It was during the third hour that Garth made his move. Ornth had fallen sullen and quiet, only making a suggestion now and then as Garth adjusted the power input controls.
Garth grabbed up a sharp length of brass-like metal. It was a broken shard from a frozen valve. He’d had to snap the valve with a prying bar in order to force it to turn. Now it was a dagger of metal with a needle-sharp point. He pressed the dagger to the side of his neck, just under the skull.
“Let us discuss a new order between us,” Garth said.
Absurd!
cackled Ornth.
I’ve been awaiting just such a juvenile attempt. Continue your work, or I will retake the reins and punish your body. Humans are equipped with two ocular organs—one is enough to function. I will burn your left eye from your head until the socket wisps steam.
“Not before I can thrust this point into my skull.”
Again, the Tulk shook with laughter. Garth gritted his teeth with annoyance. He hated this being that had dared violate his body and mind.
I’ve examined your profile. I know of the idle boasts you made to Fryx, exactly this kind of thing. Putting a gun to your own head and the like. I’ll not be cowed in this manner, rebellious creature! You have no intention of killing yourself and exposing me. You will be ridden, and you will come to accept your place in this universe!
“You’re right,” Garth said. “I don’t intend on committing suicide or exposing you. Instead, I plan to drive this metal spike under the bottom rim of my skull. A precise jab will prod your body, and mortally wound it. You are only a pound or so of soft flesh, after all.”
You would not dare! You would never take such a risk!
“Wrong again,” Garth said, curling his lip in pain as he jabbed the needle-like tip into his own neck. Blood ran down his back and mixed with his sweat in a slurry. “I have little to lose under the current circumstances. I do not have high hopes for my own survival, but I can at least finish my life alone in my thoughts.”
The Tulk raged and complained bitterly, but at last he relinquished the reins of Garth’s mind. He would not shut up, however. As Garth climbed up the long shaft toward the surface, he considered jabbing himself in the back of the head anyway, if only to silence the annoying creature.
#
Aldo and Nina brought their army at last to the southern end of Lavender City. They hid in a dispersed pattern under the spreading domes of a thousand suntrees. Overhead, the great ship could be seen hanging in the sky. From the ground, it resembled an oblong moon wreathed by tiny artificial lights. Nina wondered if it tracked them and if it possessed weaponry capable of annihilating their army.
“We must press the attack without delay,” Aldo said. “We must rush into their ranks and prevent them from bombarding us from above.”
“Order the mechs in first,” Nina urged, not for the first time. “They are our shock-troops. Once they are engaged I will take my knights over the canyon rim. We will flank them and break them.”
“Can your riding machines handle such a fall?”
“If it is no greater than a few hundred feet, these mounts will fall, but catch themselves. The repellers will keep us from dashing our brains out on the streets below.”
Aldo reluctantly ordered the mechs to charge. Nina watched with glittering eyes. This, she hoped, would be her moment of vengeance. It would have been much better if she could have slain Sixty-Two personally, but having engineered his death was enough for now. She had an entire world to save, after all.
She watched the battle unfold in detail on a computer scroll. Vid pickups followed the mechs, and many of them broadcast live streams of the action.
Things did not go as planned from the start. Almost as soon as they broke free of the suntrees, the
Gladius
flared with bright pinpoints.
“They are firing on us,” Aldo said.
“They are firing on the mechs,” Nina corrected.
Aldo gave her a sidelong glance that was less than trusting. Did he suspect her plans? No matter, she thought. The die was cast. The mechs were already sprinting across open swards, their feet sparking on the Queen’s Highway as they ran. There was no point in recalling them now.
The snap and whine of descending missiles turned into blossoming explosions. Two initial impacts sent up mushroom clouds. Mech limbs twirled over the landscape. Blooming clouds of dust obscured the battlefield. There were a dozen more strikes all around the landscape, all hitting one clump of running individuals or another. Still, even under harsh bombardment, the mech charge continued undaunted.
Nina strained to see a flapping cloak—a lone figure different from the rest that wore a hat like a man. But there were only clanking, uniform individuals. Perrupters, altered laborers and a few rare construction mechs with massive bodies twenty feet high charged together. They all ran and ran. They died, but kept going. Nina felt a momentary pang of sympathy for them. She’d narrowed her hate to one individual, and no longer wished the rest harm. They were only slaves, as Sixty-Two had taken great pains to point out.
Her eyes roved over the mechs hungrily. Had Sixty-Two already been blown to fragments? She hoped not, she didn’t want to miss such a moment of triumph.
“So many losses,” said a voice beside them. “We can’t win the battle if it goes on like this.”
Nina craned her neck around in shock. It could not be! There stood Sixty-Two, unmistakable in his tattered cloak, scarf and hat.
“You!” she shouted, pointing out into the charging mass of mechs on the field. “Why aren’t you out there with your troops, leading them?”
Sixty-Two tilted his head to one side, a gesture not unlike that of a shrug. “You two are commanders, as am I. Why didn’t
you
lead the charge you ordered?”
Nina turned away in a fury.
“They’ve reached the alien lines,” Aldo said. “It is time, Baroness.”
Thousands of knights surged out of the suntrees. Nina realized, to her rage and horror, that it was Sixty-Two who was now going to watch her make a suicidal attack from a position of safety and comfort. Seething, Nina Droad screamed for her troops to charge. She might have refused Aldo’s order, but for her own code of honor. She’d sworn to follow a reasonable command from him, and this attack had been her own plan. To disobey now would be to dishonor herself and Droad House. Nor was it possible to sit out the action as Sixty-Two had done. On Ignis Glace, able-bodied nobles led their troops personally.
Ahead of her, she saw the ragged line of knights reach the canyon rim and fly out into space. They plummeted, and those that lost their nerve or who were less than masters of their mounts inverted and plunged to their deaths.
Nina soon came to the rim herself and felt her guts squeeze up tightly within her. She went over the edge and began a wild fall to the dark streets below. Wind rushed up, buffeting her and threatening to knock her from her saddle. Her mount bucked and twisted under her rump, and she fought the controls with every ounce of skill she had. Bright flashes showed enemy fire coming up at her, twice scoring the steel flanks of her mount.
She noticed her mount’s vid pickup was glowing red. Someone was using her cameras to watch the battle remotely. Perhaps it was Sixty-Two himself.
Life was anything but fair.
#
The watchtower of Lavender City, which had been converted to a hotel and back again to a fortification, was among the last places in the city to succumb to the alien assault. The Duchess Embrak had prepared for this moment, and possessed a slim laser pistol that was custom-shaped to fit her small pale fist. She drew it from the dressing table drawer and checked the energy pack, making sure it was fully charged. Soon, the aliens were hammering on the door. They struck the metal with such alarming strength and rapidity that it shook the walls. The Duchess trembled in shock. How many were out there? Was this the end?
She drew herself up and placed the tip of her weapon under her chin. Four pounds of pressure on the trigger, that was all that was required. She began to squeeze—relented—then began squeezing again. Her eyes shut tight and she bared her fine teeth.
The door buckled. An upper corner of the metal surface curled inward, as if it were folding paper. Her last two bodyguards glanced at her. She nodded to them in salute. One’s face streamed with tears, the other man’s face was locked in an animal snarl. She reflected how differently each person faced a horrific finish to their own lives. She was glad the bodyguards were here. If they had not been present, she doubted she could have maintained a calm exterior. Since there were witnesses, she did not want them to see her collapse over the velvet furniture and bawl like a jilted schoolgirl.
The door came down. Still, the Duchess didn’t fire her weapon and end her own existence. Partly, she was curious about what these aliens looked like in the flesh. There had only been flickering hints from the battlefield pickups. Since it was her final moment, she had decided to indulge that curiosity.
Gray creatures, vaguely man-like, rushed into the room. They moved with unnatural speed, like a vid that was played at high speeds. The two bodyguards fired and the first alien that entered the room went down, flailing. It bounded back up, but was blasted down again. Such vitality. The Duchess was impressed and fascinated.
Two more followed it. The bodyguards were expert marksmen and veterans of many conflicts—reasons for their employment. But they did not concentrate their fire this time, and the killbeasts reached them before they could be slain. One man was decapitated—the one that had been crying. The second grappled with the killbeast for a moment. But it was an uneven contest. The man had a barrel chest and a savage snarl, but he could not face the power of alien musculature. He was bent back double and gargling within seconds. His spine snapped audibly. The Duchess winced. Helpless, he lay on the floor, panting and raving, still alive.
The Duchess took her gun from her throat and fired at the killbeast that had broken her last bodyguard’s back. She held the button down, and the sleek weapon lanced a hole through its tough exterior. The carapace smoked and grey steaming liquids gushed out. The beam came through the far side and the thing staggered. Aiming carefully, she burned three more holes into its carapace and it sagged down.
It was the next killbeast that changed matters. It bound close and swept the weapon away—taking her hand off at the wrist. The gun clunked on the floor, her small bejeweled fingers still gripping it. The Duchess stared at her lost hand in shock.
She passed out then, and when she awakened, she found herself on the back of a table-like creature with a heavy claw holding her down. Her wrist stump had been clamped with some kind of organic blob—it resembled a leech made of gray glue. It had obviously been applied to prevent her from bleeding to death. The thing on her stump pulsed and appeared to be alive. She suspected it was feeding upon her pumping blood, even as it staunched its flow. She could not remove the thing on her wrist, in fact, she could barely move at all.
The Duchess watched from this position on her back, being carried to an alien nest as ants might carry home squirming, living prey. She was at the north end of the valley, where things were relatively quiet. As they climbed the cobbled streets toward the valley exit and the assault ships that waited there to shuttle her to
Gladius
, she saw a battle erupt at the distant southern end of the valley, miles distant. It had to be Aldo. Why had he attacked the opposite end of the city?
There were no witnesses, so the Duchess allowed herself to cry.
Twenty-Five
Baroness Droad’s knights swept up toward the rear of the alien garrison at the southern entrance to Lavender City. The aliens unleashed withering fire in every direction, but they were surrounded and badly outnumbered.
The raging army of mechs reached the lines first. Many had been damaged by fragmentation bombardment from the ship above. Some were dragging themselves or the ruined bodies others. The bombardment stopped the moment they reached the canyon entrance, and the mechs fell upon the alien lines in a frenzy.
The aliens sent out a wave of culus and shrade teams to soften up the charge, while peppering them with laser fire from killbeasts in the rear. The tactics were very effective against humans, but much less so against mechs. The mechs grabbed up shrades, which twisted and lashed like grass snakes in their grippers. The shrades were on average seven feet in length and tremendously strong. They were no match however, for steel and servos. They were torn into lashing fragments and tossed aside. Expert fire and sweeping power-blades cut the culus numbers out of the air as well before they could return to the safety of their line.
The killbeasts, working laser rifles with precision, did better. They soon realized a single hit might rock a mech back on its servos, but did not finish them. In fact, a dozen random hits on the chassis of a perrupter did little to slow it down. The Imperial troops quickly adjusted their fire downward and focused on the ball joints holding together the leg struts. Three or four hits there reduced a charging mech to one that only crawled over the ground, dragging itself with its grippers.
This adjustment to their aim came too late. The fast moving wave of mechs charged into them before more than a dozen were maimed. The mechs came into direct conflict with little fanfare or finesse. The laborers reached out, grabbed up killbeasts with one gripper and dismembered them with the other. The perrupters were even more effective, severing limbs with their flashing power-blades and firing lasers point-blank into the thorax of any exposed killbeast.
The vitality of the killbeasts was legendary, but in this situation that attribute just meant they took longer to kill. They slashed with their horn-bladed feet, kicking at the orbs and grippers. Steel being harder than flesh, bone or horn, they won very few of these fights once the mechs were in close. The mechs swept away the initial line and advanced into the streets. Every mech chassis was burned, scarred and dented, but they had not been stopped.