Crackling torches dotted the streets of the ville in reddish light, the illumination reflecting off the honeycombed gla.s.s of the many greenhouses. The streets were deserted with every door closed, every window bolted shut, only the murmur of soft voices coining from inside the lower levels of the intact buildings and from underneath the gutted ruins. Beyond the pile of smashed vehicles composing the great wall, sec men watched the sky with blasters in hand as the scintillating beams of the searchlights swept the cloudy sky, endlessly searching for an enemy that would attack without notice. In the far distance, a wolf howled in agony for a lost mate. Cursing under their breaths, grim sec men moved closer to the lights and made sure their weapons were ready for combat.
Cutting through the alleyway between the market place and a partly built greenhouse, Leonard Strichland strode purposefully across the dark plaza heading toward the bright lanterns of the baron"s palace. After the revolution, the open area before the converted museum had been painstakingly cleared of structures so that the defenders inside would have a clear field of fire against any attackers. Leonard considered that a practical idea. If the old baron had thought of such things-indeed, if the despot had considered anything other than harshly disciplining his people-then the man might still be in charge of Alphaville instead of a chained prisoner in the dank bas.e.m.e.nt of his former home.
The walls of the predark museum soared twenty yards into the sky, a louvered expanse of granite strips interlocking into a solid h.o.m.ogeneous whole of amazing strength. No windows marred the three sides of the predark structure. The entire front had once been a window, but the new baron had bricked up the vulnerable area, both inside and out, giving it a relative stability almost equal to the granite sides. On the roof, sec men steadily patrolled the perimeter of the building, bolt-action longblasters held at quarter-arms.
Secretly, Leonard knew there were also small kegs of black powder with homemade fuses in a locked munitions box up there to drop on invaders. Any attacking force would be met with fierce opposition.
Born and bred on the dirty streets of Alphaville, Baron Gunther Strichland didn"t make the same mistakes as his dethroned predecessor. On the ground, sandbags formed a low wall before the double doors, the emblazoned bra.s.s marred with dull streaks where soft lead bullets had ricocheted. A half circle of steel I-beams salvaged from the ruins across the Stink River chasm had been welded into tripods to act as a deterrent to attacking wags, or even APCs. Getting past those would take a predark tank. Coils of barbed wire stretched across the ground like dark smoke frozen in time and s.p.a.ce. A few strips of stained cloth here and there marked the spots where sec men had thrown the corpses of their fallen comrades onto the wire so they could gain access to the museum and continue the fight to usurp their former leader.
Before being captured alive, Baron "Mad Jim" Harvin had unleashed his pet winged muties, but it didn"t work. Sergeant Strichland had carefully orchestrated the revolt at first dawn so his troops would be safe from the deadly black bats. Or flying lizards, or whatever the h.e.l.l the muties were. Leonard had no idea, nor did anybody else, as the creatures only appeared at night and the only folks who got a good view of them died soon afterward, torn to shreds. Not a single one of the creatures had ever been successfully slain.
Leonard walked toward the front doors of the palace so that the guards would see him coming. Five huge men stood behind the sandbags, longblasters over their shoulders, handblasters at their belts. The Elite, the baron called them. The five were sworn to die before allowing invaders inside the home of their baron. To their left and right rested a pair of old muzzle-loading cannons. It had taken two years to unblock the barrels, but the weapons were fully functional now, and the soft cotton bags stacked in the red plastic milk crates were filled with bits of broken gla.s.s, bent nails and other tiny sc.r.a.ps of metal. A band of raiders had gotten this far once, and after the cannons roared, nothing remained but b.l.o.o.d.y clothing and smashed bones. It was the last direct attack.
"Morning, Lieutenant," a sec man said.
"Morning, Sergeant." Leonard smiled, trying not to lose his armload of papers. "Permission to enter, please."
"Granted, sir, as always," the sergeant said, waving him on.
A private pulled open the door and saluted as Leonard walked through. Inside was the mate of the outside cannons, and more sec men standing behind more sandbags. They put aside their card game and snapped to attention.
"Morning, sir. Dropping off a message, or looking for your father?" a grizzled veteran asked, his face mostly composed of scars.
The phrase embarra.s.sed the adopted boy. "The second, Sergeant. Do you know where is the baron?"
"Cellar," said the sec man grimly. "We caught a thief last week. Now he"s getting justice."
"One of our own, or a newcomer?"
"Local man. Cobbler. Been here for years."
"Did he lie about the crime?" Leonard asked hopefully. Stealing food was a pardonable crime, and the perpetrator often got no more than a dozen lashes. But lying to the baron was death by the Machine.
The soldier shook his head. "He should have known better." "Thank you." The boy hurried off, still clutching the portfolio of papers and maps to his chest.
"I hope he toughens up." The private sighed, reclaiming his chair and gathering his cards. "Don"t want a momma"s boy like Leo there as our baron."
Fanning the cards in his hand, the sergeant shifted them about to hide the straight he had drawn. "Don"t be fooled. Boy"s still young. But I saw him in the revolt when we charged this place. He took an arrow in the leg and a bullet in the chest and he fought on with his father. Tough as a s.l.u.t"s heart, the both of them."
"Long as he ain"t twisted as his old man," the private muttered, laying down a card and drawing a fresh one. "I hate all that screaming in the night."
"Well, got to be worse for them doing the screaming," the other man added wisely.
"Aye, suppose it is." He brushed a hand through his golden crew cut. "d.a.m.n, I"m sure glad my girl is a blonde."
SMOKING SLIGHTLY, vegetable-oil lanterns with rope wicks stood in wall niches illuminating the interior. The high vaulted ceiling of the museum was perfect for conducting away the greasy fumes.
Hurrying across the terrazzo expanse of the front hall, Leonard turned left and took the main stairs downward, the broad steps some four yards wide. There used to be a bra.s.s handrail along the center, but that had been destroyed when the rebels drove an APC down the stairs, chasing the former baron.
Caught him, too.
Guards and maids greeted Leonard politely as he hurried along the corridor past the storage room and the armory, past the furnace room and finally the jail. The door was closed, tufts of cloth r.i.m.m.i.n.g the jamb of the thick portal, but he could still hear the muted roar of machinery inside and a man pitifully screaming.
Withdrawing a small ring of keys from his pocket, Leonard unlocked the door and entered the deafening enamel house, the air stinking of excrement and exhaust fumes.
"Mercy!" screamed the man hanging from the ceiling by chains. The chains were wrapped about the hanging man"s wrists, a trickle of blood flowing down his arms as he struggled to get free.
"Please!" the prisoner wailed, the word barely audible over the muted rumble of the machine directly beneath. A black plume of smoke streamed from its exhaust pipe, and the ceiling was blacker than h.e.l.l itself from the acc.u.mulation of grime from its use.
Squads of somber men in clean uniforms stood about the abattoir watching the suspended victim struggle for life. None of the grim faces were softened by an expression of pity, or even interest.
"Mercy?" Baron Gunther Strichland asked, crossing his powerful arms across his barrel chest. The redheaded giant towered over the other men, his long fiery red hair moving as if endowed with a will of its own.
"Mercy?" he repeated as if it were a new word never tasted before. "An interesting choice of words for a traitor."
"I am innocent!" the man howled as the chain jerked and once more he was lowered inexorably towardthe maw of the churning machine. Between his bare feet, he could see the blur of the interlocking blades whirling at incredible speed. His stomach heaved at the idea of what was happening, but nothing rose into his throat. He hadn"t been fed for days in exact preparation for such an eventuality.
"I didn"t break the window!"
"No," Gunther said, accepting a silver chalice of cool wine from a busty maid in Army fatigues. "Your son did, and valuable plants were destroyed. Should we punish him instead?"
"Yes! Yes," the man whimpered, rivulets of sweat pouring off his naked body. His toes could feel the vibrations of the Machine in the air. It sent waves of ice through his veins, and the judgement room swirled as he started to faint.
"Not yet, thief," a woman snarled, and threw a bucket of ice water over him.
The shock forced him fully awake, and he squealed like a piglet being dragged to the butcher"s block.
"Do you honestly think," Gunther murmured, sipping from the chalice, "that we should kill a child instead?"
"Yes! He did it, not me! Not me!"
With a snarl, the baron dashed the chalice to the concrete floor. "Then you are worse than a thief.
You"re a coward, as well! Your boy may have done the damage, but you, the adult, hid the fact! By the time we discovered the damage, the sandstorm had killed over half the crops in that greenhouse! How many others may die from lack of food because of your cowardice?"
"Excuse me, High Baron," Leonard said from the doorway.
Furious over the interruption, Gunther turned, his red hair a crimson halo about his distorted features.
But when he saw who it was, the man relaxed his posture and his filaments laid down obediently on his wide shoulders.
"Yes, Leonard, what is it?" the baron asked calmly.
The teenager bowed respectfully. "We have a problem."
Gunther turned back to the screaming man. "Then handle it, my son. I"m busy at the moment dispensing justice."
A diplomatic cough. "It is a serious problem, sir."
"Sir, eh?" The baron smiled tolerantly. "Very well, then, let"s go." He turned to a sec man. "Lieutenant Kilgore, handle that matter."
A slim, dark, handsome man snapped to attention and briskly saluted. "At once, Baron!"
Gunther reached for the door latch, but Leonard took his arm.
"Father," he whispered softly, glancing at the writhing prisoner, "I know his crime was terrible, unforgivable, the killing of plants, the stealing of food..." He swallowed and his voice faltered. Baron Strichland rested a hand on the boy"s shoulder until he looked up. "Never be afraid of anything.
Especially when asking me for a favor. Understood?"
"Yes, my father."
"Is it mercy you wish, for that?" the baron asked, the distaste in his voice painfully clear. "A thief and a liar who places the blame of a crime on his own child?"
"Yes," the boy said forcibly.
Debating the issue, the baron looked directly at the rest of his council. Their opinions were also clear on the matter. The weeping prisoner had drawn his knees to his chest, fighting to keep his flesh away from the churning maw of the wood chipper.
"I can refuse you nothing, my chosen son," the giant said gently. "Mercy it shall be."
Leonard took his father"s hand and kissed it, "Thank you, Father."
"Enough," Gunther said, shaking off the embrace. "I"m the baron, not some mucking high priest."
"Sorry."
"Lieutenant Kilgore, show the criminal mercy."
"At once, sir!"
"Come, lad, to my office, where we can talk in private." The baron turned and they left the room.
"Mercy." Kilgore sneered in contempt. "For the likes of you. This is your lucky day."
And so saying, the lieutenant reached inside his camou-colored flak jacket, drew a Colt .45 blaster and fired once. Half of the man"s skull was removed by the bullet, blood spraying out in a hideous geyser.
Limply, the feet of the warm corpse dropped straight into the blades and disappeared. The crew holding the chains released the tension, and the body dropped without hindrance and a hideous whinnying noise rose as the man was reduced to mincemeat.
"Enough!" Kilgore said after a minute, sliding his blaster away into a predark shoulder holster. "Never waste fuel. Why is that, Private Hanson?"
Caught by surprise, the middle-aged woman snapped to attention. She had been busted four times back to private for not paying attention while on duty, and here it was happening again! "Ah, because the Machine won"t run on the alcohol we make, but only on real gasoline."
"That is correct. You there, Corporal, what is the sequence of the mix?"
His mustache merely a wisp of hair across his upper lip, the teenager swallowed and saluted. "Boil the residue twice to remove impurities, then mix him with sand in a one-to-ten ratio. Then add twice-boiled sewage two parts to five. Let it ripen for a week in summer, a month in winter."
"Very good." Kilgore smiled, wiping a tiny droplet of blood off his sleeve. "When he is processed, addthe new soil to the contaminated soil of the repaired greenhouse. We may be able to recover some crops from this mess yet."
"Sir, about the child who did the actual damage..."
"He is now a ward of the ville, and upon age will become a sec man trained to kill those who steal food from our bellies." A rue smile. "We do not harm children here, Private. Only thieves and liars."
"Yes, sir," the woman replied, fear a lump of ice in her belly from a carrot she had stolen from the kitchens the previous week.
AS THE FATHER and son approached the office on the third floor of the museum, sec men snapped open the door and saluted. The baron waved in pa.s.sing, and Leonard returned the salute properly.
The office was tremendously huge, covering half of a floor. To the east was a working stone fireplace surrounded by a sunken living room of plush couches. A wooden desk stood in the center of the room, and behind it on the wall was a map of the ville and surrounding lands. The floor was smooth fieldstone dotted with a dozen matching white rugs. To the west was a bookcase made of mirrors and gla.s.s shelves, and on display was the first ear of corn grown in the first greenhouse, fancy autofire blasters, all of which worked and were loaded, geodes because they were pretty, hundreds of bottles of liquor and predark wine, a few specially marked bottles expertly poisoned and a small teakwood box nearly full of human ears taken from every man who had ever challenged Strichland to a duel. a.s.sa.s.sins simply went into the Machine, and the baron drank a cup of their blood in order to steal their souls and make himself stronger.
As the door closed behind them, the elder Strichland took the chair behind the ma.s.sive cherry-wood desk and put his boots on the mirror-smooth surface. "Report," he ordered.
"Three people came in yesterday," Leonard said, placing his armload of papers on an empty chair. "But they were chased by only six wolves."
"b.a.s.t.a.r.d birds, or whatever the muties are, have been breeding again," Strichland grumbled, cracking his knuckles, as his hair stirred with impatience. "Every time we find their nest and burn it out, they"re back again in a couple of months."
"We may never find the main nest," Leonard stated.
"Obviously." Gunther sneered, his hair coiling in response to his tension. "If it weren"t for my searchlights, the things would have destroyed Alphaville months ago. Are the lights in good working order?"
"Yes, Father. Perfect shape. I check them myself every day."
The redhead smiled benignly. "Good lad."
"We could send in more men to search the ruins," Leonard suggested.
Gunther shook his head. "And risk one of them finding the old baron"s secret weapons cache and starting a war over the ville? I think not."
"Why did the old baron hide his weapons outside the ville?" "You"ve never asked me that question before."
"It never seemed important before," the boy said.
"And now?"
"I...It is my duty to know such things."
The baron placed his boots on the floor with a thump and beamed proudly. "At last, you"re taking an interest in ruling our land. Excellent. Baron Harvin did that so in case of a rebellion, he could regroup sec men outside the ville and blast their way back in to seize control."
"But none of the troops stayed loyal."
"A lesson to remember, future baron," the man said sternly. "Always stay on the good side of the troops. That is why a gaudy house was the first thing I built, even before the greenhouses. The sec men go there for free, which makes them happy. None of the farmers" daughters or wives are attacked, which makes them happy, which increases the production of food, which makes everybody happy. These people would willingly march into a rad pit for me!"
And they would someday, too, Gunther added privately. Every last one of the stinking norm b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, once he had a real son to replace him as baron. That was, if he ever managed to father a true heir and he wasn"t saddled with this obedient milksop for the rest of his life.
"Father?" Leonard asked urgently. "Something wrong?"
The middle-aged man smiled gently. "Nothing, my son. Nothing."
Rising from his chair, the baron started to pace the room. "The searchlights, which keep away the muties, also attract more people. Both good things. However, a larger population means more noise, and more activity, which attracts the muties. It"s a vicious circle. Our only defense weakens us and makes us more of a juicy target. For ten months, we"ve been walking the razor"s edge. I took the ville from the monster who controlled it before. There are no more random beheadings, no more rape or cannibalism.
We have greenhouses and grow enough food for an army. We have trials, and gaudy houses. The population has tripled since I took over. Tripled!"