Authors: Taylor Anderson
Chack stood. “Very well. Much remains to prepare, and there are always delays.” Chack waved out at the devastation. “But we must leave as soon as possible.” He grinned. “I shall leave you to sort out your own, uh, preparations.” With that, he turned and left, following Pam into the palace.
“Pam's gonna hate your gutsâagain,” Horn warned.
“Maybe. But she'll be outa here, back on
Walker
when they go chasin' Grik in the strait, anyway.”
“Wouldn't you rather be on
Walker
?”
Dennis considered, and his thoughts veered suddenly back to the bosun. “Not just yet,” he answered quietly.
Suddenly, a small, colorful reptile with furry membranes stretched between its limbs scrambled up and leaped on Silva's chest with a “Grawwk!” of greeting. Not capable of actual flight, the creature was more of a tree-glider from Yap Island, where Silva, Lawrence, Sandra, and a number of others had been marooned for a while. Originally the pet of then Princess, now Governor-Empress Rebecca Anne McDonald of the Empire of the New Britain Isles, he'd been sent away purportedly due to his somewhat inappropriate behavior.
“Goddammit, Petey!” Silva snarled. “Get off! Go back to the Skipper's lady where you belong!” Petey promptly arched his back and heaved like a cat with a hairball, and before Silva could fling him away, he regurgitated a bolus of . . . something, on Silva's clean shirt. “Eat!” he cawed triumphantly, beaming up at Dennis with large, adoring eyes. “Eat, goddammit!”
“You might lose Pam for good this time,” Horn deadpanned, “but at least
somebody
still loves ya.”
//////
Second Fleet
Off the coast of New Granada (Ecuador)
USS
Maaka-Kakja
(CV-4)
“W
ith all respect, Your Highness, I do not care if you are my Governor-Empress,” High Admiral Harvey Jenks declared, his carefully controlled patience beginning to crack. “We simply cannot risk the reinforcements you've brought by putting them ashore just yet, and I certainly cannotâ
will not
ârisk
you
!” Despite her small stature and normally almost-elfin face, a lesser man would've dissolved under the withering glare the young empress bestowed on Jenks. Admiral Lelaa-Tal-Cleraan, commander of
Maaka-Kakja
, still the sole aircraft carrier/tender with Second Fleet, was a personal friend of Rebecca Anne McDonald, and even she almost took a step back. Jenks held his ground, but began absently
twisting his long, braided mustaches with his fingers. The others gathered on the great ship's broad bridgewing reacted in various ways. High Chief Saan-Kakja, Rebecca's Lemurian “sister” ruler of all the Filpin Lands, stood beside her, but blinked her mesmerizing black and golden eyes with a thoughtfulness that Rebecca's temper had abandoned. Sister Audry, the young, straw-haired Benedictine nun, appeared slightly embarrassed, as did “Tex” Sheider, Lelaa's Exec. Sergeant “Lord” Koratin, Audry's scarred, wizened, Lemurian Marine bodyguard and advisor from Aryaal, stood at parade rest. His face didn't show it, of course, but he had an air of boredom about him. Sister Audry's enlightened and converted regiment of former Dom prisoners of war, her “Regimento de Redentores,” had a new colonel. Former Teniente of Dominion “Salvadores,” Colonel Arano Garcia had an anxious expression on his dark, handsome face. Surgeon Commander Selaas-Fris-Ar, Keje's daughter and chief medical officer for all of Second Fleet, blinked consternation. Matt's cousin, Orrin Reddy,
Maaka-Kakja'
s Commander of Flight Operations (COFO), looked on with guarded amusement. A pair of Nancy floatplanes, their blue paint now salt streaked and weathered, roared off the flight deck and into the sky, bound for Guayakwil Bay to support General Shinya's expeditionary force in the East.
Rebecca waited for the noise to subside, then continued her argument. “I regret that we were unable to bring the new carriers completing in Maa-ni-la. There have been delays. But my sister and I did not come all this way, bringing troops and weapons so sorely needed on this front, merely to bob about aboard the most powerful element of an inactive fleet!”
Jenks winced at that, but held his tongue. Lelaa didn't. “That's unfair, Your Highness,” she scolded, relying on their friendship and her status as the most senior representative of the “Amer-i-caan Navy Clan” in the hemisphere. “Most unfair indeed. This fleet has not been âinactive.' Far from it. And we have not sought a decisive fleet action with the Doms at the Pass of Fire simply because we do not know what is there!” She nodded at Orrin. “We have tried to scout the strange strait between the continents and the enemy fleet gathered there, but there are too many Grikbirdsââdragons'âfor our planes to penetrate far enough to see anything worth the terrible losses in aircraft and crews we have sustained in previous attempts.”
“We brought more planes and pilots,” Rebecca shot back.
“Which will allow us to try again,” Lelaa agreed resignedly, “with further dreadful losses, no doubt.”
“And as for going ashore,” Selass interjected, “High Ahd-mi-raal Jenks seeks only to protect you and the troops you bring. As he has informed you, there is a terrible illness ashore that the locals call âEl Vómito Rojo.'” She shook her head. “So far it has not affected Mi-AnakkaâLemurianâtroops, but it has been devastating to the human forces.” She sighed. “Perhaps half of them are sick. Even General Shinya has fallen ill. And though the seep and polta paste seem to help prevent the secondary, more fatal symptoms, there have been several hundred deaths within the army. The civilian population of Guayak has been even harder hit.” She blinked incredulity. “Some appear to be immune, having never had the disease, but many seem to accept it as merely a seasonal part of life. I cannot imagine why they don't simply move away. Through my correspondence with Karen Letts at Baalkpan, I am convinced the swarming mosquitoes on the coastal plain are to blame. They are not as bad at higher elevations.”
“Where the Dom âArmy of God' gathers under that hideous fiend Don Hernan!” Rebecca snapped. Scouts of the enemy position and preparations had secured enough prisoners to confirm that.
“Yes, but they do not have polta paste to alleviate much of the suffering. If they come down and attack now, they would be even more devastated by the disease than our people are.”
“Then we must hope they are as sensitive to losses as we,” Koratin said dryly. Everyone knew that they were not.
“If I may?” Colonel Garcia asked quietly. Jenks looked at him, unable to hide the skeptical arch his eyebrow made. He remained unconvinced that Doms could be torn away from their fanatical adherence to their twisted faith, even though they now knew not all “Doms,” the Guayakans for example, shared that faith in the first place. He'd talked with their spokesman, Suares, and through him to their alcalde, and they'd struck him as normal, if rather odd, people, just like any in the Empire. But Garcia had been a Dom officer, and his regiment was composed of men who'd fought fanatically
against
the Empire on the island of New Ireland. He found it hard to believe they'd just . . . stopped being what they were. Sister Audry and even Governor-Empress Rebecca were
insistent, however, and he too had to admit that Garcia seemed devoted to them. “Please do,” he finally said.
“If Don Hernan senses weakness in your army, he will attack regardless of losses,” he said. “He may even calculate that he could march down from the mountains and destroy General Shinya before El Vómito could weaken his own force enough to stop it. I think it more likely, however, that he will wait until the worst of the season has passed, then strike with a healthy force while he believes yours remains weak.”
“How long?” Jenks demanded.
“Another week. Perhaps two,” Selass said. “According to Suares.”
“Can you at least wait that long, Your Majesty?” Jenks pleaded. “We will commence transferring supplies immediately, and we can set the reinforcements ashore quite rapidly when the time comes, I assure you.”
Rebecca hesitated, then nodded. “Very well. But in the meantime, we must discover what we face at sea. We all know Don Hernan, and I do not think he will be content to merely wait for his opportunity. I suspect he will move against the fleet in some fashion in conjunction with his land assault. We mustn't let him have his way in
all
things, in respect to his schedule.” She looked at Jenks. “You say our aircraft cannot penetrate to the Pass of Fire without prohibitive losses to the dragons, but there is little they can do against well-prepared ships. I am directing you to dispatch a sizable portion of the fleet to investigate the pass at once!”
Jenks frowned. “I respectfully suggest that such a move would be extremely risky. We have no idea how large the Dom fleet is, and we risk losing that âsizable portion' if it runs into something substantial. We should wait a bit longer. Perhaps we may even receive word from the strange âother Americans' Lieutenant Reynolds and Ensign Faask encountered during their escape from the Doms.”
“But you said such a communication would likely only come after we have dealt the Doms a harsh blow at sea.”
“That's true. But I still counsel against itâand if we must move against the pass, we should do it with all our might or none.”
“That is unacceptable,” Rebecca stated. “The larger portion of the fleet must remain here to cover General Shinyaâand land the reinforcements when the time comes. You will send a heavy scout to discover what it may, at long last, about the enemy fleet. Our ships are
faster than theirs. The squadron can always retire if it runs into more than it can handle. Perhaps that move alone will prompt the other Americans to signal us in some way?” Her tone hardened. “I have acquiesced on all other points. Do not fight me on this, High Admiral Jenks!”
Jenks nodded reluctantly. “Very well, Your Highness.” Rebecca turned to Orrin Reddy. “Is there no way that we can fly to meet these strangers? Circumventing the Pass of Fire, of course.”
Orrin looked doubtful. “Fred Reynolds and Kari Faask suggested that themselves,” he admitted. “Even volunteered. Nutty damn kids, after what they went through. But it's just too dangerous. There're the Doms and their Grikbirds to consider, sure. But we don't even know where the hell to send 'em. They got the impression these other Americans have a fleet in the Gulf of Mexicoâa, ah, body of water on the other side of the Pass of Fire. Full of fuel and nothing else, a Nancy might make it that far, but what then? Even if there is a fleet, it'd be dumb-ass luck for one plane to find it. I'm afraid we'd just be wasting anybody we sent.”
“The only other option is a land expedition from the Imperial colonies around Saint Francis,” Jenks said, “but again, they don't really know where to go, and such a trip might take months.” He shrugged. “They know where we are, Your Majesty, and said they would contact us when the time was right for them. I see no feasible way to contact them for the foreseeable future.”
“Without a fleet action,” Rebecca prodded.
“That was mentioned as a means of getting their attention,” Jenks confessed reluctantly.
“All the more reason to send the heavy scouting force,” Rebecca stressed. “As I said, perhaps they will consider that enough.”
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
Orrin trotted down the steps from the bridgewing, heading for his office near the ready room. At the base of the ladder, as expected, he ran into Fred Reynolds and Kari Faask. He paused, shaking his head. “No go,” he said. “I pitched your case, like I agreed, but they didn't go for it.” He didn't mention how strongly he'd
objected
to their case. Fred and Kari both took deep breaths and then looked at the deck.
“Thanks anyway, Mr. Reddy,” Fred mumbled.
“Hey, at least you're back flying,” Orrin consoled.
“Sure. That's something. But we're not doing much. Most of the combat ops sortie out of Guayakwil Bay. We're just flying around, knocking holes in the sky and watching for Dom ships.”
“Somebody's got to do itâand damn it, folks are sick on shore! You guys are still weak from what you went through. You want to get sick and finish yourselves off?”
“
I
not get sick,” Kari countered.
“You want another pilot, then?” Orrin demanded. “Because Fred probably
will
. Him and me are still the only human pilots in this fleet, and will be until the Impies finally get some fliers out here. You don't see
me
clamoring to go ashore, do you? Let this bug run its course, and we'll all get plenty busy.”
“Okay. Afternoon, Mr. Reddy. And thanks.”
When Orrin was gone, Fred sighed at his Lemurian friend. “Would've been easier with his help, not to mention feeling less like running off. Nothing for it, though, I guess.”
“Nope.”
//////
Chimborazo
New Granada Province
Holy Dominion
G
eneral Ghanan Nerino, former commander of His Supreme Holiness's Army of the South, approached Don Hernan de Devina Dicha with a familiar sense of dread. Even when he didn't bear news he was sure the unpredictably capricious Blood Cardinal would dislike, he was uncomfortable in his presence. Bringing . . . disappointing information, Nerino had no idea how Don Hernan would react. Sitting on a padded wicker chair on the porch of the residence of the alcalde of Chimborazo, the Blood Cardinal sipped from a steaming mug in the cool, late-morning air. Seeing him gaze about with such a benevolent expression behind his immaculately trimmed mustache and goatee, Nerino would have found it easy to imagine that Don Hernan was not really a maniac after all, if he hadn't seen such ample proof to the contrary.
He
was
a maniac, to be generous, and a singularly dangerous one. Since he was second in authority only to His Supreme Holiness himself, Don Hernan's power was unchecked, and he practically ruled the Holy Dominion in the name of the Messiah of Mexico who was, even Nerino believed, Emperor of the World by the grace of God. But even by the standards of God's harsh laws, interpreted and set forth in holy tracts by His beloved priests, Don Hernan's rule was peculiarly frightful. As prescribed, he ruled through terror, but he took his responsibility to an extreme unremembered in Nerino's lifetime. Pain was the gateway to grace, and blood was the price of God's love and favor; that was the way of things. The effusion of both was celebrated and ritualized throughout the Dominion, but neither was to be wantonly wasted. That Don Hernan could so casually and often arbitrarily command the deliberate squandering of so much blood from behind such a pleasant demeanor of gentle piety inspired equal measures of horror and amazement in Ghanan Nerino, and convinced him that Don Hernan was mad.
Nerino moved through the priests gathered behind Don Hernan, standing in silence. Their lord had decided that morning that he didn't want to see any people, only the unspoiled beauty of the mountain village and God's creation surrounding it. Therefore, all the troops encamped east of town had been forced to move with fanatical urgency in the predawn dark, and every villager had been warned to stay out of sight until midday. It hadn't been necessary to remind them what would happen to them if they were seen. No doubt, Don Hernan would watch their execution with the same expression he now wore. This was yet another example of how erratic, impulsive, and stunningly profligate in time and resources his whims had become, even as he constantly urged haste in preparing the Army of God to expel the invaders infesting the coastal lowland.
Ghanan Nerino had tried that once already, and had lost an army in the attempt. He was fortunate, he supposed, that he'd been so painfully wounded by the flaming bombs dropped by the invader's flying machines. That had isolated him from blame for the debacle, and doubtless granted him some grace in Don Hernan's eyes. The filmy bandages still covering his face and hands were a constant reminder of his sufferingâhis “grace”âand had probably allowed him to speak more freely to Don Hernan than he would otherwise have dared, but grace was transient,
he knew quite well, and he always wondered when his would finally run out.
He still wasn't sure precisely what his status was. Don Hernan still called him “general,” even though he led no troops; Don Hernan himself was in sole command of the Army of God. Nerino assumed the Blood Cardinal had, initially at least, suffered his presence as an advisor because he actually did know more about the heretic army than anyone else. He'd since taken upon himself the task of coordinating the gathering of even more information about the enemy since, to his surprise, no one else was doing it. To be fair, he hadn't expected much intelligence from his own staff before the Battle of Guayak, but he knew better now. His rank remained good for something. He started appropriating and evaluating the reports of spies, and passing what he learned to Don Hernan during their increasingly frequent meetings. “Spymaster” was his new “status,” he supposed.
A musical chime within the residence proclaimed noon, and Don Hernan started as if released from a trance. “Ah, General Nerino!” he said without turning. “You continue to improve, I trust? Surely God has sped your recovery for the task ahead!” Nerino was taken aback by the address. He'd approached so quietly, there was no way Don Hernan could have known he was there. But then again, he
would
have known, because he'd commanded Nerino's presence, and of course his general would be waiting upon him at the appointed time.
“Thank you, Your Holiness. I am sure of it,” Nerino respectfully replied.
“Join me, General,” Don Hernan invited, gesturing grandly at a chair across the small table beside him. “Have refreshment!”
“Thank you, Your Holiness,” Nerino said, stepping forward and easing into the chair. His burns were healing well, and even his chin whiskers were beginning to return, but he'd lost a great deal of weight during his recovery, much of it muscle. He'd once been somewhat round; the result of a soft, well-fed life, but now he was almost thin and felt weak and sore.
After the usual pleasantries that prefaced any conversation with Don Hernan, even a sentence of death, the Blood Cardinal leaned back in apparent satisfaction before gazing intently at Nerino. “And what have you heard from our spies? Most particularly, what is the state of
the heretics' army, now that El Vómito Rojo is upon them?” Don Hernan's voice had a sudden predatory tone.
Nerino nodded, but cringed inwardly. The Army of God had mustered almost a hundred and ten thousand men, composed of what remained of Nerino's Army of the South, more troops originally intended for the conquest of the Galápagos, and still other forces hastily gathered from all over the Nuevo Granada Province. A division of the elite Blood Drinker infantry was even rushing southwestward from as far away as the Templo de los Papas, in Nuevo Granada City itself. It was scheduled to bring a “special gift” from His Supreme Holiness, from the mountain village of Popayan several hundred miles to the north, but they'd received no word as yet whether the division had even arrived at that remote place, much less resumed its difficult march.
The “gift” will make its journey even more arduous
, Nerino reflected,
but might prove decisive if it comes in time
. The Army of God was already larger than the one the heretics had destroyed around Nerino, but the heretics had also been reinforcedâwithin a strategically dangerous fortification. Don Hernan didn't want to wait for the Blood Drinkers to arrive, despite his excitement over the special gift, but he had been willing to delay his final assault long enough for El Vómito Rojo to decimate the enemy. El Vómito was a seasonal, often deadly, lowland fever. On this coast it was associated with rotten air rising from stagnant pools created by spring melt and late-summer rains, but was much less prevalent in the more wholesome air of the higher, cooler clime the Army of God now occupied. Unfortunately, Nerino's spies had reported that while the fever
was
upon the heretics, it had not had the expected effect.
“The position the heretic general has takenâShinya is his name, you may recallâis most formidable, and . . . awkward for us, as you know,” Nerino generalized. “It is supported by sea from both Guayak, and now Puerto Viejo as well.” He nodded grimly. “Indeed, it is confirmed. The people there, culturally related to the Guayakans, did not, ah, âsuccessfully resist' the heretics that landed there to cut that narrow segment of the Camino Militar.”
“As I told His Supreme Holiness!” Don Hernan brooded. “Heretics on every hand! And the ones within our midst are at least as dangerous as those from across the sea! None can be trusted; all must be cleansed!”
Nerino hesitated in confusion over what Don Hernan meant by
“all.” “Of course,” he said neutrally, before continuing. “The enemy now commands all junctions of the Camino Militar, from every direction but the south, beyond Guayak”âhe frowned and spread his handsâ“which does not signify. After the . . . indisposition of my army, there are few troops left to draw from the southâand no way to communicate our need in any event, since the heretics control the sea as well.” He paused, realizing he'd just reminded Don Hernan of his own failure once again. He hadn't been blamed, but quite a few fine officers under his command had been, to their pain. He hurried on. “Our first objective remains, as I see it, the destruction of this âFort Defiance' as they style it, that they have erected. It
is
quite impressive,” he stressed again. “Once that has been achieved, we can move to expel the heretics from Guayak and Puerto Viejo.”
“Not âexpel,' General Nerino,” Don Hernan objected coldly. “Exterminate.”
“Of course, Your Holiness.”
Don Hernan eyed him thoughtfully. “But what of El Vómito? I asked you before. Surely it has weakened the heretic army by now? The sickness should have reached its peak and done half our work for us.”
“The sickness
has
reached its peak,” Nerino carefully confirmed.
“But why did you not say so to begin with?” Don Hernan scolded gently, a soft smile on his face. “The time has come for the Army of God to march into the valley and across the plain to slay the few survivors, still sick and weak! When that is done, we will raze Guayak and Puerto Viejo to the ground before we move to take the Galápagos.” He smiled more broadly. “The final conquest of the world is finally at hand, my dear general! Rejoice!”
Nerino shifted uncomfortably on his chair. Don Hernan studied his expression, and his own smile began to fade. “What have you not yet revealed?” he demanded.
Nerino took a breath. “There appear to be more than a, ah, âfew' heretic survivors. It seems that the sickness has already peakedâand begun to fade, Your Holiness. Our spies say there was much fever among the human heretics, but they use medicines we do not know, that relieve and shorten the symptoms of the ill and even save many of the most grievously afflicted. It is said that they may even be able to
prevent
the disease in some cases!”
“Impossible!” Don Hernan proclaimed. “No medicine can do that! It must be sorcery of the darkest sort! All the more reason to destroy the heretics without delay!”
“But they have not been weakened as much as we hoped, and the animal warriorsâthe âLemurians' that constitute fully half their forceâdid not take sick at all.” Nerino braced himself. “I most humbly suggest that we not underestimate the animal warriors again, Your Holiness. I did, once. Why should I not? But having done so, I learned what a terrible mistake it was. They
are
demons,” he said almost wonderingly, as if realizing it for the first time himself. Perhaps he was. “Most unnatural demons. And I do not know, honestly, if they are in the power of the Imperials, or the other way around!”
“They
are
demons,” Don Hernan somberly confirmed. “And your confusion is well founded because even I cannot enlighten you. I have known one,” he added bitterly, “and thought it just a pet. But whether its . . . human companion was truly that devoted to it, or it had some power over him, I cannot say. Either way, I shall certainly not underestimate the creatures, and will not rest until all are swept from the face of the world.” Nerino said nothing, stunned by Don Hernan's admission that seemed to imply the recognition that
he
had once made a mistake. Nerino was tempted, but finally didn't mention that he too had met a Lemurian; a most intimidating female captain named Blas-Ma-Ar, if he remembered correctly. It was just as well that he said nothing.
“Too many of your former troops who fought them insist they are Jaguar demons,” Don Hernan continued darkly, “or some such creatures whose coming was foretold by the Jaguarista bandits that style themselves rebels against the temple!” He glanced at Nerino with a frown of regret. “We cannot silence them all, you know. The army needs every manâfor now. A few examples should be made so the rest will at least keep their filthy thoughts to themselves. But ultimately, the only way to end this evil is to destroy it.”
“And we shall prevail, of course,” Nerino quickly assured him. “But the Army of God will suffer no matter what we do. That may delay further campaigns for a time. Perhaps . . . we should delay
this
one just slightly longer. At least until the reinforcementsâand the giftâarrive.”
“That may be,” Don Hernan reluctantly acknowledged, to Nerino's relief. “And I will send courier dragons to find the column of Blood
Drinkers. Try to hurry them along. But if what your spies report is true, the heretics
are
at least somewhat weakened just now. They will only get stronger the longer we wait. It therefore remains that the time to strikeâboth at this âShinya' and against the enemy fleet as wellâis upon us regardless.” He reflected a moment, gazing at the villagers beginning to emerge from their homes. “I had hoped to delay our naval attack a short while longer. You could not know the details, but it had to be clear to you that our Western Fleet met great . . . difficulty against the Heretic Navy. Otherwise, they would not have been able to land an army here. New weapons and strategies have been devised for use by the elements of our Eastern Fleet gathered at El Paso del Fuego, and I am confident we have both a qualitative and vast numerical advantage now at sea.” He paused, frowning. “But new things of any sort are always so troublesome to predict,” he confessed with a frankness that again surprised Nerino.
“In addition,” he continued, “other things are in motion, beyond what is seen, that cause me some concern. . . . You know that the heretics have other enemies in Africa?” Nerino nodded, even though Don Hernan had only recently informed him of that. “I dispatched a mission across the Atlantic to contact them, but nothing has been heard,” Don Hernan admitted. “Perhaps it was lost. It is a dreadful voyage. Or perhaps
our
other enemies, Los Diablos del Norte, have interfered. Even in the face of our withdrawal of so many assets in the Caribbean, Los Diablos have done remarkably littleâthat we have seen.” He shook his head. “Far too much is unknown to me in these strange times, and that only makes it more imperative that we eliminate the most pressing, apparent threats as quickly as we can. To completely destroy Shinya and his fort, we must deprive him of all support, so we
must
release our own fleet at El Paso del Fuego to accomplish that task. I have sent courier dragons there as well, bearing the appropriate commands. It is time that General Shinya, his âSecond Fleet,' and all who aid them on land and sea were erased.”