Land of the Dead (30 page)

Read Land of the Dead Online

Authors: Thomas Harlan

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction

THE
WILFUL

 

The main hatch to Engineering cycled open with a pained groan and Hadeishi slipped through the opening. The machete was sheathed, the serrated knife tucked away in his tool belt. Two bandoliers of shipguns—in a wide variety of models—were slung over his shoulder. De Molay was leaning heavily on the console, her face tight with pain.

“You’re tracking blood on my deck, Engineer. But,” she gestured at her leg and side, “who am I to complain?”

Mitsuharu laid down the captured weapons and knelt beside her. His lips pursed, gentle fingers tightening the press-pak on her leg wound. The bandage was saturated and the status strip across the blue material had shaded to red as well. The old woman’s color had deteriorated in his absence.

“No geisha ever had a whiter brow than you,
Sencho
. I will carry you to the medbay.”

Moving the freighter’s captain would not improve her condition, but Hadeishi saw no other option. He was not a corpsman and there were no doctors to hand. He rigged a sling, eased her into the fabric, and then set off, his own weariness offset by a jolt of stimulant from his medband. Dead Khaid sprawled in the nonengineering corridors, their bodies chittering with shipbugs. As they moved slowly through, De Molay glanced at the tight, distorted faces, all gray with the mark of carbon monoxide poisoning. After the first dozen or so, she closed her eyes and leaned her head against his back.

“Don’t sleep yet,
Sencho
, you’ve landing papers to sign, manifests to review…” He hoped the medbay, if there was such a thing on the freighter, was equipped with an autobot of some kind.
Aren’t all ships as well equipped as a Fleet light cruiser?

The reality was far more spartan, but the medical bay—more properly a closet with a fold-out bed—did have a diagnostic and treatment module for trauma cases. Hadeishi broke open a shock-pak and applied the first IV tabs. De Molay shivered from head to toe, and then her eyes fluttered open. She gave a short breathy laugh when she saw the image of her mashed thigh on the overhead display. “Just a flesh wound,” she gasped.

Hadeishi peeled away the press-pak from her leg. Bright red blood oozed in tiny pinpoints from an enormous bruise easily the length of his forearm.

“Severe tissue damage. No broken bones,” an androgynous voice announced from the trauma unit. “Apply anti-inflammatory agents as needed. Apply fresh press-pak. Leave on forty-eight hours. Set patient medband to dispense pain control agents as needed. Bed rest is recommended to speed recovery.”

De Molay made a face at Mitsuharu. “Give me those press-paks. Where’s the Bulldog?”

Hadeishi fished out the Webley and checked the magazine before handing the automatic over. “Full up,
Sencho
. But I think we’ve finished off the other gunslingers.”

De Molay shot him a pained glare. “You’re a clever engineer with the toxic air, but I’ll keep my old Humbert handy. He is very reliable. Now”—she paused, clenching her teeth and waiting for the medband to kick in—“I’m already a patient. I can be my own corpsman. You—you’re all the command crew we have.”

Hadeishi nodded, rummaging through the trauma station. He laid out the necessary medpacks, made sure her comm bracelet was responding and the overhead v-display toggled to show shipnet. “You’re the only backup I have,
Sencho-sana
.”

“So I’m not permitted to die, then? I’ll consider the suggestion.”

*   *   *

 

Stepping around the bodies fallen at the entryway to the bridge, Mitsuharu entered gingerly—a Khaid shipgun cradled in his hands, safety off—and checked all the corners before turning his attention to the command station.

The Khaid officer was still slumped against the console. Hadeishi grunted with effort, heaving the body onto the floor with a clatter. Then he cleared the session on the boards—the Khaid had loaded some kind of interpreter to allow them to enter transit coordinates—and authorized himself with De Molay’s codes.

Much better,
he thought, seeing a whole series of v-panes unfold, all seeming very modern and closely modeled on the standard Fleet executive interface.
I do believe this ship has illegal software loaded. Excellent.

For a moment he considered drilling into the ship’s manifest and construction logs, looking to see who—exactly—had updated the freighter. But then Hadeishi brushed those panes aside. His suspicions could wait, for there was far more interesting business afoot.

He shut off the transit alarm and then ran through a postgradient checklist. The hyperspace coil was still in operation, though now quiescent, and maneuver drives were primed and idling. Exterior cameras showed the
Wilful
drifting in a region of fantastically colored dust and gas plumes. As the little ship’s passive sensors woke one by one, they revealed distant shoals of wreckage, multiple radiation sources, shattered ships, and the far-off wink of distress beacons. His hand lingered over a set of controls which would initiate an active scan, but then he passed on, unfolding up a comm channel to the medical closet.

“We’ve come to the right place,” Hadeishi said, when De Molay’s face appeared. “Hachiman has passed this way with scythe and spear. I’m picking up both Khaid and Imperial transmissions, so the outcome is still in doubt.”

The
Wilful
crept forward through the murk, emissions signature as low as Mitsuharu could manage with his rough understanding of the freighter’s capabilities.

“Where are you taking us?” De Molay asked, watching his face intently through the monitor. Now that she was lying down and had proper meds, her color was improving rapidly. The trauma unit had also dispensed a drinking tube of complex carbohydrate-based rehydration fluid. This substance was a lambent green, but the old woman didn’t seem to mind the taste.

“There are Imperial evac-pods within range,” Hadeishi answered, eyes flitting from screen to screen. “And this ship needs a crew to be useful.”

De Molay did not respond immediately, though Hadeishi could hear her breathing tensely as he double-checked the feed from the scanners. Their immediate area
seemed
to be clear of combat—he couldn’t pick up any missile drive plumes, anion beam spikes, or the gravity dimples of mainline starships.
But then, the sensor suite on this barge is … limited.
His fingers tapped briskly on the console.

“You should take us out of here, back into hyperspace—” De Molay was frowning.

“Not while we can rescue some of these men.” Mitsuharu felt strange—alive again, with the v-panes of a starship under his fingers. He felt the hum of the engines through the deck, the tickle of a comm implant snug in his ear canal. But he had a sensation of riding in emptiness, alone on a deserted road, astride a strange horse with no known companions.
Where is the chatter of my crew? Where is Susan’s slim, fierce shape at the secondary console? There are only ghosts.

“We’re not equipped to fight, Engineer. This is not an IMN ship of war!”

“I know.” Hadeishi settled himself in the command chair, feeling the cracked leather dig at his skin. Even the shape of the civilian shockchair was odd and unfamiliar. The console was too far away for his taste, and could not be adjusted. There was no threatwell, or even a holotank to give him a working view of the field of battle!

Dishes rattled in the kitchen of the little noodle shop. Musashi was hungry—starved would be a better word, he thought—and was busy shoveling udon into his mouth, feeling the first hot rush of chicken broth like the wind from Nirvana, with a pair of chopsticks. The yakuza, four of them, entered with unusual swiftness, their faces blank as N
ō
gaku masks, and before even he could react, their leader had snatched up his
bokut
ō
and hurled the wooden blade away, out into the night-shrouded street.

“This is the one,” the gangster barked, his own katana rasping from a cheap bamboo sheath. His arms bulged with muscle, gorgeously colored tattoos peeking from beneath both kimono sleeves.

Musashi looked up, expressing dumb astonishment and curled his left hand around the bowl of soup. “The one, what?”

“Haiiiii!” The other three yakuza drew their swords with a great flourish, kicking mats and tables aside.

Musashi turned slowly to face them, rising with the bowl in one hand, the chopsticks between his middle fingers in the other. “Pardon?”

But the scanner display was dusted with the signatures of evac-capsules. Mitsuharu lifted his hand towards the screen: “We’re the only chance they have to escape a slow agonizing death, or slavery. We’ll save as many as we can, before we have to run.”

“I gather Command has spoken,” De Molay replied, her expression pinched.

“You bear a simple cross of silver at your breast,
Sencho
. Would you leave all these travelers abandoned in the dark, prey to our enemies? Where is your charity then?”

The old woman did not reply, her eyes narrowing to tight slits.

Mitsuharu shook his head. “I cannot abandon them,
kyo
. We go forward.”

THE
NANIWA

 

“The fool! He should swing back to meet us.”

In her executive ’well, Susan watched the
Tlemitl
barrel towards the Pinhole, closely followed by a phalanx of Khaid battleships, the entire conglomeration ablaze with the snap of beam-weapons, streaking missiles, and the constant stuttering flare of fusion detonations. The massive radiation signature from the battle was threatening to wash out passive scans and hide the whole affray from view.

“They’re not going to make it,” she hissed to herself. Dragging her attention away from the doomed flagship, Kosh
ō
checked in with the repair crew cutting away the door to cabin nine on deck six. A medical team was lifting the body of the Swedish woman and the old
nauallis
out on stretchers. Susan tapped her earbug, jaw clenched. “Are either of them alive?”

In the v-pane, the
gun-i
holding a medpack to the old Méxica’s chest nodded,
Yes
.

Anderssen raised her head feebly, a bronze-colored comp clasped tight to her chest. “Captain, you’ve … got to slow the ship.…” She coughed as the medical team loaded the stretcher onto a grav-cart. “The outer surface of the Barrier shifts and moves, billowing like a sail … or a permeable membrane … it’s not stable. All of the Mirror data is outdated, too old to use.”

“Get her to medical,” Kosh
ō
snapped, “stabilized and jacked into shipnet with her comp!”

What next?
she wondered, turning back to the threatwell. “Pucatli! Get me
someone
on the flagship—I don’t care who, the kitchen staff supervisor will do!”

*   *   *

 

Three hundred thousand kilometers ahead, the
Tlemitl
swerved into the confines of the Pinhole. Susan could see they were following the pathway divined by the Mirror probes. But the newer information the Swedish woman had loaded into the
Naniwa
’s nav system clearly showed one of the veils had begun to occlude the opening. The phalanx of Khaid battleships and lighter elements charged in directly behind the crippled dreadnaught and catastrophe ensued.

Kosh
ō
couldn’t help but grin ferally as first one and then a dozen of the enemy ships interpenetrated with the invisible Barrier—a rippling string of icons winked out abruptly on her ’well plot. Moments later, the camera views on the side panels studded with the blue-white flare of ships disintegrating. A storm of chatter erupted on a channel Pucatli had picked out of the storm of electromagnetic noise. Susan couldn’t understand the Khaid traffic—the message bursts were encrypted and in a tongue foreign to her—but the cadence of the staticky noise said nothing but
panic
.

For another minute the
Tlemitl
dodged and weaved, exercising her maneuver engines to the utmost, following a corkscrew path known only to—and then the dreadnaught brushed against one of the invisible threads. The battle-shields, which were mostly active at that moment, did
nothing
to prevent nearly a third of the behemoth from being cloven away in one dumbfounding instant.

At this distance, on the cameras, there was nothing to see but a jagged smear of light where the hull rupture was decompressing explosively.

On the
Naniwa
’s bridge, however, there was loud confusion. Konev and Holloway, who had access to enhanced telemetry feeds from the battle-cruiser’s sensors, shouted aloud in alarm. Pucatli and the others turned, staring at Kosh
ō
in raw, open fear. The threatwell updated, showing the enemy ships in disarray.

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