Tale of the Thunderbolt (7 page)

BOOK: Tale of the Thunderbolt
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Valentine's particular responsibility was the Coastal Marines. The Coastal Patrols looked on the marines as only one rung above the Grogs on the evolutionary ladder, and a short rung at that: gun-toting, useless ballast for most of the trip. Valentine put the rivalry to good use, organizing physical contests between them. Races around the deck, arm-wrestling matches, and boxing contests occurred each night, giving the two sides a chance to scream their lungs out supporting their contestant and abusing the opponent. Not all the diversions were physical; singing and musical entertainment were often a spontaneous part of the after-dinner leisure hours. As Valentine stood next to the Oerlikon on the aft gun deck, listening to the music produced by an improvising group of players and singers, he almost forgot these men were technically his sworn enemies. Under different circumstances, he might have been ordered to sneak aboard the ship and plant a bomb that would blow musician, wrestler, and fishing instructor to bloody shreds. All the while, a long line of stormclouds on his mental horizon, came the worries about what he had to do and how to go about doing it.
Valentine felt for the sailors. The captain believed himself an expert disciplinarian, when in fact his rules verged on pointless sadism. He had an elaborate system of uncomfortable punishments for the last man out of his bunk on a watch, the last man on deck for inspection, the last man in line at mess call. Since physics required someone to be last, Valentine thought the practice cruel: spending a watch-on-watch at the top of the old communications tower without food or water for being shoved out of the way coming up a hatchway improved no one. Of course, the captain's distemper was exacerbated by the ship's radio breaking down after leaving port. Valentine pointed out that their orders demanded radio silence until the pirates were dealt with, so the loss of communications made no difference, but Saunders just grumbled out his familiar “want of a nail” liturgy again.
The executive officer was even worse. Wishing to emulate his captain, thereby showing himself fit for command, Worthington out-Heroded Herod in his punishments.
Valentine and Post kept their marines busy, and as far from the eyes of Saunders and Worthington as the ship would allow.
Valentine felt nervous, bottled up. If he'd been on land, he would have quartered logs and chopped kindling, but there was no firewood to cut on a gunboat at sea. After they grabbed a quick dinner with the marines, they returned to the cabin and undressed. Valentine picked up one of his lieutenant's bottles and sniffed the mouth. It smelled like rubbing alcohol stored in an old boot. “Will, why do you do that to yourself?”
The two officers kept to first names when out of uniform.
“I'm still trying to figure out why you don't.”
Valentine marked the tiny blue veins crisscrossing Post's nose and forehead. “Maybe I want to live a few more years. The way you're going, your liver will abandon ship or you'll get drummed out. Either way, you'll be finished.”
“Hear hear,” Post agreed, refilling his glass, his thick features under the salt-and-pepper hair taking on a red flush. “I figure you for the type to step into the shower, close the curtain, and blow your brains out with your service revolver. The system's rotten, and you know it same as I.”
Post either trusted Valentine or did not care about being turned in. Either way, from their first days sharing a cabin, they began to tentatively express to each other unorthodox opinions about their Kurian masters. But neither had yet expressed it so directly.
“Did you lose someone, Will?”
“I was married once, yeah. Close to six years ago now. That's why I tried so hard for officer — it helped us get better housing. But it all went wrong.” He took another gulp. “Not worth talking about. You're lucky, your wife gives you someone to live for. Not sure I even want to live for me anymore.”
Valentine nerved himself for the plunge. “She's not my wife, Will. The license is forged.”
Post looked up at him. “Yeah? What, you pretending for some reason? Might as well get married, that way you don't need false documents to get your allotments. If it goes wrong, just toss her, plenty other officers have done it, hasn't hurt their careers one bit.”
Valentine opened the door briefly to check the corridor. He shut the door to their cabin again and sat down on the bed opposite Post. “Will, everything about me is faked. Her, my commission and service record from up north, even the name ‘Rowan's not my own. My name is David Valentine.”
Post turned over in his bunk, lying on his side. He put the bottle on the floor between them and took another sip from his glass. “Okay, you've got a false name. I don't get it. What is it then, an escape attempt?” Post asked, also lowering his voice. “Damn elaborate one. You'd better pick the right island — go to the wrong one, and the residents will eat you alive. I mean that literally.”
“I need the
Thunderbolt,
and I'm going to take it,” Valentine said. He let the words sink in for a moment. Post's face rippled from blank astonishment to incredulity, then back again to astonishment as the idea took hold.
“The original plan was to try with a small group of men I would bring on board,” he continued. “That didn't work out, so I'm going to make do with what's already on the ship. The Chief is on our side, and so is Ahn-Kha, the Grog foreman.”
“Our side? Whose side is that?” Post finally asked, his liquor-lubricated train of thought finally leaving the platform.
“Southern Command. I work for one of the Freeholds, the one in the Ozarks and Ouachitas. And I'd like you to join us, if you'll risk it.”
Post reached for the bottle and took a drink, ignoring his glass. “The sun's gone to your head, Dave. What are you going to try to do, turn the crew? They didn't get this job by being unreliable. Plus they have families back home to think about.”
“The families will be taken care of,” Valentine countered. “It's in the works right now. In a few more days, they'll be on their way out of the KZ. One of our Cats is on the inside.”
“Cats?”
Valentine's hypersensitive ears searched the adjoining rooms and corridor. Someone moved through the passageway, and he paused before continuing in his low monotone. “It's a nickname, I guess. It's a long story, but the Kur and the Grogs aren't the only ones here from Elsewhere. Earth is part of a larger war, and other worlds are involved. The Kurians are what you might call a faction of a people called the Lifeweavers.
“Their society split thousands and thousands of years ago when the Lifeweavers on a planet called Kur discovered how to become immortal through . . . I call it vampirism. They've been at war ever since. Way back then, the Kurians came here, and the Lifeweavers picked some people to hunt the things brought over from Kur. They explained to the primitive men that they were placing the spirit of Wolves or Bears or Lions or what have you into the warriors they chose. I still don't know what they do exactly or how. All I can compare it to is turning on something inside you, like a light going on once you close the circuit. There was a hiatus lasting about six thousand years when the Lifeweavers won and Kur's transportation network got closed down. We turned into a civilization in the gap. Then they came back, and the Lifeweavers appeared again to help us.”
Valentine looked at Post. He wondered if his lieutenant thought him a lunatic, or simply an imaginative liar.
“I've heard rumors,” Post finally whispered. “Weird stuff about men who can become invisible, or breathe water, or wrestle a Reaper to the ground. Is that what you can do?”
“None of those,” Valentine said, smiling. “I can see and hear better, and they did something to quicken my reflexes. But that doesn't help me with this, at least now. The best hearing in the world isn't going to help me take this ship. But you could.”
Valentine felt relieved for some reason. Something had felt wrong in keeping up the pretense in front of Post. Having a man he instinctively liked believing him a tool of the Kurians grated.
“I'm not the only discontented one, just the only one that shows it. But you tell most of the men what you just told me, they'll claim they're in with you and two minutes later go straight to the captain. Claim the Terrorist Bounty. It's big enough to live on for years, if you catch a real one.”
“Post, in the KZ the ‘rest of your life' is whatever the Kurian in charge wants it to be. In the Ozarks, you're not livestock, you're an individual. Part of a community. It's not Old World, at least not in material terms. But the old beliefs are there. Life has value.”
“Some community,” Post said thickly, his rotgut kicking in. “I've heard you folks are so hungry that when winter comes, you live off the dead.”
This was not the first time Valentine had heard that grisly rumor. He was happy to gainsay it rather than cite invented facts to support it. “Not true. I will say we don't eat as well as a lot of folks in the KZ, but then we're not being fattened for the slaughter, either. I'm offering you a way out of all this, Will. A real escape — not like the bottle you're using now. More, a chance to fight back. You'll be with men and women working to smash the system.”
Post picked up the nearly empty bottle and looked at the mouth in a sidelong way, as if it were playing some kind of tune only he could hear. He shut his eyes and opened them again, staring straight at Valentine.
He stood up, a little unsteadily, and extended his hand. “It ain't going to work, Dave. But maybe you won't die alone.”
They shook on it.
 
A long moment passed, and Post sat back down in his bunk. He wiped his face, turning the gesture into a long, thoughtful pull at his chin.
Valentine slipped back into his pants and shoes and left the cabin for a moment, passed the word for the officer's steward to bring some sandwiches to his cabin. He stepped out onto the afterdeck, felt the engines through the rail. The Grogs were hurrying to finish up their duties, looking forward to an evening's rest, and off-duty marines and sailors lounged around the deck, playing games of card and dice, or sitting absorbed in wood carving, reading, or just talking. He smelled the men's dinners below, the sea air, and the oily smell of the diesels.
When he returned to the cabin, Post had his footlocker open and was unwrapping a burnished steel pistol from a terry-cloth rag. A matching gun lay on his bed.
“I wasn't planning on moving this minute,” Valentine said, shutting the door behind him.
“Hope not. I'm too drunk to shoot straight. Thought you might want something to replace that .44 wheelgun you lost. Some mementos of my bright and shining youth.”
He handed an automatic to Valentine. Its straightforward lines and large, businesslike grip made it instantly identifiable. “A Colt 1911 model?”
“One of the variants. Got a .45 shell that should stop just about anyone, good and permanent. Bought this pair fresh out of Officers' Training.”
Valentine tested the slide. The weapon was in fine condition.
“Take one, Dave. It shoots faster than that revolver ever could.”
“Happy to,” Valentine said. Post also presented him with magazines of freshly loaded ammunition for the weapon. “Are the bullets reliable?”
“Better than most,” Post said. “Not service issue — they come from a gunsmith in the old town. He's a good man, as long as you treat him right. I heard that a major went out one time, threw his weight around to get a free gun, and damned if his pistol didn't misfire just when he needed it.”
The sandwiches arrived, accompanied by a gumbo soup made of the scraps of the fresh meats brought out of New Orleans. They pulled out a mini-desk between their bunks and ate in thoughtful silence, mopping up the remnants of the soup with the ship's fresh bread. For the first time since Valentine started eating with Post, his lieutenant did not wash down his meal with half the contents of one of the iodine-colored bottles.
“Can you tell me what you need the ship for?” Post asked.
Valentine had committed himself, and if he could trust Post with his life, he could trust him with the few details that he knew. Ahn-Kha would take over if he were killed, but if by chance both of them —
“I'm to find a stash of old weapons. I don't know what kind. Then I'm supposed to get them back, either going through Galveston or farther south by Mexico. That's the reason for the armed ship: it's supposed to help at the island, and then make sure nothing can challenge us on the way back. There's a man in Southern Texas who'll take it from there.”
“Why don't they tell you what it is?”
“I think the danger is that if the Kurians found out about it, they'd either take it themselves or destroy it.”
Valentine heard someone in the passageway outside, and held up his hand for silence.
“Where is it?” Post asked after Valentine had dropped his hand.
“Haiti.”
“Haiti?” Post choked. “Jesus, I figured it was the old naval base at Guantanamo. Sir, Haiti's hell's own greenhouse. It's pretty fuckin' big, and I've never heard of anyone getting inland out of range of the ship's guns and coming back to tell about it.”
“I know roughly where on the island I'm supposed to go. There's some kind of traitor in the Kurian organization there who'll teach us about it. I know it will be bulky — that's why we need a ship and so many men for the job.”
“There's an awful lot of
ifs
in your plan, if you don't mind me saying, sir.”
“I know.”
“I'm not asking you to follow me inland. I was counting on you to run things on the ship until I return.”

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