Star Road (30 page)

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Authors: Matthew Costello,Rick Hautala

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Space Opera

BOOK: Star Road
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SECRETS AND LIES

 

 

 

 

 

~ * ~

 

29

 

 

BETRAYAL

 

 

 

 

Annie let her breath out
slowly.

 

And then cut the wheel hard to port while hitting the retro-thrust.

 

The SRV did what any other vehicle on any other “road” would do.

 

It turned over, rolling as she increased her speed, gunning the engine, giving as much spin to the roll as she could.

 

Annie held on tight to the controls, and everyone inside SRV-66 turned ninety degrees, then completely upside down, and then: a grinding, crashing sound ... the shriek of metal ripping apart.

 

The speeder that had attached itself to the SRV was crushed into the surface of the Road.

 

Not much left, not even for the Road Bugs.

 

The explosive multicolored sparks from the screaming metal flew forward, nearly blinding Annie as glowing pieces of the speeder sprayed like golden raindrops across the cockpit window.

 

The barrel roll continued even as the SRV dragged the remains of its attacker under it, pressing it harder against the Road.

 

More sparks, exploding in vibrant showers of light, and then the SRV righted itself.

 

Amid the crazed mayhem of the barrel roll, that annoying sound was gone.

 

Now came the tricky part...

 

Could Annie get the vehicle running straight again when it returned to a level position on the Road?

 

Theoretically, she knew how to do this. She had to go slowly, play with the controls to keep the SRV from flying off into what looked on either side like the absolute void of space.

 

Her pulse throbbed, the blood pounding in her skull.

 

But she held steady, turning slowly.
Don’t overreact.
And the SRV came around level. She played the wheel to the right, then to the left. The SRV banged back and forth, trying to get some kind of traction on the Road.

 

And then, with a gentle thump, it settled down on the Road and was running straight.

 

It was quiet.

 

No drilling sound.

 

“Impressive,” Jordan said.

 

A pause.

 

And she had to agree.

 

“Unbelievable.”

 

“First time for everything.”

 

On the screen, she could see that while Jordan was holding a number of speeders at bay, more were creeping up along both sides of the vehicle. The speeders were bristling with spiderlike arms—more drills.

 

So that’s how the Runners take down their prey.

 

With less mass, the speeders moved faster than the SRV on the Road. They steadily closed the gap, and the helpless waiting game continued.

 

If one or more attached to her, could she pull off another barrel roll?

 

Unbelievable or not, she would have to try.

 

A light tap on her shoulder made her jump. Then a voice. And a single word.

 

“Captain?”

 

~ * ~

 

A quick look.

 

Ruth Corso.

 

“Back to your seat, Ms. Corso. We’re still—”

 

“He spoke.” Annie shook her head. Confused.

 

“Ivan ... he spoke.”

 

With a neuro-collar on? Not possible.

 

“He said, ‘I can shoot.’ “

 

Annie grit her teeth and nodded.

 

Thinking:
What he’s really saying is “Set me free.”

 

To help or... what?

 

She looked at Jordan on the screen, overwhelmed by speeders slipping past him like a stream of running rats.

 

The shields all over the ship were decreasing, nearly drained.

 

Ivan can shoot, but can I trust him?

 

He’s the reason we’re being attacked.

 

She had to make a decision. Fast. And she was good at that.

 

She took a key from her side pocket.

 

“It releases the collar. He’s going to be weak, sluggish at first, but tell him to get the hell up here, pronto!”

 

Gripping the key, Ruth returned to the one-time leader of the Runners, amazed to think he might be their only hope ... or quite possibly their destruction.

 

~ * ~

 

Rodriguez winced and squinted into the mirror as he checked his wounds. The left side of his face was flecked with the electric burns that oozed blood and pus.

 

“Looks pretty bad to me.”

 

Sinjira swatted the mirror away and leaned forward, smiling as she daubed antiseptic on his wounds.

 

“You’ll live. I’ve seen worse, umm after a bad night in SoHo.”

 

Rodriguez looked as though he didn’t believe her.

 

She raised a hand to his face. Touched his cheek. Not a bad-looking guy. Though she liked more
man
in her men.

 

Lots more.

 

“Just flecks. Superficial stuff.”

 

“And what was wrong with the SRV? What was with that turn?”

 

“Beats me, Doc. Just be glad we were both strapped in. Too bad I didn’t get it on a chip, though. That
was...
unique.”

 

“I like my stomach under my ribs, thank you,” Rodriguez said.

 

Sinjira dabbed a few more spots with ointment that immediately stopped any oozing from the burns.

 

“And I think ... I need a new chip.”

 

She reached into her side pocket pouch to grab a chip because she was sure this show wasn’t over yet... especially when Ruth Corso came down from the cockpit and unlocked Ivan Delgato from his neck collar.

 

“Really? You’re freeing him?”

 

“Captain’s orders.”

 

The collar snapped free. Ruth helped Ivan stand up. He looked shaky, to say the least.

 

Ivan blinked, turned his neck left and right as if making sure it still worked. Then he raised his arms and stretched, but he looked as weak as a baby.

 

Sinjira heard Ruth say: “Captain wants you. Up front.”

 

Ivan took a step forward and nearly collapsed into another seat. Then, stiffening his legs, he moved as fast as he could, weaving like a drunk as the SRV rocked left and right. He almost fell again as he started up the short flight of stairs.

 

Sinjira looked at Rodriguez

 

“Gotta say we are having ourselves quite the Road trip...”

 

~ * ~

 

Annie glanced up as Ivan entered the cockpit.

 

“Against my better judgment, Delgato, I’m giving you the gunner’s seat. Your head clear enough?”

 

Ivan nodded, but he was clearly pained. Disoriented.

 

“Start firing as soon as you can focus.”

 

She tended to the controls but kept glancing back at him, not moving, just standing there.

 

“You hear what I said? Sit your ass down and start—”

 

Finally, he moved.

 

Reaching smoothly down to his right leg, he quickly produced a small handgun. It wasn’t much bigger than a deck of cards.

 

“What the hell?”

 

Annie started to ease forward to un-holster her own sidearm.

 

Ivan shook his head. “I wouldn’t if I were you. This is small, but it packs a good punch.”

 

“Jordan will—”

 

“Will do what he has to. I know. But for now, open a secure link to the battle cruiser commander.”

 

Annie didn’t move. She listened to the quiet thumping in her ears.

 

“Did I forget to say
now?”

 

~ * ~

 

Ivan kept the small gun pointed directly at the captain’s head. Leaning forward, he removed her sidearm and tucked it into the waistband of his pants.

 

Finally, defeated, Annie heaved a sigh and then threw a switch. The ship’s channel lit up the screen, and the speakers chirped.

 

“Battle cruiser Commander ... this is Captain Scott of the SRV-66.”

 

The screen at the top of the cockpit flickered to life, and the battle cruiser commander’s holographic image appeared.

 

“I’ll take it from here,” Ivan said to Annie. And then: “Commander, this is Ivan Delgato. I’ve taken charge of this SRV.”

 

On the projection, the commander’s eyes widened. He looked confused.

 

“Delgato? You don’t look like—”

 

“A bit of reconstructive surgery, courtesy of the World Council.”

 

The battle cruiser commander still didn’t look convinced.

 

“I
am
Ivan Delgato ... and I have this SRV and its captain under my control.”

 

“How am I supposed to—?”

 

“Order your speeders to stand down.
Now!”
He glanced at Annie as he drew the word out. “Get them back into your bay. Tell me, is my brother aboard?”

 

The commander turned away, barked an order, then turned to face the screen.

 

“Kyros gave us orders to bring you to him. Alive if possible.”

 

“Oh, I’m very much alive. What’s the next way station off-ramp?”

 

“Bottes Six. Not far.”

 

“Follow us there.” To Annie: “Program for an unscheduled stop at Bottes Six.” To the commander again: “You can take possession of this ship and its passengers and contents if you’d like.”

 

“And what do you want us to do with them?”

 

Ivan leaned back and laughed, then glared at Annie to make sure he had her undivided attention. The gun barrel was mere inches from her forehead.

 

“With this vehicle? Its passengers and crew? Do whatever you want. Blow ‘em all to hell for all I care. Makes no difference to me.”

 

After a short pause: “Yes, sir. We’re setting in a course to track you to Bottes Six.”

 

“Good. We’ll talk more once we’re on the tarmac.”

 

Then to Annie: “Cut the link.”

 

Annie hit a switch.

 

“Now what?” she said, not a trace of nervousness in her voice.

 

The woman’s tough,
Ivan thought.

 

“You’re actually going to hand us over to those killers?”

 

On the screen, Ivan saw Jordan watching as the speeders peeled away. Then he moved down to his screen that showed the cockpit and Annie.

 

But not the gun.

 

“Tell your gunner to come up here asap. And be careful. I’d hate to have to pull this trigger. At close range like this? It’d make quite a mess.”

 

Annie took a quick breath. Leaning forward, she keyed the commlink.

 

“Jordan, get your ass up here now.”

 

~ * ~

 

By the time the gunner entered the cockpit, Ivan had taken to the wall beside the hatch, so at first the gunner would only see his captain sitting in her command seat.

 

“What the hell happened? Where’s Delgato?”

 

Jordan had his sidearm out as he entered.

 

Good instincts,
Ivan thought “Jordan,” Ivan said quietly.

 

The gunner spun around, his gun aimed at Ivan ... who kept a steady bead on Annie’s head even as he looked at the gunner.

 

“Captain?”

 

Annie took a breath. “I think it’s best if you stand down, Jordan.”

 

The gunner didn’t move. Didn’t flinch.

 

“Jordan! I said ... stand
down!”

 

Finally, Jordan lowered his weapon.

 

“Good,” Ivan said, reaching out and taking it from his hand. Jordan held his grip on it, not letting go for a tense second or two.

 

“Nice to see you both can be reasonable. Now take your seat while we get off the Road.”

 

“Off the Road?”

 

“Bottes Six,” Annie said quietly. “They want Ivan.”

 

“And us?”

 

Annie lowered her eyes and said nothing.

 

“Okay, Captain Scott,” Ivan said. “Get us to Bottes Six.”

 

~ * ~

 

30

 

 

THE TRUTH

[PART TWO]

 

 

 

 

Annie eased the power up
as the SRV hit the off-ramp.

 

Unlike the twisting maze of the station on Hydra Salim, this way station had a flat, straight plane converging on a small runway with a tiny control tower.

 

There was no sign of human activity anywhere. No one asked for their ID or was tracking their transponder or giving them landing instructions. Annie assumed that the Runners had already taken out whatever few poor bastards worked on this dismal outpost.

 

“They’ll get you again,” Annie said, pulling back and slowing down the SRV. “The World Council, I mean.”

 

“We’ll see about that,” Ivan said dismissively.

 

“Screw the WC. I’ll get you, you son of a bitch,” Jordan said.

 

Ivan looked at him but said nothing.

 

He focused on the screens over their shoulders, his pulse gun aimed steadily at the back of Annie’s head. Their landing on the tarmac was smooth and, on the rearview display, he saw the battle cruiser trailing behind them, lumbering like a behemoth on such a small ramp.

 

Annie brought the SRV to a gradual stop. Her grip on the controls tight, her knuckles white knobs.

 

“Okay,” Ivan said. “Wait until the cruiser comes to a full stop. Then open the commlink.”

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