The Prince by Jerry Pournelle and S.M. Stirling

“Sir,” he said. “I’d advise you to take this officer’s advice. Quickly.”

Alexander Collins’s mouth clenched. “Not quite yet, Major Owensford,” he said.

Peter turned and caught Jesus Alana’s eye. He jerked his head toward the rear door. Alana nodded and left the group.

Collins turned to the militia officer. “Saunders, this is in violation of the permit, isn’t it?”

“Yes, sir,” the policeman said. “Excessive numbers, obstructing traffic, half a dozen counts.”

“Hand me your ‘caster,” the king said.

The policeman pulled a hand-unit from his belt; Alexander took it, keying it to the loudspeakers in the police car and stepping up on the base of one of the Spartosky’s columns to make himself visible to the crowd.

“Get the crowd-control car ready,” he said to the policeman. Then he drew breath to speak to the crowd.

* * *

“Two-knife,” Skida said. She was lying on her back below the window, studying the crowd through a thin fiber-optics periscope. “Bobber. Now. And Bobber, Skilly would be very happy if you keep the Werewolves from getting too antsy. Important the cameras get good shots of nasty policemons whipping on heads before it starts. We provoke them to provoke us, understand? On the word.”

Niles looked over at Bobber. This suite was supposed to be the offices of Universal Exports, and the female gang leader looked wildly out of place in it with her red tights and silver-studded knee boots. The chain-decked black leather jacket was unfastened to her waist, half-baring breasts far too rounded to be natural. Both bore a one-word tattoo: SWEET on the left, SOUR on the right. She stood, the tall fore-and-aft crest of hair on her shaven head nodding with the motion that had given her her street name; the rocket launcher was cradled protectively in her arms.

“Yo, Skilly,” she said, wrapping it in cloth and trotting out the door. The squad of feral-eyed youths in Werewolf colors followed at her heels, and then the huge Mayan.

A snarl came from below, and Niles felt the small hairs on his spine try to rise; instinct deeper than thought told him that the pack was on his heels. He grinned past the fear, vision gone ice-clear with the wash of adrenaline, and Skida smiled back at him. Her eyes took him in again, with flattering attentiveness.

“You expect the police to attack the crowd?” he said quietly. They were alone in the room except for one of Murasaki’s men, who might have been a statue as he sat at the tiny console of his portable com unit. The Englishman shifted his grip on the silenced scope-sighted carbine. “Rather brutal bunch, eh?”

“Skilly expects the police to be good and frightened, Jeffi,” she replied. “They only shopkeepers and clerks, mon. Respectable people, not used to this. Frightened peoples act stupid. We take it from there.” A chuckle. “Then the RSMP come kills us, if your Nippo friend’s toys doan work.”

MY PEOPLE,” a voice called from the street below, amplified echoes bouncing off the buildings. “WE ARE ALWAYS READY TO HEAR YOUR PETITIONS. REMEMBER THAT LIBERTY CAN COME ONLY TO THOSE READY TO BEAR ITS BURDENS—”

* * *

The crowd howled when it saw Alexander; and again, when he began to speak. The sound was huge, almost enough to override the amplifiers. Then another megaphone spoke, from among the demonstrators.

“FUCK THE KINGS! FUCK THE KINGS!”

Owensford was close enough to see Alexander flush, and then his lips move in a prayer or curse as the mob took it up. He was also close enough to see the anger on the faces of the Milice. They began to surge forward, pushing with batons held level, until their officers called them back; hauled them back physically, in some cases.

The twist in his stomach grew; there was more here than met the eye. Peter Owensford had been a soldier for all his adult life, very little of it behind a desk, and he knew the scent of trouble. Events were moving to a plan, a plan laid by somebody who meant no good.

“Saunders,” the king said. “Read them the Act and clear the street. Minimal force, but don’t endanger lives hesitating.”

“Sir!” the policeman said with enthusiasm. He took the handunit and began—

“CLEAR THE STREET AND DISPERSE! YOU ARE IN VIOLATION OF THE PUBLIC ORDER AND ASSEMBLIES ACT AND SUBJECT TO ARREST IF YOU DO NOT DISPSKKREEEEEEE—”

The deafening feedback squeal continued until one of the Milice ripped the wires loose from the speaker on the car’s roof. Jeering laughter rippled from the crowd among the chants, and a few bottles and rocks arched forward to bang against the shields. Owensford saw one man stagger out of the police line, hands over a smashed nose. There was a momentary gap; through it he could see two of the helmeted protesters, a man and a woman. Boy and girl rather, in their late teens. Well-dressed in a scruffy sort of way, and grinning as if this was all a game.

It is, he thought bleakly. But not the sort you imagine.

“Sir, the unit won’t work at all, we’ve got no commo.”

Owensford met his second-in-command’s eyes; they nodded.

“Sirs,” Peter said to the two kings. He had to shout. “I must insist that you return to the building, otherwise I cannot be responsible.”

“The back entrance,” Saunders said.

“No. Too risky, it might be covered. Captain Alana has secured the lobby. Now, if you please, sirs.” Several of the Legion officers grouped around the kings with pistols drawn and began backing towards the entrance, carrying the protesting monarchs along willy-nilly.

“Clear the street,” Saunders was screaming in the ears of his officers, who relayed it verbally to the Milice.

They raised their batons and linked shields, pushing forward. The glowstrips blinked out, and the marquee of the Spartosky, and the street was suddenly plunged into darkness. Then another light came on, a narrow-beam illuminator from the news cameras, flicking across the line of Milice and incidentally into their eyes. Owensford shaded his, and saw several of the protesters fling themselves forward on the line of clubs. He bared his teeth; they were not trying to fight, just cowering dramatically and holding up their hands as the police instinctively lashed out with their truncheons. One of the protesters turned as if staggering, and the camera light caught a mask of blood across his agonized face.

Razor cuts, Owensford knew. Flicked open to give the appearance of dramatic wounds. “Get all these people back inside,” he shouted to the remaining mercenaries. The guests were milling and shouting on their own. Different from an Earthling crowd, though; many were drawing weapons and pushing their way to the front, and there were few shrieks. A gunfight, just what was needed. “You, you, you, get the doors open and start pushing people into the lobby. Move!”

More bottles arched out of the crowd, some of them Molotovs trailing smoke, which burst in puddles of flame on the pavement. The police scattered away, and knots of disciplined rioters burst through, lashing out with the poles of their signs. Again they seemed more interested in being beaten than really fighting. . . .

“Jamming,” Ace spoke into his ear; he had one of their own communicators in his hand, they were all carrying one in a pocket of their dress blue and golds. “I’m through to the base camp. Jesus is bringing in some MPs.”

“Right. Get everything you can,” Owensford said.

“Mission?”

“Cover our retreat,” Peter said. “We don’t understand the politics, and we sure don’t have time to learn. I want everyone out of here alive and unhurt. Preferably without inflicting casualties.”

“Roger,” Barton said.

“The crowd-control car, thank God,” Saunders muttered.

A turbine hum echoed back from the walls, and a vehicle floated into sight. It was Earth-made, a Boeing-Northrup Peacemaker: essentially an upright rectangle, supported by six powerful ducted-fan engines on either side. Nozzles protruded below the control bubble on the forward edge, and they could see the operator in the armored nacelle within. Hot exhaust air washed over them, rippling the clothes of the crowd.

“Hurry up, dammit!” Owensford barked. His men had gotten the guests moving, but it was a painfully slow process, the more when many wanted to stay right where they were.

Fresh howls rose at the eight of the riot-control vehicle; many of the Welfare Island types would recognize it from Earth, where they were used to put down slum riots daily. Shots rang out, and bullets ricocheted from the armor panels in bursts of sparks. The Milice line was buckling, and the gang members from the outside of the crowd had waded in; Owensford saw chains and iron bars whipping through the air in deadly arcs, and then a shotgun went thump five times in as many seconds. The riot car turned in midair, ponderously graceful, and a nozzle swiveled. Bright yellow gas shot out, a thick jet under high pressure that bounced from the crowd and dispersed in a dense fog.

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