Part 9 (1/2)
Coordinator Sun himself. The royal treatment, indeed, he thought.
”Governor,” Sun said, inclining his head briefly to Jonny as he neared the group. ”Speaker One; Mr. Moreau,” he added with similar nods to the Troft and
Corwin. ”If you'll step this way, the team has just penetrated the outer perimeter section.”
”Is there an attack taking place?” Speaker One asked as they followed Sun back toward the crescent-shaped console.
”In a manner of speaking,” Sun told it. ”The Cobra team who'll be going to
Qasama is practicing their building a.s.sault techniques. Let's see how they're doing.”
The displays showed various degrees of activity, and Corwin scanned them quickly in an effort to make sense of it all. Despite the multiple camera angles shown, it was soon apparent that there were actually only a total of four Cobras involved: Almo Pyre, Justin, and two more Corwin knew only from pictures and
Council reports, Michael Winward and Dorjay Link. The latter two were moving stealthily down a corridor, while Pyre and Justin huddled before a formidable-looking door.
”Those two,” Sun explained, pointing at Pyre and Justin, ”are blocked by a blast door with an electronic lock. They could probably force it open with their antiarmor lasers, but at this point there's been no general alarm and it's worth the time to see if they can get through more quietly. Looks like one of the
Qasamans is about to surprise them, though.” He tapped a display whose rolling image showed the gait of a mechanical remote-
The camera turned a corner and stopped, the blast door and Justin framed in its view. Justin alone? Corwin thought. But Almo was there, too.
The screen flared abruptly and went black. Corwin s.h.i.+fted his gaze to the fixed-camera monitors just in time to see Pyre drop from the ceiling to land in a crouch beside the disabled remote, hands curled into fingertip laser ready position. He checked around the corner, then lifted the remote and carried it back to the door. ”All clear,” he whispered to Justin.
”Just about ready here,” Justin whispered back.
”Inside,” Sun said, ”is a key missile control tracking station.” He leaned over to touch a switch, and a vacant display came to life with an overhead schematic of the entire test area. Corwin quickly located the dots representing his brother and Pyre... and with a stomach-wrenching shock saw that the room they were about to enter was far from unoccupied. ”You'll note,” Sun continued in the same emotionless voice, ”that there are eight Qasamans on duty in there. All are armed, but the Cobras ought to have the advantage of surprise. Let's see....”
Justin stood up and pulled on the door... and an instant before it began its swing the tense silence was shattered by the blare of alarm bells.
Corwin would later learn that Winward and Link had accidentally triggered the alarm, but for that first instant it seemed horribly obvious that Justin and
Pyre had walked into a trap. The two Cobras seemed to believe that as well and, rather than charging through the open door, they hit the wall on either side.
Beside him, Corwin heard Jonny mutter something vicious... but by the time it seemed to dawn on the Cobras that they'd make a mistake it was too late. The remotes in the tracking room were on guard, and when Pyre risked a glance around the door jamb he nearly caught a laser blast for his trouble.
Corwin's jaw was clenched hard enough to hurt; but the figures on the monitor wasted no time in recriminations. Pyre sent Justin a half dozen quick hand signals, got an acknowledging nod, and seemed to brace himself. Both men took a second to fire apparently random fingertip laser shots through the doorway... and then, gripping the jamb for leverage, Pyre hurled himself into the room.
Into and up. The tracking room monitors caught a perfect view of him arcing spinning into the air like an oddly shaped gyroscope coming off a jump board, the antiarmor laser in his left leg carving out a traveling cone of destruction.
He'd just reached the peak of his jump when Justin came in behind him, the younger Cobra's flat dive and somersault landing him on his back in a sort of spinning fetal position... and his antiarmor laser, too, began its deadly sweep.
It was a cla.s.sic high-low maneuver Corwin recognized from his father's stories of the war. Between Pyre's sensor-guided air attack and Justin's lower horizontal spray, effective cover simply ceased to exist, and in the s.p.a.ce of maybe a second and a half all eight of the remotes' displays went dark.
Corwin suddenly realized he was holding his breath and risked a quick look to see what Winward and Link were up to. They'd split up since he'd last seen them, with Link at what was obviously an open outside door and Winward standing guard with fingertip lasers ready at the intersection of two hallways. Between them, the overhead schematic showed an impressive number of disabled remotes.
A flash and thunderclap jerked Corwin's attention back to the other displays, and he was just in time to watch as Justin aimed his right fingertip laser at one of the control panels in the tracking room and triggered his arcthrower.
Corwin's hands curled into tight fists as the second flash and crash came; he had been burned once by a faulty electrical outlet as a child, and the arcthrower with its high-amperage current flowing along an ionized laser path made his skin crawl in a way the far more powerful antiarmor laser never did.
But he forced himself to watch as Pyre and Justin worked methodically around the room, destroying every sc.r.a.p of electronic equipment in sight. Pyre paused once before a large s.h.i.+elded display, and a low hum abruptly filled the room. ”Sonic disruptor,” Sun murmured, presumably for the Troft's benefit. A few seconds later Corwin thought he detected a m.u.f.fled crack, and the hum disappeared as