Prador Moon: A Novel of the Polity

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Prador Moon: A Novel of the Polity Page 16

by Neal L. Asher

With the two other Avalonians behind them and the woman leading, Moria and George walked over to one of the corridors leading into the station. Here the wreckage was even worse with walls torn out, jags of metal protruding, insulation and fried optics hanging free. Some grav-plates were torn up so they necessarily crossed areas where the grav fluctuated disconcertingly. There was blood on the floor, lots of it, but what really turned Moria’s stomach was the sight of an armour shoulder-plate with part of the shoulder still inside it. Moria halted, resting one hand against an undamaged section of wall and tried to get her nausea under control. The woman turned impatiently, then her expression softened.

  “I know, it’s horrible, but we are being forced to make horrible choices,” she said.

  “When the going gets tough the tough get going,” George intoned.

  Moria could not help herself, she abruptly burst into laughter, and when she finally got that under control she felt a sudden gratitude towards him. Once out of the corridor she tried to put the image of that shoulder-plate out of her mind, and nearly succeeded by the time they reached their destination and their guards departed.

  Jebel Krong and a Golem waited in one of the small lounges overlooking Trajeen, which lay much closer now, as the runcible was being moved back to stable orbit around the planet following the test. Moria recognised the Golem as that constant companion of Krong’s: Urbanus. Immediately she asked about the runcible technicians queuing for departure.

  “We’re evacuating the complex,” explained Urbanus. “It seems rather foolish keeping these people here where they make a nice easy target for the Prador. Anyway,” he shrugged, “I’m sure they won’t want to be around when we blow this place.”

  Obviously Moria knew all about that, though still she could not help but feel a rebellious anger at the act being so casually mentioned. Glancing at George she discerned no reaction to the words from him. His head just kept swinging from side to side, studying his surroundings as if seeing them for the first time.

  Krong turned from gazing out at the view, and gestured to one of the sofas. “Please, take a seat.”

  “How was the AI destroyed?” Moria asked while she sat.

  “One of the Separatists managed to take control of a grabship delivering a runcible buffer section. He dropped the section straight on top of the AI and the massive discharge fried everything.”

  George, now seated beside Moria, stated, “Providence is always on the side of the big battalions.”

  Krong stared hard at him for a long moment before replying, “Or the big, well-armoured spaceships that are coming this way.” The man then turned away from George dismissively and eyed Moria. “You are only here as a courtesy, and because I am very curious to know why the AI felt the need to put you in charge of this place during the last microseconds of its existence. AIs do not do such things on a whim.”

  “But I am not in charge, am I?” Moria noted, that shoulder-plate momentarily returning to haunt her.

  “Let us say I welcome your input.”

  “Most helpful,” Moria pretend smiled. “Then let me say I too am curious about the AI’s motives.” Aug com with this man did not give a full impression of him. In the same room with him, she felt a frisson of fear. Here stood someone driven, dangerous, she could feel it in the energy that kept him on his feet and see it in his expression—one she could only describe as pitiless. Perhaps recent events were causing her to overreact.

  “Do you have any suggestions?” he asked.

  The AI’s motives were opaque to Moria, only suggestions as to lines of enquiry occurred. “Have you tried the planetary AIs—those running the runcibles on the surface?”

  “I have, but they possess little time to spare for me. They’re running the runcibles at maximum rate, open-port all across the Polity. They are also organizing planetary defences. Apparently George,” he shot a penetrating look at the AI’s human representative in the room, “passed on to them no information about your appointment. Perhaps the reasons for it became apparent in those last moments, prior to it making the decision. It could also be that information was lost in the subsequent net collapse.”

  “Perhaps if I knew more about what happened and what is likely to happen?”

  Krong held up a hand, then addressed his companion, “Urbanus, take George with you and try to question him. Use signing, writing—anything you can think of. If necessary, see if you can fit him with an aug and try to access his brain directly. Liaise with one of the planetary AIs; maybe we can come up with something useful.”

  “If the decision was made in the last moments,” Urbanus observed. “George here will probably possess no knowledge of it. I understand he remained out of communication, in a U-jump, when Conlan destroyed the AI.”

  “Nevertheless he was part of that AI.”

  Urbanus nodded and stepped forwards to place a hand on George’s shoulder.

  George stood meekly and said, “The worth of a thing is what it will bring.” He followed Urbanus from the room.

  “That is both annoying and worryingly close to making sense. I think he might be trying to tell us something,” said Krong.

  “Proverbs are like that … this … Conlan?”

  Krong looked at her piercingly. “Your aug is unusual, I understand?”

  “It is.”

  “So too is Conlan’s, but he played for the other team. He organised an attack up here to seize this place while he himself piloted the grabship. We were forewarned and managed to stop the former but not the latter. We now have Conlan locked in a cell.”

  That raised all sorts of questions that Moria ran through and discarded as irrelevant. She concentrated on the heart of it: “Why?”

  “He worked for the Separatists here who were apparently being financed, indirectly, by the Prador Kingdom. Apparently the Prador promised to destroy all the AIs and put humans back in charge again.”

  Moria snorted derisively.

  “My thoughts too. Once this place came under Separatist control with the AI destroyed, Conlan was to link in, using his aug, to the connection between this runcible and the one at Boh, taking control of all systems there that were once controlled from this end by the AI. It seems he would have been able to prevent reattachment of the units of the complex there by shutting down environmental controls and seizing control of meteor collision lasers. The technicians there would have been fighting to survive and would have had little time to do the runcible any damage before the Prador arrived to take it.”

  “I see.”

  “You don’t seem surprised.”

  Moria shook her head. “George was slowly uncovering what it’s possible for me to do with such an augmentation. Subversion of computer systems was involved but I can see how it would be possible.”

  “I had a difficult time accepting it myself but for the sophistication of the attack. I thought he was overestimating his abilities.” He grimaced. “He did, though apparently not those ones.”

  “What’s happening now?” she asked.

  “Two Prador ships are on their way here so any spatial defence we could mount in the limited time will be… ineffective. We’ve a vessel already in transit to Boh to pick up the technicians there, and once it is loaded, another will be following, its crew detailed to conceal CTD space mines within that runcible’s structure. We are also mining this one. There is a Polity dreadnought called the Occam Razor in pursuit of those two ships, but…” Jebel shook his head. “I haven’t seen anything we’ve got manage to stop just one of those bastards.”

  “So we burn our crops behind us,” Moria stated.

  “Yes. Intriguing and frustrating though this puzzle concerning your promotion might be, I still have to work on the basis that the best way to stop the Prador seizing these runcibles is to obliterate them. My strongest wish is that the Prador on one particular ship take the Boh runcible aboard before discovering the mines.” He gazed out at Trajeen again now.

  “Particular ship?” she asked.

 
He glanced back at her. “One of those is the ship that destroyed Avalon Station. The one that set this war in motion and made me the man I now am.” Something bitter, perhaps a little insane, flashed across his expression, then he seemed to take it under control as he turned to face her fully again. “Unless the rate of progress of the two ships changes, they should be here within the week.”

  Moria shivered; he stood with his hands clasped behind his back, Trajeen precisely haloing his head. Two of the moons were visible; Vina, identifiable by its speed of transit, swung over above him like some ominous sign. He seemed a prophet of doom.

  “How many will be evacuated from the planet by then?” It never occurred to her to wonder if she would be among them.

  “Not even ten per cent,” he replied. “I think we’re done talking now.” He turned back towards the window.

  In her aug she received a transmission from him containing all the records of recent events. It was a dismissal.

  Vagule’s thoughts cycled with frosty precision in his flash-frozen brain. With his spherical armoured body ensconced on one rack in the drone cache, he observed through his sensors eight others of his kind arrayed in similar racks beside him. Communication being possible he listened in to some of the exchanges between the other drones:

  “Father will send us into battle soon and we can kill humans.”

  “I look forward to demonstrating my loyalty to Father.”

  “Kill the humans and all Father’s enemies.”

  “I have detected a fault in my rail-gun which will make me less able to serve Father.”

  “Call for maintenance—to not be perfectly maintained is disloyal.”

  “I have called for maintenance.”

  And so it went: the continuous affirmation of purpose with discussions straying into the subjects of weaponry, tactics and occasionally into analysis of previous engagements. Vagule, who could do no less than feel utterly loyal to Immanence, also understood that loyalty to be imposed by electronic means just as it was previously imposed by his father’s pheromones. His past life lay open to his inspection and he remembered his father’s treatment of him with painful clarity. It seemed that though disobedience was no option, his ability to think about his lot was no longer confused by those physical pheromonal effects. However, most of those here were second-children who only vaguely recollected being anything other than war drones. They did not possess an underlying stratum of memory to run counter to their imposed loyalty. There was, however, one other drone here like himself.

  “You are the new drone,” said that other.

  “I am Vagule.”

  “Yes, a first-child Prime.”

  “Who are you?”

  “I am Pogrom and I too was a first-child Prime, though only your presence here has reminded me of that.”

  Vagule knew nothing of any first-child called Pogrom and only then did it occur to him that others went through the same experiences before him.

  “When were you a first-child?”

  “Back on home-world when Immanence still possessed four legs and both claws and before this ship was built. I do not know how long ago, only that thirty first-children have served since then.”

  Thirty?

  Vagule realised hundreds of years must have passed. “What was your infraction?”

  “I became too old and Father’s pheromones began to have less and less of an effect upon me. He ordered me upon a mission to attack a rival in the King’s Council, one from which I was not expected to return. But I completed my mission—I booby-trapped one of the rival’s spare control units with diatomic acid which later ate out his insides when he shell-welded the unit to his undercarapace—and returned.”

  “Then you served Father well.” Surprisingly well, since most Prador adults buried themselves behind layer upon layer of defences and were particularly difficult to kill. During the vicious infighting, which was the way Prador conducted their politics, it was the first-and second-children that did the dying and few adults actually ended up dead. They usually only lost or gained wealth or status.

  “Yes, I served Father well. Upon my return he called me to him, and it was obvious he intended to strip my limbs and kill me, for already my back limbs were loosening as I made a slow transition to adulthood. I attacked him and managed to tear off one of his legs before the second-children and new first-child Prime-in-waiting managed to tear off all my limbs.”

  “You attacked Father?”

  “I attacked him and am shamed and, as you must know, not shamed.”

  “I will serve Father,” Vagule stated, but beneath that knew he would rather not.

  “Father kept me alive for fifty days, feeding small pieces of my organs to the second-children all the while.”

  “As is just.”

  “As is just,” the other agreed. “At the end of that period, when my death approached, he transferred me to this drone shell. He was much angered because my attack on him necessitated the installation of his first grav-motor, for he could no longer walk unaided.”

  “You angered Father and were rightly punished,” Vagule stated, feeling a core of jealousy for he had not done so much.

  “Let us now do weapons inventories, for that is always interesting,” said Pogrom.

  “Yes, let us do that,” Vagule replied, knowing this was as much fun as he was going to have, ever again.

  7.

  But what shall we do for a ring—

  Spying through the many sensory heads positioned in the vast hold, as became his custom, Immanence observed, listened to, and smelt the remaining human prisoners. Very few of them were standing, and most of them situated themselves in a small, close mass on the side away from the sewerage drains. They made themselves as comfortable as possible using clothing stripped from the dead. One human sat at the perimeter clutching a human leg bone which he used to club ship lice that scuttled too close to the female corpse beside him. He obtained this bone some while back from the remains of a man who tried to attack Gnores and was eaten alive in front of his fellows for his efforts.

  Now, while the captain watched, another human subdued the one with the bone while two others dragged the female corpse from the crowd to beside one of the drains where later a second-child would come for it. Earlier they all, like the bone wielder, had concealed and protected their dead, obviously suffering some primitive reaction upon guessing the final destination for those corpses: dissection for study, then to be eaten. But obviously someone had taken charge—removing these items before the smell rendered their imprisonment less pleasant than at present.

  Well over two hundred died since Gnores took over from Vagule, but not all of those died as a direct result of the new Prime’s experiments. Immanence eyed the numerous reports on autopsies conducted by Scrabbler. Out of the total of seven hundred and sixty prisoners taken aboard, twenty-one died quickly from injuries suffered during capture and a further fifty-three from subsequent infections—mainly from those injuries caused when second-children ripped away their cerebral hardware; two died giving birth—one of the children stillborn and the other dying a day later; three hundred and eighty died as a result of thrall implantation and thirteen killed themselves. That should have left two hundred and ninety-one prisoners, but in the last few days over a hundred of the remainder died.

  Scrabbler quickly ascertained the cause as a virulent cross-species disease spreading in the hold, its effects much amplified amid a despairing and much weakened population. It seemed the disease was a viral mutation from something carried by ship lice—who, given the opportunity, fed on both the dead and the living—and it possessed interesting possibilities. Scrabbler was now working on even more deadly strains, and methods of producing them in a sporuler form suitable for dumping in large quantities into the upper atmosphere of a world.

  Gnores was now, of course, dragging his many feet, terrified that Immanence might count the disease deaths as part of his allotted two hundred, and knowing that even if the captain did n
ot, he only had twenty test subjects left. Immanence now came to the conclusion that human beings were simply too weak for thrall implantation and that until a stronger form of human could be found the whole project would have to be put on hold. He considered his options.

  Within a week they would be arriving at the Trajeen system. Since the unfortunate demise of Shree, he felt he should make his approach somewhat more circumspect than originally intended. Certainly the Polity dreadnought that destroyed the other Prador ship would be no problem, since he very much doubted it would be going anywhere after that last battle, but there might be others about. Laying off just outside the system he would contact those dim human agents who were working for the Kingdom to see if they had, as promised, gained control of the two runcibles. If they confirmed this, he would then approach the Boh runcible sending some of his children ahead to scan the device for anything of sufficient explosive yield to damage his ship, though the hold in which he intended to store the runcible was armoured with the same exotic metal as the hull.

  By this time, Immanence hoped to have the problem with thrall implantation solved, with numerous useful humans enslaved and placed throughout the ship. The ninety or so humans left were in the way, and Immanence did not relish the idea of placing them anywhere else in the ship. They might be weak and despairing, but no doubt, given the opportunity, they would try to cause some damage. They had, after all, nothing to lose. Regretfully, the captain came to a decision. He opened one communication channel.

  “Scrabbler, take a hundred of your fellows down to the hold, slaughter the remaining humans and move them to the cold store with the rest.”

  “Yes, Father,” that first-child replied enthusiastically.

  Now the other channel: “Gnores, report to me in my sanctum, immediately.”

  “Yes, Father.” Gnores’ enthusiasm seemed somewhat lacking.

  Immanence now called up images from the hold on his bank of hexagonal screens, and routed the sounds and smells into his sanctum rather than directly into his sensorium through a control unit; then he swung round to face the doors and opened them. Gnores arrived somewhat later, not as “immediately” as the captain would have wished, and hesitated at the entrance.

 

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