Veil of Shadows (Book 2 of The Empire of Bones Saga) (24 page)

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Authors: Terry Mixon

Tags: #Military Science Fiction, #space opera, #adventure

BOOK: Veil of Shadows (Book 2 of The Empire of Bones Saga)
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“Yes, sir. If it’s all the same to you, I’ll have my people see you back aboard. Nothing personal, but the Lieutenant gave me specific orders.”

“I hardly think that’s necessary for a trip straight back to the ship, but I’m not going to countermand his orders. Keep me informed of your progress. And Sergeant? Pass my gratitude to the men. Taking this shipyard whole just might mean the difference between getting home and not. We paid a terrible price, but I couldn’t be prouder.” He looked at Owlet. “That goes for all of you.”

His team formed up and they made their way directly back to the airlock they’d breached. They passed far too many bodies in Fleet or Pentagaran combat armor. The dead would keep those already in his dreams company.

Once he was back on board the pinnace and his implants had access to the systems, he uploaded the data he’d collected on the transmissions. The pinnace’s computers refined the area of possibility even more closely. The pinnace had also been scanning the surface as they orbited, looking for any transmissions, so he had a fair bit of data to add to his rough map of the zone.

There were no large ruins in the narrowed target area. In fact, there wasn’t much of anything. A few rises that someone might charitably call hills and a substantial lake rounded out the landmarks. They’d need to vector the drones into that area to get more detailed readings.

The pinnace detached and backed away from the shipyard. Jared opened a line to the flight deck. “How long until we have line of sight with the search area the landing team is covering?”

“Five minutes, Captain.”

“Raise them for me as soon as you can.”

“Aye, sir.”

He watched the planet below as they sped toward
Courageous
. It looked so pristine. Untouched. Yet the Pale Ones had desecrated it in the foulest way. Not only had its people been slaughtered, they’d been perverted into monsters. Even now, they probably swarmed the green surface.

How many Pale Ones were down there? How many unmodified humans driven to savagery? He might never know the answer. If there were many Pale Ones, would it be better to isolate them and allow them to die off?

Could they reverse the process?
Courageous
said it the Empire had done so before it fell. Doctor Lenard seemed to think it was possible with the machine they’d recovered. If they could wipe the viral code, perhaps they could also deactivate the hardware. Then the poor bastards could live out their lives in whatever peace they could find.

He really needed to come up with a plan for capturing some prisoners. They’d been reacting to the attacks thus far with lethal force. Kelsey had a neural disruptor that could stun. The scientists needed to get more of them refurbished.

“Captain,” the pilot said over the communications channel. “We have line of sight, but I don’t see them on the scanners. They may have landed in an area that’s obscuring them. I’ve tried hailing them without success.”

That worried him, but they might not be in a position to respond. If they had an enemy presence in their area, they might maintain communications silence. He’d give them a little more time to respond before he sent a team after them.
Courageous
could send some drones to look around without tipping anyone off to their presence.

“Understood. Take us home.”

Still, he could do something. He accessed the communications suite and blocked one of the arrays from showing changes on the flight deck. He then tasked the unit to continue broadcasting the data he’d uploaded and a message with his thoughts across the area where Kelsey’s pinnace should be. The other pinnace would route it to Kelsey if it received it. Then she’d know what he was thinking.

He rode in silence to
Courageous
once he finished. The ship loomed reassuringly large in front of them and he relaxed when the pinnace settled home with a soft thud.

The marines helped him strip off his combat gear. He let them put it away as he headed for the bridge. He split his attention between greeting the people he passed and accessing the computer.

Jared was starting to download the ship’s status when his connection terminated. He frowned and attempted to reconnect. The computer didn’t respond. Something was wrong.

He trotted to the nearest lift and waited impatiently for its arrival. The world went dark before the doors had a chance to open.

 

Chapter Twenty-Five

 

“That’s impossible,” Kelsey said flatly. Bell was old, yes, but not half a millennium old.

The old man grinned. “True enough, though we’re not talking about me living that long straight through. The Empire had medical devices called stasis units. They would keep a person with traumatic injuries alive until they could receive medical care. Very cutting edge stuff developed by Fleet.

“It was never intended to keep a person alive for hundreds of years, but with adequate monitoring and adjustment it can do exactly that, it seems. I was the last surviving person with military implants, so they asked me to try, not knowing if anyone would ever come. Frankly, I’m astonished that I woke up again. Though I’m grateful to have the chance to be here at this historic moment.”

He let her stunned silence go for a few seconds before continuing. “I was twenty years old when the rebellion broke out. I was already a midshipman at the premier Fleet academy on Terra. Annapolis, in the North American District.

“Things were looking very bad by the time they sent me to
Courageous
. Another year and we were on the run. I came down to Erorsi with a team to help stiffen the defenses. I assumed the rebels destroyed
Courageous
after I left. We all did. The rest, as they say, is history.”

His age astounded her. “How old are you?”

“Five hundred and seventy three next March, though without stasis I’m a mere Two hundred and seventy six. The medical nanos common in the Empire, combined with good medical care, made two hundred years a common occurrence. The ones given to the military added another hundred years to the lucky. Or the unlucky, if the rebels caught you. Thank God those poor souls are long dead. They deserve peace after they hell they’ve been through.”

Dear God, he’d seen the Empire at its height with his own eyes. Jared would faint. The man before her was Fleet. The real Fleet.

Then it struck her like a hammer. He knew how to control his implants. The old Empire had trained him and he had lifetimes of experience. He knew what was possible and how to do it.

He could teach her.

She took a deep breath. “You are the answer to our prayers. Certainly to mine. I was captured by the Pale Ones—the rebels—and implanted. Our Captain rescued me before they could reprogram the implants, but I have no idea what the hell I’m doing. All I know is that I have what they called a set of commando implants and they do the damnedest things. Do you know anything about them?”

“Commando! That’s the very highest level of modification in the Imperial Service. Do you have the full body modification?”

“Everything. Coated bones, artificial muscles, and a chip that’s trigger happy.”

Bell leaned back in his chair. “We had commandos on board. Their modifications were highly classified, but we all heard things. What you call trigger-happy is something they called combat mode. The implants take over combat processing and act under the rules of engagement to speed human reaction time.”

“Well, I’m pretty sure that there are no rules of engagement in my head.”

“If a child pointed a gun at you, would you open fire?”

“I hope not,” she said with a certain dread, “but I don’t really know.”

“If your implants were never overridden, I’m certain there are basic safeguards in place. Have you ever attacked a non-combatant?”

She shook her head.

“There you are. The Pale Ones, as you call them, have no such restriction. I don’t really know much more about commando implants, but I can give you some basic instruction with more conventional implant operations. If we have time. Right now, the rebels are down, but you need to finish them.”

She rubbed her eyes tiredly. “Are you suggesting that we attack them? I’m certain the Captain would be happy to evacuate you from the system. I’m not so sure he’d agree to any kind of ground action. We don’t exactly have a sky full of ships.”

Bell smiled. “Far be it from
me
to tell a Fleet Captain what he should be doing, but you may not realize just how badly you’ve hurt them. We once had marine reconnaissance drones. We know roughly where the controlling AI is located. The reverse is also true, unfortunately. They can’t precisely locate us, but we can’t directly attack them, either.”

Kelsey nodded. “We saw at least one large city. I assume they’re in some place like that.”

“Then you’d be wrong. They used kinetic strikes to take out every population center with spaceport facilities, but they left the rest alone. Those cities probably still have people living deep under them, but the rebels only go there when they want to capture more people to convert. They have their own area further to the east. The deep woods there are full of rebels. It was a massive nature preserve before the invasion. They’re set up somewhere inside it.”

She glanced over at Lieutenant Reese. “Lieutenant, do you think we could re-task some of the drones we brought with us to check out that area?”

The marine officer smiled a bit sardonically. “That would necessitate us being able to signal them. It’s not as though the Pale Ones don’t already know we’re here. However, we’re getting ahead of ourselves. We need to come to an agreement about this communications blackout. Either these people trust that we won’t give them away, or they don’t.” He tipped his head in Bell’s direction. “No offense.”

“None taken. Now that you know who we are, I have no objection to dropping the communications blackout. I just ask that you go some distance away before you open any long-range communication. By all means, please speak with your Captain. As for what we want, we want to take our world back from those things. We want to take our Empire back.”

Kelsey could certainly appreciate how he felt.

“Then if you don’t mind, we’ll go back out to talk this over with Captain Mertz. We’ll come back and work out the best way to get what we all want.”

The old man stood slowly and the others followed suit. “Even though you have an Imperial battlecruiser, we have people here that have worked with Imperial systems all their lives. They don’t have implants, but they have experience. We each have strengths the other lacks. Help us make that final push. Help us defeat the rebels.”

Kelsey could hear the unspoken addendum. If
Courageous
didn’t help them, they wouldn’t gain access to that knowledge base. Or perhaps she was reading too much into what Bell had said. In any case, she needed to talk with Jared. Based on what they’d done so far, he might green light the final attack, just on the basis of gaining control of the AI. She’d certainly encourage him to do that. The information in its databanks was priceless.

Da Silva escorted them back to the entrance. Talbot and his men formed up around her as they withdrew from the gully. Reese, who still hadn’t put his helmet back on, looked over at her as they walked. “I know what you’re going to recommend, and I’d like to urge you to be cautious. We need to scout out the enemy position before we make a commitment. The Pale Ones overthrew the Empire. We’re just one ship.”

“Believe it or not, Lieutenant, I agree. We need to see what we’re up against, and then we can make a reasoned decision on what’s in our best interest. Of course I’d like to see this planet freed from the control of the Pale Ones. If there’s any way that we can pull that off, we should finish them while we have the chance. This place is a direct threat to everyone on Pentagar, and that’s a threat to the Empire.”

She put on her helmet when Reese did, and listened to him give instructions to the marines. Everyone pulled back into the pinnace and he buttoned up the landing craft. “Pilot, let’s get out of here. Take us back down the mountain chain at a leisurely pace. I don’t want any transmissions until I give the word.”

The pilot acknowledged and the pinnace lifted off smoothly.

Kelsey sat next to Reese and started to take her helmet off. She stopped when she saw a message waiting light at the corner of her heads-up display. She accessed her armor’s communications unit and saw that the pinnace had forwarded her a message.

She played Jared’s message and saw the information he’d forwarded to her. The loss of life on the shipyard horrified her, but she knew deep down that her half-brother had made the right call. Possession of the shipyard could give them a critical edge.

The narrowed search data on the AI jibbed with what Bell had told them. It looked like he’d been on the level, as her father used to say.

She opened a private channel to Lieutenant Reese. “It looks like the Captain sent us a message while we were down below. I’m going to send you the transmission.” She relayed it to his armor.

“That’s very interesting,” he said after it ended. “The pilot also indicated that we received several transmissions while we were down below, but he couldn’t contact us and let us know that we had them. We’re in control of this system, though the price was high.” He rubbed the bridge of his nose. “And I’m going to have to have a talk with him about getting into pitched battles, too. Is it genetic with you two?”

“Probably. Could we capture the AI if we located it?”

“If we could capture the AI intact, the data would be invaluable. I’m just not sure how realistic that goal is. We might have to settle for a kinetic strike from orbit. Let’s contact the Captain and get the green light to bring Bell and some of his people to negotiate. We can send out the drones to gather additional information. In fact, I think we should have them begin searching the area that the Captain highlighted at once.”

The marine officer looked at Talbot. “I’m sending you some coordinates. I want to re-task every drone we have to search this area for signs of any Pale Ones strong points.”

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