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Ghostworld (Deathstalker Prelude)

Page 10

by Simon R. Green


  There was no reply. Frost turned the volume back down, looked at Silence, and shook her head. The Captain turned to Diana.

  “Run a full scan, esper. If there’s anything alive and thinking in this place, I want to know what and where it is.”

  Diana turned away so he couldn’t see her face. She’d been waiting for him to ask, even volunteered, but she still remembered the horror she’d encountered the last time she raised her esp. She remembered the screaming voices, human voices, and the vast, terrible presence that had looked back at her with knowing, hungry eyes. In all her years, she’d never seen anything that scared her more. And now Silence wanted her to open her mind to it. She couldn’t. She just couldn’t. But she couldn’t refuse, either. She closed her eyes and opened her esp just a fraction, like a child peering warily betweenraised fingers. Everything was still and quiet. She probed a little further, letting her mind drift cautiously out across the ground floor, but there was nothing there. She sighed inwardly with relief, and looked at Silence again.

  “No trace of life anywhere, Captain. There’s always the chance that something’s blocking my esp, but if there is, I can’t detect it.”

  She waited breathlessly while he considered her answer, expecting him any moment to glare at her coldly as he saw through her half-truth, but he just nodded and turned away, and she didn’t know whether to feel relieved or ashamed. Silence frowned thoughtfully.

  “Odin, give me the floor plans for Base Thirteen, on an overlay. One floor at a time, starting with the ground floor. And patch the others in too.”

  A schematic appeared before him, superimposed on his vision. It seemed fairly straightforward. Only the one entrance to the ground floor, and one elevator and two sets of stairs leading down to the next floors. All Bases were built downward into the earth, for greater security. Everything important or vital was on the bottom floor, Level Three, protected by thick concrete and other, less obvious measures. Silence studied the layout for each floor, checking particularly for entrances and exits, and then had Odin withdraw the overlay.

  “All right, people. Pay attention. It looks like we’re going to have to do this the hard way. I’m splitting us into two groups, so we can cover more ground. Carrion and Frost, you stay with me. We’ll search this floor. Esper, you and the two marines start checking out the next floor down. Take your time and check every room thoroughly before you go on to the next. Don’t take any chances, and yell for help if you spot anything that looks even remotely threatening. I want information, not dead heroes. And whatever happens, no one is to go off on their own. Understood?” There was ageneral murmur of assent and nodding of heads. “All right then, people. Let’s make a start. By the book and by the numbers.”

  The marines sketched a quick salute, turned on one of the emergency lamps Ripper had found tucked away behind the reception desk, and set off towards the rear, to one of the staircases marked on the floor plan. Diana hurried after them, not liking the idea of investigating the next floor down, but liking even less the idea of being left behind and alone.

  Frost turned on her lamp. The light was bright and cheerful, though it raised uneasy shadows at the corner of everyone’s eyes. Frost offered the lamp to Carrion, but he shook his head courteously. Silence took it from her, and led the two of them off into the gloom of the ground floor.

  Corridor by corridor, room by room, they progressed slowly through the floor, but everywhere it was quiet and deserted, with no sign of any struggle or disturbance. Computer panels were unlit, monitor screens were dark, but there was still evidence of the people who’d lived and worked in Base Thirteen. An open message pad, a half-completed form, a cup almost full of coffee. Silence picked up the cup. There was a thick layer of frozen scum on the surface of the coffee. He put the cup down almost angrily. Still no signs of trouble, or even surprise. Whatever happened, it must have been quick. The thought was not comforting. Base Thirteen should have been crawling with Security personnel and backup emergency systems, even if Unseeli was supposed to be a dead world. The Empire didn’t believe in taking chances. But somehow the aliens had got into the Base, taken over its systems, and dealt with its personnel, all without being detected or challenged. Which was supposed to be impossible.

  “Interesting,” said Carrion as they moved down the corridor again.

  “What?” said Frost, looking quickly about her.

  “Your gun,” said Carrion. “I hadn’t looked at it before. I don’t recognise it.”

  Frost shrugged. “Standard disrupter. I suppose the style’s changed a lot in the past ten years. This version is far superior to the old model.”

  “Really. What’s the recharge time?”

  “Got it down to three minutes now.”

  Carrion raised an eyebrow. “That is an improvement, but I see you still carry a sword.”

  “Of course.” Frost grinned. “A sword never needs recharging.”

  “Your attention, please,” said Odin suddenly on their comm implants’ command channel. “I have discovered something important, Captain. Apparently Commander Starblood had been concerned about possible intruders in the Base even before the alien ship crashed. There are several references in his log to sightings of ‘ghosts,’ or some kind of presence, by Base personnel. These sightings became so frequent and so disturbing that Commander Starblood ordered six Security Guardians. There’s a record of their delivery, two weeks before the alien ship’s arrival.”

  Silence scowled. “Six Guardians? How the hell did the aliens get past them?”

  “What exactly are Guardians?” said Carrion.

  “After your time,” said Frost. “They’re state-of-the-art Security robots. Fast, powerful, efficient, and a really nasty attitude. They were designed originally for riot control. One per riot. And Starblood ordered six. … He must have been really scared. Six would have been enough to stand off a small army.”

  “And if they’re still here, and running loose,” said Silence, “we’re in real trouble.”

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  * * *

  Guardians

  THE marines moved cautiously down the metal stairway, scowling into the gloom below. The guns in their hands swept constantly back and forth, covering every direction an attack could come from. Diana supposed she should find such obvious expertise comforting, but instead it just reminded her of the possible dangers ahead. It almost made her wish she carried a gun of her own. Almost. She was an esper, not a killer. She stuck as close behind the marines as she could without crowding them, holding her lamp high to spread its light as far as possible. Huge shadows moved around them like watching ghosts, but everything else was still and silent.

  They’d found the elevator shown on the floor plan, which could have taken them down to the next floor, but none of them had felt like risking it. They had no idea why it was still working when so many other things weren’t, and it was only too easy to imagine the elevator breaking down between floors, leaving them trapped in a steel coffin while the air ran out. So they made their way slowly down the stairs, nerves tingling in anticipation of an attack that never came.

  It was cold in the stairwell, and getting colder. Hoarfrost made patterns on the walls that teased the eyes with hints of meaning. Their breath steamed on the still air, and the heating elements in their uniforms somehow weren’t enough to keep the chill out of their bones. Their footsteps rangloudly on the metal steps, and the sound seemed to echo an unnaturally long time in the hush.

  Diana knew she should be using her esp to check ahead, but she couldn’t bring herself to do that. Not yet. The scan in the lobby had been hard enough, when she’d feel safe and secure. But now that she’d come down into the heart of the darkness, she was afraid to send her mind out for fear it might not come back. She was afraid there was something down there in the dark with them, and she didn’t want to risk waking it again. Sometimes she thought it was an alien, and sometimes she thought it might be ghosts of the dead personnel, but all she really knew
for sure was that she was scared. So scared that even the awful forms her imagination conjured up were preferable to encountering the real thing again. It was safer to lie to herself and hide in the dark with the marines.

  They finally reached the bottom of the staircase, and stood close together at the foot of the steps. To their right, a thick coating of ice almost covered the sign saying LEVEL TWO. The marines and the esper ignored it, their gaze fixed on what the esper’s lamplight revealed before them. The corridor walls bulged and seethed with ugly alien growths, and thick strands of shimmering webbing hung down from the ceiling, twisting and turning slowly as though in response to an unfelt breeze. The metal walls had torn and split apart in many places, multicolored wiring hanging out like plastic viscera, as though the alien forms had somehow grown inside the walls and burst out when they grew too large to be contained. Silvery traces ran along the unbroken areas of wall in long, enigmatic patterns, gleaming brightly in the lamplight like metallic veins. They were pulsing slowly with an alien life. The whole ceiling was covered with dark, wartlike nodes the size of a man’s head, surrounded and connected by swirling chalky-white spirals. And thick on the air, was a harsh sweet smell like a disturbed grave.

  “What the hell is this?” breathed Stasiak, swinging his gun back and forth, unable to settle on a single target. “The place looks … diseased.”

  “Infested, anyway,” said Ripper. “I think we can be sure now that the aliens came here after they left their ship.” He glanced at the esper beside him. “This … mixture of living and unliving—is this the same kind of thing you found on the alien ship?”

  The esper had to swallow hard before she could answer, but when she finally spoke her voice was cool and quite professional. “The same kind of thing, yes. Only the ship was dead, or dying. This looks alive, and functioning. The alien crew must have brought it with them, as some kind of seed, perhaps. But why? Surely they didn’t bring about changes as extensive as this just so that they could feel at home? There must be a purpose to it.”

  “If there is, it’s an alien purpose,” said Ripper. “Something we might not even recognise, let alone understand. I think we need the Investigator down here to check this out, before we go any further.”

  “Wait a minute,” said Stasiak quickly. “Let’s think about this first. We don’t need to know what this stuff is. It looks weird and smells worse, but it’s not exactly aggressive, is it? We’re supposed to be looking for the Base personnel, and we don’t need Frost for that. We’re marines; we can handle this without an Investigator to hold our hands.”

  Ripper looked at Stasiak thoughtfully. “This isn’t like you, Lew. It’s an improvement, but it isn’t like you. What are you up to?”

  Stasiak grinned. “Odin’s recording everything that happens here, remember? And you can bet a lot of higher-ups are going to be studying this record. This is our chance to look good in front of people who matter, and do ourselves a bit of good in the process. Why let Frost steal all the glory? There’s money and fame in this; I can smell it.”

  “People have died here,” said Diana sharply. “And all you can think of is how best to turn it to your own advantage?”

  Stasiak shrugged. “If they’re already dead, there’s not much left I can do for them. So we might as well help ourselves, while we can.”

  “And if whatever killed these people finds us?”

  “Then we avenge the dead,” said Ripper. “We know our duty, Diana. We’re marines.”

  Diana sniffed and looked away, ostensibly studying the alien scene before her. Ripper shrugged. “Odin, are you getting all this?”

  “I see everything you see,” murmured the AI in his ear. “It’s really most fascinating. Please proceed further into the changed area. I need more information on the extent of the changes.”

  “Wait a minute,” Stasiak interrupted. “There’s no point in rushing on blindly. There could be all kinds of unpleasantness up ahead.”

  Ripper looked at him, amused. “A minute ago you were all for plunging into the thick of it, in search of glory.”

  “I’m ambitious, not crazy. Let’s handle this nice and easy, one step at a time. The only good hero is the kind who survives to talk about merchandising.”

  And then he broke off, and they all looked round sharply as a single, echoing thud came out of the darkness ahead of them. It was heavy and threatening, and sounded quite deliberate, as though whatever was responsible for the sound had wanted it to be heard. Ripper and Stasiak levelled their disrupters on the corridor ahead. Diana’s right hand went to the force shield bracelet on her left wrist, but she hesitated to activate it. The energy crystal that powered it had a limited life span, and she didn’t want to use it up unnecessarily.

  “Odin, can your sensors detect anything alive on this floor?” said Ripper softly.

  “I’m afraid my sensors are currently unable to penetrate the Base,” the AI replied. “Something is blocking them. My only sources of information are what I see and hear through your comm implants.”

  More noises came out of the darkness, a slow, regular thudding like the beating of a giant heart. The floor vibrated beneath their feet in time to the rhythm, and something large and hulking came out of the gloom towards them. It was huge, filling the corridor, and Diana shrank back, a child again, frightened by the bogeyman in the dark. The figure stopped suddenly a dozen feet away, its blue steel exterior glinting in the wavering lamplight. Its bent head scraped against the ceiling, and its metal hands were studded with razors. Stasiak swore softly, but his hand was steady as he turned his disrupter on the metal figure.

  Captain Silence’s voice rang suddenly in their ears. “Listen up, people. We have a problem. Odin has just told me there are Security Guardians somewhere in the Base. Don’t engage them, under any circumstances. It’s very possible they’ve been programmed to protect this Base against intruders. If you see one, retreat immediately.”

  “Thanks for the warning,” said Ripper, “but it’s just a bit late. We’re looking at one right now. Please advise.”

  “Get the hell out of there,” said Silence immediately. “Make no threatening moves and back away. If it starts towards you, run. There are probably more on the way. They’re crawling with weaponry and they don’t take prisoners. As long as you keep a fair distance away, you should be safe.”

  “Should?” said Stasiak. “What do you mean, should? I’m not moving a muscle until I’m sure it’s safe.”

  “Shut up, Lew,” said Ripper. “Esper, back away and start up the stairs. We’ll follow you.”

  “All right,” said Diana quietly. “I’m starting now.”

  She stepped back cautiously, and the huge metal figure raised a hand to point at her. A disrupter beam flew from a finger and blew apart the metal stairway in a rain of jagged shrapnel.

  Cries and screams and obscenities burst from Silence’s comm implant, drowned out almost immediately by the sound of an explosion from below. The noise was deafening, and the floor shook briefly. Carrion and Frost looked to Silence for orders.

  “Whatever’s happening down there, there’s nothing we can do,” he said flatly. “By the time we could get there it would all be over, one way or another. And the last thing we want to do is provide a Guardian with new targets. Esper, marines, can you hear me? Fall back. I repeat, fall back.” He waited, but there was no reply, only the quiet hum of an open comm channel. “Odin, access what they’re seeing and patch me in.”

  “I’m sorry, Captain,” said the AI steadily. “Something inside the Base is interfering with the comm network. I have lost all visual contact with the esper and the marines. I am still monitoring audio signals, but I can’t be sure how long that will last. I strongly advise that you leave Base Thirteen now. You are not equipped to deal with Guardians.”

  “Want to bet?” drawled Frost. “Point me at one. Anything that gets in my way is going to regret it.”

  Carrion looked at Silence. “Is she always this confident?”


  “Yes,” said Silence. “Frightening, isn’t it?”

  Carrion looked away suddenly. “Captain … something’s coming, and it’s very close.”

  Frost and Silence drew their guns and covered the two approaches. The wide corridor was still and open, with doors leading off at both sides. The only light came from the lamp Silence was holding, a pale illumination just strong enoughto show both ends of the corridor. Nothing moved, but the shadows had edges. What had been just another corridor was suddenly openly menacing, every doorway a threat. Silence and Frost moved to stand back to back. Carrion leaned on his staff, frowning, as though listening to something audible only to him. Silence strained his ears against the hush, but couldn’t hear anything.

  “What is it?” he said quietly to the outlaw. “Which direction is it coming from?”

  Carrion’s eyes closed. “They’re here, Captain. They’re here.”

  The wall to their right tore apart like paper as the Guardian burst through into the corridor. Thick strands of colored wiring fouled one arm, but the Guardian snapped them with one easy movement. The machine was eight feet tall, a broad metal colossus with glowing eyes and a constant, unnerving grin on its blue steel face. Razor blades protruded from its arms and legs, and the knuckles on its hands were spiked. It was not alive, but hate and violence were a part of its nature. It was a killing machine, fashioned in the shape of a man because it was more frightening that way.

  “Big, isn’t it?” said Carrion.

  The sound of heavy metal footsteps rang out at both ends of the corridor, and two more Guardians appeared, blocking off the only means of escape. The three machines stood unnaturally still, studying their targets, and then they surged forward, too fast for the human eye to follow. Silence aimed and fired his disrupter at the nearest Guardian as it emerged from the wreckage of the wall. Its force shield snapped on just in time to deflect the energy bolt, and then disappeared. The machine raised a hand and pointed, and Silence threw himself to one side as an energy beam blew a hole in the wall where he’d been standing. Silence hit the floor rolling, and was quickly back on his feet again. He slapped the metal bracelet on his left wrist, and a forceshield sprang into being on his arm. A yard-long oblong of glowing energy, it was capable of deflecting any energy weapon. For as long as it lasted. The Guardian could turn its own shield on and off with split-second timing, so that its shield lasted practically forever. Silence didn’t have that option. He also had another three minutes to wait before he could use his gun again, and the Guardian was right on top of him.

 

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