The Night's Dawn Trilogy (205 page)

Read The Night's Dawn Trilogy Online

Authors: Peter F. Hamilton

Tags: #FIC028000

There was little other evidence of the coup which she had led, one or two small smudges of black smoke, a crashed rentcop
plane in the parkland surrounding a starscraper lobby. Most of the real damage had occurred inside the starscrapers; but the
important sections, the industrial stations and spaceport, had sustained only a modest amount of battering.

Her plan had been a good one. Anyone who came into contact with a possessed was immediately taken over, regardless of status.
A ripple effect spread out from the seventeenth floor of the Diocca starscraper, slow at first, but gradually gaining strength
as the numbers grew. The possessed moved onto the next starscraper.

Rubra warned people of course, told them what to look out for, told them where the possessed were. He directed the rentcops
and the boosted mercenary troops, ambushing the possessed. But good as they were, the troops he had at his disposal were heavily
dependent on their hardware. That gave the possessed a lethal advantage. Unless it was as basic as a chemical projectile weapon,
technology betrayed them, failing at critical moments, producing false data. He didn’t even attempt to take Valisk’s small
squad of assault mechanoids out of storage.

Out on the docking ridges, the polyp hulls of possessed starships began to swell below a shimmer of exotic light patterns,
emerging from their convulsions as full-grown hellhawks. Fantastically shaped starships and huge harpies zoomed away from
the habitat to challenge the voidhawks and Srinagar frigates that were edging in cautiously. The military ships had pulled
back, abandoning their effort to assist the beleaguered population.

Kiera’s authority now extended the length of the habitat, and encompassed a zone a hundred thousand kilometres in diameter
outside the shell. All in all, not a bad little fiefdom for an ex-society wife from New Munich. She’d glimpsed it briefly
once before, this position, the influence, importance, and respect which authority endowed. It could have been hers for the
taking back then; she had the breeding and family money, her husband had the ambition and skill. By rights a cabinet seat
awaited, and maybe even the chancellorship (so she dreamed and schemed). But he’d faltered, betrayed by his ambition and lack
of patience, making the wrong deals in search of the fast track. A weak failure condemning her to sitting out her empty life
in the grand old country house, working studiously for the right charities, pitied and avoided by the social vixens she’d
once counted as her closest friends. Dying bitter and resentful.

Well, now Kiera Salter was back, younger and prettier than ever before. And the mistakes and weaknesses of yesteryear were
not going to be repeated again. Not ever.

“We finished going through the last starscraper three hours ago,” she told the council she’d assembled (oh-so-carefully selecting
most of the members). “Valisk now effectively belongs to us.”

That brought applause and some whistles.

She waited for it to die down. “Bonney, how many non-possessed are left?”

“I’d say a couple of hundred,” the hunter woman said.

“They’re hiding out, with Rubra’s help, of course. Tracking them down is going to take a while. But there’s no way for them
to get out; I’ll find them eventually.”

“Do they pose any danger?”

“The worst case scenario would be a few acts of sabotage; but considering we can all sense them if they get close enough to
us, it would be very short-lived. No, I think the only one who could hurt us now would be Rubra. But I don’t know enough about
him and what his capabilities are.”

Everyone turned to look at Dariat. Kiera hadn’t wanted him on the council, but his understanding of affinity and the habitat
routines was peerless. They needed his expertise to deal with Rubra. Despite that, she still didn’t consider him a proper
possessed; he was crazy, a very ruthless kind of crazy. His agenda was too different from theirs. A fact which to her mind
made him a liability, a dangerous one.

“Ultimately, Rubra could annihilate the entire ecosystem,” Dariat said calmly. “He has control over the environmental maintenance
and digestive organs; that gives him a great deal of power. Conceivably he could release toxins into the water and food, replace
the present atmosphere with pure nitrogen and suffocate us, even vent it out into space. He can turn off the axial light tube
and freeze us, or leave it on and cook us. None of that would damage him in the long term; the biosphere can be replanted,
and the human population replaced. He cares less for the lives of humans than we do, his only priority is himself. As I told
you right at the start, everything else we achieve is completely pointless until he is eliminated. But you didn’t listen.”

“So, shitbrain, why hasn’t he done any of that already?” Stanyon asked contemptuously.

Kiera put a restraining hand on his leg under the table. He was a good deputy for her, his intimidating strength accounting
for a great deal of the obedience she was shown; he also made an excellent replacement for Ross Nash in her bed. However,
vast intelligence was not one of his qualities.

“Yes,” she said levelly to Dariat. “Why not?”

“Because we have one key element left to restrain him,” Dariat said. “We can kill him. The hellhawks are armed with enough
combat wasps to destroy a hundred habitats. We’re in a deterrence situation. If we fight each other openly, we both die.”

“Openly?” Bonney challenged.

“Yes. Right now, he will be conferring with the Edenist Consensus about methods of reversing possession. And as you know,
I’m investigating methods of transferring my personality into the neural strata without him blocking it. That way I could
assume control of the habitat and eliminate him at the same time.”

Which isn’t exactly the solution I want, Kiera thought.

“So why don’t you just do it?” Stanyon asked. “Shove yourself in there and fight the bastard on his own ground. Don’t you
have the balls for it?”

“The neural strata cells will only accept Rubra’s thought routines. If a thought routine is not derived from his own personality
pattern it will not function in the neural strata.”

“But you fucked with the routines before.”

“Precisely. I made changes to what was there, I did not replace anything.” Dariat sighed elaborately, resting his head in
his hands. “Look, I’ve been working on this problem for nearly thirty years now. Conventional means were utterly useless against
him. Then I thought I’d found the answer with affinity enhanced by this energistic ability. I could have used it to modify
sections of the neural strata, force the cells to accept my personality routines. I was exploring that angle when that drunk
cretin Ross Nash blew our cover. So we went overt and showed Rubra what we can do; fine, but by doing that we threw away our
stealth advantage. He is on his guard like never before. I’ve had enough evidence of that over the last ten hours. If I try
to convert a chunk of the neural strata ready to accept me, it drops out of the homogeneity architecture, and he does something
to the cells’ bioelectric component, too, which kills them instantly. Don’t ask me what—breaks down the natural chemical regulators,
or simply electrocutes them with nerve impulse surges. I don’t know! But he’s blocking me every step of the way.”

“All very interesting,” Kiera said coldly. “What we need to know, however, is can you beat him?”

Dariat smiled, his gaze unfocused. “Yes. I’ll beat him, I feel the lady Chi-ri touching me. There will be a way, and I’ll
find it eventually.”

The rest of the council exchanged irritated or worried glances; except for Stanyon who merely gave a disgusted groan.

“Can we take it then, that Rubra does not pose any immediate threat?” Kiera asked. She found Dariat’s devotion to the Starbridge
religion with its Lords and Ladies of the realms another indication of just how unstable he was.

“Yes,” Dariat said. “He’ll keep up the attrition, of course. Electrocution, servitor housechimps cracking rocks over your
skull; and we’ll have to abandon the tubes and starscraper lifts. It’s an annoyance, but we can live through it.”

“Until when?” Hudson Proctor asked. He was an ex-general Kiera had drafted in to her initial coterie to help plan their takeover
strategy. “Rubra is in here with us, and the Edenists are outside. Both of them are doing their damnedest to push us back
into the beyond. We have to stop that, we must fight back. I’m damned if I’m prepared to sit here and let them win.” He glanced
around the table, buoyed by the level of silent support shown by the council.

“Our hellhawks are easily a match for any voidhawk,” Kiera said. “The Edenists cannot get inside Valisk, all they can do is
sit at a safe distance and watch. I don’t consider them a problem at all, let alone a threat.”

“The hellhawks might be as good as a voidhawk in a fight, but what’s to make them stay and guard us?”

“Dariat,” Kiera said, irked at having to defer to him again. But he was the one who’d worked out how to keep the hellhawks
loyal to Valisk.

“The souls possessing the hellhawks will help us for as long as we want,” Dariat said. “We have something they ultimately
want: human bodies. Rubra’s descendants can all use their affinity to converse with Magellanic Itg’s blackhawks. That means
the souls can get out of the hellhawks and into those bodies the same way as they got in. During our takeover we captured
enough of Rubra’s descendants to provide each hellhawk possessor with a human body. They’re all stored in zero-tau, waiting.”

“Waiting for what?” Hudson Proctor asked. “This is what gets me. I don’t even know why we’re bothering with this discussion
in the first place.”

“What do you suggest we should be doing, then?” Kiera asked.

“The blindingly obvious. Let’s just go. Now! We know we can do it; together we have the power to lift Valisk clean out of
this universe. We can create our own universe around us; one with new laws, a place where there’s no empty eternity around
us, and where we’re safely sealed off from the beyond. We’ll be safe there, from Rubra, from the Edenists, from everybody.
Safe and immortal.”

“Quite right,” Kiera said. Most possessed had only been back for a few hours, but already the urge was growing. To run, to
hide from the dreadful empty sky. Enclosed Valisk was better than a planet; but Kiera had hated the starscrapers with their
windows showing the naked stars, always reminding her of the beyond. Yes, she thought, we will have to leave that sight eventually.
But not yet. There were other, older instincts prising at her thoughts. For when Valisk departed to a universe where anything
became possible to every individual, the need for leadership would fade away, lost among the dream of eternal sybaritic life
into which they would all fall. Kiera Salter would cease to be anything special. Maybe it was inevitable, but there was no
need to rush into it. “What about the threat from ourselves?” she asked them, a high note of curiosity in her voice. As if
they’d already solved the obvious problem.

“What threat?” Stanyon asked.

“Think about it. How long are we intending to leave this universe for?”

“I wasn’t planning on coming back,” Hudson Proctor said caustically.

“Me neither. But eternity is rather a long time, isn’t it? And those are the terms we’re going to have to start thinking in
nowadays.”

“So?” he demanded.

“So how many people are there in Valisk right now? Stanyon?”

“Close to nine hundred thousand.”

“Not quite nine hundred thousand people. And the purpose of life, or the nearest definition I’ll ever make, is to experience.
Experience whatever you can for as long as you can.” She gave the councillors a morbid smile. “That isn’t going to change
whatever universe we occupy. As it stands, there aren’t enough of us; not if we want to keep providing ourselves with new
and different experiences for all of eternity. We have to have variety to keep on generating freshness, otherwise we’ll just
be playing variants on a theme for ever. Fifty thousand years of that, and we’ll be so desperate for a change that we’ll even
come back here just for the novelty.” She’d won them; she could see and sense the doubt and insecurity fission in their minds.

Hudson Proctor sat back in his chair and favoured her with a languid smile. “Go on, Kiera, you’ve obviously thought this through.
What’s the solution?”

“There are two possibilities. First, we use the hellhawks to evacuate ourselves to a terracompatible world and begin the possession
campaign all over again. Personally I’d hate to risk that. Srinagar’s warships might not be able to break into Valisk, but
if we tried to land on the planet it would be a shooting gallery. Alternatively, we can play it smart and gather people in
to us. Valisk can support at least six or seven million, and that’s without our energistic ability enhancing it. Six million
should be enough to keep our society alive and fresh.”

“You’re joking. Bring in over five million people?”

“Yes. It’ll take time, but it can be done.”

“Bringing some people in, yes, but so many… Surely our population is going to grow anyway?”

“Not by five million it isn’t. We’d have to make permanent pregnancy compulsory for every female for the next ten years. This
council might be in command now, but try implementing that and see how long we last.”

“I’m not talking about right now, I’m talking about after. We’ll have children after we leave.”

“Will we? These aren’t our actual bodies, they’d never be
our
children. The biological imperative isn’t driving us anymore; these bodies are sensory receptors for our consciousness, nothing
else. I certainly don’t intend to have any children.”

“All right, even assuming you’re right, and I’m not saying you are, how are you going to get that kind of influx, launch the
hellhawks on pirate flights to capture people?”

“No,” she said confidently. “Invite them. You’ve seen the Starbridge tribes. There are the disaffected just like them in every
society throughout the Confederation. I know, one of the charities I used to work for helped rehabilitate youngsters who couldn’t
cope with modern life. Gather them all together, and you could fill twenty habitats this size.”

Other books

Legally Bound 3: His Law by Blue Saffire
A Deadly Bouquet by Janis Harrison
Hot Springs by Stephen Hunter
Moment of True Feeling by Peter Handke
The Human Front by Ken MacLeod
Tag Along by Tom Ryan
Hard to Hold by Katie Rose
Loving Siblings: Aidan & Dionne by Catharina Shields
Hole in the wall by L.M. Pruitt