The Outpost (21 page)

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Authors: Mike Resnick

Tags: #Resnick, #sci-fi, #Outpost, #BirthrightUniverse

BOOK: The Outpost
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We landed next to a temple that could have passed for a small city. It had arches and turrets and spires, and I was willing to bet that it possessed its fair share of secret passageways and hidden chambers.

“The aliens just
let
you land?” asked Max dubiously.

“There was a huge wall around the temple, like a walled city, and we landed inside the wall,” answered Hurricane Smith.

“How come the aliens hadn’t overrun the temple already?” demanded Max.

“I’m coming to that.”

It turns out that whoever built the temple had actually built it as a defensible fortress (continued Smith). Not that the current inhabitants had any notion of defending it themselves … but the walls were lined with webs of energy that tended to roast the enemy, and evidently it wasn’t against their religion to keep them turned on.

“So why didn’t the aliens land inside the walls like you did?” persisted Max.

“Who’s telling this story, you or me?” demanded Smith irritably.

Max looked like he was going to argue the point, but just then Langtry Lily started hissing at him, and he decided that silence was the better part of valor.

The simple truth of the matter (said Smith) is that the aliens didn’t know that the colonists wouldn’t put up a fight. A bunch of them had been burned to a crisp trying to climb the walls or break them down, and they knew the city had impregnable defenses, so it never occurred to them that they could land inside the walls and capture it. Instead, they surrounded the place and laid siege to it.

Anyway, a few minutes after we landed we were in a huge room that had all the trappings of a cozy little chapel writ large. There were maybe three dozen men and women waiting for us. Their leader was the High Priest, an old guy by the name of Sandazar, who wore a flowing robe of spun gold.

“I thank the Great Galactic Spirit for answering our supplications and sending us three bona fide heroes in this our hour of need,” he said.

“Let’s eliminate the middle man,” said Catastrophe. “Just thank us and let’s get on with the negotiations.”

“Negotiations?” asked Sandazar, looking kind of puzzled.

“Even heroes got to eat,” said Catastrophe.

“But of course!” exclaimed Sandazar. He clapped his hands above his head. “Bring food for our saviors!”

“I don’t think you follow me,” said Catastrophe. “We don’t work for free. There was mention made of a reward.”

“Certainly!” said Sandazar. “Drive the aliens away and you may have anything we possess.”

“I’ll take that robe of yours,” said Catastrophe.

“Consider it done,” said Sandazar. “Always assuming you survive.”

Just then a gorgeous girl, no more than sixteen years old, and dressed in a gauzy blue gown you could just about see through, approached us, carrying a tray laden down with food.

“Take it away!” said Sandazar. “I misunderstood our guests. They are not hungry after all.”

“You know,” said Johnny Testosterone, watching intently as the girl walked away, “not all of us insist on being paid in coin of the realm.”

“That was never our intention,” said Sandazar. “In fact, the most heroic member of your team may claim the Temple Virgin for his own.”

“Now you’re talking my language!” said Johnny, never taking his eyes from the girl as she undulated away.

I decided that we could worry about the rewards later, but that first we ought to know a little something about the enemy, so I stepped forward and introduced myself.

“Ah, Hurricane Smith!” said Sandazar. “Your reputation precedes you.”

“I’m not so much concerned with what precedes me as with what might be sneaking up behind me,” I replied. “Suppose you tell us what these aliens are like.”

“They’re huge amoebas,” answered Sandazar. “Their bodies have almost no structural integrity; they grow and contract with every breath and step they take.”

“Have you any idea what they want?”

“They want to rule the planet and make us their slaves, of course,” said Sandazar, as if explaining the obvious to a small child.

“They usually do,” agreed Catastrophe in bored tones.

“How did they communicate that particular desire to you?” I asked.

“Verbally, of course.”

“You’re telling me that these amoebas can speak?”

“Absolutely,” said Sandazar. “Their diction is superior to Catastrophe Baker’s.”

“Have they said why they chose Leviticus IV?”

“Well, actually, they thought this was Wyandotte II, but they decided that as long as they were here they might as well take over the planet and turn us all into slaves.”

“What kind of weapons do they have?” I asked.

“I don’t know. They stay on one side of the wall and we stay on the other.” He paused for a moment. “Is there anything else you need to know?”

“Probably,” I said, “but I can’t figure out what it is.”

“You’re quite sure?”

“Quite.”

“Then I think we’ll leave the carnage and bloodletting to you, and go hide in our secret subterranean chambers. Give a holler when you’ve slaughtered the last of them.”

“No problem,” Johnny assured him. “Just remind everyone that the Temple Virgin is reserved for me.”

“I will certainly do that,” answered Sandazar. Then he turned and left the room, followed by all the lesser priests and priestesses, and we three heroes were left alone.

“Well, how do you want to handle this?” asked Catastrophe.

“It’s up to you,” I said.

He frowned. “Well, it poses a serious problem. If there were two of us, I’d just tell you to take all the aliens on the right and I’d take all the ones on the left. And if there were four of us, we could each take all the aliens facing a particular wall.” He sighed. “But I don’t know how to divide an alien army by three.”

“Howzabout you two divide ‘em in half, and I’ll kill any that get by you?” suggested Johnny.

“I don’t plan to let none get by me,” said Catastrophe.

“You know,” I said, “maybe we ought to talk to them first. Once they know who they’re up against, they might think twice about a war of conquest here and go back to hunting for Wyandotte II.”

“Especially if we give them a map,” agreed Johnny.

“It’s worth a try,” said Catastrophe. “Hurricane, you go out and talk to them.”

“You’re not coming with me?” I asked.

“Let’s be reasonable,” said Catastrophe. “If it works, you won’t need us—but if it turns out to be as dumb an idea as I think it is, there’ll still be two of us left to destroy their army.”

Well, I really couldn’t argue with the logic of that, so I walked outside, found the power source for the wall, deactivated it, opened the door, and walked out into the fields beyond the temple. Catastrophe and Johnny shut the door so fast they almost took off my heel.

I found myself surrounded by a few hundred amoebas, so I raised my arm in the universal sign of peace.

“What are you pointing at, human?” demanded the closest amoeba.

“Nothing,” I said. “I’m being friendly.”

“So whenever you want to make friends, you point to the sky?”

“Well, yes, I guess I do,” I admitted.

“You’re not impressing us with your intellect,” said the amoeba.

“Where did you guys learn to speak Terran?” I asked.

“We monitor your commercial holo transmissions,” said the amoeba. “We especially like the ones involving Pirate Queens.”

“Most people do.”

“Okay, so much for small talk,” said the amoeba. “Now it’s time to kill you. Do you prefer strangulation, crucifixion, boiling in oil, or simply being torn asunder?”

“What if I were to show you how to get to Wyandotte II?” I said.

“I’d call that damned sporting of you,” said the amoeba. “First we’ll conquer Leviticus IV, kill all the humans, and raise the temple to the ground, and then we’ll wage war against Wyandotte.”

“You don’t understand,” I said. “I’m offering to
trade
. You leave us alone, and I’ll supply you with the star charts you need.”

“Yeah, that sounds good,” said another amoeba.

“No,” said a third. “Let’s kill the humans first and then see if we can find Wyandotte on our own.”

Pretty soon all the nearby amoebas were arguing, and the one I’d been speaking to sidled up to me.

“We’re going to have to take a vote,” it said. “This could take all day. Come with me; I’ve got a box lunch hidden away.”
 

I followed it to a nearby forest. None of the other amoebas took any notice of us; they were too caught up in trying to decide whether to accept my proposal or not.

“By the way, have you got a name?” I asked when we finally sat down, protected by a pair of giant trees.

“Winoria,” said the amoeba.

“That’s a very feminine name for an amoeba that doesn’t possess a gender,” I said.

“I most certainly do,” said Winoria. “I am a female.”

“How can I tell the difference?”

“There are ways,” said Winoria, slithering closer to me. “For example …”

It sure as shooting was some example. And just about the time I’d adjusted to that one, she showed me another. (Don’t get upset, Langtry; this was long before I met you.)

Well, we spent an idyllic hour in the forest, indulging in our natural scientific curiosity. Then I heard the hum of a burner and the buzz of a screecher, and I could hear Johnny Testosterone’s voice screaming things like “
Eat hellfire, you alien scum!
” and “
Kiss your ass good-bye, you godless heathen!

I jumped to my feet and started running back to the temple. The gate was open, and Johnny was standing just in front of it, weapons smoking.

“What the hell’s going on?” I demanded.

“I got tired of waiting,” he said, “so I killed ’em all. By God, that felt even better than a hot shower on a cold morning!”

“But they were considering going away without trying to conquer the planet after all.”

“I figured that when I heard them all arguing,” replied Johnny. “That’s why I decided to start shooting. The old priest wasn’t going to give us the Temple Virgin if the enemy declared peace on us.”

I looked around. “What happened to them?”

“They melted. Disintegrated. Vanished.” He suddenly saw Winoria coming up behind me. “Except for this one.”

He aimed his burner at her, and I slapped it out of his hand before he could squeeze the trigger.

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