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The Armageddon Inheritance fe-2

Page 21

by David Weber


  Lord Chirdan saw without understanding. Three twelves of warships—four twelves—five! Impossible warships. Warships vaster than the Hoof itself!

  They came out of nowhere at impossible speeds and began to kill.

  Missiles that did not miss. Beams that licked away ships like tinder. Shields that brushed aside the mightiest thunders. They were the darkest nightmare of the Aku’Ultan, fleshed in shields and battle steel.

  Lord Chirdan’s flagship vanished in a boil of flame, and his scouts died with him. In the end, not even Protectors could abide the coming of those night demons. A pitiful handful broke, tried to flee, but they were too deep in the gravity well to escape into hyper, and—one-by-one—they died.

  Yet before the last Protector perished, he saw one great warship advance upon the Hoof. Its missiles reached out—sublight missiles that took precise station on the charging moon before they flared to dreadful life. A surge of gravitonic fury raced out from them, even its backlash terrible enough to shake the wounded Earth to her core, triggering earthquakes, waking volcanoes.

  Yet that was but an echo of their power. Sixteen gravitonic warheads, each hundreds of times more powerful than anything Earth had boasted, flashed into destruction … and took the moon Iapetus with them.

  Gerald Hatcher sagged in disbelief, too shocked even to feel joy, and the breathless silence of his command post was an extension of his own.

  Then a screen on his com panel lit, and a face he knew looked out of it.

  “Sorry we cut it so close,” Colin MacIntyre said softly.

  And then—then—the command post exploded in cheers.

  Chapter Seventeen

  General Hector MacMahan watched the shoals of Imperial assault boats close in about his command craft, then turned his scanners to the broken halves of the Achuultani starship tumbling through space in the intricate measures of an insane dance. The planetoid Sevrid hovered behind her shuttles, watching over them and probing the wreckage. There was still air and life aboard that shattered ship, and power, but not much of any of them.

  MacMahan grunted in satisfaction as Sevrid’s tractors snubbed away the wreck’s movement. Now if only the ship had a bay big enough to dock the damned thing, he and his people might not have to do everything the hard way.

  He had no idea how many live Achuultani awaited his assault force, but he had six thousand men and women in his first wave, with a reserve half that size again. The cost might be high, but that wreck was the single partially intact Achuultani warship in the system. If they could take it, capture records, its computers, maybe even a few live Achuultani…

  “Come on, people, tighten it up,” he murmured over his com, watching the final adjustment of his formation. There. They were ready.

  “Execute!” he snapped, and the assault boats screamed forward.

  Servant of Thunders Brashieel waited in the wreckage in his vac-suit. One broken foreleg was crudely splinted, but aside from the pain it was little inconvenience. He still had three good legs, and with the loss of the drive gravity had become a ghost.

  He watched his remaining instruments, longing to send the thunder against the foe, but his launchers had died. Perhaps a fifth-twelfth of Vindicator’s energy weapons remained serviceable, but none of his launchers, and no weapons at all on the broken tooth of his forward section.

  Brashieel tried to reject the nightmare. The nest-killers’ world still lived, and these monstrous warships foretold perils yet more dire. The lords of thought had believed this system stood alone. It did not. The makers of those ancient scanner arrays had rallied to its defense, and they were powerful beyond dreams of power. Why should they content themselves with merely stopping the Protectors’ attack? Why should they not strike the Nest itself?

  He wondered why they had not simply given Vindicator to the Fire. Did their own beliefs in honor demand they face their final foes in personal combat? It did not matter, and he turned from his panel as the small craft advanced. He had no weapons to smite them, but he had already determined where he and his surviving nestlings of thunder would make their stand.

  MacMahan flinched as the after section of the wrecked hull lashed his shuttles with fire. The crude energy weapons were powerful enough to burn through any assault boat’s shield, but they’d fired at extreme range. Only three were hit, and the others went to evasive action, ripping at the wreck with their own energy guns. Sevrid’s far heavier weapons reached past them, and warp beams plucked neat, perfect divots from the hull. Air gushed outward, and then the first-wave assault boats reached their goal.

  Their energy guns blasted one last time, and they battered into the holes they’d blown on suddenly reversed drives. They crunched to a halt, and assault teams charged into the violated passages of the broken starship, their soot-black combat armor invisible in the lightless corridors. A handful of defenders opened fire, and their weapons spat back, silent in the vacuum.

  MacMahan’s command boat led the third wave, staggering drunkenly as it slammed to a halt, and the hatches popped. His HQ company formed up about him, and he took them into the madness.

  Brashieel waited. There was no point charging blindly to meet the nest-killers. Vindicator was dead; only the mechanics of completing his nestlings’ deaths remained, and this was as good a place to end as any.

  He examined his nestlings’ positions in the light of his helmet lamp. They had made themselves what cover they could, a hoof-shaped bow of them protecting the hatch to main control, and Brashieel wished Small Lord Hantorg had survived to lead their final fight.

  His nostrils flared in bitter amusement. While he was wishing, might he not wish that he knew what he was about? He and his nestlings were servants of thunders—they smote worlds, not single nest-killers! He cudgeled his brain, trying to remember if he had ever heard of Protectors and nest-killers actually facing one another so directly. He did not think he had, but his mind was none too clear, and it really did not matter.

  It was as impossible to coordinate the battle as MacMahan had expected it to be. Not even Imperial technology could provide any clear picture of this warren of decks and passages, sealed hatches and lurking ambushes.

  He’d done his best in the pre-assault briefing; now it was up to his combat teams. The Second Marines provided the bulk of his firepower, but each company had an attached Recon Group platoon, and they were—

  A stream of slugs wrenched him back to the job at hand, and he popped his jump gear, leaping aside as his point man went down and more fire clawed the space he himself had occupied a moment before. Leaking air and globules of blood marked a dead man as Corporal O’Hara’s combat armor tumbled down the zero-gee passage, and MacMahan’s mouth tightened. These crazy centaurs didn’t have an energy weapon worth shit, but their slug weapons were nasty.

  Still, they had their disadvantages. For one thing, recoil was a real problem—one his own people didn’t face. And for all their determination to fight to the death, Achuultani didn’t seem to be very good infantrymen. His people, on the other hand…

  Two troopers eased forward, close to the deck, and an entire squad hosed the area before them with rapid, continuous grav gun fire. The super-dense explosive darts shredded the bulkheads, lighting the darkness with strobe-lightning spits of fury, and Captain Amanda Givens-Tamman rose suddenly to her knees. Her warp rifle fired, and the defending fire stopped abruptly.

  MacMahan shuddered. He hated those damned guns. Probably the first people to meet crossbows had felt the same way about them. But using a hyper field on anyone, even an Achuultani—!

  He chopped the thought off and waved his people forward once again. A new point man moved out, armor scanners probing for booby traps and defenders alike, and another sealed hatch loomed ahead.

  Brashieel shook himself into readiness as he felt vibration in the steel.

  “Stand ready, my brothers,” he said quietly. “The nest-killers come.”

  The hatch simply vanished, and Brashieel’s crest flattened
in dread. Somehow these nest-killers had chained the hyper field itself for the use of their protectors!

  Then the first nest-killer came through the hatch, back-lit from the corridor behind, lacing the darkness with fire from its stubby weapon, and Brashieel swallowed bile at the ugliness of the squat, four-limbed shape. But even in his revulsion he felt a throb of wonder. That was a projectile weapon, yet there was no recoil! How was that possible?

  The question fluttered away into the recesses of his mind as the nest-killer’s explosive darts ripped two of his nestlings apart. How had it seen them in the blackness?! No matter. He sighted carefully, bracing his three good legs against the bulkhead, and squeezed his trigger. Recoil twisted his broken leg with agony, but his heavy slugs ripped through the biped’s armor, and Brashieel felt a stab of savage delight. They had taken his thunders from him, but he would send a few more to the Furnace before they slew him!

  The chamber blossomed with drifting globules of blood as more nest-killers charged through the hatch. Darkness was light for them, and their fire was murderously accurate. His nestlings perished, firing back, crying out in agony and horror over their suit communicators as darts exploded within their bodies or the terrible hyper weapons plucked away their limbs. Brashieel shouted his hate, holding back the trigger, then fumbled for another magazine, but there was no time. He hurled himself forward, his bayonet stabbing towards the last nest-killer to enter.

  * * *

  “General!” someone shouted, and MacMahan whirled. There was something wrong with the charging centaur’s legs, but not with its courage; it was coming at him with only a bayonet, and his grav gun rose automatically—then stopped.

  “Check fire!” he shouted, and tossed the grav gun aside.

  Brashieel gaped as the puny nest-killer discarded its weapon, but his heart flamed. One more. One more foe to light his own way into the Furnace! He screamed in rage and thrust.

  MacMahan’s gauntleted hand slashed its armored edge into the Achuultani’s long, clumsy rifle, driven by servo-mech “muscles,” and the insanely warped weapon flew away.

  The alien flung itself bodily upon him, and what kind of hand-to-hand moves did you use against a quarter horse with arms? MacMahan almost laughed at the thought, then he caught one murderously swinging arm, noting the knife in its hand only at the last moment, and the Achuultani convulsed in agony.

  Careful, careful, Hector! Don’t kill it by accident! And watch the vac suit, you dummy! Rip it and—

  He moderated his armor’s strength, and a furiously kicking hoof smashed his chest for his pains. That smarted even through his armor. Strong bastard, wasn’t he? They lost contact with decks and bulkheads and tumbled, weightless and drunken, across the compartment. A last Achuultani gunner tried to nail them both, but one of his HQ raiders finished it in time. Then they caromed off a bulkhead at last, and MacMahan got a firm grip on the other arm.

  He twisted, landing astride the Achuultani’s back, and suppressed a mad urge to scream “Ride ’em, cowboy!” as he wrapped his armored arms around its torso and arms. One of his legs hooked back, kicking a rear leg aside, and his foe convulsed again. Damn it! Another broken bone!

  “Ashwell! Get your ass over here!” he shouted, and his aide leapt forward. Between them, they wrestled the injured, still-fighting alien into helplessness, pinning it until two other troopers could bind it.

  “Jesus! These bastards don’t know how to quit, Gen’rl!” Ashwell panted.

  “Maybe not, but we’ve got one alive. I expect His Majesty will be pleased with us.”

  “His Majesty friggin’ well better be,” someone muttered.

  “I didn’t hear that,” MacMahan said pleasantly. “But if I had, I’d certainly agree.”

  Horus watched Nergal’s mangled hull drop painfully through the seething electrical storm and tried not to weep. He failed, but perhaps no one noticed in the icy sheets of rain.

  Strange ships escorted her, half again her size, shepherding her home. He winced as another drive pod failed and she lurched, but Adrienne Robbins forced her back under control. The other ships’ tractors waited, ready to ease her struggle, but Horus could still hear Adrienne’s voice.

  “Negative,” she’d said, tears glittering beneath the words. “She got us this far; she’ll take us home. On her own, Goddamn it! On her own!”

  And now the strange ships hovered above her like guards of honor as the broken battleship limped down the last few meters of sky. Two landing legs refused to extend, and Robbins lifted her ship again, holding her rock-steady on her off-balance, rapidly failing drive, then laid her gently down upon her belly. It was perfect, Horus thought quietly. A consummate perfection he could never have matched.

  There was no sound but the cannonade of Earth’s thunder, saluting the return of her final defender with heaven’s own artillery. Then the emergency vehicles moved out, flashers splintering in the pounding rain, sirens silent, while the gleaming newcomers settled in a circle about their fallen sister.

  Colin rode the battleship Chesha’s transit shaft to the main ramp and stepped out into the storm. Horus was waiting.

  Something inside Colin tightened as he peered at him through the unnatural sheets of sleety rain. Horus looked more rock-like than ever, but he was an ancient rock, and the last thirty months had cut deep new lines into that powerful old face. Colin saw it as the old Imperial stared back at him, his eyes bright with incredulous joy, and climbed the ramp towards him.

  “Hello, Horus,” he said, and Horus reached out and gripped his upper arms, staring into his face as he might have stared at a ghost.

  “You are here,” he whispered. “You made it.”

  “Yes,” Colin said, the quiet word washed in thunder. And then his voice broke and he hugged the old man close. “We made it,” he said into his father-in-law’s shoulder, “and so did you. My God, so did you!”

  “Of course we did,” Horus said, and Colin had never heard such exhaustion in a human voice. “You left me a planet full of Terra-born to do it with, didn’t you?”

  General Chiang Chien-su was frantically busy, for the final shock of earthquakes and spouting volcanoes waked by Iapetus’s destruction had capped the mounting devastation he’d fought so long. Yet he’d seemed almost cheerful in his last report. His people were winning this time, and the mighty planetoids riding solar orbit with the planet were helping. Their auxiliaries were everywhere, helping his own over-worked craft rescue survivors from the blizzards, mud, water, and fire which had engulfed them.

  Except for him, Earth’s surviving chiefs of staff sat in Horus’s office.

  Vassily Chernikov looked like a two-week corpse, but his face was relaxed. The core tap was deactivated at last, and he hadn’t lost control of it. Gerald Hatcher and Tsien Tao-ling sat together on a couch, shoulders sagging, feet propped on the same coffee table. Sir Frederick Amesbury sat in an armchair, smoking a battered pipe, eyes half-shut.

  Tama Hideoshi was not there. Tamman’s son had found the samurai’s death he’d sought.

  Colin sat on the corner of Horus’s desk and knew he’d never seen such utter and complete fatigue. These were the men, he thought; the ones who had done the impossible. He’d already queried the computers and learned what they’d endured and achieved. Even with the evidence before him, he could scarcely credit it, and he hated what he was going to have to tell them. He could see the relaxation in their faces, the joy of a last-minute rescue, the knowledge that the Imperium had not abandoned them. Somehow he had to tell them the truth, but first…

  “Gentlemen,” he said quietly, “I never imagined what I’d really asked you to do. I have no idea how you did it. I can only say—thank you. It seems so inadequate, but …” He broke off with a small, apologetic shrug, and Gerald Hatcher smiled wearily.

  “It cuts both way, Governor. On behalf of your military commanders—and, I might add, the entire planet—thank you. If you hadn’t turned up when you did—” It was his turn to shrug.


  “I know,” Colin said, “and I’m sorry we cut it so close. We came out of supralight just as your parasites went in.”

  “You came—” Horus’s brows wrinkled in a frown. “Then how in the Maker’s name did you get here? You should’ve been at least twenty hours out!”

  “Dahak was. In fact, he and ’Tanni are still about twelve hours out. Tamman and I took the others and micro-jumped on ahead,” Colin said, then grinned at Horus’s expression. “Scout’s honor. Oh, we still needed Dahak’s computers—we were plugged in by fold-space link all the way—but he couldn’t keep up. You see, those ships carry hyper drives as well as Enchanach drives.”

  “They what?!” Horus blurted.

  “I know, I know,” Colin said soothingly. “Look, there’s a lot to explain. The main thing about how we got here is that those ships are faster’n hell. They can hyper to within about twelve light-minutes of a G0 star, and they can pull about seventy percent light-speed once they get there.”

  “Maker! When you get help, you get help, don’t you?”

  “Well,” Colin said slowly, folding his hands on his knee and looking down at them, “yes, and no. You see, we couldn’t find anyone to come with us.” He looked up and saw the beginning of understanding horror in his father-in-law’s eyes. “The Imperium’s gone, Horus,” he said gently. “We had to bring these ships back ourselves … and they’re all that’s coming.”

  Chapter Eighteen

  Dahak’s transit shaft deposited Horus at his destination, and the silent hatch slid open. He began to step through it, then stopped abruptly and dodged as fifty kilos of black fur hurled itself head-first past him. Tinker Bell disappeared down the shaft’s gleaming bore, her happy bark trailing away into silence, and he shook his head with a grin.

 

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