Blackcollar
For a moment Mordecai also lay silent, listening for running feet or curious voices. But his straining ears heard only the soft beating of his own heart. Getting to his feet, he confirmed all three Argentians were dead and retrieved his shuriken from McKitterick’s body. For a moment he considered searching the room, but decided against it and instead stepped to the door.
He paused there, his hand on the knob, surveying the bodies he was leaving behind. He felt no regret, nor any sense that what he had just done was murder. It was, instead, justice.
Leaving the room, he closed the door gently behind him.
CHAPTER 29
THE HOSTILITY IN THE conference room hit Caine like a heat wave as he and Lathe crossed to their places at the table. Every eye was on them, every expression icy cold. Caine threw a quick glance at Lathe’s face as they sat down, but if the comsquare knew the reason for this unexpected summons he was hiding it well. Across the table, the seats usually occupied by Bakshi’s four blackcollars were empty.
Tremayne didn’t waste any time with preliminaries. “Comsquare Lathe, can you account for the whereabouts of your men between twenty-one o’clock and midnight last night?”
“Not really,” Lathe replied, “but there’s no need to. I’m the one who ordered them killed.”
The tension in the room seemed to crack with surprise, then instantly reform into an even denser mass. “Ordered who killed?” Caine asked, his stomach tightening.
“Fuess, McKitterick, and Couturie,” Tremayne answered coldly. “And I’ve heard that Valentine didn’t return with Skyler and Jensen this morning.”
“That’s right, he didn’t.” Lathe’s voice was calm, but with an undertone of bitterness. “Neither did Novak. Valentine and the other three were responsible for his death.”
“How do you figure that?” Miles Cameron snapped.
“They were government spies.”
The stunned silence that greeted that statement lasted only a second before a babble of incredulous comments broke out. Through it one voice cut like a knife: “What’s your proof?”
Lathe turned to face Faye Picciano. “I have no hard evidence, if that’s what you want. If you had the facilities here a biochemist could show that none of them had ever been treated with the Backlash drug. But I can give you more indirect evidence.”
“Such as?” Faye’s voice was cool but, unlike some of the others, she seemed willing to hear him out.
“Such as their loud hatred for the Ryqril and the government. Bakshi here doesn’t show that kind of emotional fire; neither do my men. Blackcollars that do can’t survive a war of attrition—they burn out far too quickly. But that was the stereotypical blackcollar personality all of you expected—correct me if I’m wrong—so that’s the camouflage they wore for you.”
Caine tore his gaze from Lathe’s face long enough to evaluate the others’ expressions. They were still hostile, but here and there slightly creased foreheads indicated Lathe’s words had started some of them thinking. For himself, Caine felt like all the props had been knocked out from under him.
“Skyler also brought Valentine’s dragonhead ring back,” Lathe continued, “and I can show you it’s been altered to match his assumed rank of commando, whereas it originally must have belonged to a higher-ranking officer. And finally, the three that Mordecai killed attacked him first, instead of the other way around.”
“Did them a lot of good, didn’t it?” Tremayne said, throwing a glare over Caine’s shoulder to where Mordecai and Kwon waited quietly by the door. “McKitterick took a throwing star in the throat, Couturie had a broken neck, and Fuess had both lungs collapsed and bone splinters in his heart. I don’t even see you limping.”
Mordecai remained silent. “The point remains,” Lathe said, “that real blackcollars wouldn’t have attacked in the first place. They could have cleared themselves easily.”
“How?” Cameron growled. “Their word against yours?”
“Use your head, Miles,” Bakshi spoke up unexpectedly. “We all went to the same training center on Centauri A. There are a thousand little things about the people and procedures there that any true blackcollar would know.”
The attention of the group turned abruptly to Bakshi. “Are you saying Lathe’s right?” Tremayne asked, clearly surprised.
“I don’t know for sure—and any chance of cross-examining them is gone now.”
“Very conveniently,” Cameron added with heavy sarcasm.
“But,” Bakshi continued doggedly, “if Lathe is right it would explain all the raids that have gone sour over the years.”
“But even if they weren’t real blackcollars it doesn’t necessarily follow that they were spies,” Cameron persisted.
“You don’t even believe that one yourself,” Faye scoffed. “What else would they be?”
“Would I be correct in assuming you brought the four of them into Radix, Cameron?” Lathe put in.
Cameron reddened. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Only that you’re defending them like someone who’ll look bad if they’re proved phony.”
“I’m not….Oh, hell. Yes, it was one of my contacts that clued me in to them, and I was the one who recommended to Ral that they be brought here to help with strategy and tactics. But that’s all.” He leveled a finger at Bakshi. “And Serle accepted them as genuine, so how was I to know any different?”
“Why did you accept them, Serle?” Faye asked curiously. “You just said there were questions you could have nailed them with.”
Bakshi shrugged. Like Cameron he also looked somewhat embarrassed. “I had no reason to doubt them. They had enough general knowledge of blackcollar tactics and skills that I accepted them at face value. You have to remember that blackcollar teams worked independently within their assigned territories. I couldn’t be expected to have known them personally.” He nodded at Lathe. “Your squad was put together from remnants the same way, wasn’t it—in fact, I understand one of your people suffers from the same neural damage Fuess and the others claimed they had. If you couldn’t see through them until now they must have faked the symptoms fairly well.”
Lathe nodded his agreement…and Caine struggled to keep his expression neutral as all his old questions regarding Dodds came flooding back with sudden new urgency. If Fuess and the others had been able to fool Bakshi for so long, what proof was there that Dodds hadn’t been doing the same thing on Plinry? None whatsoever…except that Lathe had apparently vouched personally for Dodds.
Caine shook his head minutely to clear it. Surely Lathe was above suspicion—he’d risked his life often enough on the mission to prove that. And yet, he couldn’t help but notice that in eliminating the four Argentians Lathe had also rather conveniently silenced his most vocal opposition in the Radix tactical group. It bothered Caine in a way he found impossible to pin down, and he found himself almost hoping Tremayne or Cameron would demand more proof of Lathe’s charges. The comsquare’s reaction to that might be enlightening.
But with Bakshi and Faye more or less supporting Lathe, the controversy over the killings was cooling down, at least temporarily. Lathe obviously considered the issue closed; all business again, he had pulled out a map and was spreading it on the table. With half an ear Caine listened as the other outlined the plan he and Hawking had worked out to secure space transports from the Brocken military ’port some fifteen kilometers south of Calarand…and it became quickly clear that opposition to Lathe’s methods hadn’t died with Fuess and company.
“You seem confident that this pattern bombardment rigmarole will actually clear a path through the outer defenses before either the tower lasers open up or the Ryqril get some ground forces into the area,” Salli Quinlan said, shaking her head. “I’ll accept your word on blackcollar matters, but you’re talking Ryqril spaceports now; and I know Ryqril have better security than that.”
“True,” Lathe agreed, “but that’s only the first attack vector. The second comes through here—”
he indicated a spot on the map—“led by two double-flexarmored blackcollars who’ll sweep out a lane through the perimeter mines. Without the usual pattern bombardment there the Ryqril won’t have any real warning, so our men should be in among the parked ships before they can react.”
“Unless the antiaircraft lasers automatically fire at ground-level incursions,” Tremayne said. “I agree with Salli; the whole thing’s unworkable.” He fixed Lathe with a glare. “Or is this another feint like the big Cerbe operation?”
Lathe shook his head. “No, this one’s real. And it is unworkable if we were trying to capture the ’port. But as long as all we want to do is get the vets aboard some ships and take off we’ll be pretty safe.”
“How do you figure that?” Tremayne growled.
“Because the Ryqril want the Novas,” Faye spoke up, her gaze riveted to Lathe’s face. “That’s what you’re counting on, isn’t it?”
“My God!” Jeremiah Dan exclaimed, looking stricken. “She’s right, Ral—Fuess and McKitterick were right there when Lathe told us about the ships.”
Tremayne gave Lathe a speculative look, then turned to Faye. “What do you mean, that’s what he’s counting on?”
“It’s simple,” Faye said, eyes still on Lathe. “Now that the Ryqril know why the blackcollars are here, they’ve got a choice between raiding us and stopping the operation cold, or letting us go and trying to turn it to their advantage.”
Lathe smiled slightly and inclined his head. “Nicely reasoned,” he said.
“Thanks.” Her voice ignored the compliment. “Then maybe you’ll listen when I tell you you’ve just forced their decision. With his agents dead Apostroleris has to stop us now before we get off-planet. He can’t just follow us to wherever the Novas are hidden—his ships would have to stay too far back, and by the time he caught up we might have one or more of the ships activated.”
“With thirty or more Corsairs available?” Lathe shook his head. “The Ryqril will know we can’t possibly get the drive up to full power in less than forty or fifty hours with the number of starmen we have. They could track us by drive trail from here and still get Corsairs there in plenty of time.”
“That presupposes the Novas are within forty hours of Argent,” Bakshi said.
“They are. Come on now—surely you’ve all figured out where they’re hidden.”
There was a short silence. “Somewhere in the Diamond?” Tremayne hazarded.
“Of course.” Lathe nodded. “There must be upwards of eighty thousand decently sized asteroids out there. Any one of them could have had five caves carved into it, the Novas put in and sensor shielded—and the Ryqril could search for the next ten years without finding them. No, they’ll let us show them the way, all right.”
“Well, that’s a relief,” Cameron growled sarcastically. “And now that Apostoleris has mate in three, why the hell are we still going ahead with this?”
“Because we know something Security doesn’t,” Lathe said calmly. “One of my people knows a rather exotic shortcut that can have the Novas’ weaponry operational in less than four hours. If we can position the ships properly, we should be able to hold off anything the Ryqril have in this system long enough to bring the drives up.”
“Why haven’t we heard about this miracle cure before?” Tremayne asked suspiciously. “And which one supposedly knows it?”
“Not ‘supposedly,’ ” Lathe corrected mildly. “And you haven’t heard about it because the subject hasn’t come up until now.”
“Who?”
“Jensen, of course. He’s our spacecraft expert.”
Tremayne frowned sternly at Lathe, and for a long moment Caine thought he was going to demand proof. But Lathe returned the gaze without flinching; and it was the Radix leader who blinked first. “Just remember that if it doesn’t work it’s your neck, too,” he growled. He gestured toward the map of Brocken Base. “And you’d better hope the quizlers see things the same way you do. Otherwise a lot of good men are going to die for nothing—and you and your rads won’t escape.”
“On the contrary—we’ll be at the top of the list,” Lathe said calmly. “Or had you forgotten we’ll be leading both prongs of the attack?”
Tremayne measured him with his eyes. “All right,” he said at last. “When do we attack?”
Lathe’s answer was immediate. “Tonight.”
The painkiller they’d given Galway was an unfamiliar one, selectively numbing his broken arm and the strained muscles in his neck without fogging up his mental processes. In a way he was sorry, a part of him would have liked to escape from the memories of the past few hours. Waking up to find himself buried under tons of collapsed building…he suppressed a shudder at the memory. And yet, it was almost more painful to realize that the blackcollars had once again pulled off the supposedly impossible.
And to know that he himself was responsible for part of the current crisis.
“I’m sure he picked it up,” he said again to Colonel Eakins. “He was lucid enough, and blackcollars don’t miss clues like that.”
“Especially when handed over on a silver platter,” Eakins said acidly, leaning back in his chair. He’d looked singularly ill at ease when he’d first sat down there an hour previously, Galway had thought—he’d probably never before been on that side of the Security prefect’s desk. Now, after making a couple of dozen phone calls and giving perhaps twice that many orders, he merely looked tired.
“I know.” Galway’s guilt feelings weren’t helped by the knowledge that being in Jensen’s interrogation room when the balloon went up had probably saved his life; of those in the control area only Prefect Apostoleris had survived, and he was holding on by a molecular filament back in a Millaire hospital.
Eakins snorted, but then shook his head. “Oh, forget it. If you hadn’t said anything they probably would’ve nailed the other three through association with Valentine anyway. I just hope we can be ready before Lathe makes his next move.”
Galway gestured toward the phone with his good arm. “Do you really think you’ve got enough men to blockade every spaceport on the planet?”
Eakins sighed. “I don’t have any choice. Without any ears left in the Radix council we aren’t likely to get the Novas’ coordinates in time for the Ryqril to get there first.”
“Why not just let them go and simply track them?” Galway suggested. “You can make sure that any ship they can grab has long-range transponders aboard. They’d reach, the ships first, but once they’re there it would only be a matter of hours before the Ryqril could have a wing of Corsairs out to them.”
“I thought of that.” Eakins was studying the wood-grain pattern of Apostoleris’s desk top. “All our experts claim it’s feasible, that it’d take nearly two days for them to get the Novas up to fighting strength.” He looked up at Galway, his expression tight. “But there’s a flaw somewhere we’re not seeing. It’s too simple an idea for Lathe to have missed it, and yet his operation’s going ahead at full speed. Either we’ve miscalculated or Lathe knows something I don’t.” He shook his head. “I can’t afford to underestimate them again.”
The phone rang, and Eakins picked it up. “Security prefect’s office; Eakins,” he said. A second later his eyes widened. “Yes. Thank you,” he said hastily and dropped the handset into its cradle.
“What is it?” Galway asked tensely.
“Ryq on his way,” Eakins hissed. The words were still echoing in Galway’s ears when the door slammed open and one of the aliens strode in.
Galway had seen Ryqril close up perhaps a dozen times in his life, but there was something about this one that made the experience seem excruciatingly fresh. The Ryq was big; his slightly hunched form barely cleared the doorway, and the thump of his footsteps could be felt even through the thick carpet. But even that didn’t explain the sheer presence the alien radiated, a sense of power and authority Galway had never encountered in a Ryq. Even as he and Eakins scrambled to their feet his eyes flicked ove
r the ornate belt-and-baldric supporting the laser and short sword, searching for a rank or familial pattern he could recognize. But none of the designs were like any he knew.
The Ryq reached the desk and stopped, his black eyes on Eakins. “ ‘Re’ect A’staeleris?” he said, his gravelly voice distorting the words and adding a deep-pitched tonal fluttering.
Eakins swallowed visibly. “I am Colonel Eakins, Acting Prefect,” he said, enunciating carefully. “Prefect Apostoleris has been severely injured.”
The Ryq made a gesture with its arm, and Galway winced involuntarily before he realized the alien wasn’t going for his sword. Small as it was, his motion drew the Ryq’s eyes for a split second. “I an Hrarkh—rarriaer khassq,” he ground out, his paw completing its gesture to touch a section of his baldric.
Galway felt cold. Khassq-class warriors were the highest stratum of Ryqril society—orders of magnitude above the rear-echelon troops serving on Plinry. How high up this particular Ryq was in the government of Argent or in the war machine arrayed against the Chryselli Galway didn’t know, but it didn’t really matter. A khassq warrior’s authority superseded any chain of command.
Obviously, Eakins knew all this even better than Galway did. “What are your commands?” the colonel asked.
“Rithdraw Secaerity rarriaers arornd all landing ’ields,” the alien said promptly. “Eneny attack is allared to ’raceed.”
Eakins blinked once. “Ah—yes, of course. But—are you aware the enemy has eliminated our top spies?”
“Dae yae qrestion?” Hrarkh’s voice had dropped an octave, and Galway felt his mouth go dry. He’d heard that tone only once before from a Ryq; three men had died immediately afterwards.
“I don’t question either your order or your authority,” Eakins replied hastily. “I question only our ability to protect Ryqril interests without information from our spies if we withdraw our defenses.”