Death Match, page 12
part #3 of Sten Omnibus Series
“I should have guessed. How foolish of me,” Sten said.
“Although we do see a great need for improvements here,” Riehl said. “Many of the courses are . . . incorrect in their thinking.”
“I assume the overhaul of the university is also among your demands?” Sten asked.
“Absolutely.”
“And you’ll burn the university if they don’t?”
“Yes. Who to stop us?” the Bogazi said. “My brood most important. If someone hurt me — much trouble.”
“The same with all of us,” Riehl said. “It’s a good thing for those cops that you came along. If they had done something stupid . . . why, our families would have destroyed them all. Believe me.”
Milhouz handed Sten the sheaf of paper that was the Action Committee’s manifesto. “Those are our demands. Take them . . . or leave them.”
Sten drew the moment out very long. “Then . . . I’m leaving,” he finally said. And he rose to go.
The room erupted in total panic.
“Wait,” Milhouz said. “Where are you going?”
“Back to the embassy,” Sten told him. “I’m no good here. Besides, this is really none of my business. It’s definitely a local problem. So . . . if you’ll forgive me . . . I’ll go watch what happens to you next on my livie screen. With a nice stiff drink to warm my belly.”
“But you can’t leave!” Riehl shouted, nearly in tears.
“Watch me,” Sten said.
“But police will —”
“Kill all of you,” Sten said. “They’re pretty mad. I don’t think it’ll take much to set them off. Your pedigree will probably just make them madder. You know how cops get? Touchy. Very touchy.
“Funny, isn’t it? You people think you’re rioting. But the cops riot instead. Happens every time.”
“What do you want from us?” Milhouz wailed. His jowls were white with fear.
Sten turned at the door. “Better question. What do you really want? And don’t give me that manifesto business.”
There was total silence.
“I’ll tell you what,” Sten said. “I’ll see if somebody will talk to you. Give your views a fair hearing.”
“Someone . . . important?” Milhouz asked.
“Yeah. Someone important.”
“A public hearing?”
“I don’t know. Maybe.”
“We want witnesses,” Tehrand yipped.
“I’ll ask,” Sten said. “Now . . . will that do? A fair hearing of all your views. To be taken into account by decision-making people. Okay?”
Milhouz glanced around and saw slight nods of heads. “It’s agreed,” he said.
“Good.” Sten headed for the door.
“But . . . if they don’t at least listen . . .” Milhouz was trying to pull some pride in for the group.
“You’ll burn the university to the ground,” Sten finished for him.
“In one week!” Milhouz snapped.
“I’ll keep that in mind.”
And Sten was gone.
Chapter Twelve
STEN RETURNED TO the embassy in a mood that could only be elevated by a few ax murders.
He took one look at that lying diplomatic note still only half-written and sent the burn pad spinning across the room.
Juvenile as all hell. Also, not nearly satisfying enough.
He thought about kicking the desk over but caught himself in time, considering the mass of that enormous wooden block big enough for the Khaqan’s tastes and noting, also, that its legs already were scarred, trophies of previous ambassadorial self-mutilations undoubtedly resulting from dealing with the charming, altruistic, visionary residents of the Altaic Cluster.
Sten next thought of ordering Admiral Mason to his quarters in hopes of provoking an off-the-record punchup but settled instead for a loud feral growl, aimed out the sealed window at the slamming rain from the storm that had settled in over Rurik.
There was a chortle. And a giggle. Sten did not turn.
“An’ dinnae y’ hae pity ae th’ lad,” Alex’s voice crooned. “Discoverin’t he’s th’ wee one whae hae Imperial custody ae an entire cluster ae Campbells?”
“And this,” Cind said, her voice equally sincere, “is the brave Sten. The great warrior I grew up worshiping. The man, legend had it, who led all of the beings in the Lupus Cluster to peace and plentitude, never losing the smile on his lips or the song in his heart.”
Sten still did not turn.
“Is there one clottin’ being in this whole clottin’ cluster who isn’t out to clottin’ murder every other clottin’ being?” he demanded. “Is there clottin’ anybody, from these pampered apparatchik fools who think they’re innalekchuls and students to those clots running around with their clotting private armies to these clotting imbeciles who’re trying to play button, button, who’s going to wear the clotting throne to this clotting imbecile Iskra that our Eternal Clotting —”
He broke off, found out that his lungs were pumped airless, inhaled, then went on, a bit more carefully, considering Cind’s presence: “— that we’re supposed to hand the clotting keys to the clotting kingdom to, is there anybody who has one lousy cc of the milk of human kindness hidden somewhere about his/her/whoever’s person?”
“Tsk,” Alex mourned. “Th’ clottin’ language. In frae of a clottin’ laird an’ all.”
“Somebody pour me a drink.”
“Not yet, skipper. P’raps y’ dinnae want alk runnin’ aroun’ y’r system.”
Sten finally turned around. Both Cind and Kilgour were wearing Jochi civilian clothes. Poor-people-type civilian clothes. Dark colored.
They had Jochi cloaks over their arms.
Even more interesting, both of them were wearing combat vests. Each vest held a small com link, a cut-barreled, collapsing-stock willygun in an underarm sling, two spare magazines of the ultra-lethal AM2 rounds, and a sheathed combat knife. The vests would be invisible under the cloaks.
Even better, Kilgour had a bulky parcel under one arm, a parcel that was wrapped in a third cloak.
And he intoned:
“Atween th’ dark an’ th’ twilight
Whae th’ night’s beginnin ft’ glower,
Com’t a pause in thae day’s occupations.
Thae’s know’t ae th’ Thuggee’s Hour.”
As he recited, Alex unrolled the parcel, revealing it was, as Sten had hoped, a set of indigene civilian clothes, a weapons-equipped combat vest, and a pair of phototropic coveralls.
Kilgour continued:
“Ah ken i’ th’ close below me
Th’ clatter ae tippie-toed feet…
Th’ thunk ae a dagger thae’s buried
An’ deathrattles soft an’ sweet.”
“You two clowns are going out and play Sally-Down-the-Alley spook games, and leave me here with the paperwork.”
“A noble ambassador,” Cind said, “can’t be out in the cold and wet dealing with common turncoats.”
“You are right. I’ve got to keep track of my new station. Kilgour, did you remember my kukri?” Feeling slightly more gleeful than he had in some time, Sten doffed his ambassadorial tunic.
“Y’ll be wantin’ th’ Mantis cammies underneath, boss. I’ th’ event we’re blown.”
“What do you have?”
“Y ken one ae the Emp’s complaints, or so y’ relayed to me, wae that the Khaqan wae black-marketin’ the AM2. Sellin’ it out-system t’ pay f’r his edifice complex, aye?”
“So?”
“Assumin’t thae villainy ne’er changes, the villains mere look f r new bosses, Ah had th’ notion it might be braw an’ productive t’ find a wee bit aboot how thae black-market conduit work’t.”
“Very good. Very clottin’ good,” Sten approved. “At least somebody around here’s thinking. Lord knows it isn’t me. So who’s this lovable citizen who suddenly wants to sell his cluster’s leadership down the pike?”
Alex explained. The Mercury Corps station chief for the Altaic Cluster, a relatively junior and inexperienced operative named Hynds, holding the usual cover slot of cultural attaché, had put one of his better Jochi agents in motion.
How good, Sten wanted to know. Kilgour shrugged.
“Our wee spook thinkit A Level. But frae his reports, an’ th’ one debriefing I sat in on, th’ agent’s nae better’n B. Howe’er, we’re dealin’t, boss, wi’ whae tools’re on hand. Ah dinnae hae time yet t’ be doin’t m’ walshingham.
“ ‘T any rate, Hynds’ agent claim’t he’s got one ae th’ schemin’t smugglers who’s doin’t his nut frae gettin’ cut out ae th’ pie.”
“Do you have any verification or any second source that this canary who wants to come in and sing is anything better than somebody who wants to pick up a few Imperial credits for a creative lie?”
Kilgour looked injured that Sten could suspect him of credulity, but continued his explanation.
The man they were supposed to meet claimed to have been the owner/captain of a small shipping line that had been used by the Khaqan to move AM2. Hynds’ agent had obtained fiche of one of the line’s ship logs and two lading fiche from the man.
“A course, th’ cargo wae listed ae pears, plums, poppies, or some such, but th’ destination wae in’trestin’. It went t’ th’ Honjo, who’re ne’er backward t’ buy AM2, wi’oot askin’t too close whae th’ home ae origin was.”
“Thin,” Sten evaluated.
“No drakh,” Kilgour agreed. “Plus meetin’ ae night. In ae t’r’ble part ae town. Wi’ nae heavy backup allowed. Thae’s why Ah hae guns. An Ah hae th’ notion Cind might be a braw part ae th’ discussion. An’ y’self, assumin’t y’ still hae wind enow t’ keep up.”
“Let’s go.” Sten grinned. The prospect of a little action, even though it would almost certainly be meeting some lying sort in a back alley who’d try to sell them wolf tickets, was energizing.
“You realize, Captain Cind,” he said, “that a certain Private Otho’s going to make us cut our beards off just for general principle for excluding him from a situation that might include a bit of mayhem?”
Then he thought of something else. “Just how do we go? Suddenly remembering that I’m an ambassador and can’t just go slithering stage right without someone noticing.”
Cind looked smug. “While you’ve been out playing Diplomacy with the Bumf Brigade, I thought it might be appropriate to see how secure our bedroom is. And I would suspect the former ambassador of a slight taste for the strange.”
Cind crossed to the light controls and forced one up-down toggle sideways. A panel hissed open.
“Ah,” Sten said. “What’s life without a secret passage?”
“Running from here past our bedroom,” Cind explained. “Then down back along the wing the clericals and junior staffers are quartered in. It goes underground just next to where the kitchen is, I think, and then surfaces as part of the rear wall.”
“Wi’ peepyholes an’ doors into th’ maidservant’s bed. Th’ lad wae a romantic,” Kilgour said.
“A pervert,” Cind corrected.
“An’ whae’s th’ difference?” Kilgour wondered. “A’ter you, skip. Cap’n, if y’ll go next, Ah’ll walk drag. Y’ dinnae hae t’ worry, by th’ bye, aboot bugs. Thae’s no one knows aboot th’ passage ‘cept Cind an’ myself.”
Kilgour was very wrong . . .
The meet was almost four klicks from the embassy. The streets were nearly deserted except for an occasional gravsled moving very slowly through the blinding storm, and once or twice a being scurrying along on some no-doubt cursed errand. Their route led them to and through Rurik’s enormous public transport terminal. As they approached the terminal, Sten wondered why all transport terminals were situated in slums. Which came first? Or did transiency encourage transients?
The paired cops just inside the entrance glanced at them, identified the trio as an urban peasant, his wife, and a friend or distant relative and of no interest. Kilgour led Sten and Cind on a circuitous route through the huge building. Benches were filled with beings who, it appeared, had been waiting endlessly. Some slept. Some ate. Some read. Some stared at the blurry entertainment or transport-status screens. More just stared. On Rurik, being able to wait in line without going mad from screaming boredom was more than an art form. It was a necessity.
They stopped beside a refreshment stand. There were no hot drinks available, but three varieties of summer ices could be purchased. The only food for sale that Sten could see was a thin broth made from tubers, and the tureens were filthy. Rancid fat floated on top of the soup.
Cind, still considering herself a student in espionage, studied the other two as they, in turn, studied the people around them without seeming to pay attention.
So far, the run appeared clean, although Sten knew there was little possibility of detecting a full-scale effort to track them, with each tracker following only momentarily before passing them along to the next agent.
Finally Kilgour shrugged hopelessly, pointing up at one line on a transport status screen that was blinking: service suspended indefinitely due to weather. Muttering inaudibly like a proper peasant who had just been told he could not go home again, he led them toward an exit.
They were passing a door marked official only when Alex’s head jerked a signal and he darted sideways through the door. Cind was caught by surprise, but Sten had her by the shoulder, and they were following Kilgour. The door closed behind them, Alex booted a jamming wedge into the jamb, and they were in an echoing dank stairwell with an open gate and rain below.
Hand signals from Kilgour. You, Cind. On point. Down the stairs, outside, secure the exit.
Cind flowed silently down the stairs like mercury, cloak opening slightly, gun hand on her weapon’s grip, finger carefully near but not on trigger, ready to pull the gun into firing position. She slipped out into the night and went instantly flat against the wall.
She found a moment to admire Sten and Kilgour. Again, she was learning from these two. She had never been around combat teams where the order-giver was the one most familiar with the conditions and immediate problem, not the one with the highest rank.
Sten came out the door and was flat against the wall on the other side. Alex followed.
He, too, found spare brain for a personnel evaluation: Th’ lass fits, dinnae she? She dinnae ken, but she’d fit wi’ th’ best ae Mantis noo. Ah reck Ah’ll hae t’ tell Sten Ah gie m’blessing.
Then he, too, was out in the pelt of rain, and they were moving at the double down a maintenance access road and into the slum streets behind the terminal. A block away they took cover in a doorway and held, waiting to see if they were pursued.
The street stayed rain-dark and empty. Kilgour nodded with satisfaction. He took a bug sensor from his vest and quickly swept all three of them. Nobody had planted them as they went through the terminal.
“How did you know that terminal door would be unlocked?” Cind asked.
“Ah, lass,” Kilgour said. “Ah thought brighter ae y’t Who d’y’ think unlocked it? Who do y’ think hung that ‘official’ sign? Dinnae y’ gie me credit fr m’ craft?”
He didn’t wait for an answer. “Noo. Straight t’ meet our new friend.”
They moved on, staying close to the buildings. They went unnoticed — in this area, everyone moved as if he either had a secret or a stash, or was a footpad.
The slum they were moving through was a vertical desolation row, monstrously huge, as was everything else on Jochi. The buildings had been constructed over a hundred E-years earlier as high-rise flats for administration workers, fitted with enough conveniences and luxuries to prevent those who greased the Khaqan’s wheels from being too unhappy.
Time had passed. The buildings deteriorated. The government workers found cleaner, safer, newer quarters. The poor moved in. The McLean lifts stopped, and there were many, many flights of stairs to climb. The building supervisors were afraid or venal. And one of the curses of Jochi struck — Jochians were good at building things, but never seemed to consider that buildings, roads, or monuments needed maintenance.
Now, windows were shattered or boarded. The upper stories of the buildings were mostly dark. There was only the occasional flicker of light from a squatter’s fatlamp or a thieves’ lair.
The buildings’ facings had been intended to look like stone. Now they hung, peeling, or lay in great slippery sheets across the cracked paving. Garbage littered the streets and was piled high in the buildings’ service lanes.
Their route led them near one of the rivers that ran through Rurik. It was less a river than a moving slough, shallow and filled with junk and abandoned vehicles that had been pushed off the high bridge that spidered overhead.
Probably years earlier the embankment had been a nice place to stroll on holidays or on summer evenings. Not now. Sten decided he was not fond of this situation whatsoever — assuming this was where the meet with the agent had been set. If it was on that bridge, that was an excellent place for a trap. And under the bridge, next to the river? Sten shuddered. Not even Alex, with his supreme and usually justified confidence in his cunning, his heavyworld muscles and his experience, would go into that midnight nightmare.
Or so Sten hoped.
“Here’s the drill,” Kilgour explained. “Ah tol’ this wee agent Ah was noo a dumber, an’ was bringin’t backup. Thae’s you, Cind. Ah dinnae say where y’d be, so Ah’d be apprec’tive i’ y’d vanish into yon shadows, an track wi’ me as Ah hike.
“Ah’m to stroll doon th’ bank, an’ th’ finkette’s t’ make the meet. Ah dinnae like th’ plan, but th’ lad wae skitterish. Boss, i’ y’ agree, y’ll be th’ invisible fly i’ th’ haggis. Hie y’ doon noo o’erth’ retain’t wall, an’ gie me cover. Frae in front, i’ y’ please.”
“Thanks, Kilgour. I flog it through river mud, and I’ve got to move faster than you?”
“Aye. An’ quieter. Thae’s whae y’re a wee admiral, an’ Ah’m noo but a puir agent-runner.”
Sten checked his gun. It was ready.
“I’ y’ feel aroon i’ th’ vest, y’ll find a wee corn’copia ae grenades. Bester, flare, frag, blast.”
