Chronicles of a Space Mercenary 3: Vengeance (16 page)

BOOK: Chronicles of a Space Mercenary 3: Vengeance
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“I’ve never thought of that before.” I said in wonderment ignoring Serrath’s latter comment. Both could be counted on for immaterial remarks and it was simply easiest to ignore the ignorant. I was on a higher purpose than the mundane. My thoughts were on how this simplified the entire process. Transfer your credits or your dead. I could hardly believe I had wasted all those hours, months and years playing cards for absolutely nothing when I could simply have ordered them to transfer everything or die.

“You did last night.” Leethea said.

 

Chapter 38

 

“Who are you going to kill now?” Serrath asked as I nearly leapt to my feet headed for the hatchway.

“I don’t believe a word either of you are saying.” I said, having decided they were lying to me despite what their pheromones were telling me. Those could be manipulated but I could not. I went straight to the lower hatch and momentarily was within the crowded corridor outside our docking bay. This was a mammalian enclave but for my present purposes race didn’t matter. I snatched the first likely looking subject to hand- a monstrous hulking furred brute reminiscent of the extinct offshoot race of the human line the Sasquatch and probably just as strong, but nothing compared to the strength I now possessed.

It was wearing an antiquated laser-pistol in a holster on its left hip so I grabbed its left arm and threw it over my shoulder and smashed it on the hard trans-metal decking of the corridor. I landed on top of it still holding that left arm but my right hand wrapped around its neck. I’m sure my smile didn’t help. “Transfer half your credits to my account.” I told it in pidgin. “Or else.”

“It does work.” I said as my new Kievor account balance appeared on my screen. “Think of that.”

“How much you get?” Serrath asked.

“The poor bastard didn’t have much.” I said. I didn't tell them I didn't take it all- let them think what they wanted.

“He has even less now.” Serrath said. “Hope he purchased a round-trip ticket.”

“He had just arrived.” Leethea
noted.

“I only took half.” I said. “He wasn't poor either.”

“You weren't so generous last night.” Serrath said with a snicker.

“I wonder what the Kievor do with the disenfranchised destitute left on their Stations?” Leethea asked.

“Most end up in chain gangs headed for unpleasant places.” I retorted. “If you're looking to save the Universe you've got your work cut out for you.”

“Especially with you
helping
the process.” Serrath helped. I had had enough. I got up and headed for the hatch.

“I'm awake. That means it's time to drink.” I said. “Coming girls?”

“I'm no longer bored.” Serrath said close on my heels.

“I’ll catch up to you two later.”
Leethea said to our retreating backs. “I’m still absorbing yesterday’s events.”

“I’m not sure I’ve ever been less bored.” Serrath added as we reached the corridor outside the dock. We received more than a few glances this day
and none friendly- apparently our reputation was preceding us.

“Nothing like the homey feeling of knowing every hand is turned against you.” I said as I strolled, though I was watching the
throngs around us very closely. The enmity was an accustomed feeling however and my close scrutiny of all around us was the most I would accede them- I was in no way discomforted, in other words. I felt right at home amongst the thick mood of hostility. Everybeing has always hated me, for one reason or another and would make one up if they didn’t have one legitimately. I’m roundly despised on every front and so thick enmity was my natural environment.

“What kind of life would it be if every hand wasn’t turned against us?” Serrath agreed.

“A boring one.” I said.

“An active lifestyle is a fit lifestyle.” Serrath said. At that I did pause to look at her- sometimes there was just no reading her at all. Most of the time the words that came out of her mouth were pure bullshit but sometimes… sometimes I just couldn’t tell
if there was actually something else in the Universe she could be serious about other than stealing jewelry. There was no question she lived an active lifestyle but I don’t think it was quite the same idea as behind the original concept.

“Get yourself a treadmill.” I said. “It will save a lot of poor
being’s lives.” Am I a hypocrite? Yes I am.

“Look who has the balls to call
me
a murderer!” Serrath said. “It’s simple though; when you cease to attack your environment is when it begins to attack you and it is when you begin to die. An active lifestyle
is
a fit lifestyle.”

“The beginning… and end of our deaths will be rather sudden, is my thought.” I said as I began to get an uneasy feeling. “Feel that?” I
asked as we continued to stroll-on as if all was well. That had really been the gist of Serrath’s ideal- if after time you become inured to the struggle of life and lose the will to attack your environment you begin to cower in fear of that environment and the constant danger within it and it is when you begin to die the slow death of loss of hope. If you are still attacking your environment there is clearly still hope in your heart and the fire in your veins to continue the unending assault. Every day was a new battle to be fought and conquered. Failure meant death sooner in my case, rather than later, so such thoughts were always uppermost in my mind.

“You just now noticed?” Serrath asked.

There were a group of them though I couldn’t tell exactly how many. They were all around us in the crowded corridor but I didn’t look around to try to spot them- but I could feel them. This wasn’t pheromones but some kind of premonition. The surprises these bodies provided just kept piling up. This premonition was much like the human variety- feeling eyes on the back of your head- but stronger and directional. I could feel numerous eyes following our movement and these looks weren’t just of hostility- but intent to do murder.

It wa
s a feeling I was accustomed to and recognized immediately.

 

Chapter 39

 

They were lizards of course. Wasn’t it always lizards and no wonder the Kievor had overlooked us. Touché to Tanya because who would have imagined that we would come back to one of their Stations as despicable-hated lizards. Not the Kievor when I was quite sure they possessed adequate technology to secret away one of our weapons long enough to give it a thorough scan. They simply couldn’t imagine it. A terrible lapse and possible proof their computing abilities weren’t as all powerful as imagined. That meant Bren could be absolutely correct as well- that the Kievor weren’t innovators. We could turn this into a contest of innovation. A contest the human race was now secretly joining as well- two could play that game and the Kievor had taught the lesson well. The human race would also be coming in with the full sure knowledge of what the Kievor threat meant- and the innovative power of millions of human scientists. If I knew one thing about the human race it was that a common threat would shake the hive and angry humans would come pouring out in a swarm.

“Pleasant thoughts of the future will have to wait for the moment.” Serrath said as the corridor ahead began to thin… and where assuredly our stalkers would make their attack.

“We may not have a future.” I opined as the size of the group slowly closing in around us became more acute. “A dozen at least.”

“Oh at least.” Serrath agreed as she paused to window shop. I took the moment to look around. To see which amon
g the crowded corridor of beings around us would be forced to pause as well. There were at least a dozen all right and with a reptilian intuition rivaling our own knowing the ruse was up they immediately attacked. The subterfuge was over and they had completely encircled us.

Serrath
moved before I did. Even with equal reflexes she still managed to beat me off the mark every time. I hit the deck rolling away from the blur which Serrath had become as the air above me burned with multiple energy beams. There was no concussion or explosion when they struck the wall behind where I had been standing- disruptors if I wasn’t off the mark- but I wasn’t paying attention to ancient history. It was forge a new future now or be relegated to that ancient history. Seeing that I’m the creative type I chose to forge and create.

I created
deadly mayhem about a half-second into my innovative effort. The assassin reptiles were of various physical design- clearly top-notch agents each and every one and probably handpicked for the job at hand, but it was the Fsyth across the corridor I caught a glimpse of during my roll that gave the thinking part of my brain pause. The fighting part of my brain feinted rising to my feet at the end of my roll to confront the closest of my adversaries but instead of rising I dove into a second roll and under the blurring slash of a carbon blade I didn’t see until it was already passing over my body. My old ghetto learned instincts saving me yet one more time.

I lashed out a clawed foot
at the blade-hand as I rolled across the hard trans-metal decking and caught the offending member at what served as the reptile’s wrist. My new clawed feet were as dexterous as my hands. I ripped as I rolled the opposite direction and severed meat and tendon and gave the startled reptile a shot of venom just for good will. I didn’t know if my venom would affect it or not but it was one appendage less at the very least. I didn’t have the time to look back and see if it was completely out of the fight because I was already on to my next. There were a lot of them and there was no time to dally.

As I rose inside the guard of a large reptile I saw the flash of a new entrant into the contest. Leethea was just a blur as she went past, launching herself directly at the Fsyth across the corridor, but then I was busy with my own
problems as my instincts saved my ass yet one more time. My glance Leethea’s way had cost me a moment but I ducked just as raking claws slashed through where I had been. The sting of the claws finding meat along my back burned terribly and I wondered if this was it- if I was susceptible to its venom. I didn’t have the time to ponder however. The reptile was big and brutish but not so quick. I thrust my left hand into its throat and fell backward into a roll just as the reptile’s other meaty arm raked razor sharp talons through the space I had just occupied. A last glance as I went into my roll gave me the briefest image of a fatally poisoned being- its jaws flung open in a silent scream as it staggered back- its own claws tearing at the wound I had created. Trying ineffectually to dig the poison out I had injected into it and ripping its own throat out in the process.

I came out of my roll between two vicious fanged devils and knew my time was up.
It was curtain call and the applause wasn’t for me.

 

Chapter 40

 

The group of two dozen or so armed females came out of nowhere. They were members of the group of slaves I had helped to free and they were there to return the favor, it would seem. The two reptilian devils surrounding me paused to confront these new attackers and fell instantly under the surprise onslaught- the first losing its head as a carbon sword flashed through its neck. The second fell under the attack of four smallish females which landed on it en-mass taking it down instantly and which I left ripping it to shreds as worried I looked for Serrath and Leethea. I shouldn’t have been though things could have turned out quite differently if not for the aid of our benefactors. Their timing had been impeccable- it had been about to get ugly!

Serrath was climbing from the corpse of a small lizard
similar in attributes to our own physiology- the fact that the fight had devolved to the ground giving testament to the struggle it had given Serrath. Its head hanging askew on its thin deceptively weak neck was evidence of how it had made its passing though it had not gone peacefully. Leethea and the real Fsyth were fighting on the deck, exchanging venom attacks and tearing at one another viciously. Of the rest of the attacking group of reptiles suddenly none remained alive. I moved to assist Leethea but caught a warning glance from Serrath- it was a reptile thing and we weren’t to interfere. Our surprise benefactors closed a circle around the battling pair that they might not be disturbed but I wasn’t disturbed as it was clear Leethea was winning the engagement handily. Moments later her jaws snapped closed on the Fsyth’s neck and a further moment later it was over. Leethea dragged herself tiredly and bloodily to her feet- but suddenly smiled the purest smile of ecstasy.

“Wow!” Leethea said as she looked around dreamily.

“Yes wow.” I said as I looked at Serrath. Now I knew what the ultimate Fsyth drug was. It was our own venom. Leethea was high. Serrath gave me an ugly look but knew better than to deny what I could now clearly see.

“I get to fight the next Fsyth.” I said, but suddenly Serrath had a look on her face I could recognize even though she possessed no fa
cial muscles. I got the picture though it wasn’t a picture I wanted to take.


Some of us banded together for protection. Most were recaptured right away. They came after us right away and it was fight or back into the chains. Like they think they own us.” One of the females said, clearly the new leader of the bunch. “We slaughtered every one of them and several other groups as well that were luckless enough to fall into our sights. We need better weapons though and our funds are dwindling quickly.” They were all armed but only a dozen or so had modern high-tech weaponry. The Kievor charged for atmosphere and gravity if you didn’t have your own residence- be it a ship with the applicable docking fees or a Kievor rental- and if your account fell into the negative…it was out the airlock and no doubt about that in my mind at all.

BOOK: Chronicles of a Space Mercenary 3: Vengeance
4.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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