by John Ringo
None of it made any logical sense and very little of it was even remotely accurate. But the women in this room were eating it up and so, apparently, was the crowd outside. And so were thousands upon thousands more, in every major urban center on Jefferson. Kafari was actually relieved when her name was called by the nurse, allowing her to escape the ugly mood in the waiting room.
The exam was the only thing she’d encountered all day to reassure her fears.
“You’re doing fine and the baby’s doing fine,” the doctor smiled. “Another couple of months and you’ll be holding her.”
Kafari returned the smile, although a mist had clouded her eyes. “We’ve got the nursery all set up. Everything’s ready. Except her.”
The doctor’s smile broadened into a grin. “She will be. Take advantage of the next couple of months to put your feet up and rest every chance you get. You’ll be running on mighty short sleep, once she’s born.”
By the time Kafari re-dressed and checked out at the counter, the crowd outside had swelled to a river of people, a thick and slow-moving stream that jammed the street, with every person in it — except Kafari — trying to get to Lendan Park. Kafari’s groundcar was in a parking garage three blocks closer to the park, which left Kafari struggling to push herself and her distended belly through the close-packed jam of people. She could smell cheap cologne, unwashed bodies, flatulence, and alcohol. Within a single city block, she found herself fighting a trickle of panic. She didn’t like crowds. The last time she’d been near a crowd anywhere close to this size, it had turned on her. Had tried its utmost to kill her.
Simon wouldn’t be swooping in to rescue anybody, tonight.
I have to get out of this crowd, she kept telling herself. I have to get to the parking garage, at least. She wouldn’t be able to drive through this mess for hours, yet, but she wanted the security her car represented, modest as it was. She wanted metal walls around her. Bullet-proof glass. The gun in the console.
You’re being stupid, she told herself sternly. Just calm down and breathe deeply. There’s the garage, right there, just another hundred meters or so… She reached the garage. Unfortunately, she couldn’t get anywhere close to the entrance. There were too many people between her and the doorway. She was swept inexorably forward, a slow-motion tide that carried her — greatly against her will — toward the heart of Lendan Park. She was close enough, now, she could see a massive platform towering nearly four meters above the ground, a stage big enough to hold an orchestra. The stage boasted public-address microphones and speakers nearly three meters high, all draped with banners and bunting in POPPA’s favorite colors: sunset gold and deep, forest green.
POPPA’s “peace banners” — a three-armed triskelion of olive leaves, silhouetted against the golden backdrop — fluttered in the early evening breeze from every corner of the stage, from huge, twenty-meter-high streamers behind the stage, from lamp posts, even tree branches where zealots had hung them. A good half the crowd wore gold and green, in fervent declaration of their social and political preferences. Kafari’s cream-colored maternity suit — tailored for a meeting with off-world suppliers’ representatives, ships’ captains, and engineers to work out the kinks as they brought the new station’s systems on-line and ordered additional components — stood out conspicuously against the brighter-hued Party colors or the duller shades of jobless factory workers wearing their sturdy shop-floor uniforms.
Her portion of the crowd came to a halt sixty or so meters from the stage, out near the edge of the park. Kafari’s back ached already from standing, the muscles protesting the strain of carrying her burden unsupported. At least she was wearing sensible shoes. Kafari hadn’t worn anything truly impractical since the war.
The people closest to her were an interesting mixture. From the look of it, there wasn’t a Granger anywhere in the bunch, but she was able to peg several distinct “types” near her. Factory workers were obvious. So were the students, ranging from high-school up through college-age kids. Others appeared to be middle-class clerical types, shopkeepers, office workers hit by the slump in retail sales of everything from clothing to groundcars.
Still others had that distinct air about them that said “academia,” particularly the social sciences and arts professorial types. She didn’t spot anyone that looked — or spoke — remotely like an engineer or physicist, but there were plenty to choose from, based on snatches of conversation, if one were interested in delving deeply into the intricacies of post-Terran deconstructionist philosophies — and philologies — in the arts, literature, and what Kafari had always thought of as the pseudo-sciences: astromancy, luminology, sociography.
Any further speculation she might have entertained about the occupations of those near her vanished under a sudden blare of music from those three-meter-high speakers. The base rhythm of drums struck her bones like a shockwave. If she’d had elbow room, she’d have clapped both hands across her ears. The drums were savage, primal, striking a chord in the waiting crowd, which erupted into howls and a massive tsunamic roar that pounded again and again at her eardrums: “Vit-tor-i! Vit-tor-i!”
It wasn’t difficult to imagine the missing hard-c sound that would have transformed the war-chant into “victory,” rather than a summons for the reigning lord of the Populist Order for the Promotion of Public Accord. A wild melody began to play, counterpoint to the drum cadence, stirring the blood and numbing the brain. People were shouting and screaming, waving triskelion banners, jumping up and down in a frenzy that left Kafari bruised from too many sharp shoulders and elbows jabbing soft spots, fortunately most of them striking above her abdomen.
The music rose to a wailing crescendo…
Then the banners behind the stage parted and he was there. Vittori. The man with Madison in the palm of his hand. He was striding forward, clad entirely in a golden yellow so light, it appeared luminescent in the gathering gloom of twilight. Where the light of sunset streamed across the stage and its twenty-meter triskelion banners, a golden halo of light shone like something from a painting of the virgin Madonna and her child. Vittori Santorini, standing in the center of that halo, glowed like a saint newly descended from heaven. My God, Kafari found herself thinking, does anybody else realize how dangerous this man is?
When he lifted both hands, a prophet parting the seas, the music died instantly and the crowd fell silent in the space between one heartbeat and the next. He stood that way for long seconds, hands uplifted in benediction, in ecstatic triumph, in some twisted emotion Kafari couldn’t quite define, but left her skin crawling, to see it wash across his face and down the glowing length of his body.
“Welcome,” he whispered into the microphone, “to the future of Jefferson.”
The crowd went insane. The mind-numbing roar of human voices shook the air like thunder. Vittori, master of crowds, waited for the ovation to die away of its own accord. He stood looking at his acolytes for long moments, smiling softly down at them, then caressed them with that dangerous, velvet voice.
“What do you want?”
“POPPA! POPPA! POPPA!”
Again he smiled. Leaned forward. Waited…
“Then show no mercy!” The whiplash of his shout cracked the air like judgment day. “It’s time to take what’s ours! Our rights! Our money! Our very lives! No more soldiers drafted to die off-world!”
“No more!”
“No more kickbacks to farmers!”
“No more!”
“No more pillaging in public lands!”
“No more!”
“And no more politicians getting fat and rich while the rest of us starve!”
“NO MORE!”
His voice dropped to a velvet caress again. “What are you going to do about it?”
“Vote! Vote! Vote!”
“That’s right! Get out and vote! Make your voice heard. Demand justice. Real justice. Not John Andrews’ mockery, kowtowing to the big off-world military machine. It’s time Jefferson said ‘No!’ to
war!”
“No war!”
“It’s time to say ‘No!’ to higher taxes.”
“No taxes!”
“It’s time we said ‘No!’ to reckless terraforming schemes and new farms.”
“No farms!”
“And it’s sure as hell time to say ‘No more Andrews!’ — now or ever!”
“No Andrews! No Andrews!”
“Are you with me, Jefferson?”
The crowd exploded again, thousands of throats screaming themselves raw in the chilly air as night settled inexorably across the heart of Madison. The sound echoed off the walls of Assembly Hall, which stood behind them like a basilisk in the gathering darkness, turning not bodies but minds to stone, rendering them incapable of reason. Susceptible to anything this man said. Anything he suggested. Kafari stood caught in the midst of the unholy uproar and shuddered. She was violently cold with the fear rising up from her soul.
He stood there, arms outstretched, basking in the wild sound of adoration, drinking it down like fine wine. It was grotesque. Obscene. Like watching a man bring himself to orgasm in public. She wanted out of this crowd, out of the insanity flying loose in Lendan Park. Wanted Simon’s arms around her and Sonny’s guns overhead, keeping watch in the coming night. She knew, in that one, horrible moment, that John Andrews was doomed to lose the election. Knew it as surely as she knew the kind of programming code required to send a psychotronic brain like Sonny’s into alert status. Or over the edge into battle mode.
We’re in trouble, oh, Simon, we’re in trouble…
The crowd was shrieking, “V — V — V!”
V for Vittori. For victory. For victim… The prophet of the hour lifted his hands again, quieting the crowd to a hush so sudden, the sound of wind snapping through the “peace banners” cracked like gunfire. When the silence was absolute, he said, “We have work waiting for us, my friends. Wild work, critical work. We have to defeat the monsters ruling us with an iron hand and a stone heart. We have to throw off the yoke of slavery and call our skies, our children, our lives our own again. We have to rebuild the factories. The shops. The very future. We have to ensure the rights that everyone has, not just a privileged few. The rights to a job. To economic equality. To choose where we go or don’t go. Where we send our children or don’t send them. What we do — or don’t do — with our land. Our seas. Our air. We choose! We say! AND WE ACT!”
The thunder was back in his voice.
“We act now, my friends! Now, before it’s too late. We take charge. Before fools like John Andrews destroy us! It’s time to send a message. Loud and clear.”
The crowd was screaming again.
Vittori shouted into the microphone, shouted above that primal roar.
“Are you with us?”
“Yes!”
“Are you ready to take back our world?”
“Yes!”
“And are you ready,” his voice dropped again to a piercing whisper, “are you ready to give our enemies what they so richly deserve?”
“YES!”
“Then claim your power! Claim it now! Go out into the streets and smite those who oppose us! Do it now! Go! Go! Go!”
The crowd took up the chant, screaming it into the darkness. Vittori moved with sudden, blinding speed. He snatched up a microphone stand, held it overhead like a club, spun suddenly to face a huge picture of John Andrews that had appeared as though conjured from thin air, a picture painted on glass, translucent where spotlights sprang abruptly to life in the darkness. Vittori turned the microphone stand in his hands, swung it in a whistling, vicious arc, let go at the height of the backswing. The heavy metal base crashed through the glass, shattering it. Pieces and shards of John Andrews’ broken face rained down onto the stage. A roar erupted, shrieking like a hot, volcanic wind.
The crowd was moving, surging out toward its edges, amoeba-like. Tendrils of that massive amoeba engulfed the streets, the buildings beyond them. The sound of smashed glass punctuated the roar, staccato-quick, a rhythm of hatred and rage. The surging mass of people gathered speed, spreading out in all directions. Kafari found herself forced to run, to avoid being trampled by those rushing toward the edges of the park, into and past her. She held her abdomen, stricken with mortal terror for the baby as she ran with the crowd. They were, at least, running toward the garage where her car was parked.
They’d nearly reached it when the crowd smashed into something that was fighting back. Kafari couldn’t see what. Half the lights in the park were out, either pulled down or the glass smashed out, plunging great stretches of park into near-Stygian darkness. Storefronts and public buildings on every side stood with broken doors and widows gaping wide, interior lights splashing across the edges of the battle and the running figures of people smashing and looting their way through the rooms beyond.
Something arced high overhead, exploding with a cloud of choking chemical smoke. Riot gas! Kafari pulled off her jacket, covered her lower face with it as the smoke drifted down, engulfing the crowd within seconds. Eyes streaming, Kafari held her breath as long as she could, straining to reach the edge of the embattled crowd. She could see a line of police, now, truncheons rising and falling as they clubbed rioters to the ground. The savagery of it shocked Kafari, left her faltering, trying to backpedal against the crush of people pressing forward from deeper in the park.
The crowd shoved her right toward the line of police. They had their shields up, riot helmets down, while a second line pumped more gas rounds into the air. Others were firing at the crowd. Something whizzed past Kafari’s ear, striking the person behind her with a sickening, meaty thud that wrenched loose a scream. Terror scalded her, terror for her unborn child. She shoved sideways, trying to turn, found herself embroiled in a flying wedge of howling rioters, men who’d ripped up street signs, who’d broken thick branches out of the trees, swinging and jabbing them at the line of riot police. She was shoved forward, trapped in the center—
Police went down. A sudden hole gaped open. Right in front of her. Kafari stumbled forward, driven from behind, carried through the opening by the howling demons who’d battered their way through. She found herself running down the street. She headed toward the garage, less than half a block ahead. Others were streaming into the garage, ahead of her, evidently looking for a way out of the battle. Groundcar alarms screamed theft-attempt warnings. Kafari reached the doorway. Saw the automated attendant’s traffic bar snap and vanish as people shoved past the barrier.
Then she was inside, stumbling forward, trying to reach a staircase. She made it to the dubious safety of the nearest stairwell, badly winded and coughing violently. She could hardly climb, could barely see through the streaming tears. She fumbled her way up one flight, reached the floor her car was on. Stumbling badly, she managed to reach the proper row. She keyed her wrist-comm, flashing a message to the car to unlock itself and start the engine. Three seconds later, she fell through the open door into the driver’s seat. Kafari slammed the door shut, locked the car, sagged against the cushions and dragged down deep gulps of air.
Other people were running past, having reached her floor. She dug the gun out of the console, held it firm in a double-handed grip that shook with such violence, the muzzle described wide circles in front of her. Shudders gripped her whole body. When something smacked into the door, she twisted around. The gun came up. Her finger slid home. A wild-eyed man stared down the wrong end of the bore. His mouth dropped into an “o” of shock. Then he turned his larcenous attention to another car down the row from hers.
The muzzle of her gun rattled against the window glass in a jittery rhythm.
I will never, ever, she promised herself with devout intensity, get caught in the middle of another political riot… Her wrist-comm beeped at her. Simon’s voice, harsh with strain, sliced into her awareness.
“Kafari? Are you there, Kafari?”
She managed to push the right button on her third, shaking try. “Y-yeah, I’m h-here.”
&
nbsp; “Oh, thank God…” A whisper, reverent in its relief. “Where are you? I’ve been calling and calling.”
“In the car. In the garage. I got caught in that unholy hell of a rally.”
“How — never mind how. Can you get out?”
“No. Not yet. I’m shaking too hard to drive,” she added with grim candor. “And there’s gas everywhere, riot gas. I can hardly see. There’s no way I’m going to try driving through the mess out there in the streets. This thing’s turned ugly. Real ugly. On both sides.”
“Yes,” Simon growled. “I know. What?” he asked, voice abruptly muffled. “It’s my wife, goddammit.” A brief pause, as he listened. Then, “You want me to what? Jesus Christ, are you out of your idiotic mind?”
Whatever was being said — and whoever was saying it — Simon was clearly having none of it. She heard an indistinct mumble of voices, realizing abruptly that the transmission was scrambled, somehow, coming across the unsecured transmission to her wrist-comm as garbled sound rather than sensible words. Who was he talking to? The military? The president? Kafari swallowed hard, trying to muffle another fit of coughing. Whoever it was, they wanted something from Simon and the only reason she could imagine for someone to call Simon was for a request that he send Sonny somewhere.
Here? Into the riot? Oh, shit…
Memory pinned her to the seat cushions, paralyzed her limbs, her brain with remembrance. Sonny’s guns whirling in a dance of rapid-fire death… his screens flaring bright under alien guns… Not again, she whimpered. Not now, carrying Simon’s child. A child they’d struggled so hard to conceive. Then she heard Simon’s voice, cracking through the terror in crisp, no-nonsense tones.
“Absolutely not. You don’t send a Bolo into the middle of a city for riot control. I don’t give a damn how many buildings they’ve broken into. You don’t use a Bolo to quash a civilian riot. It’s worse than killing a mosquito with a hydrogen bomb.” Another interlude of indistinct sounds interrupted Simon. Her husband finally growled, “It’s not my job to make sure you win this or any other election. Yes, I watched the coverage of the rally. I know exactly what that little asshole said. And I repeat, it’s your problem, not mine. You’re on your own. Yes, dammit, that’s my final word. I’m not ordering Sonny to go anywhere tonight.”