Cale turned to Zant. 'This is where your Strengl will really pay off. Strengl s are shown in every sensor tech's records; it will be identified at once. And no merchant ship, armed or not, wants to tangle with a Strengl. When we close, we'll launch you, and you can zip around, running practice attack vectors, and overall just looking like a bloodthirsty madman.'

'In other words,' Dee put in, 'just act normal. Every time you get in that thing you act like a bloodthirsty madman!'

Zant raised an eyebrow at Cale. 'Oh, I just do it to impress the girls,' he said with a broad wink. Dee reddened, and Cale burst into laughter.

' Estrella de Santiago. Privateers commissioned by the government of Ilocan have captured your ship. You are surrounded by armed vessels, and any attempt to resist or escape will result in your destruction. The crew is ordered to suit up and exit the ship. Rescue officials will be notified of your locations, so you can be picked up. We are aware of the crew size of a Chata-class. You have ten minutes to evacuate, or we open fire.'

The reply came in heavily accented standard. 'Please! Do not shoot! We will comply. But our suits have not been tested for a long time. We will need more than ten minutes to check them out.'

The raider's voice replied in excellent Santiagan. 'Understood. It takes about ten minutes to check out a suit, and you have a crew of six. You have one hour, from now. One minute after that deadline, we open fire.'

' Si senor. Comprende.'

While the boats and Ilocan's Revenge waited for the crew of the Chata-class to abandon, Cale took Zant and Cheetah to a fat-looking Din-class, where the same technique was used.

All of the communication with their victims had been on low-power intership comms. Santiago Control was trying to identify the new vessels, and figure out what they were doing; but their hails were being ignored. When the Chata-class had hung in orbit close to Estrella de Santiago, Control decided to send a cutter to investigate. The cutter reported a number of small craft in the vicinity, and reported their intent to board the silent Chata-class. No further reports were forthcoming, despite Control's demands and pleadings. A rising level of confusion began to manifest itself at Santiago Control.

The first Din-class, the Dona Maria, had an efficient captain; her suit inspections were current. The crew made their ten-minute deadline with time to spare, and Cale's three prize crewmen swarmed aboard and began spinning up her inertial drives.

The captain of the second Din-class, the Viajero, wanted to argue. Finally, Cale had Zant hover his Strengl directly in front of Viajero 's main viewscreen sensor, nose on, while a computer voice counted down from ten minutes. The Strengl filling the entire viewscreen was a threat no one could ignore. The last crewman out, the Captain, made it with six seconds to spare.

With all three prizes preparing to boost, Mong called Cale. 'I suggest we get rid of the prisoners from the frigate,' he said. 'I see no sense in transporting them out of their home system, only to bring them back later.'

'Do you have enough suits?'

Mong shook his head, but smiled. 'Nope. But Santiago Control was kind enough to donate a cutter that will hold them all. With the boats gone, we can just bring the cutter into the hold, pressurize it, and load them up. They will be crowded for a while, but they're in orbit. They'll be fine.'

Cale thought about it. 'It's a good idea, but don't turn them loose until we're ready to leave, and disable their comms and drive, but not their beacon.'

The prizes began to boost for the jump point, escorted by Ilocan's Revenge. Loaded, they were much slower than Cheetah. Cale, Zant, and their five remaining boats stayed behind to spread hate and discontent. Mong was reluctant to leave so quickly; he waited long enough to punch meter-diameter holes in several orbital factories before breaking orbit and hurrying to catch up with his convoy.

There was no thought of bombarding the planet; they wanted to demoralize the Santies, not enrage them by inflicting unnecessary casualties.

So they headed for the orbital factories, where their powerful lasers and quickfirers wreaked havoc among Santiago's production facilities. As they approached the first orbital station, Cale finally broadcast a message powerful enough to blanket Santiago's Worldnet, telling who they were, and what they intended. Finally, he closed with 'Admiral Gonzalez-Villareal will soon have problems of his own. This war was entirely of Santiago's making, and thousands on Ilocan have died in it. If it does not end soon, the people of Santiago, not just its factories, will pay the price. You started this war, people of Santiago; now it is up to you to end it!'

The President's council was in emergency session, and no one was happy.

'You will have my resignation in the morning, senor Presidente,' said Tomas Santos-Villareal, the Minister of Defense.

The Minister of Trade was angry. 'Bailing out on us already, eh, Tomas? Planning to get out from under before the roof caves in?'

Tomas regarded the man in surprise. 'Are you insane?' He demanded. 'Do you honestly believe that any of us can possibly get 'out from under'? He looked around. 'Do any of you honestly believe that our political careers are not over? If any of us ever runs for so much as dogcatcher, do any of you honestly believe your opponent will not throw this in your face? Face it, gentlemen, we are finished.'

The President shook his head. 'No, we are not. And I will not accept your resignation, Tomas, until we do finish this debacle. We got our people into this; it is up to us to get them out, no matter what the personal cost.'

The Minister of the Treasury slammed a hand on the table. 'This is ridiculous! We have spent billions on your idiot nephew's so-called 'Defense Force', and we are to be beaten by savages? We did not cause this, Tomas. Your idiot nephew and his crazy idea caused it!'

Tomas shook his head. 'No, Ernesto. My idiot nephew came up with a stupid idea, but the decision to adopt it was unanimous. As I recall, you were one of the most enthusiastic of us.'

'Pah!' the Minister replied. 'A quick surprise attack,' he mimicked the Admiral, 'A week to seize Homesafe, and we own the planet and can start shipping our surplus population. We should have known it was too easy!'

'Your hindsight is perfect, Ernesto.' Tomas replied. 'It is a shame your foresight is less so.'

'Stop it!' The President smacked the table. 'Recriminations are stupid. We all voted for the war. The problem is what we do now.'

'No, senor Presidente,' Tomas said. 'The problem is what does Santiago do now?'

'Pah!' replied the Minister of Trade. ' We are Santiago. Unless we tell them what to do, the Congresa will debate until the sun goes nova. No, it is up to us. Us failures. Tomas is right. Our careers are over. I fear we will go down in Santiago's history as fools and villains.'

'Yes,' Tomas replied firmly. 'Fools and villains. Let us face it. We are all professional politicians. Vote- grubbers of the first order. We have all manipulated the government of Santiago for our own benefit.'

'Speak for yourself,' the Minister of the Treasury replied sourly. 'I have always worked with the best interests of the people of Santiago in my heart and mind.'

The President waved a hand. 'Nonsense, Ernesto. What about the Ricardo Power Plant deal? No, now is not the time for speeches. I suspect Tomas has an idea, and if so, I want to hear it.'

'Perhaps a suggestion, rather than an idea, senor Presidente,' Tomas replied. 'First, we must realize the true size of this debacle. We, everyone in this room, including you, senor Presidente, will be defeated in the elections in two years. Our careers are finished. This war will haunt us for the rest of our lives.

'And yet,' he continued, 'if we can face that, admit to ourselves that history will call us 'fools and villains', we may just be able to do something that will let us at least hold up our heads in our families, and perhaps even change that verdict of history.'

'And what is that?' the Minister of the Treasury said with broad sarcasm. 'What is this marvelous action that will save us all?'

Tomas ignored the sarcastic tone. 'I think it is time for us to stop being politicians. We can no longer grub for votes or pander to the contributors; they no longer exist for us; and in two and a half years, we will all be gone from here. But if we care about our legacy in history, if we really care about Santiago, there is something we can do that no one else can.'

He did not wait for the obvious question. 'We can stop being politicians,' he repeated, 'and start being statesmen. We are in a unique situation. Our careers are ruined, and we have no possibility of being reelected. In

Вы читаете The Privateer
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату