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Authors: Tom Kratman

Tags: #Military, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction

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As with many things, the fact that nobody could really be sure just what the Peace Fleet was capable of meant that the composite couldn’t be faxed to Fernandez’s office in the plain, nor did a mere recruiting station and sometimes mobilization coordination point have the requisite encryption capability. It had to be hand carried by the sergeant to Fifth Mountain Tercio headquarters, in
Valle de las Lunas,
then encrypted and faxed to Fernandez’s office, then immediately transmitted to Khalid, who did have decryption capability, along with the order to proceed to Teixeira, Lusitania, to contact the girl at the Hotel Edward’s Palace.

“Khalid,” Fernandez had written, “you’re my best man for direct action, but I’ve never had you do anything remotely like this. Still, of what I have who might be able to do this you are the closest.

“The most I hope for is that you can contact the girl, confirm she is who she says she is, and somehow arrange a way for her to contact us. Do that, and you’ll have earned your pay for the next month.”

* * *

I’ll have earned my pay for the next fucking
year
if I get you a mole inside the Peace Fleet,
thought the assassin, flying to the island on an airplane rather than a cheaper but slower airship. But even the girl was unable to say how long she’d be there. Time was a wasting asset.

The airship touched down without accident. The island lived off of tourism these days, so there was no shortage of a taxi to take Khalid to the hotel. The hotel had been a problem, largely because they had no cheap, unostentatious rooms. Khalid had at least been able to wrestle a
small
suite from them, where they had tried to saddle him with a large.

In the plane and in the taxi, he alternated his time with studying the composite drawing of the girl and trying to figure out a way for her to keep in contact once contacted by him.

The best he’d come up with was a dead drop e-mail account, with only the draft folder being used, and that only if she came back to Terra Nova again. In the airport at Turonensis he picked up half a dozen novels, in the sure and certain expectation that the very same half dozen would be available at the airport on Teixeira. He wrote a single number inside the cover, one through six, in each of the ones he’d bought in the former airport, then repeated those for the ones he purchased in the second.

“Best I can do, under the circumstances.”

Hotel Edward’s Palace, Island of Teixeira, Lusitania, Tauran Union, Terra Nova

Clever girl,
though Khalid,
clever sergeant, too.

The picture was fair, but less than perfect. Even so the large red flower in her hair, that was a dead giveaway. And she was alone, sitting in the hotel restaurant, reading a magazine. She wore a very attractive ecru silk dress, empire waisted, with a thin, red, tubular trim.

Khalid, always a mix of caution and boldness, tossed caution to the winds. He walked to her table as if he belonged there, sat down, and said, “Foxtrot…lima.”

“Alpha tango,” she replied. Even though she’d rehearsed this meeting in her mind fifty times, the knowledge that she had just come so much closer to her goal set her voice to quivering and her heart to pounding.

“Wonderful,” said Khalid. “If anyone you know comes over, or even gets in a position to see us, say, ‘How dare you sit down with me uninvited? Get away.’ Got it?”

“I think so.”

“How long do you have here?”

“I’m not sure,” she answered. “My high admiral—”

“What?”

“My high admiral.”

“There is only one high admiral.”

“Yes, I know. I’m her cabin girl.”

“Oh, dear God.” Now it was Khalid whose heart pounded. “I don’t think Fernandez has a clue who he sent me to meet.” In most unKhalidlike fashion, the assassin threw his head back, softly crying, “Oh, God! Oh, God! Do I just rush you out of here for debriefing or send you back for whatever purpose Fernandez might think of. Crap. Crap. Double crap!”

Being flustered was not something that came easily to Khalid. He recovered and said, “No matter. Keep going. Your high admiral…?”

“She’s beating the locals into submission, the Tauran Union Security Council. I think they’re about ready to fold. So I could be leaving within a few hours.”

“All right,” Khalid said. “Do you have bags sufficient to hold these?” He pulled one of the two sets of novels he’d picked up out of a bag and set them on the table.

“Sure. I overpacked a little, because we didn’t know how long this would take. I can leave something behind if I must.”

“Okay,” he began to explain. “These books are novels, fictional writings. Inside the cover of each I have written a number. I have a matching set I’ll send to my chief. For you to compose a message, you need to write the number I have written, then find the word you want. You write the page number, the line number, and the number of the word in the line. You can mix and match across books, if necessary, so long as you put down what book it’s coming from.” He opened one of the books and showed her how to do it.

“Then you underline or cross out that word so it cannot be used again. If we see that word’s number used again, for the same book, we will assume you are compromised and probably just cut you off.

“There are better codes,” he explained, apologetically, “much simpler and quicker ones, but none I could come up with quickly, that looked so innocent.

“It may happen that there is no word. In that case, use the same system, but only count the first letter of the words you find and spell out the word you want that way. The message will make no sense so we—my side—will automatically look for the first letter.”

“Okay,” she agreed.

“Now…I suppose there is no way for you to send a message from the ship you are on?” he asked.

“The
Spirit of Peace
? No. Or nothing that wouldn’t be too suspicious.”

“Okay…I wish…” Khalid let the thought trail off. He knew, or at least, guessed, that Fernandez had some kind of limited intelligence source on the ship, some kind of bug. If he knew what it was and where it was he could have her go and simply talk. But he didn’t know so…“The less said about that the better.”

He passed over an e-mail account, a password, and some hastily written instructions. “When you get back here, if you do, get to a computer and access that. My chief will have more clear guidance in the folder labeled ‘draft.’ Do you understand all this?”

“Yes,” she said. “I think so.”

“Clever girl!” Khalid enthused. “And now, to protect you, I am going to disappear. My suite number is Five-two-seven. I will hang around a couple of days and if I get better guidance I will contact you again, if I can. If not, good luck and contact us if you are able. God go with you, child.”

* * *

Later that afternoon, an exhausted High Admiral Wallenstein joined Esmeralda in their suite.

“Honey,” said the high admiral, “I need to sleep for a few hours. Please make the arrangements to get us back aboard ship.”

“How did the…negotiation session go, High Admiral?”

“The bloody Gaul gets his marching orders tomorrow and either obeys or is relieved by the end of the local month.”

Chapter Twenty-seven

Pity not! The Army gave

Freedom to a timid slave.

In which freedom did [s]he find

Strength of body, will and mind.

—Kipling,
Epitaphs of the War

Hovercraft Ramps, Port of Balboa, Balboa, Terra Nova

Centurion Rafael Franco, assigned
Tercio Gorgidas
and seconded to Training Maniple,
Tercio Amazona,
watched as an elderly woman showed her pass then drove her van past the security gate and into a parking spot.
One of the Tercio Socrates types, he thought, the ones who are going to provide dependent care in their homes for the girls’ children.

Franco did a quick estimate of the head count under the bright lights, each pole-mounted light surrounded by a cloud of flying insects.
Maybe two hundred and forty,
he guesstimated.
A bit under half of those who signed up. With any luck, the rest will get a sudden rush of brains to the head and not show up.

Franco mostly stayed back near, if not quite in, the shadows, himself, while noncoms, sergeants and corporals, tried—
What the fuck is the point of being so gentle? I know Silva said to be, but why?—
to get the girls to one or another of the holding areas marked with the number of their future training platoons.

Oh, all right,
Franco silently conceded,
I actually know why. So that the shock will be that much worse. Man, I shudder. Poor little shits have no idea what they’re in for.

A couple of the cadre of the platoon that would be led by Franco and his partner (and, for military puposes, boss), Centurion Balthazar Garcia, were taking girls’ names, as they reported, and directing them to one of the seven holding areas set up. Those two were Sergeant Castro and Corporal Salazar. Castro, always a nice sort, wasn’t having any problems with it but Corporal Salazar, Franco could see, was visibly trembling with the difficulty of restraint when he longed to shake some of the girls by the scruff of their necks.

I see trouble from that one,
Franco thought,
trouble in one form or another.

The door of the van he’d seen park opened up. Emerging from it was a woman Franco didn’t recognize, though she reminded him slightly of his mother. She had a few folders under her arm as she went to stand under one of the seven signs for the seven holding areas. Every now and again, the woman would open one of the folders and scan it against the face of a nearby woman or girl. Every now and again, too, she would look around at the disorder and either shake her head or shrug.

I wonder,
the centurion mused,
if she has some experience of the military or is just the orderly sort, like my own mother was. Now
there
was a woman, altogether too good for my tyrant of a father.

Franco was slightly startled as a loudspeaker began to blare out names and instructions. All talk from the women ceased. Castro and Salazar, along with the other non-coms, continued to direct and sort them as best they could, being as gentle as they were.

Franco heard a name announced. He already recognized it from the roster he and Garcia had been given. “Fuentes, Maria. Fuentes, Maria. Report to Load Ramp Seven. Fuentes, Maria, report to Load Ramp Seven.” Again the old woman checked an open file.

The other reasons Franco noticed that particular name were twofold. One was that the
Duque
had apparently taken a personal interest in the girl. The note he’d scrawled into the file suggested as much, anyway. Franco didn’t have the sense, though, that Carrera was looking for a mistress. The other was that the same personal file practically had “toughness, but worn to a nub” written all over it. Looking the girl, Fuentes, over, Franco decided he’d been right in his estimate of what the paper suggested. Fuentes looked already defeated somehow, with no happiness, nor perhaps even the capacity to feel it, left in her.

The young woman carried a child on her hip and a battered suitcase, or perhaps more of an overnight bag, in the other hand. Her expressions didn’t change as the old woman walked up and introduced herself. The child, however, also female, opened her mouth into an “O” of wide-eyed surprise and asked something Franco couldn’t quite read. He’d guessed it was something nice, though, since the old woman passed over an oversized lollipop.

Get them while they’re young,
thought the centurion.

Franco turned away from the two women and baby girl at the sound of seven hovercraft skimming the water at high speed as they approached the long ramp that led up to the land adjacent to the pier. One by one, the hovercraft climbed the ramp from the sea to the land, before settling down at marked spots on the asphalt. As each settled, the sound pouring from it dropped down to a comparatively low whine.

We could use a boat,
Franco thought,
and we do for bulky nonperishable cargo.
But transport by hovercraft was almost as pricey as by aircraft, so they only moved the island’s most important cargo, people. And they were used for that, at least half, because they were so strange, providing the same sense of passage, of break, that airplanes did, but at less cost.

Turning away from the sea, Franco let his attention rest back on the three females. Words passed between the two older ones, then the child was given a last hug by her mother before the mother began to trudge toward the nearest hovercraft. Franco thought he saw tears falling to the asphalt, marking the young woman’s passage.

For what I am about to do to you, young lady, may God forgive me.

* * *

Franco followed the last of the girls up the loading ramp, then found himself a spot where he could listen and not generally be observed. He was enough bigger than the girls, though no giant, that they instinctively cleared a way for him, except for the half dozen who tried to get closer.

And you’re operating off of instinct, too, aren’t you, chicas?

Franco was, in the vernacular, a handsome son of a bitch, knew it, and was mildly embarrassed by it.

A horn sounded three times in warning, then the foot ramp whined its way up to the vertical. The engines of the hovercraft began to whine and strain. By fractions of inches, the big machine lifted, then began to turn back towards the ramp and the water of the bay past it. On that water shone one of Terra Nova’s three moons, named for Eris, goddess of strife.

* * *

Franco was gay, totally, completely, utterly gay. There was no doubt in his mind of this, nor in the minds of anyone who knew him. But…

But I’ve always approved of the female aesthetic. Let’s face it, when we are talking “beauty” we are talking feminine. Beautiful mountains that remind one of a woman’s breasts. Beautiful valleys that bring forth life, as women do. Hell, there was a time I thought or wanted to be one, or wished I had been born one. I was even married once, and I wish I could explain to my ex-wife that it was NOT her fault. God knows, I’ve tried.

Three girls, none of them apparently aware of his presence, formed one of those immediate groupings found rarely outside of the military and almost never as strongly as within the military. One was tiny; one the girl, Fuentes, he’d seen give up her daughter to the old woman from Tercio Socrates; and one—he knew from the file—the ex La Platan whore with the medal for bravery under fire.

Besides the one risen moon, Eris, there was really nothing to see but water and wave and the lights of the city, receding behind them. Most of the girls, Franco suspected, and all the ones he could see, began staring backwards at the city’s lights, and the loved ones being left behind. Several of them, two that the centurion could make out clearly, began to sniffle, though at least it didn’t turn into a crying jag.

He heard the tiny girl introduce herself as, “I’m Inez, Inez Trujillo.”

“Maria Fuentes,” said the other, the one Franco had seen turning over her daughter to the old woman.

A third introduced herself as, “Marta Bugatti. And, yes, I’m a bloody foreigner. Moreover, I’ve been in the legion for a while, with the
classis
.” The girls kept talking, but Franco turned his attention away from those three, concentrating instead on another who was quite possibly the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen, and this in a country noted for stunning women.

“Just listen to me,” the stunner declaimed, over the hovercraft’s whining. “Stop worrying. This is going to be
easy
. Don’t fall for the men’s lies. We are smarter than they are. We are tougher than they are. Why, if a man had to go through childbirth, he’d cry like a baby. But
we
can and we
do,
all the time.”

Like that one knows anything about having a baby,
Franco thought.

The tiny one near Franco muttered, “We’re
not
as strong as they are.”

Whether the stunner had overheard or not, Franco couldn’t say and rather doubted. Instead, he thought it likely she was just parroting the female supremacist mantra in cadence.
Hmmm…I wonder if she’s studied under Professor Torres.

In any case, in accordance with the approved mantra, the stunner continued, “What difference does it make if men have bigger muscles? They have tinier brains. After all, how much of a brain can you stuff into something about six inches long and usually far, far too thin.” That raised a laugh.

Franco thought it was endearingly funny, too, but then mentally amended,
You wouldn’t say that, girl, if you had ever seen Balthazar in the flesh…very in the flesh, as a matter of fact.

“And besides,” she continued, “strength is overrated. I’ve seen it on TV; you all have. These days technology is what wins wars. And if men weren’t so stupid, they would realize that, too. Just let us show them.”

Some of the other girls who had gathered started to drift away. Franco overheard the large breasted La Platan ex-whore say, loud enough to be heard over the stunner’s speech, “Amazing. Imagine how seldom women would be hit by their husbands or boyfriends if they only knew that muscles don’t matter.”

* * *

The La Platan former hooker was one of a few on the hovercraft who had spent time on the island before. Of course the noncoms and Franco had, but they—and he, especially—were keeping their distance. As they neared the
Isla Real,
its barely moonlit peak rising from the sea, artificial lights, too, began to appear. Some shone from several places near the summit, while one set seemed to stand several hundred meters above that.

“It’s a solar chimney,” the La Platan explained. She was easily recognizable by her more than half Tuscan accent. “They saved a bundle by running it up the side of the mountain, but it goes straight up even from there. All the power for the island, enough for two hundred thousand people or more, so I’ve been told, comes from that. They’ve got it marked so that helicopters and airplanes don’t run into it at night or in fog or rain.”

“That’s right,” observed another, the tiny one Franco thought, “you’ve been out there before, haven’t you?”

“A few times, yes.”

“You were navy?” the tiny girl asked. “Why did you switch?”

“Bad memories,” the La Platan answered, then wouldn’t say more about it.

The hovercraft began to veer, causing them all to lean to the side away from the turn. Except for the marking lights, there were no others to be seen. Then, suddenly, a battery of overhead lights, powerfully bright, came on to illuminate a large concrete pad. The hovercraft eased itself over a strip of sand, then came to a gradual stop before descending to land on the pad. The engines gave a last whine of protest at being put to rest.

With a whine of a completely different pitch, the foot ramp went down on one side before settling to the concrete with a jarring clang. Up the ramp trotted a man, close-cropped, uniformed, bemedaled and just flat mean looking. He had a sneer of complete contempt engraved across his face. He carried a small portable loudspeaker in one hand. He pushed aside any women who didn’t clear out of his way quickly enough. The stunner went to her rear end with an outraged shriek.

Oh, Balthazar,
thought Franco,
you always did have an amazing degree of charm and grace about you.

The man stepped up to where the stunner had been sitting, then lifted the loudspeaker to his lips. “All right you stupid twats, get your fucking high heels off.” The man waited for all of ten seconds for the women to complete that task. “When I give the order you will have thirty seconds to clear your worthless smelly hides off this hovercraft. When you get off, the men standing below will put you into formation. Then Tribune Silva, your maniple commander, will speak to you. You will keep your foolish mouths shut. Now
GO!

Pushing each other and scrambling, the women crowded the single ramp. Many tripped and fell, to be trodden on by the others. At the concrete base, a number of noncoms, none of them with a kindly face, slapped and pushed and prodded the women into a single block. To the right, other groups were receiving much the same treatment as they debarked from their hovercraft. Being so far from the center, the men herded the women to their right. At the other end, women were being herded to the left. The end result was a mob of prisoners, surrounded by guards, standing fearfully before a dais that rose about ten feet off of the concrete.

Franco, Castro, and Salazar walked up and joined the “guards.”

A very handsome man—he introduced himself to the women as “Tribune Silva, and your commanding officer”—walked briskly up the steps of the dais. Silva made a little welcoming speech—sort of a welcoming speech. Had they been asked, most of the women would likely have confessed that they had been made to feel more welcome. After all, few welcoming speeches in history had begun with, “You fucking whores,” nor ended with, “Centurions, take charge of your sluts.”

Silva then departed in a legion vehicle, leaving the women to the none-too-tender care of their senior centurions.

* * *

Franco could see and feel it, both, as the girls involuntarily leaned back from the charging malevolence of their common chief, Garcia.

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