Path of the Fury by David Weber


  It was a rhetorical question and Rendlemann recognized it as such, merely raising an eyebrow at his commander.

  “ETA?” Howell asked after a moment.

  “Uncertain, sir. Depends on his turnover point, but he’s piling up vee at an incredible rate—he must be well over the redline—and his line of advance clears everything but Mathison Five. He’ll be awful close to Five’s Powell limit when he hits its orbit, but he may be able to hold it together.”

  “Yeah.” Howell rubbed his upper lip and conferred with his own synth link, monitoring the readiness signals as his flagship raced back to general quarters. Their operational window had just gotten a lot narrower.

  “Check the stat board on the shuttle teams,” he ordered, and Rendlemann flipped his mental finger through a mass of report files.

  “Primary targets are almost clear, sir. First wave Beta shuttles are already loading—looks like they’ll finish up in about two hours. Most of the second wave Beta shuttles are moving on their pick-up schedules, but one Alpha shuttle hasn’t sent the follow-up.”

  “Which one?”

  “Alpha Two-One-Niner.” The ops officer consulted his computer link again. “That’d be . . . Lieutenant Singh’s team.”

  “Um.” Howell plucked at his lower lip. “They sent an all-clear?”

  “Yes, sir. They reported losing one man, then the all-clear. They just haven’t called in the cargo flight.”

  “Has com tried to raise them?”

  “Yes, sir. Nothing.”

  “Stupid bastards,” Howell grunted. “How many times have we told them to leave a com watch aboard?!” He drummed on his command chair’s arm, then shrugged. “Divert their cargo flight to the next stop, and stay on them,” he said, and his eyes drifted back to the main display.

  She sagged back against the wall, heart racing as the adrenalin in her system skyrocketed. Chemicals joined it, sparkling like icy lightning deep within her, and she jerked the crude tourniquet tight. The snow under her was crimson, and shattered bone gaped in the wound as she checked the magazine indicator. Four left, and she smiled that same wolf’s smile.

  She tugged her hood down and wiped a streak of blood across her sweating forehead as she pressed the back of her head against the wall. No one fired. No one moved in the house behind her. How many were left? Five? Six? However many, none of them were tied into the shuttle’s com unit, or reinforcements would be here by now. But she couldn’t just sit there. She was clearheaded, almost buoyant with induced energy, and her femoral hadn’t gone yet, but the high-speed penetrator had mangled her tissues and neither the coagulants nor her tourniquet were stopping the bleeding. She’d bleed out soon, and message or no, someone would be along to check on the raiders eventually. Either way, she would die before she got them all.

  She moved, dragging herself towards the northern corner of the house. They had to be on that side, unless they were circling around her, and they weren’t. These were killers, not soldiers. They didn’t realize how badly she was hurt, and they were terrified by what had already happened to them. They weren’t thinking about taking her out; they were holed up somewhere, buried in some defensive position while they tried to cover their asses.

  She flopped back down, using her sensory boosters, and her augmented gaze swept the stillness for footprints in the snow. There. The curing shed and—her eyes moved back—her father’s machine shop. That gave them a crossfire against her only direct line of approach from the house, but . . .

  The computer whirred behind her frozen eyes, and she began to work her way back in the direction she had come.

  “Anything yet from Two-Nineteen?”

  “No, sir. Rendlemann was beginning to sound truly concerned, Howell reflected, and with cause. The unidentified drive trace charged closer, and it was still accelerating. That skipper was really pouring it on, and it was clear he was going to scrape by Mathison V just beyond the limit at which his drive would destabilize. The commodore cursed silently, for no one was supposed to have been able to get here so soon, and his freighters couldn’t pull that kind of acceleration this far into the system. If he was going to get them out in time, they had to go now.

  “Goddamned idiots,” he muttered, glaring at the chronometer, then looked at Rendlemann. “Start the freighters moving and signal all Beta shuttles to expedite. Abort all pick-ups with a window of more than one hour and recall all Alpha shuttles for docking with the freighters. We’ll recover the rest of the Beta shuttles with the combatants and redistribute later.”

  There were four of them left, and they crouched inside the prefab buildings and cursed in harsh monotony. Where was everybody else? Where were the goddamned relief shuttles? And who—what—was out there?!

  The man by the curing shed door scrubbed oily sweat from his eyes and wished the building had more windows. But they had the son-of-a-bitch pinned down, and he’d seen the blood in the snow. Whoever he is, he’s hurting. No way he can make it clear up here without—

  Something flew across the corner of his vision. It sailed into the open workshop door across from him, and someone flung himself on his belly, scrabbling frantically for whatever it was. His hands closed on it and he started back up to his knees, one arm going back—then vanished in the expanding fireball where the workshop building had been.

  Grenade. Grenade! And it came around the corner. From behi—

  He was whirling on his knees as the rear door hidden behind the shed’s curing racks crashed inward and a bolt of fire lit the dimness. It sprayed his last companion across the wall, and a nightmare image filled his eyes— a tall shape, slender despite bulky furs; a quilted trouser leg, shredded and darkest burgundy; hair like a snow-matted sunrise framing eyes of emerald ice; and a deadly rifle muzzle, held hip-nigh and swinging, swinging . . .

  He screamed and squeezed his trigger as the shadows blazed again.

  “Still nothing from Two-One-Niner?”

  “No, sir.”

  “Bring her up on remote.”

  “But, sir—what about Singh and—“

  “Fuck Singh!” Howell snarled, and stabbed his finger at the plot. The blue dot was inside Mathison V. Another hour and the destroyer would be in sensor range, ready for the maneuver he most feared: an end-for-end flip to bring its sensors clear of the Fasset drive’s black hole. The other captain could make his reading, flip back around, and skew-curve around the primary, holding his drive between himself and Howell’s weapons like an impenetrable shield. Howell could still have him, but it would require spreading his own units wide—and accomplish absolutely nothing worthwhile.

  “Sir, it’s only a destroyer. We could—“

  “We could nothing. That son-of-a-bitch is running a birds-eye, and if he gets close enough for a good reading, we’re blown all to hell. He can flip, scan us, and get his SLAM drone off, and he’s got three of them. If we blow the first one before it wormholes, he’ll know how we’re doing it. He’ll override the codes on the others, and killing him after the fact will accomplish exactly nothing, so get that shuttle up here!”

  “Yes, sir.”

  She huddled in the snow, crouched over her brother, stroking the fair hair. His face was untouched, snowflakes coated his dead, green eyes, and she felt the hot flow of blood soaking her own parka. More blood bubbled at the corner of her mouth, and her strength was going fast.

  The shuttle’s ramp retracted, and it rose on its counter-gravity and hovered for just a moment. Then its turbines whined, its nose lifted, and it streaked away. She was alone with her dead, and the tears came at last. There was no more need for concentration, and her own universe slowed and swooped back into phase with the rest of existence as the tick released her and she held her brother close, cradling an agony not of her flesh.

  A side party, Stevie, she thought. At least I sent you a side party.

  But it wasn’t enough. Never enough. The bastards behind it were beyond her reach, and she gave herself to her hatred. It filled her with her despair
, melding with it, like poison and wine, and she opened to it and drank it deep.

  I tried, Stevie. I tried! But I wasn’t here when you needed me. She bent over the body in her arms, rocking it as she sobbed to the moaning wind. Damn them! Damn them to hell! She raised her head, glaring madly after the vanished shuttle.

  Anything! Anything for one more shot! One more—

 

  She froze as that alien thought trickled through her wavering brain, for it wasn’t hers. It wasn’t hers!

  She closed her eyes on her tears, and crimson ice crackled as her hands fisted in her brother’s tattered parka. Mad. She was going mad at the very end.

 

  Air hissed in her nostrils as the alien voice whispered to her once more. It was soft as the sighing snow, and colder by far. Clear as crystal and almost gentle, yet vibrant with a ferocity that matched her own. She tried to clench her will and shut it out, but there was too much of herself in it, and she folded forward over her dead while the strength pumped out of her with her blood.

  the voice murmured,

  She laughed jaggedly as her madness whispered to her, but there was no hesitation in her.

  “Anything!” she gasped.

 

  “Anything!” She raised her head and screamed it to the wind, to her grief and hate and the whisper of her own broken sanity, and a curious silence hovered briefly in her mind. Then—

  the voice cried, and the darkness took her at last.

  Chapter Two

  Captain Okanami stepped into his tiny office, shivering despite the welcome heat. Wind moaned about the prefab, but Okanami’s chill had little to do with the cold as he shucked off his Fleet-issue parka and scrubbed his face with his hands. Every known survivor of Mathison’s World’s forty-one thousand people was in this single building. All three hundred and six of them.

  He lowered himself into his chair, then looked down at his fresh-scrubbed hands. He had no idea how many autopsies he’d performed in his career, but few of them had filled him with such horror as those he’d just finished in what had been Capital Hospital. It hadn’t been much of a hospital by Core World standards even before the pirates stripped it—that was why his patients were here instead of there—but he supposed the dead didn’t mind.

  He dry-washed his face again, shuddering at the obscene wreckage on his autopsy tables. Why? Why in God’s name had anyone needed to do that?

  The bastards had left a lot of loot, yet they’d managed to lift most of it out. They might have gotten it all if they hadn’t allowed time to enjoy themselves, but they hadn’t anticipated Gryphon’s sudden arrival. They’d run, then, and Gryphon had been too busy rescuing any survivor she could find to even consider pursuit. Her crew of sixty had been hopelessly inadequate in the face of such disaster! Her minuscule medical staff had driven themselves beyond the point of collapse . . . and too many of the maimed and broken victims they’d found had died anyway. Ralph Okanami was a physician, a healer, and it frightened him to realize how much he wished he were something else whenever he thought about the monsters who had done such things.

  He listened to the wind moan, faintly audible even here, and shivered again. The temperature of Mathison’s settled continent had not risen above minus fifteen for the past week, and the raiders’ first target had been the planetary power net. They’d gotten in completely unchallenged—not that Mathison’s pitiful defenses would have mattered much—and gone on to hit every tiny village and homestead on the planet, and they’d taken out every auxiliary generator they could find. Most of the handful who’d escaped the initial slaughter had died of exposure without power and heat before the Fleet could arrive in sufficient strength to start large-scale search operations.

  This was worse than Mawli. Worse even than Brigadoon. There’d been fewer people to kill, and they’d been able to take more time with each.

  Okanami was one of the large minority of humans physically incapable of using neural receptors, and his fingers flicked keys as he turned to his data console and brought up his unfinished report. The replacement star-com was in, and Admiral Gomez’s staff wanted complete figures for their report. Complete figures, his mind repeated sickly, staring at the endless rows of names. And those were only the dead they’d identified so far. SAR parties were still working the more distant homesteads in hopes of finding someone else, but the odds were against it. The overflights had detected no operable power sources, none of the thermal signatures which might suggest the presence of life.

  A bell pinged, and he looked away from the report with guilty relief as his com screen flicked to life with a lieutenant he didn’t recognize. A shuttle’s cockpit framed the young woman’s face, and her eyes were bright. Yet there was something amiss with her excitement, like an edge of uncertainty. Perhaps even fear. He shook off the thought and summoned a smile.

  “What can I do for you, Lieutenant—?”

  “Surgeon Lieutenant Sikorsky, sir, detached from Vindication for Search and Rescue.” Okanami straightened, eyebrows rising, and she nodded. “We’ve found another one, Captain, but this one’s so weird I thought I’d better call it in directly to you.”

  “Weird? How so? The rising eyebrows lowered again, knitting above suddenly intent eyes at Sikorsky’s almost imperceptible hesitance.

  “It’s a woman, sir, and, well, she ought to be dead.” Okanami crooked a finger for her to continue, and Sikorsky drew a deep breath.

  “Sir, she’s been hit five times, including a shattered femur, two rounds through her liver, one through the left lung, and one through the spleen and small intestine.” Okanami flinched at the catalog of traumas. “So far, we’ve put over a liter of blood into her, and her BP’s still so low we can barely get a reading. All her vital signs are massively depressed, and she’s been lying in the open ever since the raid, sir—we found her beside a body that was frozen rock solid, but her body temperature is thirty-two-point-five!”

  “Lieutenant,” Okanami’s voice was harsh, “if this is your idea of humor—“

  “Negative, sir.” Sikorsky sounded almost pleading. “It’s the truth. Not only that, she’s got the damnedest—excuse me, sir. She’s been augmented, and she’s got the most unusual receptor net I’ve ever seen. It’s military, but I’ve never seen anything like it, and the support hardware is unbelievable.”

  Okanami rubbed his upper lip, staring at the earnest, worried face. Lying in sub-freezing temperatures for over a week and her temperature was depressed barely five degrees? Impossible! And yet . . .

  “Get her back here at max, Lieutenant, and tell Dispatch I want you routed straight to OR Twelve. I’ll be scrubbed and waiting for you.

  Okanami and his hand-picked team stood enfolded in the sterile field and stared at the body before them. Damn it, she couldn’t be alive with damage like this! Yet she was. The medtech remotes labored heroically, resecting an intestine perforated in eleven places, removing her spleen, repairing massive penetrations of her liver and lung, fighting to save a leg that had been brutally abused even after the hit that shattered it. Still more blood flooded into her . . . and she was alive. Barely, perhaps—indeed, her vital signs had actually weakened when the support equipment had taken over—but alive.

  And Sikorsky was right about her augmentation. Okanami had decades more experience than the lieutenant, yet he’d never imagined anything like it. It had obviously started life as a standard Imperial Marine Corps outfit, and parts of it were readily identifiable, but the rest—!

  There were three separate neural receptors—not in parallel but feeding completely separate sub-systems— plus the most sophisticated set of sensory boosters he’d ever seen, and some sort of neuro-tech webbi
ng covered all her vital areas. He hadn’t had time to examine it yet, but it looked suspiciously like an incredibly miniaturized disrupter shield, which was ridiculous on the face of it. No one could build a shield that small, and the far bulkier units built into combat armor cost a quarter-million credits each. And while he was thinking about incredible things, there was her pharmacopoeia. It contained enough pain suppressors, coagulators, and stim boosters (most of them straight from the controlled substances list) to keep a dead man on his feet, not to mention an ultra-sophisticated endorphin generator and at least three drugs Okanami had never even heard of. Yet a quick check of its med levels indicated that it wasn’t her pharmacope which had kept her alive. Even if it might have been capable of such a feat, its reservoirs were still almost fully charged.

  He inhaled gratefully as the thoracic and abdominal teams closed and stepped back to let the osteoplastic techs concentrate on her thigh. Her vitals kicked up a hair, and blood pressure was coming back up, but there was something weird about that EEG. Hardly surprising if there was brain damage after all she’d been through, but it might be those damned receptors.

  He gestured to Commander Ford, and the neurologist swung her monitors into place. Receptor Two was clearly the primary node, and Okanami moved to watch Ford’s screens over her shoulder as she adjusted her equipment with care and keyed a standard diagnostic pattern.

  For just a moment, absolutely nothing happened, and Okanami frowned. There should be something—an implant series code, if nothing else. But there wasn’t. And then, suddenly, there was, and buzzers began to scream.

  A lurid warning code glared crimson, and the unconscious young woman’s eyes jerked open. They were empty, like the jade-green windows of a deserted house, but the EEG spiked madly. The thigh incision was still open, and the med remotes locked down to hold her leg motionless as she started to rise. A surgeon flung himself forward, frantic to restrain that brutalized body, and the heel of her hand struck like a hammer, barely missing his solar plexus.

 
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