Authors: David Weber,John Ringo
“Give me a more private contact number, and I’ll dump you the raw file. And the presentation. Furthermore, we had Harvard Mansul from the IAS with us for part of it as independent corroboration, and an IBI agent for a third independent data source. There’s plenty of documentation. And you
know
the Empress was being conditioned. You’d met her too many times before to think she was acting normally.”
“As I said, Ms. O’Casey, it will be quite impossible for me, as Prime Minister, to . . .”
“Roger, this is Marinau, do you read?”
“Yes,” Roger panted as he ran down the corridor. Automated systems had gone to local control, and he triggered a round at a plasma cannon that popped out of the wall. The cannon—and at least six cubic meters of Palace wall—disappeared before it could swivel and target his group. Another curtain of water erupted from overhead and splashed around his team’s armored feet as they pounded onward.
“We’ve got the courtyard, but the shuttles are late,” Marinau said over the sound of heavy firing.
“I’ve got the doors open up there,” Roger snarled. “What more do you want?”
He paused and went to a knee, covering, as they reached another intersection and the team went past him. Plasma fire erupted from one of the side corridors, and the Mardukan who’d been crossing it was cut in half.
“Can you detach anyone?” Marinau asked. “We’re getting slaughtered up here!”
“No,” Roger said, his over-controlled voice like ice as he imagined the hell the unarmored Mardukans were facing. He’d fought with them across two continents, bled with them and faced death at their side. But right now, they had their job, and he had his. “Contact Rosenberg. See what the holdup is. Continue the mission. Roger out.”
The corridor intersection had been taken, at the cost of another armored Mardukan and one of the Empress’ Own. They were down to fifteen bodies, and less than halfway to his mother’s quarters.
It was going to be tight.
Catrone held onto the desk as another titanic explosion rocked the building.
“What in the hell
is
that?” he asked as the armored room shuddered and seemed to lean to the right.
“I think I know,” Despreaux said tightly. The rescue team had made it to Siminov’s office, but they were pinned down again, with guards on both ends of the corridor covering the door.
“Me, too. And I’m going to
kill
Krindi for letting Erkum anywhere
near
a plasma gun,” Pedi added, stroking her horns nervously.
“No way out, there, Boss,” Clovis said, ducking back as bead rounds caromed off the doorway.
Trey was being tended to behind the desk after taking a bead through the thigh. The nasty hit had pulverized the femoral bone and cut the femoral artery, but Dave had an IV running and a tourniquet in place.
“A tisket, a tasket, a head in a basket,” Dave said in a high voice. “No matter how you try, it cannot answer the questions you ask it!”
“Have you got any idea where we are?” Krindi asked over the crackling roar of flames. Fortunately, their environment suits were flame resistant, and they’d lowered their face shields and activated their filters. But the air was getting low on oxygen, and even inside the suits, it was bloody hot.
“Second floor?” Erkum suggested uncertainly. He was training the gun around, delighted to have it operational again as he looked for targets.
“Third floor, third floor,” Krindi muttered, looking up. “Oh, hell. Erkum, look, very carefully . . .”
Catrone grabbed Despreaux as the rocking concussion of an explosion slammed into the room. The entire office seemed to lift and then drop, sliding downward and to the side in an uncontrolled fall as the desk toppled towards the right wall. It crunched to a halt at an angle, listing to the right.
Dave threw himself over Trey, trying to get a finger hold on the carpet.
Pedi rolled onto her stomach, gripped a fold of the deep-pile carpet in her teeth, and flung out all four arms. She managed to snag Catrone with her lower right, Dave and Trey with the upper left, and Clovis, as he slid past, with her upper right.
“Okay,” she muttered through tightly clenched teeth. “What do we do now?” The floor her lips were pressed against was getting distinctively warm.
“Slip sliding away,” Dave sang in a high tenor, holding onto the unconscious Trey with one arm and gripping the carpet between thumb and forefinger with the other hand. “Slip sliding away, hey!”
“I hate classical music,” Clovis said as he drew a knife and very slowly lifted it in Dave’s direction, then slapped it into the carpet as a temporary piton. “I really, really do . . .”
Honal banked left, almost clipping a building with his tail, then flipped right and down the next road, then left again, and pulled up sharply, rolling the stingship over on its back. As the Empress’ Own stingship rounded the corner, he let it have a burst from his forward plasma guns and rolled back upright.
“Way’s clear,” he said. “Roll the shuttles!”
“Where’s Alpha Six?” Flight Ops asked as Honal flew over the remains of the stingship sticking out of a building. Only the tail was visible, with the markings of a squadron commander.
“Alpha Six won’t be joining us,” Honal said, pulling up and over the building in salute to a fallen comrade. “Roll the shuttles.”
Time to go and join Rastar. He was probably having fun at the gate.
“At least the Navy is still out of it,” Ops said. “Rolling shuttles now.”
“Citizens of the Empire!”
Prince Jackson Adoula’s face appeared on every active info-terminal in Imperial city. He looked grave, concerned, yet grimly determined, and uniformed men and women bustled purposefully about behind him as he sat at a command station. Holo displays in the background showed smoke towering over the unmistakable silhouette of the Palace.
“Citizens of the Empire, it is my grave responsibility to confirm the initial reports already circulating through the datanet. The traitor, Roger MacClintock, has indeed returned to launch yet another attempt to seize the Throne. Not content with the murder of his own brother, sister, and nieces and nephews, he is now attempting to seize the Palace and the person of the Empress herself.
“I urge all citizens not to panic. The valiant soldiers of the Empress’ Own are fighting courageously to defend her person. We do not yet know how the traitors managed to initially penetrate Palace security, but I fear we have confirmation that at least some Navy elements have been suborned into supporting this treasonous act of violence.
“All government ministers and all members of Parliament are being dispersed to places of safety. This precaution is necessary because it is evident that this time the traitors are targeting more than simply the Palace. My own offices in the Imperial Tower were destroyed by a precision-guided weapon in the opening moments of the attack, and my home—and my staff, many of whom, as you know, have been with me for years—was totally destroyed within minutes of the start of the attack on the Palace.”
A spasm of obvious pain twisted his features for a moment, but he regained his composure after a visible struggle and looked squarely into the pickup.
“I swear to you that this monumental treachery, this act of treason against not only the Empire, not simply the Empress, but against Roger MacClintock’s own family, shall not succeed or go unpunished. Again, I urge all loyal citizens to remain calm, to stay tuned to their information channels, and to stand ready to obey the instructions of the military and police authorities.”
He stared out of the thousands upon thousands of displays throughout Imperial City, his expression resolute, as the image faded to a standard Navy Department wallpaper.
“Calm down, Kjer,” Prokourov said ten minutes after Kjerulf’s reply, calmly ignoring the outburst. “I’m
probably
on your side. Taking out Greenberg was a necessity, distasteful as it may have been. But I want to know what
you
know, what you suspect, and what’s going on.”
“Ms. Nejad, she still busy,” the Mardukan said, coming back into the monitor’s field of view. “Gonna be staying busy.”
“Tell her to get
un
busy!” Kjerulf snapped. “All right, Admiral. All I really ask is that you keep out of this. My main worry is CarRon Fourteen. We’ve shut down the Moonbase fighter wing, and it turns out that they’re pretty unhappy with Gianetto, anyway. I’ve got a small squadron of loyal ships holding the orbitals. All I need is for the rest of the squadrons to stay out of it.”
He turned off his mike and looked over at Tactical.
“Any more movement?”
“No, Sir,” Sensor Five said. “But Communications just intercepted a clear-language transmission from Defense HQ to all the outer-system squadrons. General Gianetto’s declared a state of insurrection, informed them that Moonbase is in mutinous hands, and ordered a least-time concentration in Old Earth orbit.”
“Crap,” Kjerulf muttered, and keyed his mike. “Admiral Prokourov, I take that back. We may need active support—”
“Captain Kjerulf,” Eleanora O’Casey said, appearing on his other monitor. “What’s happening?”
The door looked like oak. And, in fact, it was—a centimeter slab of polished oak over a ChromSten core. Most bank vaults would have been flimsy by comparison, but it was the last major blast door between them and Roger’s mother. And, unfortunately, it was on internal control.
Roger lifted the plasma cannon—his third since the assault began—and aimed at the door.
“My treat, Your Highness,” one of the Mardukans said, carefully but inexorably pushing Roger away from the door.
The prince nodded and stepped back, automatically checking to be sure the team was watching in every direction. They were down to ten, including himself. But there should be only two more corridors between them and his mother, and if the information in the command center’s computers was correct, there were no automated defenses and no armored guards still in front of them. They were there. If only she was alive.
The Mardukan carefully keyed in the sequence to override the safety protocols, then triggered a stream of plasma from the tank cannon at the door. But that door had been intended to protect the Empress of Man. It was extraordinarily thick, and it resisted the blasts. It bulged inward, but it held stubbornly through seven consecutive shots.
On the eighth shot, the overheated firing chamber detonated.
Roger felt himself lifted up by a giant and slammed through the merely mortal walls of the approach corridor. He came to a halt two rooms away, in one he recognized in confusion as a servant’s chambers.
“I don’t sleep with the help,” he said muzzily, picking himself out of the rumpled tapestries and ancient statuary.
“Your Highness?” someone said.
He tried to put a finger into one of his ears, both of which were ringing badly, but his armor’s helmet stopped him. So he shook his head, instead.
“I
don’t
sleep with the help,” he repeated, and then he realized the room was on fire. The overworked sprinkler system was sending a fresh downpour over him, but plasma flash had a tendency to start
really
hot fires. These continued to blaze away, adding billowing waves of steam to the hellish environment.
“What am I doing here?” he asked, looking around and backing away from the flames. “Why is the room on fire?”
“Your Highness!” the voice said again, then someone took his elbow.
“Dogzard,” Roger said suddenly, and darted back into the flames. “
Dogzard!
” He shouted, using his armor’s external amplifiers.
The scorched dog-lizard came creeping out from under a mattress, a couple of rooms away, wearing a sheepish expression. She’d been following well behind the group. From her relatively minor damage, she’d probably run and hidden at the explosion.
“How many?” Roger said, shaking his head again and looking at the person who’d called him. It was Master Sergeant Penalosa, Raoux’s second in command. “Where’s Raoux?”
“Down,” Penalosa said. “Hurt bad. We’ve got five left, Sir.”
“Plus me and you?” Roger asked, pulling up a casualty list. “No,
including
me and you,” he answered himself.
“Yes, Sir,” the master sergeant replied tightly.
“Okay,” Roger said, and then swore as a blast of plasma came
out
of the small hole his Mardukan had managed to blow in the door. So much for the CP’s information that there were no guards beyond. “What are we on?
Plan Z
?” he said. “No, no, calm, right? Got to be calm.”
“Yes, Sir,” the sergeant said.
“Plan Z it is, then,” Roger said. “Follow me.”
“Sir, we just lost the feed from the system recon net,” Senior Captain Marjorie Erhardt, CO HMS
Carlyle
said.
“We have, have we?” Admiral Henry Niedermayer frowned thoughtfully and checked the time display. “Any explanation of why, Captain?”
“No, Sir. The feed just went down.”
“Um. Obviously something is happening in-system, isn’t it?” Niedermayer mused.
“Yes, Sir. And it’s not supposed to be,” Erhardt agreed grimly.
“No, but it was allowed for,” Niedermayer pointed out in return, with maddening imperturbability.
“Should we head in-system, Sir?” Erhardt pressed.
“No, we should not,” the admiral said with just a hint of frost. “You know our orders as well as I do, Captain. We have no idea exactly what’s going on on Old Earth right this minute, and any precipitous action on our part could simply make things enormously worse. No, we’ll stay right here. But go ahead and bring the task group to readiness for movement—
low-powered
movement. Given the timing, we may need to adjust our position slightly, and I want strict emissions control if we do.”
Larry Gianetto’s face was grim as the icons and sidebars in his displays changed. Whatever his political loyalties, he was a professional Marine officer, one of the best around when it came to his own specialty, and keeping track of the apparently overwhelming information flow was second nature to him.
Which meant he could see exactly how bad things looked.
The attack on the Palace had been only minutes old when he ordered additional Marines into the capital to suppress it. Now, over half an hour later, not a single unit had moved. Not one. Some were simply sitting in place, either refusing to acknowledge movement orders or stalling for time by requesting endless “clarification.” But others were stopped where they were because their personnel were too busy shooting at each other to obey. And most worrying of all, even in the units which had tried to obey his orders, the personnel loyal to him seemed to be badly outnumbered.