Now he was clued in, Florian glanced at the creature’s legs. Sure enough, one was a regular human limb and the other a roxwolf hind leg.
‘What the crud are you?’ Florian shouted.
Roxwolf laughed. It sounded like a beast tearing flesh apart. ‘A mistake.’
Florian brought his arm up, fist clenched. Targeting graphics circled the creature. ‘Stay back.’
‘Ah. The lightning-bolt weapon. And you claimed your backpack has Commonwealth machines. The same source, I take it? The spaceship that fell into your valley?’
‘What are you?’ Florian yelled. He gasped as his u-shadow reported a link opening.
‘The same as you,’ Roxwolf sent through the link.
‘No!’
‘The Eliter macrocellular clusters are interesting,’ Roxwolf continued over the link. ‘Humans added them to their DNA at some point. They’re unnatural. Like us.’
‘Us?’
‘You call us Fallers.’
Florian’s arm trembled. ‘Stay back!’
‘Or what?’ Roxwolf asked. ‘You’ll condemn yourself and the child to a slow miserable death by starvation?’
‘I’ll not be eaten, not by you. You— You’re a breeder Faller, aren’t you?’
‘I’m not going to argue semantics with you, so I’ll just say yes. But as I told you: I’m a mistake.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘My species has the biological ability to shape ourselves. When we encounter a world, we mimic the dominant lifeform, then eliminate it. It’s a war that takes many forms; therefore, we need to constantly adapt. So somewhere deep in our history, we gave ourselves this chameleon ability. We can consciously shape our offspring, providing we have a template. And to obtain a local template, our first colonization wave absorbs the local animals, giving us their physiological pattern.’
‘You eggsume us,’ Florian groaned, his arm had dropped to his side as he made the connection. ‘Rasschaert.’
‘Yes. The version you saw outside is a Faller.’
‘You’re not gangsters. You’re a nest.’
‘No. Not true. Most of the infamous Roxwolf gang are genuine humans.’
‘You’re lying. You eat us. No human would work with you – not even gangsters.’
‘The human members of my organization are unaware of their colleagues’ nature, obviously. Their reaction would be the same as yours. That’s why I rule them through lieutenants like Shaham. I am the guiding hand; the smart one. The one with the political insights; the one with insider knowledge. The one who is unafraid to order hits against our opponents.’
‘How can this happen?’ Florian implored. ‘The PSR should have discovered you.’
‘Ah, but you see Roxwolf hides in plain sight. Everyone knows I am a mere gangster, including the PSR. I find it ironic, as much as I can understand the concept. For at the heart, I remain unseen, at least by my criminal associates.’ He gestured at the telephone-exchange cabinet. ‘They receive all their orders by telephone.’
‘They’ll work it out in the end. They’ll expose you.’
‘Several already have. They were all taken out by rival gangs – apparently.’
‘You . . . You—’
‘Ate them? Yes. I worked hard to achieve this position. I’m not going to relinquish it.’
‘Why? What’s the point?’
‘Colonizing a new world is a complex process, especially one with a dominant sentient species. First we must learn of you, and mimicking you is only part of the solution. Once we’ve arrived, we move invisible among you, to explore your civilization, to seek out its strengths and weaknesses. There are specific tasks that require specific forms. Strength, agility, intelligence – all these can be crafted. We gave ourselves that flexibility. I am a product of it.’
‘So which are you? Strength?’
‘Parentals normally craft and gestate two embryos in their wombs, but we are not parthenogenetic. Two adults exchange and create the new templates within a neural connection. This mental pattern is transferred to the embryo, which incorporates its structure. A neurological equivalent of your DNA, if you like.’
‘Mods,’ Florian said suddenly. ‘We had neuts back in the Void. Our telepathy allowed us to shape their embryos.’
‘One of our more useful servant species,’ Roxwolf acknowledged. ‘Designed to be redesigned in whatever fashion we required. The seeders bring them with us.’
‘Seeders?’
‘The Trees you see in the Ring. Before we were captured by the Void, they flew between stars, expanding our species across the galaxy. The Skylords you so venerate are merely versions who self-evolved, adapting to the strange conditions in the Void. Ironic, no?’
‘The Ring Trees are starships?’ Florian asked weakly. ‘Faller starships?’ He didn’t want to believe it.
‘Yes, but our kind of starship; they’re nothing like your Commonwealth’s technological vehicles. These are living entities that embody our essence. They are the pinnacle of our species. Our triumph. They carry us forwards forever.’
‘Oh great Giu! You really are monsters.’
Roxwolf laughed again. ‘Especially in my case. I told you I was a mistake. My parentals messed up the pattern they were formulating. They wanted a roxwolf for an established nest of the animals; they also wanted a human-mimic with Eliter macrocellular abilities. The patterns were merged somehow, for even our biology is not perfect. I am the result. An abomination.’ He snarled, his long fangs clashing. ‘I am nothing – not to them, not to anybody. They discarded me. Now I reject them as I reject you.’
‘What do you want with us?’
Roxwolf stared at Essie as she lay shivering on the settee. ‘This girl is the end of the world. That makes her the most important person alive.’
Florian sat on the edge of the settee and stroked Essie. ‘What do you mean the end of the world? She’s going to save it.’
‘For humans, possibly. What about Fallers?’
‘This is our world. We will burn you from it.’
‘She might well do that. That is why she is so valuable.’
‘I won’t let you touch her.’ He deliberately avoided looking at the backpack. The power cells in the Commonwealth gadgets still had a large charge left in them, and the roof of this underground lair couldn’t be that thick. ‘Can the food-processor power cells be rigged to explode?’ he asked his u-shadow.
‘Yes,’ it replied.
‘Assume the stone ceiling is a metre thick. If I detonate the power cells against it, could they blast a hole through?’
‘Yes, assuming you placed them correctly. But the concussion wave within the hall would present a considerable danger to you.’
‘But it’s possible?’
‘Yes.’
The knowledge allowed Florian to gather some confidence. There was a possible way out; that gave him an edge.
‘I’m sure you’re an excellent protector,’ Roxwolf said. ‘After all, not everyone could elude the PSR for nearly ten days. Congratulations.’ He began to walk around the edge of the furniture, keeping the same distance from Florian and Essie.
Florian watched him carefully; he felt like he was being stalked. ‘What do you want?’
‘I offer you a deal. I am in touch with my own kind. My current activities make me extremely useful to them. They consider me completely expendable, of course, but I can achieve many of their goals – for a price. By now they will know I have acquired her.’
‘Rasschaert,’ Florian murmured.
‘Indeed. An interesting constant is Rasschaert, an arsehole in both his incarnations.’
‘So what do the Fallers want with Essie?’
Roxwolf emitted a soft hiss of amusement. ‘Why, they will feast triumphantly on her flesh, of course.’
‘They are monsters!’
‘When faced with genocide, a species will do whatever it needs to in order to survive. And to me, your death is necessary; it is how the universe works.
You occupy a planet where we could be living. There is no question, no ambiguity. Our life is superior in so many ways. It is right that we emerge victorious.’
‘Monster!’
‘I love studying humans. So few of my kind bother. I love your anger. It is supremely irrelevant, yet you all possess it. I find that so curious. Why has evolution not eradicated it? It is not a survival trait, not in a true sentient. Do you know what my conclusion is?’
‘Do I crudding care?’
‘I believe it is a short circuit. It allows you to overcome your vaunted ethics, to justify your own horrific behaviour in extreme situations.’ Roxwolf smiled, exposing even more of his fangs. ‘And I have seen a great many of you in extremis.’
‘You think you’re so clever?’ Florian raised his arm. Targeting graphics focused on Roxwolf. ‘Think you can outsmart me?’
‘You haven’t heard my deal. But I’m interested in this development, your resurgence of confidence. Do you believe you have a way out? What could it be?’ He turned to the backpack. ‘What are the machines you said were in there, I wonder? Weapons? No. Something you can modify after you’ve killed me?’
‘What deal?’
‘Ah, now that, you see, my creepy alien friend, that is your survival instinct coming to the fore. Sentience mixed with animal desperation, analysing the options. But first you need to know all those options. So you tell me, what is it that you want, Florian? I live in both worlds, human and Faller. There is nothing I cannot acquire for you.’
‘You know what I want: to be free.’
‘Free of what, though? The PSR? The Fallers? Me?’
‘Yes! All of you. Just let us go. Leave Essie alone.’
Roxwolf nodded. ‘A reasonable request. I presume this freedom is for the duration of your infamous “month”, until Essie has finished growing. Until she is a fully developed Commonwealth human. Until she declares war on the Fallers.’
‘How do you know about the month?’ Florian gasped.
‘My position is not dependent on violence and intimidation alone.’ Roxwolf gestured at the telephone-exchange cabinet with his animal arm. ‘Knowledge, you see, is the true power in any society. And that power is how I survive. I’ve been listening to Captain Chaing’s phone calls to his Section Seven superior, Stonal. You should hear Chaing making the most pathetic excuses for his lack of progress finding you; I can play you the tapes if you’d like. Essie was mentioned a lot. Someone called Joffler said she grew quickly.’
Florian gave the tape recorders with their slowly revolving reels an astonished glance. ‘You bug the PSR phones?’
‘Absolutely. Among others. A most useful source of information. The PSR’s arrogance forbids them to believe anyone would dare attempt such an action.’ Roxwolf bent down and picked up the backpack.
‘Hey,’ Florian cried. ‘You leave that alone.’
‘Would you like to hear my offer?’ Roxwolf held out his human arm, dangling the backpack by one of its straps.
Florian stared at him, breathing heavily. His old anxiety reaction was returning; he could hear his heart hammering. Exovision medical displays were flicking to a mild amber. A list of suggested medications popped up. ‘What’s your offer?’
‘The spacecraft. It gave you Essie and the machines. What else?’
‘Nothing. That’s it.’
‘You’re lying again, Florian. For a start, it gave you the weapon. Perrick described it in great detail for me.’
Florian shrugged, wishing he didn’t feel so lightheaded. The stress of negotiating with Roxwolf was terrible; his skin was growing ice cold as he started to sweat. ‘Well, yeah.’ He shrugged.
‘What did it tell you, Florian? You have Eliter abilities for communication and memory. It gave you information, didn’t it? It gave you files that came from the Commonwealth itself.’
‘No.’
Roxwolf raised the backpack. ‘Then how do you know how to operate the machines?’
The blood was roaring in his head, heartbeat pounding like a hammer. ‘Well, it gave me those instructions, but that’s all.’
‘They’ll do for a start.’
‘What?’
‘You have information which is unique, Florian. Knowledge which humans lost when they were captured by the Void. Technology that has passed into legend. Tell me what you have.’
‘None of those things,’ he said, starting to panic.
‘You are a terrible liar. Think what we could build together. Anything Opole’s factories can produce can be brought to us here within a day – any piece of engineering, any electrical component; chemicals, metals. I can acquire it all. First we make the tools that make the tools. You just have to share the knowledge.’
‘I don’t want to build anything.’
‘Are you sure, Florian? Look into your heart. Look into your Commonwealth knowledge. What could be done to improve the life of every human on Bienvenido? Are there medicines in there? Eliters always claim Commonwealth humans can live forever. Can you give that to your family, your friends? Would they thank you for keeping it to yourself?’
‘If I had that kind of knowledge, it would be used to destroy the Fallers!’
‘Yes, but if I had it, I would be able to survive. I told you, that’s what I am. Every day of my life is a battle to survive. And I have won. I am alive. I live against every obstacle and challenge this world has thrown at me, despised and shunned by my own kind, hunted by yours. I will not give up my life simply because she has arrived. Why should I?’
Tremors were running along Florian’s limbs as Roxwolf’s words beat against him. It would be so easy to give in, to make some kind of deal. Say anything just to make this torment stop, to walk out with Essie. ‘You can’t offer us sanctuary.’
‘Oh, but I can.’ Roxwolf threw the backpack. It took Florian completely by surprise. He cried wordlessly as it tumbled through the air. It was a powerful throw, taking it the length of the hall. Exovision graphics sprang up, projecting the territory. ‘Nooo!’ The backpack landed in the stream with a loud splash. It sank as the current carried it sluggishly to the drain arch.
Florian sprinted along the line of pillars, desperate to reach it before it was swallowed by the black drain hole at the end of the channel. His targeting routines picked up Roxwolf’s movements from his peripheral vision. The malformed Faller was leaping towards Essie as she lay dozing on the settee.
Florian fired a stun pulse. I can’t kill him, he’s the only way out now! The slender dazzling beam flashed out, missing Roxwolf by centimetres. It hit the wall, blowing a small crater out of the stone.
Roxwolf landed beside the settee and rolled fast, his animal arm curling round Essie, pulling her with him, using her to shield himself from Florian. There was a pistol in his human hand, swinging round to slap its muzzle against her head.
Jerked so savagely from her slumber, Essie started to wail.
‘She would have wiped us out,’ Roxwolf said. He pulled the trigger.
Florian began to scream. His u-shadow accelerated his perception. There was a flash from the pistol muzzle which seemed to ripple out at right angles, rising to a searing white wavefront. The sound of the shot pummelled his ears, numbing him. Then Roxwolf’s hand was snapping backwards, breaking the wrist bone. Confusion bloomed across the Faller’s features as his grisly mouth opened; the roar that emerged was almost as loud as the pistol shot, combining pain and dismay. He staggered backwards.
And Essie was standing there in her dishevelled green dress, completely unharmed. A tiny haze of purple light covered her entire body.
‘Force field,’ Florian said dumbly as secondary routines dumped the information into his mind.
He shot Roxwolf with another stun pulse. The Faller shrieked, and collapsed to the ground, spasming.
An incredulous smile lifted Florian’s face. ‘You have an integral force field. Biononics!’ Then his knees gave way, pitching him onto all fours, and he threw up.
*
 
; There were seven cars and four vans in the convoy that raced across Opole. The cars carried most of the investigation team while the vans held Captain Franzal’s entire assault squad.
Chaing sat in the front passenger seat of the lead Cubar, urging his driver on through the traffic on the main road to the river Crisp.
‘Do we sneak up on them?’ Jenifa asked from the rear seat as they neared the intersection with Midville Avenue.
Chaing looked round. She was sitting on the back seat next to Nathalie Guyot. When he mobilized the assault squad, she’d eagerly exclaimed: ‘I’m coming with you.’ But the deal he’d made with Yaki was that she’d be restricted to office duties. He hadn’t mentioned that to her as they all hurried down to the garage.
‘Nathalie?’ he asked.
‘This is Roxwolf,’ Nathalie Guyot said. ‘He’ll know you’re coming by now. Most of the city knows with this racket.’
‘Okay.’ He raised the radio microphone to his mouth and pressed the button on top. ‘Franzal, we’re going in hot.’
‘Roger that,’ Franzal’s voice crackled out of the dashboard speaker.
The driver turned into Midville Avenue.
‘Crud,’ Chaing grunted as he tried to study the tall buildings that were obscured by the big walwallows. ‘Which one is it?’
Nathalie pointed ahead. ‘There.’
Chaing saw the gap where a couple of the trees had been removed. ‘Pull in just past it,’ he told the driver. That would allow the vans to stop directly in front of the club, allowing Franzal’s people to deploy quickly.
He had a brief flash of a nice old brick townhouse with a stylish neon sign above the front door. Then the Cubar stopped with a hard lurch. He opened the door as fast as he could and got out, pulling his pistol from its holster. Behind him, the vans were braking to a halt. ‘Move in,’ he called.
‘Chaing!’ Jenifa yelled. She barrelled into him, knocking him to the ground. As he went down he saw three men racing off the top of some metal stairs that led down into a narrow sunken courtyard at the side of the townhouse. They were carrying semi-automatic rifles.
Night Without Stars (Chronicle of the Fallers Book 2) Page 39