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Authors: Simon R. Green

Deathstalker (47 page)

BOOK: Deathstalker
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“The bastards!” yelled Stevie One. “They’ve teleported out and left us to die!”

There were six entrances giving out into the chamber, none of them big enough for more than two men to pass through at a time. The Stevie Blues covered three of them, psionic flames leaping menacingly from their hands. Kit moved to cover another and gestured for David to take the next. Kid Death was grinning broadly. David looked as though he’d rather be anywhere else, but his eyes were calm and his mouth was firm, and he held his sword and his gun as though it was the most natural thing in the world. He was a Deathstalker, after all. That left one opening gaping unattended. Hood was still frozen in place before the screens. Evangeline started toward the entrance as though she might break into a run at any moment, but Valentine stopped her with a hand on her arm.

“Don’t,” he murmured, “Trying to run would be a really bad idea. Look at the screens. The guards have got all the escape routes covered, and at the moment they’re shooting at anything that isn’t them. There’s nowhere to go.”

“You don’t understand!” said Evangeline. “I can’t afford to be caught!”

Valentine raised an eyebrow. “I think you’ll find that’s true for most of us. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’d better guard that entrance.”

Evangeline looked at him. “You? What are you going to do? Bribe your way past the guards with handfuls of drugs?”

“Oh, I’ll think of something,” Valentine said calmly. “Besides, there’s no one else, is there?”

Evangeline looked at Hood, still rooted to the spot, and looked away.

“Give me a knife,” she said quietly. “I won’t be taken alive.”

Valentine studied her for a long moment, then drew a long stiletto from his boot and handed it to her. She accepted it with a nod of thanks and moved over to stand beside Hood and watch the screens. Valentine moved unhurriedly over to the gaping entrance. He was still thinking hard. He’d put a lot of time and effort into his usual persona, and now it seemed he was going to have to throw it away. As usual, man proposes and the Empress disposes. And then a thought came to him, and he smiled. He didn’t know what he was so worried about; the odds were he was going to die anyway. The thought cheered him, and he checked the contents of his pillbox for something special. Some of the guards were in for a very unpleasant surprise.

The first armed men rounded a corner and found themselves face-to-face with Stevie One, guarding the entrance. They raised their guns and the esper hit them with a blast of white-hot flames. The guards screamed as the blazing fire filled the tunnel, sucking the air from their lungs as it crisped their flesh. More guards appeared in the adjacent tunnels, only to meet Stevies Two and Three. They summoned up fire, and the leading guards died horribly. Evangeline watched them die on the viewscreens and wouldn’t let herself look away. The remaining guards came to a halt in the tunnels as word of the deaths got to them. They were waiting for something.

“They’re bringing the esp-blockers forward!” yelled Stevie Two. “I can feel them getting closer. My flame’s already beginning to die down.”

More guards spilled into a different tunnel, only to find Kid Death waiting for them. He shot the first men with almost lazy precision, and then put the gun away and waded into the guards, swinging his sword double-handed. In the narrow tunnel, they could only come at him two at a time, and that was no threat to Kid Death. He laughed as he worked: a light, breathy and altogether horrible sound.

David Deathstalker boosted, and all his worries fell away. The guards were no match for him, either. But there were so many of them, and neither Kit nor David had any illusions about their eventual fate. If the guards had only had more guns, it would have been over by now.

And then Evangeline shouted and pointed at the viewscreens, and Valentine heard a familiar roar deep in the tunnels. He looked back at the screens and grinned broadly. The guards in the tunnel heard him laughing, and then they heard the roar building behind them and turned to look. A wall of rushing water came thundering toward them, filling the tunnel from floor to ceiling. For a moment Valentine thought it was the illusion again, a last-ditch defense by the espers, but even as he thought that he knew it had to be genuine. All those espers were dead or blocked by now. The water was real. And up on the viewscreens, the pounding wave smashed into the guards and swept them away. They never stood a chance.

Valentine moved back to stand with Evangeline and Hood, and watched the guards die on the screens. The water carried them along like leaves in a flooded drain, hammering them against the sides of the tunnels, and then pulling them on. A few tried to grab at the tunnel supports, but the pressure of the water was too much for them, and there was no air anywhere. They drowned, quickly if they were lucky, and their dead bodies bobbed limply in the surging tide. David and Kit cut down the last of their opponents, then looked around, confused, for more. David was panting and shaking as he fell out of boost, but his face was full of exhilaration. Kid Death was smiling gently, not even breathing heavily. But they both had the same look in their eyes, the same satisfied pleasure, and they saw it in each other like a secret shared. One of the Stevie Blues whooped with joy, and the other two joined in.

“The esp-blockers have been destroyed or swept away!” said Stevie One. “I can’t feel them anymore. We’re safe!”

“Not necessarily,” said Valentine in a surprisingly even voice. He pointed at the viewscreens. “All that water is heading our way, and there’s nothing here to stop it.”

They all saw it on the screens and backed away from the entrances. The pounding of the water was louder now, like a never-ending roll of thunder, and they could feel the pressure of its coming on the air, its awful weight vibrating
through the chamber floor. On the viewscreens, dead guards tumbled through the rushing water like so many blank-eyed dolls. Everyone backed away from the entrances, coming together in the middle of the chamber, because there was nowhere else to go. They watched their death coming on the screens, and no one had anything to say. The Stevie Blues held hands, and Evangeline held Valentine’s arm. He smiled briefly and let her.

Then the tidal wave slammed into an invisible barrier and fell back, thwarted. The water churned on the viewscreens, pounding this way and that, but couldn’t enter the chamber. The air shimmered, and the esper representatives were suddenly back in the chamber. Mr. Perfect smiled at their surprise.

“You didn’t really think we’d just abandon you, did you? We set up the flood from the sewers after Burgess’ confession. It seemed a reasonable precaution, just in case.”

“If I wasn’t feeling so good, I’d kill every damn one of you,” said David. “And I might anyway, on general principles.”

“Damn right,” said Kit. “I must have aged twenty years in the past few minutes. Mind you, on me it looks good.”

The two men laughed together companionably. The Stevie Blues were laughing, too. Evangeline noticed she was still holding Valentine’s arm and let go. He bowed to her courteously. Hood was slowly shaking his head.

“You’d think by now I’d be used to espers and their devious ways,” he said tiredly. “I assume you have some way of draining the water out of the tunnels, so we can leave?”

“Of course,” said the dragon. “It shouldn’t take long, and then you can all go.”

“I should be careful where you tread, though,” said Valentine Wolfe. “You never know what you’ll find in the water these days.”

CHAPTER NINE

Who’s Been Sleeping in My Head?

The man called Hood walked unhurriedly through the quiet corridors deep in the heart of the Empress’ palace. They were broad, high-ceilinged corridors, with tasteful paintings and portraits on the walls by whoever was currently in fashion. Holos were so gauche. People came and went on silent, important missions, passing Hood by without noticing him. The same low-level esp that hid his face among espers was more than enough to keep him hidden from normal people he didn’t want to see him. He wasn’t actually invisible; he just gave their minds a little nudge and they looked everywhere except at him. Luckily esp-blockers were rare and expensive enough that they were only used in actual rooms, not in the connecting corridors. A serious security lapse that Hood had taken care never to point out. Never knew when you might need an ace up your sleeve, particularly when dealing with the Empress. Lionstone had raised paranoia to an art form and encouraged its growth among her people.

Hood also carried a small tech inhibitor that kept his image from appearing on any of the security monitors. A simple device that triggered a program he’d entered into the security computers, which in turn edited him out of the image appearing on the monitors. The device reminded each camera as he approached, and then made it forget him once he was past. No trouble at all for someone with his access to security computers.

It took him a little longer than usual to reach his personal quarters, but he was used to that. Because people couldn’t see him, they had a regrettable tendency to try and walk
through him, and he had to be quick on his feet to avoid them. His esp wasn’t strong enough to hide him from someone who’d just crashed into him. So he ducked this way and that and never said a word, until finally the door to his private chambers was shut firmly behind him, and he could relax at last. He removed his cape, threw it more or less in the direction of his coatrack and let out a long happy sigh. Home and safe. Or as safe as he ever was. He sank into a comfortable chair and stretched slowly. Living a double life was a tiring business. He smiled and dropped his esp disguise, and there in his chair sat the Lord High Dram, Warrior Prime of the Empire and head of the Empress’ security. Right hand, confidant and lover to the Empress Lionstone herself.

Now that he was finally able to relax and be himself, it occurred to him that by rights he ought to be as mad as hell. The security raid on the underground meeting had damn near caught him napping. Certainly they’d been none of his people. He’d gone to some lengths to ensure that they were preoccupied elsewhere. And since he hadn’t sanctioned the raid, it must have originated with the Empress’ own people. Presumably they’d found out about the meeting through their own agents and seized the chance to make him look negligent in her eyes. There was always a certain rivalry between his agents and hers, but he’d thought he had it safely under control. Apparently not. He’d have to do something about that. If he had been caught and identified, all the time and hard work he’d spent establishing his Hood persona would have been for nothing, and the Empress would have lost her best source on what was happening in the underground. More importantly, he’d have looked like a fool before the Empress, and all his own plans would have been ruined. But he hadn’t been caught. Through luck, keeping a cool head and having the foresight to surround himself with the right people, he’d come out of it untouched. He’d light a candle in church as a sign of thanks. When he had the time.

He stretched slowly again, enjoying it, and put his feet up on the padded footstool that hurried forward in time to catch his feet. Dram had always believed in keeping up with the latest little luxuries. One of the perquisites of living so deep in the palace, so close to the Empress. Your life or your freedom might be in danger now and again, but never your comforts. Even so, Dram’s quarters were positively Spartan
compared to most people of his rank and standing. Dran had never had much interest in personal possessions, unless they attended to his personal comfort. So there were padded chairs and a luxurious bed, thick carpets on the floor and a well-stocked drinks cabinet, but no cybernetic toys or diversions, no holo views or personalized illusions on his walls. Nothing expensively useless or ostentatious, just to show he could afford it. He’d always been basically inner-directed, and possessions seemed to him to be just something more to worry about. They slowed you down when you were in a hurry and distracted you when your mind should be focused on more important things. So mostly he did without them. His life was complicated enough as it was.

He also had no time for the excesses and indulgences that so preoccupied others of his rank and station. Dram saw them as weaknesses, and he couldn’t afford to be weak. He had too many enemies, and besides, it pleased him to be strong and in control at all times. Given lime, he had every intention of extending that control as far and as wide as it would go. His only passion, apart from the Empress, long may she reign, was ambition. Though he was careful always to keep that to himself. Lover or no, Lionstone wouldn’t hesitate to have him executed if she saw in him a threat to her position. She’d always been very single-minded in such matters. Dram admired that in her. He liked to think they had something in common out of bed.

It was his ambition that had led him to recognize the potential in the newly developed esper drug. He’d immediately taken steps to place the scientists involved under his direct control. He cut them off from every outside influence and drove them mercilessly until he had a working sample. He tested it on expendable subjects for as long as his patience would allow, and then took it himself, just a small dose, and it was wonderful. Like a blind man seeing a swan for the first time, or a deaf man hearing music.

BOOK: Deathstalker
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