Deathstalker (3 page)

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Authors: Simon R. Green

BOOK: Deathstalker
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She looked across the bridge at the Captain. Terrence Markee was in his late forties; large and solid and reliable. He’d been a pirate all his adult life and loved every illegal moment of it. He dressed like a gaudy if somewhat dated dandy, all flashing silks and clashing colors, and affected an aristocratic accent he had no right to. At the moment he was scowling at his displays and growling a series of calm, quiet orders. Slightly reassured that at least one person on the bridge wasn’t panicking, Hazel left her eyes drift round the cramped confines of the command area. Anything was better than looking at the Empire ship.

The bridge of the
Shard
was a mess. Half the lights weren’t working at any given time, because bulbs were expensive and they never carried enough spares, and the limited low-ceilinged space was crammed with work stations, computer displays, and terminals; never mind the sensor panels and fire control station. Officially there was room for seven crew on the bridge, including the Captain, but as usual there were only four, including the Captain and Hazel. The
Shard
operated on a bare minimum crew, with everyone holding down as many jobs as they could handle. Half the systems weren’t working, but you learned to put up with that as long as the essentials were maintained. Repairs were hideously expensive, especially at stardocks. Clonelegging could provide a very comfortable living if you were in the right place at the right time and kept up a good stock, but it was a crowded field these days, and small independent ships like the
Shard
were being forced out. Markee had been relying on the Viriminde run to restock the body banks, and repair his fortunes and his ship. And then he made an enemy of the Boneyard Boys, and everything went to hell in a hurry.

A thought struck Hazel, and she looked back at Markee. “Captain, how about if we just dump everything? Throw the merchandise and body banks out the airlock and let it all burn up falling through Virimonde’s atmosphere? No evidence, no proof.”

“Nice idea,” said Markee. “And if that ship hadn’t been a starcruiser, we might have got away with it. But with the
kind of sensors they’ve got, they could identify every organ and tissue sample independently and read the maker’s name on the body banks. Their sensors records would make damning evidence. So, we can’t dump it, and we can’t afford to be caught with it. Doesn’t leave much room for maneuvering, does it?” He smiled briefly. “I suppose we could always eat the merchandise. How’s your appetite, Hazel?”

“Not as good as it was a moment ago. Basically, what you’re saying is we’re screwed if we do, and screwed if we don’t. I suppose surrender is out of the question?”

Markee’s smile came and went again. “There’s enough evidence on this ship to hang us all. Slowly.”

“So what are we going to do?”

“The one thing they won’t expect. We’ll fight. Who knows, maybe we’ll get lucky.”

“And if we don’t?”

“Then at least we’ll die quickly. Are the guns ready?”

“Ready as they’ll ever be. They haven’t been checked, let alone fired, in ages.” Hazel glared at the massive ship on the screens before her. Tears of anger and frustration burned in her eyes, but she wouldn’t give in to them. Her luck had just turned bad one time too many, that was all. She pounded a fist on the arm of her chair. “What the hell is an Empire ship
doing
here anyway? We only made the decision to come here twelve hours ago! They couldn’t have known about us.”

She didn’t see Markee shrug, but she could hear it in his voice. “A lot can happen in twelve hours, especially when you’ve got enemies. Any number of people could have found out where we were heading and then sold the information to the Empire.”

“But who the hell would send a whole bloody starcruiser after small fry like us?”

“Good question. Wish I had a good answer for you. Could be the Boneyard Boys, calling in an old favor to put the finishing touch to our destruction. It doesn’t matter. Now suck it in, and stand ready with your disrupters. Hannah is currently telling the Empire ship that we’re an ambulance craft on a mercy mission to a plague outbreak. She’s feeding them all kinds of convincing details, but I didn’t think they’re buying it. Certainly they aren’t going to buy it long enough for our engines to power up for a jump into hyperspace.”

Hazel’s mouth was suddenly dry. “Captain, our two guns
aren’t worth spit against all theirs. There must be something else we can try.”

“Sorry, Hazel; nothing springs to mind. You know what they say: if you can’t take a joke, you shouldn’t have joined.”

Hazel waited, but Markee had nothing more to say. She concentrated on her fire controls. Both the
Shard
and the starcruiser had force screens that could withstand a hell of a lot of punishment, but they also used up a hell of a lot of energy, and the
Shard
’s shields would go down long before the Imperial ship’s did. It came to Hazel then that she was going to die out in the empty spaces of the Rim, far from home and family and honor. Just as she’d always known she would.

On the Imperial starcruiser
Darkwind
, Captain John Silence sat at ease in his command chair, looking out over his efficiently murmuring bridge: every man at his station, every system running smoothly, just as it should be. The small craft on the main viewscreen seemed surprisingly insignificant to be taking up so much of his time and attention. Still, nothing that small was going to give him any trouble, and the prize money its capture would bring would be a welcome bonus. At least that way something good might come of this mission. He tried to push the thought aside, but it persisted. He had better things to do than waste time hunting down some poor bastard who probably didn’t even know he’d been outlawed yet. But man proposes, and the Empress disposes. She said go, and you went. If you liked having your head still attached to your body.

He looked at the starship on the main viewscreen again and frowned slightly. Probably just a pirate ship involved in something dubious, but what was it doing here at the same time as the
Darkwind
? Could it have come to try and save the Deathstalker? Owen Deathstalker, Lord of Virimonde, holder of a proud name and title, condemned to death by the Empress’ word. She hadn’t said why, and Silence hadn’t asked. One didn’t. But Silence had quietly checked the files anyway, just in case there was something there he ought to know. If there was, he missed it. Owen Deathstalker might be descended from a famous warrior Clan, but in his case, the blood seemed to be running thin. His people ran Virimonde efficiently enough, but the man himself was just
an amateur historian. Wrote long books on obscure subjects that no one ever read. Looking back was unofficially discouraged; there were too many subjects the Empire preferred its people to forget. Presumably the Deathstalker had stumbled across something he shouldn’t have. Whatever it was, Owen Deathstalker wouldn’t be writing a book about it this time. He was Outlawed, a nonperson with a price on his head. Literally. The Empress liked proof of her kills.

Silence shrugged and sat back in his command chair: a tall, lean man in his forties, with a thickening waistline and a receding hairline he tried not to be touchy about. He sat in the command chair with a quiet dignity, as though he belonged there. He’d served the Empire to the best of his ability all his adult life, and if sometimes he found himself on a mission he had no stomach for, well, that was the Empire for you, under Her Imperial Majesty Lionstone XIV. Also known as the Iron Bitch. Silence stopped that thought short. It wasn’t wise to let one’s thoughts run free in some directions. You never knew when an esper might be listening. He concentrated on the pirate ship before him. Small craft, built more for speed than action. No threat to a starcruiser. But she shouldn’t have been here … not just now. Silence looked across at his comm officer.

“Do we have an identification on her yet?”

“Not yet, Captain. Their AI is talking our ears off, but not actually saying much. It’s trying to feed us some nonsense about being a medical ship on a mercy mission, but it’s the wrong kind of craft for that, and it doesn’t have the proper identification codes. Odds are they’re just trying to keep us occupied while they power up for a hyper jump. Do we stop them, Captain, or let them go?”

“We stop them,” said a calm, cold voice, and Silence nodded to Investigator Frost as she came to stand beside him. Frost was in her late twenties, tall and lithely muscular, with a gun on her hip and a long sword hanging down her back. Even standing still she looked competent and extremely dangerous, like a predator in a world of prey. Dark eyes burned coldly in a pale, controlled face, framed by auburn hair cropped close to the skull. You couldn’t call her pretty, but there was a daunting glamour to her, attractive and intimidating at the same moment.

Investigators were trained from childhood to be loyal, efficient and deadly. Their job was to study newly discovered
alien species and determine how much of a threat they might prove to the Empire. Depending on those findings, the aliens would then be either enslaved or exterminated. There was no third option. Investigators were also used as security chiefs, bodyguards, and assassins. They were cold, calculating killing machines, and they were either good at their job, or dead.

Silence and Frost had worked together on several missions and understood each other. Which was as close to friendship as you could get with an Investigator.

“There’s no hurry,” said Silence. “A ship that small takes forever to power up. They’re not going anywhere yet.”

“I don’t like it,” Frost said flatly. “An unexpected ship in orbit, waiting for us? I don’t believe in coincidence. Someone has alerted our target that he’s been outlawed. That ship is either here to protect him or carry him away. Either way, our orders are quite specific. Under no circumstances is the target to be allowed to escape.”

Silence nodded. The outlaw was only ever referred to as the target in public. It wouldn’t do for the lower orders to know that a Lord had been outlawed. Especially one with such a famous name. The name Deathstalker could still command respect and possibly allies in certain quarters, irrespective of the Empress’ wishes or orders. Which was why an entire starcruiser had been sent to see that the Deathstalker’s outlawing went smoothly. He was to be captured and executed before word could get out to potential friends. Only it seemed someone had beaten them to it.

“The ship could have been sent to occupy our attention while the target is helped to escape,” said Frost. “We can’t afford to waste time on it. With your permission, I’ll form a boarding party and get some answers in person.”

“Not so fast, Investigator. Let’s do this by the book. Esper Fortuna?”

“Yes, Captain.” The
Darkwind
’s esper, Thomas Fortuna, stepped forward to stand on the Captain’s other side, opposite the Investigator. He was short, dumpy, and his uniform looked as though he’d inherited it from someone larger. His shaven head glistened brightly.

“I want a full scan on that ship,” said Silence. “See what you can pick up.”

“Yes, Captain.” Fortuna’s mind leapt up and out, and his face relaxed completely, losing all trace of life and personality.
Then his face twisted, and he was back again, shaking his head disgustedly. “That ship is full of death and the memory of pain. So many traces I can’t even identify the sources, except to say they’re all human, and all dead. There are body banks on that ship, Captain, brimming over with the residues of suffering. They’re cloneleggers.”

“Nothing to do with the target?” said Silence. “You’re sure?”

“As far as I can be, Captain.”

“That settles it then,” said Frost easily. “We can’t waste time over a handful of bodysnatchers. Blow the ship to pieces. The universe will smell better once they’re gone.”

“Couldn’t agree more,” said Silence. “Go ahead, Investigator. Enjoy yourself.”

The pirate ship
Shard
rocked as the
Darkwind
opened fire on her. Hannah got the force screens up in time, deflecting the raging energy from the disrupter cannon, but it was all the AI could do to maintain them under the constant barrage from the Empire ship. Hazel d’Ark fired back, but her two cannon made no impression on the
Darkwind
’s superior shields. Lights went out all over the
Shard
as the AI drained more and more energy from the ship’s systems to maintain the force screens. The power accumulated for a hyper jump was used up in seconds, and one by one the body banks shut down, their fragile contents left to warm and rot. The
Shard
jerked this way and that, like a fish on a hook, running through every evasive maneuver in the AI’s data banks, but the
Darkwind
stayed with them, the disrupter cannon firing one after another to maintain a constant pressure.

Hazel shuddered at her fire controls, feeling every hammering blow on the
Shard
’s shields through her mental link to the computers. She pounded impatiently on the arms of her chair as she waited the three agonizing minutes it took for her antiquated disrupter cannon to power up between shots. The
Darkwind
didn’t have that problem. She fired her disrupters in overlapping waves, so that each cannon had time to recharge before it had to fire again. The Empire ship also had far greater resources of power to drawn on. The
Shard
didn’t stand a chance, and everyone knew it.

Light dimmed on the
Shard
’s bridge as fires broke out in a dozen places. Smoke formed faster than the extractor fans could deal with it. Hazel coughed raggedly as she tried to
concentrate on the fire controls. The station next to hers exploded, the man sitting there suddenly engulfed in flames. He screamed shrilly till the air in his lungs burned up. The AI was gabbling incoherently in Hazel’s ears, its voice breaking up as it struggled to hold the disintegrating ship together. She spun round in her seat and glared across the smoke-filled bridge at Captain Markee.

“Surrender, damn it! They’re tearing us apart!”

“No point,” said the Captain calmly, raising his voice to be heard over the growing bedlam on the bridge. “They must know we’re cloneleggers. They’re not interested in our surrender. We can’t fight, we can’t run, and we haven’t a hope in hell of raising enough power to go hyper. That only leaves one option. I’m going to use Lover Boy on their shields and then ram the bastards. If I’m going down, I’m taking them with me.”

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