The Well-Mannered War Part 15
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The Darkness concentrated, humming with power. This was perhaps the most crucial stage of its operation.
On one patch of the dripping screen was Viddeas's view of his own hands working at the satellite link controls. On another was the satellite itself seen from close by. A third section was taken up by a hastily compiled map of the war zone, adapted from the one shown by Dolne. According to this, the optimum strike should impact at the grid cells marked 48.
The Darkness sent a thought pulse, and Viddeas reset the east satellite to fire all launchers at that position.
'First Pilot!' cried one of Seskwa's juniors from his position. 'There is a shower of plasma missiles coming in fast!'
Seskwa reared up. 'What? Range?'
'Eleven point three kuznaks and closing. They will reach us in three minutes.'
Seskwa snarled at the Doctor. 'So much for the innocence of your species, human.'
The Doctor looked anxiously at the radar screen. 'I suggest you stop a.s.serting your superiority and start worrying about those.'
'In this craft we can be far distant in seconds, Doctor.' Seskwa nodded to the third Chelonian, the navigator. 'Tuzelid, set a course for command and lift us away.' He started to strap himself into his support webbing as the saucer shook, preparing itself for flight.
The Doctor vaulted over the circular safety rail. 'Think. If I'm the evil genius you think I am why would my own side try to kill me?'
Seskwa looked troubled for a second. 'I don't know. But they obviously are.'
He took out his weapon and levelled it at the Doctor. 'You will lie down.'
From the mind of Viddeas the Darkness saw how some of the animals would avoid death. They had machines to carry them off, in a mockery of the Darkness's own power of flight.
No matter. There were other machines aboard the satellite to prevent them.
The saucer groaned and creaked, tipping the Doctor from side to side. He raised his head and saw only confusion. Seskwa trying to retain his dignity as his webbing was sent swinging, and the two others busy at their stations but to no avail.
'The engines are immobilized!' cried the navigator. 'A paralyser field has been imposed from low orbit!'
'One of the humans' satellites,' snarled Seskwa. 'You must break through.
Increase power.' There was a loud bang from somewhere in the saucer's workings.
'I cannot,' cried the navigator. 'The field is strong.'
The saucer tipped once more and then its motors cut out completely. It crashed to the rocky surface with a thump that jarred every bone in the Doctor's body. Smoke began to pour from some exposed panelling. Over this hiss came a far more significant noise - the droning whine of missiles.
'They're heading straight for us!' cried Seskwa, desperate. 'We are directly in their path!'
The Doctor let his head fall back on the floor of the saucer. 'Would you believe me if I told you I'm as unhappy about that as you are?'
The noise grew louder, until it became an unbearable roar signalling imminent and inescapable death.
'Impact in fifteen seconds!' shouted the Environments Officer. He could barely be heard beneath the grating machinery of the saucer's protesting engines and the horrifying shriek of the missiles.
Seskwa levelled his weapon between the Doctor's eyes. 'You shall die now, human!'
The Doctor was trying to balance himself on the wildly gyrating floor, in order that he might race to the navigator's aid and somehow affect an escape. He looked at the bright yellow muzzle of the gun with dismay.
'Where's the point in that?'
'I wish to savour the last few seconds of life.' Seskwa squeezed his claw on the trigger.
Chapter Four - The Reluctant Diplomat.
Cadinot stared in horror as the small speckled arc of yellow pinp.r.i.c.ks that signified the missiles fired at the enemy pillboxes started to spread, and larger patches of a similar pattern blossomed in the central area of the zone. At first he took this to be a technical error, and he reached without thinking for the tuning b.u.t.tons on the side of the screen. But the growing mayhem was confirmed by all kinds of mysterious, never-before-heard whistles, beeps and clicks from the surrounding instrumentation.
Something had gone seriously wrong, and a baffled murmur arose above the heads of the Strat Team.
He called over his shoulder to Viddeas, 'Captain! The launchers, all of them, are firing!' He hammered at the emergency switches, which were designed to bring all systems off-line. 'I can't stop them!'
'Continue with the attack,' Viddeas said.
Cadinot turned around. 'It's a broad sweep-patterned bombardment. The satellite's taken over and I can't get an access line.'
Viddeas looked extraordinarily calm. 'No correction is needed.'
Suddenly, Cadinot's screen twinkled with several bursts of golden energy.
'Twelve plasma bursts the length of the Low Valley,' he announced. A sick feeling hit his stomach. 'There are Chelonian active service units there.
Dekza and his lot.' Dekza was an especially popular patrolling enemy officer, whose impersonations of key Metralubitan figures had enlivened many a cheese-and-wine evening in the trenches.
'Spare no compa.s.sion for the enemy,' said Viddeas.
The tension in the Strat Room was broken by the arrival of Admiral Dolne, who entered panting and evidently angry. 'Viddeas!' he screeched. 'What are you playing at? I could hear the impacts from the far side of the post. I said mildly mildly aggressive.' aggressive.'
All eyes were on Viddeas as he swivelled himself to face the Admiral. His face was set in hard lines. 'No more games, Admiral. This is war.'
Dolne looked fl.u.s.tered, his forehead beaded with sweat. 'What's got into you?'
'Got into me?' Viddeas s.h.i.+fted uncomfortably. 'What do you mean, 'got...
into me'? Nothing's... got into me...'
'Oh, goodness.' Dolne turned from him. 'Cadinot, call this whole thing off, right away.'
'I can't, sir.' He gestured helplessly to his station. 'No response from any manual systems.'
Dolne bustled over and leant over him. 'Let me have a go. Excuse me.' He reached out and his fingers flicked over the emergency switches.
'I've already done all that,' said Cadinot.
'No harm in trying again.' He threw the last switch. Nothing happened.
'Gracious me, the satellite just isn't responding. That can't be right.'
A ghostly greenish aura had sprung up in the last few seconds at the centre of the screen. Cadinot's heart sank further. This was a nightmare. 'Admiral, look.'
'Oh. Er, what's that?'
'Patina of an engine paralyser.'
Dolne pulled a disapproving face. 'That's hardly fair. We've got to lift it.'
There was a short silence. 'Er, how do we do that?'
'Through the satellite,' said Cadinot resignedly.
'Oh dear.' Dolne tutted and called, 'Viddeas, come and give us a hand.'
The Captain stood stiffly and walked over. 'Yes, Admiral, I must. . .' His speech was slurring, his fever seeming to pa.s.s its crisis point.
But Cadinot's attention was more taken by the activity in the zone. The moment Viddeas had stood up the array of significant lights had started to die away, and the satelite access line beeped its willingness to comply.
'The interference is clearing up,' said Cadinot. 'She's coming back on line.'
'What a relief,' said Dolne, puffing out his red cheeks. 'Right, shut all these silly rockets and things down.' Cadinot was already pulling all the launchers back under his control and disabling them. 'Let's hope they haven't done too much damage.'
The satellite responded to Cadinot's commands with an ease and politeness unknown for a week and a half. Perhaps, he thought, the interference had finally cleared itself up and things could return to normal.
The Darkness conferred with the s.p.a.ce-Cloud Ones, the part of itself specially created to traverse airless atmospheres. The s.p.a.ce-Cloud Ones could now leave the satellite, it decided. It had done its job and stirred much antagonism.
The interference would now end. Every weapons system would be needed to create more death.'
The Doctor flinched from Seskwa's weapon.
'First Pilot!' cried the navigator. 'Sir! The screen is down. We're free!'
Seskwa twisted about in his webbing and barked, 'Then lift! Get us out of here!'
With a mighty effort the saucer started to revolve, straining as it went to dislodge the grey matter that had lodged in its vents. With full power restored to its engines it spun with sudden urgency, sending fountains of soil in all directions. Then, when the markings on its side were no more than a blur it shot upwards and zoomed away, a great plume of black smoke in its trail.
Only a moment later the missiles streaked down, three of them, sleek, white, and pencil-shaped. The plasma burst echoed from rockfaces that gave way under the sustained vibration.
The Doctor found his feet and nodded approvingly at the thankfully remote roar of the blast. 'There we are. One crisis averted. They probably changed their minds.' Keeping his tone casual he nodded to Seskwa. 'Well, if you don't mind I'll just collect my coat and-'
'No, Doctor,' said Seskwa. The gun was still clasped tight in his front foot.
'No? You can have it if you really want it. I've got several others.'
The Well-Mannered War Part 15
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The Well-Mannered War Part 15 summary
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