Battlecry: Sten: Omnibus One (Sten Omnibus) (25 page)

BOOK: Battlecry: Sten: Omnibus One (Sten Omnibus)
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‘Our broodmate, almost. Yes he—’ and Frick and Frack launched themselves from the dome. Frack armed one of her tiny wingbombs and folded her wings.

Plummeting in a vertical dive, she and Frick made no attempt to release. They died instantly as their tiny bodies slammed into the patrol officer. Then the bombs went off. The officer became a fireball, and shrapnel sliced through the squad crouched beside him.

Sten saw Doc crawl from his hiding place near Jorgensen’s body and move toward the dead man’s willygun. The small panda awkwardly turned the willygun toward the barricades, then staggered up with the crushing – to him – weight. One hand pulled the trigger back and held it until the magazine went empty. More shock.
Doc
really isn’t …

Sten swept his sights over the barricade, and blew off the arm of a momentarily exposed patrolman. As the man reared up, screaming, Bet finished him.

Alex knelt beside the nuclear device under the floor-panels. Ah ken on’y hope, he thought, the amat’oors who built this lashup hae some respect f’r betters an gie some shieldin’. Ah c’d build a better A bomb then this be wi’ a crushin’ hangover an’ mah teeth, he thought.

The bomb was an idiot-simple device. A metal ball covered with what resembled modeling clay. Small, directional blasting charges studded the surface, hooked to a radio pickup and what Alex assumed was a timer.

He started to yank the wires off, then squinted. There were extra wires he didn’t see any purpose for. Booby traps, he decided.

Thin, he thought, we’ll gae the hard way. And began gently lifting each blasting charge out of its slot. Ah wonder how many ae these Ah’ll yank out afore this wee bomb blows? He wiped sweat away.

The driver pushed the sled wide open, and he and Thoresen ducked behind its shield. The sled flashed down the corridor, and the Mig resistance fighters ducked. They spun, and the few with riot weapons opened up.

Far too late as the sled banked around the corridor and out of sight.

Thoresen looked up. Ahead of him was the entrance to The Eye. He sighed in relief – it was still held by a detachment of Sociopatrolmen.

‘Ah hae it! Ah hae it!’

Sten saw, out of the corner of his eye, Alex’s rotund form bounce out of the below-floor space and bound across the open area. He dived and skidded across the last five meters into shelter. ‘Yon wee beastie’s safe’n mah gran,’ he said.

‘Leaving us only one problem.’

‘Aye,’ Alex said. ‘Figurin’ how we haul butt afore we’re hoist wi’ our own petard.’

At least fifteen patrolmen were stubbornly holding behind the barricades. ‘I don’t think,’ Ida said, ‘they’d be much interested in a mutual truce.’

‘Correct,’ Doc added gloomily. ‘Prediction: since they’ve been cut up so badly, they’ll assume we’re bluffing.’ He ran another few rounds through the willygun that Sten had wedged into position for him. ‘Kilgour. You realize this is all your fault. Now I’ll never be able to have my own practice.’

‘Nae tha’s an advantage Ah no considered,’ Alex managed. ‘Tae many bloodybones aroun’ as ’tis.’

Bet shook her head in disbelief.

‘Ida,’ Sten said suddenly. ‘Come on. Alex. We’re going to try a superbluff. Flank ’em if they go for it.’

Ida rippled to her feet, and the two dodged out, toward the freighter’s lock. Puzzled, Alex, Bet, and Doc opened up with covering fire.

Sten wedged the flare to the freighter’s control room window, and shoved the portable com into his coveralls. ‘You think they’ll believe it?’

Ida lifted her hands helplessly. ‘Rom don’t believe in death songs. So we might as well go out trying.’

Sten checked his watch. Alex’s charges had only ten minutes to go. He and Ida hurried to the lock and began firing at the patrolmen. Alex, momentarily unobserved, sidled out of the Mantis Section’s improvised fort toward the patrolmen’s flank.

The patrolman waited. Sooner or later, one of them would show himself. Sooner or later … he jerked as what looked to be an explosion flared across the lab in the freighter’s control room. Wild shot, he guessed. Then the freighter’s external speakers blossomed out of their compartments and crackled to life. A siren warbled up and down its range and a metallic voice announced: ‘Two-minute blast warning, two-minute blast warning. All units clear blast area. Repeat, all units clear blast area …’

For the first time the patrolman realized the exhaust nozzles of the freighter were aimed almost directly at him. He didn’t know what to do.

‘Must’ve hit the computer,’ the man beside him muttered.

‘What happens if it fires?’ the patrolman managed.

‘We fry,’ his companion said.

Sten coughed, then touched the transmit button on the portable com. Ida had linked it directly into the freighter’s broadcast net. He tried to sound as much like a computer as possible.

‘This is a thirty-second warning, thirty-second warning. Override. Thirty seconds from out-of-sequence computer lobe. All units, thirty-second correct transmission. Time to blast now fifteen seconds …’

The near-panicked patrolmen didn’t see Alex break cover. Even if they had, assuming normal human reactions, they would not have had time to stop the high-gee trooper’s charge.

Alex dived as he came over the barricade. The first patrolman he hit died with a crushed skull. Alex let the body cushion him while he rolled, feet lashing out, smashing through the stomach walls of two men.

He was on his feet, one-handed swinging the body of the second man like a meaty club.

Sten and Ida came up, offhanded aiming, firing. Sten gaped as Alex tore the head off another patrolman, then disappeared.

The two troopers ran for the barricades. Screams. Then silence, the two patrolmen broke, running for the exit. Alex jumped to the top of the barricade, picked up a three-meter-long steel work bench and hurled it like a spear.

It crunched into the two men, smashing their spines. Doc and Bet darted across the room. ‘I would suggest,’ the panda managed as he passed them, ‘we avoid the usual imbecile human congratulations. We have four minutes.’

The four Mantis troopers and Bet sprinted down the corridor. Sten slammed the emergency panels as they went down the corridor. Hoping that would be enough.

The charges went just as Alex said they would. Sten, Bet, and Alex stared at the intestine-shaped lab through a port in the main passage. Ida held Doc. Light winked, winked, and again. They felt a low rumble through the plates under their feet. Then Bravo Project blew. The shaped charges blew out and down, ripping the floor and supply sections out of the lab like it was a fish being gutted.

‘That’s what The Row must’ve looked like,’ Sten thought suddenly.

The rumble crescendoed, and emergency alarms clanged. Debris cascaded out the bottom of the lab into space. But the top section, the Tech’s housing, was still intact.

Ida and Doc looked at Alex. ‘Ah’m a wee bit disappointed,’ he said, not meaning a word of it. ‘I nae counted a’ that sympathetic second blast. It whidny be hon’rable to say Ah done that.’

And then Bet noticed Sten was gone.

Chapter Thirty-Seven

It was done. All traces of Bravo Project eliminated in the explosion. For the first time in hours, Thoresen felt safe.

He poured himself a celebratory drink. Odd, he thought. His dream lay in shambles, but he still felt elated. He’d beaten the Emperor after all. All he had to do was wait for Guard officers to come through his door, thank them for rescuing him from the Migs, and put himself in their hands.

What could the Emperor do? Put him on trial? For what? There was no evidence. Besides,Thoresen thought, the Emperor would be reluctant to admit publicly that an alternative to his AM2 monopoly might exist.

Thoresen would probably have to accept a lesser position in the Company’s leadership. He shrugged. It would take a few years, but he would be back up on top again. And then they’d see. They’d all see.

Suddenly, Thoresen realized he was quite mad. He laughed. What a strange thing to realize about yourself. It was like being another person on the outside, watching yourself, taking note of thoughts and actions. And examining them like a Tech observing a microbe. Something crawled at the back of his brain. Was Sten really dead? That explosion? It wasn’t quite what he expected. Different, somehow. Thoresen found himself wishing Sten were alive. His fingers curled, imagining them crushing into the soft Mig throat. Sten, he thought. Sten. Come to me.

There was a sound behind him. Thoresen smiled to himself and turned.

Sten was a few meters away and padding softly toward him. A knife glittering in his hand.

‘Thank you,’ Thoresen said, ‘for being so prompt.’

Sten hesitated. Puzzled.

‘You know me?’

‘Yes. Intimately. I killed your family.’

Sten was on him in a rush, knife hand blurring at his throat. Thoresen dodged, gasping slightly as the knife point touched a shoulder, leaving a trail of blood. He kicked sideways and felt a crawl of pleasure as he heard the dry snap of Sten’s wrist breaking. The knife went flying and disappeared in the grass.

Sten ignored the pain, twisted to avoid a blow, and struck out with his good hand. Fingers clawing Thoresen’s face. And Thoresen was backing away from him. Sten went into a crouch, anticipating a charge. Then he realized that the Baron wasn’t coming at him. Behind him, a few meters away, was the arms collection. Thoresen was going for a gun.

Sten sprinted for the wall, hands closing on an ancient blunderbuss as Thoresen reached his choice – Sten realized it was a pirated willygun – and opened fire. Sten dove to the ground, whipped the shotgun up. Fired. The charge ripped into the overhead dome lighting. Darkness. And he was rolling over and over again as the AM
2
bullets stabbed through the darkness, searching for him.

He crawled behind a tree. Chunks of earth and wood exploded around him. Then silence. Sten listened. He heard a slight rustling as Thoresen moved in the darkness. Sten thought he was coming toward him. Gathered himself for a leap.

A click. A long rasp. And Thoresen opened the cages.

The tigers came out of the cage running. Two huge mutated gray Bengals. Growling softly. Lashing their tails. Thoresen punched a control button. A tingling in their collars, and they turned, then moved swiftly away from him.

Sten moved through the brush. Where was Thoresen? Why didn’t he come? A rustling behind him. Soft padding. Sten whirled as the tiger charged. Bounding. Then a huge leap, straight at him.

He dropped backward, bringing his feet together and – straight up with all his strength. They connected, and the tiger went flying over him. Landing, convulsing. Tried to get up, then went down. Dead, its throat crushed by Sten’s kick.

Sten came to his feet, fighting back the pain in his useless wrist. Sickness crawled in his stomach. Then. Over there! A sound. Thoresen, he was sure.

The dome lights came on. Sten was frozen for a moment, blinded by the glare. Then he dived for cover as the willygun opened up. He was behind another tree. How many shots? He hadn’t heard
Thoresen reload. He had to be getting low on ammunition. Sten looked around wildly, searching for a weapon.

The tiger stood there, lashing its tail. Gathering itself for a leap. Then it screamed to freeze him in place.

Sten forced himself to laugh, a wild almost hysterical giggle.

‘I got the other one, Thoresen,’ he shouted.

The Baron opened up with the willygun. Catching the tiger just as it jumped for Sten. It turned end over end, and crashed to the ground, dead. Thoresen kept firing. And then there was a dry clacking sound as the gun was empty. Sten charged from the brush.

Thoresen saw him, searched desperately for another magazine. Nothing. He moved back quickly – grabbing for the first weapon he could find. The saber blade rasped as he pulled it off the wall and slashed.

Sten grunted in pain as the tip of the blade grated across ribs. He dodged the backhand stroke, grabbed for a weapon. Any weapon.

The rapier flashed up as Thoresen struck. A loud clang as the blades met. Sten twisted his wrist slightly, almost in reflex, and the saber slid off. He lunged forward, felt the tip hit the softness that was Thoresen, and then the blade was almost ripped away as Thoresen parried. Sten dropped back.

He flexed the thin foil. Trying to come up with the right hold. Then thought of a knife, loosened his grip. Thoresen took a step forward, smiling and whipping the saber blade back and forth.

Not a chance, Sten thought. The saber Thoresen held was too powerful and fully edged. Sten was fighting with just a slim piece of pointed steel. Flexible steel. Sten suddenly realized there might be an advantage. The flexibility. No matter how hard Thoresen struck, he could turn the blade away.

And Thoresen struck. The blades met. The rapier was like a snake as it twisted around the saber, using the force of the stroke to turn it away. And Sten lunged forward, felt his point find flesh, heard Thoresen moan as it slipped through.

Sten stepped back just as the saber ripped at him. Pause. Thoresen stood before him, panting and leaking blood from several wounds. But seemingly unfazed.

He charged forward, slashing hard. Sten tried to parry, but the blade foil slipped, and he felt the saber cut deep into his arm, then the limb twisted away, out of range.

Thoresen knew he had Sten now. The way the rapier point dropped, he was sure his last cut had made Sten’s fighting arm useless. Like the other.

He stepped toward him, slashing down. Missing as Sten parried the blade, but still leaving an opening. And Thoresen began the backhanded swing that would decapitate Sten.

Screamed in agony as the rapier point speared into his elbow. The saber fell and Thoresen grabbed desperately, his fingers closing on steel. He ripped the foil away while feeling the flesh of his fingers turn to raw meat.

The Baron struck out with his good hand, the palm a knife edge, aiming for Sten’s collarbone. He felt bone give and struck again. But Sten blocked the blow and fell back, one arm dangling. He was trying to keep his footing.

Thoresen threw another punch and Sten knew horrible agony as he caught the blow on his useless arm. He speared out hard, fingers like a blunt blade. Feeling Thoresen’s ribs snap like dry wood. He stepped back quickly, to avoid a counterblow, but tripped to one knee. And Thoresen was on him, hand cracking down for Sten’s neck.

Sten struck up with all his strength. Below the ribs. Bone giving again. Giving. Giving. Soft wetness.

Thoresen screamed in pain.

Sten ripped the heart from his chest.

For an awful frozen moment Thoresen stared at Sten. And then he was falling.

Sten looked numbly at the dripping heart in his fist. Then down at the Baron’s body. He turned, and threw the fibrillating organ far into the brush, where the tigers lay.

Unexpectedly, he heard a shout and peered up. A shadowy figure was rushing toward him. He tried to strike out at it.

Bet caught him in her arms. Lowered him unconscious to the ground.

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