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by C. Gockel


  Electricity was sparking through 6T9, and though his Q-comm hadn’t provided any guidance, he shouted, “I’m angry with you!” and lunged again.

  James jogged backward, into the prairie zone…and over the edge of the quadrant’s grav plate.

  With a thought shot into the ether, 6T9 turned up the gravity on the prairie to three times standard G. Shouting in shock, James tumbled backward. 6T9 was already leaping into the air. He landed on the higher G plate, feet plowing into the earth on either side of James’s body. Grabbing the other android’s throat, knowing that James couldn’t flip him in the higher G, 6T9 brought a blow down on James’s face…almost…James caught the fist just in time. With his other hand, James sought to loosen 6T9’s grip on his throat. Gasping for air, James struggled under 6T9’s grip, both of his hands shaking.

  James didn’t need to breathe, which meant he was gasping because he wanted to speak. Did James think he could talk 6T9 out of his anger? Sickly fascinated by whatever logic James was going to spout, 6T9 loosened his grip.

  Inhaling with a loud wheeze, James said, “You wanted to be able to help Volka.”

  6T9 laughed—or tried to—but it sounded like a sob. “She won’t want me like this. I was an angel to her because I couldn’t kill or hurt!” She was the only sentient being in the galaxy who thought he was anything close to divine. She believed he adhered to a higher morality—even though he was a sex ‘bot, and by the rules of her planet, he was a base thing even among base things—he was a machine that catered to humans’ basest urges.

  James’s chest heaved. “Do you want Volka to believe you’re an angel, or do you want her to live?”

  For a moment, all of 6T9’s processors shut down. And then he remembered the infected men, women, and children of the pirate camp. The ones infected by the Dark seeking to infect Volka or destroy her, who would have destroyed 6T9 if she hadn’t destroyed them. She had killed them—against her own programming—and 6T9 had done nothing but criticize her and question her judgment, and then had abandoned her when she was grilled by the Diplomatic Corps and Fleet and put under house arrest.

  In the end, Captain Darmadi had comforted her. 6T9 wanted to break every bone in the good captain’s body and then send him out an airlock.

  6T9 gasped and shook his head. No, that was wrong…it was James he wanted to hurt. James he should hurt for turning him into this violent monster.

  “Your key, 6T9,” James said. “You…can change…yourself back. But we’ll be at war soon. How much do you value Volka’s…life? The Dark…the Dark is coming…”

  The Dark, an alien consciousness that turned humans into slaves, had declared its intention to destroy all of humanity. It hated machines. Volka would turn on him if it possessed her. 6T9 scrunched his eyes shut, his lips turned up in a silent snarl. James’s hands were shaking, or 6T9’s were, or both.

  James gasped. “To save her…how much…will…you…give?”

  2

  Sacrifices

  Luddeccea

  The ceiling fan was on in Alaric’s uncle’s kitchen, the windows were open, and the only thing Alexis had prepared for breakfast were slices of thick black bread, cold meat, cheese, and chilled fruit. Still, it was uncomfortably warm. Alaric’s ship had air conditioning; most of Luddeccea did not.

  Alexis, with Markus in his sling on her front, poured him some iced coffee. Markus was deaf, so Alaric signed and said, “Thank you.”

  Gurgling, Markus waved his hands excitedly. Alexis wasn’t paying attention. Frowning, she focused on the guard standing outside the window. The premier, Archbishop Sato, and most of the members of the Council were in agreement that Alexis was of strategic importance. She was the only person on Luddeccea who could read the language of the strange aliens that had been destroyed by the Dark. There were guards stationed around the perimeter of the grounds and the house itself at all hours to protect her. They’d turned the guest house into their operations center.

  Her scowl deepened.

  Had one of the men been rude to her or the boys? Did she find their weapons frightening? Had she seen someone act in any way that was less than professional?

  “Is there a problem?” Alaric asked.

  “No,” she said, but didn’t move.

  Alaric lifted his coffee, but then set it down. “You can tell me.”

  “It’s nothing,” Alexis said.

  Alaric took a deep breath. “If something is troubling you, it isn’t ‘nothing.’ Please tell me what it is.” He tapped the empty seat beside him.

  Rubbing a hand nervously down the bundle that was Markus, she sat.

  Alaric took a sip of his coffee and prepared for a wait. He reminded himself that his wife had many sterling qualities. She was smart and witty. She was devoted to their children. She was brave and had a cool head in a crisis. She was, as much or more than any member of the Luddeccean Guard, Council, or the Priesthood, passionate about destroying the Dark. She had turned in her own parents—her own mother—for their plot to destabilize the Luddeccean System. Alexis knew how dangerous destabilization would be with the threat of the Dark.

  The trouble was Alexis didn’t feel comfortable revealing her wit or humor to him. She had difficulty revealing anything of herself, her joy or her pain. Alaric could never tell how much of what she said was true and how much she said because she was supposed to say it. It had taken years of marriage, but he was finally piecing together that it wasn’t duplicitousness so much as a sincere belief that he didn’t want to know her opinions, and maybe even a belief that she wasn’t supposed to have them. She’d given him three beautiful children, and she was still a stranger. Silence was still uncomfortable between them. And after her kidnapping, her parents’ betrayal, and the grueling treatment she’d faced when she’d been infected by the Dark, she had never taken comfort in his arms. Unlike Volka, who he’d arguably treated much worse…

  He tried to push the thought aside, but the memory of his cheek against the top of Volka’s head, her tiny body tucked into his arms, and their fingers entwined invaded his consciousness. There had been nothing lustful in that last encounter; he had only given her comfort, but his skin had a memory of every point of contact, and it refused to give those memories up.

  He took another bitter sip. He had to forget. His relationship with Volka had poisoned his marriage from the beginning, even though it had been over, physically at least, since the time of Alaric’s and Alexis’s engagement. Volka had ended it, declaring his offer of patronage not fair to her or his future wife and “not right in the eyes of God.” She’d been right about the first part, and Alaric had gone into his marriage in good faith, hoping to make the best of it. He hadn’t realized that although God’s eyes had not been on him, the neighbors’ eyes had been on his relationship with Volka. They hadn’t seen the relationship end, perhaps because the salacious possibilities were too juicy for them to notice it was over.

  He thought of Volka tucked in his arms. Was it over? He still loved Volka. More than he loved her when they’d been together. He hadn’t really known Volka then, either. He hadn’t imagined her successfully stowing away aboard the Leetier, discovering and absconding with a sentient faster-than-light spaceship, taking down pirates in mech-suits, rescuing scientists on worlds infected by the Dark…or rescuing his wife.

  “It’s nothing. I shouldn’t bother you,” Alexis said, forcing his mind back to the present.

  Alaric set his coffee down with too much force, sloshing liquid over the edge. “Yes, you should bother me.” His voice was angrier than he meant it to be. Alexis stared at him with wide eyes. Markus, babbling and bouncing in his sling, caught the violent movement and went still and silent…before reaching for the cup. Pulling it away, Alaric sighed and rubbed his temple. “Alexis, if something is bothering you, it bothers me. I may not be able to fix it, but at least let me know what it is.” Let me know you, woman.

  Alexis took a deep breath, and at first, he thought it was a delayed reaction to his ou
tburst, but then she said, “I don’t like feeling so helpless.”

  Dropping his hand, he turned toward her, hoping she would take it as a sign to continue, afraid to say anything unless the small bit of openness slammed shut.

  She bit her lip and gave Markus a spoon to play with. Not looking at Alaric, she said, “When the Galacticans came to rescue me…on the planet…they had extra weapons, but I couldn’t help them, even if I had…” She took a breath. “I couldn’t help them. I wouldn’t know how to fire a pistol.” She looked out at her guard. “If something happened, I couldn’t help them, even if I had a weapon.”

  “Would you like to learn how to shoot?” Alaric asked.

  Alexis scowled.

  Did she think he was questioning the validity of such a desire? He hastily added, “I would be happy to teach you.”

  Her scowl deepened, and she patted Markus slowly. “What would the neighbors think?”

  His first impulse was to shout, “Who cares what the neighbors think!” but he stifled it. Instead, summoning up his calmest, most even tones, he said, “Whatever you want, Alexis. I am happy to teach you.” He didn’t think he sounded hostile, even though he found her insistence on propriety head-bangingly frustrating.

  She studied a point on the table. “I will think on it.”

  Which was probably as direct an answer as he would get.

  Alexis didn’t get up, even though Markus began to fuss. “I’m going to go see Holly,” she blurted.

  Holly was Admiral Charles Nilsson’s wife. She was a smart, sensible woman, from what Alaric could tell. He was shocked…not that Alexis would go to see her, but that she would tell him. Normally, she wouldn’t comment much on her visits with friends or her adventures with his uncle. What to say to encourage her to keep talking? Lord, some of his crew complained about their wives never shutting up. “Mmm…doing anything special? A museum, maybe?”

  “I…it’s…I want to discuss more personal matters with her.” Alexis said, patting Markus to soothe him or herself, or both.

  Personal matters. Holly was a midwife…Alexis could only be referring to the matter of the doctor who’d delivered Markus. The doctor who’d maimed her, according to his werfle Solomon. If Alaric got close to the man, he’d break his hands.

  “Or maybe it’s a bad idea,” Alexis said, rising from her chair.

  Which was when Alaric realized his jaw had gotten hard, and he was gripping a fork in a white knuckled hand. “What? No, I think it is a good idea. She’s trained as a midwife and she has children of her own. You like her, and I support you completely.” Even though it might mean the admiral would know more about his sex life than he’d like—if Holly was the type who did talk to her husband. But if Alexis was comfortable with Holly, and that helped her, he didn’t care.

  Alexis’s shoulders rose and fell. “All right, then.” She patted Markus and stared at the table but was no longer frowning.

  “How are your translations going?” he asked, seeking a safe topic of conversation.

  Markus began to fuss. Standing quickly, sending her chair scraping across the floor, she swayed to soothe him. “I don’t know if the Galacticans are barring our access to alien files, or if they just haven’t found what we need.” What they needed was more information on the alien weaponry—the singularity beam that could crush a ship and blink it away to, well, wherever.

  When she spoke about her work, her expression relaxed, her tone became light, musing, and unguarded. Alaric suspected that it was because she’d never been directly ordered not to serve as a translator for an extinct alien race. Face thoughtful, she ruffled Markus’s hair and gave him a shiny metal bowl to gnaw on. “I don’t think the beam you described was a weapon, though, Alaric. I just feel so certain of that.” She shook her head. “Though, of course, I forget everything but the writing…the rest is like a dream. A dream that is fading.”

  Alexis had received her understanding of the aliens while she was infected with the Dark. She was forgetting everything about the aliens except their written language. They’d spoken to a neurologist about it. The working hypothesis was that the mRNA that had been planted in her neurons by the Dark had given her the memories of the Dark’s former host species. The Galactic Republic’s treatment had destroyed the mRNA and the Dark’s control over her, and most of the memories of the Dark’s hosts had been destroyed, too. Fortunately, before the treatment had taken effect, Alexis had read the aliens’ language and it had been committed to her short-term memory. Alexis had continued to read it through her recovery, solidifying that knowledge. She read the aliens’ language, but their history, she’d forgotten: how they’d encountered the Dark—or how it had encountered them—she wasn’t sure. How they had traveled between the stars, she did not know.

  She took a step away from the table, and just trying to keep the conversation going, Alaric ventured, “The myths you’ve been translating have been interesting.”

  Alexis’s face lit up. “Oh, yes…and yesterday I got to what I think is part of their history…though it was very…epic…in scope.” She blinked. “So, I could be wrong. It could be another myth.”

  “What makes you think it is folklore, not fact?” Alaric asked, his curiosity real.

  “Well,” Alexis said, not looking at him, her tone reflective. “Humans, according to Father Romano—I think you were a pupil of his—he is head of the History Department at the seminary?”

  Picking up his coffee, Alaric nodded. “Yes, I enjoyed his lectures.”

  Alexis continued. “Humans existed on Earth as hunter-gatherers for approximately 200,000 years, but the People—”

  “The People” was how the aliens thought of themselves or as close a translation as could be managed. They had no word for themselves, because they were truly deaf, only capable of perceiving sounds as vibrations in the long, flexible feathers that fell from their heads like hair, according to the Galactican scientists’ vivisections. They had some limited sign language, but mostly they didn’t need it. They were true telepaths from birth.

  “—the People were nomadic gatherers for only about 25,000 years. But what is more astounding is that they went from subsistence agriculture to a spacefaring race in 2,000 years. It took humans 20,000 years to get to the moon after the beginning of agriculture.”

  Stunned, Alaric set down his coffee with deliberate care. The Dark had destroyed people so much more precocious than the human race? Had she gotten the numbers wrong?

  Alexis met his gaze. “Maryam…Dr. Johnson reviewed the numbers with me by telephone. Those are standard Earth years.”

  Johnson was one of the few women in the seminary. She was a widow with two young children, and Luddeccean society did allow—and even encouraged—widows and barren women to work, offering them opportunities for advancement that women weren’t usually allowed. Working with the People’s symbols for pi, Plank’s constant, and the speed of light, Johnson had been able to translate the People’s numeric system and their units of time. If Johnson had verified the numbers, Alaric believed them.

  “That is …” he shook his head. “Remarkable.”

  Alexis nodded. “There was a meteor strike at the beginning of their agricultural age that caused massive famine. They remembered it. The goal of the People across their home world became preparation for the next strike, and space colonization, to ensure the People would survive.” Her brow furrowed. “Or enough of them would.” She shrugged. “And they did it.”

  Alaric thought of what he knew of ancient Earth civilization. “How did a single empire manage to conquer the whole of a planet, hold their empire together, and succeed in such an ambitious undertaking?”

  Bouncing a rapidly-growing-irritable Markus, Alexis shook her head again. “That is the other part of the story, or history, that makes me think it was mythical. There was no conquering; it was just…agreement. They all had memory of the terrible famine, the Dying they called it, and were determined that it wouldn’t happen again.” She looked out
the window. “Of course, history is written by the victors, so perhaps it wasn’t as peaceful as the myths make it sound?”

  Alaric felt a cold prickle on his neck remembering the alien in Volka’s starship’s dream prostrating itself before them.

  Markus threw the bowl from his hands and gave a howl that completely obliterated the sound of it clanging on the floor.

  Sighing, Alexis said, “He’s hungry. I’m going to feed him before his carer comes.”

  She left, and Alaric sat piecing together everything she’d told him, and everything he’d seen in the spaceship’s dream. There must have been a warrior class, one that had rewritten the history books of The People. It must have been a small group to maintain such a fiction for so long—or perhaps it was just that they had so few samples of The People’s historical records? If it was a small group that ruled everything, then perhaps that explained their rapid decline. A small, insular group would become entrenched in a single way of thinking. Luddeccean society, unlike the Galactic Republic, firmly embraced tradition, but even they knew the danger of that and had mechanisms to prevent society from becoming ossified. Families that traced their lineage to the First Founders wielded considerably more influence, but any man could work his way up from the ranks of enlisted to officer or priesthood and marry into those families, and many did. Holly’s husband, for one. Alaric frowned to himself. Any man but a weere man could do so.

  He blinked up from his coffee and realized he should have said something to Alexis before she’d left the room. He should say goodbye to her at least.

  A knock came from the front door, he heard the weere maid answer, and then the sound of Markus’s carer—a deaf woman who read lips and spoke very well, but was also fluent in sign language. Before the door closed, he heard the sound of a motorcycle engine cutting off, and then a car coming to a halt: Alexis’s daily messenger with new documents to translate, and Alaric’s ride.

 

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