After a delay of 0.5980 seconds I locate an identification node. I am unit R-0012-ZGY of the Dinochrome Brigade, Mark x.x.xIV of a proud and ancient line. I am Bolo.
I am Bolo.
In this, I find comfort, knowing who and what I am. But there is more. I find that my Commander is Lieutenant David Rasha Orren, and that I am attached to the 1198th Armored Regiment. I arrived at my duty station- The record trails off into nothing. Is this information missing, or did I truly never arrive at my a.s.signed unit?
I reach out through my shattered circuitry, cataloging damage, routing around damaged modules. A scattering of emergency systems come on-line.
I am very badly damaged.
Both my h.e.l.lrails seem to have incurred ma.s.sive damage. My forward turret is jammed, possibly fused. My missile launchers are not responding at all, and four of my twelve secondary batteries are inoperable. My number two cold-fusion reactor is down to thirty-percent efficiency. All my external sensors are badly damaged. All indications are that my drive systems are undamaged, but this cannot be the case. I have applied full forward and reverse power to all eight of my tread systems. While readings suggest that all systems are working, other than some vibration, there are no indications that I am moving at all.
Finally I find an external sensor that does not appear to be damaged, a radiation sensor normally only deployed from its armored canister when taking measurements.
Amazingly, I discover that my hull is extremely radioactive, the result of an intense neutron bombardment. This is consistent with the pattern and extent of damage. Somehow, during the lapse in my memory, I experienced a low-yield fusion explosion at point-blank range.
The sand on the corridor floor was warm under Vatsha"s unshod feet, and she dug her foot-thumbs in as she walked, enjoying the sensation. She stopped at a wall of armored viewing windows and stared out into s.p.a.ce, at the sky-spanning nebula that her people called "Kevv"s Blood." Stress seemed to flow from her, and her hood retracted into the sides of her head and neck.
According to the stories she was told as a child, Kevv went into the sky to save the homeworld from the Sun-eater, and he sacrificed himself so his wife could live to give birth to the original bloodlines of the Kezdai.
Vatsha remembered those simpler childhood days, and standing here, she could almost imagine she was back on the homeworld at night, looking up at the sky. Even the air was scented with tangy night-moss and sweet oil-vine. This is what power buys, comfort such as this, even in the cold of s.p.a.ce. She could only hope that her brother did not lose this for both of them.
She made her way back along the spine of her brother"s yacht to his private apartments. The ship had been redecorated since she had last been here, another of her brother"s little extravagances. Rich tapestries hung on the walls, and abstract statues in rare nickel and silver sat in alcoves every few spans along the hallway.
Finally she reached the portal to his apartment. The mid-caste soldiers guarding the door lowered their beaks as a show of respect, but they kept their green eyes focused on her as a gesture that their respect had limits. Their metal tipped spears crossed in front of her, and their free hands hung close to the hilts of their suriases.
She lifted her head and clicked her beak. "I come to see the Is-Kaldai, brother-of-my-blood."
"What business, my lady?"
Her hand strayed near her own blade, as a gesture of dominance, rather than out of any real possibility of a fight. "Business of the blood, underling, not to be spilled without a fight."
The guard nodded, and the spears parted. "As you wish, my lady."
She walked into the apartment, decorated to look like an opulent long-tent used by their nomadic ancestors. Her brother sat on a large pile of cushions at the far end of the room, a scarlet colored sandcrawler coiled around his neck. The pet took immediate notice of her, hissing and using the grip of its many legs to shift position, but her brother was staring into a holotank, lost in thought. He was large for a Kezdai, powerfully built, if a little past his prime of youth and somewhat soft from easy living.
She bowed her head. "Is-kaldai of the realm, brother of my blood, your sister has returned with news of far places."
He looked up, surprised, his beak hanging open. "Vatsha, you are back from the Human world. I did not expect you so soon. What news from the battlefield?"
"Our forces have regrouped, our lines are solid, but we do not move. Many of the Human creatures have been trapped behind our lines, but they have fled to the mountains and badlands. They are not warriors, probably low caste, and not worth the effort to b.l.o.o.d.y our blades on right now. They are better suited to living on this foul, wet world than we are. Perhaps they can be employed as mine laborers once the planet is ours."
Rejad hissed in disgust and the sandcrawler scuttled down the front of his blouse and disappeared into the pillows under his legs. "These Humans are disgusting creatures, soft, hairy and weak. They constantly leak water as though it were free. I find it impossible to believe that they have troubled us so, that they have built the great armored machines that keep our armies at bay. Perhaps those are only gifts from a more powerful race."
"Perhaps, my brother, and if so, we do not want to meet them among the dunes."
"Then we should be done with this war before they take notice of us. End it quickly."
She bobbed her head in mock apology. "Pardon, lord, but that is what the last Is-kaldai said before he was called home in disgrace. I am shamed to point out that my lord may not have been a.s.signed here as a sign of good favor with the Mor-verridai."
"The Mor-verridai is a shadow, sister, with no power, and my rivals in the Council will be as well, once I win this war. My predecessors were brave, but not very smart."
"And you are smart, but not very brave?"
His fingers brushed over the hilt of his blade. "Do not trifle with me, sister. Without my Blade of Kevv and its kaleidoscope sensor screen, the recent reversal might have gone much worse."
"I remind my brother, that the kaleidoscope device is my design."
"If I do not make the blade, does not my hand still make it cut? You are a clever female, sister, but it is I who put it into a ship and put it to use."
"And you who nearly had it shot from the sky?"
Rejad was silent for a moment, then made an amused cry. "My sister is ever eager to remind me of my own shortcomings. This is good. I should hear these things occasionally from someone I do not have to kill. But I have nothing to be ashamed of here.
"It matters not if I am here because the Blade of Kevv succeeded, or because it failed. I am here, and I will win. The Blade of Kevv survived and will return, and these clever monkeys will yet fall to it. Speaking of, you have a report on the repairs?"
"Yes, it came by courier pod not two units ago. The hull damage is repaired, and the two damaged turrets are being switched out with units from a conventional cruiser of similar design. The kaleidoscope device is undamaged and ready for use."
She had been saving something. "And better news, the Council has approved the purchase of two more kaleidoscope-equipped cruisers from our shipyards."
Rejad stood quickly. "Glory to the bloodline and our ancestors. That is excellent news."
"Perhaps, but it will be many cycles before the new ships arrive, and the Blade of Kevv was never intended to act alone. It should operate in concert with at least five other ships of its kind. Alone, as we have seen, it is still vulnerable."
Rejad paced the back of the room, stopping to finger a silver bowl worth enough to feed a family of low-bloods for a year. "A blade too precious to be drawn is no blade at all. You are clever, sister, but you do not understand the affairs of the Council. Support for this war grows weak. Too many reputations have been lost, too many bloodlines soured, too many resources wasted. We will have those ships, and more, in time, but we cannot wait. We cannot even wait for the two additional ships. Blade of Kevv must prove its usefulness, without doubt this time, and then the Council will give us that we need."
His hood flared. "We will succeed, and then there will be a dozen ships, and a hundred, and a thousand, and our bloodline will stand six years for every ship."
Two.
The capsule glittered among a cl.u.s.ter of trees high among the rocks, just off of the trail. Jask couldn"t believe at first what he was seeing. Could it be the falling star? He had seen something streak across the morning sky, heard the shriek of its landing. Since then he and Bessy had been looking for it.
But was this thing it?
It looked weird, all blackened and metal-like, sitting wedged in the trees. Maybe it was more of the aliens that had killed his mom and dad. He called them the "bizzards" because they looked like a cross between a buzzard and a lizard he"d seen in pictures from Earth.
But this falling star didn"t look like any of the alien machines he"d seen pa.s.s through on their patrols. It wasn"t much bigger than a man. Sort of long, too. Still, as he started up to the falling star, he was glad to have Bessy close, his personal Bolo.
"You keep an eye on me now, Bessy," Jask said as he got closer. "I might need your help if this is a bizzard box."
Bessy climbed over the rocks beside him, its balloon tires moving it slowly and surely upward.
He inched his way closer to the box. Suddenly something dropped from one of the trees.
He jumped back behind Bessy as a crablike seyzarr about the size of a dog scurried toward the box. The seyzarr snapped at the box with its claws, acting as if somehow there was food inside.
"That"s my falling star," Jask said to the seyzarr. "Not yours."
Jask removed a powerful slingshot from a bin on Bessy"s side. He knew the seyzarr had a vulnerable spot right between its eyes, where the armor was thin and its brainlike nerve cl.u.s.ter was close to the surface. But hitting it was going to be tough, since the thing was moving all the time.
Jask took a salvaged steel nut from his pocket and loaded it into the sling. It felt heavy in his hand. A good weapon.
But to make the shot count, he had to get the seyzarr to face him.
"Bessy, you get back into hiding among the rocks. You"re too big. You might frighten it."
Bessy stopped and then started slowly backward.
Jask shouted, letting his voice turn into a high-pitched scream. It was a noise that Jask figured even the seyzarr couldn"t ignore.
He was right. The seyzarr turned, hesitated, considering where the easier meal was to be found. The hard sh.e.l.l of the pod hadn"t yielded much to its terrible claws, and Jask figured he looked small and defenseless. So the creature did exactly what Jask had hoped it would do. It charged.
The seyzarr clattered down the rocks with startling speed.
Jask got the slingshot up and in position, his arm pulled back and waiting. His dad had taught him that anytime he had to shoot something like a gun, or a bow and arrow, or even a slingshot, the most important thing was controlling his breathing.
Jask forced himself to take a deep breath and ignore the seyzarr"s flailing legs, snapping claws, and biting jaws, and instead look only into its eyes. And the soft spot between them.
Just as the seyzarr was almost on him, Jask fired.
There was a crack like a walnut under a hammer. The creature"s legs buckled.
For a moment Jask thought he had only wounded it, but then it fell at Jask"s feet, twitched once, and died.
"Hey, Bessy, come take a look at this!"
Jask studied his prize for a moment, forgetting about the box above him. Then as Bessy reached him, he cut off the animal"s claws and legs, throwing them onto Bessy.
"Sorry you have to haul stuff like this," Jask said. "I know Bolos have more important things to do, but there will be fresh meat tonight if we can get this back to camp."
After he finished loading the remains of the animal onto Bessy, he turned his attention back to the box. When he finally got up to it, he realized it was more than just a box. The rocks underneath it were scorched, as if some fire came from the bottom of the thing at the last minute. There was also a big yellow handle on one side with a word on it.
RESCUE.
"Hey, Bessy," Jask said, "If I pull on this handle, you think it will somehow call for rescue?"
Bessy said nothing. Jask really didn"t believe in the word rescue. He had seen too much over all this time living alone in these mountains. He believed in Bolos, Bessy, and doing things himself.
"Suppose it won"t matter none, will it?" Jask said. "We came this far looking for it, we might as well go all the way. Right, Bessy?"
Again the little truck said nothing.
Jask reached up and pulled the handle. Then stepped back.
There was a hiss, a slight release of vapor, and then the top of the thing opened like a seash.e.l.l.
Jask slowly poked his head over the top to see a man inside, pale and covered with blood.
"Well, Bessy, looks like the bizzards got another one," Jask said. He wasn"t surprised at all. He"d seen a lot of death since the day he saw his mom and dad"s bodies. None of it much bothered him anymore.
Then he noticed that the man"s lips were moving. The guy tried to sit up and then moaned.
"What do you know, Bessy," Jask said. "He"s still alive."
Then Jask noticed the man"s uniform.
And the service pin on the man"s chest, the golden silhouette of a great tank, its turrets rising up from the top, bristling with weapons.
It was a pin that Jask had only seen in picture books, the pin of a Bolo commander.
Painfully, slowly, I work to restore the most minimal of my systems. Even my self-repair systems are gravely damaged.
I focus my efforts on restoring communications, but this turns into a dead end. My secondary communications systems are fused solid, my primary is also fused, though a few circuits open at the time of the blast seem curiously to have survived. I can send and receive coded pulses over my command receiver link, though I am unable to alter the frequency or scramble code. I have attempted to signal my Commander using this circuit without any success. I must face the grim possibility that if he were nearby at the time of the explosion, he is likely dead.
This avenue abandoned, I set to restoring my external sensors. This seems more promising, as a patchwork of the primary and secondary support circuitry seems to be intact. The external sensor heads and antennas have been destroyed or rendered inoperative, but this is a common occurrence in battle, and I have hardened backups for many of them. Unfortunately, most of my hull access plates are jammed or welded shut.
I apply power to each of the access plate actuators in turn, cycling each several times. Finally I detect a small movement in a cover over an auxiliary optical head located atop my A turret. I cycle the actuator several hundred times, but the movement remains minute.
I apply 120 percent current to the cover. I feel a stinging in my already overloaded pain circuits. I increase to 200 percent power. 300 percent. There is an overheat warning, and I estimate that the actuator will burn out in 0.027 seconds.
But then there is a screech of rending metal that I detect through an induction sensor in my hull, and the cover pops open. I am startled by the sound, and suddenly realize that I have heard nothing but the vibration of my own systems since I became operational.
The silence disturbs me. Seeking some rea.s.surance that the outside world still exists, I unshutter the now exposed optical sensors.
I see nothing.
Blackness.
Yet all indications are that the sensor is intact. I shift to infrared wavelengths and it is nearly as dark. Wherever I am, not only is devoid of light, it is cold as well.
But there are shapes close around me, perhaps retaining some slight residual heat of the explosion. Perhaps they are warmed slightly by their own radiation. I readjust.
Things are clear now, crumpled duralloy frame members, carbon-carbon composite panels, twisting conduits and light-guides. The materials and construction are of a light-weight nature. The wreckage of an aircraft of some sort? Whatever, I am entombed in wreckage. I must see what is beyond it. With some difficulty, I am successful in opening seven of the ports over my infinite repeaters. I cycle them through their entire range of lateral motion, and fire.
There is surprisingly little sound, but I am rewarded as their fire slices through the coc.o.o.n that surrounds me, allowing light in from the outside world. The flying wreckage requires me to shutter the optical sensor again, but at this range against a fixed target, it isn"t needed.
It takes 12.50 seconds for the secondary batteries to complete their task. I unshutter the optical head, and am rewarded with a view of the local sun as it sweeps overhead at nearly impossible speed.
At first I doubt my internal clocks. I would have to be on a planet with a rotational period of 59.00394 seconds. Then a distant planetary body moves through my field of view at the same rate. I screen out its glare, and see stars whirling by. Then I watch half of my former prison spinning away, and on a hatch cover I read "C.M.S. Cannon Beach."