David Drake - The far side of the stars

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The Far Side of The Stars
David Drake
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are
fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2003 by David Drake
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof
in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN: 0-7434-7158-X
Cover art by Stephen Hickman
First printing, October 2003
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
TK
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Typeset by Bell Road Press, Sherwood, OR
Printed in the United States of America
Baen Books by David Drake
The RCN Series
With the Lightnings
Lt. Leary, Commanding
The Far Side of the Stars
The General Series
Warlord with S.M. Stirling (omnibus)
Conqueror with S.M.Stirling (omnibus)
The Chosen with S.M. Stirling
The Reformer with S.M. Stirling
The Tyrant with Eric Flint
Hammer's Slammers
The Tank Lords
Caught in the Crossfire
The Butcher's Bill
The Sharp End
Paying the Piper
The Belisarius Series
with Eric Flint
An Oblique Approach
In the Heart of Darkness
Destiny's Shield
Fortune's Stroke
The Tide of Victory
Independent Novels and Collections
Seas of Venus
Foriegn Legions, edited by David Drake
Ranks of Bronze
Cross the Stars
The Dragon Lord
Birds of Prey
Northworld Trilogy
Redliners
Starliner
All the Way to the Gallows
Grimmer Than Hell
The Undesired Princess and The Enchanted Bunny
(with L. Sprague de Camp)
Lest Darkness Fall and To Bring the Light
(with L. Sprague de Camp)
Armageddon
(edited with Billie Sue Mosiman)
Killer
(with Karl Edward Wagner)
DEDICATION
For Tristan David Drake
The previous four generations of the family have
read voraciously, so I hope he'll carry on the tradition.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Dan Breen continues as my first reader, making my prose better than it would be without him.
Dorothy Day and Evan Ladouceur have been addressing specialized continuity problems in
this one, and my webmaster Karen Zimmerman not only helpfully read my drafts but also
archived them. (After you've killed as many computers in the middle of projects as I have, you
learn not to take chances.)
Speaking of which, my son Jonathan got me going again when I did kill a computer. I can't
claim to have consciously raised my own techie, but it seems to work very well if you have the
time. I'm reminded of the Neolithic hunters who set their axeheads in split living branches, so that
when the wood regrew it gripped the stone perfectly.
Clyde Howard helped research bits of information that I knew I had but couldn't put my
finger on till he'd provided them.
My friend Mark Van Name made an observation that allowed me to write this book (and I
expect future books) in a greater state of contentment than ever before. I don't think it makes the
prose better, but it's certainly an improvement for me.
Writers aren't easy to live with, and I may be more difficult than most. My wife Jo manages,
and she feeds me very well besides.
My thanks to all of you.
Dave Drake
david-drake.com
AUTHOR'S NOTE
One of the problems when you're writing of either the past or the future is 'How much should
I translate?' I don't mean simply language: there's a whole complex of things that people within
any society take for granted but which vary between societies. (But language too: I had
somebody complain that the Arthurian soldiers in The Dragon Lord talked like modern soldiers.
My reaction to this was that I could write the soldiers' dialogue in Latin, but the complainant
couldn't read it; and if I'm going to translate into English, why on Earth wouldn't I translate into
the type of English the same sort of men speak today?)
Weights and measures are a particular problem. I don't assume that the world of the far future
will use the weights and measures of today, but I'm quite certain that my inventing new systems
will do nothing desirable for my story. (There are people who're really happier for a glossary of
made-up or foreign words. I'm not, though I'll admit I still occasionally murmur to myself,
"Tarzan bundolo!")
In the RCN series Cinnabar is on the English system and the Alliance uses Metric, simply to
suggest the enormous complexity I expect will exist after Mankind spreads among the stars.
(Well, I certainly hope we'll spread among the stars, but I won't pretend I'm sanguine about our
chances at the moment.)
Communications protocols are very roughly based on those of the 2nd Squadron, 11th ACR,
during the period it was—I was—under the command of LTC Grayle Brookshier. There were a
lot of stories about squadron and regimental commanding officers. The stories about Battle Six
were all positive.
I think I should comment on the background of this novel also. Today physical travel is easier
than ever before, and television takes us literally anywhere. The world is generally accessible to
most people, and as a result it's becoming homogenized. I don't insist that this is a bad thing, but
it's a major change from the situation of a generation ago, let alone that of a hundred years in the
past.
In the late 19th century a party of Russian nobles bought a South Seas trading schooner from
its owner/captain, hired as captain the former mate (a man named Robert Quinton), and for
several years sailed the Pacific from Alaska to New Zealand, from Kamchatka to Diamond Head.
They hunted, bought curios, visited ancient ruins, and viewed native rites in a score of localities.
This sort of experience was available only first-hand and only to the exceptionally wealthy
(or their associates like Quinton, who wrote a memoir of the voyage). Today anybody who
watches PBS and the Discovery Channel can see everything those aristocrats saw, or at any rate
as many of those things as survive.
I've tried as one of the themes of The Far Side of the Stars to give the feel of that former time,
when travel was a risky adventure possible only for the few. While I'm glad that many--myself
included--can share the world's wonders today, I do regret the passing of the romance of former
times and the fact that maps no longer have splotches marked Terra Incognita.
Dave Drake
david-drake.com
CHAPTER 1
Adele Mundy wore for the first time her white Republic of Cinnabar Navy dress uniform. The
sleeves had the chevrons of a warrant officer, the lightning bolt of the Signals Branch, and a
black ribbon of mourning. She paused to check herself in the mirror in the entryway of her
townhouse.
Three generations of Mundys had lived in Chatsworth Minor, ever since the family became so
politically prominent that Adele's grandfather replaced their previous townhouse in Xenos with
these imposing four stories of brick, stone, and ornate carvings. Adele had grown up here, but
she'd been off-planet continuing her education as an archivist the night sixteen years ago when
the Three Circles Conspiracy unraveled and gangs arrived to carry off the remainder of her
family for execution.
She'd never expected to see Chatsworth Minor—or Cinnabar—again. When she learned that
the heads of not only her parents but also her 10-year-old sister Agatha had been displayed on the
Speaker's Rock, she hadn't wanted to see any relic of her previous life.
She smiled faintly into the mirror. Times change, but people change as well. The stern-
looking naval officer with splashes of medal ribbons on the bosom of her tunic wasn't the
reserved girl who'd left Cinnabar for the Academic Collections on Bryce just in time to save her
life. They shared facial features and a trim build, that was all.
Or almost all; because both the officer and the girl lived with the bone-deep certainty that
they were Mundys of Chatsworth. Adele's parents had been egalitarians and members of the
People's Party, but there'd never been any doubt in their minds that the Mundys were first among
equals . . . and no doubt in their daughter's mind that whether she was a scholar or a street-
cleaner, she was a Mundy. There'd been times after her parents were killed and their property
confiscated for treason that Adele believed a street-cleaner probably lived better; but that didn't
change anything that really mattered.
Adele's servant Tovera—if servant was the right word—glanced at her mistress briefly in the
mirror; her eyes flicked on, never resting anywhere very long. If Adele was prim, then Tovera
was so colorless that casual observers generally paid her less attention than they did the
wallpaper. For the funeral she wore a gray dress suit of good quality, also with a mourning
ribbon. Her only other ornamentation was a blue-and-silver collar flash that proclaimed her a
retainer—the sole retainer at the present time—of the Mundys of Chatsworth.
Tovera missed little but cared about even less; perhaps she cared about nothing except
whatever task she'd been set or had set herself. Having Tovera around was much like carrying a
pistol with a trigger as light as thistledown.
The pistol in the sidepocket of Adele's tunic was so flat it didn't bulge even a dress uniform.
Its trigger was indeed light.
Smiling again Adele said, "I didn't have to check myself, did I, Tovera? You'd have told me if
something was wrong."
Tovera shrugged. "If you wanted me to, mistress," she said. "I don't imagine we'll attract
much attention at this affair."
Adele adjusted the set of her own black ribbon. "No," she said, "I don't suppose we will. But
Daniel loved his Uncle Stacey, and I wouldn't care to fail Daniel."
I'd rather die than fail Daniel . . . But she didn't say that aloud, and Tovera wouldn't have
cared anyway.
Adele glanced at the footmen, waiting patiently as she'd known they would be, and then to the
doorman. The house servants wore Mundy livery, but unlike Tovera they were employed by the
bank which on paper leased the townhouse. That was one of the perquisites which had fallen to
Adele by virtue of her friendship with Lieutenant Daniel Leary, RCN; the son of Corder Leary,
Speaker Leary to his associates even though he'd given up the speakership of the Assembly years
before.
"I believe we're ready, then," she said. The doorman bowed and swung open the front door of
softly gleaming beewood cut on what had been the Mundy country estate of Chatsworth Major.
With the four footmen ahead of her and Tovera trailing a polite pace behind, Adele stepped into
the court.
Times indeed change. Speaker Leary had been primarily responsible for crushing the Three
Circles Conspiracy—and Adele's family—into a smear of blood . . . but it was his influence
acting through the agency of Daniel's elder sister Deirdre which had returned the townhouse to
Adele's ownership when she decided she wanted it after all. Ligier Rolfe, the distant cousin who'd
taken possession of the truncated estate after the Proscriptions, probably didn't to this day know
what had happened to ownership.
The tram stop was at the mouth of the court, now quiet, which had acted as an assembly room
when Lucius Mundy addressed his supporters from the fourth floor balcony of Chatsworth
Minor. Political power had never meant anything to Adele; indeed, so long as she had enough to
feed her and the freedom of a large archive in which to indulge her passion for knowledge in the
abstract, she didn't care about money. Even so it pleased her to think of how furious her cousin's
wife, Marina Casaubon Rolfe, must have been when she was evicted from a house to which the
mere wealth of her merchant family would never have entitled her.
Tovera must have noticed her expression. "Mistress?" she asked mildly.
"Do you remember Mistress Rolfe?" Adele said.
"Yes," Tovera said. "A fat worm."
"I was recalling," Adele explained, "that she saw fit to insult a Mundy of Chatsworth."
Tovera didn't comment. Perhaps she smiled.
Servants lounging at the entrances of other houses fronting on the court rose and doffed their
caps, standing with their heads bowed as Adele passed by. In Lucius Mundy's day, all these
houses had been owned by supporters of the People's Party. They'd suffered accordingly, but
those who bought the properties in the aftermath of the Proscriptions were generally social
climbers like Marina Rolfe. To them Adele's return gave the neighborhood the cachet of a real
aristocrat's presence; they'd made very sure that their servants were properly obsequious.
Adele couldn't imagine what her neighbors made of the fact that Mundy of Chatsworth was a
naval officer; and a warrant officer besides, a mere technician instead of a dashing commissioned
officer like her tenant, Daniel Leary. Aristocrats were allowed to be eccentric, of course.
"Mistress?" Tovera said again.
"Am I eccentric, Tovera?" Adele asked, glancing over her shoulder.
"I wouldn't know, mistress," Tovera said. "You'd have to ask someone who understands what
'normal' means."
Adele grimaced. "I'm sorry, Tovera," she said. "It's not something I should joke about."
As Adele and her entourage approached the stop, an east-bound tram pulled onto the
siding.Another monorail car clattered past on the main line, heading west toward the great
roundabout in the center of Xenos. By law only the Militia, the national police, could own aircars
within the municipal limits of the capital; the likelihood that a touchy rival aristocrat would shoot
down a private aircar passing overhead made the law more effective than merely legal sanctions
could have done.
Many of the great houses had their own tramcars which teams of servants set on the rail when
their master or mistress chose to go out. Adele had a respectable nest egg in the form of prize
money gathered while under the command of Lieutenant Leary, but she couldn't have afforded
such an establishment even if she'd seen any use for it.
She'd gotten used to taking care of herself; she preferred it that way now. She had Tovera, of
course, but it was easy to forget that Tovera was human.
A footman ran ahead to engage the tram that'd just stopped, saving Adele the delay before
another car arrived in answer to the call button in the kiosk. At this time of day that might be as
much as half an hour. The funeral was being held at a chapel near Harbor Three, the great naval
base on the northern outskirts of Xenos. Adele had allowed enough time—of course—but she
preferred to be a trifle early than to miss the start of the rites because of a run of bad luck.
Adele Mundy had seen a great deal of luck in her 32 years. Quite a lot of it had been bad.
The man who got off the tram wore a hard-used, one might almost say ragged, RCN 2nd class
uniform, gray with black piping. It was the minimum standard of dress required for off-duty
officers in public, though given its condition—there were oil stains on the left cuff and a mended
tear on the right pants leg—the powers that be in the Navy Office might have been better served
had the fellow donned clean fatigues instead.
The recent armistice between Cinnabar and the Alliance of Free Stars had led to the
decommissioning of many ships and the consequent relegation of officers to half-pay status. For
those who didn't have private means, half-pay was a sentence of destitution. This was obviously
an unfortunate who couldn't afford to maintain his wardrobe—
"That's Lieutenant Mon," Tovera murmured in her ear.
"Good God, it is," Adele blurted under her breath. She'd unconsciously averted her eyes in
embarrassment; poor herself for most of her adult life, she had no desire to wallow in the poverty
of others.
Such concerns didn't touch Tovera any more than love or hate did. The man coming toward
them was a potential enemy—everyone was a potential enemy to Tovera—so she'd looked
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TheFarSideofTheStarsDavidDrakeThisisaworkoffiction.Allthecharactersandeventsportrayedinthisbookarefictional,andanyresemblancetorealpeopleorincidentsispurelycoincidental.Copyright©2003byDavidDrakeAllrightsreserved,includingtherighttoreproducethisbookorportionsthereofinanyform.ABaenBooksOriginalBaenPu...

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