Read Loralynn Kennakris 2: The Morning Which Breaks Online
Authors: Owen R. O'Neill,Jordan Leah Hunter
Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine
This incident raised her star in some quarters, raised hackles in others, and deepened the air of mystery surrounding her origins. Those seeking answers might have applied to Sergeant Major Yu. Yu had spent most of his career in the Strike Rangers, officially the 101
st
Marine Special Operations Brigade, where he was still on the strength as brigade sergeant major, and thus had access to private and confidential sources of information. But they did not know to do so, and it was well they did not, for that could have created some painfully awkward circumstances. For his part, Yu kept his own council and his eye on his gifted and anomalous cadet.
Just how gifted and anomalous became apparent six weeks into the quarter, when new cadets were introduced to ship drill. Although the members of Class 1861 were destined to become fighter pilots, the Academy took an ecumenical approach to education and for the first three months, everyone followed the same curriculum. This included, starting that sixth week and then every third week thereafter, being bundled into a mock-up where the whole class spent five days living in a berth, sleeping in a rack instead of a bunk, eating in the mess, and fulfilling the duties of every rank from junior officer to the lowest enlisted man. Instructors—senior officers all—guided them through those duties: anything from replacing equipment modules to cleaning the recyclers to inspecting weapons to sensor drills and long hours of watch standing. It was an intensely odd feeling—at home and not, familiar and unreal—and Kris woke up in a cold sweat twice during her first night.
Those first five days were expected to be something of a shambles as the class struggled with getting used to their suits, maneuvering in null-gee and learning up from down, all too often literally. Only minimal direction was initially given and it was not anticipated they would complete the tasks assigned to them with any degree of competence. The real purpose was to assess how they dealt with new and stressful surroundings and tackled problems for which they were manifestly unprepared.
Her instructors had already noted how much at home Kris was in null-gee during the periodic safety drills, but it was they who were unprepared for how quickly she grasped the basic elements of ship-duty. When she was assigned to replace the CO
2
absorbers on her third day, the officer in charge of the drill left to get a leisurely cup of coffee, expecting on his return to find her fumbling through the operation, perplexed and annoyed. And Kris, floating at her station,
was
perplexed and annoyed: perplexed at how anyone could spend so long getting a cup of coffee and annoyed that he was wasting her time—she’d finished the job within a few minutes and had been waiting for a quarter of an hour.
Replacing CO
2
absorbers was not a demanding task: a precocious cadet with a manual could be expected to figure it out. What happened during the second week of ship drill was in a different category altogether. Kris was standing the bridge watch when there was a simulated failure in the environmentals—exactly the sort of surprise instructors liked to spring on cadets just as they were beginning to get their feet under them. At once, she alerted the officer of the deck, who notified the Exec, both of whom arrived minutes later to find everything properly secured and Kris running through the diagnostics, looking faintly disgusted that the simulation did not extend to actually diagnosing and correcting the problem.
The story quickly made the rounds—Basmartin, who hadn’t bothered to hide his admiration for Kris, was the likely vector—irritating Minx and bringing Kris onto better terms with Tanner, the only other cadet whose experience of ships seemed to extend beyond the occasional pleasure cruise. It also caused no small amount of comment among her instructors, but it didn’t appear to faze Sergeant Major Yu, who merely made a laconic note in her file and awarded Kris an extra eight hours of sim time.
Offering simulation time as a reward for superior performance was an Academy tradition of long standing. Class 1861 contained a healthy crop of gamers, as usual for incoming cadets, but the games they’d grown up with were nowhere near as challenging as the Academy simulations, nor did they take place in a genuine virtual-reality environment as the Academy simulations did. These used only a mild form of neural induction to produce their VR effects, and while those effects were not as vivid or realistic as the sensations produced by memory modules and direct-wired connections, they also did not produce the dementia that had resulted in VR technology being heavily restricted where it was not completely outlawed. Like AI technology, banned by interstellar treaty after the disastrous hacking events during the Formation Wars, virtual reality was something of a taboo topic in the Homeworlds, and even this benign introduction to it captivated the cadets with a taste of forbidden fruit. As intended, sim-runs rapidly became the favored form of recreation, spawning teams and competitions and even a degree of wagering which, as long as it was kept within sane limits, was duly noted and duly winked at.
As this eventful first three months wound to a close, exams became the other great concern. They were approaching the Semi’s: the battery of tests that took place at the end of their first quarter. Basmartin had acquired a cramming guide, a common expedient, which Kris was at the moment borrowing. Just as she closed the unit on the history of early terraforming, Basmartin looked up and cried, “Unbelievable!” This was the third time he’d done that since Kris started her review.
“Baz, are you reading about
Apollo
again?”
“Kris, you really oughta look at this.” He gestured animatedly with his xel. “It’s chemical! They did this all with chemicals—liquid oxygen! Kerosene! Would you believe it? I mean . . .
kerosene
!”
Baz was near-obsessed with ancient space flight and he had recently found scans, almost primordial, of some analog data records in the Academy archives that showed plans and specifications for chemical rockets from the very dawn of space flight. Baz was not shy about sharing his enthusiasms, and over the past few days Kris had promised herself that if he said, “Amazing! Unbelievable! Greatest instance of human ingenuity!” one more time, or cried out in rapture about the dazzling genius of these ancient giants of inspiration and intellect, she was going to stab him in the neck with a fork. So far, she’d managed to refrain, but as she put her tablet down and Baz beamed at her from across the room, his long legs dangling over the back of a chair as he lounged in his bunk, she felt herself slipping.
“You know,” he said, for he was not terribly perspicacious when this mood was upon him, “I don’t think there’s anyone alive today who could do this. Just think of all the knowledge—the art!—we’ve lost. It’s criminal!”
If so, it was a crime even older than civilization, and Kris thought it was like lamenting that people no longer knew how to start a fire by rubbing two sticks together: another one of Basmartin’s favorite examples. She could imagine instances where starting a fire would be useful and two sticks might be the only resources at hand, but why anyone would ever have occasion to build a chemical heavy-lift rocket with tools that were barely more advanced than stone axes and braided plant fibers was beyond her.
“Baz, don’t we have tests to study for?”
He looked up. “What? There’s nothing till next week.”
Kris looked hard at him, willing him to get the hint. She knew where there was a fork . . . “What about a pop quiz, maybe? I think we’re overdue. Shouldn’t you be brushing up on the muzzle energy of the three-ring surge gun or something?”
“Oh.” Enlightenment dawned; Baz deflated. “Yeah, probably. Good idea.”
Kris sunk back into her bunk, picked up her tablet again, and trying to quell her irritation at not even being half done with what they were expected cover, thumbed to the next section.
Section 3.4. . . . Ancient History Module: Initial Colonization Failures
{a} . . . The G-Barrier: Low-Gee Pregnancy—Sperm Motility—Effects on Fetal Development—Artificial gestation related to infanticide. [ Open Abstract ]
You Have Not Read This Article
{b} . . . Century of Failure: First Mars Failure—Confinement Issues—Religious tensions of colonization. [ Open Abstract ]
You Have Not Read This Article
{c} . . . First Hopes: Early Terraforming—Mars & Venus—The Mars Air Line. Belt Civilization: Ganymede, Callisto, Europa, Titan, Triton. 1st Nanocyte Revolution. [ Open Abstract ]
You Have Read This Article
NBPS HQ, Mare Nemeton
Nedaema, Pleiades Sector
The story of the botched attempt to capture Nestor Mankho was now three months old, but damning details continued to dribble out, feeding the conflagration it had lit. The media had kept the story alive, the Archon’s supporters trading shot-for-shot with the pro-opposition outlets. The
Scholai
Michael addressed the Synalogue on the controversy, carefully couching his remarks in a tone more of sorrow than of anger. As head of state, these ‘private observations’ to an advisory and largely ceremonial body with no political remit carried no more than moral weight, but that weight was not inconsiderable.
The Archon’s allies in the Proxenoi Council tried to spread some oil on the troubled waters by entering a resolution that a committee headed by a special investigator be stood up to look into the government’s handling of the raid. This jaded tactic came too late and served to highlight the Archon’s perceived failures rather than calm the furor, especially after some influential parties in the Nedaeman Senate savaged the proposal on the floor of the chamber, with one former supporter, hand raised imperiously, proclaiming that just such “half-witted half-measures” were responsible for the fiasco in the first place. The quote and the image made for top-line news for over a week and the Archon’s response, which was meant to sound measured and statesmanlike, instead came off as stuffy and ineffectual when presented through the media filter.
As the increasingly rancorous debate built towards a fever pitch, Lysander Gayle, Nedaema’s junior Grand Senator and a man of immense ambition and considerable oratorical powers, delivered a carefully timed bombshell on the floor of the Grand Senate in the form of a proposal that the League issue an ultimatum to the Bannermans over their support for the Mankho plot. This stroke, coming just as a vote of no-confidence on the Archon’s government appeared to be inevitable and the various claimants were jockeying for position, stole the limelight from his several competitors and sent half of them into eclipse. The very brass of the measure heightened its impact, coming as it did from a Grand Senator who was heretofore best known for his ability to straddle any issue and for his appeal to the often-contrarian backbenchers.
It was also the first public revelation of Bannerman involvement, and it instantly elevated the issue from a Nedaeman political crisis to an interstellar one. The Bannerman ambassador returned to his capitol on Sephar the next day for consultations with the Confederacy’s President-for-Life, who ordered his navy to conduct a series of fleet exercises in the Hydra. Invited by the Bannermans, Halith sent observers.
While the Bannermans explained the pacific nature of their exercises—training, nothing more—older heads grappled with the proposal, which they found absurd, especially as Gayle had said next to nothing about the specifics of his ultimatum. This very lack, which might have seemed irresponsible or obtuse at another time, buoyed Gayle up now. With nothing concrete to attack, those who criticized him were tarred with the brush that had been so liberally applied to the Archon, as being against
doing something
. The Speaker, wise enough not to play Canute with the rising tide, bided his time.
Stories about these developments circulated through the Chattering Classes and were sagely commented on and speculated about, but there was a general feeling that little would come of it; that the Grand Senate would dilute any proposed action through politically expedient compromises, and that once the media cooled off, the whole affair would reduce itself to just another tempest in a teapot.
Three-hundred-eighty light-years away, another opinion was heard. “Worse’n a reformed harlot out for blood,” said Chief Inspector Taliaferro to Commander Wesselby during another of their oh-dark-thirty meetings. “If they’d gone in and done this job when we had Mankho’s organization by the short hairs, I’d have cheered for them. But now that they’ve had all this time to refit and recoup and we don’t even know where the son of a bitch is, they wanna barge in and carry on like a Bashan bull.”
“Or a braying ass full of mischief?”
“I like that. A braying ass full of mischief—spot on. Where’d you hear that?”
“Poetry.
A braying ass of mischief full
. I think that’s how it went.”
“The Bible?”
“No. An ancient named Douglass. He was an escaped slave who preached against slavery.”
“I didn’t know you liked poetry.”
“I have unsuspected depth. Do you think Gayle’s serious?” Trin disliked politics and followed it only inasmuch as it made her job more difficult when it wasn’t making it impossible.
“The braying ass?” Nick smiled and Trin looked down, diplomatically covering an inward sigh; she had a feeling she’d be hearing that phrase a lot from now on. “Dunno. I kinda doubt it. If I had to guess I’d say he’s expecting the ultimatum to get hung up in committee. He needed a way to give the Archon the finger in public and see what sort of support he has when it comes to a no-confidence vote. An ultimatum isn’t something people can straddle the gate on.”
Trin shook her head and then snapped in pure waspish exasperation. “But releasing the Bannerman data! Do they really have no idea what that cost us in terms of assets? What in the hell was he thinking? He set us back years!”
An amazingly witty remark on the idea that a politician might actually
think
presented it to Nick’s mind, but taking note of Trin’s expression, he forbore. “The way I heard it, the Archon pretty much told him to his face that he didn’t have the balls to go through with it. Now Gayle is well known for being spine-optional, but the Archon had to go and yank his chain on this one—overplayed his hand.”
“Boys,” Trin snarled under her breath.
“You ever meet him?” The question was purely rhetorical: serving CEF intelligence officers did not hobnob with Homeworld politicians.
“He was a lawyer, wasn’t he?” Trin said, smoothing some strands of hair back distractedly.
“Colonial law, I think. Got his start as head of this big charitable foundation, doing good works in underdeveloped colonies, y’see. He’s a queer fish—bit of a rabble rouser. Likes to champion this cause or that one—took up the antislavery cudgel for a while—then move on before the real work starts. Made a boatload of money doing it, too.”
“Charming.”
“They say he is. He was originally a pacifist too. Then just after the war, he claimed to see the light and switched sides, becoming a big proponent of defense and active measures. More ‘n likely, he just realized that the pacifists were never gonna get him elected Grand Senator. My read, though, is that he’s still a lawyer at heart. Thinks this is all just an academic exercise with real nice fringe benefits. He ain’t gonna take a threat seriously until he comes home to find it soaking in his hot tub, eating his last avocado.”
An alarm chimed: someone requesting entrance to the building. Taliaferro got up, checked the monitors and excused himself. Two minutes later he was back with a large flat box that emitted wisps of steam. He put the box between them on his desk. “You hungry?”
Trin leaned forward and inhaled expectantly. “You didn’t.”
“I’m afraid I did.” He opened the box, revealing a large, flat round of baked dough slathered in red sauce and crowded with small rounds of sausage smothered in cheese, still bubbling.
“Is that real?” Nedaemans were officially all vegetarians; what meat was allowed to be imported for consumption by foreign residents was strictly monitored, licensed and regulated. Only meat that was cultured according to very specific and exacting standards was permitted and certainly no variety of sausage was on the list.
“Yep. It pays to know people.” He extracted a slice, the cheese pulling into long, sticky threads and a few drops of hot grease scattering onto his desk.
“So much for the sacred principle of law enforcement not being above the Law,” Trin muttered, inhaling deeply of the warm, savory aroma.
“I prefer to think of it as being below the Law. Help yourself. Plates under the coffee maker if you’re feeling civilized.”
She was feeling civilized and they ate in silence for a while, Trin more cautiously after the first bite nearly blistered the roof of her mouth.
“Like a beer?” Taliaferro asked, procuring one for himself. Trin shook her head; she preferred milk with this particular delicacy and Nick Taliaferro was emphatically not a milk drinker, although she assumed he knew what it was.
They demolished three-quarters of the pizza in religious silence. Trin declined a final piece and brushed crumbs from her lap. Watching them scatter—they were more profuse than she’d thought—she asked suddenly, “Nick, do you know how they were planning to handle Mankho’s interrogation if the op succeeded? They didn’t exactly cover themselves with glory with Larson and his cohorts.”
“Screwed the pooch is more what I’d call it.”
Larson was the name—obviously a codename—of the one good-sized fish Nick’s people had netted, along with a shoal of minor ones, in the aftermath of Mankho’s plot. Then, once the heavy lifting was done, the Nedaeman Foreign Office moved in and claimed jurisdiction. They demanded that the captured terrorists be turned over to the counterterrorism task force, which the Foreign Office led. The claim was perfectly valid, given the interstellar nature of the plot, but a sensible approach would have taken into account that the task force, being an interagency organization, lacked its own assets and was ill-equipped to handle prisoners or undertake their interrogations.
The obvious solution—to include the Bureau of Public Safety in the task force and let Nick’s well-trained people conduct the interrogations—was rejected in favor of bringing in the Nedaeman Directorate of Intelligence and Analysis. NDIA was not, strictly speaking, a field organization, so they in turn brought in teams of contractors, who were not sufficiently diligent in testing the terrorists for tripwires, as anti-interrogation implants were commonly known. So the NDIA and Foreign Office reps watched as the brains of several subjects, including the man called Larson who’d led the cell that carried out the operation, literally melted before their horrified eyes.
Trin had managed to get her hands on the forensic analysis—the actual raw data, not the sanitized version that made it into the official report—and it was painfully obvious to her professional eye just when and where and how the operators hired by NDIA had gone wrong. Interrogation was a delicate business, requiring at least a day or two by a skilled operator, and tripwires were, by their very nature, touchy things to deal with. To disable them took at least twice as long, maybe even a week.
The implants Larson and the others had been fitted with were good but not the best she’d seen. Any halfway decent CEF interrogator would have found them and known how to handle them. Which meant that either the contractors selected by NDIA were not halfway decent or that something else was going on. And the more she looked at the situation as a whole, from the botched interrogations to the failed raid, the more the possible dimensions of that
something else
grew to disturbing proportions.
“Weren’t going to bring in any of your people, were they?” She offered to the silence.
“Never got that far. The grumbles said SOCOM was gonna try to keep it in-house this go.” Nick wagged the forefinger of his beer-holding hand at the last slice. “Sure you don’t want to split that?”
“Thanks, but you go ahead.”
Nick did and Trin watched as the last of the pizza fulfilled its destiny. “Who was read in on this op?” She asked as the last bite of crust disappeared. “Anyone new?”
He looked at her over his glass. “What’s on your mind, Trin?”
She wiped her mouth again on a napkin, scrubbing at more than just pizza grease, and dropped the crumpled cellucine wad into a trash receptacle. “It’s just that . . . Nick, have you ever known an op to go so wrong?”
“Not above a couple dozen.”
“No, I mean so
precisely
wrong. The plan was timed to the minute, from insertion to extraction. Look at this.” She brought a small envelope out of the breast pocket of her uniform.
Taliaferro’s eyebrows climbed high up the dark-tanned forehead. “You
printed
it?”
She nodded. “My paranoia is rising to a new pitch. Look.” She unsealed the envelope, extracted two folded flimsies and spread one out on top of the pizza box. “This is the timeline, as far as we’ve been able to reconstruct it. The more I look at it, the worse it seems—like they had a precise list of targets and were just waiting for them to show themselves so they could take them out.” She ran her fingers down the list of events, showing the planned and actual timing. “See the tolerances? Now here’s what we think happened.” She overlaid the second sheet on the first. “Note this delay? Another couple of minutes and they almost certainly would have aborted. But they were pushed right to the edge, where they’d have the least amount of time to adapt if anything went wrong. Then they walked straight into what must have been a trap.”
She sat back as Nick stared hard at the flimsies, lips moving in silent vexation.
“Now wouldn’t it take some pretty fancy hardware in overwatch to detect the corvette, track the team and cue the sensors? That corvette and the shuttles had some of the best signature suppression we’ve got. If even Halith has hardware
that
good, we’ve missed it badly.”
“But if they were being surveilled from the moment they got in-system, why let it go as far as a firefight? Propaganda value? Doesn’t make much sense—just detaining the corvette would’ve still given them a dandy incident, if that’s what they were looking for.”
That took a few unpleasant moments to digest. “You have a point.”
“And all the indications are that surprise was complete. If they were waiting for them, that means our team couldn’t detect ‘em.”
“Or they
weren’t
waiting for them. Which implies they had their forces staged in the vicinity but not close enough for our team to find them,
and
a good enough idea of the timing so they could warn against the corvette even if they couldn’t track it. But once the shooting started and the shrike went up . . .” Trin folded up the flimsies and stuffed them back in her pocket. “Nick, how conspiratorial are we feeling?”