Redspace Rising
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Synopsis
In the far future revenge does not stop with death. For readers of John Scalzi's Old Man's War and Neuromancer by William Gibson.
Harris Alexander Pope is the man who ended the Partisan War on Mars. All he seeks now is solitude and a return to the life that was stolen from him. Yet when he learns that the worst war criminals are hiding in other bodies, he is forced into an interplanetary pursuit.
Teaming up with other survivors eager for their own brand of vengeance, Harris begins to suspect a darker truth:
Maybe what he remembers about the war isn't what happened at all...
FLAME TREE PRESS is the imprint of long-standing Independent Flame Tree Publishing, dedicated to full-length original fiction in the horror and suspense, science fiction & fantasy, and crime / mystery / thriller categories. The list brings together fantastic new authors and the more established; the award winners, and exciting, original voices. Learn more about Flame Tree Press at www.flametreepress.com and connect on social media @FlameTreePress.
Release date: September 13, 2022
Publisher: Flame Tree Publishing
Print pages: 288
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Redspace Rising
Brian Trent
Chapter One
Casualty of War
“We killed you,” the unknown woman was saying as she squatted beside me. “We had to. You weren’t responding to the reactivation protocols. Left us no choice but to take you down manually. I need you to sit up slowly. Breathe deep. Get your bearings.”
There was a chalky texture in my mouth, as if I’d been eating dirt. My vision cleared and I considered the person before me. Pale eyes in a lean face. Cheekbones that looked like they could cut glass. Spiked hair. She was Martian-tall and ensconced in beetle-black armor. On her left breastplate, a military insignia depicted two dots flanking a large circle – Mars and her moons.
The insignia of the Order of Stone.
The enemy.
“We don’t have a lot of time,” the woman insisted. “But I can’t send you back into the field until we’ve determined the upload has taken.”
“What upload?”
“Sit up, soldier.”
I didn’t have the vaguest idea what she was talking about, but there was no harm in complying with her demand. For some reason, I’d been lying on the floor. Mouth still gritty with Martian dust – that shit gets into everything, like talcum powder. My back felt like it had been knifed just under the left shoulder blade. I rubbed my eyes and took stock of my surroundings.
We were in an airy building that had apparently come down on our heads: slabs of masonry lay scattered like giants’ teeth. Twisted I-beams snaked through the debris. The green of an algae-lamp reflected in crumbled glass. That solitary glow steeped everything in a swampish, sickly hue, providing just enough light for me to read the placard on a nearby wall: BAGGAGE CLAIM – GATES D, E, F.
Beneath that was a large poster, red background and stylized silhouette of a Partisan soldier, accompanied by the words:
TRUE MARTIANS STAND TOGETHER. REPORT ANY SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY, PEOPLE, OR CONVERSATIONS TO THE TIP LINE.
YOUR ANONYMITY IS GUARANTEED.
“Look at me, soldier,” the woman commanded.
My gaze flicked from the poster to her stare.
“Tell me your name, rank, and current mission.”
“My name?” Memories shuffled like mah-jongg tiles. Despite the rubble, I recognized that I was in Bradbury Shuttleport in the city of Hellas, Mars. I remembered being in a dropship, skimming the city’s medinas and ziggurats. Remembered seeing sandclaws roaming the streets like the oversized metallic crabs they were, striding over makeshift barricades as easily as I might step over a rolled-up towel. Hellas was a war zone.
Mars was a war zone.
At war with itself.
I remembered the thrum of the dropship beneath my boots. Remembered it hovering above the shuttleport like a dragonfly over a pond.
The feel of a rappel cord in my hands. My heartbeat pounds in my temples. The excitement and fear of fast-roping out of a dropship never ebbs. The airport tarmac is deserted – the sitrep is that civilian air-traffic in Hellas is grounded. But that didn’t mean the enemy wasn’t already here.
My six-man squad clutches their rappel cords alongside me. We slide out together like spiders on silk tethers. Hit the tarmac. Spread out, advancing three-by-three formation, into the empty shuttleport. The dropship tilts away and vanishes over the building, keeping mobile until we signal for evac.
I remembered all this.
But my name? It was a blank spot in my mind. Like a sun-bleached corner of brocade.
“Soldier!” the woman snapped. “Your name, rank, and current mission. Report!”
“I don’t know my name,” I breathed, astonished to be saying the words. “But I know yours: Lieutenant-Commander Natalia Argos, First Sentinel with the Order of Stone.”
The woman nodded. I abruptly sensed tension pouring off her. Her fingers whitened around the trigger of her multigun.
Following this one bright thread through faded tapestry, I continued. “You’re Number Eight on the Partisans’ Most Wanted list. Dead or alive.”
Alive was the preference, because the Partisans employed uniquely skilled interrogators against enemies of the state. They would strip out Natalia Argos’s neurals and plumb them for every scrap of information she had. Mars had been embroiled in a civil war for twenty years. The legally elected Partisan government had been increasingly challenged by a loose grouping of insurrectionists who, as the years rolled by, had coalesced into a formidable opposition: the so-called Order of Stone.
The Partisans therefore needed to know the enemy’s battle plans, supply lines, covert operatives, sympathizers, intelligence cells. Needed to pinpoint the locations of their underground factories where they printed weapons of war. We especially sought to ascertain the names and locations of their leadership…the shadowy, ever-secret commanders of their resistance. And Natalia Argos would have that intel. She probably had a killswitch – an implanted bomb to blend her brain into useless soup. But a skilled interrogator could render her unconscious before she could activate it….
Natalia abruptly shoved the muzzle of her multigun into my neck. A standard-issue Greely model with default 3.33 millimeter unjacketed lead-alloy haze-release fleschettes, five additional magazines in the ammo wheel, and an EMP carriage beneath it.
“Last chance, soldier. What is your—”
“Harris,” I blurted, the name seeming to outpace my conscious thoughts. “My name is…Harris Alexander Pope.”
“Rank?”
Another blind spot. I was wearing the rust-red armor of a Partisan soldier, but I suddenly realized it was just a costume. Like one of Prospero’s guests at his ill-fated masquerade.
And then the knowledge welled up within me, and I said, “I’m Special Operations for the Order of Stone.”
“Very good,” she muttered, a bead of sweat rolling down her neck.
Squinting in the algae-light, I considered further details of my environment. Martian dust had invaded the facility. It formed a granular residue on my tongue. It was also hazardous – prolonged exposure killed lung and brain tissue alike. Yet I wasn’t wearing a dust-mask. Neither was Natalia. And I didn’t remember my six-man squad from the dropship wearing them….
Which suggested that the terminal had been intact not so long ago.
I finally noticed a third person in the ruined chamber with us. He was an imposing, tank-like figure, framed in the algae-lamp’s backsplash. Like Natalia, he carried a multigun. His armor, however, was bone-white and packed with ablative, tortoise-style layering. Nestled in shadow as he was, I couldn’t make out his face.
Other details of the terminal collected in my sphere of awareness. Bullet holes and needle-spray perforated the rubble. Dead bodies lay scattered in the dust: a mix of Partisan and Order corpses.
“Looks like I missed quite the party,” I muttered.
“The hell you did,” Natalia snapped. “You were the guest of honor, you just didn’t realize it.” She glanced to her sole compatriot and nodded. The mysterious fellow moved off, making a patrol through the debris.
“Where are my weapons?” I asked, realizing how defenseless I was.
“In safekeeping for now. Get your bearings, Harris. Let the upload take.”
“What upload?”
“You’ve been undercover with the Partisans for a long time. I need you to remember who you truly are. Take all the time you need, but be quick about it.”
“Yeah, sure.” I shook my head. My thoughts coalesced like proto-planets wheeling around a newborn star.
My name is Harris Alexander Pope.
Having a name seemed to make things easier. It was attracting other memories.
I’d grown up in the coastal town of Lighthouse Point, where meltwater from the Amazon Sea was pumped into Canal Penthisilea and, from there, to the branching watercourses nourishing the cantons. In terms of human habitation, Mars was barely two centuries old, a child compared to the storied layer cake of Brother Blue and her moon. I remembered scampering along weedy shores as a kid, the velvet-soft, rust-hued sand between my toes. Remembered the sea’s muddy, thick consistency, the polar caps melted by heating coils to return a long-extinct ocean to life after a billion-year slumber. Remembered, too, how sandstorms continually choked the canals and turned the water as red as an Egyptian plague. My first dust-mask was painted with vampire teeth.
More puzzle pieces clicked into place. I had a younger brother, three years my junior. Together, we’d scamper along the shore looking for oddly shaped rocks to pretend they were alien fossils. We’d buy pastries from kindly Mrs. King’s bakery stall. On weekdays, we’d run to the seaport to meet Dad coming off his shift; Dad worked the sandships. My brother and I, sitting on the boardwalk, legs swinging over the water, eating our pastries and watching Dad’s dragon-shaped vessel dock.
My brother! His name was….
“Dave!” I cried. “Where is David?”
Natalia frowned. “The exact location of General David Julius Pope is classified. But he authorized this operation himself. When we received word that you were back in Hellas, he acted immediately. Sent my squad to intercept you.”
Life in the Partisan ranks fell away. The battles fought, late-night patrols of bombed-out cities. Years of memory unspooling as some grisly scroll in a dusky necropolis. Years of undercover operation. Years of battle….
Years?
“How – how long was I under?” I stammered.
“We’re reactivating you for an important mission,” Natalia said, breezing past my inquiry. “We embedded its details with the upload, so you should know it. Your orders are—”
“To infiltrate and destroy Partisan High Command and everyone with them.” It was like someone else speaking for me, or having the words of an unfamiliar script appearing on my optics. Appreciating what I’d just said, I raised an eyebrow. “Infiltrate and destroy Partisan High Command? On fucking Phobos? How the fuck am I supposed to pull that off?”
Natalia bristled at my tone. “You’ve been undercover with the Partisans, Harris. As far as they’re concerned, you’re one of their most trusted operators. You’ve been working as a shadowman in their employ.”
“That doesn’t mean I spend my shore leave on a goddam moon!”
Partisan High Command was nestled deep within Mars’s largest natural satellite. Decades earlier, Phobos had been a waystation and trading post, launching and receiving shipments to and from the rest of the solar system. Back when we were the ruby in the InterPlanetary Council’s crown.
The election of 325 had changed that. The Partisans captured executive and legislative control of Martian government, and immediately made good on their campaign promise to secede from IPCnet. Mars broke off diplomatic and commercial relations with the rest of Sol society. Kicked out the IPC. Kicked out that planet-spanning corporate juggernaut known as Prometheus Industries. Kicked out the foreigners, the offworlders, the parasites on Martian society….
Mars was free.
For two years, the Partisans enjoyed control of the planet. They consolidated power in every canton. Took control of planetary media to free it of Earth influence. Arrested Earth loyalists…as well as those suspected of being Earth loyalists. Dissolved political opposition under the auspices of emergency powers.
And converted Phobos Base into a secure military bunker to keep a watchful eye on the planet below. Gods above Olympus itself.
How the hell was I going to infiltrate there?
“How the hell am I going to infiltrate there?” I demanded.
“You’ve been there before,” Natalia informed me. “According to our intel, as a Partisan shadowman, you’ve been to Phobos several times.”
I hesitated, sifting memories for the truth of this. Something ugly swam in my thoughts. I suddenly wasn’t sure I wanted to remember Phobos.
“How many years was I undercover?” I asked again.
“Twenty.”
Her words hit me like a grenade blast. “Twenty years!? I’ve been undercover for twenty goddam years?”
“We encountered unexpected circumstances.”
“For two decades?” A sick feeling uncoiled in my stomach. “The plan was never for me to stay undercover that long! David would never have allowed—”
“I don’t have time to explain it all to you.”
“Make the fucking time!”
Natalia flushed angrily at my tone, but I could see her struggling to control her response. She needed me, that much was obvious. And it gave me a measure of power.
“Harris, you’ve been undercover as a shadowman. No one’s ever been able to do that. The plan was to keep you embedded as a sleeper cell until needed.”
“And I wasn’t needed for twenty years?”
Natalia was sweating again, as if worried I might revert. “We couldn’t find you, soldier. Shadowmen operate all over the planet. They’re the best at what they do – infiltration, assassination, and straight-up combat. As one of their operators, you dropped off the ladar. It was only a week ago that your presence triggered a patmatch to local resistance cells. That’s when the general – your brother – hatched this plan.”
I was still reeling from the shock of it all. “My brother rose to the rank of Order of Stone general?”
“When General Pope realized you were back in Hellas, he devised an operation to end the goddam war. You don’t want these twenty years to be for nothing, do you?”
I shook my head.
“Then listen up. You are to infiltrate Phobos Base and plant a bomb at the fusion core.”
“But how do I get to Phobos? I doubt I can just dial up the brass and request a pickup!”
“High-value suspects are sent to Phobos for interrogation,” Natalia said. “You’re about to get your hands on a suspect as high-value as they come. An offworlder who many, manypeople have been searching for. We let it slip to Partisan intelligence that he was in our possession, that he’s been a part of the Order since its founding, and that he was being moved to a safehouse.” She pointed a finger at me. “Twelve minutes ago, your team shot down his transport. All you have to do now is go fetch him.”
“And that’s why the Partisans sent me and my squad here,” I said, remembering. “We were to intercept and grab the target. We splashed his shuttle and were moving to retrieve him when—”
“When my squad hit yours. All for the purpose of reactivating you.”
“Where’s the target?”
“Exactly where you shot him down: Hellas Market. He’s your ticket to the moon.”
I stood on shaky legs, taking stock of the scattered corpses. Grisly halos of blood-spatter and viscera. Ropy brains, spent casings, empty magazines. The detritus of combat. A final chapter of life expressed in red footprints.
The shuttle is a blip on our dropship’s ladar, flying low over Hellas. A dust storm rages, reducing visibility to only a few meters. We open fire and splash the vessel, knocking it out of the caramel sky like a duck clipped by birdshot. It comes down hard through the market dome.
Rappelling out from the dropship. Hitting the tarmac.
My squad enters the shuttleport. Beresha, Hammill, Conway, Shea, and Cuddy. Three-by-three formation. Zeroing in on our navpoint, numbers ticking down.
The ambush hits us near baggage claim.
Invisible attackers strike from all sides. Conway goes down first, then Hammill. Beresha and I leap into hyperacceleration and return fire. Needle-spray whispers by my face in slow motion. Trajectories burn in red arrows across my HUD. I thumb the switch on my multigun, selecting phopshire, and spray it in a glowing arc across the terminal. Invisible assailants are splashed as bright targets. Another thumbing of my rifle, selecting armor-piercing rounds. I fired center-mass, double-tap. One hostile goes down. Beresha is pulped three meters from me and I fall back to the cover of a column and—
Nothing.
The memory spool ends.
Natalia seemed to read my thoughts. “Like I said, we had to kill you. You fought like a fucking demon, Harris. You wrecked the goddam place. We killed you and healed you before you could become a permanent corpse like the others here.” She indicated the bodies with a disgusted sweep of her hand.
“Who killed me?” I demanded. “You?”
Sighing impatiently, she pointed.
I turned to see that the mysterious third man had returned from his patrol. This time he stood in the full glow of the algae-lamp. His face was the stuff of nightmares, festooned with piercings and a web of chains. His flesh was scarred in tribal rows and glyphs. His teeth were fangs and his eyes were a rich violet. Tattoos glowed at his neck like neon gills. His hair was a lion’s mane, dyed red.
A trog.
A goddam trog!
One of Mars’s homegrown barbarians. Criminals, murderers, thieves, and pillagers, mostly hailing from the original and long-abandoned shipyards in Ybarra District. The Order of Stone must have been desperate indeed to have recruited one of them into the fold.
I met the trog’s fiery stare. “Can I know the name of my murderer?”
The man was fully a head taller than me. Tall even by Martian standards. As massive and muscular a specimen as I’d ever seen.
“Not that it matters,” he growled. “But my name is Eric.”
“You don’t look like an Eric.”
“And thanks to me, you don’t look like a corpse. I killed you clean.”
“Um, thanks?”
The shuttleport thundered, spilling dust from the partial cave-in above. A marsquake maybe, or (more likely) an Order-versus-Partisan battle in our vicinity. Maybe the sandclaws in the streets were encountering resistance.
Natalia regarded the rubble as if ascertaining the likelihood of it collapsing on our heads. “Get to the transport, grab the asset, and complete your mission, Harris. This is the homestretch of the war if you do this right.”
“No pressure.”
Natalia smiled. It was a cold, cruel expression, and for a moment my memories clashed so vigorously they nearly gave off sparks. I was Harris Alexander Pope, soldier in the Order of Stone resistance, and in that capacity, Natalia Argos was my commanding officer. She was fearless, a tough taskmaster, an experienced combat veteran, and a key figure in their ranks. Her name and face were constantly parading around Partisan-controlled media.
But residual impulses from the past twenty years rang out like klaxons. Natalia Argos was the enemy. The Partisans wanted her alive or dead.
Preferably alive.
“Harris?”
“I understand my orders,” I said.
“Then good luck, soldier.” She gave me a brisk salute, but it seemed there was something mocking in the movement.
It was Eric who returned my weapons to me. I hefted my multigun, slid my shieldfist gauntlet over my left hand. Then I glanced back to Natalia.
“How am I supposed to blow up the most secure bunker in redspace?”
Natalia said, “We’ve given you something special. Outfitted your multigun with two very unique rounds.”
I checked my weapon’s ammo menu. The display pinwheeled open to show available ammunitions. Sure enough, there was a new tab there. And whoever had installed it wasn’t bothering with clever codewords.
ANTIMATTER ROUNDS (2) – OPTION SELECT
I blinked. “Holy fuck.”
“Two is all we could give you. Don’t waste them. You can set them for instant or delayed detonation. You need one at least to puncture the fusion core on Phobos.”
“How is David?”
“He’s the best hope we have. With your help, he’s going to end this war.”
“The Pope brothers save the planet, huh?”
Natalia was one of those rare people who can grin and glower at the same time, like a double-exposed Janus. “That remains to be seen. Get going, soldier.”
I pivoted and fled into the darkness, setting my navpoint to Hellas Market. A hundred meters south, I turned down an inactive escalator and found a tram station. The trams weren’t running. The shuttleport was a ghost town.
I hopped down onto the tracks, jogging along the black tunnel towards a distant point of light.
Chapter Two
The Man in the Shuttle
The distant point of light was Hellas Market, the shuttleport’s colorful central hub. I reached the station platform and hoisted myself into a jungle of high-nutrition plants – beets, spinach, red peppers, watercress, cauliflower, lemons, strawberries, pink grapefruit, white grapefruit, and sweet potatoes. The produce sprouted along floor-to-ceiling trellises, interrupted by placards showing the way to terminals, baggage claim, ground transportation, and the high-speed rails that crisscross Mars like radials of a spiderweb.
I hesitated, memories stirring.
Hellas Market!
It had been a monthly pilgrimage for my family – a jaunt my mother made with Dave and me as her helpful shopping assistants. Hellas was the premier supplier of fresh food, shipping its goods to every canton. But Mom liked to go straight to the source on the monthly Ides. I recalled the joy of those sojourns. The way our shopping carriage would gradually transform into a veritable arboretum.
The memory faded as I saw the shattered ceiling dome. Spokes of metal bent inward. The dust storm whipped across this breach, making a hollow sound like breath over the top of a beer bottle.
A message spiked into my audio:
*Harris! You’re alive?*
Instinctively, I took cover behind a support column. At the same time, I plucked an airhound from my utility belt and flung it into the air. A 360-degree view of the market bloomed in my HUD.
Two hundred meters southeast of my position, Hellas Market had become ground zero for a shuttle crash. The vehicle was indeed the one my Partisan squad had blasted out of the sky. It had crashed through the dome, skidded across the agora, and lay sideways against a tangle of market stalls, splattered vegetables, and the sudsy foam of fire suppression systems.
A woman crouched by the shuttle, blowtorch in hand, cutting into the hull. She wore a flight suit and mirrored visor. As I gazed through the airhound, her blowtorch cut out and she turned in my general direction.
*Harris?* she repeated. *Are you receiving this? I’ve got eyes on your position. Respond please!*
“I’m here,” I said carefully, sifting memories for the correct protocol. “What’s your status?”
The woman laughed bitterly. *Relieved that you’re not dead, that’s my status! I’ve got airhounds all over the market but I’m alone here!* A hesitation. *Where’s everyone else?*
“Dead.”
*What happened?*
The woman’s voice was instantly, intimately familiar. A rich, throaty voice that I could feel as well as hear. Watching through the airhound feed, I couldn’t make anything of her face behind that reflective visor; the market’s colors warped on its surface. Yet her voice was bringing memories into orbit.
“We were ambushed,” I said, skirting parallel to the truth. “An Order patrol hit us in the terminal.”
*Fuck.*
Committing to my course, I emerged from cover and advanced, vision split between immediate and overhead perspective. The woman slid up her visor.
I saw a lovely face, brown-skinned, with playful eyes that suggested mischief. Black curls peeking out from her helmet. She was of medium height, with features indicative of Persian or Pakistani genotype; her beauty was obvious even at a distance of fifty meters. Seeing me, she flashed a high-watt grin that made my heart skip.
Umerah.
Her name is—
“Umerah,” I breathed.
“Your comlink went dead,” she said, breathing hard. “I was circling overhead when I lost contact with the squad.” Her grin grew larger. “Together again, huh?”
“Never apart for long,” I said automatically.
The words leapt out of me spring-loaded, propelled by some autonomic function of wired-together neurons. And as I beheld her grin, a memory crawled to conscious light.
I ascend the stairwell of a burnt-out office building, climbing to the ninth floor. The Martian dusk is crushed velvet through the windows. At the ninth landing, I step into an empty corridor, watching my navpoint diminish to a pre-established rendezvous point. Rifle out, vision shifted to thermal. Ready for trouble. I don’t know who my local contact is, and it’s possible this is a trap: the Order of Stone has cyberwarfare specialists who can hackcast false breadcrumb trails, leading soldiers straight into an ambush. I watch the navpoint tick down in rhythm to my heartbeat.
There’s a doorway ahead spilling faint light. I creep closer, peek inside.
Umerah Javed sits against a wall. She’s laid a blanket out on the floor as if for a picnic. An MRE – chicken-and-broccoli by the smell of it – steams in her lap. A small lamp glows in the corner.
“U-Umerah?” I stammer.
She looks up from her ration, grins marvelously. “Harris! Together again, huh?”
“Never apart for long.”
The memory pulled at me like mud at a boot. With difficulty, I brushed it aside. “Where’s the dropship?”
Umerah pointed to the ceiling gash.
“You parked it on the roof?” I cried. “In a storm?”
“I’m something, aren’t I?”
“And you came down here without support?”
“I thought you were all dead. What was I supposed to do, bug out? Our target was sitting here, prize inside…though I don’t know if he’s alive or dead.” She wiped her dusty brow and her grin returned. “Stars, it’s good to see you, Harris!”
I glanced skyward, saw her thin rappel line dangling there. “You have any idea how dangerous it is, what you did?”
She shrugged. “And yet here I am, without a scratch.”
“Umerah….”
“Cover me while I finish cutting, okay?”
She snapped down her visor, and I saw my own scowling reflection on its surface. Then she resumed her blowtorch work. I scanned Hellas Market and tried to remember more. Tried to remember….
Everything. About this woman, about the war. Memories were there, but without reference. Like being dropped into someone else’s VR photo album. Where do you start? Sifting twenty years of undercover life – twenty fucking years! – I found my only anchor to be the market itself. Being a little boy, wandering the aisles of produce and pretending I was some Old Calendar pulp adventurer like Doc Savage, pushing my way through a Congolese jungle towards a lost temple.
My attention slid back to Umerah. Sparks rained and danced around her handiwork. At last, a slab of metal dropped away like a fallen scab.
Beige crash-foam spilled from the breach. A shape moved, coughing and stumbling forward.
“Hold fast!” I yelled, snapping open my shieldfist and drawing my multigun over the transparent rim. “Let me see your hands!”
The shape hesitated. My optics auto-outlined him in the gloom. He was a man. An Earther, judging by that dense body.
He held out his hands.
“Come out slowly,” I ordered.
“I’m unarmed,” he said.
“For your sake, that better be true.”
The shuttle’s occupant emerged into the market’s light. He was black-haired, handsome in a rough way, and sinewy. His eyes were as green as heated emeralds. My patmatch scanner read his face and threw a name onto my HUD.
I blinked, hardly believing what I was reading. Umerah must have been receiving the same data, because she gasped in surprise.
The man gazed directly at me and seemed to gauge my disbelieving expression. “Gethin Bryce,” he said. “At your service.”
The most wanted man in the universe! Holy shit!
Umerah’s shocked expression mirrored my feelings. Awkwardly, she said, “Mister Bryce? Partisan High Command would like to have a few words with you.”
His green eyes glinted in amusement. “Yeah? They’re just the latest in a long line.” He considered the state of his shuttle and sighed. “I really don’t have good luck with these things, do I?”
* * *
We dashed through the market, following signs for the space elevator. Umerah had cuffed our quarry’s hands, and she steered him along while I stalked ahead as vanguard, scanning for signs of ambush.
But there won’t be an ambush, I realized. If we ran into Partisans, they’d think I’m one of them, as surely as Umerah still thought I was one of them. And the Order wasn’t going to trouble us, because they needed me to reach Phobos intact.
We’re safe.
The shuttleport concourse opened into the S-E tram’s departure gate. I steeped myself in securing the premises. The western wall was a colossal sloping window, and Martian daylight – filtered through the dust storm – flooded the waiting area. My airhound was still with me, so I sent it to affix to the ceiling; its view took up a small corner of my own.
Umerah went straight to the empty reception desk and punched up tram controls. “Car is on the way, three minutes,” she said.
I pushed Gethin Bryce into one of the waiting area’s plastic seats. Then I viewed the scene through the window.
Beyond the tarmac and grounded shuttles, the tramline ran straight to the S-E for a half-mile. I felt my pulse quicken, much as when I was a kid, at the sight of the space elevator. Even through the dust storm, it ascended into a bruise-hued heaven like a mythical world tree. The sandstorm momentarily parted like a smoke-colored curtain; I saw two immense dust-devils chasing each other, hundreds of meters tall. They skittered in and out of each other’s trail, and then the storm snapped shut over them.
A Martian sandstorm was deadly business. Its hurricane gales claimed dozens of people annually.
Umerah leaned against the reception desk. “So, what happened back there, Harris? I was sightjacked with the squad for about twelve seconds before the feed cut.”
“Like I said, an Order squad hit us.”
“You eliminated them?”
“Right down to the last.” The lie came as smoothly as chilled wine.
“Whoever they were, they were a crack team.” She looked thoughtful. “I only had a glimpse, but if I didn’t know any better, I’d swear one of them was a trog!”
“Imagine that.”
She looked sidelong at me. “You okay?”
I touched my fingers to the window. “I’m surprised the S-E is still standing.”
“You kidding me? If either side lobbed so much as a spitball against it, the IPC would have pretext to ‘protect their interests’.” There was a sharp, bitter edge to her words – a pulse of emotion like a supernova lighting up an otherwise serene quadrant of space.
I glanced to Bryce. He sat obediently, hands cuffed in his lap.
Did he realize the Order was using him? Had he volunteered to help me get to Phobos? Or was he an innocent, sacrificial lamb?
I turned back to Umerah. Knowledge spooled from buried wellsprings.
Umerah Javed, pilot in Partisan employ. And a superb pilot at that. Taking a dropship into a hot zone was one of the most dangerous jobs in war. She handled her ship as if it was an extension of her body; she’d have been a Flying Ace in the Old Calendar’s first big war. A nachthexen in its second. She’d even been with me at….
“The Siege of Noctis,” I gasped.
Umerah raised an eyebrow. “Excuse me?”
“Sorry. Was taking a walk down memory lane.”
“Tell you what, when we get to Phobos I’ll buy you a drink and we can walk that lane together.” She pursed her lips. “Do they have alcohol up there?”
“They’re stocked with enough supplies to get through half a century.” I spoke so automatically that I wondered if it was truth or pure bullshit. Natalia had said I’d been there before. I tried to remember.
It was a cramped place, set deep in Stickney Crater. I remembered the scene of its hangar from which craft darted off like falcons. Remembered how HubCentral sat within a network of corridors leading to the dormitories, supply caves, com array, and prisoner cellblocks. Ugly memories stirred, and I thought: I don’t like Phobos Base. I’ve been there several times over the past twenty years, and it’s a place of fear.
“I’m looking forward to seeing it,” Umerah said. “Not for nothing, but Mars is a small planet. All this fighting? It’s like microbes duking it out on a holiday ornament.”
My attention flicked to our prisoner.
Umerah followed my line of sight. “Do we know why the brass wants him?”
“He’s the most wanted man in the solar system.”
“I know that, babe. But the IPC has been after him. Why do the Partisans give a shit?”
I shrugged and glanced to the tram display board. 1 MINUTE, 40 SECONDS to arrival. Squinting through the window and storm, I observed the covered track and pictured the car propelling towards us.
Umerah’s hand brushed against mine. Instinctively, my fingers parted to allow the interlace. I remembered—
—being in a CAMO tent in the foggy basin of Noctis Labyrinthus. The sight of Umerah skinning out of her flight-suit. Her tawny thighs straddling me. Her hips rolling in steady, relentless circles. Our hips and lips sealed together.
The tent is unlit – we can’t afford to betray our position to enemy snipers. My hands skate along the smooth geometry of her body. Her spine is a string of pearls….
Heat bloomed in my cheeks. Beyond the window, the dust storm was a tempest. It had swallowed not only the shuttleport, but the city as well – maybe the entire canton. Hellas appeared like some sunken Atlantis: an intricate warren of classical Greek-style structures set in concentric circles.
Still holding my hand, Umerah gave a toneless whistle. “Earlier this year, Hellas was firmly in our control. Now it’s a goddam death trap.”
“The entire planet is a goddam death trap.”
She looked at me curiously. “You’re usually more optimistic than that.”
Thinking quickly, trying to choose the right words and not sure I’d find them, I was opening my mouth to reply when an explosion took out ten meters of track.
The blast made the window tremble in its molding. An instant later, the high-speed tram burst from the wreckage and went careening across the runway like an oversized tumbleweed.
Umerah’s eyes went wide. “What the hell?”
“That was a missile strike,” I gasped. “Somebody fired a missile at the—”
And then several things happened at once.
Gethin Bryce leapt up and spun towards the window, his previous calm replaced by instant, visible dread. Hands shackled, he strained to see the destruction that – even now – was being engulfed by the storm.
The airhound feed remained in the corner of my HUD; it suddenly switched to full overlay as it detected movement.
From the balcony overlooking us.
A narrow shadow had appeared there. A long thin shape suggestive of a rifle’s stock, taking aim at Gethin Bryce.
I activated my blurmod. Umerah seemed to freeze in place, lips poised in mid-speech.
I rushed towards Bryce, shieldfist flowering open on my left hand, when a bullet whined through the ultrasonic and streaked towards his head.
* * *
My shield flared scarlet from impact. I grabbed Bryce – to my hyperaccelerated state he was as easy to move as a polystyrene dummy.
Another round splashed against my shield. I pushed Bryce away from the balcony’s view towards a maintenance door. Then I looked back to Umerah. My blurmod shrieked as the charge timed out.
One second left….
I dropped from hyperacceleration.
Umerah was where I’d left her, blinking at my unexpected vanishing act. Her eyes found me thirty meters from where I’d been standing. ...
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