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Battlestar Galactica 2 - The Cylon Death Machine

Page 24

by Glen A. Larson


  "And thank you and your people for your help," Apollo said. "If you and Tenna had not led the way up Hekla, I don't—say, where is Tenna? They were all here a few moments ago."

  Ser 5-9 hesitated before answering:

  "I believe they went into the shuttle to say good-bye to your Lieutenant Starbuck."

  "I should have known. Starbuck!"

  Inside the ship, Starbuck was busily bestowing kisses on three Tennas, each one in turn. They all seemed to be enjoying the ritual immensely.

  "Time to go, Lieutenant," Apollo said, trying to keep from laughing.

  Starbuck appeared reluctant. He sidled conspiratorially over to Apollo and whispered:

  "Can't they come with us? There're only three of them, and—"

  "No, Lieutenant. We can't interfere with these people any more than we already have."

  "It hasn't been such a bad interference," one of the Tennas said.

  Apollo's observation to Ravashol had been more correct than he'd even suspected; the clones were becoming more and more human.

  "Captain," Starbuck urged, "this is a chance in a lifetime. Three versions of the same beautiful woman. Can you imagine?"

  "Only too well can I imagine. Another time, Starbuck."

  "But, Captain . . ."

  "I'm sorry, Starbuck. Good-bye, each of you, and thank you. We are all in your debt."

  "I just wanted to pay off some interest," Starbuck muttered; then he said in a way that took in all three women: "Good-bye, Tenna."

  All three bade him farewell together, an identical sadness in their eyes.

  As Starbuck watched them disembark, Boomer patted his shoulder and said:

  "Win one, you lose one."

  "I just lost all three," Starbuck said.

  He turned and saw Athena glaring at him from the entranceway to the pilot compartment.

  "I think I'm on a real losing streak," he mumbled to Boomer; then he stepped forward, saying, "Athena, we were all just friends. Really."

  She continued to stare daggers at him.

  "By the way," he said, in his best disarming fashion, "I heard you flew the pants off this rig."

  Her mouth made a nervous movement at the corners, as if it very much wanted to smile.

  "But I missed it. Tell me about it, huh?"

  She said nothing, but nodded toward the cockpit of the shuttle. He followed her in, and took the copilot seat as she began to run an equipment check preparatory to launch.

  For the first time in recent memory, Imperious Leader felt stunned. He had had to verify the report three times with his executive officers. The laser gun had been destroyed. Contact with First Centurion Vulpa and his garrison had been lost—apparently the communication systems there had been destroyed along with the cannon. Some human ships had been detected leaving the ice planet. Then, abruptly, the human fleet itself had escaped. None of his officers knew how, although they suspected the Galactica had successfully created another camouflage force field. None of his officers knew where they had escaped to.

  The trap should have worked. It was as if it had been sprung and had captured its quarry, and still the humans had found some way to wriggle out.

  He came out of his reverie to find the Starbuck simulacrum looking at him and smiling.

  "How did they escape?" Imperious Leader asked the Starbuck.

  "Escape?" it answered. "That's just so much bilgewater, bug-eyes. We beat you, that's all. We beat you again. And we're going to keep on—"

  Imperious Leader leaped at the Starbuck, intending to strangle it. His hands went right through the Starbuck's neck, and did not alter one degree of its smile. With one gigantic effort, Imperious Leader pushed the entire simulator off his pedestal. It crashed to the floor of the chamber. Sparks flew in all directions. For a moment, the Starbuck stood at the center of the wreckage, then suddenly flickered out.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  Croft:

  After what I've been through, the bridge of the Galactica seems incredibly claustrophobic, even though it's an immense chamber. But I can't stop my shoulders from contracting at the box that I feel enclosed in. Boxes, prisons, cells. That's my life. Maybe I should have taken the opportunity to escape with Wolfe and Leda. They might be still alive and I might not feel so trapped. Still, as I look around at the joyful crowd gathered on the bridge, I can't help but feel that their lives were traded for the lives of all around me, all personnel and passengers on the many ships of the fleet. Perhaps it was the proper trade.

  Adama is in his commander mood and praising Apollo and the expedition for the successful completion of the mission. He tosses a couple of bouquets to Athena and Apollo for their flying skills. I try to feel a part of it all emotionally, but all I can feel is that it was just a job I did. I wouldn't downplay my part in it, especially the rope-swinging act I did with the kid, but I still don't feel that I belong here, drinking in the rhetoric of praise. They used me because they had to. Otherwise, they would have left me in my stinking hole. The hole they're going to send me back to.

  Adama has moved to Cree and is eulogizing on how brave the young cadet was. Well, that's true enough. I'd rather have been hanging on that rope and falling in that avalanche than be subjected to Cylon torture. Good work, Cree, you deserve the praise.

  Suddenly Adama is standing in front of me. I try to straighten up into some semblance of attention, a reflex from the old days, but my bones are so much in pain I can hardly move them.

  "And Croft," Adama says in his resonant voice.

  "I guess it's back to the old grid-barge," I say, and try to smile as if I don't mind.

  Adama smiles back. The monster, smiling about sending me back.

  "No," he says after a pause. "I think you worked out the rest of your time down on that ice planet. You're needed on the Galactica, Commander."

  I almost don't hear him say the last word. Commander. Reinstatement in rank. If only Leda were here, she might just—I've got to stop thinking of her now. Anyway, she'd only have said that reinstatement in rank was just so much bilge.

  Adama grips my shoulder for a moment, then moves on. Now he faces the kid and his daggit pet, which is doing a good mechanical version of a happy drool.

  "Boxey," Adama says, "if anyone should be sent to the grid-barge for disobeying orders . . ."

  The kid looks scared. I almost want to protect him. The daggit squeals.

  Maybe a good scare'll cure the kid of sticking his nose into dangerous places.

  But I doubt it.

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  First Centurion Vulpa pulled his heavy body up over the hanging cornice. The sound of the metal in his uniform scraping against the ice surface sent echoes rolling down the mountain. He glanced down at the uniform. Many of the black bands awarded him as decoration for valor had been scraped away by his climb. Breaks in the suit that had occurred during the crash landing of his ship had rendered it only barely functional. He had had to continue to wear it as protection against the rising cold temperature.

  There was only a little farther to go. Exercising all the willpower that two brains could offer, he climbed upward. By the time he had reached the summit station, he knew he had no more powers of exertion left in his body. He lay still for a long time.

  Finally he could force his body to rise. Without looking around him, he began stepping heavily across the wreckage until he reached the center where the remains of the once-powerful weapon stood. Its shell still rose mightily toward the sky, dark gray and gloomy. But it stood on a mangled foundation. The awesomely powerful energy pump was in jagged ruins. Fragments of the station, broken, split, bent, lay about the still-intact flooring. At points Vulpa could see a helmet or uniform from one of his warriors perceivable beneath some part of the ruins. A bridge of burned metal had formed across the gaping elevator shaft. Except for the shell of the gun, nothing tangible revealed what it once had been.

  Leaning his heavy body against the shell of the weapon, Vulpa resolved to go into a meditati
ve state. The ability to do that in the midst of a disaster such as this was a second-brain quality for which he was extremely grateful.

  He could meditate here, oblivious of the wreckage around him and what it meant to his life, for a long time.

  Perhaps for the rest of eternity.

  Or until a reinforcement garrison arrived.

  Or until he died.

  It did not matter.

  Table of Contents

  CONTENTS

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER THIRTY

 

 

 


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