Throne of Stars (62 page)

Read Throne of Stars Online

Authors: David Weber,John Ringo

“Not if they don’t like you,” Eleanora replied. “They know it ticks us off. They can be very unsubtle about things like that.”

“Well, we’ll just have to see how subtle we can convince them to be.”

Roger stood at the head of the wardroom table as the Alphane delegation filed in. There was a Phaenur who, again, was in charge, two Altharis, and a human. One of the Altharis was a guard—a hulking brute in unpowered combat armor who took up a position against the rear bulkhead. The other wore an officer’s undress harness with the four planetary clusters of a fleet admiral.

Roger’s staff was gathered around the table, and as the visiting threesome sat, he waved the others to their chairs. This time Honal was missing; his out-sized seat was taken by the Althari admiral.

“I am Sreeetoth,” the Phaenur said. “I am head of customs enforcement for the Alphane Alliance, which is just below a Cabinet position. As such, I am as close to a ‘policymaker’ as you are going to see without more information. My companions are Admiral Tchock Ral, commander of the Althari Home Fleet, and Mr. Mordas Dren, chief of engineering for the Althar System. Now, who are you? Truthfully.”

“I am Prince Roger Ramius Sergei Alexander Chiang MacClintock,” Roger answered formally. “For the last ten months, I have been on the planet Marduk or in transit to this star system, and I had nothing to do with any coup. My mother is being held captive, and I’ve come to you for help.”

The human rocked back in his chair, staring around at the group in wild surmise. The Althari looked . . . unreadable. Sreeetoth cocked its head in an oddly insectlike fashion and looked around the compartment.

“Truth. All of it is truth,” the Phaenur said after a moment. “Apprehension, fear so thick you could cut it with a blade . . . except off the Mardukans and the Prince. And great need. Great need.”

“And why, in your wildest dreams, do you believe we might put our necks on the block for you?” the Althari rumbled in a subterranean-deep voice.

“For several reasons,” Roger said. “First, we have information you need. Second, if we succeed in throwing out the usurpers who are using my mother as a puppet, your Alliance will be owed a debt by my House that it can draw upon to the limit. And third, the Alphane require truth. We will give you the truth. You’ll find it hard to get one gram of it from anyone associated with Adoula.”

“Again, truth,” the Phaenur said. “Some quibbling about the debt, but I expect that’s a simple matter of recognizing that the needs of his empire may overrule his own desires. But I’m still not sure we’ll choose to aid you, Prince Roger. You seek to overthrow your government?”

“No. To restore it; it’s already been overthrown . . . to an extent. As things stand at this moment, Adoula is still constrained by our laws and Constitution. For the time being . . . but not for long. We believe we have until the birth of the child being gestated to save my mother; after that, she’ll be an impediment to Adoula’s plans. So she’ll undoubtedly name him Prime Minister and he or the Earl of New Madrid—” Roger’s voice never wavered, despite the hardness in his eyes as he spoke his father’s title “—will be named Regent for the child. And then she’ll die . . . and Adoula’s coup will be complete.”

“That is
all
surmise,” Sreeetoth said.

“Yes,” Roger acknowledged. “But it’s valid surmise. Mother would never ally herself with Adoula, and I was
definitely
not involved in the coup. In fact, I was totally incommunicado when it occurred. She also hates and reviles my biological father . . . who’s now at her side at all times, and who is the biological father of her unborn child, as well. Given all that, psychological control is the only reasonable answer. Agreed?”

“You believe it to be,” the Phaenur said. “And I agree that the logic is internally valid. That doesn’t prove it, but—”

“It is true,” Tchock Ral rumbled. “We are aware of it.”

“I’m in way over my head,” Mordas Dren said fervently. “I know you guys thought you needed a human in the room, but this is so far out of my league I wish I could have a brain scrub and wash it out. Jesus!” His face worked for a moment, and he squeezed his eyes shut. “Adoula is a snake. His fingers are in every corporation that’s trying to kick in our doors. Him as Emperor . . . That’s what you’re talking about, right?”

“Eventually,” Roger said. “What’s worse, we don’t think it will work. More likely, the Empire will break up into competing factions. And without the Empress to stabilize it . . .”

“And this would be bad how?” the Althari admiral asked. Then she twitched her massive head in a human-style shake. “No. I agree, it would be bad. The Saints would snap up territory, increasing their already formidable resource base. If they managed to get some of your Navy, as well, we’d be looking at heavy defense commitments on
another
border. And it’s my professional opinion that the Empire would indeed break up. In which case, chaos is too small a word.”

“The effect on trade would be . . . suboptimal,” Sreeetoth said. “But if you try to place your mother back upon the Throne and fail, the results will be the same. Or possibly even worse.”

“Not . . . exactly.” Roger looked back and forth between the three Alphane representatives. “If we try and fail, and are discovered to be who we are, then Adoula’s tracks are fully covered. Obviously, it was me all along, in which case, he’d be much more likely to be able to hold things together. The reputation of House MacClintock would be severely damaged, and that reputation would have been one of the things that stood against him. If I’m formally saddled with responsibility for everything, he’ll actually be in a better position to supplant my House in terms of legitimacy and public support.”

“Only if no word of where you
really
were at the time of the initial coup attempt ever gets out,” the Phaenur pointed out.

“Yes.”

Tchock Ral leaned forward and looked at Roger for a long time.

“You are telling us that if you fail, you intend to cover up the fact that you are
not
guilty of staging the first coup?” the Althari said. “That you would stain the reputation of your House for all time, rather than let that information be exposed.”

“Yes,” Roger repeated. “Letting it out would shatter the Empire. I would rather that my House, with a thousand years of honorable service to mankind, be remembered only for my infamy, than allow that to happen. Furthermore, your Alliance—you three individuals, and whoever else is let in on the secret—will have to hold it, if not forever, then for a very long time. Otherwise . . .”

“Chaos on the border,” Dren said. “Jesus Christ, Your Highness.”

“I asked for senior policymakers,” Roger said, shrugging at the engineer. “Welcome to the jungle.”

“How will you conceal the truth?” Sreeetoth asked. “If you’re captured? Some of you, no matter what happens,
will
be captured if you fail.”

“It would require a concerted effort to get the information out in any form that would be believed, past the security screen Adoula will throw up if we fail,” Roger captured. “We’ll simply avoid the concerted effort.”

“And your people?” the Althari asked, gesturing at the staff. “You actually trust them to follow this insane order?”

Roger flexed a jaw muscle, and was rewarded by a heel landing on either foot. Despreaux’s came down quite a bit harder than O’Casey’s, but they landed virtually simultaneously. He closed his eyes and breathed for a moment, then reached back and pulled every strand of hair into line.

“Admiral Tchock Ral,” he said, looking the Althari in the eye. “You are a warrior, yes?”

Eleanora was too experienced a diplomat to wince; Despreaux and Julian weren’t.

“Yes,” the admiral growled. “Be aware, human, that even asking that question is an insult.”

“Admiral,” Roger said levelly, meeting her anger glare for glare, “compared to the lowest ranking Marine I’ve got, you don’t know the meaning of the word.”

The enormous Althari came up out of her chair with a snarl like crumbling granite boulders, and the guard in the corner straightened. But Roger just pointed a finger at Sreeetoth.

“Tell her!” he snapped, and the Phaenur jabbed one hand in an abrupt, imperative gesture that cut off the Althari’s furious response like a guillotine.

“Truth,” it hissed. “Truth, and a belief in that truth so strong it is like a fire in the room.”

The lizardlike being turned fully to the bearlike Althari and waved the same small hand at its far larger companion.

“Sit, Tchock Ral. Sit. The Prince burns with the truth. His —soldiers—even the woman who hates to be one—all of them burn with the truth of that statement.” It looked back at Roger. “You tread a dangerous path, human. Altharis have been known to go what you call berserk at that sort of insult.”

“It wasn’t an insult,” Roger said. He looked at the trio of visitors steadily. “Would you like to know why it wasn’t?”

“Yes,” the Phaenur said. “And I think that Tchock Ral’s desire to know burns even more strongly than my own.”

“It’s going to take a while.”

In fact, it took a bit over four hours.

Roger had never really sat down and told the story, even to himself, until they’d worked out the presentation, and he’d been amazed when he truly realized for the first time all they’d done. He’d
known
, in an intellectual way, all along. But he’d been so submerged in the doing, so focused on every terrible step of the March as they actually took it, that he’d truly never considered its entirety. Not until they’d sat down to put it all together.

Even at four hours, it was the bare-bones, only the highlights—or low-lights, as Julian put it—of the entire trip.

There was data from the toombie attack on the
DeGlopper
; downloaded sensor data from the transport’s ferocious, sacrificial battle with the Saint cruisers and her final self-destruction after she’d been boarded, to take the second cruiser with her. There were recorded helmet views of battles and screaming waves of barbarians, of Mardukan carnivores and swamps and mud and eternal, torrential rain until the delicate helmet systems succumbed to the rot of the jungle. There were maps of battles, descriptions of weapons, analyses of tactics, data on the battle for the
Emerald Dawn
from the Saints’ tactical systems, enemy body counts . . . and the soul-crushing roll call of their own dead.

It was the after-action report from Hell.

And when it was done, they showed the Alphane delegation around the ship. The admiral and her guard noted the combat damage and fingered Patty’s scars. The engineer clucked at the damage, stuck his head in holes which still hadn’t been patched over, and exclaimed at the fact that the ship ran at all. The admiral nearly had a hand taken off by a
civan
—which she apparently thought was delightful—and they were shown the
atul
and the
basik
in cages. Afterward, Rastar, stony-faced as only a Mardukan could be, showed them the battle-stained flag of the
Basik
’s Own. The admiral and her guard thought it was a grand flag, and, having seen an actual
basik
, got the joke immediately.

Finally, they ended up back in the wardroom. Everyone in the command group had had a part in the presentation, just as every one of them had had a part in their survival. But there was one last recorded visual sequence to show.

The Althari admiral leaned back in the big station chair and made a clucking sound and a weird atonal croon that sent a shiver through every listener as Roger ran the file footage from the bridge’s internal visual pickups and they watched the final actions of Armand Pahner. The Prince watched it with them, and his brown eyes were dark, like barriers guarding his soul, as the last embers of life flickered out of the shattered, armored body clasped in his arms.

And then it was done. All of it.

Silence hovered for endless seconds that felt like hours. And then Tchock Ral’s face and palms were lifted upward.

“They will march beyond the Crystal Mountains,” she said in low, almost musical tones. “They will be lifted up upon the shoulders of giants. Their songs will be sung in their homesteads, and they shall rest in peace, served by the tally of their slain. Tchrorr Kai Herself will stand beside them in battle for all eternity, for they have entered the realm of the Warrior, indeed.”

She lowered her face and looked at Roger, swinging her head in a circle which was neither nod nor headshake, but something else, something purely Althari.

“I wipe the stain of insult from our relationship. You have been given a great honor to have known such warriors, and to have led them. They are most worthy. I would gladly have them as foes.”

“Yes,” Roger said, looking at the freeze-frame in the hologram. Himself, holding his father-mentor’s body in his arms, the armored arms which, for all their strength, had been unable to hold life within that mangled flesh. “Yes, but I’d give it all for one more chewing out from the Old Man. I’d give it all for one more chance to watch Gronningen being used as a straight man. To see Dokkum grin in the morning light, with the air of the mountains around us. To hear Ima’s weird laugh.”

“Ima didn’t laugh, much,” Julian pointed out quietly. The retelling had put all the humans in a somber mood.

“She did that first time I fell off Patty,” Roger reminded him.

“Yes. Yes, she did,” Julian agreed.

“Prince, I do not know what the actions of my government will be,” Tchock Ral said. “What you ask would place the Alphane Alliance in no little jeopardy, and the good of the clan must be balanced against that. But you and your soldiers may rest in my halls until such time as a decision is made. In my halls, we can hide you, even under your true-name, for my people are trustworthy. And if the decision goes against you, you may rest in them for all eternity, if you choose. To shelter the doers of such deeds would bring honor upon my House forever,” she ended, placing both paws on her chest and bowing low across them.

“I thank you,” Roger said. “Not for myself, but for the honor you do my dead.”

“You’ll probably have to make this presentation again,” Sreeetoth said with another head bob. “I’ll need copies of all your raw data. And if you stay at Tchock Ral’s house, you’ll be forced to tell your stories all day and night, so be warned.”

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