Honor Harrington 9 - Ashes of Victory, page 48
assumed conservatism made the sentry suspect he was one of those who did not. But Hughes only shook his head and clapped him on the shoulder.
―Don‘t worry, Al. I won‘t tell Brother Tobin he needs to aim that sermon he‘s writing at your gambler‘s ways. I‘m sure he‘s got more important sinners to bring to task. Besides, I happen to know you tithe even more than Father Church expects.‖
―Well, I do try,‖ Al agreed. ―And I do like a good game of poker—for cash,‖ he admitted.
―No reason you shouldn‘t, as long as you don‘t get carried away,‖ Hughes assured him. ―And now I really should be on my way. Brother Tobin may‘ve said ‗any time,‘ but I doubt he‘ll really be pleased to see me if I get there after midnight!‖
―Somehow I kind of doubt he would be,‖ Al agreed, and waved him through the gate.
Hughes stepped out onto the ancient, stone-slab sidewalks of the City of Mueller. Moonlight slanted down across narrow, twisting streets almost a thousand years old and beamed into wider thoroughfares which had been driven through the Old City in more recent times. Modern lighting had been added, but Mueller was a Grayson city, not a Manticoran one. It was a warren of low buildings, few more than eight or nine stories tall and none more than thirty, spread out in a sprawling, anachronistic confusion of streets and alleys and roadways. The Old City, in particular, had never been planned for modern lighting, and its constricted, twisty streets and lanes produced unexpected puddles of darkness at odd intervals.
But it was also an orderly place, like most Grayson cities. Street crime wasn‘t unknown on Grayson, but it was vanishingly rare compared to most urbanized planets. Besides, Hughes was armed and wore his Mueller Guard uniform, and he walked confidently along the sidewalk, cutting through the maze of alleys towards the cathedral—and the back door of the bookstore—and whistling tunelessly.
―That‘s him,‖ the man who called himself Baird whispered to the two men who flanked him in the alley. The taller of the two turned his head, watching with cold and calculating eyes as the lanky sergeant ambled past the alley mouth, whistling.
―No problem,‖ he said, but Baird shook his head and caught the other‘s arm.
―It has to be done cleanly,‖ he said flatly. ―And don‘t forget what you‘re really after.‖
―No problem,‖ the other repeated, and raised one arm in a beckoning gesture. Three more men blended out of the darkness, and a jerk of his head sent them moving soundlessly after the whistling sergeant. ―We‘ll get it for you,‖ he assured Baird.
―Good, Brother. Good,‖ Baird replied, and released the other man‘s arm. ―This world is God‘s,‖ he said formally, and the cold-eyed man bent his head briefly.
―This world is God‘s,‖ he confirmed, and then he and his final companion were out of the alley and hurrying after the others. Baird watched them go, then turned and walked away almost as silently as they had.
Hughes didn‘t know what had alerted him. Whatever it was came and went too quickly for him to sort it out, and there was no time to try anyway. Perhaps it was simply instinct, or perhaps his trained subconscious had picked up on something his forebrain never noticed, but he was already turning when the first knife came out of the night.
He grunted in agony as the keen-edged steel drove into his back, above and to the outside of his right kidney. The blade grated on rib, and then his own movement wrenched it out of his flesh. He staggered to one side, feeling the scalding rush of blood, and the man who‘d knifed him snarled and closed for another thrust.
But Captain Steve Hughes had been chosen for this assignment for many reasons, and one of them was that he was very, very tough and very well trained. His right hand had gone to his pulser even as he turned, and despite the agony of his wound, the weapon came out of the holster with smooth, deadly speed.
The knife man‘s eyes widened in sudden panic as his forward rush rammed the pulser‘s muzzle into his own belly, and then Hughes squeezed the trigger.
The burst of hypersonic darts almost ripped his assailant in two. The pulser‘s shrill whine rebounded from the stone buildings lining the narrow roadway, but it wasn‘t fueled by chemical explosives the way older-style side arms had been. There was no thunder of gunfire, and the man Hughes had shot went down without a sound, a corpse before he had time even to think about screaming.
Hughes staggered back, nauseated and suddenly weak-kneed as the shock of the wound hit him through the adrenaline rush. His hand shook, and he gritted his teeth against the white-hot pain lashing through him. He couldn‘t reach the wound without dropping his pulser, but he leaned heavily against the facade of a building, forcing himself to remain on his feet while he tried to press the elbow of his right arm against the dreadful, bleeding gash.
The combination of shock and pain was like a club, trying to beat him to his knees, and he shook his head doggedly. It had all happened so quickly there‘d been no time to think about it, try to reason out what was happening, but instinct told him his assailant hadn‘t been alone.
Nor had he. Another man came out of the darkness of the alley. Dim light, spilling from a window high overhead, gleamed faintly on a steel blade, and he charged Hughes with an ugly curse, trying to close before the dazed armsman could react.
He almost made it, but another blast of pulser darts took him in the chest, and he sprawled backwards with a dull, meaty thud.
Hughes gagged as the smell of blood, ruptured organs, and voiding sphincters washed over him, and his brain told him he needed help. That the wound he‘d taken was even more serious than he‘d thought.
That he might very well die without immediate medical attention. Even with the support of the alley wall, it was harder and harder to stay on his feet, and he raised a suddenly clumsy left hand to key his com.
And that was when the third man came out of the alley.
Another knife flashed, and Hughes grunted as the blade struck. He managed to throw his left arm up to intercept the blow, and steel grated on the bone of his forearm. Fresh pain exploded through him, and he felt himself going down, but his wounded arm shot out and grabbed his attacker by the front of his jacket.
His muscles felt weak and flaccid to him, but the other man cried out in sudden panic as he was jerked half off his feet and yanked towards the man he‘d come to murder. His knife arm flailed for balance, and then he went down with a choked, gurgling scream as half a dozen pulser darts ripped through his chest and lungs.
He and Hughes both went to their knees, facing one another on the blood-soaked sidewalk, and Hughes saw the dreadful understanding in the other man‘s eyes. Then there was nothing in those eyes at all, and the other man slumped to the side.
Hughes knelt alone on the sidewalk, his brain working sluggishly. Three of them. There‘d been three of them, and he‘d gotten them all, but—
The sudden, whiplash crack of an old-fashioned automatic pistol exploded down the alley, and the blinding brilliance of the muzzle flash flared like trapped lighting. Steve Hughes never heard or saw it, for the heavy handgun‘s bullet struck him squarely in the forehead, killing him instantly.
People who hadn‘t heard the whine of Hughes‘ pulser heard the distinctive crack of the gun that killed him, and voices shouted in alarm. Windows were thrown open, and people craned their necks to peer out into the night. It was too dark, and there was too much confusion, for anyone to realize—yet—what had happened. But that was going to change, and the cold-eyed man who‘d listened to Baird‘s orders swore venomously as he rushed to the dead armsman‘s side.
Who the hell had this guy been? Taken by surprise by three trained killers, he‘d still managed to kill all of them before he went down himself! The cold-eyed man had worked with Baird for over two T-years.
Before that, he‘d been a high-ranking officer in the Office of Inquisition on Masada, and this was far from the first sinner‘s death he‘d overseen. But he was shocked by how quickly and completely a quiet, efficient assassination had gone wrong, and anger blazed like fiery ice in his eyes.
He knelt in the hot, sticky pool of four men‘s blood, and his left hand ripped the top button from Hughes‘ tunic even while he held the pistol ready in his right. He shoved the button into his pocket, then took a moment to check the pulses of his three fellows.
―We‘ve got to get out of here!‖ his sole surviving henchman hissed from the shadows, and the cold-eyed man nodded curtly and shoved himself to his feet.
― Cleanly,‖ he snarled, his cold eyes blazing for just an instant with raw fury, and he kicked the dead armsman savagely. ―Stinking bastard!‖ he hissed, his voice softer but even more malevolent.
―Come on!‖ the other man demanded. ―I can already hear sirens! We‘ve gotta go now!‖
―Then shut up and go, damn it!‖ the cold-eyed man barked, and jerked a furious nod down a side alley to where their getaway car waited. The other man didn‘t hesitate. He was off with the gesture, racing down the alley and already fumbling the keys from his pocket.
― Bastard!‖ the cold-eyed man hissed once more, then drew a deep breath and gazed down for one more moment at the bodies of his companions.
―This world is God‘s,‖ he told them, a man swearing a solemn oath, and then he, too, disappeared down the alley.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
―Welcome to Trevor‘s Star . . . finally, Dame Alice.‖ Hamish Alexander‘s word choice might have been more felicitous, but he smiled broadly as he reached out to shake the golden-haired officer‘s hand firmly. They stood in the boat bay of GNS Benjamin the Great, and Alice Truman, in rear admiral‘s uniform but wearing a vice admiral‘s collar stars, grinned back at him as she returned his handclasp with interest.
―It‘s good to be here, My Lord.‖
―I‘m glad you think so, because we‘ve been waiting for you with what might be called bated breath,‖ Earl White Haven told her. She raised an eyebrow, and he laughed. ―Your arrival means we‘re about finished playing paper tiger for Barnett‘s benefit, and we‘ve all been looking forward to that.
Impatient as the public may be back home, I doubt they can even begin to match our impatience. For that matter, most folks back home probably don‘t even realize we were initially supposed to go after Barnett almost three full T-years ago!‖
―Probably not,‖ Truman agreed. ―As a matter of fact, My Lord, it‘s hard for a lot of us in the Service to really realize how long you‘ve been sitting out here. Maybe—‖ she smiled again, this time mirthlessly ―—because McQueen‘s managed to make life so . . . interesting that we haven‘t really had much leisure to think about it.‖
―Well, leisure is one thing Eighth Fleet‘s had altogether too much of,‖ White Haven said firmly,
―and I‘m looking forward to making things interesting for McQueen for a change.‖
He turned and gestured for Truman to accompany him, and the two of them followed Lieutenant Robards towards Benjamin‘s central lifts.
―I think we can confidently assume we‘ll manage at least that much, My Lord,‖ she said. ―I know my boys and girls are ready to hold up their end of it. I just hope ONI and the First Space Lord have figured McQueen‘s probable responses accurately.‖
―Oh, I think they have.‖ White Haven waved her into the lift car ahead of him, then joined her while Robards punched the destination code into the panel. ―I‘ve been more and more impressed with the First Space Lord‘s insight into the Peep operational posture, especially over the last few months,‖ he went on.
―Oh, he got caught out like the rest of us by the Basilisk raid, but between them, he and Pat Givens have predicted just about every major Peep move since then with surprising accuracy. And that little number he pulled off on the Grendelsbane approaches was nothing short of genius.‖ The earl shook his head. ―Even if they don‘t launch the sort of offensive down there that he‘s hoping for, he‘s certainly drawn them into a false position. They have to believe we‘re still not ready for a stand-up fight . . . and I‘ll guarantee they don‘t have a clue as to what Buttercup is about to do to them.‖
―I hope you‘re right, My Lord,‖ Truman repeated. And, to be honest, she felt confident he was.
Which was the reason she spent so much time and effort making herself stand back a bit from the general confidence. Someone had to watch out for the pseudogators lurking in the reeds to bite them all on the ass if Sir Thomas Caparelli—and Hamish Alexander— weren’t right, and it looked like the job was hers.
And one reason I made it mine was because I know how green some of my people really are, she reminded herself grimly. I said we can hold up our end, and we can, but Lord what I’d’ve given for just three more weeks of training!
―Another reason I‘m glad you‘re here now,‖ White Haven went on in a more serious tone, ―is that security on the entire Anzio project has held up much better than I ever expected it to. All my flag officers and most of my captains have received the stage one briefing, and there are lots of rumors floating about all the way down the line. But no one really knows anything, and people have been remarkably careful about when, where, and with whom they‘ll even discuss the rumors. Which is why I scheduled this conference on the very day of your arrival. I know it‘s rushing you a bit, but I really want my senior officers, at least, to hear about the new LACs from the horse‘s mouth, as it were, before the carriers actually begin arriving.‖
―I understand, My Lord. And at least you said ‗from the horse‘s mouth,‘ rather than another portion of his anatomy.‖ She chuckled. ―Besides, I might as well admit I‘d pretty much figured out that was what you had in mind when you invited me aboard. Which is why I brought this.‖ She raised her left hand, and the chain from her wrist to the briefcase it held glittered in the lift car‘s lights.
―And ‗this‘ is?‖ White Haven inquired politely.
― ‗This‘ is the official holo presentation my staff put together for Admiral Adcock and BuWeaps just after our last readiness tests, My Lord. I think it will bring all of your people up to speed quite handily.
And give them a realistic appreciation of the LACs‘ limitations, as well as their potential.‖
―Excellent!‖ White Haven beamed at her. ―I‘ve known you were a resourceful officer since that business at Yeltsin‘s Star, Dame Alice. I‘m happy to see you‘ve stayed that way.‖ The lift slid to a halt, and he looked at Robards. ―I see we did forget one thing though, Nathan,‖ he said.
―We did, My Lord?‖ Robards frowned, and White Haven chuckled.
―It‘s not our fault, of course. We didn‘t know Admiral Truman was going to be bringing her home video. I‘m sure if we had known, we‘d have remembered to be sure everyone had lots of popcorn.‖
Commander Tremaine sat in the chair reserved for him in PriFly, otherwise known as Primary Flight Operations. PriFly was the nerve center of HMS Hydra‘s LAC operations, and he let his eye flick down the long rows of steady, green lights on the master status panel. Each of those lights showed a LAC
bay with its own LAC nestled into the docking arms at one hundred percent readiness for launch. Had any bay been down, or the LAC in it not ready for instant deployment, its light would have burned an angry red, not green. But there wasn‘t a single flicker of red, and he allowed himself a deep, well-deserved glow of pride as the big CLAC held her place in the transit queue.
He took his attention from the master status panel and looked into the repeater plot deployed from the arm of his command chair. In its own way, that plot was even more impressive than the status panel.
There were almost as many lights on it, although their precisely drawn lines were spread more widely, and the ships each of those lights represented were far larger than any LAC. Especially the string of blinking green beads which stretched out ahead and astern of Hydra‘s own light dot.
Seventeen. That was how many LAC carriers—and their wings—Admiral Truman had managed to get worked up. Each of them was the size of a dreadnought, and between them, they carried almost two thousand LACs.
A lot of those LACs could have used weeks or even a month or two more of working up, but that would have been true whenever the Admiralty decided to take the gloves off, he reminded himself.
Someone would always have been the new kids in the pipeline, after all, and they were scheduled to spend almost a month integrating the carrier groups with Eighth Fleet. Most of that would be for Eighth Fleet‘s benefit, but they‘d get in some more training of their own. And however it worked out, it was past time to commit the carriers and their broods. Past time to throw the Peeps back onto the defensive once more.
And this time, we finish the bastards, he thought grimly. As the commander of the Nineteenth Strike Wing, he‘d been part of the audience when Admiral Truman‘s staff briefed them on Operation Buttercup. He still thought that was an idiotic codename—it sounded like the name someone might bestow on a pet pig—but he‘d been awed by the sheer scale of Admiral Caparelli‘s brainchild.
Buttercup was going to virtually double the total number of hyper-capable hulls assigned to Admiral White Haven‘s Eighth Fleet. That was impressive enough, given how hard Tremaine knew the Admiralty had been forced to scratch and scrape to built White Haven‘s original order of battle. But Eighth Fleet‘s actual combat power was about to go up exponentially, not arithmetically. In addition to Truman‘s seventeen LAC carriers, with six more scheduled to follow within two months, it was about to receive twenty-four more of the new Harrington/Medusa-class SD(P)s. That would give White Haven thirty-one, and he would be the first admiral allowed to use their full capabilities in an offensive operation. With hordes of LACs to cover their flanks and sweep up lighter units and cripples, those ships were going to mow a swath right through any Peep force stupid enough to get in their way.












