hesitation. As friend, however, I say bullshit. If there’s trouble on Rapt One,
and rumors
have
been surfacing about mantonium theft, you’d know it, Ran.
Look, I want to know how to deploy help from the nearby bases, but I need
information on how they should go in. What are they facing anyway? Come
on, help me.”
“I don’t know anything for sure.” Ran thrust his fingers through his hair,
the possible scenarios spinning out in his mind, none of them very
reassuring. “The Council is aware of a problem, but—”
“You’re going to tie my hands with that damned close-mouthed
authoritarian red tape.” A frustrated breath echoed out. “Look, fine, you
can’t say what you think is exactly going on, but tell me this, are the
explosions deliberate?”
“I’d guess they are.”
“Big casualties?”
“Probably. If not already, there might be.” Ran swung out of bed and
walked over to grab a tunic and pants. “I’m going to call an emergency
meeting of the Council, Ian. I’ll get right back in touch as soon as possible.”
He set aside the communicator and started to dress. Jerra stared at him
from across the darkened room. “You can’t tell me either what’s going on,
can you?”
“No.” He fastened his tunic and reached for his boots.
“Does this have something to do with that quotation you wanted me to
translate?”
“My love, I’m not sure. Larik is there, Larik sent the quote, and now
there is trouble. I know only a little more myself.”
Beautiful and voluptuous in the gilded light from the two moons
hanging low in the distance, visible through the long windows by the bed,
she stared at him with open concern. “Will Minoa have to become
involved?”
Ran pulled on his boots and went over to give her a swift kiss. “I’ll be
back as soon as I can.”
* * * *
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
85
Larik bent over the prostrate man and both blessed and cursed the latest
technology in warfare. The cutting edge weapon of choice among the Sspecies military was a high-powered, lightweight firearm that sent a small
device containing a powerful electric charge. Upon contact, depending upon
the location of the strike, it was enough to stop a man’s heart. In the
colonel’s case, the insulation properties of his uniform was designed to
diffuse the charge. It had done its job to a certain degree, but he was still
stunned and the hit was direct enough Larik was amazed he’d survived.
“Hit?” Pearce managed to open his eyes for a second only. A faint burnt
smell lingered around him.
“Abdomen. Higher and it would have done the job.”
In the distance came the sound of yet another explosion. Trey, still
breathing hard, crouched down. “Colonel, is there a way out of here besides
going back into the tunnel?”
“Doors on the…north…side.” Pearce’s face held a gray tinge and his
lips were blue. “Damn, I feel like someone slammed a transport into me.”
“I’d cut off my left testicle for a transport right now. And believe me, I
value my balls highly, so that’s saying something.” Trey’s mouth twisted
cynically. “Look, we can’t sit here huddled in an open hatch for long. They
can wait us out, easy. Somebody have a plan?”
Aspen, who’d slammed a recharging cell into her weapon, looked a little
pale, but otherwise resolute. “There can’t be many of them. Larik said ten.
Two dead of the virus, one on Minoa somewhere, and someone is setting off
the explosions, probably more than one from the sound of it. So five at the
most, probably less. Four to five isn’t bad odds.”
Only one of them was severely injured. Larik doubted Pearce could
even stand on his own.
“Take my communicator,” Pearce gasped a little as he spoke. “Call
for…help. Tell them…we’re…trapped in Station Seven.”
Larik pulled it from his belt and even before he could touch the pad, it
flashed. “Incoming call,” he said briefly. “This is Larik Armada. Colonel
Pearce is down.”
“I know. This is Ravenot.”
86
Annabel Wolfe
Larik glanced at the frequency call identification and committed it to
memory. Then he drawled sarcastically, “Nice of you to get in touch. Don’t
let me forget to thank you for that month sitting in confinement quarters.”
“At least you had Lieutenant Thorne, Armada.”
The mocking edge to the man’s tone made Larik want to do something
violent and highly illegal. “What do you want?”
“My men are waiting and I’m sure you’ve already figured out they can
pick you off within seconds. They were stationed there to prevent any
escaping high ranking officers, but lucky me, you popped out of that tunnel
instead. Weapons on the floor, please, and just walk out slowly.”
“So you can kill us with our cooperation? No, thanks, I’ll pass.”
“I actually have orders not to kill you if possible. All three of you could
be useful in your own way, especially the lovely lieutenant. There is nothing
more useful than holding the daughter of a prominent general hostage.
Having a trained pilot at the skill level of York is always an advantage, and
you could help us solve a problem or two we’re having with the mantonium
project. Some of the bombs are going off prematurely.”
“Fuck off,” Larik said with cool deliberation. “I’d never help you, the
only place Trey would ever fly you is into hell, and Aspen isn’t going to
quietly let you take her prisoner. We know all about The Covenant and
Acadien, Ravins.”
There was a brief pause and then a short laugh. “You
are
resourceful,
Armada. Once I found out you were talking to Kartel, I knew we had to
speed things up. Maybe I should make my position more clear. Rapt One is
in our hands already. In case you doubt me, I’ll let you finish this
conversation with someone else.”
That didn’t sound good and the expression on his face must have
reflected it because Trey said an obscene word and shook his dark head.
“Armada, this is Governor Halden. I’d like to encourage you to
surrender yourselves. Ravenot claims they’ve enough explosives to continue
a systematic destruction of the capital city. With what has happened so far in
just a short time, I am forced to believe—”
The bitterness in his voice came through clearly and the brutal way he
was shut off spoke more than his words. At once Ravenot was back on. “So
you see, it’s best you just cooperate. It would save lives, including yours.
Some heroic gesture on your part is not going to change things. We’ve been
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
87
planning this for years. We want control, not destruction, but using the latter
won’t stop us if it becomes necessary.”
Outside alarm signals pierced even the walls of the station, the
intermittent sounds punctuated by the occasional rumble of another small
explosion.
“If you don’t want to kill us, why hit the military quarters first?”
“It was already planned. Your release precipitated the action. If you
died, you died.” His voice held a figurative shrug. “Since you didn’t, let’s
negotiate.”
They weren’t in much of a position to negotiate. Larik didn’t trust Rapt
One’s former Chief Engineer in the least, but he had an injured man and a
pregnant female to protect. Aspen may not appreciate his way of thinking,
but in his mind, his own child could be at risk also, not to mention his
feelings for her were deeply involved.
“Contact me again in a few minutes.”
Aspen stared at Larik as he disengaged the exchange. “No,” she
protested vehemently, her training obviously asserting itself. “Our military
expressly forbids cooperation with anti-federation forces of any kind.”
“Have I ever mentioned you’re even more beautiful when you’re
spouting regulations at me, Lieutenant?” He grinned, trying to portray a
nonchalance he didn’t really feel. “But we need to be realistic right now.
Colonel Pearce is wounded and needs attention. And let’s not forget we’re
cornered.”
Only half-conscious on the floor, the colonel gave a weak cough. “She’s
right. Don’t do anything for me.”
It was Trey who said slowly, “I’ve seen that look on your face before.
What do you have in mind, Armada?”
“That was a very enlightening conversation in some ways. I need access
to a communication center anyway and this makes it more urgent. Any
thoughts, Colonel?”
“There’s one in this building…of course, but…”
“Yeah, but,” Trey said with emphasis. “Trying to get to it without being
exterminated could be tricky. I can’t believe we were able to drag the
colonel back in here without getting hit. If Aspen hadn’t been returning fire,
we wouldn’t have.”
Larik frowned, thinking furiously. “Where is it?”
88
Annabel Wolfe
“Near the exit.” The colonel was ashen now, his eyelids fluttering. “It
controls security safeguards.”
“But I bet it’s directly tapped into the main system, isn’t it? That’ll save
time.” Larik really didn’t need an answer, he was just musing aloud. “I
really, really need to access it.”
“Couldn’t…coded…” Clearly Pearce was losing consciousness.
“Wait a minute.” Larik had a sudden flash, trying to remember the exact
configuration of the way the tunnel had been set up. “Colonel, stay with me
please.” He knelt by the fallen man and touched his shoulder. “You said you
are in charge of security in the tunnel during maintenance, right? Is there a
separate communications system down there?”
“Panel…near hatches. Also…coded, but just for…” Pearce lost the
battle, his body going limp.
“I bet he meant it’s like the one in quarantine, only set for simple access
and other basic functions. That’s all right. Time-consuming, but I know a
few shortcuts after navigating the Rapt One database these past weeks.”
Larik nodded at Aspen who stood by the control panel. “Let’s go.”
“Shit,” Trey muttered bitterly, “I swear I knew I was going to get stuck
going back down there.”
* * * *
With the city blowing up all around them, it seemed like a terrible idea
to go underground in case they ended up stuck there, but Aspen trusted
Larik’s confidence, and the last time she checked, their options limited.
Surrender was
not
an option. If they thought holding her hostage would
sway her father, they were wrong. If she was captured, she knew he’d be
worried and intensely involved as much as possible in any rescue attempt,
but he would never budge on negotiations. It wasn’t done, and he followed
protocol to the letter of the regulation.
The hatch plummeted downward and came to a halt, and thankfully, the
door opened. Once their opponents realized they went back down, there was
nothing to prevent them from blocking the energy source needed for them to
go back up.
She shivered, not liking the idea of the dark tunnel and the very idea of
being trapped…
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
89
Kneeling, she checked Colonel Pearce’s pulse, finding it both weak and
irregular. “Larik, hurry. The faster we get him out of here, the better.”
“The faster we
all
get out of here the happier I’ll be.” Trey held his
weapon with business-like competence and looked strained. “Hurry,
Armada. I’m begging you.”
“I need only a few minutes.” Larik pushed the panel button and it slid
up smoothly, to their mutual relief. The sound of his fingers clicking away
was like some strange echoing, but welcome, music in the confines of the
tunnel exit.
“How come no one else used this exit?” Aspen peered into the darkness,
only a hint of luminous blue in the distance.
“Blocked at the other end would be my guess.” Trey stared down at her.
“By the time they realized how serious the situation is, it was too late.
Ravenot…Ravins, or whatever the hell his name is, isn’t an idiot. As Chief
Engineer, he knows pretty much everything about Rapt One.”
“That’s unfortunately right.” Standing by the open panel, somehow
Larik was able to listen to their exchange and still work on whatever he
insisted was so important they risk getting locked away. “But you know,
there’s one thing he’s completely unaware of. Or I hope so.”
“What’s that?” She watched him work, amazed at how effortless it
looked. He didn’t even hesitate as he typed in passwords and whatever other
wizardry needed to infiltrate what should be an impenetrable system.
In answer he smiled, a slow curve of his mouth visible in the dim
illumination. “I’m in, and if I set it up properly, all I need to do is…this.”
He clicked a key.
The lights came on.
Aspen felt her mouth part in surprise.
Trey murmured, “That’s better, thanks. Now, what are you doing?”
“Restoring power, blocking the subversive communication grid, sending
out distress signals to the Federation.”
“Is that all?” Trey’s crystalline blue eyes glimmered in relief and
amusement. “With one touch of a key?”
“I noticed them setting up a failure a few days ago. I thought it might be
prudent to make sure I could negate it if we needed to. I installed an