Part 15 (1/2)

On the other side of the hall, Krysty and Dean had taken a section of the wall and high ceiling s.p.a.ce to themselves, and started side by side, then worked slowly away from each other. Dean's Browning Hi-Power was a better target pistol, and perhaps better suited to the task than Krysty's .38 caliber Smith & Wesson blaster. Nonetheless, the t.i.tian-haired beauty was no less accurate than the young Cawdor, just of necessity slower as it took fractionally longer to sight on the Smith & Wesson for the higher cameras.

Jak had disdained the use of his Colt Python. The blaster was an excellent man-stopper and could cause considerable damage, but wasn't the right handblaster for the task at hand. He had handed the Python to Gloria and requested the use of her Vortak. It had a larger round capacity than the Python, and the smaller caliber shot along with the gas-buffered recoil system enabled him to shoot with a greater swiftness and accuracy over longer distances. The speed was a necessity as they had to knock out as many cameras as possible before the enemy in the redoubt below had an opportunity to make a clear overall picture of what exactly the Gate were doing. And the accuracy was needed for those cameras that were secreted high in the vaulted ceiling of the chamber.

”Dark night, this is like one of those old churches I've seen in pics,” J.B. murmured to Ryan as the two men stood side by side in the sector of the chamber that they had elected to clear.

”Mebbe it is,” the one-eyed man replied. Then, noticing the puzzled look in the Armorer's eyes, Ryan expanded. ”Some people believed in a G.o.d who would bring them salvation from the s.h.i.+t around them, and some people believed in blasters and bombs bringing them salvation from the s.h.i.+t around them. Same old s.h.i.+t, different solution. So why not the same kind of building for the same kind of faith?”

”Whatever.” The Armorer shrugged. ”The only thing that mattered was who could beat the s.h.i.+t out of who when the going got tough. Blasters and bombs would sure help then.”

”It's a point of view,” Ryan commented, sighting the Steyr on a camera that was high in the vaulted chamber, partially hidden behind a small b.u.t.tress that ran off a pillar to the high ceiling. Squeezing gently, he let off a shot that whip cracked in the air, echoed almost immediately by a similar-though deeper- crack as the camera shattered under the high velocity sh.e.l.l.

J.B. sighted Ryan's SIG-Sauer on a camera that was more within handblaster range and loosed a shot that took out the lens with a minimum of effort and fuss -a typical J.B. Dix move. His very movements were easy and laconic, with an ease that belied the razor sharpness behind the move. He and Ryan had elected to take their sector together as the Armorer had been swift to point out that target shooting with handblasters would be efficient for those cameras that were within easy view-but those that lay farther up in the ceiling and walls of the chamber presented a problem. To take them out was hard enough. To even spot them in the first instance might require a magnified sight such as that on Ryan's Steyr.

The one-eyed warrior agreed, and so he accompanied the Armorer and was sighting higher and farther up than his friend, taking out those cameras where a single handblaster shot might not be enough. It would be stupid to waste ammo on two SIG-Sauer shots where one from the Steyr would suffice.

Taking out the cameras in J.B.'s allotted sector gave Ryan some idea of what he was looking for, and he soon left the Armorer behind, moving swiftly around the chamber, joining the other members of his party and covering their areas at the higher level, picking out those spa.r.s.ely but carefully concealed cameras that occupied the upper levels.

Eventually he was satisfied that all the sec cameras had been taken out. There was always the possibility that there might be one or two that had escaped detection, but the sight on the Steyr was so powerful that the odds were against that.

”We're as secure as it's possible to be,” he said to his a.s.sembled crew. He dispatched Jak to tell Gloria, and the Gate queen responded by informing the albino that the base camp was also secured and guarded at all points leading off the large hall.

”Now we've got ourselves really dug in, I think we'd better talk about what the f.u.c.k we do next, don't you, honey?” she said to the albino.

Jak allowed her a smile. Rare on his scarred visage, he found that the warrior queen had an ability to inspire them in him. ”Sure. Can't stay here forever,” he replied. ”You and Ryan need talk tactics.”

”Then talk we'd better. Eat, as well. I don't know about you, sweetie, but there's nothing like a chilling to work up an appet.i.te. I'll set the stupidworks men to it.” She added, before smiling, ”Not that it includes you, of course.”

DOWN ON THE FIRST level, where the sec monitors were set up, the Illuminated Ones were unaware of the ease that had descended over the Gate camp. Al and Simon were standing in front of another bank of monitors, these all in darkness. The monitor system for the interior hall was like that for the sec cameras on the exterior of the building. Whereas the vid systems and screens for those cameras that were dotted around the compound-and also on the corridor system in the interior of the building-were sectioned off into individual rooms to allow the vid watcher to concentrate his attention entirely on his sector, the monitor systems to cover the exterior and main hall of the central building were set up in a bank that would provide an overall picture of proceedings and enable a sec chief and a trained observer to pick out tactical points and direct a defensive or attacking action.

Except that this strategy didn't allow for the cameras to be taken out. From their position on the upper level of the redoubt, Simon and Al watched in mounting horror as screen after screen went dark, watched each time as one of Ryan's people was caught full in the camera eye as they lined up the shot, then vanished in a blink as the mechanism was shattered and the vid link severed.

Simon looked at Al from the corner of his eye, not wanting the sec chief to realize that he was being stared at. The older man was red in the face from a mixture of tension and suppressed rage, except around the tightly set lips, which were white from the pressure of his clamped jaw. His eyes bulged as he kept his anger and rage within, and Simon was certain he could hear Jorgensen's teeth grinding, even from a distance.

”So what do you want me to do, Al?” Rack asked in a voice that came out much smaller, and more timid, than he would have liked.

There was no answer, and Rack pa.s.sed an awkward few seconds wondering if he had been heard. He was about to ask again when Al replied in a strangled voice that seemed to be forced from the back of his throat.

”Do nothing, Simon. This is my baby. And they'll learn soon enough.”

With which, Al turned on his heel and strode rapidly from the room, leaving Rack in front of the darkened bank of monitors. The observer felt awkward. Should he stay and await further orders? Should he attempt to follow Jorgensen so that he, too, could report? Or should he just try to get the h.e.l.l out of the way before all h.e.l.l broke loose, as it surely would.

For Simon knew that Jorgensen was making a complete mess of the situation. He was only an observer, but even he-without training-could see that the situation was absurd. They had a vastly superior a.r.s.enal and greater manpower, and yet they now had this group of savages almost inside their base. Things couldn't get worse than this, could they?

THE REDOUBT WAS HUGE. It ran to seventeen levels, burrowing deep into the earth, each level heavily reinforced to secure it against the pressure of the level above and the earth and rock surrounding. It had taken years of work in the two decades before the nukecaust to complete, and even then there were some areas where work had been stopped by skydark, and was only now being resumed and finished with what materials were at hand. It had been a vast undertaking by the secret cabal known as the Illuminated Ones, and the knowledge of how a black budget within the U.S. military-industrial complex had been set up and diverted to insure the completion of this and the other bases of the cabal had been handed down from generation to generation to insure that the importance of security and secrecy was emphasized and maintained.

Which was why Al Jorgensen felt distinctly uncomfortable when he entered the chamber where the central council met. A quorum of eight people-four male and four female-served as the central council. The tasks and divisions codified within the pseudo-military setup of the Illuminated Ones had been established before the nukecaust, and maintained in order to keep a structure during the long years of being hidden from view. Although these structures were rigid, the young ones born during those generations weren't immediately a.s.signed tasks by heredity.

Rather, they were educated, a.s.sessed and then allotted their sections according to whatever gifts they might possess. Thus, unlike any other pockets of predark old tech and old ways that might have existed the Illuminated Ones had insured that their redoubt ran smoothly because of competence.

Those who served on the quorum were from the administrative and comp-tech branches of the redoubt. These people had revealed a knack for their tasks during the years of education, and took turns of six months on the leading quorum before returning to their regular tasks until such time as their rota decreed they serve again. Like everything in the redoubt, it was ordered and streamlined to serve as efficiently to the cause as possible. Competence was the watchword, and with their desire to prolong and extend resources for as long as possible, the worst crime was incompetence.

Which was also why Jorgensen was so uncomfortable about facing them. He wasn't a stupid man. In fact, in simulation he had revealed himself as far and away the best for his task. He prided himself on his ability to manage a job. And the fact that he now stood before them as a failure who was endangering their existence was something that hurt his pride deeply. He wasn't afraid of what they would do to him for his failure. In truth, in his eyes he deserved whatever they might decree. The primary shame was that he had failed himself as much as he had failed the cause.

He stood before the quorum in the spa.r.s.ely furnished room, loosely at ease and staring at a fixed point above their heads. He couldn't bear to look any of them in the eye.

The black metal tables and chairs, padded in black leatherette, absorbed all the light and sound in the room, so that even under the fluorescent glare the lighting seemed subdued, and the multihues of the one-piece uniforms worn by the eight quorum members in front of him seemed to be as muted as the mood evinced by his entrance.

”You don't look happy, Al,” said one of the women on the quorum. She leaned forward in her chair, her long, fine blond hair falling over her forehead. ”So I take it that it's not good news.”

Jorgensen sighed. ”I've failed. Maybe you should appoint a replacement taking effect immediately.”

”That would be impossible, and you know that,” she replied, but with a tone of sympathy in her voice rather than reproach. ”Is it really that bad?”

”Maybe worse,” Jorgensen said, bringing his gaze down from the fixed point so that he could look her in the eye. ”I've f.u.c.ked up big style, Eve. When it came to it, I just wasn't up to the task. And it's put us all in danger.”

Eve Goulden-head of the quorum by virtue of it being her turn, and a comp tech who had a friendly relations.h.i.+p with Jorgensen-shook her head gently. ”What's the situation, Al? Put us in the picture and let us be the judge of what's going on.”

So he outlined all that had occurred since the Gate tribe and their allies had entered the compound, not flinching from a single detail, including the ma.s.sacre of his sec force in front of the building, and the fact that the sec-vid cameras had been shot out so that there was now no way of knowing what the invaders were doing until they-perhaps-came in range of a camera secreted in one of the myriad corridors.

”Of course, that a.s.sumes that they proceed in such a fas.h.i.+on and don't know exactly where they're heading.”

”Which would be?” Goulden questioned.

Jorgensen shrugged. ”The elevators and shafts down into the redoubt. I've given up thinking that they know nothing, and maybe should just think that they know everything. s.h.i.+t, at least that way there's less chance of them taking me by surprise. You know what I'm saying?”

”It's a fair point, I guess,” Goulden mused. ”But why the h.e.l.l would they know about the redoubt?”

”Come on, they've been heading in a direct line for us. They knew what they were doing when they were in the compound. I'm certain my attempts to direct them just played right into their hands. And the way they spotted the sec cameras and shot them out when they got in here? No, I can't believe that's all just blind luck. They knew what they were doing. And I reckon they may just have been heading for us.”

Goulden looked at the other members of the quorum. ”This is worrying, people. We've been working away without figuring on anyone out there knowing we're here, let alone wanting to come after us.”

”But why would they? What possible use could we be to them as they are?” asked one of the male quorum members.

It was Jorgensen, shrugging, who answered. ”Equipment, stores-it's all hard currency out there these days. We're relatively sheltered here, but I've heard tales of other skirmishes. Could be they got wind of us from one of those trading parties that have pa.s.sed by, maybe put two and two together and come up with the magic number. Sure as s.h.i.+t they aren't stupid, right?” he added with an edge of bitterness.

Goulden took in her fellow quorum members with a sweeping glance. ”Well, if worse comes to worst, then we move on. Right?” She waited until they had all nodded their agreement-a couple of them with some reluctance. ”Good,” she said finally. ”The way I see it is that we don't really have much of an option. But our best hope is to make sure that it actually doesn't come to that.”

”How do we do that?” Jorgensen asked her helplessly.

”Well, what do you suggest, Al? After all, you're our sec chief here, right? We have that much faith in you.”

Jorgensen's visage brightened visibly. ”Well, if it comes to that, I guess the best thing to do is secure all entrances into the redoubt, posting guards with heavy armament. Also, I would suggest we go to high alert status and prepare for an immediate evac. We shouldn't have to do that, but I'll be f.u.c.ked if I'm going to let myself be responsible for the possibility of a screwup that big.”

Goulden smiled at him. ”You've calmed down and cheered up a lot already, Al, and I think it's helped your thinking. Between us all, we can see off this challenge. After all, who do these people think they are, for f.u.c.k's sakes?”

”YOU WANT TO WHAT?” Ryan asked incredulously.

Doc shrugged uncomprehendingly, unable to grasp why Ryan was so bemused.