Read Rebellion Online

Authors: William H. Keith

Rebellion (39 page)

Lara Anders cut into the network. “I’m reading green on all conventional thruster and maneuvering systems. We’re go for release.”

“Roger on that.” Koenig added. “Looks like ship’s systems have taken care of all leakage. ATM is steady at point nine-eight bar.”

“Power coming up in the fusor packs,” Onkar Tewari, an Earth-born Hindi, announced. “Cryo-H are secure and at full pressure.”

Good. The collision had not vented their reaction mass into space.

“We’ve got about a platoon of marines coming at the front
door.” Anatol Karposci announced over the link network. “Plasma guns and rocket launchers. I think they mean business.”

“Seal them off.”

“Forward hatch is sealed. Boarding tube is released.”

“I have the ship’s AI on line,” Simone reported. “I can’t get at the codes for nuclear launch or the K-T drive, but we’re jacked in on everything else.”

“Easy feed.” Dev said. He’d not expected to get the nukes. Those things were jealously guarded. And they wouldn’t be needing to go faster than light. “Get to work on the mag grapples.”

“Yes, sir.”

That would be the tricky part. The magnetic grapples were not controlled from the ship but through the docking AI of Shippurport Approach Control. Simone would have to hack her way into the synchorbital facility’s computer network to get them to release the ship.

“Captain? We have a demand from port security that we surrender and open the forward docking hatch.”

Dev laughed. “Tell them we need Lord-high Omigato’s permission for that. That’ll keep ’em guessing.”

He wondered if Omigato was still aboard the
Tokitukaze.
He doubted it. The Imperial
daihyo
would probably have gone where the action was as things broke loose on Eridu, buried somewhere in HEMILCOM’s orbital fortress.

“Captain, this is Simone. I can’t access the magnetic grapples—”

“Damn!”

“—but I
can
trigger the emergency explosive release.”

“Outstanding! All stations! Report readiness for space.”

“Engineering is go. Captain. Power up, thrusters standing by. You have maneuvering at your command.”

“Weapons go. We’re still tracking those bandits, now at one hundred one kay and closing.”

“Maneuvering go.”

“Affirmative. Okay, Simone. Do it. Now!”

An electrical signal flashed to explosive charges mounted at the base of each docking grapple. Soundlessly in vacuum, but with a dull, hollow thud that echoed through the passageways of the
Tokitukaze,
the charges detonated, releasing the destroyer’s prow.

With nothing holding the ship, the centrifugal force of the synchorbital eased the
Tokitukaze
backward at a velocity of just over one meter per second. Koenig cut in the bow thrusters a moment later, and then they were falling free, clear of Shippurport and dropping into the night.

Nearly three hours had passed since the wild fight in the main Babel dome. After securing the Towerdown, the sky-el base, and the communications center, Katya had led the remainder of the rebel force out through the main airlock and onto the city plain.

They were standing on a broad hill almost a kilometer south of the Towerdown dome, a ridge named Raeder’s Hill after Eridu’s first governor. The view was spectacular, one hundred meters above a violet sea. The jungle circled in the distance, tangled and impenetrable save for the clear-cut slashes where monorails and roadways passed. At Katya’s back, the sky-el speared the zenith, dwindling away overhead to a vanishing point lost somewhere in the depths of that green-blue sky.

Other rebel forces had been arriving all morning—from Gulfport, from Emden, from other outposts scattered across the equatorial zone, and even by monorail from as far away as Winchester and Boreal. Including the former Hegemony Guard warstriders that had come over to the rebel side, the Confederacy forces could muster thirty-three warstriders, plus something like eight hundred men with full combat armor, able to move and fight outside the city domes. Another two thousand, plus the thousands more of civilians who didn’t even possess partial armor, waited inside the Babel domes, watching the overture to the coming battle.

“That was well done, Katya,” a familiar voice said in her mind.

“General Sinclair! Where are you?”

An RS-64D Warlord ten meters in front of her turned and lightly raised its left arm. “Right here.”

“But… you’re not supposed—”

“Not supposed to risk my life?”

“The Network can’t afford to lose you, sir.”

“At this point, Katya, my living or dying won’t make that much difference one way or the other. My analogue has been safely downloaded, just in case, and it knows all my contacts and codes. But now that the Declaration has been published, I’m just another striderjack.”

“The Network needs a leader, General.”

“The Confederation has all the leaders it will need. Right now, it needs men and women who aren’t afraid to get their hands dirty. Right?”

Katya hesitated. “Yes, sir.”

He shifted to the general command frequency. “Right. Alessandro! I’d like you on the right flank. Keeping an eye on the monorail.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Quillier and Sung, you’re with me on the center. Creighton, you’re on the left. Foot commanders, get your people well dispersed and well dug in. We’re going to be counting on them to even up the odds a bit.”

As Sinclair continued to rattle off orders, Katya turned her attention to the forest treeline, seven hundred meters to the south. A number of Hegemony Guard warstriders were already in sight at the bottom of the hill, secure in the knowledge that the rebels wouldn’t start firing at them randomly. Ammunition, rockets and explosive shells, was too tight to waste it. She was tempted to try probing those ranks with her laser, but resisted the urge. All it would do would be to start a firefight now, before the leggers were in place. Well, if they were willing to stand around in the open waiting for the party to start, so was she. The cocky bastards even had banners up, she saw. Two stylized yellow stars and a centaur on a dark green background: the Chiron Centurians. She wondered if any of the people over there were New American Mech Cavs or 4th Terran Rangers, and what it would be like fighting someone in your own unit.

You ought to know, girl,
she told yourself.
Just like Dev, all over again. The only difference is that this time you’re trying to kill him before he kills you.

She was suddenly very glad that Dev had joined the rebellion.

With brief, crisp orders, she deployed the striders in her squad, making sure they had at least fifty meters spacing between them and that their fields of fire overlapped. Chung. Hagan, and Jacobsen took up positions in a rough diamond pattern with her; Darcy, with his recon warstrider, went on the far right flank.

She glanced again into the sky. Where was the enemy’s air? The rebels had a few ascraft—too few to challenge the government’s air superiority. She’d expected them to use that advantage… one reason that she’d argued during the initial planning sessions that if they had to defend Babel, they’d be better off doing it inside the domes. She’d been overruled by Sinclair, however. They couldn’t save Babel’s population by killing them in the fallout from a strider-to-strider armored clash. Katya understood that, though she felt as though they were giving up one of their very few military advantages, the defensive cover provided by the domed structures. Out here on the open hilltop, they still had the advantage of position, but not of cover.

Sinclair had also overruled her on the suggestion that they try to summon the Xenophobes, using the code they’d imprinted on Katya’s comel during her contact with the Self. “Katya,” he’d said, “we need allies we can
trust!”

And she’d not been able to press the point.

Explosions, many of them, set deep in the rock and repeating quickly,
the comel had seemed to whisper in her mind after her return from the Xenophobe cavern.
Powerful magnetic fields, masses of pure elements grouped together. It will be felt. It is how Self tastes the interface, and what it hungers for. Self will come.…

Dev had laughed when she’d told him. “How about that?” he’d said when he could breathe again. “Here we are stomping around on the surface of a planet in our warstriders, twenty, maybe forty tons of duralloy and steel and ‘pure elements.’ with magnetic fields in our skimmers and ascraft, explosions, noise…”

He’d laughed again. “Don’t you see? Every time we used to gather all our striders together to go hunt for the Xenos, we were saying, ‘Hey, guys! Dinnertime! Come and get it!’ ”

It wasn’t as simple as that, of course. She thought that the “explosions, set deep in the rock and repeating quickly” ruled out the possibility that the Xenophobes would simply pop up in the middle of a battle. The sense she’d received from the comel had been of a deliberate signal, something that the Xenophobe would definitely hear in its deep lair, and respond to.

But Sinclair refused to even consider using the Xenophobes. “Too dangerous,” he’d said, “especially this close to the sky-el. We’d be inviting disaster, bringing those things up on the surface anywhere near Babel.”

Katya had understood, and in a way she’d been relieved. Ever since her return to the light of the surface, she’d tried not to think about those dark, close moments in the Xenophobe’s belly, and she was not eager to see those crawling horrors again. Sinclair might be thinking of Babel and the space elevator, but she didn’t want to bring them in because, she realized now, she was afraid for her own sanity.

One by one, the legger squads called in, reporting that they were ready. Robot guntowers had been deployed, trenches dug by constructors. Unfortunately, they’d not had time to grow any defensive walls.

In fact, they were still deploying the last of the troops when someone shouted over the general frequency. “Look there! More of the bastards!”

It was true. She’d counted five light Guard warstriders before, a single squad of LaG-17s and Ares-12s, clearly either a reconnaissance unit or a cavalry screen for troop movements farther back in the woods. Now she could see other light striders moving out from the trees, deploying in a long line of machines made hazy by the shimmer of nanoflage. Behind them, bigger, more powerful machines were lumbering from the woods, smashing their way clear of mushroom trees and thick foliage.

There were Ghostriders and Scoutstriders, of course, but she also saw the flat, twin-horned torsos of KR-9 Mantas, forty-two-ton medium assault striders with twin 100-MW lasers, missile packs, and automatic cannons. Behind them came four RS-64D Warlords, at least one Qu-19E Calliopede, and the ponderous, fifty-four-ton bulk of a Kr-200 Battlewraith. Skimmers spilled from among the trees, each carrying at least a squad of armored infantry.

The sight was shocking… and terrifying. Katya was counting striders as quickly as she could and had reached thirty-eight when Sinclair ordered all units to arm weapons and prepare to fire. The rebel defenders were outnumbered… and where their heaviest striders were three Warlords and four creaking Devastators, the enemy had at least twelve striders massing more than forty tons each.

Unless Sinclair decided to lift his restriction on Xenos or on retreats into the city, it was going to be a short fight, and a lopsided one.

A missile arced across the rebel lines, trailing smoke, striking behind the lines with a flash and a loud bang. With a roar like thunder, the government line advanced.

And Katya was fighting for her life.

*    *    *

His first crisis of command had been the problem of an unknown number of Imperials still loose aboard the
Tokitukaze,
men isolated in the aft part of the ship and more than able to mount an attack on Dev’s handful of boarders, or worse, to tinker with the ship’s drives or power source and leave the destroyer helplessly adrift.

The problem had been easy enough to solve. Seconds after dropping clear of Shippurport, he’d passed a warning to those of his crew not safely strapped into jacking tubes, giving them a chance to find acceleration couches, then applied four Gs of acceleration for over a minute. Anyone standing when the drives had kicked in would be on the deck now, probably with broken bones. Dev was gambling that anyone smart enough to find acceleration couches after that was smart enough to stay there. Periodically, he kicked in a short burst, just to keep his unwanted passengers aft cautious.

Now, Dev was looking back at Eridu, distant enough that Babylon and the space elevator were invisible, the world a peaceful-looking orb of brightly colored splendor. What was happening back there, he wondered? What was happening to Katya? He wished he could have stayed with her.

He sensed that his relationship with Katya had changed, though he still loved her. She’d drifted away from him in the past few months… or had he drifted from her? Hard to tell. Perhaps, when this fight was over, they could explore growing closer once more. He was willing, if she was.

If they survived. He didn’t like thinking about that. The two Imperial frigates were less than fifty thousand kilometers away now, still well out of range, and
Tokitukaze
had begun maneuvering clumsily for an intercept. Perhaps eight minutes remained before the two sides came within extreme missile range.

Meanwhile, there was time for thought. Too much time.

Dev had always,
always
wanted to be a ship captain, a dream that went back to childhood and his unquestioning worship of a ship captain father. The sight of the Eridu space elevator from space as he’d backed the
Tokitukaze
clear had filled him with a sudden, an unexpected rush of emotion, of guilt that he’d not seen his father before Michal Cameron’s suicide, of understanding that this was what it must have been like, commanding an Imperial destroyer at the spaceside terminus of a planetary sky-el.

It was ironic, and it hurt to examine it. They’d called Michal Cameron a traitor because he’d destroyed the space elevator, stopping the Xenophobes of Lung Chi from reaching synchorbit and the refugee fleet docked there. Faced with a difficult choice and no time in which to choose, he’d acted. A hero.

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