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Authors: David Andrews

Tags: #First Born, #Alliance, #Sci fi, #Federation, #David Andrews, #science fiction, #adventure, #freedom

The Alliance (20 page)

BOOK: The Alliance
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She opened a portal a thousand feet above the open expanse where Jack was hiding and settled down to watch.

The line of searchers had reached the copse of shrubbery in the hollow, and two men were crawling through the bushes looking for signs. Anneke bit back a laugh when their clumsy progress wiped out the two indents from his toes. She tried to imagine Peter’s reaction to their ineptness and failed. He might have applauded their thoroughness elsewhere, for they probed every bush, every tussock, with the long pikes, the bright ceremonial blades glinting in the morning sun.

She frowned when she saw Jack slide into a low clump of scraggly bush. Except for its denser core, it offered little in the way of concealment and contained a menagerie of reptiles, insects, and rodents living together under an uneasy truce. She wasn’t particularly worried about them attacking Jack. Even for a telepath, he had an unusual affinity with animals, but the concealment was poor and the pikes were long enough to reach the central core.

The search line was on the move again, the spacing between individuals kept to the length of the pikes so no piece of ground went un-probed. The Pontiff had committed all his reserves to this operation and must be operating the palace with a skeleton staff. He even had priests in the line, their clumsiness with the pikes marking them.

The line reached Jack’s hiding place and the guard began probing the edges gingerly. He had the attention of the searchers on either side, both of them trying to watch him and their sectors at the same time. One of them, a priest, had edged away a little. Anneke swooped down invisibly for a closer look. Jack had a plan, and she knew his sense of mischief.

The guard had probed the edge closest to him and had raised the pike to probe the central core when a movement within it made him leap backwards. An angry black and white rodent with white stripes running down its back emerged from the shrubbery and turned so its raised tail faced the guard. He fled, and so did the searchers on either side while Anneke roared with relieved laughter. She knew that animal and its malodorous defense mechanism.

Jack had done it again.

A non-commissioned guard officer came running down the line to investigate the disturbance and berated all three. “Leave the bloody bushes alone and get on with the search. If there were anyone in there, we’d smell them for a mile by now. My best uniform still stinks from the last time you upset that bloody animal.” Like most of the guards, the sergeant was a townie, but he’d learned this lesson the hard way. “We need to be finished and back in concealment before full light.”

The search line reformed beyond the shrubbery and Jack was safe.

* * * *

Rachael’s circumstances changed. She was now a prisoner in the palace, secured to the guardroom wall by a chain locked snugly around her waist. It gave her just enough slack to lie down on a pallet placed against the wall for sleeping. During the day, she folded the pallet and sat on it with her back against the wall. Apart from the sleeping off-duty guards, she was alone, the normally bustling guardroom quiet. Her servants still brought her food, although the guards plundered half of it, and they had arranged a curtained enclosure for her privy, a concession granted grudgingly.

The temple maidens were idle, the palace compound quiet. There was a brooding air of expectation over everything, the sense of an impending explosion—even the guards spoke quietly. The Pontiff saw no one, spending the time in his chamber monitoring the search. Everyone knew the net was closing on the spacer. They’d discovered proof he’d passed the first ring and was less than twenty miles from the Treaty Port. The prestige of the Papacy hung on his capture, particularly now word had leaked of the ambassador’s deadline. There was even talk of Federation cruisers lurking the other side of the portal, ready to invade, an idea Rachael knew to be preposterous. The Federation didn’t have cruisers.

Her servants arrived with a washing bowl filled with warmed scented water, thick towels, and her temple maiden’s outfit. “Mistress. You will want to look your best today.”

They woke one guard and chivied him into unlocking the chain around her waist, forcing him to stand with his back to her corner while she stripped and washed herself. The guard was of common stock and surrendered to the ingrained respect all his kind showed the Elite of their race.

This morning there was a touch of fear as well.

Rachael took her time, enjoying the unrestricted movement. She didn’t understand the undercurrents. The Papacy had long crushed all resistance, its guards more a symbol than a military force, yet she’d felt this air of expectation before. It usually preceded an uprising against the establishment, a welling up of dissatisfaction waiting for a trigger—the one element missing. No focal point waited to concentrate the groundswell of opposition.

Why
?

The spacer, Jack, was the son of an Elite, and he was becoming more of a hero everyday. Had the Alliance found the perfect means of denying this world to the Federation—depose the Pontiff and replace him with one of their own? It had the mark of their thinking.

Her male servant touched her shoulder. “Mistress. The Pontiff comes. You must be as he expects.”

Rachael nodded and lifted her arms so the guard could lock the chain around her waist. He did it half apologetically, but it was still too snug for her to escape.

She didn’t want them implicated. “Withdraw. I will face him alone.”

The two servants bowed and took their leave, impressing Rachael with their simple dignity. Either something had changed, or she’d been incredibly blind.

The Pontiff entered, trailed by a silent priest/scribe. “Woman, the deadline approaches for your return to the Federation.” He looked tired, but his voice sounded strong. “I’m of a mind to do it, threats or no.” He turned to the guard. “Give me your pike while you unlock her chain.” The man hesitated. “Now. Do it now.” The Pontiff’s voice rose and he held out his right hand for the weapon.

The guard handed him the weapon and took the keys from the table as he approached Rachael. She held up her arms and watched him unlock the chain. He needed a bath and her nose wrinkled at the sourness as he stepped closer to take the weight of the chain.

“Drop the chain and step away from her,” the Pontiff’s ordered.

Rachael looked up. He’d raised the pike for a killing thrust, its needle-sharp point aimed at the base of her throat.

* * * *

Jack could see the gate leading into the temple and the other leading into the Federation compound. Only a hundred yards separated him from his goal—a hundred yards and twice as many guards.

He hadn’t expected to make it this far, but it seemed a pity to fail this close to victory. He would have to trust this last throw of the dice to his disguise, but the ploy was so obvious.

He’d stolen a guard’s uniform.

“Arm me, audacity.” He made the plea aloud as he set his face in sullen weariness, walking toward the knot of guards as if he had the weight of the world on his shoulders. None of them were happy, and he had to fit in seamlessly to succeed. A second glance would bring him undone. If he was close enough to the gate, he might just break through. If he wasn’t...

The distance shrank and no one noticed his approach, all focused on something happening behind him. He didn’t dare turn around, just hoped their distraction would last.

“There he is.” He recognized the voice, the deep cover agent from Trygon.

As one, the guards came to ceremonial attention, pikes vertical at their sides, the crash of their hobnailed sandals on the pavement sending the birds flying into the air in fear. A non-commissioned officer turned to face him and gave a full honors salute. “Your orders, sir.”

* * * *

Rachael saw her death in the Pontiff’s eyes and played desperately for time. “Why?” Her body shook uncontrollably. The reversal of fortunes had been too complete. She was a little girl again, an adult looming over her bed in the dark.

“I allowed you and the spacer to distract me. It gave them time to prepare while I stripped the palace of its defenses. It’s too late now, and I can’t reach the spacer, but you’re here.” He gathered himself for the thrust.

“Holy Father,” Lothar, spoke from the doorway.

She could see the shock in the Pontiff’s face. He’d thought himself alone.

“You’re one of them, too,” he said and the pike point wandered.

She tensed herself to run, but the air shimmered and a man stood between her and the Pontiff. She was transfixed as he took the pike from the Pontiff’s hands.

“Yes, he’s one of us.” The newcomer’s voice sounded pleasant, but his presence was magnificent. Put this man in the middle of a crowd, and he would still be a king. “It’s time for you to come home.”

The Pontiff had turned back as the pike dropped from his hand. “Who are you?” His voice quavered slightly. “How did you get here?”

“Feodar always called me the soldier, but my name is Peter. It’s dangerous for you to stay. I’m taking you to where you’ll be safe.”

The air shimmered again and they disappeared.

“I will escort you to the Federation compound,” the priest said, holding out his hand. “You’re safe now.”

Rachael heard him from a distance. Her knees were jelly and she was falling. A black pit opened before her and she dove in.

* * * *

“Rachael needs you.”

Jack ignored the deep cover agent’s explanation at Peter’s summons, sprinting like a madman through the cheering crowd who emerged from the village and swirled through the grounds of the temple. They made way for him with smiles. He was their hero, the local boy who’d defied the Pontiff for months. He hardly saw them, driven by a terrible fear. A figure beckoned at the palace door, a priest by his clothes, and Jack cursed Peter’s prohibition on translocating here, his breath rasping in his throat as he ran.

“Please, let her live,” he gasped and ran on, forcing his body beyond its limits.

“She’ll live.”
Peter’s thought was gentle. “
I have plans for her, but she needs you now.”

Jack reached the palace and his hob-nailed guard sandals skidded on the marble floor of the guardroom. He brushed aside the two Elite servants kneeling at Rachael’s side and lifted her in his arms.

She stirred, her arms going around his neck as her eyes opened. “Are you going to spank my bottom now? You promised.” Her words had the child-like quality of deep shock, but the arms around his neck tightened as she buried her face in his shoulder. “I’m so tired,” she whispered. “You took so long coming.”

“I’m here now. Nothing can harm you.”

“I know.” Her eyelids drooped and the relaxation of her arms told him she slept.

* * * *

Peter stood in Limbo, the Pontiff at his side, and watched Jack carry the unconscious Rachael toward the Federation compound. She’d have to go back to her people for a while, but they’d send her back, and Jack would be happy. He’d failed Jesse and Anneke. Perhaps Jean-Paul would come back with an answer in time to save these two.

The Pontiff turned to him inquiringly. “Is she worth it?”

“What do you mean?” The man had proved himself an able adversary and, for Feodar’s sake, they owed him much.

“You’ve compromised your security. The Federation will work out these portals exist when they debrief her. It will make them harder to defeat.”

Peter sensed Jack’s emotions. “She’s worth it,” he said. “These two will hold your world against the worst the Federation can do. In fifty years time there will be a stable democracy here.” Jack didn’t yet know about his first independent operation, or that he’d have Rachael’s help.

Chapter Ten

Rachael came back to Feodar’s World in style, wafted through the new ground level portal in the rear seat of a luxurious ground effect vehicle. The outgoing Federation ambassador greeted her in full uniform, his orders and decorations gleaming in the sunlight.

Yet, she was nervous. Twelve months of intense therapy were not part of the normal qualification for a Federation ambassador and her decision to arrive in a plain federation uniform, without insignia or rank, suddenly seemed flawed.

“You’ll find a lot changed.” The ambassador smiled as he entered the vehicle and sat down beside her. “You’re a local heroine, the obvious choice as my replacement. The President has expressed his pleasure at your appointment and has asked to see you immediately.”

“He has?” Rachael whispered a prayer her choice of the plain uniform and chignon hairstyle would remind the president of the meal they’d shared together as agents. He’d complimented her appearance then and it might tempt him to overlook her part in what happened after that meal.

Her companion sensed her unease. “He says this world owes you honor and he has a personal debt.”

“Yes. I betrayed him and sabotaged his ship.” She wondered whether the President was referring to his promise in the restaurant to spank her and smiled nervously. It would be a novel way to start a diplomatic relationship.

“He holds no grudges, but you’ve drawn a tough assignment. He’s a skilled negotiator and his loyalty to his people makes him incorruptible.”

“His people? I thought he was Alliance and the rest his operational legend.”

BOOK: The Alliance
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