Read The City Who Fought Online
Authors: Anne McCaffrey,S. M. Stirling
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction, #Science fiction; American, #Space ships, #Space warfare, #Sociology, #Social Science, #Urban
Perhaps the conditions . . ." and Channa made a vague motion with her hand to suggest that the occupation might have added to her instability. Channa made herself lean back casually in her chair, appearing at ease. "Perhaps it's a sign of progress that she is this aware of, ah, current events, Master and God. She must have concocted this fantasy about Bethel from the newstapes, for example."
Rachel exploded. "She lies!" She lunged for Channa, coming up with a jerk when the guard pulled her back by her long hair. Her gorgon's mask of rage did not even register the pain. She struggled briefly and then subsided as Amos came back into the room. "Amos," she pleaded, weeping, "help me!"
He looked at her with sympathy.
"Of course, I will help you, Rachel," he said. His mellow voice rang with sincerity. "We
all
wish to help you." He leaned close to Channa. "The doctor is on his way, Ms. Hap."
"No!" Rachel screamed. "No! How can you do this to me? She is using you, my love! Do not betray me! Please . . ." Tears began to leak down her long nose. "Please . . . please."
Channa's stomach twisted.
She
is
crazy.
Probably curably crazy—most were. Irritation faded before pity, and pity faded before the threat of the Kolnari putting any weight into Rachel's tale.
Amos' sympathy was achingly real.
"There, there," he said soothingly. "You are ill, Rachel. Daddy will call the doctor to make it right." He offered the rag doll he was carrying. "You can have Siminta with you." He pressed it into her hands.
For a moment Rachel's sobs stopped and she stared at him in confusion. "What?" she said. "You are my betrothed, not my
father
!" She looked down at the doll, then dashed it to the floor and stamped her foot.
"Stop
mocking
me!"
Amos shifted uneasily. "I cannot keep up with this. May I be excused until Doctor Chaundra comes?"
"It might be best," Channa said, addressing Belazir.
The t'Marid's eyes flicked over the three of them. "Daddy?" he said dubiously, then quirked an involuntary smile.
Channa sighed. "Last week, she thought she was five years old and Simeon-Amos was her father. She would start to cry if he left the room. For some reason, she's totally fixated on him. Chaundra supposes that he resembles whoever dropped her on us. We don't know."
"Lies!" Rachel shrieked. "lies."
"The doctor should be here by now," Amos said, clearly uncomfortable. He picked up the doll and placed it carefully on a chair. "Ah . . . she will grieve later if it isn't there."
"You may go," Belazir said to him. His eyes never left Channa's.
Chaundra strode in. He walked over to the weeping girl and touched her shoulder gently. "Poor Rachel,"
he said soothingly, "poor little girl."
"Doctor," t'Marid said sharply. Chaundra turned and stood very straight, looking down. "This is your patient?"
"Yes, Master and God."
"I do not appreciate having my time wasted on the daydreams of this madwoman. If she is so much as seen again—no, no point. You may go. Wait. You have records of her illness? I want to see them."
"Yes, Master and God, but I can't access them from this computer. Medical records are on a closed system to protect the privacy of the patient."
Belazir made an impatient, dismissive gesture. "Serig," he said. "See to it, then back to the
Bride
, continue on the matter we were planning. I will join you shortly." Serig bowed deeply.
"At your command, lord," he said, his teeth showing slightly in cold amusement. "The doll, too?"
Belazir snorted. "Go, insolence."
Rachel took a deep breath and seemed to fight for dignity; the twitching lessened in her face. "They
are
lying, Master and God, you will see. I am telling the truth."
That ended in a squawk as Serig turned her about and pushed between her shoulderblades. She ran to avoid falling, and the door hissed open before her.
"Now," Belazir snarled. Chaundra followed.
In the strained silence that followed, Belazir and Channa studied each other.
At last Belazir spoke. "Have your man return."
Channa pressed the intercom button, "Simeon-Amos, would you come in here, please?"
"This Rachel is in love with you," t'Marid observed, a hint of laughter in the yellow eyes.
"I confess," Amos said bitterly, "that I am beginning to despise the very sight of her."
The Kolnari raised an eyebrow.
"One day," Channa informed him, "she became convinced that Simeon-Amos was God and went around the station trying to convert people to worshipping him. She's been a very difficult experience for all of us, but she's been a particular strain on Simeon-Amos."
"Simeon-Amos," Belazir said, "is rather obviously the victim of a similar fixation on you, Channahap. A strong reason to believe your tale."
"Yes, Master and God," Channa said. She closed her eyes.
Simeon?
she asked.
"He's halfway convinced, but still wondering. Impatient. Channa, it's starting. No more than twenty minutes until the pirates' sound alarm."
She opened her eyes again. "Simeon-Amos," she said. "Why don't you go see to the primary warehousing?"
He hesitated for a long second. "As you wish."
* * *
The worm raised its head from the ruins of the castle, looking out across a plain of volcanic fumaroles and blue-glowing lava. Flights of tongue-wasps patrolled there and arcs of lightning jagged over crater and canyon in patterned displays.
Thunder rumbled. A barking broke loose, louder than the thunder, and the vault of heaven split. The worm reared up, endless, longer than time, glutted with its feeding.
Simeon burst through and new skies sprang above the blasted landscape. The light changed from a pitiless white to the softer yellow of sunshine. The wasps fell, twitched, died. Three-headed and elephant-sized, the dog paced beside him. He raised the bat, struck.
The Grinder lunged and the concentric mouths damped on the end of the weapon. Then it recoiled, as the wood turned to a hoop and expanded, thrusting the rows of teeth back. It tried to shake loose, but the dog's three heads pinned its body to the earth. Wider and wider the glowing green circle swelled, until the mouths were a doorway.
A scalpel and icepick appeared in Simeon's hands. He walked into the worm's mouths and raised the tools.
"Heeeeeeere's Sim!" he shouted. "Open
wide.
"
On the auxiliary command deck of the SSS-900-C, the Kolnari tech was reaching for the rear casing of the battle computer when he noticed the telltales.
"Lord!" he cried. "The—"
At that instant, the self-destruct charge built into the base of the computer detonated. It was not much in the way of an explosion, but much more than was required to destroy the sensitive inner workings. The designer had intended that to foil tampering. However, the flattened disk of jagged housing was more than enough to decapitate the pirate.
His companion reacted with tiger precision, scooping up his weapon and leaping for the doors. They clashed shut with a snap, and the warrior rebounded into the control chamber. It was empty save for him and there was no other exit. He pivoted, holding down the trigger of his plasma rifle and firing from the hip into the consoles.
"Naughty," a voice from the air said. The vents began to hiss. The Kolnari staggered at the first touch of the gas. His last act was to strip a grenade from his belt and trigger it, carefully held next to his own head.
"Damn," Simeon muttered. The mess was considerable and the equipment wasn't going to be much use for a while. Then he took the equivalent of a deep breath and
concentrated.
Several dozen things must be done at once.
* * *
"Not for a while yet," Belazir said lazily. "I have hastened as it is. There is another five minutes available."
His body was dry against her sweat-slick one, but much warmer, with the higher metabolism of his breed.
"Are we staying, then?" she breathed against his ear.
"No," he replied. "You suspected?"
"That you'd take me with you, or that today would be the day to go? Both." She wiggled. "Now,
please.
I have to get some stuff."
"I shall keep you well," Belazir said, then rolled away off her. "Be swift."
He lay idly on the sofa, watching her disappear into the bedroom.
Memorable,
he decided. Starting with her skinning out of her clothes the moment they were alone.
Anticipation is the best garnish.
The Kolnari consulted his interior timesense: twenty minutes, unusually swift. Well within the day's schedule, too. He grinned to himself, stretching and tossing back strands of white-blond hair. Tomorrow stretched out before him in a road of fire and blood and gold.
* * *
They were leopard-crawling down the ductway; an action that was hard for one of his shoulder-breadth.
Behind them Patsy was having less of a problem, since much of her volume was compressible.
"Yeah . . ." Joat paused. "I haven't actually been this way, y'know. I was trying to
hide
from Simeon." A pause. "We're right over the main corridor to the elevator shaft. I think."
"I think I had better check," Joseph said, with a tight smile. "Are you all right, Joat-my-friend?"
"Yeah." She threw a smile back at him. "Just . . . I got a little shook, is all. I'm fine."
She touched the junction node and her jacker. The membrane beneath them turned transparent.
Chaundra did not look up. Instead, he glanced behind him, shook his head, moved on.
Joat crawled past, then froze as two more figures came beneath. Rachel was running, but Serig caught her easily in one hand, pushed her against the corridor wall. She screamed, breathy and catching in her throat, like someone awakening from one nightmare into another.
"Don't do it, Joe, he'll kill you!" Joat cried sotto voce, lunging for the Bethelite's belt. She missed and knew it would have done no good. Her hand could never have deflected the solid charging weight of the man. He was through the space and dropping to the deck before she could finish the sentence. His knives were in his hands: one long and thin, the other short and curved.
The Kolnari had his hand back to cuff Rachel again as she screamed a second time, hopelessly.
"Pirate," a voice behind them said.
The warrior threw her aside as easily as he might a sack of wool, and she thudded into the corridor wall.
The same motion turned into a whirling slash with one bladed palm, a blow that would have cracked solid teakwood. Joseph was not in its path, but the long knife in his right hand was. The yellow eyes slitted in pain and a broad streak of blood arched out to spatter against the cream of the sidewall and flow sluggishly down. The Clan fighter leaped back half a dozen paces, out of reach of the blades, but also farther from the discarded equipment belt. He was naked and unarmed, and the slash in his forearm was bone-deep. He dared not even squeeze it shut with his other hand. The raw salt-copper smell of blood was strong as the wound began to ooze more sluggishly. Superfast clotting would save him . . . if he did not exert himself
"Come to me, pirate," Joseph said softly. "Come, see how we fought in Keriss, on the docks."
The Kolnari snarled and leaped to one side, flipped in midair and bounced off the upper wall. He was a hundred-kilo blur of muscle and bone snapping at Joseph behind a clenched fist. Huddled against the wall, Rachel gave a whimper of despair, but Joseph was not there anymore. Anticipating such a tactic, he had thrown himself down on his back. Both knives were up. The pirate jackknifed in midair, but when he rolled erect, there were two more long slashes across his chest.
His grin was a snarl of pain as he slid forward. The long wounds were orange, the runneling blood a shocking deep umber against his raven-black skin. He held his arms up: one in a knuckled fist, the other open in a stiffened blade.
"Come," Joseph whispered. Rachel blinked back to full consciousness and the sight of his face chilled her. "Come to me, yes, come."
The knives glinted in either hand, splashed orangey-red now, the edges glinting in the soft glowlight as they moved in small, precise circles.
What followed was a whirling blur. It ended with one knife flying loose and Joseph crumpling back, curled around his side. The other knife still shone in defiance. The Kolnari warrior staggered and shivered for a moment, then drew back his foot for the final blow. Rachel flung herself forward, grasping blindly.
Her arms closed around the poised leg. It was like gripping a tree, no, a piece of steel machinery that hammered her aside like some giant piston-rod. But blood loss and the unexpected weight threw the pirate off-balance. He staggered forward into Joseph. For a moment they stood chest-to-chest, like embracing brothers. Long-fingered black hands damped down on Joseph's shoulders, ready to tear the muscles of his bull-neck free by main force.
Then she saw the Bethelite's left arm moving. The right hung limp, but the left was pressed against the Kolnari's side. There was something in it. A knife-hilt, and the blade was buried up to the guard; the curved blade of the
sica,
whose density-enhanced edge would carve steel. It slid through ribs as the pirate's killing grip turned to a frantic push that arched him like a bow.
The two men had fought in silence, save for the panting rasp of their breath. Now the Kolnari screamed, as much in frustration as in final agony. The cry dissolved in a spray of blood as the diamond-hard
sica
's edge sawed open his ribcage and ground to a halt halfway through his breastbone. He flopped to the ground, voided, and died. Joseph wrenched his knife free and stooped. He forced his right hand to action, gripped the dead pirate's genitals, severed them with a slash. Then he stuffed them into the gaping mouth of the corpse and spat in the dead eyes, still open like fading amber jewels.
Blood. Rachel wiped at her mouth, suddenly conscious of the blood: in her mouth, her hair, over her body, spattered on corridor walls and ceiling, dimming the glowstrips, more blood than she had ever imagined could be. Joseph was coated with it, his eyes staring out of a mask of blood, his teeth red.