Read Deathstalker Rebellion Online

Authors: Simon R. Green

Deathstalker Rebellion (19 page)

“You never liked him, Adrienne, even if he was your husband. And you really haven’t got anything else to bargain with that anyone wants. You don’t have to do anything difficult. Just contact Finlay and persuade him to emerge from the underground at an agreed time and place, so we can be waiting for him. We’ll take him away, and you can return to society, as though nothing had ever happened.”

“You don’t have that much influence.”

“I will have once I have Finlay.”

“What makes him so important?”

“You don’t need to know, dear.”

“What will happen to him?”

“What do you care? I’d suggest you make good use of this offer while it still stands. Finlay is currently very hot, and a lot of people want him. He’s just killed Lord William St. John and has made a rather amazing escape.”

“Wait a minute,” said Adrienne. “Hold everything. Fin-lay’s killed someone?”

“Yes. I wouldn’t have believed it myself if I hadn’t seen the holo recordings. He’s really quite an excellent swordsman. I can only assume he’s been taking lessons in the underground. But not to worry. I’ll have more than enough men standing by to handle him.”

“St. John’s dead? The Empress’s own personal attack dog?” Adrienne shrugged. “Can’t say I ever liked the man. Thought he was God’s gift to women, and he had clammy hands. I had to hit him around the ear with a candlestick once.”

“That’s as may be, Adrienne. Will you help us, or do I have to apply a little pressure? You have two very lovely children. Quite charming. Be a shame if anything were to happen to them.”

“You touch my babies, and I’ll rip your balls off with my bare hands,” said Adrienne. Gregor continued as though she hadn’t spoken.

“Robert isn’t the only one with friends in the military. Think about it. And call me when you’ve made your decision. Don’t take too long. If all else fails, I might decide to do terrible things to you, in the hope Finlay would come to rescue you. Rather a distant hope, I’ll admit, but we could
do all kinds of interesting and inventive things to you while we were waiting for your husband to show up.”

“I’d smack you right in the mouth, Shreck, if I wasn’t afraid of catching something disgusting from you,” said Adrienne in a voice so cold she barely recognized it. “Now, remove your loathsome presence from my viewscreen. My neighbors will think I’ve got a toilet overflowing in here. If I change my mind, I’ll contact you. But don’t hold your breath.”

Gregor Shreck just laughed. Adrienne hit the off switch, and a sudden echoing silence filled the room. She sniffed and stretched slowly to get the tensions out of her body. She must be losing her touch. She should have been able to handle a creep like the Shreck. There was a time she could goad a man into an impotent homicidal fury with just a few well-placed barbs. But this time Gregor held all the major cards, and he knew it. Worst of all, she was considering his offer. Finlay had never meant much to her, and she couldn’t risk anything happening to her children. Robert had sworn he’d protect them, but when all was said and done, he was only a junior officer in the fleet. And if Finlay really was going around killing people … She bit her lip. If she allied herself with the Shreck, and Robert found out … Robert had been due to marry the Shreck’s niece, Letitia, in an arranged marriage. They’d almost completed their wedding vows when Gregor killed her, rather than have her dishonor him. He’d strangled her with his bare hands while the Campbells held Robert back. He’d never forgiven the Shreck for that.

Adrienne’s scowl deepened, if she was going to do this, Robert must never know. Which meant she’d have to shake off the people Robert had protecting her, before she could start making arrangements to contact the underground. She’d be putting herself at risk. Gregor wouldn’t be the only one to think of using her as bait in a trap to catch Finlay. Not that he’d come anyway, the bastard. Finlay had never made any secret of his feelings, or rather lack of them, for her. They had absolutely nothing in common except the children, and on the few occasions they absolutely had to meet, they could hardly exchange a dozen words without sniping at each other. After a dozen words they tended to escalate rapidly to shouting invectives and throwing things.

It had been an arranged marriage, of course. Neither of them had had any say in the matter. Personally, she’d always
thought Finlay was mentally disturbed, with his obsession over clothes and fashions, and his recent exploits only seemed to confirm that. But would he really stand by and do nothing while his wife was tortured to death? Would she, if the situation was reversed? Well, yes, probably. Adrienne had always known she was a hard bitch at heart. But Finlay had put his own life at risk to save hers when she was mortally wounded during the Wolfe hostile takeover. If he hadn’t got her to the regeneration machine in time, she would have died. She could still feel the sword punching through her belly and out her back. Sometimes she dreamed about lying helpless on the gravity sled’s desk, awash in her own blood, while Finlay strove desperately to shake off the pursuing Wolfe craft. She woke drenched in sweat and couldn’t sleep again until the morning brought comforting light. Finlay had saved her life, when he didn’t have to. But typical of the man, he had to do it in a way that insulted and humiliated her.

She hadn’t known about Evangeline Shreck then. She’d known there was someone in his life, some other woman who mattered to him in a way she never had. But she hadn’t known who till she woke up in the regeneration machine in Evangeline’s apartment in Tower Shreck. Robert and his people were standing guard over her, but Finlay and Evangeline were long gone. Robert had got her to safety. Evangeline finally resurfaced, free of guilt or any connection to Finlay, and returned to her apartment. But Adrienne had never found the courage to call her.

Adrienne sighed and looked around her at her cramped quarters. It had started out life as Robert’s bachelor pad, somewhere for him to crash and burn on his infrequent leaves, and hadn’t improved since. It might almost be worth making a deal with Gregor, just to get out of this dump. She’d had Jacuzzis that were bigger. And it was strictly masculine territory, with no frills or fancies or real comforts. She itched to transform the place according to her tastes. But one, she didn’t have the money, and two, Robert would have a fit. He actually liked it this way. Men. Probably washed his underwear in the hand basin, and clipped his toenails in the bidet. He let her have what money he could, but it wasn’t much. Clan Wolfe now possessed all the old Campbell assets, bad cess to the bastards. She’d been selling what personal jewelry she’d been wearing on the day, piece
by piece, to keep her head above water, but it was nearly all gone now. She hadn’t got much for them. She was limited in where she could go. Old friends didn’t want to know her, and businesses were afraid to make enemies of those in society who openly gloated over Adrienne’s downfall. It appeared her big mouth had offended practically everyone at one time or another. Adrienne sniffed. Hell with them if they couldn’t take a joke.

If she were to work with the Shreck and betray Finlay, he’d probably let her name her own price. She could be rich again and part of society and laugh in the faces of all those who’d ostracized her …

There was a knock at the door, and she spun around sharply, face flushed as though she’d been caught doing something wrong. As though whoever it was had known what she was thinking, she made herself breathe steadily and glared at the door. Two callers in one day. She was getting popular. She forced her voice to be calm even as she asked who it was, and then tensed again as Robert Campbell identified himself. He’d made it clear right from the beginning that he wouldn’t be visiting her often. There was a limit to how much he could be seen helping her. He had his career to think of. And his own safety. Adrienne understood. If he was here now, it must be important. She flushed again. He couldn’t know about the Shreck’s offer already. He couldn’t. She made herself open the door, and Robert came breezing in, wearing full fleet uniform with a kit bag over his shoulder. He nodded and smiled at her, dropped the kit bag on the floor, and looked around his apartment.

“Just a flying visit, I’m afraid, Adrienne. My orders came through this morning. I’ve been posted to one of the new E-class ships, the
Endurance.
Massive bloody craft, with twice the usual weaponry, as well as the new stardrive. She takes off tomorrow, two weeks of tests and shakedowns, and then we’re off to patrol the Rim for six months. Which means not only will I not be able to protect you anymore, but the fleet is going to want these quarters back for someone else. Sorry to spring this on you, but I wasn’t given any warning myself. I’ve got some friends here in the city who’ll try and look out for you, but I can’t speak for their loyalty if anyone starts putting the pressure on.”

“I understand,” said Adrienne, and she did. The Shrecks’ contacts in the military were already at work, arranging
things. Removing her options one by one till she had no one left to turn to but Gregor Shreck.

“There is someone who might be prepared to help you,” said Robert. “But you’re really not going to like it. I’ve contacted Evangeline Shreck. She was, and is, Finlay’s love, but she’s a good sort, for a Shreck. She’ll do anything for Finlay. Even protect you. Go and see her, Addie. You might find you have more in common than you think. Now, I’ve got to go. They’re expecting me on the
Endurance.
I’ll try and keep in touch. Good-bye. Good luck.”

He grabbed up his kit bag, pecked her quickly on the cheek, and left, closing the door quietly behind him. Adrienne scowled, her hands clenched into fists at her sides. She’d always known her residence here was only temporary, but it still came as something of a shock to be thrown to the sharks so suddenly. The question was, did Evangeline know about her father’s plans for Finlay? Was she, perhaps unwittingly, a part of them? If so and Adrienne warned her, that would put Evangeline in her debt. Adrienne nodded, smiling coldly. She always felt more comfortable when dealing with people from a position of power. She would go and see Evangeline Shreck. If only so she could hear about a side of Finlay she’d never known herself.

Evangeline Shreck stood before the single great window in her apartment in Tower Shreck, looking out at the world beyond, a prisoner in her own home. The door wasn’t locked, of course. Nothing as obvious as that. But if she were to try and leave the tower without getting her father’s permission first, polite guards would calmly but firmly insist that she return to her apartment while they waited for instructions from the Shreck. And they’d walk back with her, just to make sure she didn’t get lost along the way. The Shreck wanted her going outside as little as possible. Officially, he was concerned that the Empress might try and seize her, to become one of her maids—a mentally conditioned slave with no will of her own. Lionstone had already done it once with the Shreck’s niece. No one had done anything. No one had said anything. No one dared, not even the Shreck.

But mostly Gregor was concerned that Evangeline would be revealed as a clone, in these very anti-clone days. If it were ever revealed that the Shreck had cloned his daughter
after she died suddenly, and then passed the clone off as the real thing, there would be outrage in the Court and in society. Being replaced by a clone of oneself was an aristocrat’s worst nightmare. Gregor would be punished and ostracized, and the clone Evangeline would be destroyed—mostly for the crime of having fooled them all for so long.

But even that wasn’t the whole truth. The Shreck kept her a prisoner because he could. He wanted to love, cherish, and own her completely, as he had his real daughter. For the Shreck had loved his daughter not as a father, but as a lover. Which might have been why he killed her. Evangeline didn’t know the true story. The Shreck insisted it had been an accident, but he liked to drop hints, now and again, that no one ever defied him and lived to boast of it. Evangeline kept her head bowed and did as she was bid. For though she hated her father and would have killed him in a moment if she could, she had no choice. By playing the loving, dutiful daughter, she bought the Shreck’s protection for her true love Finlay’s wife and children, as she had promised Finlay she would. He never knew the price she paid. He must never know, or he would come storming up out of the underground to take a terrible revenge, not caring if he died as a result. Evangeline cared, so she never told him. She loved him so much she played a role that was destroying her, and never once allowed herself to think how unfair that was.

Evangeline was cracking up, though she hadn’t realized that yet. She had too many commitments to too many people. To her father for his protection. To Finlay and his family for his love. To the clone and esper underground for the Cause. They all wanted something from her, and sometimes their needs clashed. It was getting harder to keep them separated. Different lies for different people, until the truth got lost in the smoke. She still loved Finlay with all her heart, though she saw him less and less. The underground kept him busy with missions he never explained to her. She had been the underground’s contact with the Court and society, but since she got out so rarely now, she was of less and less use to them. She couldn’t explain. They might tell Finlay. And, of course, she couldn’t ever tell her father about Finlay or the underground. He’d kill her for what she’d done—for defying him, for daring to love someone else.

After all, he could always clone another Evangeline. He’d done it before.

And so she walked up and down in her apartment, thinking furiously, beating at the shifting walls of her various personas, getting nowhere, going quietly insane. She hardly opened her mouth to anyone, for fear of saying the wrong thing to the wrong person. And always worried that the next person at her door would be from security, with a warrant to drag her away to the interrogation cells. They’d make her talk. Everyone depended on her silence—lover, father, and Cause—and she felt less and less dependable with every day that passed. So far she had kept herself from cracking up through sheer force of will. Partly, because of her love for Finlay, and partly, because of all those who would suffer if she was weak. If she allowed herself to be weak.

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