Northworld By David Drake

An officer wearing a patch over her right eye stepped forward and saluted. “Sir!” she said. “I’m Major Fernandez, in charge of your escort. The High Council has already been briefed. They’re proceeding to a rendezvous point.”

Warts and knobs studded the tanks: weapons and sensors and defenses of various sorts. Snow collected on the angles and aided the camouflage of the huge vehicles, instead of melting from warm metal as Fortin would have expected. The shielding which hid the tanks from thermal imagers was obviously of exceptional quality.

As was every other facet of weaponry and mayhem in Ruby.

“Very good, Major Fernandez,” Fortin replied without bothering to salute at all. He strode toward the nearest armored personnel carrier. “Let’s get started then, shall we?”

The troops broke for their vehicles with a shout at Fernandez’ order. Their noise didn’t completely mask the whine of the hydraulic motors rotating the tank turrets so that their guns tracked the Inspector General to the millimeter as he walked.

A visitor to Ruby was a potential threat. North the War God was sacrosanct in Ruby, but security was greater even than North.

Though there was no wind to bite within the vehicle, the metal frame of Fortin’s seat was cold. The APC made a lumbering take-off and turned hard to starboard.

Fortin smiled. If he’d really cared to know where he was being taken, the artificial intelligence woven into the metal braid of his uniform would have told him.

Neither where nor how they were going mattered. Nonetheless, Fortin was amused to know that his hosts would follow a unique course to a unique location; a location that shared with previous meeting places only the fact that it was a barren wasteland as far as possible from anything of significance to the security of Ruby.

“Brace yourself, please, sir,” said Fernandez, locking the Inspector General onto his jumpseat with a powerful arm as the APC descended abruptly. She was missing two fingers as well as the eye.

Fortin’s stomach squirmed with a feeling of queasy pleasure, like that he felt when he realized the tanks’ big guns were tracking him and might at any instant blast him to vapor. It wasn’t danger which provided that almost sexual thrill, but rather the thought that there might suddenly be a universe in which he didn’t exist.

The drive engines howled to full power, buffeting the vehicle with echoes reflected from narrow walls to either side. Motion stopped except for engine vibration; then the APC dropped the last centimeter to the ground.

Fernandez slammed open the vehicle’s hatch with the same motion in which her other arm released the Inspector General. He stepped out.

The sidewalls of the APC hadn’t dropped because there wasn’t room for them to do so within the narrow gorge in which the vehicle had landed. Two infantrymen were facing Fortin with automatic rifles leveled. Twenty meters above on the rim of the canyon were a pair of tripod-mounted plasma weapons whose bolts could devour the armored personnel carrier itself if circumstances required.

A colonel behind the infantrymen said, “All right, port arms.” As the men obeyed, the colonel went on, “This way, sir. The Council is awaiting you.”

The Council’s command vehicle was fifty meters away, out of sight behind a kink in the gorge. Snow had drifted over the rim to knee height. High boots were part of the colonel’s camouflage uniform, but Fortin wore polished shoes. Snow seeped over the tops of them, and he smiled at the discomfort.

Marshal Czerny leaned out of the side door. “Come aboard, sir,” he said. His voice rasped as though he’d drunk lye, but it was probably just age. “Glad to have you with us again.”

Of the five marshals around the table this time, Moro and Stein looked old, and Czerny looked as old as life itself. Tadley and Kerchuk were gone, replaced with a pair of men whose nametags read Breitkopf and Lienau—both of them middle-aged, wolf-lean, and with features that would have looked unusually cruel on sharks.

Fortin was a god to whom duration meant nothing, but duration meant decay and death for the tools he used. Despite the arrogance of the folk of Ruby, they would all die—and they didn’t even care about that, so long as the system they served survived.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *