'Begging your pardon, Prince Roger,' one of the Vashin said as he trotted over through the increasing vacuum. 'Prince Rastar's compliments, and we have no idea which way to go.'
Roger chuckled and gestured at Dobrescu.
'Get going, Doc. Raise as much hell as you can while doing the minimum damage. Keep them from reinforcing the Bridge, Engineering, and the Armory. Pay attention to the shuttle bays, especially.'
'Got it,' Dobrescu acknowledged, adjusting his carbine sling. 'Where are you going?'
'Bridge,' Roger replied as four Vashin fell in with him. He arranged them so that the sole plasma gunner was in
'Now we find out if I'm a genius, or an idiot.'
* * *
Giovannuci flipped through screens, trying to get a handle on the battle. He was sure all four of the shuttles had managed to breach and board, and one was visible on an exterior monitor. Unfortunately, the holds were poorly covered at the best of times, and so far he hadn't been able to find out how many of the Marine reinforcements had come aboard.
He touched another control, then looked up as he heard Lieutenant Anders Cellini, his tactical officer, gasp.
'Sir,' the tac officer said in a strangled voice. 'Screen four-one-four.'
Giovannuci keyed the monitor for Hold Three and froze in shock.
'Are those what I think they are, Sir?' Cellini asked with a pronounced edge of disbelief.
'They're scummies,' Giovannuci replied in a voice of deadly calm. 'With plasma and bead cannons. That resource-sucking, inbred cretin gave
'Well, at least it's not more Empie Marines.' The tac officer sounded as if he were trying very hard to find a bright side to look upon, and Giovannuci barked a harsh, humorless almost-laugh.
'You're joking, right?' he snapped. 'Empie Marines would at least know not to blow holes in the side of the
* * *
When Harvard saw the yellow light above the hatch, he knew that volunteering to 'help out' had been a bad idea. Not that he'd had a lot of choice. There were so few Marines left that, in the end, the prince had shanghaied every human he thought he could trust to assist the Mardukans. Now technicians from the port, and even complete civilians like Mansul, were running around the interior of a Saint Q-ship, trying to keep the scummies from killing themselves.
It was turning out to be a difficult assignment.
'The button won't open the door,' Honal snarled, hitting the circuit again.
'Uh ...'
For entirely understandable safety considerations, Harvard had wedged himself into the middle of the scummies' formation. Unfortunately, this meant he couldn't reach the Vashin nobleman before the light dawned.
'Aha!' Honal said. 'The emergency release.'
'Honaaalll!'
It was too late. Before the human could get the Vashin's attention, Honal had flipped out the emergency unlock lever and thrown it over.
As Honal would have realized, had he been able actually to read the information displayed on the lock- assembly, the far compartment wasn't totally depressurized. It was, however, at a much lower atmospheric pressure than the near side of the hatch. The result was a rather strong suction.
Honal was unable to let go of the hatch before it flew backwards, dragging him with it. However, the physics of its opening, rather than spinning him to slam into the bulkhead, combined with the blast of wind at his back to pick him up and pitch him violently down the passage.
All that Mansul could hear was a short, cut-off cry, the clang of the hatch hitting the stops, and a crunching sound. Then he was carried along by the stampede as the Therdan contingent rushed to the aid of its commander.
Harvard found him lying against a piece of radiometric monitoring gear, crumpled and twisted like a pretzel. His head was tucked under one armpit, and one of his legs was thrown over backwards, touching the deck.
'So, Harvard Mansul,' he croaked. 'What
* * *
'You're joking, right?' Beach had lost contact with Ucelli and was trying to round up more stragglers to feed into the cauldron around the Armory. She was also hunting Empies. A team had been ambushed somewhere around here, and she was determined to track down the Marines responsible. She'd sent Ucelli to block the passage leading up from Cargo Main, but now she wished she'd kept him around. The little gunslinger would've been good backup for facing down scummies. Although ... maybe not scummies armed with plasma cannon.
'No, we're down to the wire, here,' the colonel said. 'If we can't get more people armed up and armored, I'm going to have to punch the ship.'
'I'd really appreciate it if you didn't do that,' Beach said. 'I know we've had our differences over the One Faith, but you have to admit that suicide generally isn't a good thing. Think of the resource waste.'
Giovannuci smiled thinly at her over the monitor.
'No, Beach, we
'Oh, grand,' she whispered, after she'd cut the circuit. She thought furiously for a moment, but she couldn't really see a way out. The tactical officer had a second key for the self-destruct mechanism, so she was unnecessary; her absence from the Bridge wouldn't keep Giovannuci from doing exactly what he'd just said he would.
'Oh, Pollution,' she whispered again ... then slammed into the bulkhead as her uniform hardened under a savage kinetic impact.
She bounced back and spun in place, raising her bead rifle, but a whirl of silver smashed into the breech, crushed her left hand, and pitched the weapon from her grasp. She started to drop into a crouch, but the backswing caught her on the side of the helmet, and she rebounded off the bulkhead again, then slumped to the deck.
Poertena used the wrench to smash out the monitor, then dragged the unconscious officer into a nearby supply cabinet. Assuming they survived this goat-pock, they might need her, so he pulled off her communicator and weapons, then welded the door shut. The door had an air seal and was marked as an emergency life-support shelter, so as long as the ship didn't explode, she should be fine.
* * *
Rastar looked down the seemingly endless passageway, and then glanced at the human pilot.
'You're sure it's this way?'
'That's what the schematic said,' Dobrescu replied shortly. 'It's a ways yet.'
'Very well.' The Vashin prince lifted his arm into the air in a broad and a dramatic gesture. 'To the shuttle bays!'
He continued down the high, wide passage. It was the first thing they'd found on the ship that wasn't made for midgets, and it was a vast relief. He and Honal had divided their forces in order to approach the shuttle bays from different directions in the hope that one of them might get through unintercepted. So far, neither of them had encountered any actual resistance, and that made Rastar very, very nervous. It was also one reason he was so glad to see this spacious corridor. All the Mardukans found the normal short, narrow passages, and the strangely close 'horizon' caused by the curvature of the ship, very odd and alien, but his concern was much more basic. The farther ahead he could see, the less likely he was to walk into an ambush.
After about five minutes, they reached a 'T' intersection, with signs leading to the Bridge and the shuttle bays. The Vashin noble waved to the left, then watched as the plasma gunner on point flew backwards with the entire back of his head blown out.
Rastar didn't even think about his response. He simply drew all four bead pistols and leapt across the