Authors: David Weber,John Ringo
“Okay,” Pahner replied. “That’s what I recalled, too. Computer: all hands. All Imperial personnel, begin evacuation of the ship. Computer: command group. Captain Fain? Rastar?”
“Here,” Fain called.
“This is Honal,” Rastar’s cousin said a moment later. “Rastar is . . . occupied, but we’ve secured the shuttle bays. They’re damaged, but secure.”
“You need to start evacuating the ship,” Pahner said. “Pull off as many of the Saint prisoners as seems practical.”
“Armand,” Roger said on a discrete frequency. “We can’t let them go. If we do, my life isn’t worth spit.”
“No, but if we get our forces off, we might have a shot at the next ship,” Pahner replied.
“Imperial commander,” Giovannuci called. “You have thirty seconds to begin evacuation. After that, I’ll start the detonation sequence, and there’s no way to stop it.”
Roger had automatically shifted back to the command group frequency, which meant that the Saint colonel’s voice had gone out to everyone else patched into it with him. He grimaced, but then he shrugged. Maybe it was for the best.
“That’s the situation, guys,” he said.
“Not good,” Honal said. “We’re loading on the shuttles, but our assault did a certain amount of damage.”
“Honal,” Kosutic said. “Send a team of Vashin down to the southwest quadrant. I’ve got a group of crew that needs evacuating.”
“Colonel Giovannuci,” Roger called, this time making certain that he wasn’t putting it out over the command frequency, as well. “We’re evacuating as we speak, but both sides have casualties, and there are depressurized zones all over the ship. It’s going to take a little time.”
“I’ll give you two minutes,” Giovannuci replied. “But that’s it.”
“Armand, I am
not
giving up this ship,” Roger snarled over the discrete frequency. “If they’re stupid enough to go ahead and blow themselves up after we evacuate, well and good. But if they just fly away, we’re pocked.”
“I know, Your Highness,” the captain sighed.
“Captain Pahner,” Poertena’s voice interrupted. “Are we suppose’ to evacuate t’e Saints?”
“Yes,” Pahner replied calmly. So far, only the command group knew they were looking at a self-destruct situation, and he intended to keep it that way as long as possible. “The ship is in bad shape. We need to get the Saints off for their own safety, and as prisoners of war.”
“Okay. I t’ink I gots t’e ship’s exec tied up in a closet. I’ll go get her.”
“Wait one, Poertena,” Roger interrupted. “Where are you?”
“In t’e southeas’ quadrant,” the armorer replied. “Deck Four.”
“Sergeant Major,” Roger instructed. “Head to the southeast quadrant and link up with Poertena. Do it now.”
“Don’t go off half-cocked, Roger,” Pahner warned. He was nearly to the Bridge tunnel.
“Not a problem,” Roger replied. “I’m cool as cold.”
Kosutic took the proffered crowbar and inserted it into a crack between the door and its frame. Then she threw her weight on it, and the metal seal popped loose with an explosive “Crack!” The closet door sprang open, and she looked in at the female officer in a combat crouch and shook her head.
“I could probably take you
out
of the armor,” the sergeant major warned her. “And we don’t have time for games.”
“I know we don’t. We need to get out of here,” Beach replied. “That Pollution-crazed idiot is getting ready to blow up the whole ship.”
“What happens if we take the Bridge?” Kosutic asked. “For general information, we already have Engineering and the Armory.”
“Well, if you take the Bridge, it’s
possible
that I could shut down the scuttling charges,” Beach admitted. “It all depends.”
“We don’t have a lot of time to debate here,” Kosutic said.
“Look, we’re technically illegal combatants,” Beach said. “You know it, I know it. What’s your law in that regard?”
“Generally, you’re repatriated,” Kosutic told her. “Especially if we can trade you for one of our groups.”
“And then, most of the time, we replace
your
group on a recovery planet,” Beach said. “So I can die fast, here, when the charges go off. Or I can die slow, being worked and starved to death.”
“Or?”
“Or, I can get asylum.”
“We can’t grant asylum,” Kosutic said. “We can
try,
but we can’t guarantee it. We don’t have the authority.”
“Is the guy leading you
really
Prince Roger? Because, according to our intelligence, he’s dead, and has been for months.”
“Yeah, it’s really him,” Kosutic replied. “You want his word on it or something?”
“Yes. If a member of your Imperial Family promises, at least it’s going to be a big political stink if the Empies don’t comply.”
“You have no idea how complicated you’re making this,” the sergeant major muttered.
“Imperial commander, you have fifteen seconds to exit the ship,” Giovannuci called. “I don’t think you’re gone yet.”
“We’re working on it,” Roger said, just as his helmet flashed a priority signal from the sergeant major. “Hold one, Colonel Giovannuci. This may be from my people in the shuttle bay. Computer: switch Kosutic.”
“It’s the Saint second, all right,” the sergeant major confirmed over the secure channel. “She’s willing to give us the codes in exchange for asylum. She wants Roger’s personal word.”
“If she thinks that’s going to help, she obviously doesn’t know there’s a price on my head, does she?” Roger said with a grim chuckle.
“I think we’re dealing with intelligence lag,” Kosutic replied. “She knows you’re dead; she hasn’t heard Jackson’s latest version yet. Either way, what do I do? We’re on our way, by the way.”
“Tell her she has my personal word as a MacClintock that I will do all in my power to ensure that she gets asylum from the Empire,” Roger replied. “But I want to be there when she finds out I’m an outlaw.”
“Will do,” the sergeant major said with a grin that could be heard over the radio. “About a minute until we’re there.”
“And I’m here already,” Pahner said as he strode up behind Roger. “You need to get the hell off the ship, Your Highness. Sergeant Despreaux is already on the shuttle, and so are most of the wounded.”
“Somebody needs to take this bridge, Armand,” Roger said tightly. “And we need it more or less intact. Who’s the best close-quarters person we have?”
“You’re
not
assaulting the bridge,” Pahner said. “Lose you, and it’s all for
nothing
.”
“Lose the
ship,
and it’s all for nothing,” Roger replied.
“There’ll be other ships,” Pahner said, putting his hand on the prince’s shoulder.
“Yeah, but if this one leaves, they’ll be Saint carriers!”
“Yes, but—”
“What’s the mission, Captain?” Roger interrupted harshly, and Pahner hesitated for just a moment. But then he shook his head.
“To safeguard you, Your Highness,” he said.
“No,” Roger replied. “The mission is to safeguard the
Empire,
Captain. Safeguarding
me
is only part of that. If just Temu Jin makes it back and saves my mother, fine. If you make it back and do the same, fine. If
Julian
makes it back and performs the mission, fine. She can make a new heir. If she wants to, she can use DNA from John and Alexandra’s dad. The
mission,
Captain, is ‘Save the Empire.’ And to do that, we have to take this ship. And to take this ship, we have to use the personnel who can do that most effectively and who can physically get here in
time
to do it. And that makes taking this bridge Colonel Roger MacClintock’s best possible role. Am I
wrong
?”
Armand Pahner looked at the man he’d spent eight endless months keeping alive on a nightmare planet for a long, silent moment. Then he shook his head again.
“No, you’re not. Sir,” he said.
“Thought not,” Roger said, and pointed his plasma cannon at the hatch.
Giovannuci looked at the tactical officer and nodded as the first blast shook the bridge.
“On three,” he said, inserting his key into the console.
Lieutenant Cellini reached out slowly to insert his own key, but then he stopped. His hand dropped away from the board, and he shook his head.
“No. It’s not worth it, Sir.” He turned to face Iovan, pivoting in place until the noncom’s pistol was pointed squarely between his eyes. “Two hundred crew left, Sergeant Major. Two hundred. You’re going to kill them all for what? A corrupt leadership that preaches environmentalism and builds itself castles in the most beautiful parts of the wilderness? Kill me, and you kill yourself, and you kill the colonel.
Think
about what we’re doing here!”
Giovannuci looked over at the sergeant major and tipped his chin up in a questioning gesture.
“Iovan?”
“Everybody dies someplace, Lieutenant,” the sergeant major said, and pulled the trigger. Cellini’s head splashed away from the impact, and the sergeant major sighed. “What a senseless waste of human life,” he said, as he wiped the key clear of brains and looked at the colonel. “On three, you said, Sir?”
ChromSten was almost impervious to plasma fire, but “almost” was a relative term. Even ChromSten transmitted energy to its underlying matrix, which meant, in the case of the command deck, to a high stress cero-plastic. And as the heat buildup from the repeated plasma discharges bled into it, that underlying matrix began to melt, and then burn. . . .
“Breach!” Roger shouted, as the center of the hatch buckled, and then cracked open. For just a moment, white light from the bridge illuminated the smoke and steam from the blazing matrix before it was sucked greedily away by the vacuum.
The approach corridor was just
gone
. The intense heat from the plasma discharges had melted the material of the surrounding bulkheads and decks, creating a large opening that revealed the bridge as a ChromSten cylinder, thirty meters across, and fifty high, attached to the armored engineering core.
Getting across the yawning, five-meter gulf between his present position and the breach was going to be Roger’s first problem.
“No time like the present,” he muttered, and triggered his armor’s jump gear with a considerably gentler touch than Julian had used.
He sailed across the chasm, one hand supporting the plasma cannon while the other stretched out for the hole, and slammed into the outer face of the cylinder. The outstretched arm slipped through the breach, but his reaching fingers found nothing to grip. His arm slithered backwards, and for just a moment he felt a stab of panic. But then his fingers hooked into the ragged edge of the hole and locked.
“Piece of cake,” he panted, and exoskeletal “muscles” whined as he lifted himself up onto the slight lip which was all that remained of the outer door frame. He braced himself and ripped at the hole, widening it. The matrix of the ChromSten itself had begun to fail under the plasma fire, and the material sparked against his armored hand, returning to its original chrome and selenium atomic structure.
Giovannuci and Iovan stood with their hands behind their heads, with the rest of the command deck crew lined up at their stations behind them, as Roger entered the compartment behind his plasma cannon. All of them were in skin-suits against the soft vacuum that now filled most of the ship.
Roger looked around the bridge, then at the gore splattered over the self-destruct console, and shook his head.
“Was that strictly necessary?” he asked, as he walked over to the tactical officer’s body and turned it over. “Who?”
“Me,” Iovan said.
“Short range,” Roger said contemptuously. “I guess you couldn’t hit him from any farther away.”
“Take off that fucking armor and we’ll see how far away I can shoot,” Iovan said, and spat on the floor.
Pahner clambered through the hole, widening it further in the process, and crossed to the prince.
“You should’ve waited for us to secure it, Your Highness,” he said over the command frequency.
“And give them a chance to destroy the controls?” Roger replied over the same circuit. “No way. Besides,” he chuckled tightly, “I figured they were probably down to bead guns after Julian’s crazy stunt. If they hadn’t been, they’d still be shooting at us in the passageway.”
He switched back to the external amplifier, cranked up to maximum in the near-vacuum that passed for “air” on
Emerald Dawn
’s bridge at that particular moment, and looked at Giovannuci and Iovan.
“I can’t read ‘merchant marine’ rank tabs. Which of you is Giovannuci?”
“I am,” the colonel told him.
“Turn off the self-destruct,” Roger said.
“No.”
“Okay,” Roger said, with an unseen shrug inside his armor, and turned to Iovan. “Who are you?”
“I don’t have to tell you that,” Iovan said.
“Senior NCO,” Pahner said.
“Yeah, he’s got that look,” Roger said. “Not a bridge officer, so you can’t turn it off, can you?”
“Nobody in here can,” Giovannuci said. “Except me.”
Roger started to replied, then half-turned as Kosutic crawled into the bridge.
“I’ve got that second officer out here,” the sergeant major said over the command frequency. “She’s ready to turn off the self-destruct, just as soon as we clear all these guys off the Bridge. She said to watch the CO. He’s a real true-believer.”
“So which one of you is Prince Roger?” Giovannuci asked.
“I am,” the prince replied. “And I’m going to see to it that you hang, if it’s the last thing I do.”
“I don’t think so,” the Saint colonel said, calmly, and pulled the one-shot from behind his neck.
Time seemed to crawl as Roger started to lift his plasma cannon, then dropped it. If he fired it, the blast would take out half the ship controls . . . including the self-destruct console. So instead, he sprang forward, his hand continuing upward to the hilt of his sword even as the plasma cannon fell.
The prince was almost supernally fast, but whether he could have killed the colonel before he fired would remain forever unknown, since Pahner slammed into his suit, arms spread.
The impact threw the prince’s armor to the side, sending it smashing into the tactical display and out of the Saint’s’ line of fire just as Giovannuci swung the weapon forward, catching Pahner dead center, and squeezed the button.