Loralynn Kennakris 3: Asylum (13 page)

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Authors: Owen R. O'Neill,Jordan Leah Hunter

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine, #Space Opera

BOOK: Loralynn Kennakris 3: Asylum
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“Nothing since I returned, sir. She’s been placed in a medical coma.” That would be consistent with the diagnosis of a massive stroke.

“Prognosis unchanged then?”

“It’s guarded, sir. They say it’s still too soon to assess the full extent of the damage.”

“I see.” He rasped one beefy hand across the new stubble on his heavy jaw. “She can be transported?” Traveling hyperlight could be risky for delicate cases, especially neurological ones.

“Yes, sir. They were discussing arrangements to transfer her to Bastogne when I left.” Bastogne Military Hospital at Cassandra Station was one of the CEF’s premier medical facilities.

The admiral nodded. “Have them use my corvette—she’s standing by with my personal physician. Make it as soon as possible, Geoff. I’d like you to oversee this personally.”

“Of course, sir.” Reynolds had known his boss and the commander were close. He hadn’t known he regarded her, in essence, as family.

“There’s something else we oughta see to,” PrenTalien continued. He took a chip from a secure envelope and put it on the desktop. “You recall Nick Taliaferro.”

“Certainly, sir.”

“He and the commander are close friends.” Reynolds did not miss the slight emphasis on
close
. “He ought to be informed of what happened.”

“Do we know where he is, sir?” He’d heard the retired Nedaeman chief inspector had moved on.

“She mentioned he’s vacationing. Outremeria, is what I recall her saying.”

“Outremeria?” A decidedly eccentric choice for a vacation spot, in Reynolds’ opinion.

“Yep. Nick likes to go
fantee
, at times.”

The lieutenant recognized that as a cant term for ‘going native’—or so he thought. He resolved to look it up when he had a moment. “Do we even have a consulate on Outremeria, sir?”

“We don’t, no. But Nick’s from Whitworth”—as indeed the admiral himself was—“and the colony maintains a semi-permanent delegation there. For
trade
, you understand.”

Reynolds understood, in so far as at least a third of the economy of Whitworth was based on smuggling. Only Lodestone Station surpassed it as a notorious smuggler’s haven. “Quite so, sir.”

“If we get a message to them, Nick will be able to pick it up. The current colonial registry will have the contact info.”

“Very good, sir.”

“And then there’s this.” PrenTalien tapped the chip he’d placed on the desk. “It’s a private message she left for him in case anything happened. It ought to be personally delivered, if possible.”

“Yes . . . That might be—problematic? Sir.”

“Might be,” PrenTalien agreed, hoisting himself out of his chair with a grimace. “But get a hold of Sergeant Major Yu. Explain the situation and see what he suggests. If he wants, have the chip couriered to him directly.”

Fred Yu had spent most of his long and extraordinary career in the Strike Rangers, where he was still Brigade Sergeant Major, and if there was anyone who would know how to deliver a sensitive chip to the far side of charted space, it was him.

Reynolds picked up the chip cautiously. “I’ll get right on it, sir.”

The admiral smiled, a weary expression that aged his broad, heavy-jowled face. “Treat this all as classified, Geoff. I know I can rely on your discretion.”

“Absolutely, sir.”

LSS Trafalgar, deployed;
Gamma Hydras, Hydra Border Zone

“Tally ho! Two bandits! One o’clock level. I don’t think they’ve made us yet. Let’s see what’s on their mind.”

Huron’s voice was crisp over Kris’s helmet set, with that slight undertone of anticipation she’d come to recognize. She had the two Doms fixed on her T-Synth, heading away on a crossing vector, apparently unconcerned.
Apparently
—and only two of them. Doms typically flew in a three-fighter vic, and these guys looked a little too casual for her taste. It stank of a setup, but the way to find out was to go dance in that fire.

“Got ‘em, sir.” She eased in tighter to Huron’s wing spar, banking with him.

“Come left to oh-one-five, angels plus six, twenty decel easy, continue left turn.”

“Roger—coming to oh-one-five, angels plus six, twenty decel easy, continuing left turn.”

As one, their fighters rose six thousand meters, sliding around in an arc that would bring them into the Doms’ drive cones (their
baffles
, as they were called) where their passive sensors were blind.

“Kris, we’re gonna engage along Phase Line Hammer. I’ve got a bead on the northern bandit.”

“Roger that, sir. I got the southern guy.”

At that moment, the Doms broke, cutting back sharply and going to max boost.

“Okay, this is it—they’re comin’ down.”

Kris and Huron opened their formation. Some pilots liked to play it close, so the fields of fire of their antimissile chain guns would overlap, but that risked crowding each other’s engagement volumes. Opening up maximized their kill power on target, and the very best missile defense was obviously to kill the other guy first. The Doms felt similarly, for they did likewise and bore straight in.

Kris flipped to her neutron guns.
Ya wanna go head to head, motherfucker? That’s fine with me
.

They opened fire at almost the same instant, his shots splashing in bright peacock colors all over her forward shield. She watched the indicator dip into the yellow and was about to jink when he flashed past, coming between her fighter and Huron’s. It was a gutsy move, and she pulled back on the stick to clear her baffles. Huron had winged his target and was closing in for the kill. She checked her T-Synth to get a line on her adversary—she doubted he was hurt yet.

Christ!
Where the fuck did he go?

A lock warning chimed as Huron’s voice came over the command link. “Kris, watch your six!”

Shit!
How’d he done that so fast? He was too close to spin loop and engage, so she broke right into a J-slide. He stuck with her as if he’d read her mind, pickling two missiles as he closed. She dumped a chaff bundle. One missile bit on it and her chain guns opened up on the other. It detonated off her port side, close enough to singe a wing spar through the shield.

“Goddammit, Huron! Get this asshole off me!”

“I have him, Kris. Hard roll left! Help me engage.”

She nodded the nose of her fighter to the right then slammed into a left roll. The Dom didn’t bite on the yaw and anticipated her maneuver smoothly. A burst of plasma fire lit up her weakened aft shield.

Jeezus Fucked! This bandit’s all over me!

“Huron!”

He swooped in on the Dom’s tail, plasma cannon and neutron guns firing together. The Dom reacted a split-second too late. His shields flared and died—he spun wildly. There was a blinding flash, tinted green by her shields, and a spreading cloud of debris.

Fuck! That was close
.

Huron coasted up on her starboard side. “How you doin’ there, Ensign?”

“I got it, sir”—fighting to keep the tremors out of her voice.

“Good. Because we got triplets coming in at three o’clock low.”

“I see ‘em.”

“They’re splitting wide. Let the trailer go.”

“I can take him, sir.”

“Stick with it, Ensign.”

“He’s coming around, goddammit!”

“I said stick with it. Don’t break until I say.”

Okay, fine. Let him burn your ass

She slid in alongside Huron, targeting the off-side bandit. Her fire control cycled and hunted, fighting his ECM for a solution.

C’mon—lock up, dammit!

The two Doms started crossing their drive wakes, further cluttering her sensors. She pushed forward. “Missiles won’t lock. I’m switching to guns.”

“Kris—”

Her target cut back to counter, but she veered, suddenly dropping below him. He tried to recover but couldn’t get his nose around in time. Twin streams from her neutron guns took him solidly in the belly. His shield failed, the thinner armor there boiled and he exploded.

Yes!
That was more like it!

Huron was in a knife fight with the other two Doms far off to her left and above, one of them now bleeding air. She throttled back and was turning to engage when a sixth fighter appeared on her T-Synth, high and behind, and stooped. Caught decelerating at the bottom of her loop, she could have braked into a Split-S—that was the prudent thing to do. It wouldn’t allow her to engage the Dom, but it would buy crucial time and set up Huron for a clear shot, once he’d shaken his last adversary. Even if Huron couldn’t engage, she’d still be in a good position to extend an escape.

But Kris wasn’t feeling prudent. If she elected to escape, Huron would be obliged to break off to follow her, and that meant letting them
both
go.

No fuckin’ way

She held her vector and went to maximum power. The bandit had a velocity advantage, and if he pushed hard enough he could still close. The maneuver she intended had a tight envelope; the game was to pull him in by convincing him she was outside it, because there was the book envelope and there was
her
envelope. Her acceleration continued to climb and he was burning in, red-lining his drives—just what she wanted.

“Kris!” Huron called suddenly. “You can’t pull a cobra boosting like that!”

Her fist tightened on the stick.
Watch me, asshole!

The Dom was still coming hard—in another second, he’d be in range. The instant he locked—

The lock alarm shrieked. She jammed the brakes, dropping power as she pulled up the nose. The trick was to hit E-boost and pitch down just as her bird tipped past vertical, flying up and snapping back to the horizontal as the Dom shot by. The tight S-shaped trajectory her bird would describe, ending with a sharp lunge forward, gave the lethal maneuver its name.

Sensing the moment, she hit pitch thrusters to pop the nose down, but her timing was off by a hair and there had been a shade too much yaw when she braked. A sudden vicious cross-coupling threw her into rapid tumble. Struggling to save it, she never had time to see the Dom loop back easily and fire two missiles, both of which hit her weakened shield mere seconds later.

“Gotcha!” N’Komo caroled over the exercise circuit, his voice reaching that annoying high-pitched register he resorted to when happy. “You’re dead, kiddo.”

Swearing in a steady monotonous undertone, Kris cracked the simulator canopy and levered herself out. Dropping to the deck, she saw Huron emerge from the adjacent unit. He stood there, appraising her in that dissecting way of his, and rubbing his jaw.

“That could’ve gone . . . better.”

Her left hand rhythmically clenching, Kris resisted the urge to kick something—anything. This failure meant another three weeks on the walking wounded list, standing watch along with Tole, who’d also failed to requalify, and missing out on everything. How could she possibly take it? The biggest battle since Anson’s Deep
right there
on the horizon, and she’d be left out of it? They
couldn’t
let that happen. They just couldn’t—

“You’re trying too hard, Kris,” Huron intruded on her thoughts. “You know better than to push it like that when you’re in a bad position.” He stepped over and showed her the biometric readouts: stamina, vision, and reaction time were all highlighted. “It’s not there, Kris. You’re not ready yet. Sorry.”

“I feel fine, sir. Really.” She brought a hand to her forehead, unable to face the numbers any longer. “I just got a little tight out there today. I’ll get the edge back. I will.”

“I know.” His voice was soft—almost intimate. “But not today. Not tomorrow or this week. You’ve still got some healing to do.”

Biting her lip savagely, Kris looked down to hide the wetness starting to film her eyes.

“Yessir.”

Outbound Station;
Gamma Hydras, Hydra Border Zone

At precisely 0732, between grabbing a second helping of eggs over-easy, pouring a third cup of coffee and trying to decide between another plate of bacon or a lamb chop, Minerva Lewis’s xel lit up. She pushed it aside without looking at it—the alert tone had signified
general/administrative
—and continued her contemplation of the lamb chop. It was cultured, of course (you couldn’t get anything really fresh out here, except vegetables from Crystal City’s few hydroponic farms, and those cost like hell), but overall, she’d been surprised and pleased at how well the officer’s mess on Outbound did.

Frowning now, though, she concluded that lamb which had never gamboled or even had a chance to
baa
was not all that interesting this AM. Uncharacteristically, she abjured more bacon too and was reaching instead for the hash browns when her xel chided her for neglect. She glared at the device, still demurely furled and emitting a soft amber glow.

As it was, her mood was far from good (if it could have been pegged by an old-fashioned barometer, the mercury would have settled somewhere between
Storm Warning
and
Hurricane Watch
). Three of the past four days had been taken up with exercises; they were to hold the final postmortems that PM. In a more charitable mood, she would’ve readily acknowledged that Major Bradshaw, the executive officer, was decently competent, Lieutenant Colonel Kerr was making some progress getting his head dislodged from his ass, and the kids were shaping up okay.

But this progress was a far cry from anything on the smiling side of comfortable, because she knew what lay ahead of them. She’d heard about the ‘phantom’ monitor, both officially and privately, had spent no small share of the wee hours discussing it with Kell, and there was just no fuckin’ way in this here God’s Great Green Galaxy
here
you could stand up and say with a straight face they were ready.

Kerr, of course, had done just that. He had to, obviously. There was no possible way around it—no other acceptable answer.
Do or die, no questions why—up an’ at ‘em, never quit ‘em—send ‘em back in the same old style, fuck the bastards single file—three cheers and a slug in the rear—swing low, sweet chariot, she’s never gonna follow you home
. . .

It wasn’t that she minded her molecules mingling out there with star stuff—that’s what everyone was and would be again—
we’re all just once and future fusion fuel
—but that she hated waste and bad management. She’d had her run—done her bit. Her experiences, knowledge, joy and pain were part of the Cosmos now, propagating inexorably toward some far place the physicists still couldn’t make up their mind about, in company with all the other myriad thoughts and feelings: the incalculable love-hate-agony-fear-lust-raptures that are the marrow of all the Joyful Sorrows of the World and the precise opposite of
nothingness
, but just as unfathomable.

Not a bad thing that
. . .

But those kids—feeling their way yet, their impressions still soft, unset, apt to smudge—being cheated of leaving an indelible fingerprint on the
Infinite
, all because of carelessness—some asshole who couldn’t care less—couldn’t care about a 6 and 9 transposed—169 serial numbers on 169 bronze boxes (
did they get
those
right?
)—616 (
sweet symmetry that
) of her people paying the blood gelt for what those REMFs couldn’t shovel under fast enough, bury deep enough—
and here we go again
—boots and saddles, lock and load, answer the Call . . .

Take the weight, pay the freight—and the rest is silence
.

Her xel, out of patience, warbled aggressively.

Uttering two bad words, she picked it up. There wasn’t anybody she wanted to hear from this AM except maybe Kell (unlikely, since she’d be seeing her later in the day), or Quinn—which shouldn’t have been possible, as she’d never be that reckless. And anyway, they had a date scheduled for tomorrow when her duty week ended. With any sort of luck at all (she couldn’t help feeling she was overdue in that department), Quinn would have received some sort of response by then.

Opening the display, she silenced the alert and read the message headers in frustrated puzzlement. It was from PLESIG; the subject said:
Request Follow-up
. The body was hardly more illuminating, repeating the subject while adding “re: previous communication” and suggesting a 0930 meeting or “at easiest convenience.” It could only be about those misdirected Anandale reports. Why they felt it necessary to waste her time with that now, in the midst of all this other shit, was one of those mysterious dysfunctions of the bureaucratic mind.

To hell with it. Might as well take the bullshit by the horns. With a mirthless upward bend of the lips, she tapped the
reply
icon and suggested 0800 as being her “earliest convenience.” That gave them five minutes to confirm, if she was going to make it. If they were expecting her to try to put it off, they would not be watching the clock. They’d have dropped the message in the cue, planning to check it in an hour or so. In that case, she’d be within her rights to blow them off for today, which effectively meant until the beginning of her next duty week, by which time who knew what might have come up?

Her xel beeped again: confirmation of her request for an 0800 meeting. Not even a full minute had elapsed. Oh well. That still gave her five minutes to finish her hash browns. Which was something.

*     *     *

Minerva Lewis presented herself at the PLESIG Annex at 0758 and was ushered in by the secretary on duty, who was (in marked contrast to the rather severe female lieutenant she’d met on her first visit) a good-looking young jig with a calm demeanor and a rare degree of poise for such a junior officer. It was pretty clear to Min he’d been handpicked for grooming, probably by Commander Wesselby herself. She had no opportunity to form any further impressions, for once they crossed the lobby into the office proper, he simply raised an arm to point down the corridor to her right.

“Conference Room Three. Fifth door on your left. He’s expecting you.”

They exchanged parting nods and he returned to his desk without further ado. Min went to find the room indicated. Neither the secretary nor the message said who
he
was (the message had a generic signature on it, which meant the secretary had sent it out as part of the office’s daily mail), but it could hardly be other than the deputy, or possibly a department head. So it was a surprise when she opened the door to Conference Room #3 and saw a broad-shouldered back belonging to a dark-haired man, her height or maybe an inch shorter, with a lieutenant commander’s tabs and an ineffably familiar air to him, instead of the stocky, sandy-haired and unfortunately dough-faced deputy.

Commander Huron turned around, dropped whatever he’d been reading on the table and extended his hand to her. “Hello, Captain. It’s been a while.”

“Years, Commander”—meeting the strong grip confidently and trying to remember just how many years.

With that characteristic smile that pleasantly concealed any real intentions, he invited her to a seat. As they settled in, he drew the folder he’d been reading closer and rotated it through 180 degrees.

“I appreciate you responding so promptly, Captain. I imagine you have other matters to fill up your day.” Like the smile, that meant precisely nothing and she gave it the shallow nod it deserved. “So we might as well move this right along. I didn’t ask you here to talk about those Anandale reports.”

It would have been patently absurd if he had. Huron was a line officer, and however close he was to Trin Wesselby (pretty close, by all she’d heard, and he seemed damned comfortable here), he could never act for her. But he’d obviously talked to her about them. And she didn’t much like the way he was fiddling with that report folder. What he said next she liked a good deal less.

“I hope you’ll forgive me this indiscretion”—
We’ll see about that
—“but given the circumstances surrounding those reports and Commander Wesselby’s incapacity”—the slight emphasis seemed to proclaim volumes—“I was obliged to do a little investigating.”

That raised Min’s hackles. As an officer, Huron was a mere lieutenant commander in the SRF, without any authority over her whatsoever. As a member of the Huron family, he could do damn near anything he pleased, and—on occasion—had. Whether she was talking to the officer or the heir was not yet clear. But this meeting was not trending in an
officerly
direction.

She replied with another of those carefully calibrated nods.

“The Tanith Rangers usually have a person or two stationed at all the main transit nodes that might impinge on their operations. I noticed there’s a Lieutenant Quinn working at the
Lark
.”

That caught her completely off-guard, and it took a great effort to keep the shock out of her face. She knew Huron had excellent sources—besides his relationship with Wesselby, she was aware of his history with CAT 5 and his long friendship with Sergeant Major Yu—but she wouldn’t have guessed his reach extended into the heart of the Tanith Rangers.

Unaware of her inner reaction, or more likely ignoring it (she was getting a whole new appreciation of how he’d come by his reputation), he finished, “I don’t suppose you happened to drop in there when you visited the City last week?”

There was little point in subterfuge now and Min’s eyes narrowed as she drew in a slow breath. She was under no compulsion to answer the question, of course. She could end this interview, interrogation—whatever it was—at any time, but sometimes it was better to take a bullet to keep moving forward. Trying to dodge it lost momentum, and often did nothing more than delay the inevitable anyway.

“I did.” The clipped response carried its own warning. Kell had told her this was dangerous ground and that certainly seemed to be proving out, but it didn’t mean she was entirely without options. “So what’s your next bullet?”

He smiled at the intentional pun. “That—as much as I admire General Corhaine—she can’t help this time.” He looked over at her. And he’d stopped fiddling with that report. “But maybe I can.”

“You know the General?”

“Not personally. We’ve worked with her a time or two.” Meaning his family’s business then. That explained a few things, but far from all. She waited out a brief silence. He ended it by pushing the folder across to her.

“Fred Yu says you’re one of the best officers he’s ever worked with. I’ve trusted my life to Fred’s judgment on a number of occasions. And I’m about to do it again.” He gave the folder a pointed look. She flipped the cover open. The first page was an executive summary of recent results obtained by a group she’d never heard of, codenamed
Eschaton
.

“Judgment Day,” Min commented, referring to the moniker. “Cute. Who thought that up?”

“Hard to say.” That smile was back, camouflaging his thoughts, but not the intensity of them. She read on. Most of the first page talked about the Halith IFF systems recovered from the cruiser Captain Lawrence captured, which had allowed the Yeager Raid to be conducted.

“So that’s how they did it,” she commented, when she finished with that part. “Commander Wesselby set all this up?”

“That’s right. She selected the people and personally runs the group. As you can see, Eschaton’s charter—as far as anyone knows—is tech exploit.” Which pretty clearly indicated there were things anyone
didn’t
know. He supplied what she took to be a hint. “In fact, it’s our best cryptanalysis group.”

The remaining entries did give that overall flavor. But there was nothing about Anandale.

She slid the report back to him with an offhand smirk. “So this is the part of the show where I scoot to the edge of my seat?”

“I’d take that as a compliment,” Huron returned easily, closing the cover. “But don’t put yourself out.” She rewarded him with a tight smile. He continued. “What you didn’t read in here is that the surviving Halith lieutenant on
Vistula
also missed an old tertiary message backup.”

Interesting
. “And what do we get out of that?”—feeling it wouldn’t hurt to play the game.

“The ability to crack the Supreme Staff’s Morganatic channels.”

“Oh.” For a moment Min couldn’t think of anything else to say.

“That’s how Trin—Commander Wesselby—learned that Halith has broken Admiralty B.”

This time Min didn’t bother with any vocalization at all.

Huron pressed on. “We learned this shortly after Anandale was proposed. CNO—I mean Westover, not his office—suggested a delay, so we could try to establish an alternate system, but he couldn’t support it without revealing why. So Anandale went ahead using Admiralty B.”

A pause filled with an aching, pregnant, white silence peopled by the whispering dead. Then: “Who knows about this?”

“Eschaton—obviously. PrenTalien. Westover. Me. Zahir and Narses were told three weeks ago. And now you.”

“That’s a very hard wrap.”

“I’m sure it’s evident to you that compromising Admiralty B had to be an inside job.”

Min nodded.

“And you’re aware of the history surrounding the Lacaille Raid.”

Min nodded again.

“Nothing can excuse the clusterfuck with the relief force, Captain. But it wasn’t all for nothing.”

“I see that.”

“Commander Wesselby would have informed you herself”—
eventually
, but their personal debate over exactly
when
was precisely that—“if she’d had the opportunity.”

Nodding absently, Min got to her feet. Against the scattershot radiance in her mind’s eye was superimposed the indelible memory, like an image in negative, of the instant the light went out in Kate’s eyes.

It wasn’t all for nothing
.

“Now I owe the commander an apology.” Her voice huskier than she would’ve liked.

“How’s that?”

Min gave her head a shake, trying to restore a modicum of her normal vision. “Just somethin’ she said. How’s she doin’, by the way?”

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