Throne of Stars (93 page)

Read Throne of Stars Online

Authors: David Weber,John Ringo

“Oh, shit,” Phelps said.

“What now?” Gunnar inquired with a yawn.

“Multiple signatures!” Phelps snapped. “Military grade. Three loca—four . . .
five
locations, two in the Western Ranges! Three of them are
inside
the city!”


What?
” Gunnar jerked upright in her station chair, keying up a repeater on her console. “Oh, my God! Not again.”

“Where in the hell did they
come
from?” Phelps demanded.

“No idea,” Gunnar replied. “But five gets you ten where they’re
headed
.” She started tapping in a set of commands, only to stop as her connection light blinked out. A fraction of an instant later, there was a rumble from the building’s subbasement.

“Primary communications link down,” Corporal Ludjevit said tersely. “Secondary down, too. Sergeant, we’re cut off.”

“Find out why!” Gunnar said. “Shit, can’t we communicate at
all
?”

“Only if you want to use a phone,” Ludjevit told her.

“Then use the fucking
phone
!”

“Luddite.”

“Say what you will about all these human devices,” Krindi Fain observed, blowing out the match, “there’s a certain thrill to gunpowder.”

The main communications node for the Imperial City Police Department had just encountered two kilos of the aforementioned gunpowder. The gunpowder had won.

“Humans taught us that, too,” Erkum said, scratching at the base of one horn. “Right?”

“Oh,
be
a spoilsport,” Krindi replied. “Time to get out of here.”

“Right this way,” Tebic said. “Getting in was easy.” It had been, thanks to IBI-provided clearance for the “technicians.” “Getting out, we have to take the sewers.”

Imperial City was the best defended spot in the galaxy. Everyone knew that. What most were unaware of, however, was that it was defended primarily against
space
attack. Defensive emplacements ringed the city, and some were located in its very heart, for that matter. But they were designed to engage incoming hostile weapons at near orbital levels.

There were far fewer defenses near the ground.

The stingships used that chink in the capital’s armor for all it was worth. Aircars had been grounded automatically, as soon as the city police network went down. That meant the traffic which would normally have been in their way was parked on the ground, drivers cursing at systems that simply wouldn’t work. That didn’t mean the air was free, just less cluttered by
moving
crap.

Honal banked the stingship around one of the city’s innumerable skyscrapers and triggered a smart round. The round went upwards, then back, and impacted on Prince Jackson’s office as Honal dove under a grav-tube and made another bank down 47th Street.

A police car at the intersection of 47th and Troelsen Avenue sent a stream of beads his way, but they bounced off the stingship’s ChromSten armor like raindrops. Honal didn’t even respond. The police, whether they knew it or not, were effectively neutrals in this battle, and he saved his ammo for more important things.

Such as the defensive emplacements at the edge of Imperial Park.

His sensors peaked as one of those emplacements locked onto him, and he triggered two HARM missiles at the radar. They screamed off the Shadow Wolf’s wing racks, and he banked again—hard—to put another skyscraper between him and the defenses. The HARM missiles flew straight and true, riding the radar emissions into the defensive missile pods, and rolling fireballs blew the pods into scrap.

But one of the pods had already fired, and an anti-air missile locked onto his stingship and made the turn down 41st Street, howling after him.

A threat warning blazed in Honal’s head-up display as the pursuing missile’s homing systems went active. He glanced at the HUD’s icons, then dropped the ship down to barely a hundred meters and kicked his afterburners to full thrust. The Shadow Wolf’s turbines screamed as the stingship went hurtling down the broad avenue at the heart of the capital city of the Empire of Man, but the missile was lighter, faster, and much more modern. It closed quickly, arrowing in for the kill, and Honal waited carefully. He needed it close behind him, close enough that it couldn’t—

He hauled up, riding his afterburners through a climbing loop on a pillar of thunder. His stingship’s belly almost scraped the side of yet another skyscraper, and the semismart missile followed its target. It cut the corner to destroy the stingship, slicing across the chord of the Shadow Wolf’s flight path . . . and vanished in a sudden blossom of flame as it ran straight into the grav-tube Honal had looped inside of.

“Yes!”
Honal rolled the ship and headed for Montorsi Avenue and the next target on his list. “I am Honal C’Thon Radas, Heir to the Barony of—!”

“Red Six,” Rosenberg said dryly over the com. “You’ve got another seeker on your tail. Might want to pay a little attention to that.”

“Captain Wallenstein,” the duty communications tech said in the clipped, calm voice of professional training. “We’re receiving reports of a military-grade attack on Imperial City. IBI communications and Imperial City Police are down. The Defense Headquarters is in communication with us, and the defenses around the Palace are reporting attack by stingships.”

“Contact Carrier Squadron Fourteen,” Gustav Wallenstein said, turning to look at his repeater display as the same information began to come up there. “Have them—”

“Belay that order,” a crisp voice said.

Wallenstein’s head snapped around, and his face twisted with fury as Captain Kjerulf stepped into the Moonbase Operations Room.

“What?” Wallenstein demanded, coming to his feet. “
What
did you just say?!”

“I said to belay that order,” Kjerulf repeated. “Nobody’s moving anywhere.”


Minotaur, Gloria, Lancelot
, and
Holbein
are moving,” a sensor tech said, as if to contradict the chief of staff. “Course projections indicate they’re moving to interdict the planetary orbitals.”

“Fine,” Kjerulf replied, never taking his eyes from Wallenstein. “What’s happening on Old Earth is no concern of ours.”

“The hell it’s not!” Wallenstein shouted, and looked at the guards. “Captain Kjerulf is under arrest!”

“By whose orders?” Kjerulf inquired coolly. “I’ve got you by date of rank.”

“By Admiral Greenberg’s orders,” Wallenstein sneered. “We’ve had our eye on you, Kjerulf. Sergeant, I
order
you to arrest this traitor!”

“Why does treason never prosper?” Kjerulf asked lightly, as the Marine guard remained at her post. “Because if it prospers, none dare call it treason. Well, Wallenstein, you’ve prospered for the last few months, but not today. Sergeant?”

“Sir?”

“Fatted Calf.”

“Yes, Sir.” The Marine drew her sidearm. “Captain Wallenstein, you are under arrest for treason against the Empire. Anything you say, etc. Let’s save the rest until we have you in a nice interrogation cell, shall we?”

“Captain,” the com tech said as a slumping Wallenstein was led out of the room, “there’s a call on his secure line from Prince Jackson. He’s asking for Admiral Greenberg.”

“Is he?” Kjerulf smiled thinly. “That particular call might be a little difficult to put through, Chief. I suppose
I’d
better take it, instead.”

He seated himself in the chair Wallenstein had vacated and keyed the communication circuit with a tap.

“And good morning to you, Prince Jackson,” he said cheerfully as the prince’s scowling face appeared on his com display. “What can I do for the Imperial Navy Minister this fine morning?”

“Can the crap, Kjerulf,” Adoula snarled. The data hack in the display’s lower corner indicated that it was coming from an aircar. “Get me Greenberg. And have Carrier Squadron Fourteen moved in close to Old Earth. Prince Roger’s back, and he’s trying another coup. The Empress’ Own needs Navy support.”

“Sorry, Prince Jackson,” Kjerulf said. “I’m afraid that, as a civilian member of the government, you’re not in my chain of command. And Admiral Greenberg is unavailable at the moment.”

“Why is he unavailable?” Adoula demanded, suddenly wary.

“I think he just got a fatal dose of bead-poisoning,” Kjerulf said calmly. “And before you trot out General Gianetto—who, unlike you Mr. Navy Minister, is theoretically in my direct line of command—you can feel free to tell him that he’s up for the next dose.”

“I’ll have your head for this, Kjerulf!”

“You’re going to find that hard going,” Kjerulf told him. “And if we lose, you’re gonna have to wait in line. Have a nice day, Your Highness.”

He hit the key and cut Adoula off.

“Right, listen up, troops,” he said, turning his command chair to face the Ops Room staff and tipping it back. “Does anyone really believe that the first coup was Prince Roger?” He looked around at the assembled expressions, and nodded. “Good. Because the fact is that Adoula led the coup, and he’s been keeping the Empress hostage ever since, right?”

“Yes, Sir,” one of the techs—a master chief with over twenty years worth of hash marks on his cuff—said. “I’m glad somebody’s finally willing to say it out loud.”

“Well, you can all make your decision right now,” Kjerulf said. “Until very recently, Adoula thought Roger was dead. He’s not. He’s back, and he’s got blood in his eye. Forget everything you’ve seen on the news programs about the Well-Dressed Prince. Bottom line, he’s a MacClintock—and a
true
MacClintock, what’s more. The Marines are with us. The captains of the
Gloria, Minotaur, Lancelot
, and
Holbein
are with us, and Admiral Helmut is on the way. He’s probably going to be a day late and a credit short, because we had to start the ball early. Anyone who is
not
willing to stand his post—and that’s probably going to mean missiles on our heads—head for Luna City, pronto. Anyone willing to stay is more than welcome.”

He looked around, one eyebrow raised.

“I’m staying,” the com tech said, turning back to her board. “Better to die like a spacer than work for that bastard Adoula.”

“Amen,” another of the petty officers said.

“Very well,” Kjerulf said as the rest of them nodded and muttered their assent. “Send a message to all Fleet Marine contingents. The codeword is: Fatted Calf.”

“I love Imperial Festival,” Siminov said as Despreaux’s float chair was wheeled into the room by the gorilla. “Bookies are busy, whores are busy, and drug sales are up fifteen percent.”

Despreaux glowered at him over her gag, then turned to look at Pedi.

“So, as you see, Ms. Karuse,” Siminov continued, “Ms. Stewart is unharmed.”

“Well, Mr. Chung sent me over to negotiate,” Pedi said, grimacing again in an attempt to smile and rubbing her horns suggestively with her fingertips. “You see, he just doesn’t
have
a million credits sitting around at the moment. He’s willing to offer a hundred thousand immediately, as what he calls the ‘vig,’ and pay the rest in a few days, if all goes well. In two weeks, at the outside.”

“Well, I’m sorry you’ve come all this way for nothing,” Siminov said. “The deal is nonnegotiable. Especially since my emissary went missing,” he added harshly. “Perhaps
you
should go missing, Ms. Karuse,” he suggested. “That would only— What was that?”

A distant explosion rattled the building, and Siminov and his gorilla looked at one another with perplexed expressions.

“Damn,” Pedi said mildly, glancing at her watch. “Already?”

The gang lord and his bodyguards were still trying to figure out what they’d just heard when she slapped Despreaux’s chair, throwing it across the room, and dropped forward. All four of her hands hit the floor in front of her feet, and she kicked back with both legs.

Gorilla and his brother went flying back against the wall. They slammed into it—hard—and Pedi pushed off with her lower hands and flipped backwards. She flew through the air, landing in front of the two guards even as they began to reach into their jackets for their bead pistols. Her upper elbows slammed back to connect with their faces, and her lower hands reached down and back. Her more powerful false-hands gripped tight, picked them up by their thighs, and threw them off their feet. They landed on the backs of their skulls with bone-jarring force.

She somersaulted forward, thanking the gods of the Fire Mountains for a high ceiling, and flipped across the desk. All four hands balanced her on its surface as her feet smashed into Siminov, sending him backward to slam against the wall before he could raise the bead pistol he’d pulled from a drawer. He hit with stunning force, and the pistol went flying into a corner of the office.

Pedi somersaulted again, backwards this time, and ended up back between the guards. She grabbed gorilla’s hair, tilted his head back so that his throat was extended and unguarded, and flipped the back of her horns across it with a head twist. The sharpened recurve opened it in a fountain of blood, faster than a knife, and she tossed the bleeding body aside and kicked the other guard on to his stomach. She stamped down with one foot to break his neck, then calmly reached over and locked the door.

“Roger thought you might underestimate a woman,” she said gently as she strolled back across the room.

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