Authors: David Weber,John Ringo
He’d
promised
he wasn’t going to do this sort of . . . shit anymore.
A sudden, ringing silence filled Pedi’s ears, and she realized she was on a deck clear of (living) pirates, still chained, lying on her back, and looking up at this old fellow . . . dangling . . . above her. And while the sight had been welcome, in one way, the angle could have been better. Not to mention the fact that her neck and shoulders hurt like hell.
“Ahem,” she said as sweetly as she possibly could under the circumstances. “I don’t suppose you could be convinced to take these chains off me?”
CHAPTER ELEVEN
“Roooggger!”
The prince closed one reloaded revolver cylinder and turned around as Despreaux came clambering over the side of the ship.
“God
dammit,
Roger! When are you going to
learn
?”
“Your Highness,” Captain Fain said, striding across the deck. “That was most thoughtless of you. We were well on our way to clearing the ship, and you jumped directly into our line of fire.”
“I know, Captain Fain,” Roger said, switching his toot to Diaspran. “But—”
“
ROOOGGGER!”
Armand Pahner strode out of the clearing gunsmoke. “What in the hell was
that,
Your Highness? We had the damned battle well in hand!”
A babble of Mardukan broke out behind Roger as he turned towards the Marine captain with a harassed expression. Denat had made his own, slower way to the deck and was engaged in a full throated harangue of his uncle. From the tone of the shaman’s attempted responses—not to mention the irate set of his lower arms—Cord was about to start hollering back like a howler monkey.
Which was remarkably similar to the way
he
felt, the prince thought. Then he drew a deep breath and keyed the amplifier on his helmet.
“Everyone shut the hell up!”
The sudden silence was as abrupt as it was total, and Roger snorted in satisfaction. Then he turned the amplifier off and continued in a more normal tone.
“I will answer everyone’s questions as soon as I have
mine
answered.”
He turned to Cord and fixed the old shaman with a baleful look.
“Cord, what in the hell were you thinking?”
“They were killing the prisoners,” the shaman answered in his best Imperial. His accent did . . . interesting things to it, but he’d spent many a long evening during the endless journey working on mastering the Empire of Man’s universal tongue. He’d needed to, so that he could debate the way the Empire
ought
to be organized in long, evening discussions with Eleanora O’Casey. As a result, his basic grasp of the language was actually very good, despite his accent, considering that he lacked the advantage the humans’ toots conferred upon them. It was also
much
better than his Diaspran, and Cord knew Fain would be able to follow at least some of the conversation if they all used that language.
“That’s it? The whole explanation?” Roger asked, propping his hands on his hips. “We were clearing the whole ship, Cord. Most of those pirates were going to be overrun by Krindi’s troops in no more than a few minutes. The usual pattern is, first, kill the enemy;
then
save the prisoners. Not the other way around!”
“They were killing them at that time, Your Highness,” the
asi
pointed out in a tone of massive restraint. “The deaths would have been accomplished before even Captain Fain’s soldiers could have stopped it. I could not, in good conscience, permit that to happen.”
Pahner drew a deep breath and turned to stare up at the towering Mardukan.
“Hold on. You mean,
you
went first?”
“Yes, he did,” Roger said with immense, overstrained patience. “I just followed him. And that’s another thing,” he continued, turning back to Cord. “What about me? Huh? You’re supposed to cover my back. I
depend
on you to cover my back, for God’s sake!”
“You were safe on the other ship,” Cord said. “How was I to know you would follow me?”
“Of
course
I was going to follow you, you old idiot!” Roger shouted. “Cord—
Arrrgh!
”
“They were killing the prisoners,” Cord repeated, gesturing at the one chained at his feet. “I. Could. Not. Let. That. Happen. As I am bonded to you for saving my life, so I am bound to save others. It is the only honorable thing to do.”
“So, you were following Cord?” Despreaux asked. “I want to be clear about this.”
“Yes,” Roger said distinctly. “I was following Cord. It was not Prince Roger being a suicidal idiot. Or, rather, it was not Prince Roger
on his own
being a suicidal idiot.”
“I was not being suicidal,” Cord interjected. “As you yourself just pointed out, Captain Fain’s group would have soon cleared the deck. All I needed to do was to hold off the pirates for a short time.”
Roger grabbed his ponytail and yanked at it in frustration.
“Captain Pahner, do
you
want to handle this?”
“Shaman Cord,” the captain said, very formally, “this was not a good decision on your part. It’s not our job to endanger Roger unnecessarily.”
“Captain Pahner,” the shaman replied, just as formally, “I am Prince Roger’s
asi
. He is not mine. It is not his duty to preserve my life, and he was in no danger of direct attack when I left his side. Moreover, the fact that I am
asi
does not absolve me from the responsibilities of every Warrior of the Way. Indeed, as one who is
asi
—whose own life was saved by one under no obligation to do so—I am bound by the Way to extend that same generosity to others. Symmetry demands it . . . which means that it was clearly my responsibility to prevent the slaughter of innocents. But it was
not
Prince Roger’s responsibility to join me when I acted.”
Pahner opened his mouth. Then he closed it again while he thought about it for a moment and, finally, shrugged.
“You know, Your Highness, he’s got a point. Several of them, in fact.” He thought about it a bit longer, and as he did, a faintly evil smile creased his face.
“What?” Roger asked angrily.
“Ah, well, Your Highness,” the captain sounded suspiciously like a man who was trying not to chuckle, “I was just wondering how you feel with the shoe on the other foot for once.”
Roger began a hot retort, then stopped abruptly. He glowered at the captain, then looked around as Despreaux began to laugh. Finally, he smiled.
“Ahhh, pock you all,” he said with a chuckle of his own. “Yeah, okay. I get the point.” He shook his head, then took a look around the deck. “So, now that that’s out of the way, does anyone know what the situation is?”
“It appears to be mostly under control,” Captain Fain said . . . just as two Mardukans—a Diaspran infantry private and one of the pirates—burst upward out of one of the hatches. They fell to the deck, rolling over and over, with the Lemmar using all four arms to push a knife at the private’s neck while the private tried to push it back with his true-hands and flailed at the heavier pirate with both false-hands.
Roger and his companions watched the two of them roll across the deck, too surprised by their sudden eruption to do anything else. But Erkum Pol, as always following Fain like an oversized shadow, reacted with all of his wonted efficiency. He reached down with two enormously long arms, jerked the pirate up by his horns, head-butted him, and then let him go.
The pirate dropped like a rock, and the private waved a hand at Pol in thanks.
“As I was saying,” Fain continued. “More or less under control. The Lemmar are fighting . . . very hard. None have surrendered, although a few—” he gestured behind him at Pol’s victim “—have been rendered unconscious.”
“I’m not sure that one’s going to survive,” Roger observed. “Maybe Erkum should have used a plank.”
“Be that as it may,” Fain said. “We have the ship.”
“And these three surviving prisoners,” Roger mused. He hooked one thumb into his gunbelt and drummed on the leather with his fingers while his free hand gestured at the female at Cord’s feet. “Watch this one. She’s a tough little thing.”
Then he pulled out his clasp knife and stepped closer to her.
“So,” he said, switching his toot to the local dialect. “What’s your story?”
These new maybe-
vern
were very noisy, and the one with the pistols had a really incredible voice. It was so loud Pedi’s ears were still ringing. More importantly at the moment however, and whatever language they were using, it was clear there was some disagreement, and she just hoped it wasn’t over whether or not to throw everyone over the side, or burn the ships with them still on board. Finally, the one she’d tentatively pegged as the leader—although everyone seemed at first to be angry with him—turned to her.
“What you bard’s tale?” he asked in a hash of Krath and High Krath.
Pedi knew enough Krath to figure out what he’d said, but the question didn’t make very much sense. And she had to wonder what would happen if she told the truth. They knew Krath, so they were in contact with the Fire Priests. That meant that they would know what a Server of God was. But if she tried to tell them she and her fellow captives weren’t Prepareds and they found out, it would only make things worse. Lie, or not lie? Some of them were dressed like Shin, though, and the old one had fought to save them from the Lemmar. Maybe they were allied to the Shin, and she’d just never heard of them?
Not lie.
“I am Pedi Karuse, daughter of the King of Mudh Hemh. I was captured by a raiding party to be a Slave of God. We were being sent to Strem, to be Servants there, but we were taken by the Lemmar in turn, and now by you. Who are you, anyway?”
One of the other Shin prisoners had recovered from the dragging and now looked over at her with wide eyes.
“What happened that the Vale of Mudh Hemh could be raided?” she asked Pedi in Shin.
“I guess the Shadem found a way through the Fire Lands,” Pedi said, flicking her false-hands in the most expressive shrug her manacles allowed. “With the Battle Lands so picked over, they must have decided to strike deep. In our sloth and false security, we allowed them to come upon us unaware, but I was outside the walls and raised the cry. And was taken anyway, if not unawares,” she snorted.
“What is the language you are using?” the leader asked. Or, she thought that was what he’d asked, anyway. It was difficult to be certain, given the mishmash of Krath and Shin he was speaking.
“It is called Shin,” she told him, and decided to be diplomatic about his . . . accent. “How do you know it?”
“I know it from you,” the leader said. Then he leaned over her, and a knife blade suddenly appeared on the . . . thing in his hand.
The one nearest him, another
vern,
caught her snap-kick in midair.
“Whoa, there,” the
vern
said, with an even thicker accent. “He’s just cutting the chain.”
The leader had jerked back so quickly, despite being off center, that she probably would have missed anyway. She filed his—probably “his,” although all of the
vern
wore coverings which made it hard to tell—extraordinary reflexes away for future consideration. But he seemed remarkably unbothered by her effort to separate his head from his shoulders and gestured at the chain with the knife.
“Do you want that cut off, or would you rather keep it on?”
“Sorry,” Pedi said, holding out of her arms. “Off.”
Now that she could see it clearly, the knife looked remarkably like a simple clasp knife, albeit made of unfamiliar materials. But whatever it might
look
like, its blade cut through the heavy chain—and her manacles—effortlessly. The
vern
seemed to exert no strength at all, but her bonds parted with a metallic twang, as easily as if they had been made of cloth, not steel.
“That’s a nice knife,” she said. “I don’t suppose I could convince you to part with it?”
“No,” the leader said. “Not that I don’t appreciate your chutzpah.” The last word was in an unknown language, but the context made it plain, and her false-hands shrugged again.
“I am a Mudh Hemh Shin. It is our way.”
“Pleased to meet you,” the leader said. His face moved in a weird muscle twitch which showed small, white teeth. “I am Prince Roger Ramius Sergei Alexander Chiang McClintock, Heir Tertiary to the Empire of Man, and currently in charge of this band of cutthroats.” His face twitched again. “I saw you kick that one guard to death; you look like you’ll fit right in.”
Only three of the six captives were still alive. One, the Fire Guard, had been killed by the Lemmar, and the other two by the weapons of the boarders or when the chain wrenched them across the deck.
Although both of those casualties had been Shin, Pedi didn’t hold them against the newcomers, these . . . “humans” or their guard. War was a way of life to the Shin; from the lowliest serf to the highest of kings. To die in battle was considered a high honor, and many a serf, as the other captives had been, had won his or her freedom by heroic defense against the Krath raiding columns.
Pedi wondered what to do next. Although the serfs came from other clans, it was clearly her responsibility to take charge of them and insure their welfare until they could be returned to their fiefdoms. Should return prove impossible, she would be required to maintain them to the best of her own ability. And at the moment, that ability was rather low.
The female serf who had spoken so abruptly came forward, her arms crossed, and knelt on the deck, head bowed in ritual obeisance.
“Light of the Mudh Hemh, do you see me?”
“You must be from Sran Vale,” Pedi said with a gesture of humorous acceptance.
“I am, Your Light,” the serf said in obvious surprise. “How did you know?”
“If my armsman saw someone from Mudh Hemh bobbing and scraping like that to me, he would die of laughter,” Pedi said. “Get up. Who are you?”
“I am Slee, serf to the Vassal Trom Sucisp, Your Light.”
“And you?” Pedi asked the other serf.
“I am also of the lands of Vassal Trom Sucisp, Your Light,” he said, kneeling beside Slee. “Long may you shine. Pin is my name.”
“Well, in Mudh Hemh, we don’t put much stock in all this bowing and scraping,” Pedi said sharply. “Stand up and act like you know what your horns are for. We’re better off than we were, but we’re not home yet.”
“Yes, Your Light,” Slee said. “But, begging your pardon, are we to return to our lands?”
“If I can arrange it,” she said. “It is our duty.”
“Your Light, I agree that it is
our
duty,” Slee said in a tone of slight regret. “But surely it is the duty of a
benan
to follow her master?”
Pedi felt her slime go dry as she replayed the memory of that tremendous leap on the part of the old man. She would surely have died without his intervention—the intervention of a stranger, with no obligation to aid her.