The Tabit Genesis (27 page)

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Authors: Tony Gonzales

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BOOK: The Tabit Genesis
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Instead he was thrown backwards as if struck by a combat mech. The skythe was knocked from his hand.


Where is she?
’ the Pathfinder howled, clamping his hands around Maez’s throat. ‘
What have you done?

Maez could not believe his father’s strength. His grip was unbreakable, and he panicked as his head was lifted and smashed onto the metal grating.

‘Why, why, why?’
the Pathfinder howled.

Maez’s vision began to tunnel. His eyes searched out something he could use to defend himself, but instead saw only the Seers cackling behind the glass.

Then, the one who had been silent raised his head, and the others froze.

His father saw it as well.

‘I see the one named Vladric,’ the Seer said. ‘The message that comes will be from him.’

Maez felt the grip on his neck release, and sucked in as much air as his lungs would allow. His father had sprung to his feet.

There was an acolyte standing at the forbidden cave’s entrance.

‘My lord … about your daughter,’ he said weakly.

 

Your Majesty,

 

Princess Myrha is in my custody. As you can see, her injuries are minor. Although she refuses aid, she has been treated humanely. No additional harm will befall her, provided you accept my terms, as outlined below.

This is not a negotiation. Time is of the essence. If you do not comply, you will never see her again.

Our paths crossed decades ago on Magellan. Like so many in search of salvation during those hard days, I was a desperate young man drawn to your cause. Surrounded by your devoted followers, I watched you captivate the crowd like a sermon on the mount. You invited anyone who would listen to join House Obyeran as acolytes – the
peasants
of your manufactured culture – promising them security and equality, the quintessential social commodities of Orionis.

It was a tempting offer. But something felt out of place. You are the oldest surviving member of the
Tabit Genesis
. The Obyeran brothers helped build that very ship. If not for your technology, the human race might be extinct now.

You were a god. Yet you ran from the Inner Rim. You resurfaced years later on the most remote world mankind has ever been. If it were anyone but you, no one would have believed that House Obyeran stood a chance.

So I asked myself: what makes a god flee?

As a ghost, I have no reverence for Earth. But its history reveals much of what rots Orionis today, especially the history that highborns have taken every measure to hide. Near the end, there were two reigning geopolitical camps on Earth. The goal of ICERS was to save it. The goal of UNSEC was to leave it. And there weren’t enough resources left on the planet to do both. The corporations of the world held more power than the governments, because they controlled access to the resources in space. Arcwave Technical, the corporation you founded, was entrenched in the ICERS camp. You had plans for terraformers, trans-continental irrigation projects, biocybernetic creations that could decontaminate radioactive lands; investments so grand in scope that only a business titan like you could even conceive of them.

But then you changed sides. Overnight, Arcwave Technical became a full supporter of UNSEC, committing all available resources to the construction of the Genesis motherships with an urgency the likes of which mankind had never seen. You know why, of course: first contact. The encounter between a Raothri warship and UNSEC mining craft in the belt between Mars and Jupiter.

What was the warning that creature gave? That Earth was beyond saving? That a Raothri armada was coming to destroy it? And who among the UNSEC demigods decided the remaining human population was better off dying in nuclear fire than facing what was coming?

I know you did not support the ‘mercy killing’ of millions of people. I believe you left Tabit Prime to escape from the ones who did. Once humanity had secured its footing here, your usefulness to them was over. You, and the secrets you know, are a liability to them – or, as they would argue, to all of humanity. You fled to save your own life. The other highborns would have killed you and everyone associated with you to protect their secret. They might still. With the
Archangel
, you are no longer beyond their reach.

If we allow it, the highborn grip of Orionis will be unbreakable, and will eventually extend to Tau Ceti. The
Archangel
is an agent of evil, and I cannot stop it without your help.

That is why I took Myrha from you.

My fleet is three weeks from Corinth. We will attack the
Archangel
and make it ours. Your son is a great warrior and skilled commander. He will destroy the
Tabit Genesis
, the heart of everything we despise. The tactical plan for this joint operation is included with this message.

With his leadership, your Lightspears, and my fleet, we can rid Orionis of the tyrants you escaped from and at last take the freedom that is ours by right.

Your Majesty, I am not proud of my actions. I have no children of my own and cannot fathom your anguish.

I only know the anguish of ghosts. And I am just as desperate now as I was on Magellan. We cannot endure for much longer.

Prince Maez must be our saviour if Myrha is to live.

If we meet again, I would not blame you for attempting to take my life.

Yours in human brotherhood,

Vladric Mors

 

Maez looked at his father, and saw not a king, but a broken man.

Seated at the edge of the walkway, across from the cave entrance, Masaad was silent and sullen, except when whispering ‘Myrha’ every now and then. Fearful for their lives, the Obyeran Guardians had sent a hapless acolyte to deliver the news. The boy was brave to walk into this wretched place. Maez doubted he would live to see another day for the crime of having seen it.

The Pathfinder had not moved. His thick white hair was filthy, falling to his shoulders like melting ice, his amber eyes vacant and dark. The Seers had fallen back into their slumber, all except the old crone, who was mumbling in her wet grave. Maez supposed that was because she had expected ‘The Blood Prince’ to be dead by now.

He couldn’t blame her. It was the only way to hurt the madman who imprisoned her. The shock of being attacked by his own father was offset by the unbelievable fact: Myrha was gone. Worse, he couldn’t decide how he felt about that. There was too much to process.

Maez rubbed his neck, which was so sore he had trouble turning his head. But as Vladric had mentioned, time was of the essence.

‘To have any chance of getting her back …’ he started. ‘You have to tell me everything.’

His father’s expression confirmed what Maez all but knew.

‘She caught me giving her Lightspear the advantage,’ King Masaad admitted. ‘The Voyage Home … is no contest.’

Maez knew how that must have devastated her. Over the years, he’d found that his scepticism was founded on good instincts. He chose his next words with care.

‘I understand its importance,’ he said. ‘The foundation of our culture is the promise of a new world. People need to believe in us to accept that possibility. The question is, did you find one?’

‘Al Khav is there now,’ King Obyeran said.

That was heartbreak, Maez thought. This final chapter of The Rites heralded the imminent journey that would take House Obyeran there, with Myrha leading the way. In essence, everything his father had worked for had been vaporised on the eve of his greatest accomplishment.

There was no time for pity. The logical choice was to sacrifice her and proceed as planned. Or start a new Rites to find a worthy successor. Myrha would have agreed. But Maez suspected his father was anything but rational at this point.

‘These highborns he mentioned,’ Maez said, omitting any mention of the Raothri. He would revisit that another time. ‘Did you ever share your plans with them? Does anyone else know you found a world?’

King Masaad shook his head.

‘My brothers,’ he mumbled. ‘Myrha. Now you.’

‘You mobilised the fleet,’ Maez said. ‘Are you prepared to go to Eileithyia for her?’

The Pathfinder nodded.

Maez stood.

‘You fully understand what that means.’

‘Yes,’ King Masaad said.

‘A moment ago you nearly killed me,’ Maez said. ‘Am I now the commander of your Lightspears?’

‘You. Are.’

‘And you understand that I shall show no mercy, no remorse,
in your name
, for the mere chance of saving Myrha’s life?’

‘I do.’

Maez shook his head.

‘You’re a fool.’

King Obyeran stood.

‘They have my daughter.’

‘So the crone was right,’ Maez said. ‘I am the “Blood Prince”.’

‘You were born to protect our world from those who would try to take it from us,’ King Masaad said. ‘But she was
my
world.’

Maez bowed.

‘Then I will find her,’ he promised. ‘But remember: I am the instrument you made me to be. I offer no justification for what follows. I am just the executor of your will.’

‘Bring her back,’ King Masaad whispered, his lips quivering. ‘By any means necessary.’

26
 
VADIM
 

Ninety-Seven Years Earlier 2712 AD

 

In the dreamless shroud of unconsciousness, time had lost meaning, and a strange wisp of light appeared in the darkness. Slowly it grew into a piercing blaze, lifting the veil of anaesthesia. Vadim opened his eyes to the warm smile of his father.

‘Welcome back, son,’ he said.

Vadim Hedricks was more familiar with post-operative procedures than most medical interns. Surgery had become so routine that he knew the number of ceiling lights between the ICU and the recovery room down the hall. As they passed overhead, he took inventory of the sensations in his body, wary for new pain, and hoping not to find the old aches that were always with him.

Born with deformities that had left him bedridden all his life, Vadim could not recall a moment of his existence that was without pain. The root of his ailments was cancer, which was extremely rare for a firstborn. Only Outer Rim miners were supposed to contract ‘ghost rot’, yet somehow the disease had found him, the firstborn son of Grand Admiral Franz Hedricks. Even with modern advancements in biotechnology, the doctors had feared Vadim would never live past the age of eight.

But now he was ten. And his father insisted that he would live much longer.

The physicians were nice enough, but it was still awkward to be sitting naked in a room facing six of them.

‘Well, go on,’ his father encouraged. ‘Give them a try.’

Vadim looked at his new legs, dangling off the gurney. The incisions were already healing and, for the first time, each limb looked to be the same length.

The nurses on either side of him were smiling.

‘They won’t let you fall,’ his father assured.

With a slight push from his arms, Vadim slid his rear off the gurney. Both feet made simultaneous contact with the deck; his knees buckled, and the nurses grasped hold of him.

He glanced at his wheelchair.

‘Let go,’ he instructed. ‘I want to try.’

The nurses looked to his father, who approved. Vadim felt their supportive hands move away. For the first time ever, he was standing on his own two feet.

His father beamed.

‘Look at you,’ he marvelled. ‘Try taking a step.’

This room had once been the only hospital in civilisation. Located on the sole spinning torus of the original
Tabit Genesis
, the ancestry of every human being in Orionis could be traced back to these cold metal walls. It had evolved with the population over the decades. Gone were the thick lead bulkheads and magnetic shield generators that once protected the mothership’s most precious cargo from interstellar radiation. In their place were six surgery rooms and ten times as many recovery rooms, the most this old structure could accommodate.

Everything and everyone inside was clad in sterile white – except his father, who wore the dark blue Orionis Navy uniform, with the vintage UNSEC cloak draped over his broad shoulders. He towered over everyone inside, and his shadow stretched across the deck to where Vadim was standing.

With shaking knees, Vadim managed to lift his foot. The nurses’ arms were close by as it planted. His legs had never borne so much weight. His back foot followed the front one. Vadim had taken his first step.

The room burst into applause, which made him feel sheepish.

‘Many more will follow,’ his father encouraged.

Vadim scanned the recovery room, hoping to see his mother and friend Atticus, another cancer patient he had bonded with in the last year. But neither was there, and suddenly the physical exertion overwhelmed him. The nurses reacted just in time.

His father relieved them, placing Vadim’s arm over his shoulder.

‘You’re getting stronger,’ he said. ‘Before long you’ll be running the torus faster than Navy cadets.’

Taking a silent cue, the surgeons left the two alone.

‘Where’s Atticus?’ Vadim asked, leaning as he took another step.

When last they spoke, his friend hadn’t looked well. The tumours were in remission, but the smallest effort left him weak and exhausted. On occasion, a nurse would force him to exercise, and those sessions were difficult to watch.

‘Atticus was sent home,’ his father said.

‘Home?’ Vadim said. ‘I thought he was still sick.’

‘He’s well enough to recover on his own,’ his father said. ‘There are other children who need his place.’

Vadim looked towards the recovery area; every bed was empty. Losing his concentration, he stumbled, grasping his father’s uniform.

‘Good,’ his father said, supporting him. ‘Falling is part of learning.’

Atticus always spoke in reverent, awestruck terms about Vadim’s father, and so did everyone else Vadim met. Franz Hedricks had been the captain of the
Tabit Genesis
when it left Earth. Not that the vessel needed a captain to make the journey – computer systems managed all of the mothership’s functions. But Captain Hedricks made all the crucial decisions once they arrived, from managing resources to establishing the provincial UNSEC government of the new colony. If technology was the enabler of human survival, it was the leadership of Franz Hedricks that guided mankind through its darkest hour.

Atticus’s father was a mechanical engineer for the privateer corporation Lantrek Shipyards. His older brother was learning his craft and preparing to take his father’s place. Atticus had not seen either in more than a year. But his mother looked after him tirelessly, and never left his side in the hospital.

She was beautiful, cheerful, and kind. Her smile reminded Vadim of his own mother, whom he rarely saw at all, especially since her last fight with his father.

Vadim thought of her while taking another tentative step.

‘I wish Mom could see this,’ he said. ‘Will she be visiting later?’

‘She’s away at present,’ his father said.

‘Do you know when she’ll return?’ Vadim persisted, trying a larger step.

‘Soon.’ His father dismissed the topic. ‘That’s it. Someday you’ll be stronger than the ones who were born healthy.’

Vadim straightened his posture, trying not to lean.

‘When is my next surgery?’ he asked.

‘Five days from now,’ his father said. ‘For the tumours in your brain.’

‘Will they put in any fake stuff?’

‘Augmentations? Yes. They’ll keep the cancer from returning.’

‘Will I need them for ever?’

‘Not to beat cancer, no. But perhaps for other things.’

Vadim stopped, exhausted from the effort.

‘Really?’ he asked, out of breath. ‘Like what?’

Sensing that Vadim was about to collapse, Franz Hedricks hoisted him up with both hands and placed him gently in a wheelchair.

‘Things to help you command a ship more powerful than the
Tabit Genesis
,’ Franz said, pushing him down the hallway.

Vadim flushed red.

‘You want me to command a ship?’

‘When the time is right,’ his father said. ‘There will be challenges. Competition. But you have the advantage.’

‘Why?’

‘Because you’re a Hedricks.’

His father wheeled him up to a window, beyond which the buildings of Tabit Prime curved high overhead. But his reflection captured him most; he saw a feeble, hideous, crippled boy with the towering shadow of his father standing behind him.

‘Atticus dreams of being a Navy captain someday,’ Vadim said. ‘I think he’d be much better at it than me.’

‘He can dream,’ his father said. ‘But that’s as far as he’ll get.’

‘Why?’

His father placed his hands on Vadim’s shoulders.

‘This metal shell once held the last of us,’ he said. ‘We lived in these walls for decades before branching out in the system.’

Vadim knew this story. It was the foundation of his father’s legend, how he reached Orionis only to find their new homeworld ruined by disaster.

‘What happened to Eileithyia?’ he asked.

‘A rogue celestial body, probably a gas giant with satellites still attached, passed near the Tabit star and disturbed the orbits of her planets,’ his father explained. ‘Some believe the object that struck Eileithyia was a captured moon from Eris or Hephaestus. The inferno below is all that remains. We set orbit here because the planet’s distance from the sun is ideal for agriculture and maintaining our notion of time.’

‘Atticus knows people who don’t believe we came from Earth,’ Vadim said. ‘Some think it doesn’t exist at all.’

‘Earth is real,’ his father said, with a hint of annoyance. ‘And it is lost. We learned about the invasion five years into the journey and just prior to discovering Eileithyia’s fate. So we began planning for a life very different from the one we trained for.’

Vadim had heard stories about those early days, but they were more about cruelty than perseverance.

‘Are the Raothri real?’

‘Yes,’ his father said. ‘And their existence shaped the priorities of this colony. To save our species, we needed to cherish, rebuild, repopulate and fortify. These principles guide Orionis today, and soon it will become your responsibility to enforce them.’

Vadim did not know how to answer. His father noted the puzzled look on his face.

‘You see, the crew chosen for the
Genesis
motherships were the brightest, strongest individuals from every race on Earth,’ his father said. ‘They are the precious origins we must cherish; and they are the foundation upon which we have rebuilt our civilisation. To preserve their legacy, we have the Heritage Act. To rebuild, repopulate and fortify our species, we have the
amniosynth
.’

The word rolled off his tongue with disdain. Vadim had heard stories about amniosynths. Everyone knew they were born from machines, and that many of them were monsters. They said a firstborn could tell if someone was an amniosynth just from the way they looked, or smelled. You knew they were
different
. And dangerous. It was no wonder they were called ‘ghosts’.

‘Vadim, let me make this perfectly clear: amniosynths are the working class of the human race,’ his father said. ‘They have built our ships, our stations, and soon, they will build the mothership that you command. If the day should come when we must face the Raothri, amniosynths will be on the front lines, and firstborns will be their generals. This is the way it must always be. Do you understand?’

‘Yes, Father,’ Vadim said. ‘I really do.’

‘Good,’ his father said. ‘Now, as to the whereabouts of Atticus, I had him removed from this facility.’

Vadim’s jaw dropped.

‘Removed? Why?’

‘Because this ward is for firstborns only,’ his father said.

Vadim shook his head.

‘What? Atticus isn’t …’ he started. ‘Are you saying that he’s an
amniosynth
?’

‘No fault of his own, no more than anyone is to blame for your illness,’ his father said. ‘But your fates could not be more different.’

Vadim could not process what was happening.

‘What’s going to happen to him?’ he asked. ‘I don’t know anyone else that—’

‘His guardians are wealthy,’ his father interrupted. ‘They chose to have him, so they can pay for his needs. But their money takes from those entitled to care by birthright, which is the law of Orionis.’

Vadim was despondent.

‘But he’s my
friend
…’

‘Which demonstrates precisely why his guardians are so selfish,’ his father said. ‘They believed that their Heritage privileges would apply to him. They now understand that no one is above the law. You won’t be spending any more time with him.’

Vadim felt a cold sensation in the pit of his stomach.

‘Why?’ he stammered. ‘I never said goodbye!’

His father resumed wheeling him down the hall.

‘Much depends on you,’ he said. ‘Now that you can walk, you’ll be spending less time here, more time training, and absolutely no time pursuing trivial interests.’

Vadim’s natural instinct was to turn to his mother. Hid father was a stern man whose nature was proud and imperious. Instances of compassion were rare. When Vadim had last seen his parents together, they had been shouting at one another. And he had never seen his father so enraged.

His mother had been threatening to tell Vadim something that his father didn’t want him to hear. He found himself wondering again what that was.

‘You are my son,’ his father continued. ‘Someday your shoulders will bear the weight of mankind’s survival. You will learn to make hard choices, beginning now with Atticus.’

‘He’s my only friend,’ Vadim murmured, eyes welling with tears.

‘Then triage is your first lesson of command,’ his father said. ‘In our world, Atticus is already dead. Focus your effort on the ones you can save.’

 

Present Day

 

Corinth Naval Yards, construction site of the
Archangel
and main base of the Orionis Navy, was the most secure block of space in human control. Nothing could exist within twenty thousand kilometres in any direction of this fortress without the Navy’s permission.

Grand Admiral Vadim Hedricks operated freely in this world. He travelled with neither announcement nor flight plan, anywhere he chose, and security parted before him everywhere he went. This was his domain, isolated from the political drama of Tabit Prime; his rule was not questioned.

Vadim piloted his shuttle from an
Archangel
hangar towards the torus station across the shipyard’s scaffolding. The structure was ‘black’, meaning it did not officially exist and was thus without formal name. Navy pilots called it ‘Corinth Able’; a navigational designation for ships permitted to land there, of which there were few. Like its parent facility, Able was completely isolated from contact with the rest of Orionis. Its occupants were exclusively government employees: labourers, engineers, and the crew assigned to the
Archangel
. Of this group, the latter was mostly firstborns, many with living highborn parents. The rest were privateers and ghosts who voluntarily traded their freedom for living conditions that were as comfortable as it was possible to attain anywhere in Orionis.

Vadim never conducted business here. He visited only to meditate. Descending in the elevator from the central hub, his eyes absorbed the majestic treetops rising from the inner torus to greet him. Most living humans had never seen a tree, let alone a forest. This place was among the best-kept secrets in Orionis, a bioengineering masterstroke. Ferns, pines and oaks filled his view, engulfing him in a green sea of tranquillity. When he stepped onto the hard, packed detritus, there were no guards to meet him – just the watery rush of a nearby stream, and a manufactured breeze gently pushing the leaves above.

Able had cost a fortune to build, and for the moment it belonged exclusively to him. Only highborn money could subsidise such a feat, a fact plainly evident to anyone permitted to see it. Walking among the trees, Vadim occasionally glanced up through gaps in the canopy at buildings where the workers who had toiled to build the
Archangel
lived.

Very soon, they would find themselves at the crossroads of history.

He breathed deeply, welcoming the damp, earthen air. But then his enhanced olfactory senses picked out the scent of a familiar nuisance lurking among the trees ahead.

‘Admiral Lao,’ Vadim called out.

The Hera OPCOM stepped from behind an oak, wearing a Navy flight jacket and a smug look, as usual.

‘What a coincidence, running into you,’ Vadim said. ‘What do you want?’

‘We need to discuss the Gryphon list,’ Lao said.

‘What of it?’ Vadim said, walking right past him.

‘The highborns disprove of the selections,’ Lao said, following.

‘Combat proficiency is agnostic to lineage,’ Vadim said. ‘The best pilots passed.’

‘They question whether Captain Lyons was objective in his assessment.’

‘A ghost has no reason to play favour to a pool of firstborns,’ Vadim snapped.

‘That may be,’ Lao said. ‘But the fact remains.’

‘What fact?’

‘That some of his selections are guilty of conduct unbecoming,’ Lao said. ‘Decanto has been seen worshipping.’

Vadim might have smiled, if the mere sight of Jang Lao didn’t inspire such venom.

Dominic Decanto was the son of firstborns Ferdinand Decanto and his wife Marianne Antiqua, who owned the largest investment bank in Orionis. According to Captain Lyons, Dominic was one of the more skilled pilots in the pool, possessing formidable mastery of the Gift. His highborn grandparents were both deceased.

The remaining highborns of Orionis wanted to dilute the influence of the deceased and ensure that their own lineage would be represented among the most prestigious positions on the
Archangel
.

‘Unless it affects his performance, I couldn’t care less,’ Vadim said.

‘Maybe you should, considering he worships the Red,’ Lao replied.

Orionis had no laws explicitly prohibiting people from worshipping. But freedom of religion had never been declared as an inherent right of Orionis citizenship. Most of the ancient religions had disappeared, although some highborns were trying to keep their faiths alive. But the Navy kept close surveillance on the shadowy cult that worshipped the Raothri. Some very alarming discoveries had emerged from this effort, including an alleged plot to detonate nuclear weapons in the hope of drawing the alien species to Orionis to complete their extermination of humans. The cultists aspired to invoke a ‘rapture’, in which their Raothri gods welcomed them into their kingdom.

Any suspected affiliation with the cult was managed with the urgency of terrorist investigation. But Vadim had good reason to doubt Lao’s claim.

‘It’s an ugly scenario,’ Lao said. ‘A reputable highborn name dragged through such filth.’

‘I hope for your sake you’re just the messenger,’ Vadim warned.

‘Oh, I am,’ Lao said, resuming his stroll. ‘Of course, witnesses are reluctant to come forward, given the family name. But we have more evidence that implicates two other Gryphon pilots as well.’

‘I’m sure the case against them is equally strong,’ Vadim said. ‘What do the highborns want?’

Admiral Lao’s smugness vanished.

‘Pilots Solomon, Adams, and Nkembeh all failed,’ he said. ‘Their parents were generous contributors to the Gryphon programme.’

‘I see,’ Vadim said. ‘What would they have me do?’

‘Fix it,’ Lao said.

‘These men are proud competitors,’ Vadim said. ‘How do you think they’ll feel about being unjustly promoted?’

Lao rolled his eyes.

‘Sooner or later they’ll all end up in a Gryphon, though they won’t have the distinction of being “first class”, so to speak.’

‘Or serving on the
Archangel
,’ Vadim said.

‘Yes, that as well,’ Lao acknowledged.

‘Your highborn masters are fortunate to have you in their service,’ Vadim said. ‘Before you waddle back to them, I want the status of our preparations to defend Orionis.’

‘Sir,’ Lao said, reddening. ‘The
Calypso
,
Vienna,
and
Melbourne
have all reported. The
Calypso
will remain close to Eris in case Ceti attempts an orbital bombardment. The
Vienna
and
Melbourne
will orbit the moons to herd any stragglers back towards the
Archangel
. The corporations have been asking questions but believe this is just an exercise. Though that isn’t likely to be the case for much longer.’

Vadim stopped walking.

‘The Chancellor has become aware of Ceti’s plans,’ Lao said, smugness again on full display, ‘and your attempt to hide them from her.’

‘Who?’ Vadim said.

‘Captain Lyons, naturally,’ Lao said. ‘Which brings me to the second reason why I’m here: Chancellor Vespa has summoned you to Tabit Prime. She means to question you before the senate.’

Vadim showed not a trace of emotion.

‘Captain Wyllym Lyons is to be arrested at once,’ he ordered.

Lao’s eyes widened.

‘On what charge?’

‘Treason, dereliction of duty, and homicidal negligence,’ Vadim said, resuming his stroll. ‘Have Tyrell do it. Always better to have a friend bring bad news.’

‘Yes, sir,’ Lao said.

‘What a convenience for the highborns,’ Vadim said. ‘Now I have reason to question his entire pilot selection, don’t I?’

‘We believe Captain Lyons acted on his own volition,’ Lao said. ‘But the whispers began once the Second Armoured received deployment orders.’

Vadim stopped dead in his tracks.

‘I beg your pardon?’

‘Admiral Larksson had them reassigned to the
Archangel
,’ Lao said.

They had reached the forest’s edge, and a pathway emerged from the packed soil. A wheeled drone scurried past their feet, collecting the pine cones strewn about. Just beyond the fence was a street lined with buildings. Some people were nearby, many looking directly at him.

‘Why did he do that?’ Vadim asked.

Lao straightened his posture.

‘Standard procedure,’ he said. ‘All of our capital assets have infantry units on board …’

‘He is as stupid as he is arrogant,’ Vadim growled. ‘If I see an armed soldier anywhere near that ship, I’ll have both your stars.’

‘Sir, wh—?’

‘Because he’ll incite a panic, you idiot,’ Vadim fumed. ‘Moving ships about is one thing. Mobilising armoured divisions is something else, and frightened civilians are the last thing we need. Tell him to rotate the division to another assignment.’

Lao began fumbling in his coat for his corelink.

‘I don’t know if that’s possible,’ he mumbled.

‘Then find a way to make it possible,’ Vadim snapped. ‘For the last time, that Ceti fleet won’t get near the
Archangel
. Stop acting like a frightened child and follow your orders, Admiral.’

‘Yes, sir,’ Lao said, reddening. ‘What shall I tell Chancellor Vespa?’

‘Nothing,’ Vadim said. ‘You will tell her absolutely nothing. Is that clear?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Now get out of my sight.’

Lao forced a quick salute and scurried away, hurrying towards the street. Moments later, a Navy courier arrived to pick him up. The crowd that had gathered went back to their business, some nodding their approval.

Everything, Vadim knew, was going precisely according to plan.

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