The upper level was deserted, the alarm having sent the staff scurrying down to the level 7 shelter. Not that it would do them much good, thought Heather, walking quickly back to her cubicle and the drawer with its terminal, awaiting the destruct sequence she'd long ago memorized.
As Heather stepped into the cubicle, Hochmeister looked up at her, hands folded in front of him. "Captain," he said with an almost imperceptible nod. "Or do they call you Professor here?"
She whirled, hand drawing the big .357 Magnum from the holster belted at her waist.
"I'm alone," said Hochmeister. "For the moment—unless my impatient colonel has too much of your night air." Opening the
bottom right drawer, he took out the bottle of rye and two fairly clean glasses. "Care for some of your whiskey?"
She shook her head, watching him, transfixed. "How did you get in here?"
"Through your top-secret bolt hole."
MacKenzie took out her handset. "Hargrove, they know about the bolt hole," she said.
"How . . ." came the static-filled reply. "Don't argue—blow it!" "Yes, ma'am."
A second later the cavern shook to the rumble of preset charges bringing down a tunnel.
"Really, you should." The admiral had filled both shot glasses and slid one across the desk. "It may be the last drink for both of us, MacKenzie."
Surprising herself, she picked up the glass, keeping the revolver in her right hand.
"Cheers," said Hochmeister.
The two empty glasses clinked down on the table. "I hate liars, MacKenzie," said Hochmeister, pouring a second round.
"I hate tyrants," she said, not touching the glass.
He smiled sadly. "Nothing so grand—just the last proconsul." He glanced at his watch. "I'm afraid Colonel Ritter and his men will be coming soon—the SK take no prisoners, you know."
"Very humane," she said. "What do you want?"
"You, Dr. MacKenzie." Hochmeister stood. "I want that keen brain, that unwavering courage, that indomitable spirit.
"Are you proposing, Admiral Hochmeister?" she said wryly.
"Full professorship—America, Germany, France or Britain. Occasional sabbaticals for research at Peenemunde and detached duty to the Abwehr."
Her grip tightened on the Magnum. "Go to hell."
He spread his hands. "MacKenzie, you can never succeed against us. We're too entrenched, our agents are everywhere, your government's a perverted joke. You're one of the last virulent guardians of a failed dream, an empty culture, a cancer-ridden state. America's dead, MacKenzie. With us, you'd make a difference—a difference for this tired, blood-soaked world. Here you're just grist for the mill."
Hochmeister watched dispassionately as, pale-faced, lips compressed, MacKenzie slowly raised the Magnum, took careful aim at his chest and squeezed the trigger.
The alert klaxon and the pistol report sounded together, just as the lights failed.
16
R
'gal turned from
the screen. "Those bombs go up, we're here for a long time." Behind him,
Devastator's
main bridge screen showed an aerial view of the Hill. Hargrove had sent a suicide squad up through a hidey-hole—they were busily raining hand grenades and machine-pistol fire down on the SK sapper unit at the main entrance. Orange tracer rounds snapped back, raking the hilltop, followed by a dual stream of rockets exploding among the defenders as a Fokker-Cobra chopper came in low and fast.
Seen without audio from the battleglobe's bridge, it was silent, colorful and deadly, the bodies tumbling from hilltop to snow, or crumbling where they stood in perfect pantomime of death.
"Get down there and clean it up," said R'Gal, pointing at John, K'Raoda, S'Rel and Guan-Sharick.
"Who's down there?" said K'Raoda, pulling the white survival suit on over his boots. The personnel equipment lockers were in what had been a security ready-room, off the battleglobe's smallest flight hangar. The rectangular niches where AI security blades had lain at rest were now stuffed with survival suits, silver warsuits and gray field packs, their black duraplast straps dangling over the edge of the storage shelves. A double rack of loaded M32 blaster rifles sat to the right of the double doors leading to the hangar area.
"Down there's our old friend Admiral Hochmeister, Heather MacKenzie, about a thousand soldiers and four hundred megatons of booby-trapped nuclear weapons." John stopped by the arms rack, slid back the retaining bar and picked up a rifle. Checking the charge indicator, he tossed it to K'Raoda, then took one for himself. "We go to bring them sweet reason. Better take an extra chargepack, T'Lei." They stepped together through the doors.
"Rhode Island," John had dubbed this, the smallest of
Devastator's
hangar areas. Over five thousand AI assault craft lined the twenty miles of deck. Round and black, about forty meters in diameter, each with three gun blisters, the small ships could carry several hundred AI security blades into the heart of battle—three wedge-shaped meters of intelligent, pitiless steel, slicing and blasting their way through the enemy ranks.
The two men turned right, walking quickly past the silent assault craft, boots echoing in time down the immense battlesteel canyon. "Fifty hangars much like this on every battleglobe," said K'Raoda, slinging his rifle over his shoulder. "That's two hundred and fifty thousand infantry assault craft per battle-globe, times two hundred security blades per craft, times one million battle-globes." K'Raoda raised a clenched fist over his head. "Forward, men!" he cried, then laughed—a slightly hysterical laugh.
"I'm afraid the Fleet of the One's going to be disappointed when it gets here," said John. Ahead of them, center deck, sat a K'Ronarin Fleet shuttle, silver against the black of its surroundings, an oblong craft resting its landing struts, passenger ramp extended. S'Rel and Guan-Sharick stood waiting, watching as the two men approached.
"Disappointed?" said K'Raoda.
"Sure. They've been preparing for a million years to come after the God-Emperor or whatever he was and those all but magical ships that nearly broke them in the Revolt. Well, no one even remembers the God-Emperor's name, the magic's gone and all that's left is us, stumbling into each other. Hello, S'Rel, Guan."
"Don't give up on us yet, John," said S'Rel with a grin. "Not until we've stumbled into the enemy."
"Let's get down there before they blow each other up," said S'Rel, turning and stepping up the ramp and into the shuttle.
After a moment, the ramp retracted, the shuttle rose and accelerated with a faint whine of n-gravs. Piercing the blue shimmer of the hangar's forcefield, it soared up into the simulated sunshine of
Devastator's
atmosphere, breached the shield layers and was gone.
Heather rose from the office floor peering into the pale glow of the emergency lighting. There was no sign of Hochmeister. Automatic-weapons fire was echoing through the cavern—multiple, staccato bursts that rattled down the entrance tunnel, resounding in overlapping waves off the rock walls of the Hole. Running to the desk, Heather jerked open the bottom drawer—the destruct terminal was gone. "Shit," she whispered.
Holding the Magnum high and two-handed, she stepped into the corridor that ran past the offices to the tunnel entrance.
Smoke and the dim flicker of orange flame filled the tunnel, the thick tendrils of white smoke spreading slowly into the complex. As
Heather watched, three men wearing gas masks and clad in ski jackets burst through the smoke, turning to fire their machine pistols back down the tunnel.
Return fire ripped through them, tumbling their bodies to the granite as the first SK squad broke into the complex—six or so black-uniformed troopers who leaped the bodies of the dead defenders, charging straight for Heather. You're not taking this rebel alive, she vowed, raising her pistol.
A rough hand jerked Heather into a side corridor. Twisting free, Heather turned, finger thumbing back the hammer, and saw Hargrove, shirt blackened and torn, blood trickling down his face from a nasty scalp wound. "Run!" he ordered, jerking his head down the tunnel. As Heather ran, he pulled the pin on the grenade, chucked it back at the intersection and stepped into a rubble-filled alcove.
Heather ran.
The SK squad rounded the corner at a dead run, opening fire just as the grenade exploded, turning Colonel Ritter's point squad into four corpses and two badly wounded men. One of them was still screaming in pain-racked agony when Hargrove finished the job with two quick bursts from his minimac.
"Come on!" said Hargrove, catching up with Heather. Behind them, assault whistles echoed down the corridor as the two companies of SKs penetrated the Hole.
"Bomb room," gasped Heather as they ran. "Manual destruct."
"Back door," agreed Hargrove.
"Cuckoos have entered the nest. Cuckoos have entered the nest." It was the amplified voice of Hargrove's executive officer, sent echoing throughout the complex by the PA system. "White dove to chicks. White dove to chicks."
White dove's coming to hatch her chicks, thought Heather, keeping up with Hargrove. And kiss it all good-bye.
Back behind the tunnel's sheltering curve, other boots now echoed.
Futile, the whole project, she thought. And Hochmeister walking in as if strolling down the K'dam, slipping in through that ultra-secret entrance . . . Treason, something whispered in her head. It was a whisper she trusted, child of a broken nation in a treacherous world.
They halted, panting, at an intersection. To their right, the original tunnel continued. To the left, the remains of some old cave-in choked the passageway.
Hargrove stopped, hands feeling along the side of a vertical support beam. Watching him, Heather seemed to see him for the first time.
There was a sharp
click
and the tumbled pile of stone blocking the left-hand passage rumbled into the wall. They hurried through and the passageway resealed behind them.
Where does a nuclear bomb sit? thought Heather. Anywhere it wants, she answered, looking down at four hundred kilograms of plutonium 235, encased in fifteen dull blue shells of pure cobalt. They were fat little bombs on which some bored staff had painted fat little smiling faces, complete with jowls, and they sat on their dollies in a semicircle around the room's single console. The center bomb, the one facing the console, wore a deep frown—as it should—with the dual terminals of a thin, hard wire strung into its broad nose.
"Better get to it—white dove," said Hargrove, stepping down the short metal staircase and into the bomb room.
"King's bishop to white dove four." Admiral Hochmeister slowly walked to the center of the room, hands in the pocket of his unzippered parka. "My game, I believe," he said, hand on the console.
"Not yet," said Heather, and fired, sending three quick rounds into Hargrove's back. He was dead before his face could even mirror his first dull surprise.
"White dove takes bishop's knave," said Heather, advancing, gun leveled. "Only he and I knew about that bolt hole, Admiral —and I sure as hell didn't tell you."
"Look again," said Hochmeister, nodding at the body.
Heather risked a quick glance and stood transfixed: green, over six feet tall, tentacles extending from its shoulders, antennae on its head, mandibles where its mouth should be—a S'Cotar transmute lay dead on the floor, three large, ugly holes through its thorax.
"You sonofabitch," said Heather, looking at Hochmeister and raising the Magnum. "The bugs are back and you sold out."
He shook his head. "No. That one was one of Guan-Sharick's loyalists, working for me by mutual agreement.
"My offer to you still stands, MacKenzie," he said. "It won't be repeated."
"Step away from that console, Admiral."
Hochmeister looked up and behind her. "Ritter, kill her if she takes another step."
Heather turned at the snick of rounds being chambered—Colonel Ritter and three SKs stood in the doorway.
"I opened the door while you looked at the bug," said Hochmeister as they took her gun away. "Get your ordnance people in here, Colonel," he ordered.
"Excuse me, Admiral," said Heather as they handcuffed her hands behind her back. "When you opened the door, how many times did you push the switch?"
"Twice." Frowning, he looked at the small green button, then back at Heather. "Nothing happened the first time. Why?"
She laughed—a high clear sound that echoed through the room. "Baby chick takes all the king's horses and all the king's men. When this installation's on alert condition, that little green button becomes a booby trap—one opens the door with five seconds' delay. More than once within five seconds ..."
"Destruct sequence activated." It was a recording, playing automatically from the overrun defense center. "Mark thirty. Twenty-nine
"Cut that cable!" Ritter ordered the three-man ordnance team just coming down the stairs, packs in hand. He pointed at the line running from the console to the frowning bomb.
As the first man touched the cable a green laser beam fired from the wall, boring a neat hole in his chest. He crumpled at Hochmeister's feet.