The Well-Mannered War Part 14
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Dolne wrinkled his nose. 'You never did take that bath, did you?'
Romana stepped from the cell, nodded to the young man and addressed Dolne. 'Thank you, Admiral. I'm pleased that someone here can think clearly.'
He tapped her on the shoulder. 'Not a bit of it. Now, K9 is waiting for you in his quarters, fifth level. Cadinot here will show you the way and fill you in on the gen.'
Romana joined Cadinot, who waved a hand towards the door leading from the cells. Something in the formal manner of the Admiral was unsettling.
Why had she suddenly been accepted, and treated so kindly?
'You can't let her go,' spluttered Viddeas. He was paid no attention.
Stokes was viewing this scene with visible apprehension. 'Admiral,' he called. 'At last you're here. This underling of yours has been behaving to me in an outrageous, and probably unlawful, manner. Surely there's no reason now, with the bombs flying about our heads, to keep me locked up down here? And no reason why I can't take the first shuttle away?'
'Return to your bunk,' said Viddeas, gesturing with his gun.
Dolne raised a hand. 'No, wait. Er, Stokes. If I let you out will you promise to behave?' He stepped closer and said quietly, 'Only I've got enough on my plate without you shouting your mouth off.'
'Sir,' protested Viddeas. 'This man is a disruptive influence.'
'You've just made up my mind for me,' Dolne said. He reached out and unbolted Stokes's cell. 'Out you come.'
'Thank you,' Stokes said, with all the grace he could muster. 'And now, if you'll escort me to the shuttle, Captain?'
'I didn't say anything about that. You're to remain here.'
Stokes flared up, pulling himself to his full height. 'But I've -' He caught sight of Dolne's look of warning and his shoulders fell. 'Very well.'
Sickened at the sight, Romana turned her back and allowed Cadinot to lead her away.
A moment later she felt a tap on her shoulder and turned to face Stokes with accusation in her eyes.
'I had no other option,' he said anxiously. 'If I'd spoken up they might have accused me of being your accomplice. By keeping quiet I could work out a plan to get us both free.' He held out a little finger. 'Friends again?'
She sniffed. 'I don't recall that we ever were.'
Dolne waited until both Romana and Stokes had departed before turning to Viddeas. He had no wish to give the man an audience at this distressing moment. Indeed, he felt rather embarra.s.sed. 'Word's come through,' he said.
'From Metralubit?' Viddeas's eyebrow shot up.
'Do you have to look so eager?' He reached in his pocket for a small folding map of the battle zone, smoothed it out, and indicated a certain area. 'Here we are. There's a scattering of pillboxes along these slopes at 73 to 76.
Prepare the launchers.'
Viddeas s.n.a.t.c.hed the map and his eyeb.a.l.l.s rolled over it. 'But they're unstaffed. The Chelonians use them for remote camera scanning. They're worthless.' He bit his lip, leaving a small white mark. 'Sir, three of our men are dead. Six if you count Kelton and his team. I say we should hit back hard. If we do this they'll just laugh at us.'
Dolne was saddened. 'Oh dear. Why does everyone have to get so upset?
I don't know what's possessed you.'
Viddeas flinched and his eyes dilated oddly. 'Possessed? What do you mean, possessed possessed?'
'I mean I don't know why you're behaving so oddly,' said Dolne.
'Ah I see.' Viddeas relaxed.
'I just think we ought to try not to let things get out of hand.' He took the map back, noting how it seemed to cling to the clammy skin of Viddeas's hand. It was only now he noticed that Viddeas wasn't sweating; and rather than being flushed like everyone else's face at the post, his face was pallid and showed a faint greenish tinge. He had always been of the fastidious sort, overeager but deferential, and scrupulously tidy. It was odd. 'Now, I want a mildly aggressive bombardment. Nothing too serious. Do I make myself clear?'
'Yes, sir,' said Viddeas. 'I'll see to it.' He saluted and left the cell block.
For the first time in a while Dolne was left alone. His thoughts turned to Jafrid. He hoped his old friend wouldn't mind what was about to happen, that he would see it was only fair for both sides to have their little accidents.
It was very difficult, Romana was rediscovering, to ignore Stokes. He made the Doctor, whose lips never seemed to rest together very long, seem shy and reflective by comparison, and seemed incapable of letting even the smallest incident pa.s.s by without making some comment on it. Cadinot had directed them to the post's lowest level and hurried away on business, and now they were turning the corner into the pa.s.sage that contained K9's quarters. This level was constructed more st.u.r.dily than the others, and there was a suggestion of luxury in the fan-shaped light fittings that emitted a soft, rea.s.suring orange glow. 'Plush, isn't it?' remarked Stokes. 'When I first arrived I came down here for some drinks with Dolne. He's got very good quarters and a reasonable cellar.' Noting Romana's silence he adopted a plaintive tone. 'I would hardly have abandoned you, you must realize. Here's a suggestion. Why don't we find the Doctor and all go back to your TARDIS thing? You've still got it, haven't you?'
'I thought you liked living on Metralubit,' said Romana.
'I do,' he said hotly. 'Very much so. It's a fantastic place, with all the luxuries and civilized refinements that a man of my taste and character could wish for. And I'm very much appreciated there. What I was thinking was that you could just drop me off...' He let the sentence fall to the floor.
'We'll discuss it later,' she said. They had now reached the third door along the pa.s.sage. 'This must be it.'
Stokes seemed to notice where he was for the first time. 'I thought so.
These are my rooms, the guest suite. They've got a cheek, throwing me out like an old boot. It's ridiculous. What will a tin dog want with a jacuzzi?'
'Let's find out.' Romana knocked on the door and it whirred open. Inside was a reasonably sized room with subdued lighting, a scattering of low leather sofas, and a large communications unit. Its main screen was at present scrolling through a micro disk's worth of data, which K9 was absorbing with incredible speed. On the wall above was a framed Stokes original, a dotted red swirl that depicted nothing in particular. 'h.e.l.lo, K9,'
she called.
'Greetings, Mistress,' he replied without turning from the screen.
'How are you?'
'I cannot converse at present, Mistress. Imperative that I absorb this information.'
Romana stepped forward and pressed the screen's pause control. The display at this point read: The current democratic system evolved from the chivalric notions of the second Diurnary period, and from which many of the rituals, including the second Diurnary period, and from which many of the rituals, including the right of const.i.tutional privilege, are traditionally derived. right of const.i.tutional privilege, are traditionally derived.
'It doesn't look very imperative to me,' she observed.
'h.e.l.lo,' said Stokes. K9 ignored him, so he stepped in front of the screen and smiled. 'Recognize me?'
This time K9 seemed genuinely taken aback. 'Humanoid artist Menlove Ereward Stokes. Friend. Encountered during the Xais/Nisbett affair.
Unreliable and erratic character.'
'Lovely to see you again, too,' said Stokes. 'He seems a tad snootier than at our last meeting.'
Romana knelt down to address K9. 'We must find the Doctor. There's no time to waste on political history.'
'Aiding the Doctor Master is my first priority, Mistress.' Stokes was right, thought Romana. K9's manner seemed somehow elevated. 'It is to achieve that end that I have accepted my const.i.tutional right to stand as the Opposition candidate for the Premiers.h.i.+p of Metralubit.'
She blinked. 'What?'
'It is to achieve that end that I -'
'Shut up, K9. I mean, don't shut up. I mean, explain.'
In the Strat Room, Viddeas gripped the arms of his chair and swivelled it very slightly to the left. It was surprising, he thought, how much of his personality remained in this dead sh.e.l.l. Perhaps the creature dominating him needed to retain some of his human characteristics. It seemed to encourage him whenever he thought of war and death, which was often.
'Right,' he ordered. 'Align launchers three and four.' He swung a remote control board from the wall so that it rested at his waist. 'Hammerschmidt, give me satellite access to this position.'
The named officer turned round guiltily. The Strat Team had been shaken by Viddeas's orders to prepare counterfire, even when he had a.s.sured them of its mildly aggressive nature. 'The interference is still strong, sir,'said Hammerschmidt, a trace of resentment in his voice. Unlike Viddeas, many of the staff at the post had friends among the enemy. This reluctance would have to be dealt with. 'We'll have to launch the missiles on manual.'
'Do not question my orders,' snapped Viddeas. 'Give me guidance to this station.'
'But you won't be able to do anything, Captain,' protested Hammerschmidt.
'Do it!' shrieked Viddeas. For a moment, as the terrified lad struggled to comply, Viddeas had a sickening vision of his body with all the strength and health drained from it, saw it as a piece of decaying meat, and had to fight down a wave of some feeling that was nausea and excitement combined.
Cadinot spoke. 'Launchers aligned to target on manual.'
'Very well.' Viddeas gulped. 'On my order.'
Suddenly his mind was wrenched open from within with the force of a strong light piercing an ancient tomb. He seemed to see not only the Strat Room and the backs of his staff hunched at their stations but also a hideous, red-outlined place the size of a cathedral. This was a shrine to animal death, a stinking lightless temple where disease was a holy word.
And his consciousness was not contained in just one body but in billions, all traces of individuality stripped away until there was one central mind governed by a feverish l.u.s.t.
Somehow, this creature he had become part of told him that the satellite was free for him to use.
'Missiles armed and ready, sir,' said Cadinot, very distantly, his voice seeming to echo through the others.p.a.ce, the vast Darkness, to reverberate through the billions of tiny, furled-up buzzing creatures with jittering wings and twitching probosces.
He reached out and started to manipulate the satellite link, unseen by the others. 'On my mark,' he heard himself say.
The Doctor felt he was getting somewhere. Seskwa had been rather forthcoming about the planetoid's history.
'So, you turned up here a hundred and twenty-six years ago, set up camp, and the Metralubitans came along and told you to push off. At which point you claimed Barclow as your territory, you threatened war on each other, then signed a treaty to let this Committee sort it out, and have been waiting for the findings ever since with not a shot fired?'
'That is the gist, yes,' said Seskwa.
'Good. I just wanted to get things clear.' The Doctor allowed himself a smile. 'Very unusual. It makes this mystery all the more puzzling.' He gestured to the dead body.
'Humans weren't responsible for this.'
'How do you know?'
'Not their style. Too imaginative.' He crouched down to bring his face level with Seskwa's - a presumption that would test their new alliance.
Seskwa narrowed his eyes. 'Why, then, do they jam our communications?
Our east satellite is almost totally blocked.'
The Doctor wagged a finger. 'You haven't considered the other possibility.
Some third, alien force.'
Seskwa gestured with a front foot. 'You are an alien.'
'I meant a very alien force.' He looked at the test tube that was still in his pocket. 'I really could do with a closer look at this gloop. I don't suppose you have a microscope about the place?'
The Well-Mannered War Part 14
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The Well-Mannered War Part 14 summary
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