Dark Run (38 page)

Read Dark Run Online

Authors: Mike Brooks

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Dark Run
7.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘I heard you the first time!’ Jia snapped. ‘Yeah, well there were two!’ Drift protested, watching the display with a sinking feeling in his gut.
Of all the ways I could choose to die, being blown into hard vacuum by an explosive device was a long way from the top of the list.
There was a sickening lurch as the
Jonah
corkscrewed to one side and at least nominally upwards, the change in momentum doing unkind things to Drift’s gut despite the artificial gravity.

‘Are there still two now?’ Jia demanded. ‘No,’ Drift confessed. ‘There’re three now.’


Cào n ıˇ z uˉz oˉng shíb aˉ dài!

‘I thought you said your slicer would be able to get control of their systems!’ Rybak shouted. The Europan captain was dressed in a full atmo-suit except for the helmet and was ‘supervising’ their run from the doorway, although the notion of anyone having much of an input into proceedings once Jia had actually started flying was a convenient fiction Drift had been happy to go along with.

‘Why do you think we suggested this?’ Drift demanded, desperately scanning the screens. ‘
Dios!
Jia, one incoming!’

‘If we reach that rock and Jenna’s still alive, I’m gonna
qi aˉ s ıˉ
that little bitch!’ Jia spat, a term Drift didn’t know the translation of but which didn’t sound friendly. ‘Hold on!’ The
Jonah
changed course again, a roll-turn which sent them diving down towards the main layer of the ring structure. ‘As soon as we hit dust, jam it!’

‘Won’t the—’

‘Just fucking
do
it,
bái ch ıˉ!

Drift hovered his hand obediently over the jamming switch: not a feature commonly seen on
Carcharodon
- class shuttles, but a certain level of paranoia was rarely a bad thing in a starship captain, especially when they might sometimes have to leave places in a hurry after doing something not technically legal. ‘Ready.’

‘Wait for it . . .’ Jia muttered as the shifting, refracting plane of the ring loomed up towards them. With no sense of scale, Drift found his eyes swimming as he tried to focus and work out the distance to the mass of rock and ice shards. He glanced back at the display and saw to his dismay that the missile was closing in on them even faster than he’d feared, its radar tracking signal growing stronger and more urgent.

There was a sound like the most violent hailstorm ever hitting the viewshield and he slammed his hand onto the jamming switch even before Jia’s shout of ‘Now!’ His headphones were momentarily clogged with the blast of white noise from the
Jonah
’s own transmitters as Jia hauled them around yet again; the shuttle described a tight arc out through the bottom of the ring, which was merely a few tens of metres deep, and back up into it again.

‘Status?’ Jia barked.

‘Yes!’ Drift punched the air as the missile’s signal faded, presumably passing them astern as its targeting system was confused by the combination of jamming and the radar-baffling particles of the ring structure. ‘Lost it!’

‘Great,’ the pilot replied, her voice still tense. ‘The others?’

‘Uh . . .’ Drift frowned at his screen, trying to make sense of what he was seeing. ‘They’ve gone.’

Jia actually looked over her shoulder at him, the ear flaps of her pilot hat wobbling as she did so. ‘Define “gone”.’

‘Nothing has a lock on us,’ Drift told her, checking again to make sure he wasn’t imagining it. Sure enough, the display remained suspiciously clear. ‘They must have cleared when we went through the ring.’

‘Or your system’s glitched and we’re about to get blown out of the stars,’ Rybak put in darkly.


Or
,’ Jia continued as they pulled up above the main ring layer once more and the dark bulk of the asteroid loomed up ahead, ‘Jenna’s got off her ass and is running the show now, which is why the doors are opening.’

‘They’re what?’ Drift looked up from his station and, sure enough, the gleam of metal now had a slowly widening dark line in its centre. Moments later there was a crackle of static over the speakers, followed by a familiar and all-too-welcome voice.

+Shuttle
Jonah
, this is Jenna McIlroy. You are cleared for landing so long as you do it fucking quickly, because I am slicing like a goddamn bastard to keep control of this rock’s systems from whatever techno-wizard they have on board. I’d appreciate you coming in and establishing a perimeter, or whatever it is you do, before I get someone else trying to burn their way into my shuttle.+

‘Jenna!’ Drift’s spirits, which had been dipping almost as fast as the
Jonah
trying to evade a missile, soared once more. ‘Damn, it’s good to hear your voice!’ He frowned. ‘Wait, did you say “someone
else
” trying to burn their way in?’

+Uh, yeah.+
There was a nervous and slightly manic laugh.
+But we’re in the main hangar bay and, well, I needed to open the door for you guys which involved a security override
anyway
so . . . I guess it got kinda cold and hard for them to breathe, real quick.+

Drift exchanged a sober look with Jia. That sounded to him like a Jenna who was stretched about to breaking point. ‘We’re coming in.’

‘Damn right we are,’ Jia muttered, throwing more power to the drive and activating the internal comm to address the crowd of Europan troopers in their cargo bay. ‘Hold onto ya butts!’

‘Better strap in,’ Drift advised Rybak. ‘When she brakes, she brakes
hard
.’

‘I don’t doubt it,’ Rybak replied, following his suggestion and dropping into the seat where Jenna herself would normally be. ‘I’ll say this for your pilot; she can certainly fly.’

‘Never say that until we’re inside!’ Jia shouted. ‘Are we still clear?’

‘Still clear!’ Drift confirmed, seeing a welcome lack of targeting icons on his scope. At this distance they’d barely have any warning to evade, especially given how fast they were closing on the asteroid. Which was a point, actually. He swallowed nervously. ‘Jia, aren’t we going in a bit—’

Even given his warning to Rybak, Jia’s application of the retros still caught him by surprise.‘
Jesús Cristo!

‘Told ya to hold on,’ Jia snapped, ‘not my fault if you din’t listen.’ The hangar mouth swallowed them with Jia still firing retros, and only a few hastily flicked switches activated the mags and cancelled the
Jonah
’s artificial gravity before the Heim field of the asteroid took hold of them. The bay itself was larger than any he’d seen except on the biggest ships, and held two other cargo shuttles besides the hulking shape of the
Early Dawn
.

‘Jenna, we’re in,’ Drift wheezed into the comm. ‘You can shut the doors and repressurise, if you can.’

+On it. Hey, you okay?+

‘Yeah, you know what Jia’s flying’s like.’ Drift ignored the snort from the pilot’s chair, slapped at the release on his crash harness and turned to Rybak, who was breathing a little hard herself. ‘Coming, Captain?’

‘Certainly, Captain,’ the Europan officer responded, disentangling her own arms from the restraints. She seemed to have got her head around the notion that the
Keiko
and the
Jonah
belonged to Drift, warranting him the title of ‘Captain’ despite Rourke still being addressed as ‘Agent’ and viewed as being in charge.

They came out above the cargo bay and its corresponding payload of nearly one hundred Europan troops in atmo-suits and maglock harnesses, some clamped upright to the walls and the rest lying on the floor, secured against whatever misfortunes might arise from rapid changes of velocity. Rybak adjusted her comm but still raised her voice slightly, probably unconsciously.

‘We have breached the asteroid and are currently setting down in the main hangar bay! Standard sweepand-clear, all contacts are to be treated as hostile and engaged unless and until they put down arms and surrender! We believe that the GIA currently have control of this rock’s computer systems,’ here she threw a look at Drift, who gave a hopefully encouraging thumbs-up, ‘but that status is subject to change so I want everyone’s suits to remain sealed until you have at least
two
airlocks between you and this hangar! Suit protocol from that point will be decided by your squad commander on an individual basis!’ She paused for a second, then dropped her voice to little more than a fierce whisper.

‘Go show these bastards what it means to start a war with Europa.’

‘YES MA’AM!’ the cargo bay roared back, mag harnesses being unfastened and weapons readied. Within seconds the entirety of Rybak’s company were poised at the main ramp and Drift only just managed to stifle a truly incongruous giggle.

It had actually worked. The time since Kelsier’s cargo had so spectacularly vaporised part of the North Sea was a jumbled blur: week after week of shitting construction blocks, living by the skin of their teeth and fraying their nerves, trying to spin a web of bullshit fast enough and far enough to get clear of the clutching fingers which seemed to be closing in on all sides. And, against all odds, they’d nearly done it. Here they were, poised to unleash the military might of the old bastard’s former government against him based on the strength of Drift’s tongue, Rourke’s old electat and a Defence Ministry communique forged by a girl just out of her teens with a knack for slicing and the view that, when it came to computers, laws were things which happened to other people. Now there was just one thing left to take care of: Nicolas Kelsier himself.

And this, of course, was far too important a detail to leave to the Europans. They might get it wrong.

The
Jonah
touched down and Jia immediately hit the ramp release, as per instructions. The fully suited Europan troops charged down it as soon as it tipped beyond horizontal, fanning out and sweeping the hangar bay with their weapons. A few shots reached Drift’s ears, indicating that there were at least some of the asteroid’s crew that hadn’t realised exactly what magnitude of threat had come aboard in the slightly battered
Carcharodon
-class shuttle.

‘Agent?’ Rybak had finished fastening her own helmet in place and was walking down the steps to where Rourke was standing, her atmo-suit dark green and looking rather shabby in comparison with the Europans’ slate-blue combat rigs.

‘Captain.’ Rourke looked even odder in an atmosuit than most people did, and it took Drift a moment to realise that she seemed wrongly proportioned without her coat and hat. Rybak wasn’t a particularly tall woman, but next to her Rourke looked almost like a child. Granted, few children would be handling a Crusader 920 with such familiarity. Hopefully.

‘Let’s go and see what we can flush out,’ Rybak said, drawing a sidearm. A quartet of soldiers drew up around them on a bodyguard detail and, thus flanked, the two women made their way down into the hangar. Drift waited until they were out of sight, then activated his comm.

‘Jia? Can you patch me through to Jenna?’

+Done.+

‘Jenna,’ Drift said, making his way across the gantry to the opposite airlock, ‘how’re you holding up in there?’

+Your friends have certainly made my job easier,+
the young slicer replied.
+Whoever was trying to take the systems back from me seems to have other things on their mind now.+

‘Glad to hear it,’ Drift said agreeably. He reached the door and palmed it open.‘How about
your
friend? Is she still with you?’

+Sara? Yeah, she’s just gone to the galley to make some coffee now we don’t have to worry about anyone breaking in.+

‘She’s not in the room? Good.’ Drift stepped through and let the door hiss shut behind him. Ahead of him, Apirana poked his head out of the
Jonah
’s own canteen with an enquiring expression. Drift gave the Maori the thumbs-up and his voice took on a more businesslike tone. ‘Have you got access to schematics?’

+Sure. What do you need?+

‘I need to know where Kelsier is,’ Drift told her flatly, ‘and A. and I need to get there before the Europans do.’

+Gotcha. What does he look like? They’ve got cameras most places . . . well, they did, but I’ve decided they don’t need to see the feeds. However,
I’ve
still got cameras most places . . .+

‘White, old, straggly pale hair to about his collar, mechanical right hand . . .’ Drift paused. ‘Wait. Where
haven’t
they got cameras? Because I’d bet money the old snake doesn’t want anyone spying on his private nest.’

+We’ve got . . . ooh, that’s interesting. It looks like . . . yeah, there’s a few corridors and rooms on the schematics which I can’t seem to find on camera,+
Jenna confirmed.
+There’s a little network in the middle of it all. It’s pulling down a lot of power as well.+

‘Sounds like a good place to start,’ Drift confirmed. Apirana appeared again, now with Micah’s immolation cannon slung over his shoulders by its strap, and Drift barely restrained a wince; the indiscriminate firepower of the big gun would be devastating in the sort of narrow corridors the asteroid was likely to offer. Still, at least it was going to be on his side. ‘How do we get there?’

+You might be in luck. It looks like our Europan friends have already gone past one of the entrances without turning in, and they’ve been poking their noses in everywhere else. I’m guessing they’re concealed.+

‘This is sounding more and more promising,’ Drift said, feeling a tight grin spreading across his face. ‘Send your friend over to the
Jonah
so she doesn’t see what’s going on.’ He looked up at Apirana. ‘Okay big man, time to move.’

‘Let’s end this,’ the Maori growled in reply.

Drift had wondered about taking a larger gun, but the asteroid was likely to resemble a starship’s interior and he reckoned he’d had more experience of starship boarding than most. Firepower was useful, but speed of reaction was vastly more important than accuracy at range, so he trusted that his pistols would do the job. All the same, he couldn’t help feeling slightly under-equipped as he watched Apirana carrying an assault rifle in one massive hand and steadying the immolation cannon with the other while they jogged across the hangar bay deck towards the
Early Dawn
.

Other books

The Demon Horsemen by Tony Shillitoe
The Third Kingdom by Terry Goodkind
Lone Star Magic by Karen Whiddon
A Bullet for Billy by Bill Brooks
Down: Pinhole by Glenn Cooper
Interface by Neal Stephenson, J. Frederick George
Night Forbidden by Ware, Joss