“Shall I order Field Marshal Baines to repeat the ultimatum, sir?” the bionic soldier asked.
Hawthorne shook his head. Who was he to order nuclear devastation on these desperate people? Even though he kept the binoculars pointed at them, he closed his eyes. He knew then what the Shah of Iran must have felt. To have the force to annihilate and then to feel such pity—it could freeze a man. It could steal his resolve. Stand and fight to the end, bitterly, or run, or surrender to the Highborn.
“I’m killing a city to save Social Unity,” Hawthorne said bleakly.
“This is war, sir,” said Captain Mune.
“Is this war?” asked Hawthorne. When no answer was forthcoming, he opened his eyes and lowered the binoculars. The com-soldier and Captain Mune watched him. It was so easy to give advice, to urge a Supreme Commander to give brutal, soul-searing orders. But to be the man who had to give those orders, that was something else altogether.
Why had he insisted on witnessing the operation himself? Being outside felt good, that’s true. Is that what they felt down there? He hoped they felt the sun beating down on their faces and the cool kiss of the sea breeze. He hoped they smelled the clean air of Earth at least once. Maybe it was better that so many of them where already out of the levels.
“Order Field Marshal Baines to launch the missiles,” Hawthorne whispered.
“You have to come down, sir,” Mune said. “Otherwise the flash will burn out your eyes and peel off your skin.”
Hawthorne lowered the binoculars until they thumped against his chest. Feeling old, he headed for the hatch. The com-soldier already sat at his station. Hawthorne slid into his seat, turning on his screen. Captain Mune entered and closed the hatch. The main engines purred into life, and Hawthorne lurched in his seat as the tracks outside no doubt churned soil.
“I’ve sent the order, sir,” the com-officer said.
Hawthorne stared at his screen. All those streaming people outside would face the brunt of the missiles.
There! He saw one on his screen. It moved so impossibly fast. The missile zoomed downward. It zoomed toward the cluster of tall buildings, the domes and massive cube-buildings that had been the craze in this part of the world for the last ten years. He could imagine shocked faces looking upward. Would eyes bulge or mouths hang agape? Was there screaming, pushing, shoving and trampling? The missile flashed.
Hawthorne automatically counted the seconds. A thunderous boom crashed against the APC. He grabbed the bars as the shockwave hit. The heavy APC rocked back and forth.
“Halt the vehicle!” shouted Mune.
Seconds later, the vehicle’s vibrations finally stopped. Hawthorne vaguely realized that he couldn’t hear the engines. Multiple thunderous booms sounded now, and soon the APC rocked more violently. How many missiles had he ordered onto Beirut?
A glance at the screen showed nothing but fuzziness. The wash of electromagnetic pulses must be playing havoc with communications.
“Sir!” shouted the com-officer.
“Yes,” said Hawthorne, weary beyond life.
“I’m receiving an emergency message.”
That made no sense. The EMP blasts—oh, special laser optics probably linked the vehicle with a hardened communications site.
“Are the other two cities surrendering?” Hawthorne asked.
“It’s from Mars, sir. At least, it’s coded as a Mars Golden Flash.”
In took two entire seconds before Hawthorne scowled. “Speak sense,” he said.
The bionic com-officer adjusted his screen. “It’s a direct message, sir, for your eyes only.”
“What about Beirut?” Hawthorne asked. “I’m not interested in Mars right now.”
“A Golden Flash, sir,” the bionic officer said, swiveling around. “It’s from Commodore Blackstone.”
“Who?” said Hawthorne.
“The commander of the SU Battlefleet in Mars orbit, sir.”
“I know who Blackstone is,” said Hawthorne, his voice hardening. “Why’s he sending me a message now?”
“That’s unknown, sir. Shall I transmit the message?”
Hawthorne stared at the com-officer. With a mental effort, he cleared away the guilt of having just ordered the deaths of millions of people.
“Does the message have a heading?” Hawthorne asked.
“Yes sir. Apparently, it’s concerning the cyborgs. The Commodore believes he might have found them.”
It took two blinks. Then a cold feeling swept through Hawthorne. He knew then why he’d ordered the thermonuclear weapons. There were worse things than Highborn.
“Hurry man,” Hawthorne said, “read it to me.”
-30-
Commodore Blackstone stood beside the map-module on the Vladimir Lenin. The Zhukov-class Battleship was one of four in the Mars System. There were a few other secondary vessels in his truncated fleet, but they were a pittance compared to the ships he’d possessed before facing the Doom Stars.
There was a red glow on the bridge. His officers were at their posts, diligently studying new data.
The hatch opened and Blackstone looked up. Commissar Kursk entered, and the briefest flicker of a smile played on his lips. Kursk was the only happiness he had in the certain knowledge that humanity was doomed.
They had beaten the Highborn. At least, they had made the super-soldiers retreat in their dreadful Doom Stars. For that, Blackstone knew he’d become a legend among the people of Earth. He’d even enjoyed the broadcasts the propagandists had beamed to Mars. It had revived him enough that he’d begun physical training and had regained some of his youthful stamina. Kursk had taken advantage of that in prolonged sexual encounters. That had lasted until news over a year ago had arrived from Jupiter. The story of the planet wrecker…what had that Jovian moon been called? Ah, right—Carme. The moon had changed Blackstone’s perceptions, so had the reports of the Highborn blockade tightening around Earth.
There never had been more battleships and no extra missile-ships joining his flotilla. The Supreme Commander had decided to keep a small fleet-in-being between Venus and Earth. From the rumors he’d heard, it was a deteriorating fleet. One battleship had headed out-system. Instead of stopping at Mars, it had long ago sped for the Saturn System. No one had heard anything from it for over a year.
Blackstone adjusted the map-module. He was a short man, with a newly bio-sculpted face, giving him a younger appearance. The best doctor in the Planetary Union had operated on him. The doctor had sharpened the nose and added authority to his chin. He’d even grafted new hair, which had taken well. Kursk had urged him to make these changes.
“You have news?” asked Kursk.
“It’s difficult to see,” Blackstone said.
Kursk moved beside him, bumping her hip against his. She was taller and more earnest than he was. He was the more imaginative.
“What am I looking at?” asked Kursk.
“The last readings from the Stalingrad-Seven,” he said.
“A probe?” she asked.
Blackstone nodded. The probe had been launched many, many months ago, and it had made a long and silent journey toward Saturn. Several days ago, it had become functional and begun broadcasting data.
“Is that a planet?” Kursk asked.
“For unknown reasons it’s blurry,” he said. “That’s Saturn at extreme magnification.”
“Where are its rings?”
Blackstone tapped the map-module, increasing computer magnification of the data. “Run a spectrum-analysis on the interference,” he said.
“I already have, sir,” said the sensor-officer.
“And?” asked Blackstone.
“A thin aerosol gel,” said the sensor-officer.
“Just like the cyborgs did before we attacked the Martian moons,” said Kursk.