April (53 page)

Read April Online

Authors: Mackey Chandler

BOOK: April
12.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"It was tracked on radar and then when it's intercepted it's simply not there. They look around and nothing to be found. I already knew there was no way it was inboard the
Jade
like they thought immediately. Her class needs extra fuel in that volume to orbit so high. What kind of electronics spoofs location so convincingly? Nothing we have. We painted a solid false radar return where it had long vacated. And why didn't we see it going away on its great flaming drive? And was it hiding to escape? Oh no."

"After spoofing its location it suddenly appears and runs in from kilometers away and simultaneously attacks two multi-billion dollar vessels of separate super-powers. The
Kelly
reported being engaged with at least four separate weapon systems, before she was lost. They didn't stand off scared of those two, but dove in and opened up with everything at point blank range and blew the both of them to hell and gone. All of which tells me they are either brave to the point of foolishness, or they have defensive systems equal to their offensive gear."

"The
Kelly
was engaging the
Jade
. But the
Lewis
started its run in to hit them well before they started exchanging fire. And she destroyed the
Jade
completely before turning to the undamaged Kelly. We see a debris field expanding from where they both were on radar. It was a bald faced ambush. He was sitting waiting for them to get sucked into his bag, after they went hunting him."

"And the worst part is, we and the Chinese both threatened the pilot first yesterday, when all he was asking was free passage. He just wanted to go home and we refused and bullied him and after we pushed him in a corner he told us plainly not to cross his path. We each sent a ship to die, because we could not imagine anyone having the gall to oppose us. Well, we have a problem now. And I doubt our esteemed leaders are capable of getting it."

The radar technician looked around scared because this sort of talk was dangerous. Dangerous to say, dangerous to even hear. And it didn't matter if you had stars on your collar.

* * *

Jon had seen the man on his screen before. In news shows and 'zines, not in person. It was a shock to see him calling and he knew it would not be a good thing. This was the head of Homeland Security, Preston Harrison and all the other sub-organizations it governed. Technically he was not Jon's direct boss. But from a political and practical aspect, it would be career suicide to not accommodate anything he wanted.

"We need the list of people I'm putting on your screen arrested and held in the closest security you can provide, until we have a military presence on M3 and have the station locked down."

The list was what Jon expected: Steve Lewis, Faye Lewis, Robert Lewis, April Lewis, Washington Dixon, Eddie Persico, Ajay Singh, Singh Nam-Kah and surprisingly Doris Chalmers.
You missed some important ones,
Jon thought to himself.

"Very interesting, Sir. When do you intend to announce the application of martial law? Has it already been declared down, there or is it just being invoked on station? I'd hate to act for you before a proper legal declaration. Someone might charge me later with a crime for acting outside my civilian authority, if I aid use of military force against civilians."

"Believe me, all of these people are already subject to arrest on civil charges. I have full authority to act without a formal declaration of martial law. The fact I can order the forces in question to move is sufficient in itself," he said smugly.

"Well, Sir. Several of these people I am sure are not in my jurisdiction. Also Miss Chalmers is a ward of my department seeking emancipation and it is my understanding Dr. Singh Nam-Kah even if she were here, is married to a legal USNA resident and seeking asylum and legal status. Can you fax me warrants for their arrest please? I'm an officer of the
law.
I don't just arrest people on somebody's say-so, no matter how highly placed."

Harrison was enraged by this answer. "Let me make myself clear. I am not asking you to exercise any discretion in these matters. You will arrest the people listed as required, without documentation and turn them over to martial authority when it arrives at your station and subject yourself to that authority. You will simply
do
it little man. Or you will no longer have your position even until the military gets there. You are a hair's breadth from going on the list yourself." Finally the glove was all the way off the iron fist. "In the mean time you will be contacted by Gary Chalmers and an associate, who will be assuming civilian authority over the station after this transition."

  "Little man? Jon asked him, indignant. "I am not your private goon to put the muscle on people at your personal whim. I quit." He disconnected on the man, surprised he got so much out and the other fellow hadn't unplugged him first. Harrison was obviously shocked speechless, anyone dared speak back to him. Jon felt good no matter how things turned out, he had taken the high road talking to the creep.

"Frank?" Jon called right away. "I want you to bring the missile pack here out of the storage room, but leaving the empty case there and see if you can step up your surveillance to penetrate Chalmer's apartment. I'd especially like to know if he has any other weapons than the rifle."

"I'm unemployed now. I just quit before Harrison could fire me. I don't know where that leaves you guys, but as far as I am concerned it loosens my hand a whole lot to deal with these two. Maybe they will call and fire all of you, or run through the list asking for someone to take over from me. I have to warn you. It's bound to be a short term position if anybody wants it. We got a bunch of soldier boys on the way. I refused to act without legal orders, warrants, or declaration of martial law and he threatened me. Said he had a right to act, because he has the power basically. We'll see if he really has enough, huh? If any of you want to refuse my orders now, you are free to sit this out at home. I don't have any legal authority anymore."

* * *

Thanks for the sleep. You made a good command decision," Easy allowed. "If I was tired enough to fall asleep under boost, I might have messed up and killed myself or broke something trying to do a fly around in such lousy shape. You want to finish this?" he offered the coffee bulb to April and she took it. "How does it look around the lock Ajay? Did it suck in any of the sealant after you sprayed it, or does it have a nice even meniscus all the way around the flange once it dried?"

"It looks good Easy. I don't think we bent or scratched anything badly enough to leak. It's marked up from the gun clamps but not near the edge."

Easy and April were clean again and had on the suit liners which had been vacuum cleaned. The others had cleaned up and changed liners also. All their equipment was packed back away. Ajay was obviously very uncomfortable stripping down, but Easy had warned him to not clean up and change, was to risk suit sores or infection, so he would order him to strip and clean up if he had to.

The blood had cleaned out of the cabin pretty well, but they had flushed the air once at low pressure and then wore disposable face masks while they were cleaning up, so the filtration unit had a chance to run through the cabin volume several times before they took them off. They were very aware freeze dried blood dust in the air was an effective vector for all sorts of diseases and China remained one of the worst nations for emerging diseases, despite draconian travel and isolation laws, so they cleaned up the surfaces with their used wipes from bathing and tried to minimize their exposure to the slain Chinese fellow's remains.

"What do you say we try to get some news April? I doubt anyone is saying anything good about us, but we might as well find out how bad it is."

"What would you like? Official or pirate?"

"How about the BBC? They're about as fair as anyone. They often make sneaky little hints at the truth."

"OK. I'll see if I can get their broadcast for North American audiences."

Twenty minutes later Easy was angry and April was mystified at the absence of any news about a major space battle. They had patiently heard the details on the religious rebellion in Madagascar, the latest viral disease to show up in Vietnam, which seemed to have jumped to humans from fruit bats of all things and the way the various Lunar authorities were trying to agree on controls for vacuum pollution. If it was not slowed down in a few years there would be such a haze around the moon many of the industries which depended on cheap hard vacuum would find the moon had too much of an atmosphere to continue. Burning a surveillance camera blind with a laser had been upgraded to a Federal terrorist crime, for even private or city owned cams. They chatted about the latest advances in sub-dermal medical monitors and the humorous story about the man in Italy, notorious for their free and open genetics laws, who combined the genes from his two favorite pets, a snake and a parrot and been banished from the Church for creating a dragon. However there was no hint of news at all about a space battle.

"OK," April said, growing easily as angry as Easy, "I really want to hear each of you speak on this, before we decide what to do. I can understand the USNA and China would both be embarrassed we took their ships out. I don't understand them just not saying a word to acknowledge any problem. Why aren't they yelling and screaming for someone to arrest us? Or at least just shoot us on sight? It's like nothing happened." There was a pause as nobody jumped right in to express an opinion.

"I don't like it," Easy growled. "It feels like too many black ops I've worked. Somehow I bet they still think they can cover up the whole thing and not disclose it ever happened to the public. I've seen copter loads of special forces go down on black missions and they send notices to the family about a training exercise killing everyone. Sometimes they will explain away each one separately. One a car accident. Another a presumed drowning on a canoe trip. They have the resources to do it. We did fight where there are no eye witnesses and if they're quiet it could mean they still think they are going to bag us before we do anything the public will see."

"They can't have so much available to launch quickly, they can reach us out here soon," Eddie offered. Maybe they're not sure about what happened between the two ships. Maybe the Chinese are blaming the USNA, or the other way around, instead of us.

"No, sorry, there was just too much radio traffic right up to the end for them not to know exactly what happened."

Dr. Nam-Kah offered a thought. "Maybe they don't have to come out here. Maybe they will just wait for us to go home. We wanted to go there in the first place. Wouldn't they expect us to show up there eventually?"

April spoke her thoughts aloud. "Eddie told us they are going to take over M3 before the Rock gets there. Maybe they will just hurry up and do it as fast as they can now, maybe even before we can get back. But what would be the point of secrecy? Why wouldn't they just announce it?"

"The court," Ajay said. "They'll still try to make themselves look as good as possible. We know it's bald faced theft, but they try to look as law abiding and decent as their propaganda can make them. They will take over M3, but shut down the communications and  not announce they are stealing the Rock until the World Court announces its judgment and then they will announce they are immediately taking control and make public what has been reality for days or weeks. Oh, the Court will know privately, so they don't announce a ruling which will fail."

"Could they manage it? I mean, how could it be done?" April asked.

"Now you know why the fellow Art was so interested in the radio room," Easy said. "Everything is routed through the radio shack and all the data transmission and phones are all regulated out of the one office. If they cut them off, we are only talking about two thousand people. Most of the permanent station staff's relatives are on the west coast in the USNA and they have plenty of manpower down there to call on all of them and tell them it is a matter of national security to keep their mouths shut. They can even lock them down in their homes if they seem uncooperative."

"For a few days or weeks it should be no problem keeping a lid on it. I can see them getting away with it. If a few people start asking about it they will just stonewall. There isn't a paper or a TV news service left in North America, that will push for a hot story anymore. They know they'll go to prison if they run a story they were warned to kill. Everything is labeled a National Security issue now. Crap, they even classify stuff like how big the corn harvest is now. Once the security label is on it you have no rights."

"So what do we want to do?" Eddie asked. "If what you're saying is right, even if we can call home nobody can help us. They'll bottle them up."

"I know several people who they can't be shut off through the radio room," April said. She explained Heather's talent for electronics. "If you shut her off from the regular com she can have a transmitter broadcasting to Earth in no time. She and Jeff are both amateur radio bugs – hams they called it.

"We can talk to the press and media outside the USNA." Easy said. "There are still lots of them not affiliated with the big news channels and frankly quite a few who hate the USNA's guts. They'd be glad for the story. Question is how? I didn't think about independent long range communications. We don't have a interface for in-flight data access or phone, like a passenger shuttle, because those are all proprietary."

"Obviously we are not going to get a friendly pass through from the traffic control channels. How are we going to call somebody up?  We could aim a signal at a wireless network on M3 or ISSII with a dish, but they can't radiate strongly enough back to us to establish a two way connection the computer needs. None of you has a pad plug-in to make satellite phone connections do you?" Nobody did.

"You know, all the guys who work outside in construction. Couldn't you call someone directly - whoever is out working around M3 in a scooter and ask him to relay a message into the local net for you? Or does the radio for local traffic not work this far?" Eddie wanted to know.

Other books

The Mote in God's Eye by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle
Fur Magic by Andre Norton
Volt: Stories by Alan Heathcock
If Forever Comes by Jackson, A. L.
Gone to Texas by Jason Manning
After River by Donna Milner
Empire in Black and Gold by Adrian Tchaikovsky