Modesitt, L.E. - The Parafaith War

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The Parafaith War
L.E. Modesitt JR.
1997
Version 2.0, 8-9-01
Trystin Desoll shifted in the control seat of East Red Three and tried to ignore the acrid smell
of plastic decaying under the corrosive assault of Mara's atmosphere and the faint hint of ammonia
that lurked in the corners of the perimeter station. Both odors mingled with the false citrus of
too many glasses of Sustain mixed in the small galley behind the duty screens, and with the
staleness of air recycled and reprocessed too many times.
At 13:02.51, his implant-enhanced senses seared alert-red, and Trystin stiffened, lingers
reaching, implant clicking in. As his direct-feed commands flared through the station net, he
could sense the shields dropping into place even before the faint vibrations through the station
confirmed the electroneural signals. "Revs at zero nine two--" Before Ryla's words had reached his
ears, Trystin triggered the direct-feed for the eastern sector, splitting his mental screen into
the four all-too-familiar images. In the upper right were the forward reclamation towers, still
well behind the eastern perimeter; in the upper left the line of brown-suited attackers; in the
lower right the computer enhancement showing the various hidden defense emplacements, the
attackers, and the probability figures for each system, the numbers changing as the revs moved
toward the towers. The lower left simply showed the entire sector as if from a satellite plot,
with a colored dot showing the location of the downed-and since destroyed-paraglider, a
reconstruction of the probable revvie tracks, East Red Three itself, and the hazy spot where
another storm was forming over the badlands to the northeast.
Trystin scanned the revvie communications band, ran the comps, realizing that the revs had almost
reached the perimeter before the sensors had discovered them. He triggered the line of antisuit
bomblets, checking the display that seemed to scroll before his eyes against each clickback,
finally nodding as the mental images indicated that all the bomblets had vaporized, immediately,
the lower left display showed the slowing of the revs' advance.
Nearly simultaneously, he fired off a standard attack report to Perimeter Control, to keep them
informed, not that they could help him now, but PerCon would be all over him if he reported the
attack after the fact. That was one reason for the implant and standard format-it took less than
an instant.
To take out the revs, Trystin could have gone with the gattlings, or with the laser, but the input
from the scanners indicated new reflectives on the revvie suits. Besides, he preferred giving some
of the revs a chance to survive, a preference that some of the other perimeter officers,
especially Quentar, who was one of the duty officers in East Red Two immediately to the north,
suggested might be Trystin's undoing.
According to the net's computations, there was a ninety-percent probability that the revvie
assault had originated from the downed paraglider that had hit the badlands less than a day
earlier. The radar-transparent paraglider had come from the revvie troid ship that had gotten
through the SysCon DefNet before being neutralized by the backups. How many assault wings had
gotten free before the neutralization was another question. So was how much equipment the revs had
pulled out of the glider before the patrol wing had lobbed in rockets and scorched it out of
existence.
Trystin needed to find out. So some of the revs would survive, not that they'd necessarily enjoy
the experience.
"Ryla. Get the wagon ready for revvie pickup." Voice was slower than direct-feed, but the noncoms
weren't equipped to handle direct-feed "Yes, ser. We need info, ser?'
"That's affirmative. Looks like a follow-up from that troid ship. The sensors didn't register. Run
a sampling on the suit fabric of a deader. If it's new, let HQ know." "Stet, ser."
"There's at least one deader . . . the bomblets impacted a rev. The others are in shock, mostly
milling around."
"We can use the organics I won't be taking the wagon until they're almost stiffed."
"That's fine, so long as you get a couple. Use Block B. No double-celling, and if there are more
than ten alive, use the end cells in A." "Stet, ser."
Trystin refocused on the close-up of a dozen figures- probably men, given the revvie ratios-in
outside combat suits, the solid brown with" the white lightnings of the Prophet running up the
sleeves. The respirator hoods and low backpacks gave them a hulking appearance, even as the
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synthfab coveralls began to shred. "Pretty new suits, ser," added Ryla. "Only twenty years old,"
snorted Trystin. "Still don't feel sorry for 'em, ser." "No. You don't have to. Out." Trystin went
back to the overhead view, clicking in the enhancers and trying to see if another squad of revs
had surfaced anywhere in the red-brown hills beyond the perimeter.
With the ambient heat and the gusting winds, only motion analysis had much chance of picking up
revs at any distance. The satellite feed didn't have tight enough discrimination for something is
small as a trooper, not one in camouflage brown, and < he high-intensity scanners on the perimeter
towers lost discrimination beyond five kays-or the nearest hilltop.
Besides the revs, the near scanners were now showing the storm buildup, and that bothered Trystin.
The revs, if there were any more in his sector, could almost walk to the perimeter behind the
storm front, if it drifted westward- except the revs already had arrived almost unnoticed, and
they shouldn't have been able to do that.
He flicked into the meteorological module. "Interrogative storm, badlands, outsector. "
"Not projected to intersect perimeter line at this time." The words, and the supporting data,
seemed to scroll across his mental screen before he clicked back into surveillance.
The screens showed no other revs, no sign of anything besides the badlands, the growing storm, and
the normal backdrop. He took a deep swallow of Sustain from the cup in the holder, then swallowed
before he clicked on-net, direct-feed priority to Ulteena, the sector watch to the south, and to
Quentar, who was now on duty at East Red Two to the north.
"Trystin in East Red Three. Just had a revvie thrust from that paraglider Single squad. Sensors
didn't pick up revs until late. Might be something new."
"Thanks, Trystin. Nothing on the screens here. We'll keep a watch." Ulteena projected almost a
cuddly feel through the net. Trystin snorted to himself. Her neutralization ratio was the highest
on the eastern perimeter.
"Stet, buddy," came back from Quentar. "Clear here. We'll up-scan, though. Remember. The only safe
rev's a dead rev." "Just wanted you to know " "Stet."
Trystin wiped his forehead, damp despite the cooling system. He sniffed. The station still smelled
of Sustain, ammonia, and a bit of the floral incense Gerfel had burned to mask the acridness of
the station's odors.
"Ser?" called Ryla. "They re all down. I'm taking the wagon." "Stet. Ryla?" "Yes, ser?" "If it
moves, nail it." "Yes, ser."
Trystin wiped his forehead again. He didn't need a non-com being wiped out by a deader play.
Thanos knew when the station would get a permanent replacement if that happened, and he was
already dead on his feet. The last thing he wanted to do was break in another tech.
He refocused on the split screens, but there was no discernible motion on any screen-either revs
or local wildlife. Then, the last of the local hyenas had disappeared when the scumpers had.
Trystin hadn't ever seen a scumper, but the system files showed them as oblong rough rocks with
big extrudable feet, just the sort of thing to fascinate Salya. His ecoscientist sister had voiced
more than a few doubts about the ethics of planoforming a planet with advanced life-forms, and for
her a scumper was advanced.
Trystin half frowned and shifted his weight in the command seat, then scanned his power screen.
The shrouded turbine fans were swiveled into the wind and holding at thirty percent of load, the
balance coming from the fuel-cell banks in the plastcrete bunker beneath the station. After
checking the fuel status, he triggered a request for resupply. The organonutrient glop was low,
and tankers didn't run the perimeter lines when the revs were out.
The winds had been low lately, and that meant the station was drawing more from the fuel cells. He
shook his head as he realized that he hadn't deployed the fan shields. There was too damned many
to think about and too little time when the revs appeared without any warning. At least, he'd had
the power, but that wouldn't have counted for much if one of the revs had punched holes through
the blades or jammed the bearings with shrapnel. Neither Ryla nor PerCon would have been too
happy.
Hhhstttt. . . cmccckkkkU! The storm that had begun to form above the badlands discharged into the
dry wash five kays east of the tower.
He almost screamed with the intensity of the static before the overload breakers cut in. His hands
trembled, and his eyes watered. "Shit...shit...shit..." "Ser? You all right?"
"Friggin' stormlash. . . that's all." Trystin shook his head, angry that he'd actually broadcast.
His implant cutoffs should have dropped him off-line more quickly. Idiot, he thought.
"Times, ser. I'm real glad I'm just a noncom." "Thanks, Ryla." "Anytime, ser."
Hhhstttt. .. craccckkkkk! "The second static flash wasn't as bad as the first, but his system
still twitched. He kept his mouth shut, idly wishing that the station could tap the storm's power,
as he watched Ryla guide the pickup wagon along the line beyond the perimeter, checking the area
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beyond the bomblet line. As the big-tired wagon passed, designed to keep from sinking into the too-
fine soil, Ryla placed a replacement bomblet in each of the holders, and triggered their
retraction into the artificial cacti. In one way, the revs were lucky. The antisuit bomblets were
only installed around the stations. If they'd attacked the towers, it would have been gattlings or
rockets, neither of which left much-except a crude form of fertilizer.
The wagon scooped the inert figures into the numbered bins.
"Pickup and replacement complete, ser. Looks like about five live, and seven for organics."
"Stet."
Trystin continued to scan the perimeter at high intensity until the telltales showed the wagon
inside the station and the five captives in their cells in Block B. "They're in, ser. Five are
breathing." "Stet. Mangrin will be pleased." "So will Yressa. She likes making those revvie boys
work."
Trystin pursed his lips, then steeled himself as his visuals picked up the lightning stroke.
Hsssttt!
After the shiver passed, he listened. "She says they'll make that island bloom yet," Ryla
continued.
"Maybe. She'll have to convince them that it's the will of the Prophet. You ready to go back on
the board?"
"Yes, ser. Just a minute. Got to get the wagon in the stall."
Trystin waited, still scanning the screens, but there were no signs of the other revvie squads,
although he and Ryla knew the paragliders carried more than a single squad, usually a lot more.
Where those squads might be in the twisted hills of the badlands was another question, although
Trystin would have liked to have known. Then, so would PerCon. "Set, ser."
"Stet. Going down to see our visitors. Let me know about the suit stuff after I get back." "Luck,
ser. Don't be too nice."
As the storm rose, Trystin checked the fans-carrying half the load. Maybe that would slow down
organonutrient use in the fuel cells. With a deep breath, he slipped out of the command seat and
walked down the narrow steps to the lower level, to the right and through the permaplast door into
Block B.
After ensuring the block door was closed behind him, he triggered the combat reflex biofeedback,
unarmed module, and slipped through the sliding grate into the cell of the first rev-blond-haired
and blue-eyed, like most of them, and probably in his early twenties, T-time.
The young military missionary launched himself right at Trystin, seemingly in slow motion, as
Trystin stepped aside and his hands moved through two short arcs. The rev lay gasping on the stone
floor for a minute, then lurched toward the Coalition officer. Trystin's knee snapped across the
revvie soldier's shoulder, and threw the man against the stone wall. "Oooffff..."
"Are you finished?" Trystin asked conversationally. "Golem! Infidel!"
"That's not the question. I'd prefer not to hurt you." Trystin watched, saw the tensing muscles
and stepped inside the rush, using his elbow and stiffened fingers to drop the rev back onto the
stone. "Oooo..."
"We could keep this up all day, but sooner or later. I'm going to miscalculate and really hurt
you. Not that it matters to you. You're perfectly willing to die for the Prophet." Trystin paused,
watching the rev and his eyes. "Have you considered that, since you're alive. He might have some
use for you besides fertilizer?" "Fert-" The soldier snapped his mouth shut. "All the stories are
true. We can't afford to waste anything here. Who knows? If you keep this up until I have to kill
you, you just might end up as fertilizer or as nutrients for the pork industry. We keep the pigs
in tunnels," Trystin lied.
"Golem! Infidel? Why should I believe anything you say?"
"Because I could have killed you and didn't. Because what happens to you depends on me." Trystin's
eyes fixed on the other, triggering the superacute hearing. "How many squads came in on that
glider?"
"Four" came through the subvocalization even as the rev snapped, "None but ours."
"Four," mused Trystin, direct-feeding the information to Ryla's console.
"Four? Shit, Lieutenant," responded Ryla through the link. "We got nothing on the screens." "Did
you get all your equipment out of the glider?" "Yes. . ." "I don't know."
"Did the other squads have back-strapped heavy weapons?" "I don't know."
"How long are the others supposed to stay under cover?"
"Days .. ." came the subvocalization, followed by the spoken words, "I don't know.'
"How many glider wings were there on the mother troid?"
"Twenty . . ." subvocalized, followed by the spoken, "I don't know."
"How many gliders came off the mother troid?" "I don't know." Subvocalization revealed nothing. A
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line soldier who wasn't much more than the Prophet's gattling feed wouldn't know, but Trystin had
hoped.
"Was your troid one of the new ones with twenty insystem scouts?"
"Thirty . . . golem. . ." followed by, "I don't know." Hsssttt! Despite the static burst from the
storm and the headache, Trystin forced himself to remain calm. "Was your Sword a Cherubim?"
"Seraphim. " "I don't know."
"A Seraphim? My goodness. And did your troid bring in an EMP-Slam?"
". . . 'course . . ." covered by the inevitable question, "What's that?" "Is it hot in those new
suits?" " Yes." "don't know."
"How many of the other squads were angels?" "One. " "I don't know what you're talking about,
golem." "Any of you have fun with the angels?" The rev lurched at Trystin, Who blurred aside and
let him crash into the wall.
"It's nice to know that you do have some remotely human drives," Trystin found himself saying
conversationally. Careful . . . you're not supposed to bait them. Careful-the warning seared
through him from somewhere. He took a deep breath.
"You going to kill me now? Turn me into fertilizer?" The blue eyes were bleak, and Trystin almost
felt sorry for him. Almost.
"No." Not yet, thought Trystin. Not that I care. After triggering the door, he slipped outside and
let the door seal the rev inside.
Outside, Trystin dropped a physiological overlay in place to call up some reserves for a few
minutes, then took a series of deep breaths, letting the strength flow back into him. He'd pay for
it later.
Even after months of sporadic interrogations, he still wasn't used to the mindless hatred the revs
had been indoctrinated with or the fact that they saw Coalition officers as golems, more machines
than human. Trystin didn't appear different from any other human, and looked, unfortunately, more
like a rev than an Eco-Tech. He wasn't wired with metal-his implant: was totally organic and
invisible.
After a last deep breath, he triggered the second door and stepped around the moving grate and
into the next cell, link-closing it behind him.
"You creatures really are part of the machinery." Another blond-haired blue-eyed rev, older than
the first, studied him. "Indoc or interrogation?"
"Interrogation. " Trystin noted the muscular tightening. "I wouldn't."
"Golems, aren't you? All machine, no soul." The muscles relaxed, but not totally. "Worse than the
Immortals. You even look like a son of the Prophet. Did they re-create you in that image?"
"Hardly. I was born this way." Trystin continued to monitor the rev's muscular tension. "Did you
really expect that a glider with only four squads could do much?"
"Hoped" was the subvocalization. "That wasn't my duty, ser."
Trystin tried not to frown. The "ser" bothered him. "Did you really want to throw away a squad of
angels?"
"No. " There was no conflict between the answer and the subvocal message.
The man was clearly an officer who'd been thoroughly briefed on Coalition officers' capabilities.
Trystin pushed. "Why are you hiding that you re an officer?" "I'm not hiding anything. You never
asked." "Why were you in the first attack?" "Why not?"
Trystin wanted to shake his head. All the subvocalization detection wouldn't help in the slightest
if he couldn't keep the other man off balance. "What's your rank?" "Assistant Force Leader." "What
squad was the Force Leader with?" "Second" was followed by the verbal, "He stayed with the other
squads."
"What do you really hope to get from these attacks?" Trystin let his voice become more
conversational. "Officially, that would be for others to say, ser." "What do you want?"
"To wipe that mechanically superior grin off your young face." "Do you want to live?"
The subvocalized "Yes' was followed by, "I'm not that certain survival is an option. You people
don't seem to believe in the sacredness of life." "Do you?" snapped Trystin. "Yes."
"Then why are you out here trying to kill us?" Trystin wished he had bitten back the words. The
man was getting to him. How could anyone who belonged to a faith, a system, that sent thousands of
young troopers out to die, just to wear the Eco-Tech systems down for conquest-how could he claim
that life was sacred?
". . . abominations. . . not real life. . . ""You surrendered your souls."
"Is that why the troid ship was carrying an EMP-Slam?" "Yes." "I wasn't aware of that." "How many
more troid ships followed yours?" "Three . . . think" "That's certainly none of my business."
"How many wings cleared the troid before you?" "None. " "I don't know." "How many come after you?"
". . . three. . . more. . ." "I'm not a pilot, ser." "How many troids are scheduled to attack Mara
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in the next year?"
"I don't know. Until the land belongs to the Lord." "Are all your troops-"
"They aren't troops. They're missionaries." "Excuse me. Are all your armed missionaries wearing
the new suits?"
"Of course." -"When will you start bringing in heavier weapons?" "Soon. " "When the
Lord wills. "
Trystin looked at the composed man who stood there in what amounted to a white shipsuit. All the
telltales and scans indicated, prisoner or not, that the rev was indeed as composed as he looked.
"Won't you ever stop?"
"No. Not while we're about the Lord's business.
"Why does the Lord's business just involve our real estate? Why don't you go after the Hyndjis or
the Argentis?"
go after abominations " 'We follow the Lord's will."
Trystin shook his head, and stepped back.
"While I believe, nothing you say, golem, can shake me." As the cell door shut, Trystin was
certainly aware of the truth of the rev officer's convictions, and that nothing any outsider could
say would shake his faith. Outside in the corridor, Trystin gathered himself together before
entering the third cell, trying to ignore the more prevalent odor of ammonia and the ultrafine
grit that seemed to settle everywhere in the blocks.
Trystin triggered the grate and stepped into the third cell.
The cold green eyes of the third rev looked at Trystin impassively, then his body lurched upward
and toward the tech officer, almost as though independent of the rev himself.
Red seared through Trystin's system, more quickly than the mentally scripted alert system, or the
report of electromuscular generation, and the door was opening as he kicked the rev backand threw
himself out the door, triggering its emergency closure before he was quite clear of the cell.
His boots scraped the door, and some of the force of the explosion skidded him long the smooth
stones of Block B, but he scrambled to his feet and looked back toward the bulging grate-door to
the third cell. Wisps of greasy smoke curled through the bent frame of the door.
Blood dripped from the side of his jaw as Trystin scanned the corridor, then shook his head afid
called his implant into the maintenance level Only the single cell was damaged.
Now the smell of explosives, smoke, and charred meat joined the fainter odor of ammonia. Trystin
swallowed hard. "Ser?"
"We've got a new wrinkle, Ryla. Put this on-line, for all perimeter stations-no . . .I'll do it.
"Trystin took another deep breath and walked slowly back up toward the control center. After the
heavy door to Block B closed behind him, he off-lined the unarmed combat step-up and the acute
hearing and slogged toward the console seat, where he slumped as he coded the transmission. He
took a long swallow of Sustain and walked to the galley to mix more as he direct-fed the message
through his implant.
"PerCon, from East Red Three. New rev tactic. Bio-electric detonation of organic explosives. . ."
After checking the data picked up by the scanners, he went on to summarize the use of biologically
generated electric fields to detonate pseudomuscle or bone mass that was actually a form of
plasex. ". . . thus, scanners pick up no electronic components. The electric generation is
apparently triggered by a crude form of biofeedback. Could be dangerous for interrogators or
others in direct rev contact."
He poured the Sustain powder into the glass and stirred, taking the glass back to the console seat
with him.
Almost as the report went direct-feed, Ulteena clicked in.
"Sounds nasty. How are you, machman?" "Sore. Few cuts. Angry, why don't they leave us alone?" "
'Cause the Prophet says we're the ungodly and golems. Or worse-descendants of the cursed
immortals."
"Shit, we both fought the immortals. That's why old Earth and Newton are charred cinders."
"They've got a selective memory for history. You know that. So get some rest, and snap clean."
"I will. I will. After I download the interrogations and the info."
"Always the one to do it proper. "Her voice-direct-fed or not-gentled. "I try."
"I know." The last transmission was even softer before she off-lined.
He wondered what Ulteena looked like, since they'd never synced off duty. He shrugged. Probably
not at all cuddly, but with shoulders broader than his and a nose sharper than a skimmer prow.
With another deep breath, he clicked into the log and began to itemize the results of the
interrogation, including the facts that there might be as many as another sixty paragliders
swirling into Mara's atmosphere, if they weren't already, not to mention that the troid ships were
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摘要:

file:///F|/rah/L.%20E.%20Modesitt/Modesitt,%20L%20E%20-%20The%20Parafait\h%20War.txtTheParafaithWarL.E.ModesittJR.1997Version2.0,8-9-01TrystinDesollshiftedinthecontrolseatofEastRedThreeandtriedt\oignoretheacridsmellofplasticdecayingunderthecorrosiveassaultofMara'satmosphereand\thefainthintofammoniat...

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