Part 19 (2/2)

Frost looked at him narrowly. ”Help? On Unseeli? Don't you think it's about time you filled us in on what's going on here, Captain?”

”No,” said Silence. ”Not just yet.”

”Well, can you at least tell us where you're going?”

”Of course, Investigator. I'm going to talk to the traitor called Carrion. He's going to get us through the force screen. That's if he doesn't decide to kill us all first.”

CHAPTER TWO.

Ghosts Ripper and Stasiak were supposed to be establis.h.i.+ng a perimeter around the landing field, but they spent most of their time studying the enigmatic metal forest through the swirling mists. They had both volunteered for the job, Ripper because he believed in the value of a good, secure perimeter, and Stasiak because he was glad of a chance to get away from the Investigator. He'd heard a lot of stories about the Empire's most renowned a.s.sa.s.sins, and now that he'd met Frost he was ready to believe a lot of things he hadn't before. Investigators were the Empire's elite, trained to deal with situations too dangerous or too complex for ordinary troops. Their specialty lay in dealing with new alien species. They would study the aliens in depth, work out how best to exploit, enslave, or destroy them, and then lead the mission that would bring the alien world into the Empire, one way or another. They were unparalleled fighters, cold and calculating strategists, unstoppable by anything but death. They were said to be as strange and inhuman as the aliens they studied, and Stasiak believed it. Just being around Frost made his skin crawl.

The two marines moved slowly round the boundary of the landing pads, setting down proximity mines at regular intervals and priming them to detonate the moment anything approach within the designated distance. Ripper was a great believer in proximity mines; they not only discouraged people from sneaking up on you, they also provided plenty of warning that the enemy was abroad. Ripper slapped the mine before him affectionately, ignoring Stasiak's wince. The mine wasn't much to look at, but there was enough explosive crammed into the flat grey disc to ruin anybody's day.

The perimeter had taken longer to establish than he'd expected, and not just because of the time they spent warily watching the forest. The landing field was even larger than it looked, and it looked immense.

Ripper tried to imagine how the field must have looked when the Base was first being established and the ma.s.sive starcruisers were landing and taking off every hour, like huge flying mountains, but he couldn't.

The scale was just too great. He started to mention it to Stasiak, but changed his mind. Stasiak was a good man to have at your back in a fight, but he wasn't the most imaginative of men. If you couldn't eat it, drink it, fight it, or get a leg over it, Stasiak really wasn't interested.

He was currently scowling out into the mists again, and Ripper reluctantly followed his gaze. There was something about Unseeli in general, and Base Thirteen in particular, that disturbed him deeply on some primitive, instinctive level. The sheer size of the metal trees was intimidating, making him feel small and insignificant, like a church mouse staring up at a vast cathedral. And then there was the mist, enveloping the metallic forest like a grubby off-white shroud. Ripper kept thinking he saw vague shapes moving at the edge of the forest, come and gone in the blink of an eye. There was a constant feeling of being watched, an almost tangible pressure of unseen, watching eyes. Alien eyes.

The silence was unnerving too. The only sounds on the still air were those the two marines made themselves, and they were quickly swallowed up by the quiet. No creature roared, no bird sang, and the air was deathly still. Dead world. Ghostworld. Ripper scowled, and let his hand rest on the disrupter at his side while Stasiak finished laying down the last mine. There was a feeling of imminence on the air, of something vital finally about to happen after many years of waiting. But all around, everything was still and quiet. Dead.

Stasiak ran quickly through the activating routine, primed the proximity mine, and stood up next to Ripper. Anyone who approached the perimeter now without the right codes in their implant would find themselves suddenly scattered across an extremely large area. Stasiak sniffed unhappily and hitched the gun on his hip to a more comfortable position. He'd hoped to feel more secure once the perimeter was established, but he couldn't honestly say that he did. One look at the forest was enough to put his teeth on edge. Strange colors glowed in the depths of the mists, curious and unsettling hues that swirled slowly like dye in water. They faded in and out, their slow, deliberate movements implying something that bordered on purpose or meaning, some alien intent unfathomable by the human mind. Ripper tapped him on the arm to get his attention, and Stasiak all but jumped out of his skin. He glared at Ripper, who stared calmly back.

”If you've quite finished trying to give me a coronary,” said Stasiak, ”perhaps we could get the h.e.l.l away from here and back to the pinnace?”

Ripper looked at him with amus.e.m.e.nt. ”I thought you were relieved to be putting some distance between you and the big bad Investigator?”

Stasiak shrugged briefly, looking out at the forest again. ”I was, but this is even creepier than she is. I keep . . . seeing things. Hearing things. Come on, Rip; you've felt it too, I can tell. There's something out there in the mists, watching us.”

”The computer was quite specific,” said Ripper neutrally. ”According to all the pinnace's instruments, the only living things on this planet are us. Unless you're suggesting the planet is haunted . . .”

”Why not?” said Stasiak, looking seriously at Ripper. ”Strange things have been known to happen out here on the Rim. Remember the Ghost Warriors, and the Wolfling in the Madness Maze? You can find anything out here on the Rim. Anything.”

”Even so,” said Ripper. ”I still draw the line at ghosts.”

”Something attacked us on the way down, something the sensors swore weren't there. And what about this Carrion guy the Captain's gone looking for? a.s.suming he isn't a ghost or a walking corpse, that means someone's found a way to hide from Empire sensors. And if one man's learned to do it, how do we know others haven't? A whole lot of others, heavily armed and just waiting to descend on us the moment we let our guard down.”

”You're determined to be cheerful, aren't you?” said Ripper. ”All right, I've got a bad feeling about this place too, but I'm not letting my nerves run away with me. I'm not going to start worrying till I've got something definite I can aim a gun at. You worry too much, Lew. These mines will stop anything, up to and including a charging Hadenman.”

”And if you're wrong, and there is something nasty out there?”

”Then you can say I told you so,” said Ripper calmly.

Stasiak shook his head, unconvinced. ”There must have been something nasty here for the Base to raise their screen. I mean, that's a last-ditch defence; it's what you do when you've tried everything else and none of it's worked. I don't like this, Rip. I don't like the feel of this mission at all.”

”Neither do I,” said a calm female voice behind them. Both marines spun round sharply to find Investigator Frost standing almost on top of them. Ripper and Stasiak exchanged a swift glance as they realised neither of them had heard the Investigator approaching, despite the eerie quiet.

”There's still no response from the Base,” said Frost. ”There's nothing wrong with our equipment, so either the Base personnel don't want to talk to us, or they can't. Which suggests, at the very least, there's something here capable of scaring the h.e.l.l out of an entire Base. Except, of course, our instruments continue to a.s.sure us there's no one down here but us.”

”What about Carrion?” said Stasiak, and the Investigator nodded slowly.

”Yes, what about Carrion? Have either of you heard the name before?”

”No,” said Ripper. ”Have you?”

Frost frowned thoughtfully. ”Most of Unseeli's records are sealed behind Security codes even I don't have access to, but I've managed to dig up a few things that aren't exactly common knowledge. The traitor Carrion used to be a high-ranking officer serving under Captain Silence, back when the Empire was fighting its war against the indigenous species, the Ashrai. Carrion turned against his own kind and fought with the Ashrai, against humanity. Quite successfully, from what I can tell. He apparently displayed quite powerful esper abilities in combat, though interestingly enough there are no records of his having any such abilities before he came to Unseeli. He was supposed to have died with the Ashrai, when the planet was scorched.”

Stasiak shook his head firmly. ”Then he's dead. No one survives a scorching.”

”Not so far,” said Frost. ”But the Captain seems quite convinced that Carrion has survived, and that he can find him. Intriguing, that.”

”Have you ever served with Captain Silence before?” said Ripper.

”No. He has a good record, apart from Unseeli. How about you?”

”Been with him two years now,” said Ripper. ”Not a bad sort. For a Captain. I've served under worse.

Lew?”

”He's all right,” said Stasiak, shrugging. ”Or at least he seemed to be, until this mission. He's been acting strangely ever since we got our orders to come here.”

”Considering the last time he was here he fouled up so completely he had to have the whole planet scorched, I can't say I'm surprised.” Frost lifted her gaze to the metallic forest, as though it might suggest some answers. ”I would have to say the good Captain's present behaviour could become a cause for concern. In fact, he gives the definite impression of a man no longer entirely stable.”

Ripper looked at her sharply. The Investigator was choosing her words very carefully. ”So,” he said, carefully, ”if the Captain was to be officially judged as unstable, who would take over as mission commander? You?”

The Investigator smiled. ”I might. For the good of the mission.”

”Yes,” said Ripper. ”For the good of the mission.”

”I should remind you all,” said the AI suddenly, through their comm implants, ”that the penalties for treason and mutiny are extremely severe.”

”Treason?” said Stasiak quickly. ”Who's talking treason? I'm not.”

Frost smiled, unperturbed. Ripper grimaced sourly. ”I should have known. Can't even get any privacy on a deserted planet.”

”I am required in the present emergency to monitor all conversations,” said the AI. ”I shall of course have to repeat your words to the Captain, on his return.”

”Of course,” said Frost. ”When he returns. In the meantime, you will cease to monitor any conversation of which I am a part, unless I give you permission to do so. That is a direct order, under Code Red Seven. Confirm.”

”Code Red Seven confirmed,” said the AI, almost reluctantly, and then it fell silent.

Ripper raised an eyebrow at the Investigator. ”I didn't know anyone could override an AI's Security directives.”

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