Authors: Paul Collins
These were not ordinary legs, but legs that had grown under the gravity of Normansk.
The driver never had a chance.
His upper body smashed through the windscreen. The car swerved dangerously. The guard next to the driver, who had started to respond to the mayhem in the back seat, turned his attention to steering the car.
Anneke slid her cuffed hands down the length of her legs and then pulled them down and forward, regaining their use.
She then leant over the front seat, looped her energised cuffs over the soldier’s neck, and yanked hard. Within moments, his throat shut down and he lost consciousness. Anneke grabbed the wheel and wrenched it as a side street came up.
She couldn’t reach the retro-brakes, which was a pity, as the street ended in a T-junction.
As the car bore down on a row of shops, Anneke found the thruster ignition and switched off the propulsion drive. The car decelerated. She beeped the hazard horn frantically. Pedestrians leapt for their lives and a brick shop fayade loomed large. She pressed herself down behind the front seat.
BAM!
The car crunched, glass splintered, then there was silence.
Groggy but unhurt, Anneke pressed the driver’s shackle unit and neutralised her handcuffs. Sliding over the unconscious occupants she left via the passenger window. She landed, rolled to her feet, and ran into the shop, rather than back out through the gaping hole she had created in its ornate edifice.
The shop workers were too startled to stop her. One man gave her a covert thumbs up.
She dashed through a door marked ‘Staff Only’, found a corridor that led to the back, and moments later was in an alleyway. She turned north. When she’d put several blocks between herself and the crash site, she slowed to a walk.
Twenty minutes later, Pagin found her.
For the next two days, as the
MaJoris Corporata
fleet hung in orbit and parleyed with the Kantorian gov ernment, Anneke hunted for the second set of lost coordinates.
She knew where they were and what they were.Yet she still had not managed to locate them. She was filled with admiration for those long-dead minds that had devised the hiding place.
It was simple and brilliant.
The coordinates had been inscribed into a junk DNA sequence in the airborne plankton that swarmed the skies of Kanto Kantoris and nowhere else in the galaxy.
Because the plankton was so vulnerable
ton-space
radiation, it could never be taken offworld. Whether in a test tube in colloidal suspension, or attached to someone’s clothing, lungs or hair, it could never survive the transition through a jump-gate or travel on board a starship. Both these technologies produced strong
n-space
fields and there was no known shielding for this radiation, though it harmed few biological organisms.
The plankton could never be taken to another world. It was here and here to stay. And the same for the code buried in its base pairs.
All Anneke had to do was find it.
No doubt the masterminds behind the riddle were tickled at the reference to needles, since this was indeed the hunt for the needle in the haystack.
‘Not going well?’ asked Hugar, who had come in behind her as she studied a sequencer readout.
Anneke slumped in her chair, rubbing her eyes.
‘Not going at all. You know how much useless DNA there is in a tiny plankton?’
‘A lot?’
‘Billions.’
‘Is there no way to narrow the search parameters?’
‘I don’t know what I’m searching for. They could have encoded this a dozen different ways.’
‘But why make it difficult?’
‘It’s been difficult all the way.’
‘Not on Arcadia,’ said Hugar. ‘You said the final location clue took the searcher straight to the statue. There was no subterfuge. It seems to me that they used the oldest trick in the book. They hid it -’
‘- in plain sight. You’re right. You think they did that again?’
Hugar shrugged. ‘Why not?’
Anneke started to reply, but then stopped. She’d suddenly seen the solution. It was so simple she thought it must be wrong. Completely forgetting Hugar was there, she went to work, analysing the arrangement of the base pair codes using the letters of the Old Empire script.
An hour later she had the coordinates.
She spun round, laughing to find Hugar still there, sitting on a bench, watching. ‘You were right!’ she said.
‘Hunches often are.’
‘All I had to do was look at the sequence of letters used to represent the four basic amino acids and get the computer to search for artificial patterns - much easier than looking for actual messages.’
‘So you have them. Now what?’
‘We send them via
n-space
transmitter to josh. He’ll get to work cracking the coded clues to the third and final set. But there’s something we should do first.’
‘What’s that?’
‘Eat.’
Hugar swung off the bench. ‘Excellent idea. I’m starving.’
One of Hugar’s aides rushed in half way through the meal. He beckoned Hugar and Anneke to follow him to the basement. There, a large viewscreen showed a harried newsreader.
‘News just in confirms eyewitness accounts over the past half hour. Shortly before noon, an M-Class dreadnought - an Old Empire Demon long thought destroyed or lost - arrived in orbit above Kanto. High-ranking sources believe the Demon has joined the occupying fleet, though so far no word has come from Commander Nathaniel Brown ...’
The screen cut to close-up satellite-feed of the dreadnought, the same vessel Anneke had boarded in the Scorpius system weeks before.
‘My God, look at the size of that thing,’ said Hugar, as a smaller space tug, docked to the dreadnought, slid into frame. The tug was dwarfed, like a barnacle on a whale.
Anneke stared at the screen, white-faced.
‘We must hurry,’ she said. ‘Brown intends all-out war. The negotiations he’s holding with your government are a facade. He plans to make an example of Kanto.’
‘Which is why the dreadnought is here.’
Anneke’s brow furrowed. ‘It’s a symbol. A symbol of the Old Empire, of unlimited, ruthless power.’
‘The ruling party will not listen to us,’ Hugar said. ‘They would shoot first and hold discussions afterwards.’
Anneke smiled, but her anxiety grew. The dreadnought was a new and unexpected player in a complicated game. Would Brown embroil an entire world in war to gain his own ends?
Based on his track record to date, it would seem so.
Around midnight, the Kantorian Space Fleet launched a pre-emptive strike on Brown’s armada. Some of Anneke’s worries abated while others grew.
It was a bold, brilliant move, utilising two simultaneous attacks, one from the planet’s surface, and the other from a secret base on one of Kanto’s moons.
‘There are some advantages to dictatorship after all,’ mused Anneke, as she watched the battle on screen. Unfortunately, the element of surprise quickly vanished. Brown knew. That was obvious. He’d been expecting an attack. Worse, he’d known about the secret base.
‘Someone talked,’ said Hugar, shrugging.
‘Someone always talks.’
Suddenly, the screen blinked to a uniform blue. Then the face of Nathaniel Brown appeared, smiling.
‘Anneke Longshadow. I presume you are watching, wherever you’re hiding. By now you will be aware of the M-Class dreadnought orbiting Kanto. Historically, the M-Class vessels - the Demons - were designed to destroy planets by setting off a critical chain reaction in
then-space
lattice that allows the planet to exist as a quantum entity. This weapon was so fearsome that it maintained the Old Empire’s grip on the galaxy for more than a thousand years.’ He paused. Shivers ran down Anneke’s spine. ‘At this moment, the planet-destroying weapon on board this ship is pointed at Kanto. An empty boast? Well, how about a demonstration? Let’s say noon tomorrow. If
I don’t have the second set of lost coordinates in my hands by then, I will destroy Kanto. All of it.’
BLACK paced back and forth. He’d heard nothing from Anneke Longshadow. None of his ground forces or the co-opted Kantorian police had found a trace of her. He hadn’t expected them to. RIM trained its agents better than that.
He peered through the forward screen at Kanto Kantoris. From here, on the bridge of the dreadnought in high orbit, the planet was a whirl of reds and browns and olive greens, overlaid with ragged white slashes where stratospheric clouds laddered the land beneath.
I wonder what it will look like when I blow it up,
Black wondered.
A world coming apart.
Black became aware of a presence and turned to find the Envoy watching him, his alien face as inscrutable as the day they had first met.
Black covered his unease at the alien’s presence with brusqueness. ‘What is it now? Another glitch?’ The Envoy never reacted. Stepping closer, he merely said, ‘The weapon is online.’
‘It’ll work? You’re sure about this?’
‘I am sure.’
‘Good. Now all we need is to hear from
Longshadow. And sooner rather than later.’
‘She is here.’
Black blinked. ‘Here? What do you mean, “here”?’
‘She came through the portable jump-gate five minutes ago, heavily shielded, and bearing the white hand.’
Black stared. The ‘white hand’ was an ancient request for truce and parley, the requesting party literally painting their right hand white. Even Black would not break such a tradition with treachery, so ancient and girded by superstition was the custom.
‘What are you waiting for? Show her in.’
Ten minutes later Black sat facing Anneke Longshadow, his nemesis. Her right hand was indeed white and, as the custom required, she kept it in sight at all times. Sitting there, straight, proud and undaunted, he tried to read her. Tired as she was, the life of a fugitive did not lend itself to peaceful rest, nor trust in those who watched over you.
‘Well, here we are,’ he said. ‘Face to face once again.’
‘And still not a morgue in sight.’
‘Speaking of which, if I do not get the coordinates within the next two hours, then not only will a morgue be in demand, but a large one will be needed.’
‘Even you wouldn’t destroy an entire planet.’ Black frowned. ‘Really? In what way have I changed your low opinion of me?’
Anneke tapped her hardened fingernails against the onyx-plate desk. ‘You forget that I have visited this derelict. It doesn’t have the capacity to destroy worlds.’
‘Past tense, I’m afraid. You forget that I have the
Envoy. Interesting species,’ said Black, sitting back, enjoying himself ‘Caretakers, they call themselves. Stewards. Look after all sorts of things. Lost artefacts, abandoned lore, ancient knowledge - including arcane power systems long forgotten. Of course, such knowledge isn’t of much use unless you have the hardware to interface it with, but that’s where the dreadnought comes in, isn’t it?’
The Envoy leant forward and handed Anneke an e-pad. ‘The specifications of the interfacing are there. I assure you the weapon
is
operational.’
Black watched Anneke flick through the e-pad’s pages. She faltered and grew pale. Finally, she looked up, bleak but not beaten.
‘I’ll consider your request.’ She stood up.
‘Consider it quickly,’ said Black, out of patience. The Envoy led her back to the jump-gate then quickly returned.
‘We need a demonstration,’ Black said. ‘Let’s destroy Pelas.’
An hour later, a smart-fusion bomb peeled off from Black’s flagship and dropped into a lower orbit from where it circled the planet, before dive-bombing
Kanto’s second largest city, Pelas.
Black listened to the radio frequency used for official planet-wide broadcasts. He heard a last minute squawk as top officials learnt too late what was coming their way.
Moments later, Pelas - a city of two million - turned into a glowing mushroom-cloud and the radio-speaker filled with harsh static.
But within minutes, Black’s flagship - which floated two klicks from the dreadnought and in line of sight - flashed into momentary incandescence, then disappeared into the backdrop. This was followed by the fiery destruction of six more ships in quick succession and serious hits on twenty more of his fleet.
He couldn’t believe it. They were under attack. Black scurried into his weapons control seat and strapped on a neural interface. The Envoy hurried in with a security detail. It was Black’s oversight. After the failed Kantorian attack and the destruction of the entire Kantorian space fleet, he had allowed security to lapse, believing the world below could no longer mount a credible threat.
He’d been right.
But he hadn’t reckoned on Anneke Longshadow, and her advanced technology.
‘Where are they?’ Black snapped at the Envoy, who was manning the tactical console.
‘I’m scanm.ng. ‘
‘Scan faster!’
‘I have them.’ Black wondered if there was an element of admiration in the Envoy’s voice, but he knew better. ‘They’re using two-man fighters, barely larger than escape pods.’
Already knowing the answer, he asked, ‘Why didn’t we see them coming?’