David Farland - Beyond the Gate
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- Название:Beyond the Gate
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He considered shooting at the fortresses, too, but shook his head. His memories from Tkintit, a Dronon technician, warned him that those walking fortresses were so heavily armored that he couldn’t make much of a dent in them, and they had enough firepower to devastate his little transport. But Maggie pointed out that the whole reason the starships were spaced so far out from the city was to avoid damage to metropolitan areas in case the combustible liquids stored in the exterior radiation shields leaked out and caught fire. In space the liquids cooled to below their freezing point, and there was no danger of the shields exploding on impact with a meteor. But so long as they were down here in the atmosphere, those starships were just fancy bombs, and one of Gallen’s rockets could light a fuse that would blow the nearest hive fortress off its feet, and Gallen suddenly saw some interesting ways to wreak havoc on the Tekkar. Four missiles was all he had-one for the airfield, one for each of three starships.
“You know,” Gallen said, “if we convinced the Tekkar that our purpose in attacking was to destroy their technological buildup, it could form a decent diversion, allowing us to land near the Harvester’s throne room.”
By studying the map he realized that in all likelihood, a single rocky hillside hid the chambers where the Harvester lived. The hill was nestled deep in the heart of the city, and from the air it looked rather innocuous. But if the maps were right, then somewhere on the hill’s northern slope, a huge chamber had been hollowed out. Gallen imagined that if they could blow a hole in that room, they could drop themselves right into the middle of the city. But after a few moments, he shook his head in dismay. “I’m not sure. This vehicle has enough firepower to knock out the airfield and probably even take out a couple of spaceships, but I might not have enough rockets to blow a hole into those chambers.”
Maggie shook her head, and her mantle jangled. “You’re still thinking like some backward hick. What is it that makes our aircar fly?”
“The fusion reactor?” he said.
“No,” Maggie answered, “that’s the power source. The car flies on waves of directed antigravity.”
Gallen looked at her, and his mantle began to hint to him what she planned, but he did not have a technician’s mantle, with its own arcane wisdom, so he let her explain it. “Most of the time the antigrav generator gives off weak pulses, but I can vary those-creating phased wavelengths if I want to. And I guarantee that none of these subterranean hives here on Tremonthin were built to withstand the stresses I could put on them! If I fly over this subterranean city, spiking out harmonic frequencies-well, these Tekkar will be surprised at how quickly their stone walls can get pounded into sand.”
Gallen looked up into Maggie’s eyes. “Do you know how many people you’re talking about killing? There may be a half million or more Tekkar in that city.”
Maggie leaned back, and her hair fell behind her shoulders, accentuating the impassive lines of her face. “Gallen, when we talked to Ceravanne, you must have noticed that she has no idea how to run a war. She wants to go to Moree and ‘talk to’ the Harvester, for God’s sake! Well, that’s not how we’re going to do it. The dronon brought technology here to use as a weapon, and the Inhuman is tearing these people apart. I think we should cram these weapons down their throats and let them know just how monstrous a war can be.”
“We’re talking about killing innocent women and children,” Gallen said. And he surprised himself by saying “we’re,” for he knew that he had to consider it.
Maggie shrugged. “So hit them where they least expect it. Play on the Harvester’s weaknesses, and on the Inhuman’s inexperience. We can’t afford to be nice. We can’t afford to fight cleanly. I keep … I keep thinking about something my uncle Thomas told me just before we left Tihrglas. When he came into the inn, he planned to move in and use me badly. He lay on one of the beds in my inn, wearing his dirty boots, and he said something like, ‘If you ever have to play the villain in someone’s life, play your part well. Savor it. It’s one of the greatest joys in living.’ He hinted that you should stab the fellow in the back, and twist the knife with glee.
“Well, the Inhuman tried its best to make our last two weeks on this planet a living hell, and I for one don’t think we should pull our punches. When you see the Harvester, Gallen O’Day, I’ll not have you making any nice kissy faces at her just because she’s Ceravanne’s clone. If you don’t blow her head off, I will!”
Gallen stared at her in wonder. “Jesus, you Flynns are a bad-tempered lot! It’s a wonder the priests don’t catch on and drown the lot of you when you’re born!” Gallen leaned back, and his mantle was already considering the approach it would use when they attacked. He could trace the battle lines in his imagination.
He considered the carnage they would wreak on Moree, wondered about alternatives. Maggie was right. Her diabolical ideas did have the virtue of offering them the best chance at success, but Gallen couldn’t bring himself to seriously consider such a plan. In some ways, he realized, Maggie was tougher than he was. She’d been the one who first put her life on the line when battling the dronon, and now she was willing to wage a full-fledged war with the Tekkar.
He looked back down at the holographic image hovering over the floor, his legs rising like giant tree trunks from the land. But the image of the land transposed over Ceravanne’s map gave him an idea.
* * *
Chapter 31
That morning, after Gallen and Maggie announced their battle plans, Ceravanne took Gallen aside and argued against his method long and vigorously. Neither she nor the Bock could countenance the kind of attack he proposed. They were standing in the Vale of the Bock, beside the hot pools, which shone emerald in the morning light. It was a bright day, and fair here, and it seemed to Maggie somehow odd to be talking of such things in the bright sunlight. Around Maggie, Gallen, Ceravanne, and Orick, dozens of the Bock had gathered, and they stood nearly motionless in the morning sun, their hands upraised as if they were some strange priests gathered in convocation, offering up their prayers to Tremonthin’s double suns. But Ceravanne’s favorite Bock stood beside Gallen and Ceravanne, as if to referee the dispute.
“Remember, Gallen,” Ceravanne warned him, her voice shaking from emotion, “I want no violence, if we can avoid it. Not all of those infected by the Inhuman are evil. Like you, they are people, just people who were infected-by something they did not understand and something they lacked the ability to fight!”
Ceravanne’s eyes blazed, and Maggie was surprised, for she’d never seen a Tharrin show anger. “But if we fail here today, this world may not get another chance at freedom.”
“And I would rather lose my freedom than destroy one innocent life!” Ceravanne argued. She looked like only a young girl, with her pale green eyes blazing and her platinum-blond hair. For the first time since they met, Maggie sensed that Ceravanne was losing control, speaking openly of her deepest feelings.
“But you cannot make that choice for others,” Gallen shouted. “I won’t let you! I’ve already modified my plans so that I spare as many of the Tekkar as I feel safe in doing. If that does not gratify you, then I will leave you displeased! Perhaps I should take your mantle and fight this battle without you!”
“No, please!” Ceravanne said, and her voice faltered, as if she’d never considered the possibility that Gallen would go into battle without her. She begged, “I must come. Don’t deny me that. I’ve already seen all of my own people destroyed in this conflict. And far too many people of other races have been maimed or slaughtered. If I can save only one life, then it will be worth it. I’ve convinced the Bock to come with us. He too may offer some help.”
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