“Why?”
“Because these runcibles, being located out in space, will be much easier to take, especially having been originally taken control of by Prador allies: Separatists.”
“What?”
“Allow me to acquaint you with the details contained in a recent communication I have received.” So saying the AI swiftly transferred the information to Tomalon’s interface. The data-stream being buffered, so Tomalon did not have to take it in all at once, delayed his understanding for a few seconds, then he got the gist.
“The bastards … but I still don’t see why. Do the Prador think they can make runcibles work without AIs?”
“Not known. Perhaps that is what they told the Separatists. Perhaps they believe so. A more likely scenario is that they are after the support technology, which in itself has many weapons applications.”
Tomalon did not like some of the ideas that began occurring to him: a runcible gate, even without an AI to control it, could be used to instantly accelerate matter to near-c—just one idea without thinking about it very deeply.
“They must destroy those runcibles,” he said out loud.
Out loud as well, using the com system in the bridge, Occam replied, “That is currently in hand. Now we are about to surface near the transfer station where our two Prador friends have just arrived.”
“I should give you weapons clearance.”
“You already gave it back at Grant’s World.”
“You don’t need it again?”
“Not unless you cancel that clearance. I advise you not to do that.”
It was more of a warning than a threat, but not much more.
As they surfaced from U-space, Tomalon closed up with Occam and banished his interior perception of the bridge, becoming one again with the ship and its sensors. They arrived only minutes behind the two Prador ships, and minutes were all it took. A long, glittering cloud of debris lay directly ahead like a scar across vacuum—all that remained of the transfer station. The two ships lay beyond it, gleaming in red light as they accelerated towards the dwarf sun, probably to slingshot round and fling themselves clear before engaging their U-engines again. Still hurtling along at the velocity with which it earlier entered U-space, the Occam Razor ignited its fusion engines and accelerated too. Weapons turrets and platforms rose, missiles and solid rail-gun projectiles loaded. Tomalon expected Occam to shoot out a swarm of rail-gun missiles as before, but that procedure abruptly stood down.
“Why not?”
“Further information package received. While controlling the craft we left, Aureus also sent telefactors to study the remains of the Prador destroyers. The exotic metal armour contains piezoelectric layers and s-con grids linked to what Aureus finally identified as thermal generators. Small strikes merely provide them with more energy with which to strike back.”
“Hence that particle beam they hit us with?”
“Certainly.”
“Our options now?”
“We get, as one Jebel Krong would say, ‘up close and personal.’ We need to hit hard enough to kill them before they can utilize the energy from our strikes.”
The paths of the two Prador vessels now diverged. One swung away from its slingshot route, spun over nose-first towards the Occam Razor, and began decelerating.
“Ah, it seems they want to talk,” Occam commented.
Within Tomalon’s perception the view into a Prador captain’s sanctum opened out, revealing the limbless captain floating just above the floor. Tomalon understood, from intelligence gathered during other conflicts, this to be a Prador adult, and that the fully limbed troops ECS more often encountered were the young. It grated its mandibles to make some hissing and bubbling sounds, and the translation came through a moment after.
“So ECS does have some real ships,” it said.
“Would you like to reply?” Occam enquired.
“Why not?” Tomalon sensed the link establishing and spoke out loud, “Who am I addressing?”
“I am Captain Shree—a name you will know but briefly.”
“Well, Shree, we do have real ships and you have sufficiently irritated us that we feel beholden to use them.”
“I look forward to our meeting. It is a shame we cannot meet in the flesh, but alas I have a war to help win and no time to peel that admirable vessel to find you.”
“Fuck me, B-movie dialogue. Why is this character talking?”
“Perhaps to make him the focus of our attack rather than the other vessel,” Occam replied.
“Should we ignore him and go after the other one?”
“I rather think not. If we do we’ll have Shree behind us. Upon experience of their destroyers I am not sure if we could survive that particular vice.”
“I see that your companion captain is not so anxious to make our acquaintance,” Tomalon noted.
“Oh, but Captain Immanence has a rendezvous to keep. He passes on his best regards and looks forward himself to encountering more vessels like your own. Thus far the conflict has become boringly predictable.”
The Prador vessel now launched a fusillade of missiles, zipping up in the light of the sun like emergency flares. The Occam abruptly swerved and now did launch rail-gun projectiles, but aimed to intercept the missiles rather than hit the Prador ship. On their current trajectory the solid projectiles that did not strike missiles would pass above it, but only just—it would look like a near miss. Within the great ship Tomalon observed some alterations being made: CTD warheads being diverted away from the low-acceleration rail-guns usually used, to one of the more powerful ones. They were being loaded along with the solid projectiles so that every tenth launch would be a CTD.
“Isn’t that a little dangerous?” he asked. Such warheads were not often accelerated up to relativistic speeds, since the stress might cause some breach of the antimatter flask they contained. If that happened while the missile accelerated up the gun rails the results might be … messy.
“Not nearly as dangerous as giving this ship time to take us apart,” Occam replied. “The chances are one in twenty of an in-ship detonation.”
Prador missiles began exploding in vacuum as the projectiles slammed into them. Shree’s vessel immediately changed course to intercept any of those projectiles to get through—deliberately putting itself in their path. Occam slow-launched programmed CTD warheads down towards the sun, and ramped up its acceleration towards the enemy. Both vessels came within each other’s beam range. A particle beam struck the Occam Razor, cutting a boiling trench through hull metal. Tomalon felt this as pain, but this being a facility of which he felt no need, he tracked down its source—a diagnostic feedback program—and cancelled it.
Occam used lasers to hit incoming missiles, intercepted others with hard-fields, then opened up with masers on the Prador ship. It seemed a foolish tactic, in view of what they now knew about that exotic metal armour, but Tomalon understood that Occam did not want Shree to realise how much they knew. The missiles launched down towards the sun, came up with the solar wind—more difficult to detect—and closed on Shree’s vessel. The Prador began to hit them with lasers, but some got through and exploded on the exotic metal hull. Huge dents became visible, and one split in which fires glowed, but even as Tomalon saw these, the dents began to push out and the split to close. Now four particle cannons targeted the Occam Razor, using the energy these strikes generated. They ripped into the Razor’s hull. One of them struck a weak point and exploded through, and Tomalon observed internal beams glowing white hot and ablating away, some massive hard-field generator cut in half, human living quarters scoured with fire that would have incinerated anyone in there.
The two ships were still on a collision course, and Tomalon realised the Prador vessel would not divert—it did not need to. In a seemingly desperate measure the Occam Razor turned—taking more particle weapon strikes on fresh hull metal—to use its main fusion engines to change course. The sudden massive acceleration caused huge floor sections and corr
idors, already weakened, to collapse inside the ship. The ship’s internal mechanisms began reconfiguring it, relocating the bridge pod, and moving other more vulnerable ship components deeper inside. A close pass at mere hundreds of kilometres. A beam strike hit the hull and passed straight through the ship, exploding out of the other side.
“Close enough,” said Occam coldly, and began firing that rail-gun.
They were unlucky, the one in twenty chance playing against them as the sixth CTD detonated inside the rail-gun. The explosion tore into thousands of tonnes of superstructure and hull, shattered much inside the ship and filled it with a brief inferno. Tomalon clung to the arms of his interface chair as the entire bridge pod flew twenty metres before slamming to a halt against a bulkhead. He thought that was it, they were dead, but still connected into the sensor arrays he watched three antimatter warheads, travelling at a substantial portion of light speed, strike home on the Prador vessel. The triple explosion seemed as one to human perception, but Tomalon slowed it so he could truly see what happened. The first detonation pushed a crater into the ship’s hull nearly a quarter of its size, the second ripped through and exploded from the other side to blow out a glowing funnel of the super-tough metal, and the last finished the job—cutting the ship in half.
Tomalon viewed the devastation within the Occam Razor. He was glad not to have felt it as pain, because this would have been of the smashed-open ribs and evisceration by fire variety.
“The other ship?” he enquired.
“It has gone,” Occam replied.
“Probably thought it pointless to waste weapons on us.”
“Probably,” Occam agreed.
“What do we do now?”
“There is some damage to those field projectors that protect human passengers during U-space transit. However, our U-space engines are undamaged. It will be necessary for you to be unconscious during the journey, while I make the repairs that I can.”
“We’re going after it?”
“That is our mission.”
The Prador, Tomalon realised, were not going to win this war.
Conlan rose slowly to consciousness, his head throbbing and a foul dryness in his mouth. He found himself lying on cold metal, the feel of a diamond-pattern foot grip against his face. He remained motionless, and keeping his eyes closed listened intently. No one stood nearby. He opened his eyes and tilted his head slightly to obtain a better view of his surroundings: just the floor and metal walls and a ceiling, by the look of them only recently welded into place. His cell. He tried to push himself up to stand and discovered something wrong. They had removed his hand and his artificial arm. Using his other arm only, he completed the task.
The cell stood three metres square with a single bulkhead door set in one wall—no bed, no facilities. Up in one corner protruded a single visible security camera. He walked over to the door and inspected it. No electrical controls and someone had removed the inner manual wheel. Easing himself down next to it, resting his back against the wall, he sat on the floor. His mistake, he realised, was not checking to see if his copilot was dead. Obviously, Heilberg’s hand, breaking from its mountings on his arm, softened the blow. Feeling the side of his head he discovered a sore split and blood crusted in his hair. Much blood had also spattered over the shoulder of his flight suit—to be expected from a head wound.
Conlan now used his aug to access the chaotic networks of Trajeen and learnt to his satisfaction that he had achieved his initial aim—the AI was dead, hence the chaos. Little other information became available however, and when his aug dropped offline for the eighth time, he did not bother to reconnect. It would be no help to him now.
“Can anyone hear me?” he called. “I need medical attention, somewhere to wash and a toilet, or is this the usual civilized manner with which ECS treats its prisoners?”
Movement outside now. Locking mechanisms clonked. Conlan heaved himself to his feet and stood close to the door. If he did this just right he might be able to get past whoever came in, maybe relieve them of a weapon in passing. He would have to rely on training and instinct thereafter, which he possessed in plenty. They would not expect him to act this quickly and decisively. The door, he realised, opened on hydraulic rams, so knocking it back into someone’s face was no option. When it stood partially open he glimpsed a figure beginning to step through. He kicked hard, towards a torso, but instead of the expected impact, something clamped on his ankle. The figure came through, hauling his leg up trapped between upper arm and chest, forcing him back. He leapt, spinning his other foot off the floor and aimed towards the head. The figure released his trapped leg, ducked under the kick, and a fist like a bag of marbles came up into Conlan’s kidneys. Conlan came down on his feet, but unbalanced by his missing arm, staggered. He turned, trying to aim a chop, which was slapped along its path. Then an ECS enviroboot slammed up into his testicles and Conlan abruptly lost the will to fight.
“You’re very fast,” said a voice, “but I’ve been in constant combat with those possessing substantially more limbs than you. And the lack of an arm can cause a surprising amount of imbalance—that’s something I know well.”
Focusing through tears Conlan observed the man standing over him, then further pain roiled through him and he leant over and vomited. It felt as if his balls had been hammered up into his stomach. He coiled into himself on the floor, closed his eyes, and just wished his copilot had hit him a lot harder. Finally, an eternity later, he managed to pull himself into a hunched sitting position and studied his opponent.
“Now, are you ready to talk?”
The man wore chameleon-cloth fatigues striated with black webbing. He didn’t look physically boosted or augmented, though he did wear a cerebral aug on the side of his head. His face was thin and acerbic, fair hair close cropped and a distinctive V-shaped scar marred his cheek. Conlan felt he should recognise this individual, but did not. Almost instinctively he loaded the image of the face into his aug and ran a search through the device’s memstore, rather than try to connect to the net. He soon obtained the information he sought.
Jebel Krong… why here?
He realised this was the one he spoke to from the grabship, though Krong named himself U-cap then… he remembered: up close and personal…
“Now,” said Krong, “I want you to tell me, in detail, what was supposed to happen after you took control of this place.”
“Go fuck yourself.”
The boot slammed into his guts and lifted him off the floor. Before he could even think of recovering, a knee pinned his left arm to the floor, one hand closed on his throat, while the other clamped on his testicles. He shrieked and tried to fight free. That hand closed tighter and he felt one of his bruised testicles taken between a forefinger and thumb, and crushed. The world faded away.
Conscious again, wishing he wasn’t. Krong squatted down facing him, unarmed. Did he hold Conlan in such contempt?
“Now, I have part of the story from your friend Braben, before he fainted, just like you. I will hurt you very very badly unless you tell me what I want to know. And believe me, please, what I just did to you is nothing. We have medical equipment here that can keep you alive far beyond where you would reasonably expect the relief of dying.”
Conlan felt real fear growing in him then. Always, before, he was the one dishing it out rather than receiving it. He knew that he would eventually talk, so what purpose did he serve by remaining silent?
“ECS agents… don’t… torture people,” he managed.
“Tell me your name,” Krong countered.
Conlan considered holding that back, but decided, upon his experience thus far, answering to be a small concession to make. “Conlan.”
Krong grimaced. “Conlan, ECS agents usually don’t torture people, since the results tend to be of questionable utility. Usually, once guilt is proven, further information is obtained by a mind ream. It’s interesting technology similar to that involved in installing an aug. It has to be directed
by an AI, and even then not a lot remains of the victim’s brain. But as you know, we no longer have an AI here even if we did possess the required equipment. However, ECS agents are trained to quickly extract information when the situation warrants it. They will use specialized drugs or torture. No drugs here, though, and I’m not an ECS agent, I’m a soldier fighting a war against a species who seem intent on wiping out the human race, and my patience is running out.” Krong stood. “Do you know what Prador do to some of their captives?”
Conlan shook his head. He felt he could move about now, but kept very still.
Krong continued, “They keep them alive, for as long as possible, while they eat them. I’ll use pliers and metal snips on you … to give you an as near to authentic experience as I can manage in the circumstances. What was supposed to happen here!”
The moment this man let his guard down or turned his back, Conlan would rip his throat out. That circumstance seemed unlikely for the present. Conlan told him all.
The three Avalonians who met Moria and George at the airlock were a tough-looking bunch; they were armed and their chameleon-cloth fatigues showed burns and spatters of blood. Stepping out into the embarkation area Moria gazed round at the mess: shattered drones hung from the ceiling on their power cables, energy weapon burns marred the walls and one entire section had been torn out by an explosion.
“Separatists,” stated one of the Avalonians, a hard-faced woman who then gestured to the other side of the area with the pulse-rifle she held.
Moria did not require that explanation.
In addition to all the damage in here, Moria saw queues of runcible technicians standing with baggage at their feet by all the other locks. They glanced at her with a fearful lack of curiosity, obviously intent on departing this place.
“This way,” said the woman.
Prador Moon: A Novel of the Polity Page 15