The Complete Hammer's Slammers: Volume 3 (50 page)

Read The Complete Hammer's Slammers: Volume 3 Online

Authors: David Drake

Tags: #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction - Military, #General, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction - General, #Adventure, #Fiction, #Science Fiction And Fantasy

Her fingers caressed the controller. The display shifted like a waterfall; Huber could watch the data, but they meant nothing to him at the speed they cascaded across the air-projected holograms.

“Yes . . .” Hera repeated, then looked up beaming. “There isn’t anything like enough ground transport available in the UC alone, but if the other Outer States send us what they have, we should be able to meet your needs. Though roads . . .”

“We can use dirigibles to stage supplies to forward depots,” Huber said, leaning forward reflexively though the data still didn’t mean a cursed thing to him. “We’ll need a topo display and for that matter a battle plan to know where, but—”

“Can you do that?” Hera said, also excited by breaking through a barrier she hadn’t known of a few moments before. “The map and the battle plan?”

Huber laughed out loud—for the first time since Rhodesville, he guessed. “The topo display’s easy,” he said, “but lieutenants don’t plan regimental operations by themselves. I’ll forward what we have to the S-3, the Operations Officer, and his shop’ll fill us in when they know more.”

He locked his faceshield down and used the helmet’s internal processor to sort for the address of the Log Section Deputy’s console, then transfer the Regiment’s full topographic file on Plattner’s World to it. The commo helmet had both the storage and processing power to handle the task alone, but given where they were and the size of the file, Huber let Central in Base Alpha do the job.

He raised his faceshield and saw Hera disconnecting from a voice call. “Oh!” he said. “I’m sorry, I didn’t explain—”

“I assumed you were doing your job,” she said with a smile that exalted a face already beautiful. “And I can’t tell you how reassuring it is to, ah, work for someone who can do that.”

She gestured to the phone. “That’s what I’ve been doing too,” she said. “I just talked to my father. He’s . . .”

She waved a hand in a small circle as if churning a pile of words.

“I’ve been told who he is,” Huber said, saving Hera the embarrassment of explaining that Agis Graciano was the most important single person in the state which had employed the Slammers.

“Good,” Hera said with a grateful nod. “When I said we can get ground transport from the other Outer States, I didn’t mean that I could commandeer it myself. Father has connections; he’ll use them. It’ll have to be made to look like a business transaction, even though the other states are helping to fund the UC’s stand against the tyranny of Solace.”

Huber nodded acknowledgment. He knew better than to discuss politics with anybody, especially a local like Hera Graciano. It wasn’t that he didn’t understand political science and history: the Academy had an extensive mandatory curriculum in both subjects.

The problem was that the locals always wanted to talk about the rightness of their position. By the time they’d hired Hammer’s Slammers, the only right that mattered rode behind iridium armor.

“Ah, Arne?” Hera said. “It’s going to be two hours, maybe three, before Father gets back to me. We’ve certainly got enough work to occupy us till then—”

Their wry grins mirrored one another.

“—but do you have dinner plans for tonight?”

“Ma’am,” Huber said in surprise, “I don’t know any more about rations than I did about billeting.”

The thought made him turn his head. Sergeant Tranter was back; he gave Huber the high sign. The locals still in the office buried their expressions quickly in their consoles; they’d obviously been covertly watching Hera and their new chief the instant before.

“As a matter of fact, I haven’t eaten anything yet today,” Huber continued to his deputy. “Hera. I didn’t have an appetite before my meeting with Major Steuben.”

Hera’s face changed. “I’ve met Major Steuben,” she said without expression.

Huber nodded understandingly. “I told you we were the best the UC could hire,” he said. “Joachim Steuben is better at his job than anybody else I’ve heard of. But because of what his job is, he’s an uncomfortable person to be around for most people.”

For everybody who wasn’t a conscienceless killer; but Huber didn’t say that aloud.

“Yes,” Hera said, agreeing with more than the spoken words. “Well, what I was saying—can I take you out to dinner tonight, Lieutenant? You’ve kept me from making a terrible mistake with the dirigibles, and I’d like to thank you.”

“I’d be honored,” Huber said, perfectly truthful and for a wonder suppressing his urge to explain he was just doing his job. She knew that, and if she wanted to go to dinner with him, that was fine. He didn’t guess it much mattered who paid, not judging from the off-planet dress suit she was wearing even here at work.

“When you say ‘trucks,’” he resumed, “what’re we talking about? Five-tonners or little utility haulers?”

Hera Graciano was very attractive. And if Arne Huber didn’t keep his mind on his business, he was going to start blushing.

*
*
*
*

The restaurant was quite obviously expensive. Huber could afford to eat here on his salary, but he probably wouldn’t have chosen to.

“Well, I suppose you could say there was significant opposition to confronting Solace,” Hera said, frowning toward a point beyond Huber’s shoulder as she concentrated on the past. “Some people are always afraid to stand up for their rights, that’s inevitable. But the vote in our Senate to hire your Regiment was overwhelming as soon as we determined that the other Outer States would contribute to the charges. My brother’s faction only mustered nineteen votes out of the hundred, with seven abstentions.”

Wooden beams supported the restaurant’s domed ceiling. Their curves were natural, and the polished branches which carried the light fixtures seemed to grow from the wall paneling. The food was excellent—boned rabbit in a bed of pungent leaves, Huber thought, but he’d learned on his first deployment never to ask what went into a dish he found tasty.

His only quibble was with the music: to him it sounded like the wind blowing over a roof missing a number of tiles. The muted keening didn’t get in the way of him talking with Hera, and her voice was just as pleasant as the rest of the package.

“And all your income, the income of the Outer States,” Huber said, “comes from gathering the raw Moss? There’s no diversification?”

“The factories refining the Pseudofistus thalopsis extract into Thalderol base are in Solace,” she said, gesturing with her left hand as she held her glass poised in her right. “That isn’t the problem, though: we could build refineries in the Outer States quite easily. We’d have to import technicians for the first few years, but there’d be plenty of other planets ready to help us.”

“But . . .?” said Huber, sipping his own wine. It was pale yellow, though that might have been a product of the beads of light on the branch tips which illuminated the room. They pulsed slowly and were color-balanced to mimic candleflames.

“But we couldn’t build a spaceport capable of handling starships the size of those that now land at Solace,” Hera explained. “It’s not just the expense, though that’s bad enough. The port at Solace is built on a sandstone plate. There’s no comparable expanse of bedrock anywhere in the Outer States. An artificial substrate that could support three-hundred kilotonne freighters is beyond possibility.”

“I’ve seen the problems of bringing even small ships down in the UC,” Huber said with studied calm. “Though I suppose there’s better ports than Rhodesville’s.”

Hera sniffed. “Better,” she said, “but not much better. And of course even the refined base is a high-volume cargo, so transportation costs go up steeply on small hulls.”

The dining room had about twenty tables, most of them occupied by expensively dressed locals. The aircar Hera’d brought him here in was built on Nonesuch; it had an agate-faced dashboard and showed a number of other luxury details. She’d parked adjacent to the restaurant, in a tree-shaded lot where the other vehicles were of comparable quality.

Huber wore his newest service uniform, one of three he’d brought on the deployment. The Regiment had a dress uniform, but he’d never bothered to invest in one. Even if he had owned such a thing it’d be back in his permanent billet on Nieuw Friesland, since a platoon leader in the field had less space for personal effects than he had formal dinner occasions.

Huber’s commo helmet was in his quarters, but his holstered pistol knocked against the arm of the chair he sat in. The Colonel hadn’t issued a revised weapons policy for Plattner’s World yet; and even if he had, Huber would probably have stuck his 1-cm power-gun in a cargo pocket even if he couldn’t carry it openly. He’d felt naked in Rhodesville when he saw the buzzbomb swing in his direction and he couldn’t do anything but duck.

“Ten months ago . . .” Hera went on. “Ah, that’s seven months standard. Ten months ago, Solace raised landing fees five percent. The buyers, Nonesuch and the other planets buying our base and processing it to Thalderol, refused to raise the price they’d pay. We in the Outer States, the people who actually do the work, were left to make up the difference out of our pockets!”

It didn’t look like Hera had spent much of her life ranging the forest and gathering Moss, but Huber wouldn’t have needed his history courses to know that politicians generally said “we” when they meant “you.” The funny thing was, they generally didn’t see there was a difference.

That wasn’t a point a Slammers officer raised with a well-placed member of the state which had hired the Regiment. Aloud he said, “But you do have multiple markets for your drugs? For your base, I mean?”

“Nonesuch takes about half the total,” Hera said, nodding agreement. “The rest goes to about a dozen other planets, some more than others. The final processing takes temperature and vibration control beyond anything we could do on Plattner’s World. Building a second spaceport would be easier.”

She paused, looking at her wine, then across at Huber again. “The government of Nonesuch has been very supportive,” she said carefully. “They couldn’t get directly involved, but they helped to make the arrangements that led to our hiring Hammer’s Regiment.”

“But they wouldn’t simply raise their payments for Thalderol base?” Huber said, keeping his tone empty of everything but mild curiosity.

“Where would it stop?” Hera blazed. “If those vultures on Solace learn that they can get away with extortion, they’ll keep turning the screws!”

Based on what Huber knew about the price of anti-aging drugs, he didn’t think a five-percent boost in the cost of raw materials was going to make a lot of difference, but he didn’t need to get into that. There was more going on than he saw; more going on than Hera was willing to tell him, that was obvious; and probably a lot more going on than even she knew.

None of that mattered. The result of all those unseen wheels whirling was that Colonel Hammer had a lucrative contract, and Lieutenant Arne Huber was spending the evening with a very attractive woman.

“My brother claims that even with other states defraying the costs, the UC is taking all the military risk itself,” Hera continued. “But somebody has to have the courage to take a stand! When the other states see Solace back down, they’ll be quick enough to step up beside us and claim credit!”

“It didn’t seem when I arrived . . .” Huber said, the chill in his guts cooling his tone more than he’d intended. “That backing down was the way Solace was planning to play it.”

He smiled, hoping that would make his words sound less like the flat disagreement that he felt. Hera was smart and competent, but she was turning her face from the reality the ambush at Rhodesville would’ve proved to a half-wit. It wasn’t what she wanted to believe, so she was using her fine intellect to prove a lie.

“Well then, if they persist—” she said, but broke off as the waiter approached the table.

“More wine, sir and madam?” he asked. “Or perhaps you’ve changed your mind about dessert?”

The outside door opened, drawing Huber’s eyes and those of the waiter. It was late for customers, though the restaurant hadn’t started dimming the lights.

“Patroklos!” Hera said, her head turning because Huber’s had. “What are you doing here?”

Not coming for dinner, that was for sure. Senator Patroklos Graciano was a good twenty years older than his sister. He was a beefy man, not fat but heavier than he’d have been if he were a manual laborer. His features were regular, handsome even, but they showed no resemblance whatever to Hera’s.

Huber wondered if the two children had different mothers, but that wasn’t the question at the top of his mind just this instant. He got to his feet; smoothly, he thought, but he heard the chair go over behind him with a crash on the hardwood floor and he didn’t care about that either.

“What am I doing here?” Patroklos said. He had a trained voice; he used its volume to fill the domed restaurant. “I’m not entertaining the butcher who destroyed Rhodesville, that’s one thing! Are you part of the mercenaries’ price, dear sister? Your body as an earnest for the bodies of all the women of the United Cities?”

Chairs were scuffling all over the room; a pair of diners edged toward the service area since Patroklos stood in front of the outside door. There were two waiters and the female manager looking on, but they’d obviously decided to leave the business to the principals involved for now.

Huber was as sure as he could be that there wasn’t going to be trouble—worse trouble—here unless something went badly wrong. Patroklos wasn’t nearly as angry as he sounded, and he’d come into the restaurant by himself. If his bodyguards had been with him— Patroklos was the sort who had bodyguards—it would’ve been a different matter.

“Patroklos, you’re drunk!” Hera said. He wasn’t drunk, but maybe Hera didn’t see her brother’s real plan. “Get out of here and stop degrading the family name!”

She hadn’t gotten up at the first shouting. Now that Patroklos was only arm’s length away, she was trapped between the table and her brother’s presence.

Huber thought of walking around to join her, but that might start things moving in the wrong direction. From the corners of his eyes he could see that others of the remaining customers were eyeing him with hard faces. The “butcher of Rhodesville” line had probably struck a chord even with people who didn’t support Patroklos’ position on the Regiment as a whole.

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