Ben Weaver - Brothers in Arms 02 - Rebels in Arms

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REBELS in ARMS
BEN WEAVER
For Kendall and Lauren
Who remind me that we are all children…
Contents
PART 1
Campaign Exeter
1
From my seat on the dais, I looked over the…
2
Over twenty years have passed since the night I was…
3
Disque had been trying to teach me something in that…
4
I raced by one of the markers left several decades…
5
As Paul, his crew, Halitov, and I were about to…
6
I waved on Paul’s group, ordering them to take the…
PART 2
Treading Water
7
Just two weeks after our narrow escape from Exeter, Halitov…
8
After we ate, or, more precisely, after I watched Halitov…
9
To my surprise, Halitov and I were able to slip…
10
Lieutenant Colonel Drage’s evacuation was in full swing and playing…
11
We rendezvoused with theCharles Michael at the designated location,…
PART 3
Defining the Code
12
I kept watch through a porthole while Halitov set a…
13
After listening to that racket a moment more, I finally…
14
Ms. Brooks proffered her hand, and before I could finish…
PART 4
Rebels in Arms
15
Lieutenant Addison and I were the last ones down the…
16
Halitov and Breckinridge approached in an airjeep, zooming in above…
17
The Colonial Wardens had destroyed AQ Tower and the Eri…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Ben Weaver
Copyright
About the Publisher
The Seventeen System Guard Corps Articles of the Code of Conduct
Revised 2301
[adopted from old United States Marine Corps Articles]
ARTICLE I
I will always remember that I am a Colonial citizen, fighting in the forces that preserve my world and our
way of life. I have resigned to give my life in their defense.
ARTICLE II
I will never surrender of my own volition. If in command, I will never surrender the members of my
command while they still have the will and/or the means to resist.
ARTICLE III
If I am captured, I will continue to resist by any and all means available. I will make every effort to
escape and to aid others to escape. I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy.
ARTICLE IV
If I become a prisoner of war, I will keep faith with my fellow prisoners. I will give no information nor
take part in any action which might be harmful to fellow Colonial citizens. If I am senior, I will take
command. If not, I will obey the lawful orders of those appointed over me and will uphold them in every
way.
ARTICLE V
Should I become a prisoner of war, I am required to give name, rank, and willingly submit to retinal and
DNA analysis. I will evade answering further questions to the utmost of my ability and will not
consciously submit to cerebral scans of any kind. I will make no oral, written, or electronic statements
disloyal to the colonies or harmful to their cause.
ARTICLE VI
I will never forget that I am fighting for freedom, that I am responsible for my actions, and that I am
dedicated to the principles that make my world free. I will trust in my god or gods and in the Colonial
Alliance forever.
PART 1
Campaign Exeter
1
From my seaton the dais, I looked over the crowd of cadets about to graduate from South Point
Academy. Could they really listen to a middle-aged soldier like me drone on about the challenges of
being an officer? After all, the commandant, a war vet himself, was already at the lectern and boring them
to death with that speech. In fact, when the commandant had asked me to speak, I had panicked
because I knew those kids needed something more than elevated diction and fancy turns of phrase. But
what?
The commandant glanced over his shoulder and nodded at me. “And now ladies and gentlemen, at this
time I’d like to introduce a man whose Special Ops Tactical Manual is required reading here at the
academy, a man whose treatise on Racinian conditioning transformed that entire program. Ladies and
gentlemen, I give you Colonel Scott St. Andrew, chief of the Alliance Security Council.”
Applause I had expected, but a standing ovation? Or maybe those cadets were just overjoyed that the
commandant was leaving the podium. I dragged myself up, wincing over all the metal surgeons had
jammed into me after the nanotech regeneration had failed. Unless you were really looking for it, you
wouldn’t notice my limp. I tugged at the hems of my dress tunic, raised my shoulders, and took a deep
breath before starting forward. The kids continued with their applause, their eyes wide and brimming with
naïveté.
“Thank you. Please…” I gestured for them to sit, then waited for the rumble to subside. “First, let me
extend my gratitude to the commandant for allowing me to be here today.” I tipped my head toward the
man, who winked. “As all of you know, we are living in some very turbulent times. The treaties we signed
at the end of the war are now being violated. Rumors of yet another civil war persist. But let me assure
you that we at the security council are doing everything we can to resolve these conflicts. Now then. I
didn’t come here to talk about current events. I came here to tell you what you want to hear—a war
story—not because it’s entertaining, but because it’s something you need to hear…”
I lay in my quarters aboard the SSGCAuspex , cushioned tightly in my gelrack and in the middle of a
disturbing dream. My name wasn’t Scott St. Andrew; I wasn’t an eighteen-year-old captain and
company commander in the Seventeen System Guard Corps, in charge of one hundred and sixty-two
lives; and my cheek no longer bore the cross-shaped birthmark that revealed I had a genetic defect and
came from poor colonial stock.
In the dream I was a real Terran, born in New York, and about to download my entire college
education through a cerebro. I sat in a classroom with about fifty other privileged young people who
would never need to join the military as a way to escape from their stratified society. I looked down at
the C-shaped device sitting on the desk in front of me. I need only slide it onto my head and learn.
But I couldn’t. I was afraid I might forget who I was, forget that my father, an overworked, underpaid
company geologist, had tried his best to raise me and my brother Jarrett, since my mother had left us
when we were small. Jarrett and I had entered South Point Academy just when the war had begun, and
Jarrett had died in an accident during a “conditioning process” developed by an ancient alien race we
called the Racinians. The conditioning, which involved the introduction into our brains of mnemosyne—a
species of eidetic parasite found aboard Racinian spacecraft—enhanced our physical and mental
capabilities…andaged us at an accelerated rate.
No, I couldn’t forget. I needed to remember what I had become, because I sensed even then that if just
one person could learn something from my story, from my mistakes, then the universe might forgive me
my sins.
They were many.
So I sat there, watching the others put on their cerebroes and flinch as the datalock took hold. Some
grinned as they were “enlightened.” All that cerebroed data became a part of them, while I would rather
my life, all that I had done, become a part of it. Still, I wonder if anyone will really care about the war
between the alliances and the seventeen colonial systems a thousand years from now. Future generations
might never understand that in the year 2301, hundreds of thousands died in the name of what United
States president Abraham Lincoln had once called “a just and lasting peace.” They died for a cause, and
for those untouched by war, that is too often incomprehensible. I knew that even the young people in that
room had no true concept of war. I wished I could teach them, but all I could do was sit there until the
shipboard alarm yanked me out of the dream.
I sprang from my rack, expecting the captain’s voice to boom over the shipwide comm. Nothing. The
alarm droned on and drove me to the hatchcomm. I dialed up Lieutenant Colonel Jeffery Disque,
Twenty-second Battalion Commander, a middle-aged man with buttery brown skin and a striking shock
of gray at just one temple. He eyed me with disgust, then spoke in a voice hoarse from screaming at
insubordinates. “What is it, Captain?”
“Sorry, sir. Thought maybe you knew why the Klaxon sounded.”
Disque yawned, his lip beginning to quiver. There I was, some antsy kid who had beeped him out of
slumber. The first time I had met him, I had an immediate sense of just how ill proportioned his ego had
become. You could fit planets, star systems, entire nebulae inside the thing. Then again, having a battalion
commander who thought he could live forever wasn’t always a bad thing, especially when the rounds
were flying. He would never order another company to turn tail on yours, and you might even find him
outside his command tent, pumping off rounds himself…
I cleared my throat, grew more tense as he just looked at me, failing to answer. “Do you know why the
Klaxon sounded, sir?”
He screwed his sour puss into a tighter knot. “’Course I know why that goddamned alarm is going. You
think I’m a brainwipe, Captain?”
“Sir, no, sir.”
“That’s a nav alarm. We’re changing course.”
“Sir?”
“We just got new orders, Captain.”
“We’re not going to Kennedy-Centauri?”
“Nope.”
“Then who is? Those people in Plymouth Colony need us. You saw the holos. Civvies are getting shot in
the streets.”
“Then whoever’s left better hide, ’cause the Twenty-second Battalion ain’t going there.”
“We have to send somebody.” Disque could not have known that my own life depended upon us
reaching Kennedy-Centauri, not that he would have cared.
“Bandage your bleeding heart, Captain. I’m sure they’ll dispatch another element. We got a more
interesting op. I know you’re going to like it. The briefing alert will hit your tablets in a couple of minutes.”
“Aye-aye, sir.”
“Anything else, Captain?”
“Uh, no, sir. Thank you, sir.”
He flashed an ugly grin and nodded.
Even as I switched off the hatchcomm, it rang again. Someone was at my door: Rooslin Halitov. I let him
in. He steered himself directly to the chair at my desk and sat, scratching nervously at his jaw.
A year prior, I would never have imagined that a cadet who had tried to take my life, a cadet who had
despised me more than anyone else in his world, would eventually turn down his own shot at company
commander to become my executive officer. One look at the guy—blocky jaw, blond hair, barrel chest,
flaming blue eyes—made you think, yeah, he was the neighborhood bully. And Rooslin had grown up to
become academy bully. Then, after we had both seen and had doled out more death than the Corps
could have ever warned us about, we had become uneasy friends. His transformation had not come
without a price.
“Know what that alarm’s saying to me?” Halitov asked. “It’s saying: you’re fucked.”
“We both are—’cause we’re not going to Kennedy-Centauri.”
“Shit…” He rubbed eyes full of sleep grit, eyes that had looked years younger only a few months prior.
“You talk to Breckinridge?”
“Just found out myself.” I crossed to my gelrack, dropped heavily onto the mattress. “She can’t change
this.” I sighed out my frustration. “Anyway, Disque says we’ll get the decrypted poop in about twenty
minutes.”
“Fuck Disque. I hate that prick. He’s going to get us all killed, then stand on the big pile of bodies and
give his victory speech: ‘These young men and women have given their lives so that the seventeen
systems might one day be freed from Alliance tyranny…’ Yeah, they gave their lives so you’d have a
soap box to stand on, you asshole.”
“Next time we’re out drinking, I’m going to pay you to do that. Of course the old man will show up
behind you.”
“This ain’t funny…” His sober expression dampened my smile. Thankfully, the hatchcomm beeped
again, distracting us from feeling any more sorry for ourselves. I checked the monitor. It was our
Accelerated Assimilation Trainer, Captain Kristi Breckinridge, who, with short, dark hair gelled back and
a body conditioned to machinelike precision, could steal some officers’ breaths with a salacious glance or
a chokehold, depending upon her mood or how obviously they had gawked at her. I opened the hatch.
“Captain,” she said, then didn’t wait for an invitation and pushed past me. “Shut the door.” She regarded
Halitov with a curt nod, turned her clandestine expression back on me. “He has to leave.”
“He stays.”
A dangerous realization lit her gaze. “You haven’t told him, have you? You understand that information
is highly classified…”
“Told me what?” said Halitov, feigning ignorance.
“Sit down, shut up,” I said, then faced Breckinridge, trembling with the realization that I would stand up
to her, be honest with her—even reveal that I had done some research on her past and discovered things
that made me distrust her even more. If she wanted me to play her game, I’d play—but by my rules. “He
knows everything. And you’re going to help him, too.”
She swore under her breath, closed her eyes. “Scott, that wasn’t the deal. He hasn’t been invited to
become a Warden.”
I looked at her, grew rigid. “You came in here, said the Colonial Wardens—the most powerful and elite
group in the Seventeen System Guard Corps—wants to recruit me. Turns out you guys are running a little
coup to motivate the new government and want me to help. Then you tell me you know something about
my brother, get me thinking that maybe he’s not dead, and finally, you promise me that I can meet a
woman on Kennedy-Centauri who has epineuropathy just like me, only her conditioning process is
perfect, and she’s got three times the strength and endurance of the average conditioned soldier. You say
you can fix me, make me like her, ’cause the Wardens have found a second conditioning facility on Aire
Wu, when everyone thinks there’s just one, on Exeter, currently occupied by Alliance troops. If I ever do
get reconditioned, if there is a cure to this rapid aging, then I’mnot going to keep that information
classified. Every conditioned solider deserves to know about and receive that cure, and the first one in
line is going to be him.” I pointed at Halitov.
“You’ll do what we tell you—or you’ll get nothing,” she snapped.
“I’m not sure I want anything from people like you. I know what happened at the academy, the hazing
and the cheating—”
She snickered. “Don’t you have better things to do than pry into my life?”
“Not when mine’s on the line. They cleared you, but you were guilty, I bet. Then you graduate, try to get
into the Wardens, but the request is denied five times—until the CO who’s been denying the request
suddenly changes his mind. I talked to an old buddy of yours, Grimwald. He told me just how you got
that CO to change his mind.”
Her cheeks flushed. “If I were you, I wouldn’t say another word.”
“But I’m not done. We haven’t even gotten to your brother. Yeah, I know about him, too. Disabled and
abandoned. Your parents are gone. He’s all you have in the world. So why is he still there, rotting away
in that hospital?”
She eyed me for a moment, then, in the next second, she reached out with her mind into the quantum
bond between particles and crawled across the bulkhead behind me, shifting like some arachnid
unimpeded by gravity. She slipped in and got me in her patented chokehold. Her voice came low and
harsh, directly into my ear: “You…don’t…know…anything.”
“I know you’re an opportunist. You have no honor, no loyalty.”
“What I have…is your life in my hands.”
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Halitov jab a pistol into Breckinridge’s head. “Let him go,” he said.
She thought a moment, then ripped her arm away, shoved me aside. “You want to push my buttons? I
can push yours. Should we talk about your mother?”
I massaged my neck, felt a sudden tightness in my chest.
“Oh, spare me this bullshit,” groaned Halitov, his expression turning emphatic. “We’re dying. We need
to be reconditioned.”
“That’s right,” I said, then glared at Breckinridge. “He gets reconditioned—or I don’t even meet with
your people—whenever that’s going to happen, because we’re no longer en route to
Kennedy-Centauri.”
“I knew that before the nav alarm sounded. We’ll reschedule. I sent word to my people on a chip
tawted out just five minutes ago.”
“I hope this little meeting will be soon,” said Halitov.
Breckinridge’s stare turned menacing. “It will be.” She took a deep breath, sighed heavily. “Got more
news for you. We’ve done some studies on the aging side effects. In one month you might age a standard
year. In the next month, you might age only three, four months, in the following month, you might age
naturally. We haven’t found a pattern or a way to predict the effects yet.”
“Oh, that makes me feel all warm and tingly,” sang Halitov. “Tomorrow I wake up, and my bones are
cracking and my hair’s falling out and I can’t even remember that I had a sex drive, which, by that time,
won’t be driving me anywhere, anymore.”
“Shut up,” I told him, then gestured that Breckinridge go on.
“We have learned that as the aging progresses, there’s a long-term memory imbalance that interferes
with the short-term. You can’t remember if you shut off the vid, and you can’t stop reciting some obscure
data cerebroed into the deepest parts of your mind.”
“I’ve seen that effect,” I said, recalling an old woman from the Minsalo Caves, a recently young old
woman who had become a misfiring human computer, confused and ultimately suicidal.
“Finally, I do have some good news,” Breckinridge said, brightening slightly.
Halitov rolled his eyes. “This I have to hear.”
“I know where you’re headed.”
I raised my brows. “Really?”
Within an hour of our conversation with Breckinridge we were tawting out seventy-five light-years from
Earth to the moon Exeter. Halitov and I had met there at South Point Academy, but our training to
become officers had been interrupted by the war. I never thought I’d return to the place where my career
had begun, but I later learned that Halitov and I were shipped there because our friend Mary Brooks,
chief of the Colonial Security Council, had orchestrated our transfer to the Exeter Campaign:
#345EX7-B. We would, she hoped, take back control of the academy and the damaged conditioning
facility from Alliance occupation troops. She also knew we would satisfy our curiosity regarding our
friends Paul Beauregard and Dina Anne Forrest. During a black Op, Dina had been killed, and in love
with her, Paul had gone AWOL to take her to the Minsalo Caves on Exeter, where he thought she might
be revived because a strange healing process occurred there, one I had experienced firsthand. The idea
that a cave could raise the dead seemed ludicrous, but there were alien artifacts within those caverns, and
history is woven with stories of places that heal the body and the soul.
Thus, Paul Beauregard, son of the famous Colonel Beauregard, head of the Colonial Wardens, thought
he could save the woman he loved, and the last we had heard, Alliance Marines had found his ship but
not him or Dina. More than ever, I hoped that he had succeeded, and I already burned to abandon my
mission and head out to the caves to find out for myself. My own heart ached for Dina, though
somewhere deep inside I had already begun to accept her death.
We reached the Jovian-like gas giant of 70 Virginis b, and Halitov and I took in the view through a
narrow porthole.
“Weird coming back, huh?” he asked.
“Yeah.”
“You think Beauregard really got her into the caves?”
“Who knows.”
He nudged my shoulder. “Hey, that was some smooth negotiating with Breckinridge. I really liked the
part where you brought up her disabled brother.Real smooth.”
I gave him a dirty look. “She’s scum.”
“No, she’s hot.”
“If you had a disabled brother, wouldn’t you want to be there for him, care for him? Would you leave
him to rot away with strangers?”
“I don’t know…”
“Well, I do.”
We stayed there for a few minutes, neither saying a word until the order to drop came in.
The insertion went off well, with the loss of only one troop ship. Within an hour we stood outside my
command tent, watching artillery fire stitch across the night sky above the academy. Relentless enemy
gunners played connect the dots with the constellations, or so it appeared.
In the valley below, our three platoons stealthily advanced toward the admin building, that great
assemblage of isosceles triangles glowing in the tracer light and framed by the distant mesas.
“I don’t get it. We blanketed this place with EMP bombs,” said Halitov.
“Which knocked out all localized weaponry and electronics,” I said. “They’ve obviously resupplied.
Pulse wave’s a singular event. Doesn’t affect new weapons brought into the area.”
“Then I want to know how they rearmed themselves so quickly…”
“They must be making drops on the other side of the moon, maybe out where Beauregard took us when
we stole that shuttle the last time we were here.”
“Then how come our eyes in the sky haven’t picked up those crab carriers making drops?”
“I don’t know.”
“I say they got a cache already here, maybe underground. Maybe out in the Minsalo Caves.”
“Maybe—”
A tremendous boom just meters away cut off my thought. From the corner of my eye, I saw that my
command tent had exploded in an upheaval of sparks and sharp-edged debris.
“Son of a bitch!” cried Halitov.
Even as the shrapnel rained down, he and I dropped to our bellies, reached for our wrists, and tapped
buttons on our tacs, activating our combat skins. The phosphorescent membranes of energy enveloped
us, and the Heads Up Viewers rippled to life, superimposing themselves at an arm’s length from our
faces and giving us reports of our own vital signs and skin status, as well as troop movements and a half
dozen other options visible only to us. Once skinned, you could always tell when someone else’s life
force was drained just by examining how brightly they glowed in the standard green night-vision setting.
As usual Halitov wasn’t glowing very brightly, not because his life force was drained but because the
mere act of skinning always triggered his claustrophobia, and that fear, born of a childhood trauma in
which he had been locked in a box for days by neighborhood bullies, took a heavy toll.
“Rooslin! You’re okay, man! You’re okay!” I shouted over our command frequency.
摘要:

REBELSinARMSBENWEAVERForKendallandLaurenWhoremindmethatweareallchildren…ContentsPART1CampaignExeter1Frommyseatonthedais,Ilookedoverthe…2OvertwentyyearshavepassedsincethenightIwas…3Disquehadbeentryingtoteachmesomethinginthat…4Iracedbyoneofthemarkersleftseveraldecades…5AsPaul,hiscrew,Halitov,andIwerea...

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