Starfist: Kingdom's Swords

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Starfist: Kingdom's Swords Page 10

by David Sherman


  Marta Conorado was no stranger to any of this. All the many years of waiting for news of her husband’s fate and living without him had hardened her outwardly, but now she had grown weary of life in the Corps. When her children were small, she had the diversion of taking care of them, holding the family together against their father’s return. And when he did come home—oh, joy beyond measure! All the anger and pain she felt at their enforced separations would vanish instantly in his arms.

  Now, during the first few weeks after her husband’s departure, Marta wavered between feeling guilty at what she had said the night he left and feeling righteous anger that she was once more being left in the lurch. She realized that she did not know for sure if she really meant to leave her husband, but that’s what she’d said, and there was no way to take the words back; he had left with them ringing in his ears. She comforted herself with the thought that at least he’d be in no danger on that trip, with his company again deployed to some godforsaken hellhole. What could a stupid court-martial do to a man like Lewis Conorado? Maybe, she thought, if the court-martial went against him, he’d at last see the light and take the offer her father had made many times in the past.

  Herbius Carmody ran a very successful import-export business. More than once, he had offered Conorado a top position in his firm with the promise of a salary that would make his Marine Corps pay look like peanuts. The old man was serious. Managerial and leadership talent such as Conorado had developed as a Marine officer was hard to come by. But Conorado had turned him down, politely but flatly, and Marta had always supported him. Her father could never understand it. Marta had always thought she did, but she wasn’t so sure anymore.

  While Camp Ellis was a ghost town, Mainside, the Confederation Navy base on Thorsfinni’s World, thrived with activity. Its clubs and messes were full every night, and during the day the port operation and the naval command headquarters hummed with the life of a base operating at full capacity. The sidewalks at Mainside seemed to vibrate with the sharp salutes of the officers and men going about their duties. When ships of the line came into orbit for a visit, their shuttles discharged eager crewmen anxious to spend money on liberty in New Oslo—the hospitality of the ’Finnis was renowned throughout the Fleet—or even in the enlisted clubs at the base.

  While their children were in school, the navy wives at Mainside enjoyed a whirlwind of social events, from card games to shopping sprees in New Oslo. Marta Conorado did not participate in any of that. After obtaining her master’s in education and eventually the principalship of a high school off-world, she had met Lew. He’d been on recruiting duty then, but had come to her school not to recruit, but as a guest lecturer in a government seminar. A local politician had also been a member of the discussion panel, and when he began to openly deride the Marine Corps before the senior class, claiming that professional military people were no better than prostitutes, Conorado had shut him down with the simple statement: “Sir, if that is so, next time the enemy comes knocking at your gates, call for a prostitute.” Lew had invited her to dinner that night, and she accepted. Since then, as time and circumstances permitted, she had taught in a variety of school systems part-time, but her main focus in life had become her husband and their children.

  Yet Marta Conorado was a woman with a high degree of intelligence and lots of good, old-fashioned horse sense. There was little she couldn’t figure out on her own. Over the years, for instance, she had taught herself how to repair just about any type of small machine. She had to learn because on Lew’s pay they could not easily afford new applicances or the bills required to fix old ones when they broke down.

  So Marta did not fit in with the coterie of navy wives who spent their time gossiping, shopping, and having affairs while their men were away. Once, years before, while having lunch with some Marine wives, one of them had commented that her husband would refuse to shave when he was off duty for any length of time. “He tells me, ‘I’m off duty and so is my face,’ ” she said, to the laughter of the other women around the table.

  “Well, that’s typical of the male of the species,” another remarked. “But for a woman, her face is like an officer, it’s never off duty! Isn’t that so, Marta?”

  “Well,” Marta answered, “I guess so, but for me, I really don’t have to show anyone anything, you know? I’m not in ‘show’ business.”

  But despite the fact that Marta Conorado never expended much effort showing the world her face, she was still a handsome woman, even in her fifties. Slim and athletic, not a streak of gray in her auburn hair, she was a smart, confident, healthy woman who didn’t need much in the way of beauty aids.

  And now, over all her thoughts, hung the chilling knowledge that Lewis had imparted to her about the Skinks and what happened on Society 437. The Marines had dealt with them on that occasion, and she had no doubt they would again, but with the FIST off elsewhere, Marta realized just how vulnerable everyone on the fringes of Human Space really was.

  So one night after Lew left for Earth, Marta Conorado decided to go out and get good and drunk.

  The motif of the Seven Seas Bar was the old sailing navy of the early twenty-first century. It was a unique and popular feature of the officers’ open mess system, if only because the drinks and meals served there were catered by a live serving staff. The waiters and waitresses flitting between tables taking orders were off-duty sailors earning extra pay. They did not seem to mind the unfamiliar and uncomfortable costumes of the old navy the job required, and the patrons loved them.

  A huge placard mounted by the entrance to the Seven Seas explained the rules of the club: no headgear could be worn at the bar, under penalty of buying everyone else there a drink; formal dress was only permitted in the dining room; and the tip was set at one percent of the tab. This system had always prevailed at Bronnysund and other primitive outposts, but most naval personnel at Mainside had never been to such places often enough to consider the practice routine.

  The Conorados had been to the Seven Seas several times and Marta liked the atmosphere, especially the bar, a long wooden affair where drinkers sat on high chairs and ordered their concoctions from a bartender. Of course, the actual mixing and pouring of the beverages was done by a servo, but the novelty came from being served by a human being dressed in old-fashioned garb. The bar was a dimly lighted, informal place where people could sit together and enjoy quiet conversations. Tobacco and thule were permitted, and the haze of cigarette smoke was said to be part of the bar’s attractive ambience.

  Marta had only been in the bar area one other time, with her husband, but the place attracted her. She noted on that previous occasion several unaccompanied women, evidently unmarried naval officers, who seemed at home there. She realized that the bar was an ideal place for single people to meet, and on that particular night Marta felt an urge to talk to a stranger, any stranger.

  Of the dozen seats at the bar, only three were occupied. Hoping she was not acting too self-consciously, Marta took a seat by herself at the opposite end.

  “Good evening, ma’am, my name is Jerry,” the bartender said. “What would you like to have?”

  Not a drinker, Marta was suddenly nonplussed. “A beer, please?”

  “Yes, ma’am, we have . . .” He rattled off the names of several brands of beer. They were mostly incomprehensible to her. But she did recognize one of them.

  “Reindeer,” she answered as nonchalantly as she could.

  “An excellent choice.” The bartender was a yeoman first class earning a bit of extra money tending bar, which he had been doing for some time now. He sized Marta up quickly: fiftyish, good facial bones, athletic or at least in good physical shape, married, out by herself, husband with the Fleet. The Seven Seas period atmosphere might be phony and contrived, but Marta Conorado’s situation that night was as old as men and the sea.

  Marta had drunk Reindeer ale many times before, usually with meals, but she had never particularly liked the brew. But on this night it tasted g
ood to her. She finished her glass and ordered another. The yeoman glanced at her out of the corner of his eye as he added the second beer to her tab. He knew very well what the classy broad wanted, and here he came—a navy aviator dressed in his flight suit.

  The lieutenant stood just inside the doorway for a moment, letting his eyes adjust to the dim light. “Excuse me, ma’am, may I take this seat?” he asked as he slid onto the stool next to Marta’s.

  “Sure,” she said. “My name is Marta.”

  It had been a very hard day at Camp Ellis. Since there was little to do in FIST headquarters, Colonel Ramadan felt obliged to get involved in things that the deputy commander of a Marine FIST would normally not be bothered with, to the great annoyance of the base maintenance personnel, but there was nothing they could do about it. Early in the morning the sewage system had sprung a leak, and Ramadan had spent most of the morning with the engineers trying to get it fixed. When he got back to his office, his system was inundated with messages from Kingdom relayed by Fleet, and although all were routine requests for logistical assistance, he considered acting on them a priority. As a result, it was way after sundown before he’d finished with the chore.

  Back in his quarters, Ramadan lighted one of his precious Anniversarios and poured himself a large glass of ale. He looked over his books. One struck his fancy, and he took it to the alcove on the other side of the room, where he did his reading in a comfortable captain’s chair. He stretched, sipped from his beer, and read at random from the first page that fell open on his lap:

  This inn was furnished with not a single article that we could either eat or drink; but Mr. Murchison, factor to the Laird of Macleod in Gleneg, sent us a bottle of rum and some sugar . . .

  Ramadan smiled to himself. The passage was from James Boswell’s The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, the third edition, the last one to have had the advantage of Boswell’s corrections and editions. It was not an original, of course, just a limited editions reprint, but still extremely valuable, and very precious to Ramadan personally. After many years of traveling to the most primitive reaches of Human Space, he often felt he understood how Boswell and Dr. Samuel Johnson had felt on their tour of Scotland in the eighteenth century. Talk about “not a single article that we could either eat or drink”—Colonel Ramadan, as a Marine, had been there, done that.

  He suddenly felt a compelling urge for companionship. Carefully, he closed the book and set it aside. The officers’ mess would be a dull place tonight, only a few solitary souls seeking a late night snack. No, he required something more lively. He got up and dressed. It would be a long drive, but there was a club on Mainside he liked a lot. He’d spend the evening there.

  The airman’s name was Lieutenant (jg) Ken Busby and he flew a Raptor. He was already an ace, having shot down the requisite number of Diamundian aircraft during the war there—he’d told Marta all this before his rear end had time to warm the seat he took beside her. That was the campaign Lew Conorado had fought on the ground, against Marston St. Cyr’s tanks, while this Ken was zooming around shooting up a third-rate air force. But she didn’t say anything. That evening, Marta did not want to be reminded of her husband.

  “Are you a civilian employee here, Marta, or . . . ?” Ken asked. He’d ordered bourbon on the rocks and another beer for her. He left the question hanging because he knew the answer already. He deliberately did not ask if she was married, but had seen the impression on her left ring finger. She’d left the ring home. She wanted to try life without it for the first time in more than twenty years.

  “Um,” she responded, and Ken was satisfied to let it go.

  “Thule?” He offered Marta a cigarette. “It’s a Raucher, one of the prime Wanderjahrian brands.”

  “No thanks, Ken, the beer is enough for me.” Marta smiled. “How about you? What’s your ship?”

  “CSS Butner. We’re here pending—” He hesitated, for the information was classified. “—a berthing opening, for supplies and refueling, you know.”

  Marta’s heart skipped a beat. She knew that the Butner was off to support 34th FIST on wherever it had been sent. If 34th FIST needed the support of a carrier on this operation, it was far more than just a “routine” peacekeeping deployment. Thank God, she thought for the umpteenth time, Lew will be out of this one! Then she kicked herself. She was being selfish: Company L would need him now more than ever, if it were deploying. Then she kicked herself again: Wasn’t that the reason their marriage was breaking up? All these deployments? She smiled inwardly, Once a Marine’s wife always . . . ? With effort, she suppressed that train of thought.

  “How about you, Ken? Where are you staying?”

  Ken’s heart skipped a beat. Could this be . . . ? “I’m staying at a BOQ here on Mainside. Liberty for a few days, you know? I plan on going into New Oslo tomorrow. Would you—be free?”

  “I’m free, Ken. But let me think about it for a while.” Marta regarded the young lieutenant. He was a handsome man—“dashing,” was really the word. He had the easygoing, devil-may-care look of the fighter pilot, the kind of man who lived to fly. He wore a scarf about his neck, dark blue with white polka dots. “Are those the colors of your squadron?” she asked.

  “Yes!” Ken answered enthusiastically, then launched into an interminable monologue about Attack Squadron 6, the “Blue Devils.” When he talked about his flying unit, Ken’s face flushed with enthusiasm. He used his hands to illustrate each point, especially when he talked about aircraft performance. It was impossible for Marta not to like the dedicated young flier. She realized he was nervous. This was probably his first attempt to pick up a married woman, or a recently divorced older woman, and she smiled. Ken misinterpreted that as interest in what he was saying about Attack Squadron 6.

  “Another drink?” Marta asked, pointing at Ken’s nearly empty glass.

  “Oh, sure.” He ordered another bourbon for himself and a beer for Marta and then rushed on: “But I’m telling you, Marta, this Dickerson guy, he’s goddamned crazy! Well, we’re all a little crazy, you know, but flying a Raptor at Mach 2 underneath a goddamned bridge!”

  Marta found herself laughing with Ken at his stories. She wondered what it would be like to have sex with him. Before either of them realized it, they were holding hands and laughing together. It was the alcohol and the thule, of course, but Marta was beginning to enjoy Ken’s company—a lot.

  “Good evening, Mrs. Conorado,” a deep male voice said from behind them.

  Marta whirled around. “Ah, why, good evening, Colonel Ramadan! What a, er, surprise to see you!” She felt as if she were a teenager again and had been just caught masturbating by her father. Her face turned very red, and she hoped in the dim barlight it was not too noticeable.

  Ramadan stood with a drink in one hand and a book under the other arm. He smiled.

  “Uh, Ken, Lieutenant Busby, this is Colonel Ramadan,” Marta said.

  “Evening, sir.” Ken nodded at Colonel Ramadan. He thought at first the colonel was Marta’s husband, then a friend of her husband’s. He’d just tried to hit on the wife of a senior Marine officer!

  “Evening, Lieutenant, Marta. You enjoying yourselves?”

  “Oh, yessir,” they both blurted out at the same time.

  “Well, excuse me.” He nodded at the two of them and walked to a table in a dark corner of the bar.

  Marta felt as if she were standing on the edge of a precipice. One step and she’d plunge over. Should she take it? She hesitated. She was not a superstitious woman, but Ramadan’s unexpected intervention had been provident. “Ah, Ken, I’ve got to go,” she announced.

  “Ah, sure, Marta, sure. I understand. Um, one for the road?”

  Marta shook her head no, and finished her beer in one gulp. She kissed Ken lightly on the cheek and walked, not very steadily, out of the bar. Ken shrugged. Just as well, he thought. Well, tomorrow it was on to New Oslo. But he had really liked her. A guy could talk to a woman like Marta. Boy, he thought, some luck
y jarhead, to be married to a woman like that!

  Back in her apartment, Marta locked the door, shook off her clothes, and stepped into the shower. She turned the water on as hot as she could stand it. She stayed in there for a long time.

  CHAPTER

  * * *

  TEN

  “Watch my tip, Wing. We’re going seventy degrees starboard, take a flyover on that swamp.”

  “Roger, Lead,” the wingman on Raptor Flight 2 replied.

  Corporal Rolo Strataslavic, on watch in the squadron’s comm shack, heard the voices but didn’t register the words. He was too heavily engrossed in the Raptor tech manual he was studying. More than anything else, Strataslavic wanted to get out of headquarters and into the squadron’s Raptor section as an electronics tech. There were a lot more high-paying jobs in the civilian world for spacecraft and starcraft electronics techs than there were for comm techs. He knew that experience working on Raptors could help him land one of those jobs when he got out of the Corps in another two years.

  Everybody knew he spent his watch time studying, and his superiors approved, though unofficially, of course. It was expected that the men spend work time studying to advance themselves. It was different on a combat deployment, when everybody had to pay close attention to everything because lives were at stake. But Kingdom was hardly a combat op, just a bunch of peasants who could be dealt with by an army military police company, if the damn army could get its act together.

  “Wing, cover me, I’m going down to take a closer look at that.”

  “Roger. Wing orbits.” A moment later the wingman exclaimed, “What the hell?”

  Corporal Strataslavic didn’t notice immediately that the transmissions from Raptor Flight 2 had ceased. He was immersed in a particularly tricky section on superconductivity.

 

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