The Centurion's Empire (55 page)

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Authors: Sean McMullen

Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fiction, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Science Fiction - General, #High Tech, #Science Fiction - High Tech

BOOK: The Centurion's Empire
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"They're not going to run away," said Vitellan as she revved up the fans and the machine lurched into the air.

"I can't understand why you're so calm," she retorted.

The tiltfan entered the coldlock of the hangar. Double doors slid shut behind it, double doors in front opened onto
blinding Antarctic whiteness, then they surged out on four columns of air. The tiltfan quickly gained height in the clear,
cold air, and Vitellan looked ahead to a cluster of hills. Almost at once Lucel began the descent. The site of the time raft
was marked by a scatter of red tiltfans and tents, and two spidery ice-cutting handlers stood idle beside a geometrically
regular gash in the blind valley's ice. Vitellan noted a row of oblong blocks covered in yellow insulative near one of the
cranes, and Lucel steered the tiltfan for these as they came in to land.

Each of the blocks of ice containing the Temporians' bodies was on a pallet. Vitellan walked across the compacted snow
past two deferential guards to one of the pallets and lifted a corner of the yellow insulative. He stared at some-
thing dark and indistinct beneath the surface of the frozen block, then went across to the edge of the excavation. Lucel
joined him as he stood staring into the remains of the time raft.

"I've ordered that the pallets be loaded into my tiltfan at once," she reported.
Vitellan turned to see an articulated handler lift a pallet with firm but gentle efficiency and stamp across to the tiltfan.

"How many trips will you make?" Vitellan asked as he watched.

"Just one. You don't seem very interested, Vitellan. There are cameras recording all this, you know. You're part of this
too, people want to share your feelings in this moment."

"I think my feelings are fairly obvious," he said as he turned away again.

Lucel stood beside him for a moment, unsettled by his strangely detached mood, then she strode over to the tiltfan and
waited there as the last of the pallets were loaded aboard. She was revving up the engines and preparing to leave when
Vitellan finally came back.

"You have to stay here and examine the site and reports," she said, barring his way to the cabin.

"Do I?" he asked. "What I've seen already is enough. I'm just a tourist."

"Please, love, the tiltfan is heavily loaded as it is. I mean if s safe, but I'd rather you went back in one that's not so close
to the limit."

"If that's the case we should split the load. I don't want you in danger," he said as she walked him to the hatch.

"Vitellan, I know what I'm doing!" she shouted impatiently. "Now please go and see Gulden. He wants to show you how
the last man awake, probably Decius, rigged a snowdrop to cover himself. He also thinks that one of the women may turn
out to be Helica."

Vitellan shrugged, then turned and walked clear to where Icekeeper Gulden was waiting with his team of archeologists.
They said nothing but exchanged nods and watched as Lucel's tiltfan lifted sluggishly from the ice and slowly gained
height. Now Gulden and Vitellan walked straight to a

smaller tiltfan that was revving up, and they strapped in beside four armed security guards. Still not a word was
exchanged. The second tiltfan surged into the air and rose clear of the low, desolate peaks. Ahead of them Lucel's tiltfan
was a tiny red hyphen against the blue sky, high above the ice. A puff of smoke burst abruptly about the distant aircraft,
something flew clear, then a roiling ball of fire blossomed in midair. Debris rained down to the ice, followed by a
parachute of red and white concentric circles. The second tiltfan descended, pacing the parachute until Lucel landed in a
puff of powdery snow. Vitellan jumped to the surface with Gulden as Lucel was unbuckling her harness. The guards
followed.

"Vitellan, how did you get here so quickly?" she panted.

"Roman efficiency," he replied tersely.

Lucel nervously brushed at the snow on her parka. "I only just managed to eject in time, there was a bomb aboard. Some
Luministe leftover cell must have detonated it remotely."

Vitellan and Gulden drew their rail pistols together.

"Vitellan?" she gasped, spreading her hands wide rather than raising them.

"Don't move, Lucel, don't make this harder than it needs to be," he warned.

"Vitellan, you've lost your senses, I—"

Gulden fired as she began to reach for Vitellan, and she convulsed as a covalat-edge, charged needle tore through the
monomolecular mesh bodysuit beneath her clothing arid raked her nervous system with pain. Vitellan fired another,
then Gulden fired again. Lucel toppled to the snow, as rigid with shock as a bronze statue. The Icekeeper took a webcap
from his pocket and pulled back the hood from Lucel's head as Vitellan covered him. A few seconds later she was safely
in an induced coma, and the guards lifted her into the tiltfan.

"You were right," said Vitellan as he and Gulden stood watching.

"I am not proud of being right," Gulden replied, the rail pistol still in his hand, "but the Luministe records that I
de-encrypted were accurate. Her mind is still focused by those obsession imprints that she was given. 'Kill all false
prophets from the past, and kill all time travelers except the true

jrophet,' they say. She might have been able to tinker with :he vectors so that you are the true 'prophet' instead of
Bon-lomme, but the Temporian Romans have no such protection. It's not Lucel's fault, they had not been discovered in
2024 when the imprint work was begun on her." "Are they safe?"

"Safe?" exclaimed Gulden indignantly. "You ask the Icekeeper of Durvas if frozen bodies in his care are safe?"
Vitellan was used to dealing with Icekeepers. "Well, are they?"

"Our ultrasonics have located seventeen profiles, all about a hundred yards from our dummy trench. Now that my worst
fears about Lucel are confirmed and she is under control, we can start the real work. Do you want to be there for the real
excavation, Centurion?"

"It will be a great moment, and I seem to be drawn to great historic moments. Yes, but let us get Lucel safely away from
here first."

D u r v a s , B r i t a i n : 1 9 A p r i l 2 0 2 9 , A n n o D o m i n i

An official announcement was made that the Centurion of Durvas had been revived successfully for medical checks, but
apart from some limited interviews he was kept distant from the journalists and their cameras. The media people did not
mind unduly. As was expected, events in Antarctica tended to dominate the networks: news of the find of a second
Antarctic time ship had been released. It was hyped up like the landing of a UFO. The Temporian Romans would be
ambassadors from an advanced but alien society, and their effect on human society would be studied as as an example of

"first contact." They also presented an opportunity to study how humans adjusted to really long-term time travel, travel
so extreme that no familiar societies were left when they were revived.

"They are a vaccine," explained Gulden as he and Vitellan walked in the garden of Gulden's hobby farm.-Spring had
taken a firm hold, and the background greenery was swamped with flowers.

"And what is the disease?" asked Vitellan.

Gulden gestured to the sky above.

"Read any history of first contact between civilizations. Even if those in power on the weaker side are able to fight back,
there are always those who turn traitor and support the invaders. They are the Luministes in the picture, they sell their
own people into submission to gain power under the invader. Our world needs practice in dealing with such times and
changes. The Temporians have no power, no weapons, no home world to give them backing, so they are safe enough. The
next shipload of intelligent aliens may not be without such backing."

The commnode cheeped on Gulden's wrist. He held his hand up, then slipped his dataspex onto his face. After only
moments he removed them and turned to Vitellan.

"That's the Durvas Clinic. You're needed there."

"Lucel?"

"Yes. Come this way, I have a tiltfan ready over there behind the barn."

The tiltfan lifted with a deep, authoritative hum of engines, and Gulden brought it up to a transit corridor level before
setting the pilot beacon and selecting the coordinates for the Durvas clinic. He did not switch to autopilot. The act of
piloting was something to hide behind while he talked with the memories of a man born nearly twenty centuries earlier.

"There is practically no hope for Lucel," Gulden said as he stared through the windscreen at the English countryside
four hundred feet below. "The paranoia against all but her chosen time traveler, you, has been imprinted too deeply, and
on too many levels."

Vitellan drummed his fingers on the shockcell padding beside his seat, staring down at the patchwork of fields and
tracery of roads.

"McLaren could transfer my mind to another brain, yet you can't undo a mere obsession? Is that what you are saying?"

"Yes."

"Please explain, I find that unbelievable." Gulden waved his right hand in a little circle. "Were I to botch the landing at
the Durvas Imprint Clinic and hit a wall

rery hard, how much do you think it would cost to restore his tiltfan?"

Vitellan consulted the cyclopedia imprint. "It sells for a juarter million pounds, so ... perhaps a third of that?"
Gulden laughed softly. "Three or four
times
that, Vitellan. Surprised?"

"Yes!"

"I'll explain. Tiltfan components are stamped out very efficiently in the factories, but a mangled wreck has to be bent
sack straight again, then panelbeaten until the dents are gone. Torn sections have to be welded, missing bits have to
be
replaced or filled with bondfiber, and many parts just have :o be discarded altogether and replaced. It's intensive work,
and expensive work. After a serious accident it's easier to salvage what parts have survived, break up the rest for
recycling, and buy a new tiltfan."

"But Lucel is not injured."

"She is riddled with gates and stabilized imprints. We have removed one, but it took a lot of sweat. The rest would take
longer than her expected lifetime to clear. We could take whole blocks out, filter them for anything suspicious, then
return them as an imprint."

"Then do it."

"The risk is that we shall remove too much of the legitimate Lucel. A lot of gate-pattern memories are the real her, and
after six years of therapy you would be left with a pale reflection of what was once Lucel. Something like a shy
nine-year-old, someone who would grow into a woman again, but almost certainly a different woman from the one you
knew."

Within minutes the tiltfan was descending into a pattern of landing lights on the roof of the Imprint Clinic. Vitellan and
Gulden descended to the maximum security ward where Lucel was being held. She was drowsy with sedation, but
fighting to keep herself sharp.

"They give me no lines or news," she said as she sat with her head on Vitellan's shoulder. "Information is my life,
Vitellan. I can't go on like this."

"You're in the middle of heavy imprint therapy. You must be kept calm and relaxed."

"But why bother with this therapy? I understand what was done to me, I know that I have keys to attack any frozen time
traveler other than you, but now there are none left. I'm safe to be with."

"But there are thousands of modern people in cryogenic storage."

"My imprints don't cover them, they have to be from tt» distant past."

Vitellan said nothing. Lucel began to pace the ward, her arms folded behind her back.

"If I need therapy, it can only be because the frozen Temporian Romans have survived," she concluded quickly. "You
probably colluded with Gulden and set up an elaborate hoax to test my reactions. If you had to do that, then it must be
because there are other time travelers. If I must still be restrained, it must be because the blocks of ice on the tiltfan
contained wax dummies or modern cadavers. The real Decius and his companions are probably still in the ice."
Vitellan sat on her bed, hunched over and hopeless. "What do you want me to say?" he asked.

"Nothing. When I let the Luministes do this to me, I thought that only you and Bonhomme would be involved. With all
these others around... I'll continue to have obsessions to vector on them. I am only in control now because you have not
confirmed that the others are still alive. Imprint therapy is the only answer, Vitellan. I may not be totally in control, but
I'm no fool."

They stood together and kissed. Lucel stared into Vitellan's eyes, and seemed to peer into his thoughts.

"This feels like good-bye, you seem so sad," she protested.

"Gulden says the procedure is dangerous," he admitted, his words halting. "You may wake up ... not quite yourself. He
was quite blunt about the risks."

Lucel clenched her fists, and muscles rippled impressively along her forearms.

"I shall not say good-bye, Vitellan. You fought for your identity and won, so I can do it too. I'll be back as me, just you
wait."

When she was fully sedated Gulden brought a touchboard

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