The Iron Maiden (4 page)

Read The Iron Maiden Online

Authors: Piers Anthony

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction

BOOK: The Iron Maiden
13.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Hope's vision. His father told him that he was to have food for us and for that lovely girl of his. I believe that is you.”

“Oh my God,” Helse breathed. “The vision told!”

“It's a true vision,” Spirit's mother said.

Helse looked helplessly at Spirit. Then she got up and climbed out of the cell. Soon she was back, wearing a dark blouse and skirt that had once been Faith's, and her hair hung loose about her shoulders.

Indeed, she looked almost as pretty as Faith.

Spirit stared at her. “You're beautiful!”

“I am what I am. I must admit it's a relief to be unbound.” She cupped her breasts through the blouse for a moment, but she meant more than the physical aspect. "Your father called me lovely, so I must be so.

For the sake of the vision."

“The vision,” Spirit said. “I don't understand where there could be food. All he showed was an empty hand.”

Helse gazed at her. “I'm not sure I should say what I think.”

“Say it!” Spirit said. “I want to know.”

Helse took a breath. “He meant--to eat the hand itself.”

“The hand it--” Then Spirit got it. “Oh, no!”

“Now don't start screaming, or you'll get me going too. Try to think of it objectively. We will all die if we don't get more food--and there is--is plenty of--of meat frozen out there. It makes sense to--to use it.”

“Cannibalism!”

“You could call it that. But use it or not, your father will not live again. None of the men will. Wouldn't they prefer to see that at least their wives and children live?”

“Yes, they would,” Spirit said. “Oh, God, I'm going to throw up!”

“Try to stifle it,” Helse said. “You can't afford to lose it.”

There could be two meanings there, too. Spirit managed to keep her gorge down. “But if we do that--what does that make us?”

“Survivors,” Helse said succinctly.

Spirit looked at Hope. “That's why he screamed! He knew--on some level.”

“He knew,” Helse agreed. “But not consciously. Only the women understood the message, at first. Hope was merely the messenger.”

“Not the originator,” Spirit agreed.

“I think Hope will not like this, when he wakes.”

“Microscopic wonder! I can't stand it.”

“I think we will have to help him. I'm less emotionally involved, because I have no relatives on the bubble, but I'm appalled. It is worse for you--and I think will be worse yet for him. He-- feels so strongly.”

Spirit knew what she meant. Everyone had feelings, but Hope was in a class by himself. “Yes.” Then she sniffed. “What's that smell?”

“Fresh meat,” Helse said. “We shall have to eat it.”

“But there's no--”

“The women have been out to fetch it. They are preparing it. They are sparing us that.”

This time Spirit's gorge filled her mouth. She clapped both hands over it and forced herself to control her heaves and swallow it back down. This was like rape, only at the other end. Necessary.

Hope woke, perhaps stirred by the sounds of her struggle. Fortunately he was distracted by the sight of Helse in feminine apparel. His gaze fixed on her, while Spirit got herself back in order. “You're beautiful,”

he murmured.

Helse smiled, being beautiful. “Thank you.”

Then he looked at Spirit. “You look serious.”

Spirit forced herself to speak. “We have food now. You--you can smell it.”

“That's great! But why aren't you eating it instead of sitting here with me?”

How should this be broached? They couldn't express phony delight; he would see through it immediately.

But Helse was right: they would have to eat it. So she started cautiously. “We're--we're not sure we should use it.”

He frowned. “Where is it from?”

Helse forced a laugh. “From your vision, Hope.”

“You think I made that up?”

“No,” Spirit said. “I saw our father sit up and talk to you.” That was an exaggeration. For one thing, she wasn't even sure it was their father's body he had gotten entangled with.

“I hauled him up. He couldn't have--”

“But I do believe you,” Spirit said. Because she knew that Hope would never make something like that up. He was honest to a fault. He had surely had a vision. “Father gave you a message, and Mother understood it.”

He didn't want to get it. “He showed me an empty hand.”

“He showed you his hand,” she agreed. Then, carefully, the two of them herded him into the unkind realization. He had no choice but to accept it.

So it was that they ate the meat. The women cooked it on candle flames and on bits of wood from furniture, and served it in very small portions, so that it was impossible to tell from what part of what animal it might have come. The women ate with the same pretense of unconcern they had affected after submitting to rape, and that told Spirit a lot. She did get sick, and so did Hope, but they both returned gamely to eat again, until they were able to hold it down. After a few days the horror receded somewhat, and became a matter of course.

But for a long time Spirit dreamed of that empty hand Hope had described. It was in its dread fashion her last memory of their father. She knew she wasn't alone; some of the other children evinced odd and ugly symptoms of the underlying guilt for the manner of their survival. But there was no alternative.

Jupiter grew in the vision ports as they slowly approached it. The women were managing to pilot the bubble where it needed to go. The conviction grew that they were going to make it.

But that allowed Spirit to think about other things. Hope and Helse were now an open couple, and they looked wonderful together. That griped Spirit; she had been closest to her brother before. She tried to control herself, knowing that her attitude was unworthy, but couldn't.

One day she burst in on the two of them in their chamber, hoping to catch them in the middle of sex.

“There you go again!” she cried. “Father's gone, Faith's gone, Mother's alone--and you're busy fooling with her!”

Actually she could see that they weren't doing it at the moment; they were naked, but they had been sleeping. Still, they were doing it at other times, and certainly Helse was monopolizing Hope's attention.

“I do not take your brother from you, Spirit,” Helse said. “I can never do that. You are of his blood and I am not. I do not love him as you do.”

Spirit faced her defiantly. “That's space-crock! You love him more than I do!”

Helse looked as if she had been stabbed. “Oh!” she cried in pain, and fled the chamber, naked.

Spirit stared after her, astonished. “I vanquished her!”

“But you misspoke yourself,” Hope protested. “You said she loves me more than you do. You know she doesn't love me; she can't love any man.”

“Oh, I shouldn't have said that! I blabbed her secret!”

“What secret?”

“I'd better go try to apologize. I lost my stupid head.” She started to leave.

He held her back. “She doesn't love me, though I love her. I understand her situation. My talent--”

“Oh, you don't know half what you think you do!” Spirit snapped. “When your emotion is tied in, your talent cuts out!”

He looked stricken, and she realized that she shouldn't have said that either, though it too was true. She was thoughtlessly laying about her with a verbal knife, and cutting up those who meant most to her. “But she said--” he said haltingly.

Once again she spoke before she thought, and then just had to continue, because half the truth would be worse for him that all of it. “She had to deny it, dummy! She thinks men don't love women who love them back. She's always been used by men who only wanted her body, no matter what they said at the time, and when her body changed they didn't want her anymore. So she knew if she really liked someone, she shouldn't ever, ever let on, because--” She wrenched, trying to break free of his hold on her. “Let me go, Hope! I could kill myself! Helse's an awfully nice girl, and I've got to tell her--I don't know what, but I've got to!”

Now she scrambled out of the chamber, and searched for Helse. She wasn't hard to find; evidently becoming aware of her extreme dishabille, she had ducked into another unoccupied chamber. She was huddled there, alone, sobbing.

Spirit dropped in beside her. “Helse, I'm sorry! I--I--when Hope gets in trouble, he expands his understanding and somehow makes it come out all right. With me, I just start fighting worse. I--” But what could she possibly say to make it right? Suddenly her tears were flowing, making it worse yet. “Oh, damn, damn, damn!”

“I didn't mean to hurt you, Spirit,” Helse said. “I thought it was all right with you.”

Even through her tears, Spirit managed a form of laugh. “I'm supposed to be apologizing to you! You're a really nice person. I just got so crazy jealous--damn! I'm a stupid child. I never should have--what can I do to make it right?”

“You spoke the truth.”

“Sure! And we're eating our fathers. Should I speak that truth too?”

“I think I see it now,” Helse said. “I've been taking up so much of Hope's attention, you're getting excluded. I shouldn't have been so selfish. I'll try to change--”

“No! That would only hurt him. He loves you.”

“And it seems that I love him. That means--”

“No it doesn't!” Then Spirit caught herself. “I've been messing everything up with my big mouth. Maybe it's time I stifled it.”

“Your mouth has been speaking truth.”

“Truth that shouldn't be spoken! Damn it, Helse, if I could take it all back--”

“No, maybe it is better to be open. What is your point about me?”

“It's about Hope, really. He's not like other boys. Men. Whatever. He truly cares. He doesn't change. He loves you, and it doesn't matter what you do or say, or how you feel, he'll always love you. All this business with other men--it just doesn't matter. He won't change.”

“But he accepts me as I am. As I said I am. Without love. He understands.”

“He thinks he understands. But sometimes his own emotion gets in the way of his talent. You can fool him if you want to, because he really can't read you. And you can love him if you want to, and you might as well, because--” She choked off.

“My love does not conflict with yours, Spirit. I'm not family.”

“Yes, damn it.”

Helse paused, gazing at her. “I haven't known my siblings since I was six years old. There must be something I don't understand.”

“Oh, hell, I'm just a kid. What do I know?”

“You're a woman, Spirit. I think that's the problem.”

“I've got a year to go.”

“Spirit, I know something about young feeling. It is possible to be a woman long before you stop being a child. You're a woman.”

“No, I've never done the woman thing.”

"Sex? It's not defined by that either. I had more than enough sex as a child. You have the woman instinct.

But what's it like to be a sibling?"

“I wish I could change places with you!”

Helse paused again, piecing it together. “You would prefer to be a girlfriend rather than a sister?”

“No, of course not.” She had to deny it, but there was a disconcerting element of truth in it.

Helse nodded. “I think I should go back to Hope. But any time you wish to be with him, just do it, and I will go elsewhere. I never meant to interfere with your relationship.”

“You aren't interfering. I am his sister.”

“But I don't have to take all of his time.”

Spirit didn't answer. Helse climbed out of the chamber, and Spirit remained alone. She knew she had said too much, yet again, but she couldn't unsay it. Did Helse really believe that it was just Hope's time she wanted? But it was certainly all she could have.

Bio of a Space Tyrant 6 - The Iron Maiden
CHAPTER 4

Children

They came close enough to Jupiter, and were intercepted by the Jupiter Patrol--the real one, this time.

Salvation was at hand.

And Jupiter rejected them. The Jupiter crew refused to believe their story, and instead gave them supplies enough to go elsewhere, and towed them back out beyond the orbit of Amalthea, to the outer ring, and let them go with a warning not to return.

“And we thought we had known rape,” Spirit's mother said. Hope and Helse just stared out of the port at the receding planet, tears streaming down their faces. Spirit joined them, much the same.

Where could they go? They could not return to Callisto, and Ganymede and Europa were little better.

No major moon would accept these wretched refugees.

“Hidalgo!” Spirit exclaimed.

They considered it. Hidalgo was a planetoid no bigger than the moon Amalthea, in a stretched-out orbit between Mars and Saturn. It had been settled by folk from Hawaii back on Earth, and was a major tourist region. Its population was mixed, so the refugees should fit in. But Hidalgo was far distant, and the bubble's gravity shields would take years to get it there, and its little drive jet was insufficient. The food was not enough, either. They would also need an ephemeris, a detailed listing of the locations of bodies in space and time, because otherwise they would never be able to find Hidalgo, let alone rendezvous with it.

So they decided to make a raid on an outpost on Io. Io was a hell moon, the most violently volcanic body in the system. Other worlds, such as their own Callisto, might seem almost dead on the surface; Io was the opposite. It had an erratic eccentric orbit, being hauled about by the next moon out, Europa.

Tidal action literally squeezed it, blowing out sulfur. It was mostly uninhabitable, except for small observation stations. They hoped to raid one of these for the supplies they required.

They floated down toward it, looking for a station large enough to have what they needed, and small enough to have a hope of raiding. They were becoming pirates, of necessity.

They found a suitable prospect near a massive rocky escarpment. They settled onto the sulfur. Then Hope and Helse donned their space suits and went with a raiding party of 25 women. Spirit wanted to go too, but her mother told her why not: after losing her husband, she couldn't bear to risk both her children at once. That had to be true.

The party left in the evening. That began the long wait. They knew that it was dangerous outside the bubble. They had to complete their mission before dawn, because Io's day was much worse than its relatively calm night. Day was when the volcanoes blew.

There was nothing to do but sleep, so Spirit settled down in a chamber with her mother. “Will they be all right?” she asked.

“They've got to be,” her mother said tightly. That was when Spirit realized that this was no sure thing. The adults had pretended that it wasn't complicated, but her mother's tenseness gave that the lie.

“They'll be all right,” Spirit said reassuringly. She wasn't sure she believed it, but what else was there? She slept, but was aware of her mother's restlessness.

When morning came and the party had not returned, the women held a crisis meeting. “They are in trouble; I know it,” Spirit's mother said. “We must go to help them.”

They quickly organized a party of twenty five women, led by Spirit's mother. Ten women remained to care for the children. Spirit hugged her mother, and let her go; it was the only way. She watched as the party departed.

They waited tensely all day. The children kept looking out the portholes, but it was useless. Neither party returned. All they could see was swirling sulfur storms.

But then a tiny travel-bubble floated toward them. “It must be from the station!” Spirit cried. “They got through to it!”

Sure enough, it was Hope and Helse. Spirit flew across to hug him. “You made it!” she cried.

But the news was much worse. Only Hope and Helse had made it. All the women of their party were dead, taken by the hell that was Io's surface.

And the second party had to be dead too, for they had neither reached the station nor returned to the bubble. The remaining women lifted the bubble and searched the region, looking for telltale tracks of any moving party, but there were none.

Spirit got the story in agonized pieces. They had not known how bad it was. None of them should have left the bubble. Only blind luck had gotten Hope and Helse through; the women had sacrificed themselves to save them, and then they had missed an avalanche only because Helse had spooked and ran, and Hope had followed her. The folk at the station had been kind hearted, but too late.

Hope and Spirit tried to comfort each other, and Helse, true to her word, left them mostly alone, merely bringing them food at intervals. The loss of their father had been awful, but the loss of their mother was worse, because she was all they had had left. Except each other.

“If only we had known,” Hope moaned. “All we had to do was float our bubble directly to the station and ask for help. They would have given it. The scientist--his niece looks like Helse. Or did. She's actually four or five years older.”

Spirit grasped at this illusory straw, as if it was better to have been saved in maybe than lost in reality.

“What's her name?”

“Megan, he said. Her picture did look like Helse. It was taken when she was that age.”

“That makes two girls you could love.”

He laughed, and that was a relief, because it was the first break in their terrible gloom. “Maybe so. But Helse's all I need. And you.”

Spirit would have been thrilled, if she had not been so steeped in sorrow for their mother. “In different ways,” she said.

“In different ways,” he agreed, and hugged her again. They cried together some more.

But even the depths of their grief could not suppress them forever. In about three days they came out of it enough to survey the situation. The bubble was on the way to Leda, a much closer destination, as it was the next moon out from Callisto. The scientist had recommended it, and it made sense, because it was a military base with Hispanics in charge; there would surely be refuge there. But the bubble itself was a disaster area. The other children had been mourning similarly for their lost mothers, and a number of them had no siblings. They faced the dread abyss alone--and some of them had found ways to kill themselves.

So now the complete bubble complement was ten grown women and seventy two children. The children were moving into the various tasks of operating the bubble; not only was it necessary, it gave them something to do.

But they were passing back through pirate territory. All of them well understood the danger. When a ship overhauled them, Helse and Spirit and several of the older girls became boys, just in case. The ten women garbed themselves to be as attractive as possible, and loosened their hair, knowing that often all pirates wanted was sex, and it was easiest to give it to them and let them go away.

Spirit hid in one chamber, and Hope and Helse hid in another. They listened as the men came aboard.

The men were brutes from the start; Spirit heard them hitting the women and swearing. There were screams. The men wanted the women to hurt as they were raped.

It got worse. Soon the screams took on a truly ugly quality, and Spirit realized that the men were killing the women, stabbing them to death. Rape and kill, literally.

Then they started opening the chambers. There were new screams as the children were dragged out.

These were the worst pirates yet; they intended to leave no one alive.

Her cell opened. Spirit tried to play dead, but the pirate reached in and grabbed her arm. She screamed.

It didn't stop him. He hauled on her arm, and she was jerked violently forward, for his arm was muscular and gravity was light. Then she got smart and remembered her finger whip. It was on her left hand, which remained free for the moment. She oriented as well as she could, and let fly at his face. She caught him on the cheek, rather than the eye she had aimed for.

He cursed and slapped at his face. Then a form dropped on him. It was Hope, coming to her rescue!

The pirate dropped into the cell, and Hope dropped after him. Hope caught the man about the head, trying to draw it back, trying to choke him, but his strength and weight were too slight. The pirate roared and brought a hairy hand back, catching Hope by the hair, yanking him forward.

“Spirit!” he gasped.

That galvanized her. Why was she standing there watching? She pounced on the knife in the pirate's sash and snatched it out. The man wasn't even aware; he was still focused on Hope.

Hope brought up his knees and clamped the pirate about the head. He was doing his part; now she would do hers. She considered, then went for the most likely target. She gripped the knife in both hands and stabbed the pirate in the belly.

Unfortunately, it was only a glancing strike. It drew blood, but was not lethal. The pirate roared and went for her, but Hope grabbed him again. Spirit went for the man's face, but he jerked back and avoided it.

Hope grabbed him once more, giving Spirit a third chance. This time she made sure; she drove the knife into his throat, as fast and hard as she could. And this time she scored. Hot blood spurted, drenching her as the pirate dropped.

Hope took the knife from her hand, and she realized that she had gone into a kind of trance of horror.

She had killed!

Her brother did what had to be done. He got them out of the chamber, leaving the dead pirate there, and closed its door, and hauled the dead woman over it so that the other pirates would not find their companion. Then he got her into the next cell, with Helse. “Play dead!”

The three of them played dead. It wasn't hard, for they were covered with gore. Spirit was sobbing, but she struggled to keep it quiet, so that she would not be heard above the tumult elsewhere in the bubble.

Hope held one of her hands and Helse held the other, providing silent comfort. It helped.

No one looked in on them. Finally it was silent in the bubble. They heard the lock closing as the pirates departed.

Now they came out to see what remained. It was awful. All ten women and 27 children were dead. Now their total complement was 45 children.

The following days were nightmare, as they cleaned up the disaster. Hope and Helse, being the oldest, hauled the bodies out to join the men. Hope became the den father figure, and Helse the den mother.

They organized it to provide comfort to any child who needed it. Spirit helped, and found that comforting others helped her too. The whole group became like a single family.

The children rebounded surprisingly swiftly. It wasn't that they had lost their grief and horror, but that they were, perforce, in survival mode. They spread out to do what had to be done, to clean and operate the bubble, finding solace in the hard work. They cried often, but were starting to smile again too. The family concept lent them all strength. Everyone understood everyone.

And they oriented on defense. They had a big meeting in the bubble commons, and thrashed it out. Every child participated; no child was denied a fair hearing. They knew they were all in this together, and that the price of failure was brutal death.

They settled on a three stage program. Stage One was professional innocence; they would be cute and sweet and beg the intruders not to hurt them, giving the pirates a chance to be decent. Stage Two was to fight; Spirit had a whistle, and when she blew it, every child would bring out a weapon of some sort, be it a sharp knife or only a hard nail, and attack the nearest pirate, going for the eyes and the crotch first.

They rehearsed with pirate-sized dummy figures, so that even the smallest child could do some mean damage in that first instant of surprise. With luck they would overwhelm the pirates. They would not stop until all enemies were dead; that was another lesson learned the hard way.

If that did not work, they would go for Stage Three. This was the dreadful one. One of the toilet tank's release bolts had been weakened, set up so that it could be bashed off, letting the fecal matter fly. But its automatic safety lock was jammed open, so that the entire bubble would be blown out in moments, and all unsuited occupants would die. Helse would say “Do it!” and Hope would go out the rear airlock, climb around to the bolt, and do it. All the others would have that little time to get suited and hidden in their cells. With luck the pirates would not catch on in time. They would be vulnerable because they couldn't rape any girls while being in space suits.

They practiced diving into their own suits and sealing them instantly. They held frequent surprise suit-up drills. They knew how much time they would have from the “Do it!” moment, and made sure they could get prepared within it.

Then, ready for anything, they got bored. There needed to be a distraction, because bored children were mischief, and there was still a distance to go before they found sanctuary. So Hope and Helse decided to get married.

That appealed to the children. It would make it even more like a family. Spirit was put in charge of operations, and she was delighted; she had gotten over her jealousy of Helse, knowing how much Hope needed her. Hope was functioning well as the leader of the bubble in large part because of his love for Helse.

The kids got into it with gusto. They made Helse a wedding gown from swatches of cloth taken from all over. They planned for a wedding cake. They formed a choir and practiced the wedding march. They planned out every detail of the ceremony, lacking only a priest. They even made Hope and Helse rehearse the wedding kiss, which they enthusiastically applauded.

In due course they were ready for a full dress rehearsal. Hope lacked a formal suit, so had to wear his space suit, complete with the helmet, which would be opened for the nuptial kiss. “Take off the suit that night!” one child yelled, and they all burst into wild laughter at the thought of attempting sex in a space suit. All of them understood the mechanics of sex very well, thanks to the pirates. Helse donned her fancy patchwork wedding gown. It even had a name tag: HELSE HUBRIS, just in case she couldn't remember it after the fact.

Other books

Death By A HoneyBee by Abigail Keam
Second Chance by Rachel Hanna
Hope In Every Raindrop by Wesley Banks
The Fleet by John Davis
Dear Lover by David Deida
Moonshifted by Cassie Alexander
The Jigsaw Man by Gord Rollo
Houseboat Girl by Lois Lenski
Spring Training by Roz Lee