David Drake - With The Lightnings

VIP免费
2024-12-05 0 0 1.13MB 151 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
WITH THE
LIGHTNINGS
DAVID DRAKE
Fout! Onbekende schakeloptie-instructie.
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 © 1998 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
ISBN: 0-671-57818-9
ISBN: 0-671-57886-3
Cover art by David Mattingly
First paperback printing, July 1999
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication No. 98-6745
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Typeset by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH
Printed in the United States of America
DEDICATION
To A[rielle] Heather Wood
More widely known as The Heather Wood
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I’m afraid that I use machines and people very hard when I’m focused on a project. The machines
tend to break; the people, my friends, do not. Sincere thanks to Dan Breen; Jim Baen and Toni
Weisskopf; Mark L. Van Name and Allyn Vogel; Sandra and John Miesel;
and my wife Jo.
BOY MEETS GIRL …
Daniel closed the metal covers of the book, then looked directly at Adele. “I don’t mean to intrude in another
citizen’s business, mistress,” he said, “but my manservant Hogg is very good at finding people who can change things.
If you’d like him to locate some carpenters . . . ?”
Adele snorted. The library budget, if there was one, wasn’t under her control. “I appreciate the offer,” she said,
“but I regret that I’m not in a position to take advantage of it. Unless your man could find the carpenters’ wages as
well as the carpenters themselves.”
Leary grinned, but there was a serious undertone in his voice as he said, “I really don’t dare suggest that, mistress.
While I don’t think Hogg would be caught, I’m afraid his methods would bring spiritual discredit on a Leary of
Bantry. What Hogg does on his own account is his own business, but if I set him a task . . .”
The world had gone gray around Adele. “You said, ‘a Leary of Bantry,’ sir,” she said. Her voice too was without
color. “You’d be related to Speaker Leary, then?”
Leary grimaced. “Oh, yes,” he said. “Corder Leary is my father, though we’d both be willing to deny it.”
“I see,” Adele said. Her voice came from another place, another time. She crossed her hands behind her back.
“Lieutenant Leary,” she said, “I have a great deal of work to do. You’re a Cinnabar citizen and I will presume a
gentleman. I therefore request that you cease to trouble me and my staff.
Daniel Leary reddened also. He made a stiff half-bow. “Good morning, mistress,” he said. “No doubt we’ll meet
again.” He strode with a caged grace from the library.
Later, he sat on a bench in a garden. He’d walked until the adrenaline burned off and he needed to sit. He hadn’t
been so angry since the afternoon he broke with his father.
He’d have to challenge her to a duel, of course. The insult had been too deliberate to ignore. . . .
A NOTE ON WEIGHT AND MEASURES
As most of my fiction is either set in the far past or the distant future, I regularly face the question of whether to
use weights and measures familiar to the reader or instead to reflect the differences that time brings. In this particular
case I’ve decided to use English and metric measurements rather than inventing different but comparable systems.
In my opinion the weights and measures of thousands of years in the future will differ as strikingly from those of
today as the latter do from the talents and stades familiar to classical Greeks. Those future systems may well vary
among themselves as confusingly as the Euboic and Aeginetic standards did. But while I hope a reader may learn
something from this novel as well as being entertained, the state of the world isn’t going to be improved by me
inventing phony measurement systems.
Me that ’ave followed my trade
In the place where the Lightnin’s are made …
—Kipling
BOOK ONE
Lieutenant Daniel Leary ambled through the streets of Kostroma City in the black-piped gray 2nd Class uniform of
the Republic of Cinnabar Navy. He was on his way to the Elector’s Palace, but there was no hurry and really nothing
more important for Daniel to do than to savor the fact that he’d realized one of his childhood dreams: to walk a far
world and see its wonders first hand.
His other dream, to command a starship himself, would come (if at all) in the far future; a future as distant in
Daniel’s mind as childhood seemed from his present age of twenty-two Terran years.
For now, he had Kostroma and that was wonder enough. He whistled a snatch of a tune the band had played at the
supper club he’d visited the night before.
Daniel smiled, an expression so naturally warm that strangers on the street smiled back at him. The Kostroman
lady he’d met there was named Silena. The honor both of a Leary of Bantry and the RCN required that Daniel offer
his help when the lady’s young escort drank himself into babbling incapacity. Silena had been very appreciative; and
after the first few minutes back at her lodgings, pique at her original escort was no longer her primary focus.
Daniel was only a little above average height with a tendency toward fleshiness that showed itself particularly in
his florid face. His roundness and open expression caused strangers sometimes to dismiss Daniel Leary as soft. That
was a mistake.
A canal ran down the center of the broad street. During daylight it carried only small craft, water taxis and light
delivery vehicles, but at night barges loaded with construction materials edged between the stone banks with loud
arguments over right-of-way. The pavements to either side seethed with a mixture of pedestrians and three-wheeled
motorized jitneys, though like the canals they would fill with heavy traffic after dark.
The Kostroman economy was booming on the profits of interstellar trade, and much of that wealth was being
invested here in the capital. Rich merchants built townhouses, and the older nobility added to the palaces of their
clans so as not to be outdone.
Folk at a lower social level—clerks in the trading houses, the spacers who crewed Kostroma’s trading fleet, and
the laborers staffing the factories and fisheries that filled those starships, all had gained in some degree. They wanted
improved lodgings as well, and they were willing to pay for them.
Daniel walked along whistling, delighted with the pageant. People wore colorful clothing in unfamiliar styles.
Many of them chattered in local dialects: Kostroma was a watery planet from whose islands had sprung a hundred
distinct tongues during the long Hiatus in star travel. Even those speaking Universal, now the common language of
the planet as well as that of interstellar trade, did so in an accent strange to Cinnabar ears.
Civilization hadn’t vanished on Kostroma as it had on so many worlds colonized during the first period of human
star travel, but Kostroman society had fragmented without the lure of the stars to unify it. The centuries since
Kostroma returned to space hadn’t fully healed the social fabric: the present Elector, Walter III of the Hajas clan, had
seized power in a coup only six months before.
Nobody doubted that Walter intended to retain Kostroma’s traditional friendship with the Republic of Cinnabar,
but the new Elector needed money. At the present state of the war between Cinnabar and the Alliance of Free Stars,
Walter’s hint that he might not renew the Reciprocity Agreement when it came due in three months had been enough to
bring a high-level delegation from Cinnabar.
Daniel sighed. A high-level delegation, with one junior lieutenant thrown in as a makeweight. Daniel had almost
certainly been sent because he was the son of the politically powerful Corder Leary, former Speaker of the Cinnabar
Senate. Daniel’s—bad—relationship with his father was no secret in the RCN, but the ins and outs of Cinnabar
families wouldn’t be common knowledge on Kostroma.
A man came out of a doorway, pushing himself onto the crowded pavement while calling final instructions to
someone within the building. Daniel would have avoided the fellow if there’d been room. There wasn’t, so he set his
shoulder instead and it was the larger Kostroman who bounced back with a surprised grunt.
No one took notice of what was merely a normal hazard of city life. Daniel walked on, eyeing with interest the
carven swags and volutes that decorated unpretentious four-story apartment buildings.
Kostromans didn’t duel the way members of Cinnabar’s wealthy families sometimes did. On the other hand, feuds
and assassinations were accepted features of Kostroman social life. Daniel supposed it was whatever you were used
to.
In Xenos, Cinnabar’s capital, real magnates like Corder Leary moved through the streets with an entourage of
fifty or more clients, some of whom might be senators themselves. You stepped aside or the liveried toughs leading
the procession knocked you aside. The free citizens of the galaxy’s proudest republic accepted—indeed, expected—
that their leaders would behave in such fashion. Who would obey a man who lacked a strong sense of his own
honor?
Birds fluted as they spun in tight curves from roof coping to roof coping overhead. They were avian in the same
sense as the scaly “birds” of Cinnabar, the winged amphibians of Sadastor, or the flyers of a thousand other worlds
that humans had visited and described. The details were for scientists to chart and for quick-eyed amateurs like
Daniel Leary to notice with delight.
During the final quarrel Daniel had said he’d take nothing from his father; but the Leary name had brought Daniel
to Kostroma. Well, the name was his by right, not his father’s gift. Daniel didn’t have a shipboard appointment, and
he really had no duties even as part of Admiral Dame Martina Lasowski’s delegation; but he’d reached the stars.
The Kostroman navy was small compared to the fleets of Cinnabar and the Alliance, and even so it was larger
than it was efficient. Kostroma’s captains and sailors were of excellent quality, but the merchant fleet took the
greater—and the better—part of the personnel. Ratings in the Kostroman navy were largely foreigners; officers were
generally men who preferred the high life in Kostroma City to hard voyaging; and the ships spent most of their time
laid up with their ports sealed and their movable equipment warehoused, floating in a dammed lagoon south of the
capital called the Navy Pool.
A starship was landing in the Floating Harbor. Daniel turned to watch, sliding the naval goggles down from his
cap brim against the glare.
Starships took off and landed on water both because of the damage their plasma motors would do to solid ground
and because water was an ideal reaction mass to be converted to plasma. Once out of a planet’s atmosphere, ships
used their High Drive, a matter/antimatter conversion process and far more efficient, but to switch to High Drive too
early was to court disaster.
At one time Kostroma Harbor had served all traffic, but for the past generation only surface vessels used the city
wharfs. The Floating Harbor built of hollow concrete pontoons accommodated the starships a half-mile offshore.
The pontoons were joined in hexagons that damped the waves generated by takeoffs and landings, isolating
individual ships like larvae in the cells of a beehive. Seagoing lighters docked on the outer sides of the floats to
deliver and receive cargo.
The ship landing just now was a small one of three hundred tons or so; a yacht, or more probably a government
dispatch vessel. The masts folded along the hull indicated the plane on which Cassini Radiation drove the ship
through sponge space was very large compared to the vessel’s displacement.
The hull shape and the way two of the four High Drive nozzles were mounted on outriggers identified the ship as
a product of the Pleasaunce system, the capital of the deceptively named Alliance of Free Stars. That was perfectly
proper since the vessel was unarmed. Kostroma was neutral, trading with both parties to the conflict.
Kostroma’s real value to combatants lay not with her navy but in her merchant fleet and extensive trading network
to regions of the human diaspora where neither Cinnabar nor the Alliance had significant direct contact. Formally the
Reciprocity Agreement granted Cinnabar only the right to land warships on Kostroma instead of staying ten light-
minutes out like those of other nations.
As a matter of unofficial policy, however, neutral Kostroman vessels carried cargoes to Cinnabar but not to
worlds of the Alliance. That was an advantage for which General Porra, Guarantor of the Alliance, would have given
his left nut.
The dispatch vessel touched down in a vast gout of steam; the roar of landing arrived several seconds later as the
cloud was already beginning to dissipate. Daniel raised his goggles and continued walking. A graceful bridge
humped over a major canal; from the top of the arch Daniel glimpsed the roof of the Elector’s Palace.
An Alliance dispatch vessel might mean Porra or his bureaucrats believed there was a realistic chance of detach-
ing Kostroma from Cinnabar. Alternatively, the Alliance could simply be trying to raise the price Admiral Lasowski
would finally agree to pay. Walter III would have invited an Alliance delegation as a bargaining chip even if Porra
hadn’t planned to send one on his own account.
Well, that was only technically a concern for Lt. Daniel Leary. As a practical matter, he was a tourist visiting a
planet which provided a range of unfamiliar culture, architecture, and wildlife.
Whistling again, he strolled off the bridge and along the broad avenue leading toward the palace.
Adele Mundy stood in the doorway, fingering a lock of her short brown hair as she surveyed what was only in
name the Library of the Elector of Kostroma. Adele was an organized person; she would organize even this. The
difficulty was in knowing where to start.
The room was large and attractive in its way; ways, really, because whichever Elector had been responsible for
the decoration had been catholic in his taste. Time had darkened the wood paneling from its original bleached pallor.
The enormous stone hood of the fireplace was carved with a scene of hunting in forests that looked nothing like
Kostroman vegetation, and blue-figured tiles formed the hearth itself. The knees supporting the coffered ceiling
imitated gargoyles.
The last were a singularly inappropriate choice for the interior of a library. The notion of figures gaping to gargle
rainwater onto Adele’s collections made her shudder.
The chamber had probably been intended as a drawing room for Electoral gatherings smaller and more private
than those in the enormous Grand Salon below on the second floor. There was quite a lot of space in terms of cubic
feet since the ceiling was thirty feet above, but there would have to be a great deal of modification to make it usable
for shelving books.
The modification was one of the problems Adele had been trying to surmount in the three weeks since she had
arrived in Kostroma City to take up her appointment as the Electoral Librarian. One of many problems.
“Pardon, pardon!” a workman growled to Adele’s back in a nasal Kostroman accent. She stepped sideways into
the room, feeling her abdominal muscles tense in anger.
The man hadn’t been impolite, technically: Adele was standing in the doorway through which he and his mate
needed to carry a plank. But there was no hint in his tone that the off-planet librarian was his superior or, for that
matter, anything but a pain in the neck.
A six-foot board wasn’t much of a load for two people to carry, but even that wasn’t why Adele became dizzy
with frustration. That was a result of seeing the material, polished hardwood with a rich, swirling grain. It was
probably as pretty a piece of lumber as she’d ever seen in her life.
Elector Jonathan Ignatius, Walter III’s immediate predecessor, was a member of the Delfi clan and an enthusiastic
hunter. Jonathan’s absence on a six-month, multi-planet safari had permitted rivals in the Hajas and Zojira clans to
prepare the coup that unseated him the night of his return.
Walter by contrast wanted to be remembered as a patron of learning, possibly because he had no more formal
education than the Emperor Charlemagne. He’d decided to found an electoral library under the carefully neutral
direction of a Cinnabar scholar living in exile on the Alliance world of Bryce. He’d assembled the contents of the
library by the simple expedient of stripping books, papers, and electronic storage media from Delfi households and
those of their collateral clans.
The loot—Adele couldn’t think of another word to describe it—was piled here in a variety of boxes and crates.
Most of them weren’t marked, and she didn’t trust the labels on those which had them. The only order in the library
was the view out the north windows, onto the formal gardens.
What Adele needed to start—what she had requested as many times and in as many ways as she could imagine—
was three thousand feet of rough shelving. What she was getting from the carpenters Walter’s chamberlain had
assigned to the project was cabinetry of a standard that would grace a formal dining room. At the present rate of
progress, the job would be done sometime in the next century.
There was no doubt about the skill of the carpenters, these two journeymen and the master cabinetmaker who
never left her shop on the ground floor and never touched a tool with her own hands that Adele had seen. They were
simply the wrong people for the job. The twenty Kostroman library assistants whom Adele was to train to the
standards of Cinnabar or the central worlds of the Alliance—these were with only a few exceptions the wrong people
for any job.
Laughter boomed in the hallway. Adele sidled another step away from the door and put her straight back against
the wall. The band of tile at neck level felt cool and helped keep her calm. Bracey, one of her assistants, entered with
two other men whom Adele didn’t recognize.
That didn’t mean they weren’t library assistants: the positions had been granted as political favors to relatives who
needed jobs. The only blessing was that most of them, lazy scuts with neither ability nor interest in library work,
didn’t bother to show up. Those who did pilfered and damaged materials through careless disregard.
Bracey, a Zojira collateral, was one of those who often came to the library. Unfortunately.
The trio entered the room, passing a bottle among them. From the smell of their breath as they strode past Adele
she was surprised they were still able to move, let alone climb the lovely helical staircase to the third floor.
Three other assistants were in the library. Two were fondling one another in a corner. Their lives were at risk if in
passion they managed to dislodge the boxes stacked to either side. The third assistant was Vanness, who was actually
trying to organize a crate of what were probably logbooks. Alone of her “assistants,” Vanness had the interest that
was a necessary precondition to becoming useful. The Kostroman wasn’t any real help now, but Adele could cure his
ignorance if she just got some room to work in.
“Hey, save me seconds!” Bracey called to the couple in the corner. Adele’s presence hadn’t concerned them, but
now they sprang apart.
One of Bracey’s companions tugged his arm, nodding toward Adele behind them. Bracey waved the bottle to her
and said, “Hey, chiefie! Want a drink?”
Bracey burped loudly; his companions lapsed into giggles. Adele looked through the Kostroman as if he didn’t
exist, then walked to the data console she’d spent most of the past two weeks getting in order because that was
within her capacity to achieve without the help of anyone else . . . and she didn’t have the help of anyone else.
The console was of high-quality Cinnabar manufacture and so new that it was still crated in the vestibule of the
palace when Walter’s supporters took stock after the coup. It came loaded with a broad-ranging database which
could, now that Adele had completed her labors, access information from any of the computers in the government
network; better and faster than the computers could reach their own data, in most cases.
Adele rested her forehead against the console’s smooth coolness and wondered whether starving on Bryce would
have been a better idea than accepting the Kostroman offer. But it had seemed so wonderful at the time. She’d even
told Mistress Boileau, “It’s too good to be true!”
Adele smiled. At least in hindsight she could credit herself with a flawlessly accurate analysis.
Adele was a Mundy of Chatsworth, one of Cinnabar’s most politically powerful families while she was growing
up, though the Mundys’ populist tendencies meant they were generally on the outs with their fellow magnates. Adele
hadn’t been interested in politics. When she was sixteen she’d left Xenos for the Bryce Academy. Her choice was
made as much to avoid the alarms and street protests escalating into riots as for the opportunity to study the premier
collections of the human galaxy under Mistress Boileau.
That was fifteen terrestrial years ago. Three days after Adele Mundy reached Bryce, the Speaker of the Cinnabar
Senate announced that he’d uncovered an Alliance plot to overthrow the government of Cinnabar through native
agents—primarily members of the Mundy family. The Senate proscribed the traitors. Their property was confiscated
by the state or turned over to those who informed against them, and those proscribed were hunted down under
emergency regulations that were a license to kill.
Adele had a bank account on Bryce, but it was intended to provide her first quarter’s allowance rather than an
inheritance. Mistress Boileau herself replaced the support which had vanished with the Mundys of Chatsworth. Her
charity was partly from kindness, because the old scholar’s heart was as gentle as a lamb’s on any subject outside her
specialty: the collection and organization of knowledge.
But beyond kindness Mistress Boileau realized Adele was a student with abilities exceeding those of anyone else
she had trained in her long career. They worked on terms of increasing equality, Adele’s quickness balanced by the
breadth of information within Mistress Boileau’s crystalline mind. Nothing was said, but both of them expected
Adele to take Mistress Boileau’s place when the older woman died at her post—retirement was as unlikely a
possibility as the immediate end of the universe.
Maybe without the war . . .
Cinnabar and the Alliance had fought three wars in the past century. This fourth outbreak had less to do with the
so-called Three Circles Conspiracy than it did with the same trade, pride, and paranoia which had led to the earlier
conflicts. Those were politicians’ reasons and fools’ reasons; nothing that touched a scholar like Adele Mundy.
But the decree that came out of the Alliance capital on Pleasaunce touched her, for all that it was framed by
politicians and fools. The Academic Collections on Bryce were a national resource. Access to them by citizens of the
Republic of Cinnabar was to be strictly controlled.
Mistress Boileau suggested a way out of the crisis. She had friends on Pleasaunce. They couldn’t exempt Adele
from the ruling, but they could make Adele an Alliance citizen as soon as she renounced Cinnabar nationality.
A moment earlier Adele would have described herself as a citizen of learning and the galaxy, not of any national
boundary that tried to limit mankind. Cinnabar was a memory of the riots she saw in person and the slaughter she
missed by hours.
But she was a Mundy of Chatsworth, and she would be damned before any politician on Pleasaunce made her say
otherwise.
Then the Elector of Kostroma asked Mistress Boileau, Director of the Academic Collections on Bryce, to
摘要:

WITHTHELIGHTNINGSDAVIDDRAKEFout!Onbekendeschakeloptie-instructie.Thisisaworkoffiction.Allthecharactersandeventsportrayedinthisbookarefictional,andanyresemblancetorealpeopleorincidentsispurelycoincidental.Copyright©1998byDavidDrakeAllrightsreserved,includingtherighttoreproducethisbookorportionsthereo...

展开>> 收起<<
David Drake - With The Lightnings.pdf

共151页,预览10页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:151 页 大小:1.13MB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-05

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 151
客服
关注