The Night's Dawn Trilogy (202 page)

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Authors: Peter F. Hamilton

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BOOK: The Night's Dawn Trilogy
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Quinn stood before the conflagration, facing it down, arms raised to discharge his power, deflecting the devastating barrage
of heat. Far ahead of him, the blank figure had adopted a similar pose.

“Who are you?” Quinn screamed into the holocaust. “Tell me!” A large wall of crates burst apart, sending a storm of sparks
charging into the fray. Several roof girders buckled, sagging down, corrugated panels scythed into the flames. The tunnel
began to twist, losing its stability. “Tell me. Show your face.” Sirens were sounding, the shouts of men. And more of the
ruined hangar collapsed.
“Tell me!”

The rampaging flames obscured the impudent figure. Quinn let out a wordless howl of outrage. And then even he had to retreat
as metal melted and concrete turned to sluggish lava. He and Lawrence together lurched out onto the withered grass. Men and
fire engines swarmed around in chaos. It was easy to blend in and slink away. Lawrence said nothing as they made their way
along a lane of parked aircraft, the darkness of Quinn’s mind humbling him into silence.

Louise and Fletcher saw the first vehicles bumping over the grass, farm rangers painted military green and a couple of jeeps.
A squad of militia were running around the rank of planes, urged on by their officer. Sirens were starting up in the distance.
Behind her, the flames were crawling ever higher into the sky.

“Fletcher, your uniform,” she hissed.

He glanced down. His trousers had become purple. Ablink, and they were khaki again; his jacket lost its rumpled appearance.
His bearing was impressively imperious.

Genevieve moaned in his arms, as if she were fighting a nightmare.

“Is she all right?” Louise asked.

“Yes, my lady. Simply a faint.”

“And you?”

He nodded gingerly. “I survive.”

“I thought… It was awful. That devil brute, Quinn.”

“Never worry for me, lady. Our Lord has decreed some purpose for me, it will be revealed in time. I would not be here otherwise.”

The first vehicles were nearly upon them. Louise could see more soldiers on their way. It was going to be a complete madhouse;
nobody would know what was going on, what was to be done.

“This could be our chance,” she said. “We must be bold.” She started waving at one of the farm rangers. “That’s only a corporal
driving. You outrank him.”

“As always, lady, your ingenuity is matched only by your strength of spirit. What cruel fate that our true lives are separated
by such a gulf of time.”

She gave him a half-embarrassed, half-delighted smile. Then the farm ranger was pulling to a halt in front of them.

“You there,” Fletcher snapped at the startled man. “Help me get this child away. She has been overcome by the fire.”

“Yes, sir.” The corporal rushed out of the driving seat to help Fletcher ease Genevieve onto the backseat.

“Our spaceplane is over by the tower,” Louise said, fixing Fletcher with an emphatic stare. “It will have the medicine my
sister requires. Our pilot is skilled in such matters.”

“Yes, madame,” Fletcher said. “The tower,” he instructed the corporal.

The bewildered man looked from Louise to Fletcher, and decided not to question orders from an officer, no matter how bizarre
the circumstances. Louise hopped in the back and cradled Genevieve’s head as they drove away from the disintegrating hangar.

The corporal took ten minutes to find the
Far Realm’s
spaceplane, guided by Fletcher. Although she’d never seen one before, Louise could see how different it was from the aircraft
it was parked among. A needle fuselage with sleek wings that didn’t quite match, as if they’d come off another, larger craft.

Genevieve had recovered by the time they arrived, though she was very subdued, pressing into Louise’s side the whole time.
Fletcher helped her down out of the farm ranger, and she glanced mournfully over to where the stain of black smoke was spreading
over the crimson horizon. One hand gripped the pendant which Carmitha had given her, knuckles white.

“It’s over, now, all over,” Louise said. “I promise, Gen.” She ran her thumb over the Jovian Bank credit disk in her pocket
as if it were a talisman as potent as Carmitha’s charm. Thank heavens she’d kept hold of that. Genevieve nodded silently.

“Thank you for your assistance, Corporal,” Fletcher said. “Now I think you had better return to your commanding officer and
see if you can help with the fire.”

“Sir.” He was dying to ask what was going on. Discipline defeated curiosity, and he flicked the throttle, driving off down
the broad strip of grass.

Louise blew out a huge sigh of relief.

Furay waited for them at the bottom of the airstairs. A half-knowing smile in place; interested rather than apprehensive.

Louise looked straight at him, grinning in return—at their arrival, the state they were in. It was a relief that for once
she didn’t have to concoct some ludicrous story on the spot. Furay was too smart for that. Bluntness and a degree of honesty
was all she needed here.

She held up her Jovian Bank disk. “My boarding pass.”

The pilot cocked an eyebrow towards the smoke. “Anyone you know?”

“Yes. Just pray you never get to know them, too.”

“I see.” He took in Fletcher’s uniform. When they’d met at lunchtime Fletcher had been in a simple suit. “I see you’ve made
lieutenant in under five hours.”

“I was once more than this, sir.”

“Right.” It wasn’t quite the response Furay expected.

“Please,” Louise said. “My sister needs to sit down. She’s been through a lot.”

Furay thought the little girl looked about dead on her feet. “Of course,” he said sympathetically. “Come on. We’ve got some
medical nanonics inside.”

Louise followed him up the airstairs. “Do you think you could possibly lift off now?”

He eyed the ferocious blaze again. “Somehow, I just knew you were going to ask that.”

•  •  •

Marine Private Shaukat Daha had been standing guard outside the navy spaceplane for six hours when the hangar caught fire
on the other side of Bennett Field. The major in charge of his squad had dispatched half a dozen marines to assist, but the
rest were told to stand firm. “It may just be a diversion,” the major datavised. So Shaukat could only watch the extraordinarily
vigorous flames through enhanced retinas on full resolution. The fire engines which raced across the aerodrome were quite
something, though, huge red vehicles with crews in silvery suits. Naturally this crazy planet didn’t have extinguisher mechanoids.
Actual people had to deploy the hoses. It was fascinating.

His peripheral senses monitor program alerted him to the two men approaching the spaceplane. Shaukat shifted his retinal focus.
It was a couple of the locals, a Christian padre and an army lieutenant. Shaukat knew that technically he was supposed to
take orders from Norfolk officers, but this lieutenant was ridiculously young, still a teenager. There were limits.

Shaukat datavised his armour suit communications block to activate the external speaker. “Gentlemen,” he said courteously
as they came up to him. “I’m afraid the spaceplane is a restricted zone. I’ll have to see some identification and authorization
before you come any closer.”

“Of course,” Quinn Dexter said. “But tell me, is this the frigate
Tantu’s
spaceplane?”

“It is, yes, sir.”

“Bless you, my son.”

Annoyed at the honorific, he tried to datavise a moderately sarcastic response into the communications block. His neural nanonics
had shut down completely. The armour suit suddenly became oppressively constrictive, as if the integral valency generators
had activated, stiffening the fabric. He reached up to tear the shell helmet off, but his arms wouldn’t respond. A tremendous
pain detonated inside his chest. Heart attack! he thought in astonishment. Allah be merciful, this cannot be, I’m only twenty-five.

Despite his disbelief the convulsion strengthened, jamming every muscle rock solid. He could neither move nor breathe. The
padre was looking at him with a vaguely interested expression. Coldness bit into his flesh, fangs of ice piercing every pore.
His guttural cry of anguish was stifled by the armour suit tightening like a noose around his throat.

Quinn watched the marine tremble slightly as he earthed the man’s body energy, snuffing out the chemical engines of life from
every cell. After a minute he walked up to the dead statue and flicked it casually with a finger. There was a faint crystalline
ting
which faded quickly.

“Neat,” Lawrence said in admiration.

“It was quiet,” Quinn said with modest pride. He started up the spaceplane’s airstairs.

Lawrence examined the armour suit closely. Tiny beads of pale hoarfrost were already forming over the dark leathery fabric.
He whistled appreciatively and bounded up the airstairs after Quinn.

•  •  •

William Elphinstone rose up out of the diabolical cage of darkness at the center of his own brain into a riot of heat, light,
sound, and almost intolerable sensation. His gasp of anguish at the traumatic rebirth was deafening to his sensitive ears.
Air seemed to rasp over his skin, every molecule a saw tooth.

So long! So long without a single sense. Held captive inside himself.

His possessor had gone now. A departure which had freed his body. William whimpered in relief and fear.

There were fragments of memory left behind from the time he’d been reduced to a puppet. Of a seething hatred. Of a demonic
fire let loose. Of satisfaction at confounding the enemy. Of Louise Kavanagh.

Louise?

William understood so very little. He was propped up against a chain-link fence, his legs folded awkwardly below him. In front
of him were hundreds of planes lined up across a broad aerodrome. It wasn’t a place he’d ever seen before.

The sound of sirens rose and fell noisily. When he looked around he saw a hangar which had been gutted by fire. Flames and
smoke were still rising out of the blackened ruins. Silver-suited firemen were surrounding the building, spraying it with
foam from their hoses. An awful lot of militia troops were milling around the area.

“Here,” William cried to his comrades. “I’m over here.” But his voice was a feeble croak.

A Confederation Navy spaceplane flew low over the field, wobbling slightly as if it wasn’t completely under control. He blinked
at it in confusion There was another memory associated with the craft. Strong yet elusive: a dead boy hanging upside down
from a tree.

“And what do you think you’re doing here?” The voice came from one of the two patrolling soldiers who were standing three
yards away. One of them was pointing his rifle at William. The second was holding back a pair of growling Alsatians.

“I… I was captured,” William Elphinstone said. “Captured by the rebels. But they’re not rebels. Please, you must listen. They’re
devils.”

Both soldiers exchanged a glance. The one with the rifle slung it over his shoulder and raised a compact communications block.

“You must listen,” William said desperately. “I was taken over. Possessed. I’m a serving officer from the Stoke County militia.
I order you to listen.”

“Really, sir? Lost your uniform, did you?”

William looked at what he was wearing. It
was
his old uniform, but you had to look close to know. The shirt’s original khaki colour had been superseded by a blue and red
check pattern. From the thighs down his regulation trousers were now tough blue denim jeans. Then he caught sight of his hands.
The backs of both were covered in black hair—and everyone always teased him about having delicate woman’s hands.

He let out a little moan of dismay. “I’m telling you the truth. As God is my witness.” Their blank, impersonal faces told
him how useless it all was.

William Elphinstone remained slumped against the fence until the MPs came and took him off to Bennett Field’s tiny police
station. The detectives who arrived from Norwich’s Special Branch division to interrogate him didn’t believe his story either.
Not until it was far too late.

•  •  •

The Nyiru asteroid orbited ninety thousand kilometres above Narok, one of the earliest Kenya-ethnic colony worlds. After it
was knocked into position two centuries ago the construction company had sliced out a five-hundred-metre-diameter ledge for
visiting bitek starships. Eager for the commerce they would bring, the asteroid council equipped the ledge with a comprehensive
infrastructure; even a small chemical plant to provide the nutrient fluid the starships digested.

Udat
complained it didn’t taste right. Meyer wasn’t up to arguing. With Haltam’s best ministrations, it had taken him seven hours
to recover consciousness after their escape from Tranquillity. Waking to find himself in interstellar space, with a worried,
hurting blackhawk and an equally unsettled crew to placate did not help his frail mental state. They had flown directly to
Narok, needing eleven swallows to cover the eighty light-years, where normally they would only use five.

In all that time he had seen Dr Alkad Mzu precisely twice. She kept to herself in her cabin for most of the trip. Despite
analgesic blocks and the medical nanonic packages wrapped around her legs and arms, her injuries were causing some discomfort.
Most curious of all she refused to let Haltam program the leg packages to repair an old knee injury. Neither of them had been
in the mood to give ground. A few tersely formal words were exchanged; she apologised for his injuries and the vigour of the
opposition, he filled her in on the flight parameters. And that was all.

After they arrived at Nyiru she paid the agreed sum without any quibble, added a five per cent bonus, and departed. Cherri
Barnes did ask where she was headed, but the slight woman replied with one of her dead-eye smiles and said it was best nobody
knew.

She vanished from their lives as much a mystery as when she entered it so dramatically.

Meyer spent thirty-six hours in the asteroid’s hospital undergoing cranial deep-invasion procedures to repair the damage around
his neurone symbionts. Another two days of recuperation and extensive checks saw him cleared to leave.

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