Brightsuit MacBear (21 page)

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Authors: L. Neil Smith

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #pallas, #probability broach, #coming-of-age, #Liberty, #tom paine maru

BOOK: Brightsuit MacBear
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Pemot reached in and flipped a switch, routing the recording through a speaker.


…has always made inevitable
.


I’ll connect this to both the electronic and paratronic communications systems and seal it away from the vermin. I only pray it produces the effect I wish for it
.”

It was the voice of Mac’s grandfather, recorded on a memory bubble and programmed either to start when the compartment was opened or to repeat itself at intervals, and plugged into the hovercraft’s conventional ’com as well as the radio.

After a pause, it began again.


This is Dalmeon Geanar speaking. I am treacherously attacked and mortally wounded. My machine’s disabled, proving once again the folly of relying on technology or material possessions of any kind. I resign myself that I’ll not survive this night. Something evil and hungry in the grass is stirring, coming to get me.


This, therefore, constitutes my last will and testament.


To any sapient being within hearing of these signals, including the Hooded Seven, for whom I feel nothing but contempt, I leave the Brightsuit, here aboard this vehicle with me now. Whoever wins the fight to keep it can have it, and welcome to it. It’s worth its weight or more in precious metals, a fitting token of that self-destructive insanity which compels men to throw away their spiritual well-being in the pursuit of profane knowledge and illusory progress
.


I only regret I’ll not witness the hideous carnage which will result from this broadcast. Those of you who suffer in it will know I’ve had my revenge
.


To the grandson who betrayed me, Berdan Geanar Bear, if he lives, I leave all the other worldly goods remaining to me, knowing full well that, like his grandmother, father, and mother before him, he’s already been corrupted by a preoccupation with the trivialities of the mundane universe, and that, by my last act, perhaps I can hasten the undoing which his bad blood has always made inevitable.

“I’ll connect this to both the electronic and paratronic communications systems and seal it away from the vermin. I only pray it produces the effect I wish for it
.”

Pemot shut the recorder off before it could start again. He reached for the dashboard panel. “Well, at least we’ve half a chance now of summoning help. Since this vehicle’s paratronic telecom served Geanar’s purposes, it should—good heavens!”

Sparks flew from the ’com as missing insulation, eaten away by the rats, allowed the device to short and burn.

“So much for that idea,” Mac told him, “and so much for summoning help. Too bad they pulled the ’com gear out of the Brightsuit, but they did, and that’s that.” Mac shook his head.

“Well, I guess there’s no need to ask where all our trouble’s coming from anymore. Surely the First Wavers have telecommunicators somewhere, of some kind. In any case, the word’s out. Too bad about your radio, too. We might’ve had an earlier warning.”

Without bothering to turn around, the trilaterally-symmetrical being reversed his steps, heading away from the skeleton and the rat-stripped seats toward the door, where he peered out of the wrecked hovercraft, back toward his sand-sled.

The boy followed him with his eyes.

“Pah is an ancient Sodde Lydfan god.” Pemot gazed across the Sea of Leaves. Somewhere out there, they knew, more enemies were on the way. “Originally a primitive deity named for the sun—or perhaps the other way around, I’m not altogether certain—in any case, a simple, unassuming sun god, although the practice of worshipping Pah has become more sophisticated and abstracted over the centuries. Your grandfather, on the other hand, was an Earthian, concentrated upon different abstractions. The distinction may not mean a great deal to you, but these things matter to some individuals.”

“They sure do.” Mac’s tone was grim. “On Earth, people used to torture and kill each other over matters like that. Maybe you were wrong after all, Pemot, wasting ‘a few well-chosen words’ over somebody whose final efforts were spent on an act of calculated hate. It’s all so dumb. He went to all that trouble, all those years, just to end up here, like this!”

Pemot sighed. “Perhaps you’re right, MacBear. If so, I plead temporary humanity. People used to torture and kill each other on my planet, as well. It’s one of my fondest hopes, with the coming of the Confederacy, that those days are behind us.”

With an exoskeleton, it shouldn’t have been visible, but Pemot seemed to take a deep breath, brace himself and turn—in fact, he didn’t do that, either—back into the hovercraft.

“Now, hand me your spear again, if you will, Middle C. Let’s attend to getting the crate open. Perhaps our salvation lies with its contents. If not, then perhaps, damaged as it is, we should attempt to repair this much-abused machine.”

 

Chapter XXII: The Confederate Air Force

“That’s got it!” Mac exclaimed.

With a final squeal of protest, the top of the crate yielded to Middle C’s spear point. As the taflak stood back out of the way, the human and the lamviin seized the other end of the container and slid its contents out onto the floor of the hovercraft.

“My word!” Pemot ran a finger over the surface of the suit, refusing to believe his eyes.

Mac, too, had trouble taking in what he was seeing. The cast, chrome-plated replica back at Spoonbender’s had been nothing but the crudest approximation. Even if the Brightsuit had turned out to be the failure everyone had thought it was for so long, it was the most beautiful failure he’d ever seen.

In outline, of course, it was humanlike, from the smooth, featureless oval of the head, down the well-formed chest and back, the narrow hips and legs, to the integral and graceful boots which formed the feet. Not a single wrinkle or protrusion marred its unbroken lines, not even the dual operating keypads which were a customary adornment on the forearms of the ordinary smartsuit.

“It’s like a medieval suit of armor rendered in Swedish Modern.” Pemot breathed.

Mac, who’d never heard of Swedish Modern, and whose idea of the Middle Ages was somewhat vague, based on dramatic programs about Robin Hood, Ivanhoe, and King Arthur, frowned at the verbal intrusion. The thing before him was too lovely for words.

Even Middle C was speechless, leaning closer on his single leg, humming wordlessly and tunelessly as he examined his own curve-distorted reflection.

Some remnant of the Brightsuit’s titanic energy must have augmented what they all saw. No mirror had ever been made which could produce a clearer, more flawless image. It was as if the finish on the surface was spring water, fathoms deep. Whatever else the three companions noticed, it occurred to each of them that, despite all of its rough handling, its many years of storage and neglect, the Brightsuit didn’t show the slightest sign of wear or of accumulated grime: not a dent, not a scratch, not so much as a dust speck or a fingerprint.

At last, Mac had to touch it. To his surprise, it was as flexible as any smartsuit, perhaps even more so. Beneath his fingers, which left no print behind when he lifted them, it felt like sheer silk covering warm human flesh.

The wreckage of the hovercraft rocked with the force of a nearby explosion.

Another explosion thundered, even closer this time. The noise was excruciating.

Leaving the Brightsuit, Mac and his companions rushed to the open gull-wing door. From the north-east, they saw the Antimacassarite vehicle A.L.N.
Compassionate
bearing down upon them, its twin screws turning as fast as the slaves could be driven around the threads. As they ran, flames spurted from the weapons along the flying forecastle, threatening to roast anyone who got in the vehicle’s path.

What was worse, tumbling cylindrical projectiles were rising in high-topped arcs from launchers on the quarterdeck, falling to one side or the other of the
Compassionate
, and burying themselves deep in the moss where they exploded, showering vegetation and metal fragments back up in a wide-mouthed, deadly funnel.

“Depth charges!” Mac pounded on the lamviin’s carapace. “I’ve watched enough old submarine movies to recognize depth charges when I see them! They must be trying to stop somebody from boarding! Maybe Middle C’s people!”

Oblivious to the punishment being inflicted on him by his friend, Pemot blinked. “Wasted effort, for the most part, observe—” The xenopraxeologist was pointing a finger westward, where they could just make out the taflak warrior’s tribesbeings locked in combat with their own kind—villagers working for the First Wavers. A lot of screaming and shouting was being done, to the tune of high-pitched hoots and whistles. Thrower-launched spears were flying everywhere. Middle C’s people, outnumbered at least ten to one, were being driven backward toward the hovercraft Mac and Pemot occupied.


I cannot
,” stated Middle C, taking up his thrower and reclaiming his other spear from Mac, “
with honor permit my tribespeople to perish without perishing myself. I look for you after the battle, here, or in eternal darkness at the bottom of the Sea of Leaves where all of Majesty’s dead must go in the end
.”

With this, he leaped out the door, clearing the hull of the Trekmaster, and cartwheeled away.

“I say, cheerful fellow, isn’t he?”

Ignoring Pemot’s remark, Mac had stripped off his pistol belt and his beaten-up old smartsuit, seized the Brightsuit and begun looking and feeling for the entry seams.

“I don’t know how this is going to work out—the darn thing’s way too big for me.”

Pemot blinked. Having lived on Earth among human beings he wasn’t unfamiliar with their naked appearance, but until now he’d always believed them to be as shy about displaying their unprotected bodies as his own people were.

In any other circumstances, he’d have gotten out his notebook and begun scribbling. “By all means, MacBear, try it anyway. We certainly haven’t anything to lose now.”

Meanwhile, Mac had found the seams. “You can say that again—hey! Pemot, it’s shrinking around my legs! It’s making itself fit!”

The lamviin gave his equivalent of a shrug. “I don’t suppose they call them smartsuits for nothing. Here, get your left arm in here, and consider yourself lucky not to have nine limbs to deal with, squeezing into this suit. Getting dressed always seems to take me forever.”

Mac smoothed the front seam in place. He took the flexible hood in his hands, where, like all smartsuit hoods in proper repair, it lay hanging across his chest.

“Well, Pemot, here goes!” He lifted the hood over his face, sealed it at the back of his head, and took an experimental breath. The air collected and processed by the surface of the suit was clean, cool, and dry. The inside surface of the garment began cleansing the boy’s skin, treating minor cuts, bruises, and abrasions he’d been accumulating, killing microorganisms, adjusting his metabolism to conditions in which the human race hadn’t evolved and couldn’t adjust to by themselves. It was the first time he’d been comfortable since coming to Majesty.

“But I still can’t—oh yes I can! Pemot, all I had to do was think about being able to see, and suddenly I could!”

“Certainly,” the lamviin replied, “your cerebrocortical implant detected the desire and transmitted it to the Brightsuit as a command. Your old suit must have been in terrible condition, MacBear, as this feature is nothing at all revolutionary, any more than is the fact we can hear one another perfectly, although separated by near-perfect insulation. However, I’d be careful, young friend, with this new suit. Considering its alleged capabilities, such a response to your wish could be a dangerous thing, indeed.”

“I will be, Pemot.”

He stood up, an eerie, mirror-surfaced mannikin, an animated chromium statue. If anything, the Brightsuit’s reflectivity had increased since Mac had put it on.

He stepped to the door. “Now I’m looking out over the Sea of Leaves, toward the
Compassionate
. I just thought of being able to see better, and the Brightsuit’s optics zoomed right in. Leftenant Commander Goldberry’s out on the quarterdeck, supervising the depth bombing—and I’ve got a notation in glowing letters at the bottom edge of my field of view: five percent ultraviolet has been integrated into the picture.”

Pemot had pulled his own hood up.

“Presumably to cut through atmospheric moisture. Another perfectly conventional smartsuit feature. I’m seeing much the same view. Try the Securitasian ship.”

“It isn’t very different from the
Intimidator
, except for some weird, complicated structure running along the—Pemot! It’s a catapult of some kind! One of the overseers is just lighting up the payload basket, a big ball of fire!”

“My word, you’re seeing more detail than I am. Is it pointed at the
Compassionate
or at us?”

“What do you think? If they get us, they can divvy up what they get for the Brightsuit, which they can’t hurt by roasting us alive. Uh oh, the captain’s got a lanyard in his hand. He’s sighting along the beam toward us, and—”


MacBear!
” Pemot’s startled shout followed Mac’s reflexive leap into the air, upward and forward, toward the Securitasian vehicle. He met the fireball at the top of its ballistic arc, and batted it with both hands. It fell almost straight backward, along its former course, missing the individuals who’d launched it by a few dozen yards.

Ordinary smartsuits do not fly.

Hanging in the air, Mac—no less surprised than Pemot when the suit had translated this unconscious wish into action—looked down on the Sea of Leaves. The danger they were in was worse than either of them had guessed. He could see several other vehicles coming now, characteristic of both nation-states.

Uncoordinated as they may have been, they formed a solid ring of death around Dalmeon Geanar’s ruined hovercraft and the offworld travelers who’d discovered it. But something else was happening as well, something vaster and more ominous. Inside the deadly circle formed by the enemy vehicles, not a thousand yards from the spot where Pemot stood, the Sea of Leaves appeared to be boiling.

The moss churned and rippled with the force of something coming up from beneath it.

Something enormous and powerful.

It was at this point Mac noticed he’d left his Borchert & Graham behind in the hovercraft.

He was distracted by a puff of smoke from aboard the
A.L.N. Compassionate
. Polished, helpless-looking target in the sky that he appeared, he’d begun to draw enemy gunfire. Without his prompting, a hair-fine beam of brilliance, blinding even through his hood, leaped out from the Brightsuit near the back of his hand. Another puff blossomed in mid-air as it vaporized the rising bullet.

This first shot was followed by a ragged and spontaneous volley. Each bullet was converted to plasma hundreds of feet away from its intended destination. Mac watched with amplified vision as Leftenant Commander MacRame shouted at the rifle squad, lined them up, and commanded them to make their fire simultaneous.

A dozen beams flashed out to counteract the Leftenant Commander’s military discipline.

Mac was just as surprised when—perhaps because he’d thought of how exposed and conspicuous he was, perhaps because the Brightsuit was reaching the limit of its bullet-destroying capacities—he was whisked upward several hundred yards. At the same time, the surface of the Brightsuit was transformed from perfect reflectivity, to a perfect match for the pure blue of the sky.

Down on the surface of the sea, it must have looked to everyone as if he’d vanished.

He thought about rising higher. Microscopic tachyon lasers in the skin of the suit flared and his wishes were obeyed. Rendered inertialess by the fields it generated, the Brightsuit carried him further into the air every fraction of a second.

Mac scanned the world below.

There’s
gotta
be someone around somewhere who can help us!

But he was wrong.

The lamviin scientist, his Sodde Lydfan sand-sled, Dalmeon Geanar’s wrecked Preble Trekmaster, the Securitasian and Antimacassarite vehicles grew smaller until they were no more than indistinguishable dots. Even the broad, churning storm of tentacles, spears, and huge, gleaming eyes which were the contending tribes of taflak dwindled to the tiniest of smudges on the face of the Sea of Leaves.

Mac continued gaining altitude.

The sky darkened, blue to purple to black.

Above him, stars winked into sudden visibility, burning bright and steady overhead.

The boy even thought he could discern the curvature of the planet’s surface.

At the bottom edge of his field of view, inside the Brightsuit’s hood, an amber warning light appeared, indicating the absence of breathable air about him. This was no problem inside the suit’s protective and replenishing envelope, but still no sight presented itself, horizon to horizon, of a Confederate presence, no hovercraft, no high-tech equivalent of the tribal rafts used by the natives.

At last, Mac flexed his mind, ordering the Brightsuit to keep him where he was. Hanging at the edge of space, he looked down at the planet. Straight beneath his dangling feet was the equator, where Pemot might be minutes, even seconds, away from death. Somewhere in
that
direction, lay the north pole of Majesty and the settlement of Geislinger. Somewhere in the opposite direction, at the south pole, was Talisman. Both were invisible, far below the horizon at this altitude.

A peculiar surge of pressure ran up his spine.

He realized the Brightsuit had “overheard” his thoughts and begun rising again to some altitude from which he might see the poles. He stopped it where the sky was even blacker than before. The stars seemed like hard, cold chips of diamond.

What should he do now? Where should he go? All he knew for certain was that his friends, Pemot and Middle C, needed help, and none was to be found within thousands of miles. He’d help them himself.

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