Read The Night's Dawn Trilogy Online

Authors: Peter F. Hamilton

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The Night's Dawn Trilogy (293 page)

BOOK: The Night's Dawn Trilogy
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Ten sense-overload ordnance rounds were fired through the opening as the wrecked door spun around like a dropped coin. A ferocious
blast of light and sound surged back along the corridor. The squad rushed forward into the deluge.

It was a synchronized assault. All three doors into the courtroom were blown at the same time. Three sets of sense-overload
ordnance punched in. Three marine squads.

Dr Gilmore was still hooked into Peyton’s neural nanonics, receiving the image direct from the captain’s shell helmet sensors.
The scene which greeted him took a while to interpret. Dimming flares were sinking slowly through the air as tight beams of
light from each suit formed a crazy jumping crisscross pattern above the wrecked fittings. Bodies lay everywhere. Some were
victims of the earlier fight. Ten of them had been executed. There was no other explanation. Each of the ten had been killed
by a bolt of white fire through the brain.

Peyton was pushing his way through a ring of nearly twenty marines that had formed in the middle of the courtroom. Jacqueline
Couteur stood at the centre, her shape blurred by a grey twister that had formed around her. It looked as if she’d been cocooned
by solid strands of air. The twister was making a high-pitched whining sound as it undulated gently from side to side.

Jacqueline Couteur’s hands were in the air. She gazed at the guns levelled against her with an almost sublime composure. “Okay,”
she said. “You win. And I think I may need my lawyer again.”

26

There were nearly three thousand people in the crowd which assembled outside the starscraper lobby. Most of them looked fairly
pissed at being summoned, but nobody actually argued with Bonney’s deputies when they came calling. They wanted a quiet life.
On a planet they could have just walked away into the wilderness; here that option did not exist.

Part of the lobby’s gently arching roof had crumpled, a remnant of an early battle during their takeover of the habitat. Bonney
started to walk up the pile of rubble. She held a processor block in one hand, turning it so she could see the screen.

“Last chance, Rubra,” she said. “Tell me where the boyo is, or I start getting serious.” The block’s screen remained blank.
“You overheard what Patricia said. I know you did, because you’re a sneaky little shit. You’ve been manipulating me for a
while now. I’m always told where he is, and he’s always gone when I get there. You’re helping him as much as you’re helping
me, aren’t you? Probably trying to frighten him into cooperating with you. Was that it? Well, not anymore, Rubra, because
Patricia has changed everything; we’re playing big boys’ rules now. I don’t have to be careful, I don’t have to respect your
precious, delicate structure. It was fun going one on one against all those little bastards you stashed around the place.
I enjoyed myself. But you were cheating the whole time. Funny, that’s what Dariat warned us about right from the start.” She
reached the roof, and walked to the edge above the crowd. “You going to tell me?”

The screen printed:
THOSE LITTLE DEADNIGHT GIRLS THAT

COME HERE, YOU REALLY ENJOY WHAT YOU DO WITH THEM, DON’T YOU, DYKE?

Bonney dropped the processor block as if it were a piece of used toilet paper. “Game over, Rubra. You lose; I’m going to use
nukes to crack you in half.”

Dariat, I think you’d better listen to this.

What now?

Bonney, as usual. But things have just acquired an unpleasant edge. I don’t think Kiera should have left her unsupervised.

Dariat hooked into the observation routines in time to see Bonney raise her hands for silence. The crowd gazed up at her expectantly.

“We’ve got the power of genies,” she said. “You can grant yourself every wish you want. And we still have to live like dogs
out in these shantytowns, grabbing what food we can, whipped into line, told where we can and can’t go. Rubra’s done that
to us. We have starships for fuck’s sake. We can travel to another star system in less time than it takes your heart to beat
once. But if you want to go from here to the endcap, you have to walk. Why? Because that shit Rubra won’t let us use the tubes.
And up until now, we’ve let him get away with it. Well, not anymore.”

Passionate lady,
Dariat said uncomfortably.

Psycho lady, more like. They’re not going to disobey her, they wouldn’t dare. She’s going to marshal them together and send
them after you. I can’t keep you ahead of an entire habitat of possessed hunting you. For once, boy, I’m not lying.

Yeah. I can see that.
Dariat went over to the fire at the back of the cave. It had almost burnt out, leaving a pyramid of coals cloaked in a powder
of fine grey ash. He stood looking at it, feeling the slumbering heat contained within the pink fragments.

I have to decide. I can’t beat Rubra. And Rubra will be destroyed by Kiera when she returns. For thirty years I would have
welcomed that. Thirty fucking years. My entire life.

But he’s willing to sacrifice his mental integrity, to join my thoughts to his. He’s going to abandon two centuries of his
belief that he can go it alone.

Tatiana stirred on the blanket and sat up, bracelets chinking noisily. Sleepy confusion drained from her face. “That was a
strange dream.” She gave him a shrewd glance. “But then this is a strange time, isn’t it?”

“What was your dream?”

“I was in a universe which was half light, half darkness. And I was falling out of the light. Then Anastasia caught me, and
we started to fly back up again.”

“Sounds like your salvation.”

“What’s the matter?”

“Things are changing. That means I have to decide what to do. And I don’t want to, Tatiana. I’ve spent thirty years not deciding.
Thirty years telling myself this was the time I was waiting for. I’ve been a kid for thirty years.”

Tatiana rose and stood beside him. He refused to meet her gaze, so she put an arm lightly on his shoulder. “What do you have
to decide?”

“If I should help Rubra; if I should join him in the neural strata and turn this into a possessed habitat.”

“He wants that?”

“I don’t think so. But he’s like me, there’s not much else either of us can do. The game’s over, and we’re running out of
extra time.”

She stroked him absently. “Whatever you decide, I don’t want you to take me into account. There are too many issues at stake,
big issues. Individuals don’t matter so much; and I had a good run against that Bonney. We annoyed her a lot, eh? That felt
nice.”

“But individuals do matter. Especially you. It’s odd, I feel like I’ve come full circle. Anastasia always told me how precious
a single life was. Now I have to decide your fate. And I can’t let you suffer, which is what’s going to happen if Rubra and
I take on the possessed together. I’m responsible for her death, I can’t have yours on my hands as well. How could I ever
face her with that weighing on my heart? I have to be true to her. You know I do.” He tilted his head back, his voice raised
in anger. “Do you think you’ve won?”

I never even knew we were fighting until this possession happened,
Rubra said sadly.
You know what hopes I had for you in the old days, even though you never shared them. You know I never wanted anything to
spoil my dreams for you. You were the golden prince, the chosen one. Fate stopped you from achieving your inheritance. That’s
what Anastasia was, for you and for me. Fate. You would call it an act of Thoale.

You believe all this was destined to be?

I don’t know. All I know is that our union is the last chance either of us has to salvage something from all this shit. So
now you have to ask yourself, do the living have a right to live, or do the dead rule the universe?

That’s so like you, a loaded question.

I am what I am.

Not for very much longer.

You’ll do it?

Yes.

Come in then, I’ll accept you into the neural strata.

Not yet. I want to get Tatiana out first.

Why?

We may be virtually omnipotent after I come into the neural strata, but Bonney and the hellhawks still have the potential
to damage the habitat shell very badly. I doubt we can quell them instantaneously, yet they will know the second I come into
the neural strata. We are going to have a fight on our hands, I don’t want Tatiana hurt.

Very well, I will ask the Kohistan Consensus for a voidhawk to take her off.

You have a method?

I have a possible method. I make no promises. You’d better get yourselves along to the counter-rotating spaceport before Bonney
starts her hunt.

•  •  •

It wasn’t merely a hunting party Bonney was organizing. She was keenly aware that Dariat could always flee her in the tube
carriages, while she was reduced to chasing after him in one of the rentcop force’s open-top trucks. If Dariat was to be caught,
then she would first have to cripple his mobility.

The crowd she had assembled was split into teams, given specific instructions, and dispatched to carry them out. Each major
team had one of her deputies to ensure they didn’t waver.

Every powered vehicle in the habitat set out from the starscraper lobby, driving along the tracks through the overgrown grass.
Most of them travelled directly to the other camps ringing starscraper lobbies, coercing their occupants into Bonney’s scheme.
It was a domino effect, spreading rapidly around Valisk’s midsection.

Kiera had wanted the tubes left alone so that when they moved Valisk out of the universe the transport system could be brought
back on-line to serve them. Bonney had no such inhibitions. The possessed made their reluctant way into the starscraper lobbies,
and down into the first-floor stations. There they combined their energistic power and started to systematically smash the
tube tunnels. Huge chunks of polyp were torn out of the walls and roof to crash down on the magnetic guide rail. Power cables
were ripped up and shorted out. Carriages were fired, adding to the blockages and sending thick plumes of black smoke billowing
deep into the tunnels. Management processor blocks were blasted to cinders, exposing their interface with Valisk’s nerve fibres.
Wave after wave of static discharges were pumped at the raw ends, sending what they hoped were pulses of pure pain down into
the neural strata.

Bolstered by their successful vandalism, and Rubra’s apparent inability to retaliate, the possessed began to move en mass
down into the starscrapers. They sent waves of energistic power surging ahead of them, annihilating any mechanical or electrical
system, wrecking artefacts and fittings. Every room, every corridor, every stairwell, were searched for non-possessed. Floor
by floor they descended, recapturing the heady excitement and spirit of the original takeover. Unity infected them with strength.
Individuals began to shapeshift into fantastic monsters and Earthly heroes. They weren’t just going to flush out the traitor
enemy, they were going to do it with malevolent finesse.

Hellhawks fluttered up from the docking ledges and began to spiral around the tubular starscrapers: an infernal flock peering
into the bright oval windows with their potent senses, assisting their comrades inside.

Together they would flush him out. It was only a matter

of time now.

•  •  •

Dariat sat opposite Tatiana in the tube carriage they took from the southern endcap. “We’re going to put you in one of the
spaceport’s emergency escape pods,” he told her. “It’s going to be tough to start with, they launch at about twelve gees to
get away fast. But it only lasts for eight seconds. You can take that. There’s a voidhawk squadron from Kohistan standing
by to pick you up as soon as you’re clear.”

“What about the possessed?” she asked. “Won’t they try and stop me, shoot at me or something?”

“They won’t know what the hell’s going on. Rubra is going to fire all two hundred pods at once. The voidhawks will swallow
in and snatch your pod before the hellhawks even know you’re out there.”

A smirk of good-humoured dubiety stroked Tatiana’s face. “If you say so. I’m proud of you, Dariat. You’ve come through when
it really counts, shown your true self. And it’s a good self. Anastasia would be proud of you, too.”

“Why, thank you.”

“You should enjoy your victory, take heart from it. Lady Chi-ri will be smiling on you tonight. Bask in that warmth.”

“We haven’t won yet.”

“You have. Don’t you see? After all those years of struggle you’ve finally beaten Anstid. He hasn’t dictated what you’re doing
now. This act is not motivated by hatred and revenge.”

Dariat grinned. “Not hatred. But I’m certainly enjoying putting one over on that witch queen Bonney.”

Tatiana laughed. “Me too!”

Dariat had to grab at his seat as the carriage braked sharply. Tatiana gasped as she clung to one of the vertical poles, hanging
on frantically as the lights began to dim.

“What’s happening?” she asked.

The carriage juddered to a halt. The lights went out, then slowly returned as the vehicle’s backup electron matrix came on
line.

Rubra?

Little bastards are smashing up the station you were heading for. They’ve cut the power to the magnetic rail, I haven’t even
got the reserve circuits.

Dariat hooked into the neural strata’s observation routines to survey the damage. The starscraper station was a scene of violent
devastation. Smouldering lumps of polyp were chiselled out of the tunnel by invisible surges of energy; the guidance rail
writhed and flexed, screaming shrilly as its movements yanked its own fixing pins out of the floor; severed electrical cables
swung from broken conduits overhead, spitting sparks. Laughter and catcalls rang out over the noise of the violence.

BOOK: The Night's Dawn Trilogy
8.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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