Allies and Enemies: Fallen

Home > Science > Allies and Enemies: Fallen > Page 17
Allies and Enemies: Fallen Page 17

by Amy J. Murphy

“Not there. Not there. Not there,” she chanted.

  /Oh, but I am. I am here, lovely child. For you. I am waiting./

  “Jon. Where are you?” She did not bother to raise her voice above a whisper. He would not hear.

  /Abandoned. You have been left. But I want you still./

  Tristic seeped into her, impossible to fend off. She faded under the monster’s overpowering tide. The last thing that registered was a guilty sense of relief.

  Slowly, Erelah’s body uncurled. She stood with an erectness that denied any previous sense of fatigue or pain. Then, with stilted careful steps she turned back to the door.

  The locking interface was a simple electronic device, a mere privacy lock.

  /Another delay. More tedium. More annoyance./

  /There would be specific pleasure in eradicating the brother and his breeder./

  Carefully Erelah’s fingers picked at the metal frame that hid the locking mechanism’s circuits. Soon her fingertips were bloody as the bare metal sliced into the skin.

  Erelah was not there to feel the pain.

  20

  “You’re a tall one, aren’t you?”

  The expectant silence that followed made Sela realize the comment had been directed at her. She glanced at her captain. He bore a strange amused expression, despite the tense circumstances. At least someone was enjoying this.

  The comment had come from Phex, a squat yellow slab of a Rhobgic seated at the table across from them. She was especially mistrustful of their kind. Their biology was the symbiotic pairing of what amounted to an intelligent fungus growing over and invading a host animal frame. More parasitic than anything. Little wonder they were branded non-regs. They dwelled in the dark and squalid environs of the Known Worlds. Judging by what she had experienced of Merx so far, Phex had found an ideal home.

  “I get that a lot,” Sela said quickly, before looking away. In truth, she had been designed to grow specifically to her present height with the bone density and muscle mass to match. She doubted Phex would have been interested in that fact.

  Sela was scanning the crowd. She was hyped, on edge. The number of people here made her nervous. The tavern was a heavily fortified establishment with one point of entry. She counted four visible security personnel. Two additional, she suspected, were disguised as patrons. And in all probability Phex bore a concealed weapon. She and Jon were at a disadvantage here.

  “Good looking female.” Phex smiled, displaying teeth unacquainted with hygiene. “How much?”

  Although the question was directed at her captain, it was meant for Sela to overhear.

  “No one buys me,” Sela growled. Now the little bastard had her attention.

  Jon canted his head. The expression in his eyes was a silent command.

  Play along. Like we planned.

  “Not for sale.” He pulled her into a possessive embrace. She complied stiffly, all the while glaring at the tavern-keeper.

  “No such thing as not for sale here, friend.” Phex’s grin flattened for a moment. “Everyone knows that.”

  “Of course,” Jon responded in Commonspeak. His Eugenes accent was flatter, practically undetectable. “But the reason I’m here is to make a purchase, friend.”

  “What kind?” Phex squinted, his flabby jowls jiggling with delight. Sela was temporarily forgotten.

  “Nav charts. Compatible with a Cassandra interface.”

  “Bit of an antique, eh? What’re you offerin’ to trade?”

  “Pharms. Quality product.”

  “I might have… something.” His Stygian eyes rolled up and to the left in a pantomimed search for memory. “What system?”

  Sela wondered if anyone really bought this act. Phex may have looked like a pile of doughy, rancid wax, but beneath that was a razor-sharp swindler. Dangerous, even.

  Jon leaned over the table. “Not a system… a region. The Reaches.”

  Phex rocked back in his chair and waved a hand. “What in Fate’s name would you want with the Reaches?” It was obvious he did not pick up on their desire for subtlety.

  “That’s not really important, is it?”

  “Important enough to want charts to it.”

  The trader leaned forward. His thick-fingered hands rustled around in a bowl of joolid crisps and made them disappear into his maw.

  “Perhaps he doesn’t have what we need.” Sela said, repeating the memorized phrase, just as Jon had coached her back on the Cass. That was the way these types negotiated, he had explained. To Sela it felt ridiculous, inefficient, but she trusted her captain’s insights.

  Jon made an exaggerated shrug and started to stand.

  “Drink! You’re dry. Where are my manners? Let’s talk over a drink,” Phex erupted with a hollow chuckle.

  He brushed crumbs from the table and pounded on its surface with a fist. A stoop-shouldered server appeared.

  “Drinks for my new friends here!”

  Jon glanced at Sela. He bore the same deadpan expression she had seen before every deployment, but she knew that underneath, he was all nerves. Yet so far, things were unfolding as he had predicted.

  Moments later, the server was back. Phex took his drink and gulped its contents in one well-practiced motion. Jon reached for his tumbler, but Sela intercepted. She studied its contents, sniffed. Then, tentatively took a sip. Her gaze never left Phex the entire time.

  “Yannish brew. Cheap stuff.” Satisfied, she placed it back before her captain with a curt nod and pulled a plastic smile at Phex that made her earlier scowl look inviting.

  His expression darkened. “Breeder, right?” Phex’s pretense of the congenial merchant dissolved.

  “That make a difference?” Jon asked, dropping his hand to trap Sela’s against the arm of the chair.

  “Always can tell one. Got a look about ‘em. ‘Specially this one,” Phex replied. He turned his sneer from Sela to Jon. “What’d you do… get caught giving it to her in the officer’s lounge? Easy to see that temptation.”

  “It’s complicated.” Jon reached for his mug. His other hand firmly anchored Sela’s arm in place.

  My captain is saving your life right now, parasite. Sela chewed the inside of her mouth.

  Phex rumbled on. “Trained killers from the day they’re born. No such thing as a tame breeder, I says. Can’t trust ‘em. I’ll deal with you. Not her. No dealing with breeders.”

  Jon regarded their host for a measuring moment across the table.

  He wasn’t going to do this? Was he?

  Perhaps sensing Jon’s hesitation, Phex adopted the chummy salesman tone once more. “My man at the docks no doubt told you, I’m the only one here that deals with newcomers. Not as if you got much choice in the matter. Now I got the maps you need. You have decent goods that I can move, we go talk.”

  “I’ll find you when we’re done here.” Jon released his grip on her but kept his stare on Phex.

  “Let us discuss this in a more private setting, friend.” Phex’s smile reappeared, victorious. He gestured to a doorway shrouded with remains of a stained tapestry at the back of the tavern.

  Sela eyed Phex with infinite distrust. Her captain rose, ready to follow. She stood.

  “Your… retainer can help herself to my tavern’s amusements,” Phex said over his shoulder. “If she’s even capable of such.”

  Jon shot her a warning expression.

  Sela nodded, squelched.

  Separating was a gamble. They would be out of contact with each other; the Cass had no functional vox devices onboard. This had better be worth it.

  Jon suddenly pulled her into an embrace. Before she could react, he was kissing her.

  “Remember… low profile,” he said in a rushed whisper against her neck. He stepped back, tapping her under the chin. “And…uh… try not to kill anyone.”

  And just as quickly he turned to follow Phex.

  ---

  “A beauty like you shouldn’t be alone.”

  Sela sighed heavily and looked at the
man who had sidled up to her as she stood against the far wall of Phex’s tavern.

  Moments before, she had watched him weave through the crowd, obviously trying not to be obvious in his approach. She was reluctant to leave her position. It offered an unobstructed view of both the exit and the doorway to Phex’s lounge.

  Where this Eugenes was as wide and tall as Valen, any similarity stopped there. He appeared older by a decade. His eyes carried an open lust that provoked a primitive loathing in her. It reminded her of her days as a booter, before the males figured out she would neuter them for even looking at her like that.

  This misstep did not have the benefit of that education.

  He planted a thick arm against the doorway over her shoulder, eclipsing everything.

  “Buy you a drink, pretty?” he leered in Commonspeak.

  Sela looked him up and down. His features were brutish and thick. Tattoos dominated the left side of his face, competing with thick layer of scars at his chin. Silver lined his front incisors in what was, she guessed, the fashion among the dispossessed. He smelled of the same dank shadows of this place.

  “You don’t want any trouble,” she warned through clenched teeth. “Move on.”

  “Maybe I like trouble.”

  Sela was about to reply, but stopped when she saw the dim glint of metal within the shadow of his coat. It was the evident outline of an A6 compression pistol, a fairly new Regime issue.

  She looked down at the weapon and up at him.

  No way a scav like this could possess such a weapon. The A6 pistols were hard coded and could be fired only by the user who had the matching implanted tracer. Expensive tech.

  At her expression, his silver smile evaporated.

  He grabbed for his weapon. She seized his wrist. He got it as far as shoulder height. Sela threw her weight against his arm and kicked away from the wall. On reflex, his grip tightened, finger jerked against the trigger. The round struck the floor near the toe of his boot. The report was punishing in the small alcove. Sela threw the point of an elbow into his thick neck. The gun clattered from his grip.

  Even if he knew she was a deserter, Sela realized she looked like an easy target. Her appearance had often garnered her an unwanted type of attention. Men like this one were always surprised when she turned out to be the opposite. And she had come to rely on that.

  There was a smattering of screams and a few shouts. Over the ringing in her ears caused by the close report of the A6, she heard a throaty metallic blatting. An automated announcement, in an oddly calm pitch of Commonspeak, competed with the din:

  “Your attention please. Weapon discharge detected. Level four. Section twelve. Lockdown initiated. Thank you for your cooperation.”

  The damned energy weapon alert. It seemed the dock agents hadn’t lied.

  “Damn it all,” Sela grunted moving in time to block his retaliatory strike. She squeezed out of the alcove. No longer boxed in, she reached for the knife in her sleeve just as he grabbed a fistful of her hair.

  She threw her weight to her left and swung her right arm over his. His balance teetered. She drove a palm strike into his nose and felt a fleshy snap.

  “Breeder bitch!” he spouted with a plume of blood and spittle.

  She squared off to face him, knife slipping into her hand.

  Around them, the tavern had dissolved into chaos.

  21

  “Your attention please. Weapon discharge detected. Level four. Section twelve. Lockdown initiated. Thank you for your cooperation.”

  “Lockdown. Got it,” Sela panted, scowling down at the still figure on the floor. Her knuckles throbbed. Her injured shoulder ached. She was fairly certain she had bruised ribs, but this was invigorating. It hardly felt fair to her would-be assailant. She tapped his side with her boot. Her knife was buried between his ribs yet he still managed a low grunt.

  The tavern was empty, populated only by overturned benches and abandoned drinks.

  She knelt on to his chest, robbing him of leverage although it was highly unlikely he would ever get back up. His hand weakly gripped her upper arm. She shifted her weight and crushed his hand to the deck beneath her boot.

  “Way too grabby for a dead man.”

  Sela ripped open the front of his artfully careworn duster to expose a neat black tunic and trousers devoid of Regimental insignia. As she suspected, he was a Seeker, a well-trained fugitive hunter. They worked alone. Because one was often enough.

  She looked around for the displaced A6. It had become wedged beneath an overturned bench. The thing was brand new too. A Seeker with all-new Regime tech. For a moment she didn’t know whether to be worried or flattered.

  The knife came out more easily than it had gone in. He barely moved when she sliced open his forearm and dug his tracer out. The A6 would be useless without it.

  “I can’t leave you alone for a moment, can I?”

  “Captain.” She gaped up at Jon.

  “What happened to low profile?” He pulled her up by the elbow.

  “Seeker. There could be more Regime here.”

  “Definitely more,” he said grimly, his attention swiveling to the front of the tavern. Sela turned.

  A sudden rush of panicked screams flooded the marketplace outside. She saw the gleam of EE trooper helmets in the garish glow of the tavern’s multicolored sign.

  “This way.” Jon steered her in the direction of Phex’s private office. Sela paused long enough to scoop up the A6 from the floor.

  Inside, they leaned against the heavy metal door and cycled the lock closed. She took in the smaller room: incongruously tidy with some nice-looking appointments. But no Phex.

  “Where’s the slug?” she asked.

  Veradin shoved the table onto its side to reveal the open mouth of a trap door in the floor.

  “It’s like he knew we were coming, Ty. I was about to grab him when the weapons alarm sounded. Figured you had something to do with that.”

  “The other guy started it.” Sela looked away guiltily.

  A coordinated barrage shook the office door’s frame. The troopers had arrived. Sela sat on the edge of the opening, feet dangling into the space. Yellow chem lights offered weak illumination below. They exchanged a look across Phex’s secret passage.

  “Looks like maintenance access.” As she leaned down her voice echoed back from the dimness.

  “Ty, wait!” Jon barked.

  Without hesitation, she pushed away from the edge and slipped down into the passage. Jon followed, colliding with her as he landed. The space was tight. The passage only allowed them to stand at an awkward stoop. Moving about would have been easier for the oddly shaped little Phex.

  A crash echoed in the room above. The EE troopers had gotten through the office door.

  “They’re wearing full turnout gear. Can’t fit down here,” she said. “But that won’t keep them long, sir.”

  “Let’s move then.” Jon forced his way past her.

  They managed a scurrying stooped run. Around a curve, the conduit emptied into a tiny square room that was blessedly tall enough to allow them to stand.

  There was a distinct clatter behind her in the shaft. Sela did not give Jon enough time to pause.

  “Down!” She shoved him behind the bulkhead and covered him with her body.

  There was a blue-white pop and a wave of vertigo knocked both of them to their knees. Ears ringing, she climbed back to her feet. They had been clipped by the wave of the pulse. Not enough to render them unconscious, but enough to disorient. Just because the troopers couldn’t fit did not mean they would give up. The grenade had been their solution.

  Sela would have done the same.

  “Sir! Are you injured?” she yelled over the ringing in her ears.

  Hands on knees, Jon doubled over. He nodded, holding up a staying hand.

  “Concussion grenade?” he wheezed. Then he puked.

  Sela shrank back. What a booter.

  “Back in the kennels, one of the d
rillers used to throw them into the middle of the mess hall at random.”

  “Charming.” He wiped his mouth with his jacket sleeve. “You and I had vastly different childhoods.”

  Sela looked around. Three corridors led away in different directions from the room.

  “Which way?” she asked.

  “We have to get back to the ship.”

  “But the nav charts.” Sela stepped to doorway at her right. Phex couldn’t be that far ahead. They could still complete their objective and elude capture.

  “No… Ty. I mean now,” he called with renewed urgency.

  Sela turned. He was peering down at the handheld interface she had linked up with the Cass. A new alert pinged on its screen.

  “On-board motion detector is active. She’s attempting to open the outer hatch.”

  She cursed. The kid had enough tranq in her to knock me out for a week. “How?”

  “Does it matter? We have to go.”

  “Then which way?”

  “Here.” Veradin lunged for the left passage.

  Her arm shot out, barring him. “No!”

  Sela stooped, gesturing to what she had just noticed. “Trip wire.”

  Delicately, she traced the slender silver wire up and around the frame. Flat packets of thermaline lined the space in neat rows. A fine layer of dust coated the floor of the passage, undisturbed. No one had been that way in quite some time.

  “Explosive. Low yield. Meant to injure,” Sela explained.

  “Phex doesn’t trust himself, it seems,” Veradin said, scanning the center passage. Well-lit, it canted up and to the right, suggesting it led to the upper levels.

  “Narrows the choices then.” Sela turned back to the passage on her right. Unlit by chem lights, it was impossible to see beyond the first few paces.

  “This way,” they said in unison, both gesturing in different directions.

  “Ty—“

  “That’s the way he wants us to go, sir.” She jerked her thumb at the center corridor.

  “It’s in the direction of the docking bays, Ty. It’s faster.”

  “No doubt. But not that way.”

  He took two purposeful strides into the space before she could stop him.

 

‹ Prev