Strong Arm Tactics (40 page)

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Authors: Jody Lynn Nye

BOOK: Strong Arm Tactics
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Suddenly, with a roar like a volcano erupting the floor lifted up and flung him forward. His back pressed into his chest, and the world went black.

O O O

“Find them!” Ayala shouted. The troopers had escaped again. No one was left inside the Carrot Palace except blue-suited automata. He strode out into the courtyard, flanked by his officers. “Where could they have gone?”

“This park covers hectares,” Oostern said. “There’s no way to know wh—”

A noise louder than a starship engine burst behind them. Ayala was only aware of the thunder in his ears as he was thrown out over the Meadow Pavilion and into the empty escape pod. Gravel and debris shot outward, peppering the safety pod. Ayala ducked automatically against the deafening rumble, but he was safe. Outside his shelter, Armageddon was descending.

Individual blasts of white fire erupted all the way around the base of the Carrot Palace. Huge chunks of orange plascrete shot outward, scoring the green cobbled pavement as they tumbled. The sides splintered into long shards and fell. All four of the carrot-shaped turrets tilted in toward the center of the building and almost seemed to turn inside out, then disappeared into the deafening clouds of dust. Ayala was unable to move, but the plastic shell protected him while he watched with utter disbelief as the walls of the Carrot Palace collapsed under their own weight.

When the dust cleared, shards of the orange façade lay in a rough circle on the raised pavement. Cries for help and screams of pain arose out of the ruin. Bodies sprawled covered with dust on the torn green cobbles. Ayala rose gingerly, his limbs shaking with unaccustomed weakness, to try and help his soldiers. Oostern crawled to assist. One of his upper forelimbs had been torn off, and his head was gashed.

“It was a trap,” Ayala whispered, staggering forward. “They brought us here to destroy us! They must all die!”

O O O

Daivid felt hands pounding on his chest, and an urgent voice calling his name. “Lt. Wolfe! Lt. Wolfe, answer me!”

Daivid batted feebly at the hands. He pried his eyes open, even though it hurt to do so. “Stop hitting me,” he murmured.

“I’m not hitting you,” D-45 said.

“What? I can’t hear you!”

“I say, I’m not hitting you!” the squad leader shouted. “You got caught in the blast!” The trooper leaned over him as Gire helped him to sit up. Together they helped him take off his helmet. “Your web suit’s been giving you CPR. Doc said your heart stopped for a while. Borden’s been frantic wondering if you bought it. You okay?”

“I … yes.” Daivid licked his lips, and Gire snapped his fingers.

“Nurse!”

A three-eyed green bug-eyed monster sidled up and handed the doctor a water bottle with a straw. He put it to Daivid’s lips.

The lieutenant drank greedily. The CBS,P observed his tight shoulders and began running its backrub program. Daivid sighed with relief. He nodded toward the BEM. “I thought you were afraid of them.”

Gire beamed. “These are good aliens,” he said, enunciating carefully so Daivid could read his lips. “They told me I can dream about them. I think I will. They’ll help keep away the bad ones. Your vitals are returning to normal. I would like to tell you to rest for a while, but you won’t.”

“No, I won’t.” Daivid put a hand on the floor to push himself up. He turned to face D-45. “Wingle’s dead, isn’t he?”

“Yes, sir. Gas. Painless. Aaooorru’s kicking himself with all his feet, but I keep telling him he is not to blame.”

Wolfe bowed his head for a moment. “Any other casualties?”

“None of ours.”

“How about Ayala?”

“Still out there,” D-45 said. “But we killed about eighty of his people.”

“I want him,” Daivid said, resolutely, taking the helmet back. “Wingle would have wanted me to take him out. Ayala still owes blood for murdering his staff. Let’s go get him.”

O O O

“Welcome back, sir,” Lin’s voice said in his ear as he strode out into the daylight from the shelter of the carousel. He had to turn the volume up to maximum. The explosion had deafened him so badly that the calliope music from the carousel was a faint whistle in the background.

“Thank you,” Wolfe said, admiring the ruins of the Carrot Palace. The entire structure had collapsed in a gigantic ring of orange debris topped by the four giant carrots that had been the turrets. Two of them still had flags to wave. A few pieces had fallen on the pavilion, where they were being used as cover by the remaining Insurgent soldiers. “Nice work! Have you ever thought of a sideline in demolitions?”

“How do you think I make pin money?”

“I was thinking sheep herding?” Wolfe suggested. “How about rounding up the rest of these bastards?”

“I’d love to,” the chief replied. Whatever was wrong between them had been put to the side for now.

“Good. All right, all of you slackers!” he shouted. “Lock and load! Special Auxiliaries, ground troops and shock troops, into the Meadow Pavilion right now! Dragons, front and center.”

“Aye, aye, sir!” Lin and Jones replied.

“Aye, aye, sir,” added a new, raspy voice.

“Let’s see how they like these apples,” Wolfe said. He threw a new magazine into his machine gun and hefted it, marching into the fray. Behind him came the costumed characters, more and more seeming to arise out of the ground as he closed in on the Carrot Palace.

The two scout vehicles zoomed out of the air, hammering the Insurgents on the ground with tracer bullets. Where troops tried to break and run, they let loose with a burst of plasma fire that scorched the pavement. The Insurgents ran back and forth, peppering the pilots with gunfire that pinged off the protective shields like rain, but they were being herded steadily into the center of the pavilion.

“Stand your ground!” Ayala shouted. “They are only puppets! We still outnumber the real troopers! There are only fifteen!”

“He’s good,” Borden commented, in Daivid’s other ear.

“Hope he can use that numerical skill in hell,” Wolfe retorted.

From hidden trap doors all over the pavilion, the rest of the Wingle characters arose. Nanny Goat marched proudly at their head waving the Cockroach banner and her knitting needles. Dimmius Grebs stumped heavily up a ramp as panicked Insurgents shot grenades and bullets at him. With a puzzled, patient look on his face, he picked them up one at a time and flung them at the ruin of the Carrot Palace. The mad unicorn ran around goring soldiers, impervious to bullets that sang his way. Ginophant stomped on anyone that got in his way. He lifted one oversized foot to apologize to one of the Bizarro Twins, who lay flattened on the pavement.

“Ooh, sorry,” he said in his deep, slow voice, and backed very deliberately onto a mortar team who were trying to load their weapon. “Sorry again.”

But far more terrifying was the undulating presence of the huge red dragon. Twice as long as a shuttle, its purple eyes rolling and golden tongue flicking, snaked in and out of the attractions on low, taloned feet. It could move with the speed of a tank, preventing any of the Insurgents from leaving the pavilion. Every time a group of soldiers attempted to flee, it chased them down, herding them back into the park center.

“Get into the ruins,” Ayala instructed them. “We can defend ourselves there! Move!”

Wolfe directed the operation from a distance, monitoring the Insurgents as they made their way to what was left of a magnificent structure, the signature building of Wingle World, and the symbol of a gallant and wise man. He hoped Wingle would have approved of what he had done, and what he was about to do. He watched the Insurgent colonel clamber over pieces of orange masonry. Wolfe tracked him by his red-in-blue signature as he dashed through the building, trying to find a way out. Wolfe bounded after him, ignoring the pain in his knee. He got to the west stairs as Ayala attempted to escape down them, and blasted at him with the machine pistol. He was not going to get away. Firing back over his shoulder, Ayala retreated into the ruins.

The Cockroaches and their allies followed as the Insurgents fell back, covering one another with increasingly wild gunfire. Once behind the crumbled walls they were able to hammer the Cockroaches with little chance of being hit themselves. Somewhere in there Ayala was undoubtedly trying to plan an escape, maybe already searching for the trap doors that had allowed the Cockroaches to slip out without being noticed, but the tunnels had already been moved. Frantically, the Insurgents fired at the shadows dancing around them. Wolfe tracked the red-in-blue image of Ayala. He was almost in the center of the ruin.

“Dragons, keep everyone in there,” Wolfe instructed. Lin and Jones zoomed overhead, peppering the ruins. Heads bobbed up, fired, and ducked down again.

“Ow! Frax a dax,” Boland yelled. “One of those crazy bastards just holed me in the side.”

“Go below and see Doc,” Wolfe ordered.

“In a while, sir. I want to see the fireworks.”

“Why not? I want an end to this,” Wolfe said, keeping an eye on Ayala’s shadow as it bobbed up and down, shooting hopelessly at the troopers and puppets who were just too far out of reach. He wouldn’t be able to get out. Wingle’s vengeful spirit would be appeased. “Lin, the word is given.”

“Aye, aye, sir!”

O O O

This time he had the sense to mute the audio in his suit, but the force of the second explosion still knocked him backwards off his feet. The blast was a thing of beauty, catapulting the carefully collapsed ruins of the Carrot Palace high into the air. Lin must have used every spare kilo of explosive, propellant, and flammable substance in the entire city of Welcome, because the shards and chunks of masonry leaped higher than the Carrot Palace had been tall before ending their upward arc. They descended in a hellish rain of destruction. Wolfe and the others ducked underneath any roof they could find to protect themselves from stone and plascrete boulders from landing on them. No one in there could have survived. Wolfe saw no indicators from intact armor. Ayala was dead.

While orange and green gravel and less identifiable pieces were still falling from the skies, Wolfe and his force turned their attention towards the remaining Insurgents, who had been making their way toward the rubble when it blew. He was surrounded by hundreds and hundreds of costumed characters, some badly damaged by gunfire and explosives. Nearly all of these were armed with a projectile weapon of some kind. Their faces inside the bubble helmets were set in stern expressions, the kind of faces that took no quarter and expected none. The Insurgents backed up a pace or two, realizing that they were outnumbered and outgunned.

Very slowly, and very carefully, every one of the survivors put their guns on the ground and raised their arms in the air.

***

Chapter 22

The first thing Lin and Jones had done after the prisoners had been rounded up was to go in search of the remains of Adri’Leta and Vacarole. Wolfe was determined that the former would be buried there on Dudley. Her wishes, expressed to him in front of witnesses, would be honored. No more Adri’Letas, and to hell with the faceless foundation that kept bringing them to life.

Sparky was gone forever. Wolfe felt as though he had lost a comrade-in-arms. Not really a friend, since all the puppet had ever done was annoy him, but he wished he could find the ‘body’ and lay it to rest with honor. He spent some time kicking through the shards of the Carrot Palace in hopes of finding any trace of the puppet.

He turned away to survey what was left of the Meadow Pavilion. The park was a mess. Gunfire and explosive charges had knocked down or blown up numerous attractions and damaged countless others. Hundreds of puppets had been destroyed. He’d ruined Wingle World.

Once the all clear had been given, thousands of people began to pour into the park from all over the region. They gathered up the damaged puppets, and began to survey the ruined pavement, rides, and gardens. Wolfe wandered among them like a ghost, unable to surrender his hard-won territory to the people who actually belonged there. Borden found him limping aimlessly around Wingle Lake, and tried to steer him toward the exit.

“Go back to the hotel for a while, sir,” she said, loudly. “You’re still a little hazy from the blast.”

“No, I’m not,” Wolfe said. “I screwed up. I just tried to tell Aaooorru that it wasn’t his fault that Mr. Wingle got killed on his watch. Fortunes of war. He and I both knew that’s a heap of slag. I wouldn’t be satisfied with it, either, if my CO handed me a line like that.”

“It’s true, though,” Borden insisted.

“It’s not. The only thing that would have saved this whole situation from being a complete and utter clusterfrax is if we could have found the chip. Mr. Wingle told me just before the fighting started that he was finished with it. He put it in a safe place. Well, Ewanowski says his lab is a mess. The grenades that hit after Wingle was killed shredded most of what was in there. If the chip is still intact we will never find it.”

“You need a drink.”

“I don’t deserve one.” Though Wolfe had to admit that lying down for a while sounded like a good idea. Once he was rested, he would pitch in and help restore what he’d destroyed.

“Look,” Borden said. They spotted a pair of huge pink feet toes up in the midst of a crowd of park engineers. Daivid opened his stride to hurry over.

Glaijet looked up at him. “Sorry you have to see this, lieutenant.”

“Bunny Hug is dead?” Wolfe asked forlornly.

Bunny Hug lay on the ground, motionless, his big face frozen in a smile. Daivid felt a wrenching sense of loss, remembering the pat on the head, the hug that was such an important part of Bunny Hug’s welcoming and loving personality. He shook the great paw, but it didn’t move.

“Well, Mr. Wingle is,” Glaijet corrected him. “Of course, it was his character. Bunny Hug is always performed by a Wingle. It’s their heritage. It’s special to them.”

Daivid nodded. Bunny Hug showed a part of Oscar Wingle that he never demonstrated in person, a loving, open, sympathetic side, but he could let it all out in the form of a ridiculous nine-foot-tall pink rabbit. Or a smart talking freckled youth who always interrupted one’s darkest thoughts with a non-sequitur. Daivid felt sad, thinking he never really got to know the man behind one of his childhood heroes.

Daivid finally realized Glaijet was still talking. “… We have to contact his son.”

“His son?” he gawked.

“Oscar VIII,” the engineer replied. “He’s visiting some of our souvenir manufacturers. It’s the off-season, you know. Eight does a
wonderful
Bunny Hug. He’ll be ready to perform by the time the park opens—if we can get the mess cleaned up in time. Your ensign said he’d help, and we could use it. Oscar IX is still in school. He’s learning acting and marketing, though he’s got a natural talent for both already. Pretty precocious for a ten-year-old.”

Daivid felt his heart lift just a little bit. “So the dynasty goes on.”

The man gave him a poignant but sincere smile. “The dynasty goes on.”

“It’s an omen,” Daivid told Borden, with more energy than he had felt for an hour. “Maybe all is
not
lost.”

“I don’t believe in omens,” the junior lieutenant replied severely.

O O O

“It’s a mess,” Wolfe said, surveying the laboratory.

“I told you so,” Borden replied.

The room had looked like a crowded moving van when they had first seen it. In the aftermath of the battle, it now resembled landfill. The furniture nearest the burst ventilation duct had been blown to splinters. The communications console, the Waldo device with the enormous magnifier, and every other piece of sensitive equipment had blown and burned. Wolfe scanned the big room to see if anything at all was intact, and nearly jumped out of his skin to see Oscar Wingle VII looking at him.

“Oh, slag!” he panted.

“It’s just Dudley,” Borden said coolly.

It was. The gray-haired puppet stood in his box with a little smile lifting his mouth under the heavy moustache. Wolfe almost smiled back. He started picking through the ruined cabinets and drawers in hopes of coming across a package with his name on it, or any other kind of identifying mark.

“He was a genius,” Wolfe said, after he and Borden had spent a frustrating hour turning over broken boxes and shaking out books. “He would not have put that chip where it couldn’t be found. He said he was putting it in ‘a safe place. A very safe place.’ I wish he’d been more specific.”

Grinding and crunching noises made them both reach for their sidearms. Wolfe ducked down behind an overturned desk. A figure emerged from a sliding panel, a silver figure of a woman. She undulated towards them, her hips swaying like those of a real human female. Daivid was transfixed.

“Maria,” he breathed.

“Mr. Wingle
was
very specific,” she said.

“You speak!”

“Of course,” the android said. “I am a prototype. I also think and act. Here. He wanted you to have it, but you had to have asked for it correctly. You did.” She held out her hand and opened it. On her smooth palm was a small silver cube. Wolfe took it, with admiration for the genius who had invented it, and her. No one could have broken through that ball of steel without destroying the contents.

O O O

Wolfe never felt the ground under his boots, nor the cold of the snow falling on his head as he danced through the park in jubilation. They had fulfilled their mission! Borden followed him, disapproval writ large on her face. She had taken charge of the chip, not trusting him in his current giddy state. She was such a spoilsport, Wolfe thought. He had to share his joy with
someone.

“Daivid!” Connie waved to him. She was wearing a blue uniform and carrying a cutout gun under her arm. He waved back. He ran to her and swept her up in his arms.

“I am so glad to see you’re all right!” he exclaimed, relieved down to his bones.

“There’s something I have to tell you,” she protested, as he brought his lips toward hers. “I’m a …”

“A puppet,” Daivid finished her sentence for her. He kissed her deeply anyway, and the warm, red lips yielded to him. “I know. I’ve known all the time, since I went into Tennie’s. I was wearing my helmet. It shows the pink heat signature of everyone in the room. You didn’t have one.”

Connie drew her head back, the eyes wide in surprise. “You knew?”

Daivid smiled. “Yes. I think that’s why I let myself fall in love with you. You were … safe. That’s why I could let go of the emotional mess I didn’t even realize I’ve been carrying around with me for three years. But the point is, I did. I love you. I love the person behind you. I would like to get to know the real you.”

“But this
isn’t
really me,” Connie protested. “It could never work out.” She pushed gently at his chest and he set her free. “I have to go. But I am so glad you feel I helped you break through a barrier.” Her dimple showed. “You’re all heroes. Congratulations.”

O O O

“Do you see?” asked the woman sitting beside the bay window in the little house on a corner near the park. Daivid had gotten a good night’s sleep, showered and shaved to make himself presentable. The dark blue eyes twinkled, seeming to like what they saw, and the deep dimple by the side of the mouth deepened just for him. “What you think you love is just an illusion. I’m happily married. I have three grown children. I operate twelve other characters in Wingle World. Connie is just a part of me, though she is a favorite. My grandchildren like her to take them through the park. She’s got more pep than I have, and she’s a lot prettier. I’m getting old.”

Daivid came to kneel beside the woman and took her hand. Her hair was almost entirely white, and wrinkles cross-hatched the corners of her eyes and mouth and netted her plump cheeks. “Most of love is illusion, as I found out the hard way a long time ago. You’re just as beautiful as Connie. Thank you.” He kissed her on the cheek, then stood up, her hand still in his. “I’ll always remember you as the girl I fell in love with.”

She smiled. “That is the nicest thing anyone has ever told me. Goodbye, Daivid.”

O O O

“She okay, looey?” Thielind asked, looking up from the robot controller he was repairing on a worktable.

“Um-hm,” Daivid said thoughtfully, scanning the multitude of repairbots all repairing each other and the cleanerbots that clustered around them waving their brush and scrubber arms, all waiting their turn. “Her lawn’s a little crunchy from the fallout of the Carrot Palace, but there was no damage to the house. No one was hurt.”

“What’s she like?”

“Beautiful,” Daivid said, with a sigh. “But she’s married. You knew Connie was a puppet.”

Thielind tilted his head. “Aye, sir. Installed her heat generator myself. No one wanted to say. We wanted you to be a little happy. We could tell you weren’t. She was really nice, wasn’t she?”

Daivid nodded. He noticed that most of the Cockroaches, who were helping out with the cleanup, were very carefully not listening to their conversation. “She was. How’s it going?”

It was strange being in the secret depths of Wingle World, in the real inventor’s lab, knowing that the man himself, the legend, was never coming back again. The puppets being repaired or created anew under their hands would never know the master’s touch. But they’d know the next generation. It didn’t make it all right in his heart, but it made things better.

“There you are, Lt. Wolfe!”

The three town councillors bustled up to him. The man with arched black eyebrows took his hand.

“We are very grateful to you and your … Cockroaches for saving us all,” the puppet said, shaking energetically. “Your leadership saved the townsfolk from a threat we could never have withstood alone. In spite of the ill way we treated you in the beginning, you did us an enormous favor. We owe you a debt of gratitude.”

“Oh, no,” Wolfe cautioned them, his hands held out in protest. “Not a favor. You don’t mean that.”

“We do mean it,” the plump woman said. “And we know what it means, too. We know who you are. We looked you up. You visited us when you were small. Do you remember?”

“I’ll never forget it,” Daivid said, fervently. “That visit or this one.” Very reluctantly, he took the small database chip out from under his uniform tunic and entered the favor as a Class 5 favor.

“Your dad will be pleased,” Thielind said, absently. The ensign lifted the repairbot down and raised the next one to the worktop. He stroked his fingers gently over the manipulative arms, looking for broken components. One of the tanklike tracks that ran around two of its wheels was missing. It obediently rolled over and opened its access hatch for him.

“What do you do, baby?” he asked it.

“That’s a monotrack repairbot,” the redfaced councillor said. “Vital to the maintenance of about half the rides. It lays the filaments and repairs them.”

“Oh, I see,” Thielind said, reaching for a cable cutter. A repairbot on the floor found one and slapped it into his palm like a surgical nurse.

The councillors froze for a moment. Wolfe guessed they were conferring.

“You have an amazing affinity for our machines, Mr. …”

“Thielind,” the ensign replied, not looking up.

“Would you possibly be interested in staying on? We could use your help in getting the park in shape. The first day of the season is only ten days away.”

“Oh, I’ll help until our transport comes,” Thielind said. “I’m having a good time.”

“But what about after that?” the woman asked. “I speak with the full authority of Oscar Wingle VIII. We’re willing to offer you 150,000 credits a year.”

The monotrack robot rolled onto one side so Thielind could attach its new tractor guide. “Oh, no, thanks. I’ll stay in the Space Service.”

“Oh, come on,” the redfaced man said. “You can’t be pulling down more than twenty thousand a year.”

“Eighteen five, actually,” Thielind said.

“That’s nothing!” the redfaced man exploded.

“Please reconsider,” the man with black eyebrows urged him. “What can the space service give you we can’t?”

“My friends, and my CO,” the ensign said simply.

The councillor looked up at Wolfe. “Him? Why? What’s special about him?”

Thielind smiled brilliantly. “He calls me ensign.”

That last statement didn’t hold any special meaning for the townsfolk, but Wolfe was touched by it. The councillors, seeing where the leverage lay, turned to him.

“Would you like a job here?” asked the man with black eyebrows. “That way you can bring your genius here with you. And anyone else you wish.” He looked around at all of the troopers, whose eyes were suddenly on Daivid.

“Do you know,” Daivid replied, with deep satisfaction, “that is the second job offer I’ve gotten here on Dudley. No, I’m too busy saving the galaxy. But thank you for asking.”

“Oh, well,” the woman sighed. “It was worth a try. We … we do have one more favor we would like to ask of you. As a tribute, of course.”

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