Authors: Chris Bunch; Allan Cole
"Don't be so quick to take offense," Snyder said. He was Menynder's cousin and, now, the de facto war chief of the Torks. "That's our problem in the Altaics. Every time we consider unified action, someone gets his nose out of joint and the whole thing collapses."
"Respect we must have," Hoatzin said. His voice was harsh, weary. His wife, Diatry, had died with Menynder and the others. It was now Hoatzin's task to lead the Bogazi hutches into battle. If there was to be one.
"Divide and conquer. Divide and conquer. That's always been the Emperor's way," Douw said. He was not being hypocritical. He had truly forgotten that Iskra had used those very words, though in a different—and Jochian—context.
"So, we fight,'' Tress said. "What chance do we have? Against the Eternal Emperor? His forces—"
"Who cares about the size of his forces?" Douw broke in. "The terrain is ours. The people are ours. If we all stand together… we must prevail."
"Emperor not so strong as he thinks," Hoatzin said. "Fight Tahn many years. He had victory, yes. But not so good a victory. Very long war. Soldiers, I think, are tired. Also, as general say, this not their land. What they fight for?"
"Still," Tress said, "the Emperor has never been defeated before."
"It happen once," the Bogazi said. "Must have. Why else the Emperor disappear? I think he flee privy council."
No one had ever put the Emperor's disappearance in that light before. It was wrong thinking. But it was the kind of wrong thinking that leads to treacherous conclusions.
"We must all join together," Douw said. "For the first time in our history, we must stand united in one cause. The cause is just. Our soldiers are brave. We only need the will."
There was a long silence around the table. A nesting bird fussed overhead.
Tress rose to his haunches. "I will speak to my pack mates," he said.
"What will you tell them?" Douw asked.
"That we fight. Together."
The sniper still made no sense to Cind.
"Dinnae fash, lass," Alex advised. "Th' shooter's peepers hae big crosses on 'em noo."
"By my father's frozen buttocks, you're thick sometimes."
"Now y're cussin' a' me in y'r heathen Bhor tongue. No respect f'r y'r puir gray mentor. Shame, shame on y' lass.''
"Come on, Alex. How did he get into the palace? Why was he able to pick the best window to shoot from? How come he had all the time in the world to set up shop, find out where Sten would be sitting, plus create a diversion for his escape?"
"We hae a team pokin' 'n a probin' on th' dread plotters, wee Cind."
"No hope, there," Cind said. "Too many suspects. Too many possible combinations. They've got better chance at winning the Imperial lottery."
" 'N y're believin't y' c'n do better?"
Cind thought a moment, then nodded. "Sure. Because they're looking in the wrong direction. The guy was a pro. From his choice of positions, to that old rifle he chose as a weapon, down to the hand-molded bullets."
"Ho-kay. Yon dead shooter wae a pro. This is noo unusual i' a sniper. Wha' else is buggin't y'?" Despite himself, Kilgour was getting interested. Cind was maybe onto something.
"Two things. The first is personal. He was trying to kill Sten. Clot, he almost did!"
Kilgour knew this, tsked, and waved for the key point.
"What really gets me," Cind said, "was that he was the
only
sniper. Dammit, that makes no sense. Under the circumstances, there should have been a whole host of rooftop shooters. Or none. Not unless somebody wanted to be extra sure of exactly who died.
"Fine. We know he didn't have to go for Iskra. The coroner's report tells us the attack on the stands got him. But the same attack missed Sten. So… Wham! He tries to take him out. Thanks to you and your chain-mail tailor, it didn't work. But… still…"
Alex was thoughtful. "Aye… Thae hae t'be more."
"More of what?" came Mahoney's voice. "What trouble are you two cooking up?''
They whirled to see that Ian had entered the room. Cind was used to big beings moving silently. Look at Alex. Look at her Bhor comrades. But Mahoney still astonished her. It wasn't that he was just, well, getting on in years… But his large Irish body and round friendly face didn't look as if they belonged to someone who could cat around corners and into rooms.
She started to snap to attention and acknowledge her superior officer. Mahoney waved her down. "Just tell me what you two are plotting."
Cind filled him in on the mysterious sniper. Mahoney listened closely, then shook his head. "It's an interesting mystery, I agree,'' he said. "And the man was certainly a pro. Which means he was hired. Which also likely means whoever hired him would have had a cutout. Therefore, if you find out who the sniper is,
that's
all you'll learn. He even might be an interesting fellow, in an evil sort of way. But, I'm afraid in this case,
x
plus
y
can only equal: who cares?"
"I don't think so, sir," Cind said. "Not this time. And it's not
a
feeling, but an instinct. Professional instinct. See, when I was hunting him, I did my clotting best to try thinking like him."
"Naturally," Mahoney said. "Go on." The former Mantis chief found himself getting drawn in.
"Pretty soon I
was
thinking like him. Even named him 'Cutie' in my mind."
"So, what makes 'Cutie' different?" Mahoney wanted to know.
Cind sighed. "It boils down to his knowledge of the terrain
and
his target. Which means, I think Cutie had been around the palace for a while. I think he checked out every square inch of it.
"I also think he would have done his damnedest to get to know his target. Otherwise he wouldn't have been comfortable. No. Cutie would've wanted to know Sten. Real well. Have an idea about his private habits. Know which way he would duck when the attack started."
"Aye… Quite logical, lass," Alex said. " 'N maybe… Jus' mayhap…"
Mahoney smacked the table. "Of course! He would have tried to visit the embassy. Or, at least attend some official functions that Sten would have been at."
"Exactly," Cind said. "Which means either Sten, or Alex, might recognize him."
She looked up at Mahoney. "I want Sten to go to the morgue, sir," she said. "To see if he can ID the remains."
"Tell him, not me," Ian said, quite sensibly.
Cind lifted an eyebrow. "He'll think it's a waste of time, sir," she said. "Maybe if you…" She let it dangle.
"I'll drag him along by the ear," Mahoney said. "Come on Alex. Let's go chat with the ambassador."
The basement morgue was white and cold, with antiseptically filtered air that didn't cover the occasional whiff of odor that put a rusty taste on the tongue.
"Hang on a sec," the human attendant said. "I ain't finished the lunch." He waved a thick sandwich in their faces. Tomato sauce seeped through the bread.
Cind was about ready to rip his face off. Even with Mahoney and Kilgour prodding, Sten had stubbornly refused to go. He was too busy, he said. Up-to-his-ears-in-drakh busy.
Remarkably, however, she now watched him step in. Instead of barking orders, he slipped a sheaf of credits out of his pocket and waved it under the attendant's nose.
"You could always bring your lunch along," he said.
The attendant snatched the bills, motioned with the sandwich-filled hand, and trotted off. They followed.
"It's the only way to get a bureaucrat's attention," Sten muttered to her. "Yelling just makes them stubborner—and stupider."
The attendant was moving along the drawered crypts. "Let's see… Where'd I put that Jon Doe?" He aimed a remote box, pressed the button, and a corpse drawer rolled out with a crash. Cold air blasted from the crypt.
The attendant peered into the drawer. A drip of red sauce fell onto the body. He wiped it up with a thumb, then licked his thumb clean.
"Nope. Wrong guy." He jabbed the button and the drawer slammed shut. The attendant laughed. "Sorry to stiff you with the stiff."
Nobody laughed at his joke. He shrugged. "We been pretty busy since the Khaqan died," he said. "Got more clients than we got time."
He laughed again. "My wife's happier'n pig in drakh. I been on golden overtime for months. One more big shootin' match and we can go buy that retirement cottage we been dreamin' about."
"How fortunate for you," Cind said.
The attendant caught her tone. "Wasn't me that put 'em here, lady," he said. "That's
your
job. You frag 'em, I bag 'em. That's my motto."
He aimed the remote at another crypt and pressed the button. The drawer slid out. He peered into it. "Yep. That's the Doe you laid down your dough for. Still dead, too. Ha-ha. Belly up to the bones, boys. And see your future." He snickered at Cind. "You too, lady."
But it was Mahoney who looked first. His reaction was quick. And it was massive.
"Mother of Mercy," he intoned. "It's Venloe!"
Sten was rocked back. "It can't be." He took his own look. "Damn! It's Venloe all right."
"Thae's noo possible," Alex said as he was confirming their view. "But i' bloody is!"
Cind didn't know what they were talking about at first. Then she remembered. Venloe was the man responsible for killing the Emperor!
"I thought he was—"
"In a maximum clottin' security prison,'' Sten finished for her. "Last I heard, he was so far under the ground they had to pipe in the sunlight."
"He must have escaped," Cind said.
"Another impossibility," Sten said. He looked again. "But… there he is."
"Top part a' him, anyways," Alex said.
Mahoney frowned at the waxen features staring up at him. He remembered the day he had brought Venloe to ground. And their subsequent conversation. Venloe was a being who could squirm out of just about any situation—even the Emperor's most secure prison.
"But—what was he doing here?" Cind asked. "Who could have—"
The rest of her question was cut off by Mahoney's emergency beeper. He whipped it from his belt and keyed in. "Mahoney, here."
The officer's voice rasped through the speaker. "You better get back here fast, sir. We just picked up a fleet heading for Jochi. They're confirmed unfriendlies, sir."
Mahoney was already running as he keyed out. The others sprinted after him.
Venloe lay cold in his drawer behind them, his mystery forgotten in the impending attack.
The morgue attendant—who had overheard the news—hustled off to make his wife an even happier woman.
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
A
dmiral Han Langsdorff had obviously either slept through or cut his class in Basic Military Mistakes some fifty years earlier.
He took the three Imperial battleship flotillas out to stop the Suzdal/Bogazi invasion fleets full of confidence and contempt. This would be a simple, if bloody, mission. First he expected these primitive beings—Langsdorff concealed it rather well, but he was a xenophobe—to freeze when confronted with the mailed fist of the Empire. After they recovered from their awe and terror, they might, at worst, form a battle line and attempt a frontal engagement.
Langsdorff dangled one cruiser squadron as bait and arranged his main battle force in a lopsided wing behind and to one side of the decoys.
The enemy would attempt to attack the Imperial force, and it would be simple for Langsdorff to turn their flank and have all of them enfilade.
It was not a complex plan. But simplicity was a virtue in battle. Besides, how could any consortium of oversize avians and canines stand against the Empire?
He certainly wasn't the first battle leader to hold his foe in utter contempt. History has made a very full list of occasions when the same thing happened:
The Hsiung-Nu long-term disaster in Turkestan. The Little Horn. Isandhlwana. Magersfontein. Suomussalmi. Dien Bien Phu. Saragossa. And on, and on, and on.
Even the name of his flagship might have helped. Langsdorff vaguely know that the
Repulse
, many incarnations before, had been a water-borne warship. He even vaguely remembered it was something called a battle cruiser. That was the sum of his knowledge.
He did not know that the
Repulse's
namesake—and an accompanying battleship—had sailed calmly into harm's way, confident that the mere presence of battleships would create paralytic terror in the enemy; that no one would hazard land-based aircraft over the open sea; and that certainly no one from the never-sufficiently-despised Mongoloid subspecies of the human race would
dare
confront these magnificent examples of Empire.
It took the Japanese land-based atmospheric bombers just under one hour to sink both warships.
Langsdorff scanned the screen. The longer-ranging Imperial sensors had picked up the Suzdal/Bogazi fleets. He snorted. These beings could do nothing right. If he were invading a cluster's home world, he would certainly have come up with more warships than he was looking at—even if he had to bolt missile tubes to every lunar ferry he could requisition.
Two hostile cruiser squadrons smashed at the Imperial cruisers in a frontal assault. Bare minutes later, two more Suzdal/Bogazi formations—these formed around tacship carriers and heavy cruisers—came down on the Imperials from above and below, like the closing jaws of a nutcracker.
The Imperial cruisers fought back—but were outgunned.
The battle was joined. Admiral Langsdorff ordered his battle-wagons in, to envelop the Suzdal/Bogazi left flank, just as the human Turks had attempted in the sea battle called Lepanto. But unlike the Ottomans, he kept none of his forces in reserve.
The Suzdal/Bogazi fleet commanders believed, just as Langsdorff did, that in battle simplest is best. Their tactics were taken from the cliché drawing of a minnow being swallowed by a slightly larger fish being swallowed by a shark being swallowed by a whale.
Because farther above and below the jaws that had closed on the Imperial cruisers were the real Suzdal/Bogazi heavies. Their admirals waited until Langsdorff's battleship formations were irretrievably committed.