William C.Dietz - Sam McCade 2 - Imperial Bounty

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Sam McCade, Book Two
William C. Dietz
1988
Editorial Reviews
Ingram
When Princess Claudia seizes the throne in her brother's absence and brings the empire to the brink of
war, bounty hunter McCade must find the missing Prince Alexander before the Imperial Fleet stops him.
Reissue."
All Customer Reviews
Avg. Customer Review:
Imperial Bounty is the second volume in the McCade series., May 29, 1999
Reviewer:
Imperial Bounty is the second volume in the ongoing adventures of wise cracking, cigar chomping,
bounty hunter Sam McCade. Prince Alexander is missing, and unless McCade can find him, the heir's
evil sister will steal the throne. Like all of the McCade books Imperial Bounty makes use of numerous
ongoing characters--and this volume is the one in which I introduce a cyborg named "Cy Borg." A name
assumed by a man who gambled his body away. Cy makes an appearance in one of the Pik Lando
novels as well. I mention that because the whole notion of human brains (or alien brains for that matter)
living within some sort of machine continues to fascinate me. Some argue that the purpose of Science
Fiction is to discuss what it means to be human. If so, what better way to attack that question than to
remove the organ that we generally view as being the center of our earthly existence and place it into an
artificial context? How will such individuals view themselves? Deal with those who remain in biological
bodies? Cope with extended life spans? Those questions and many more are just part of the reason why
I continue to write about cyborgs in books like Legion Of The Damned, the Final Battle, By Blood
Alone, and, in the summer of 2000, By Force of Arms. Humans who have mechanical parts have
become commonplace--machines that include human parts are on the way.
Dietz is the man., February 13, 1999
Reviewer:
This is not so much about "Imperial Bounty" is as it as about Dietz as a writer. I am completely
shocked that his writings don't have any reviews. At least that's the case for some of the titles i've seen.
Anyway my point is that i have grabbed up every non star wars book that the man has read and just love
his writing. I was not aware that he is writing about star wars, but i guess i know what i'm gonna be
reading in the upcoming months. My science fiction writers are Simmons, W. Michael Gear, James
Halperin, Niven, Pournelle, Drake, and Poul Anderson. Dietz is right up there with the best of them!
Contents
Prologue
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-one
Twenty-two
Prologue
McCADE WAS HUNTING an icecat. Or maybe the icecat was hunting him. It wasn't clear which,
but it didn't matter much, since he was in deep trouble either way. First, because he didn't know much
about hunting icecats, and second, because icecats knew a lot about hunting people. Which wasn't too
surprising since they'd been at it for fifty years. That's how long humans had been on the iceworld called
Alice. The process of natural evolution had molded icecats into killers, and to them, humans were targets
just like everything else.
Naturally the colonists had fought back, but it wasn't easy. Icecats can move with amazing speed, and
never give up. Their name comes from a vague resemblance to Terran cats. Unlike Terran felines
however, icecats have heat-sensitive membranes located in the center of their foreheads. Operating like
infrared scanners, these membranes allow them to lock onto radiated heat, and follow it even through a
raging blizzard if necessary. They also have excellent vision, good hearing, and lots of teeth. All of which
explains why icecats are normally hunted by well-armed groups instead of individuals. "Not that I planned
it this way," McCade said to himself.
It had all begun when a roaming icecat attacked a small herd of variant caribou about twenty miles to
the south. In a matter of minutes the rampaging beast had almost wiped them out. By the time Lane
Conners arrived, there were bodies everywhere. And when Conners attempted to defend a wounded
animal, the icecat jumped him too. He had used his pocket com to call for help. Moments later his wife,
Liz, hit the big red panic button just inside the door of their pre-fab dome and raced to his side. A general
distress call went out, and as luck would have it, McCade was closest.
McCade was returning home from a series of routine law and order visits to the small mining
settlements which dotted Alice when the alarm came in. It had been a long trip. But on Alice you don't
ignore a distress call. Not if you want anyone to show up when it's your ass on the line. Amazingly
enough the rancher was still conscious when the medics arrived. As they loaded him into the chopper he
grabbed McCade's arm. "Get the sonovabitch for me, Sam. Otherwise he'll be back... and next time it
might be Liz or one of the boys."
McCade saw such agony in the rancher's eyes that like a fool he agreed, ready to say anything to get
Lane into the helicopter and on his way. So as the med evac chopper disappeared into the southern sky,
McCade got into his air-car and took off toward the north. What looked stupid now had seemed
reasonable back then. Rather than wait for help, or take the time to put together a pack, he'd decided to
follow the icecat's tracks north hoping for a quick, easy kill. He should've known better. When it comes
to icecats ... there's no such thing as a quick, easy kill.
So he'd dropped his aircar into a clearing, and set out on foot, trying to get ahead of the beast and
ambush it. But so far all he'd seen was ice, snow, and the low, twisted evergreens which passed for trees
on Alice. "Where the hell are you anyway?" he asked in frustration, but there was no answer except the
crunching sound of his own footsteps as he walked through the ice and snow. Around him the shadows
grew longer and darker, creating a thousand hiding places, any of which might conceal an icecat.
As evening approached it brought with it a frigid breeze, supercooled by glaciers a hundred miles to
the north, and sharp as a knife against the small area of unprotected skin at his throat. Walking cautiously
he reached down to turn up the internal temperature of his heatsuit. Eventually he'd run out of power for
it. Maybe he'd freeze to death while waiting for an icecat to kill him. The thought struck him as funny
somehow, so why wasn't he laughing? "You're losing it, Sam old boy," he said to himself. "Pull yourself
together. You've been in worse spots."
And it was true. In his days as a professional bounty hunter he'd come close to death many times. But
somehow those encounters were different. He'd been in control, always the hunter, never the hunted.
Here that was reversed; the icecat was in control. It could fight or disappear, and whichever it chose,
there wasn't a damn thing he could do about it.
Suddenly he stopped, his eyes riveted to the snow in front of him. The icecat was close. There was no
mistaking the huge plate-sized paw prints which overlaid the cross-hatched pattern of his own boots. The
sonovabitch was following him! And had been for some time. Together they'd made a large figure eight.
With a sinking feeling McCade realized how far he'd come. The aircar was miles away.
He glanced over his shoulder one more time, and started up a nearby slope, instinctively seeking
higher ground. Perhaps he could find a better vantage point toward the top. Eventually his path was
blocked by the sheer face of a cliff. Locating a small crevice which would protect his back, he forced his
way in, and did his best to make himself comfortable.
During his climb, the already dim sun had sunk farther in the overcast sky, making it even colder.
McCade reached down to turn up the gain on his heatsuit, and then thought better of it. Even on its
present setting the power pak wouldn't get him through the night. He did his best to settle down and
concentrate on the task at hand. "All right you flea-bitten sonovabitch... I'm ready when you are... come
and get it."
Another hour passed. He scanned the area below for the umpteenth time. Even under his visor's high
mag setting, there wasn't much to see. He was about to give up when he saw something move out of the
corner of his eye. Or had he? Maybe it was just a trick of evening's half light. No, there it was again, a
shadow among shadows, a momentary blur only half seen.
Then he had it, a long low body, winter white giving way to summer gray, almost invisible against the
volcanic rock. A strong neck supported a large triangular head, with two fan-shaped ears that twitched
slightly as they sampled the evening breeze. Huge eyes moved this way and that, each independently
scanning the area for any signs of danger. If they looked his way would they see him? And what about
the animal's ability to sense radiated heat? Could it detect him?
McCade felt a lead weight drop into his gut as the beast's hideous head swiveled toward him and
stopped. How good was his heat shielding? Maybe there was some leakage that the icecat could detect.
The icecat snarled, the thin lips of its false mouth pulled back to reveal razor-sharp teeth. The sound
echoed back and forth off the cliffs.
The last echo of the icecat's snarl was still dying away when the animal vanished into the shadows.
McCade thought about all those teeth and shuddered. The ones he'd seen were bad enough, but he
knew there were still others located in its abdomen. Icecats have two mouths. A false mouth used for
breathing and killing, and a real mouth, exclusively devoted to eating. Having made a kill, icecats
immediately drape themselves over the body to keep it from freezing, thus bringing their real mouths into
contact with the carcass. By sliding this way and that, icecats can efficiently strip a man-sized carcass in
minutes, all the while keeping their false mouths and sensory organs available for defense. It is, the
biologists like to point out, a very efficient adaptation to conditions on Alice. McCade didn't doubt it, but
had no desire to take part in the process himself.
Nonetheless he stood up. To hell with waiting. If he didn't move soon he'd freeze to death. So if the
icecat wouldn't come to him... he'd go to it. He felt the muscle in his left cheek twitch as he shifted the
comforting weight of the slug thrower from one arm to the other. The weapon had a rotary magazine
filled with alternating hollow point slugs and shot shells. As the planet's only police officer, it was just one
of the many weapons McCade carried in his aircar. Properly handled it could take out a squad of
Imperial Marines. Unfortunately, he thought, icecats are tougher than marines, and probably smarter.
Carefully he eased his way out of the rocky crevice. There wasn't much cover as he moved
downslope, but he used what there was, pausing every now and then behind outcroppings of rock to
check his surroundings. He was almost at the bottom when he spotted the icecat making its way across
the opposite slope, pausing every now and then to scan ahead for radiated heat, or sniffing the breeze for
a foreign scent.
Apparently satisfied with its surroundings, the beast moved off toward a patch of bare rock, attracted
perhaps by the glow of radiated heat surrounding it. A few more yards and McCade would be close
enough. He flicked the weapon's safety to the off position and moved forward.
Later he wasn't sure what warned him, whether it was an almost imperceptible sound, a tiny
disturbance in the air, or some sixth sense, but whatever it was caused him to step right, and saved his
life.The second icecat hit him a glancing blow as it went past, knocking him down, and jarring the weapon
out of his hands. Fighting its own inertia, the big animal scrambled to turn around, while McCade clawed
desperately for his sidearm. He felt the slug gun come free just as the icecat leaped. The gun roared four
times before the huge body landed on him, driving all breath from his body and plunging him into
suffocating darkness.
Pushing up with all his might, he fought desperately to get his breath, almost gagging on the animal's
stench. In spite of his efforts the icecat's muscular body didn't give an inch. Instead it squirmed, and slid
this way and that, trying to bring its real mouth into contact with his flesh. The intervening heatsuit was the
only thing between him and all those teeth. In a few seconds those teeth would make contact with the
wire mesh of the suit's heating elements, eat through those, and go to work on him. Wire mesh! It gave
him an idea.
He pushed up as hard as he could with his left hand, and managed to slide his right down until he
found the heat-suit's controls. Fingers fumbling, he accidently turned the knob to the right, before realizing
his mistake and turning it to the left. He prayed there was enough juice left in the power pak to do some
good. A second later the icecat's teeth came through the suit's tough outer fabric and made contact with
the inner wire mesh. As the power pak's full output hit the icecat's nervous system, the cat convulsed and
jerked away.
Momentarily freed, McCade quickly rolled left, and landed on the auto-slug thrower he'd lost earlier.
As he picked it up he saw the icecat was already back on its feet, shaking its head like a dazed
prizefighter, and preparing to attack again. The weapon in his hands seemed to weigh a ton. With a
strange sense of detachment he watched the icecat shift its weight, gather itself, and leap into the air.
Meanwhile the barrel of his weapon continued its slow journey upward. Some distant part of his mind
noticed the animal was bleeding profusely from six or seven bullet wounds, and wondered if anything
could kill it. Finally the slug thrower completed its upward arc and he touched the trigger. The icecat
seemed to run into an invisible wall. It crumpled in midair, and for a moment it was enveloped in a pink
mist, as blood and flesh sprayed out behind it. Then it landed with an audible thud, and slid the last
couple of feet, until its head almost touched the barrel of his gun.
For a moment he just sat there, too shocked to move. Finally he struggled to his feet, unable to take
his eyes off the icecat's huge body, shaking like a leaf. Then he heard the other icecat roar and, whirling,
heard the sound of his weapon merge with his own screams. The animal was already in the air, his slugs
stitching a bloody line across its chest, when his weapon clicked empty. Closing his eyes McCade waited
for the inevitable impact. Instead there was just a dull thump followed by silence.
Opening his eyes, he saw the second icecat was also dead, lying only a few feet from the first.
Suddenly his legs gave way and dumped him on the ground. He did his best to throw up, but failed.
When the dry heaves finally stopped, he leaned back, and took a look around. It was almost completely
dark. He shivered. A quick check confirmed that his suit's power pak was completely exhausted. Well,
he couldn't complain about that since it had saved his life. Of course, what good was that if he froze to
death?
"You're losing it again," he told himself, "cut the crap and do something useful." Shivering, he tried to
think. The aircar was miles away, and he wasn't sure he could find it in the dark. So he should stay put
and build a fire. With what? He knew from previous experience the low scrubby vegetation didn't burn
worth a damn. Still, he had to do something. Trying to stand, he reached out to steady himself, and his
hand encountered something warm. The body of the first icecat.
Of course! Given their bulk the dead icecats would take a while to freeze. Maybe even all night. That
gave him an idea. It wasn't pleasant, but it might save his life.
Taking a deep breath, he drew his power knife, flicked on the blade, and went to work. Twenty
back-breaking minutes later, he'd finished, and was curled up inside the icecat's warm abdominal cavity.
Outside, large piles of entrails lay where he'd thrown them, steaming as they released their warmth into
the cold night air, twitching as smaller nocturnal animals gathered to share the unexpected feast.
Eventually larger animals would arrive, and start in on the main carcass, but by then it would be morning,
and they'd be welcome to it. That was the theory anyway. By now he was so tired he didn't care if it
worked or not. Sleep was all that mattered. Doing his best to ignore where he was, and the stench that
went with it, McCade curled up even tighter and drifted off to sleep.
One
THE OUTER LAYERS of the icecat's body had frozen during the night. Now he was trapped. Panic
began to crowd in around his thoughts but he pushed it back, swallowing the bile which rose to fill his
mouth, forcing himself to think rather than feel. Gritting his teeth, McCade slid one hand down to the
cargo pocket on his right thigh, fumbled for a moment, and then retrieved the power knife. Moving
carefully so he wouldn't drop it, he brought the knife up in front of him, flicked it on, and heard the
reassuring hum as its sealed energy beam came to life. It sliced effortlessly through frozen flesh and bone.
Moments later he was crawling out of the animal's carcass onto the snow and ice.
He stood slowly, stretching cramped muscles as he looked around. Nothing. The ship he'd heard must
have landed some distance away.
Taking his helmet off, McCade strolled over to the other carcass and sat down. It was hard as rock,
and somewhat ragged, since small animals had been nibbling on it during the night.
Grinning, he fumbled around inside his heatsuit for a moment, found a broken cigar, and lit the longer
half with his lighter. He took a long satisfying drag. As he blew a thin streamer of smoke toward the sky,
the sun suddenly broke through the clouds, and he felt its warmth touch his cheek. He smiled. It felt good
to be alive.
A few moments later a familiar figure rounded an outcropping of rock and headed his way. McCade
waved and the other man waved back. Rico moved easily for a big man. And he was big. His extra-large
heatsuit bulged over his muscles and his enormous strides quickly ate up the distance between them.
He looked at McCade and shook his head in pretended amazement. "Well, sport, I guess I've seen it
all now." Rico's tiny eyes twinkled merrily as he spoke. "First ya catch an icecat and rip him apart with
your bare hands. Then, just for the fun of it, ya ambush a second one and kill him too. No offense, Sam,
but at this rate we're gonna run outta icecats in a week or so, and then what'll we do for fun?" Rico
shook his head again in mock concern.
McCade grinned as he stood up and extinguished the cigar butt under the heel of his boot. "Very
funny, Rico. Now cut the comedy and give me a hand. I lost a couple of slug throwers around here
somewhere... and certain members of the Council are notoriously tight with a credit."
Rico laughed. "Tight ain't the word for it," he agreed. "Downright stingy's more like it. But as long as
your wife's headin' the Council we'll be runnin' a tight ship. Hell, you're lucky Sara ain't countin' your
ammo."
"Don't give her any ideas, Rico, or I'll be throwing rocks at icecats from now on."
"Speakin' o' which, Sam, how the hell'd ya manage ta get into this mess anyhow?"
While they searched for the weapons, McCade told him the whole story. "All things considered, I was
incredibly stupid," he finished.
"True," Rico said with a big grin.
McCade laughed. "Up yours, Rico."
Rico poked an icecat carcass with the toe of one boot. "All jokin' aside, you're damn lucky to be
alive, ol' sport," he said soberly. "Looks like a mated pair. Well, come on... we've got places ta go an
people ta see."
"Bullshit," McCade replied as they crunched through the ice and snow. "I'm going home. First Sara's
gonna chew me out for being so stupid, and then I'm going to bed."
"Well, you're right about Sara chewing ya out, but ya ain't going ta bed, not yet anyway," Rico
answered with a grin.
"Why not?"
"You'll see," Rico said mysteriously, and steadfastly refused to say more until they reached the clearing
where McCade had left his aircar. As they broke into the open space, McCade saw one whole end of
the clearing had been scorched all the way down to the permafrost, and sitting in the middle of the burned
area was a small ship. Not just any ship, but a captain's gig, the kind that belongs to an Imperial Cruiser.
It had fast lines and a flawless paint job.
"What the hell is that doing here?" McCade demanded.
"Your old friend what's-his-name sent it. The one with two last names."
"Swanson-Pierce? You mean he's here?"
Rico nodded and pointed one index finger upward. "He's got a cruiser, a tin can, and two DEs up
there, and wants ta see ya."
McCade scowled and turned toward his aircar. "Whatever he wants can wait. By now Sara's worried
and I need some sleep."
Rico shrugged. "Suit yourself, ol' sport, but Sara's up there too."
McCade sighed. Swanson-Pierce could mean only one thing, trouble. And as usual he'd managed to
set up things his way. By getting Sara aboard he'd made sure McCade would come to him, plus they'd
meet on his turf, and he'd set the agenda. It was all vintage Swanson-Pierce.
They were met just inside the lock by a solicitous young officer who introduced himself as Ensign
Peel. He had a soft, friendly face and a firm handshake. Peel showed them into a small cabin just aft of
the control room and disappeared forward to assume his duties as copilot.
As they strapped themselves into acceleration couches, McCade took a look around. Someone had
lavished a great deal of attention on the ship's interior. The bulkheads and acceleration couches were
covered in carefully muted fabrics and, here and there, the polished glow of ornamental brass and exotic
wood caught and held his eye. The whole merged to convey a sense of restrained elegance. It all
screamed - no, murmured - Swanson-Pierce.
McCade felt himself pushed down into his seat as the ship roared upward. The pilot knew her
business and cleared atmosphere only a quarter rotation away from the large Imperial cruiser orbiting
Alice. McCade watched the overhead screens as they approached and the vessel grew even larger.
She was one of the new Jupiter Class ships. Miles long, she was a tracery of gun platforms, missile
tubes, laser mounts, and other less identifiable installations. She had none of the streamlined beauty
common to ships designed for atmospheric use, but what she lacked in grace, she made up for in raw
power. In minutes she could lay waste to all but the most heavily fortified cities. Beyond her McCade
saw a glint of reflected sunlight marking the location of an escort.
Ahead a small rectangle of light appeared as a hatch slid open to admit them. As their pilot skillfully
matched velocity with the larger craft and slipped into the launching bay, McCade felt like a minnow
being swallowed by a whale. Inside were rows of neatly parked Interceptors, their sleek deadly shapes
reminiscent of bullets waiting to be fired.
As always, four were on condition red: tubes hot, weapons armed, ready for launch. McCade knew
how it felt. You were proud to slide into the cramped cockpit because Interceptor pilots were the elite.
The cream of the Academy. And you were scared, not of the enemy, but of yourself. You'd rather die
than screw up.
Then one day the waiting was over. Wing after wing of Interceptors blasted out to give and receive
death over the planet Hell. Entire fleets maneuvered through complex computer-generated patterns
probing for strength and weakness. But for you the battle was much more personal. It was you against
them. Your skill, your reflexes, your ship against them.
Finally the moment came, and with it a strangely silent explosion as a pirate ship blossomed into a
miniature sun. You scanned your screens searching for the next target. There it was. A large ship just
ahead. You felt the groove, the almost magical connection between you and it, and knew you couldn't
miss. Relying on muscle memory, and years of training, you lined it up and prepared to fire. Suddenly a
voice breaks your concentration.
"Please, in the name of whatever gods you worship, I implore you, please don't fire. My ship is
unarmed. I have only women, children, and old men aboard... please listen to me."
And listen you did. You believed her. But a second voice comes over your headset. The voice of your
commanding officer, Captain lan Bridgar, hoarse from hours of shouting orders, tense with hatred for the
pirates who took his wife and daughter. "Fire, Lieutenant! That's an order! She's lying. Fire, damn you!"
But you didn't fire. Instead you watched the pirate ship slide out of sight, taking with it your career,
identity, and honor. For you have disobeyed a direct order from your commanding officer and his word
摘要:

SamMcCade,BookTwoWilliamC.Dietz1988EditorialReviewsIngramWhenPrincessClaudiaseizesthethroneinherbrother'sabsenceandbringstheempiretothebrinkofwar,bountyhunterMcCademustfindthemissingPrinceAlexanderbeforetheImperialFleetstopshim.Reissue."AllCustomerReviewsAvg.CustomerReview:ImperialBountyisthesecondv...

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