The man behind him could have been specifically designed as his antithesis. Inspector Ferhat Ben Belkassem, well short of his fortieth year, was small, neat, and very dark, with liquid brown eyes and a strong, beaked nose. His crimson tunic’s collar bore the hourglass and balance of the Ministry of Justice, and he seemed pleasant enough—which was far from sufficient to reconcile McIlheny to his presence. This was a job for the Fleet and the Marines. By McIlheny’s lights, not even Keita had any real business poking his nose in—not that he intended to say so to a brigadier. Particularly not to a Cadre brigadier, and especially not to a Cadre brigadier named Sir Arthur Keita. Which, because Colonel McIlheny was an intrinsically just man, meant he couldn’t say it to Ben Belkassem, either. Damn it.
“Sir Arthur. Inspector.”
“Colonel,” Keita returned crisply. Ben Belkassem merely smiled at the omission of his own name—a lack of reaction which irritated the colonel immensely—and McIlheny waved at two empty chairs across the conference table.
Ben Belkassem waited for Keita to seat himself, then slid into his own chair. It was a respectful enough gesture, but the man moved like a cat, McIlheny thought. Graceful, poised, and silent. Sneaky bastard.
“I’ve downloaded all of our data to Banshee,” he began, “but, with your permission, Sir Arthur, I thought we should probably begin with a general background brief.” Keita nodded for him to continue, and McIlheny switched on the holo unit. A display of the Franconian Sector appeared above the table, like a squashed quarter-sphere of stars. An edge of the Empire appeared along its flattened side, green and friendly, but the scarlet of the Rishathan Sphere crowded its rounded upper edge, and a sparkle of amber Rogue Worlds and blue systems claimed by the Quarn Hegemony threaded through its volume. McIlheny slipped into his headset, connecting the display controls to his neural receptor, and a single star at the sector’s heart blinked gold.
“The sector capital.” The announcement was probably redundant, but he’d learned long ago to make sure the groundwork was in place. “Soissons, in the Franconia System. Quite Earth-like, but for rather cool temperatures, with a population just over two billion. A bit high for this region, but it’s one of the old League Worlds we retook from the Lizards more or less intact.”
His audience nodded, and he cleared his throat.
“We really should have organized a Crown Sector out here a century ago, but with the Rishatha hanging up there to galactic north it seemed reasonable to turn our attention to other areas first. God knows we had enough to worry about elsewhere, and the Ministry of Colonization decided not to draw Rishathan attention south until we’d firmed up the central sectors. As you can see—“ skeins of stars suddenly winked to life beyond the sector’s curved frontier, burning the steady white of unsurveyed space “—there’s a lot of room for expansion out there, and once we start curling around their southern frontiers, the Lizards are likely to get a bit anxious. We didn’t want them extending their border to cut us off before we were ready.”
He glanced up at the others. Ben Belkassem was watching the display as if it were a fascinating toy, but Keita only grunted and nodded again.
“All right. The Crown began organizing the Franconian Sector three years ago and sent Governor General Treadwell out a year later. It’s a fairly typical Crown Sector in most ways: ninety-three systems under imperial claim—twenty-six with habitable planets—and thirty-one belonging to someone else in the same spatial volume. We’ve got five Incorporated Worlds besides Soissons, though one of them, Yeager, just elected its first senators this year. Aside from them, we’ve got fifteen Crown Worlds with Crown Governors, or—“ his mouth twisted, “—we had fifteen Crown Worlds. Now we only have twelve.”
Four stars pulsed lurid crimson as he spoke, wide-spaced, almost equi-distant from one another. One was the primary of Mathison’s World.
“Typee, Mawli, Brigadoon, and Mathison’s World,” McIlheny said grimly, one of the stars blinking brighter with each name. “Mawli, Brigadoon, and Mathison’s World are complete write-offs; Typee survived . . . barely. It was the first world hit, and it’s been settled for over sixty years—a freeholder colony from Durandel in the Melville Sector—and apparently their population was too spread out for the raiders to hit anything smaller than the major towns. The others—“ He shrugged, eyes bitter, and Keita’s mouth tightened.
“Things started out quite well, actually,” McIlheny went on after a moment. “Governor Treadwell’s got three times the normal Crown Sector Fleet presence because of the Rishatha and the Jung Association, so we—“
“Excuse me, Colonel.” Ben Belkassem’s voice was surprisingly deep for such a small man, almost velvety, with the cultured accent of the mother world. McIlheny frowned at him, and the inspector smiled. “I didn’t have time for a complete update on the foreign relations picture out here. Could you give me a little detail on this Jung Association? Am I correct in remembering that it’s a multi-system Rogue World polity?”
“Pocket empire, more like,” McIlheny said. “These three systems—“ three closely-clustered amber lights flashed “—and two treaty dependencies, MaGuire and Wotan.” Two more lights blinked. “When the Lizards blitzed the old Terran League, a League Fleet commander—a Commodore Wanda Jung—managed to hold Mithra, Artemis, and Madrigal. The Lizards never even got their toenails into them,” he added with grudging respect, “and for somebody their size, they still pack a lot of firepower. All three of their main systems have Core World population levels—about four billion on Mithra, I believe—and they’re very heavily industrialized. Until we got ourselves organized, they and El Greco were the major human power bases out here.”
The inspector nodded, and McIlheny returned to his original point.
“At any rate, what with the Rogue World odds and sods left over from the League and the proximity of the Rishathan Sphere, the Crown decided Governor Treadwell might need a big stick, so the Franconian Fleet District is unusually powerful. Soissons is very heavily fortified, and Admiral Gomez commands three full battle squadrons, with appropriate supporting elements, which one should think ought to have been enough to prevent things like this.”
He paused, brooding over his display’s crimson cursors, then sighed.
“What we seem to have here is a highly unusual bunch of pirates. We’ve always had some in the marches, of course. There are so many single-system Rogue Worlds out here the mercenary business is fairly lucrative; some of them go wolf’s-head from time to time, and we’ve had the odd hijacker outfit get too big for its vac suits, but most of them raid commercial traffic after the freighters go intra-systemic. Even the occasional bunch idiotic enough to hit a planet are usually smart enough to avoid wholesale slaughter rather than force the Fleet to go after them in strength. More than that, most of them don’t have anywhere near the firepower to mount a planet-sized raid.
“This bunch has the firepower, and there’s something really sick about them. They come barreling in, take out the starcom, then send down their shuttles to take everything. Usually, pirates stick to low-bulk, high-value cargoes, grab whatever’s handiest, and pull out; these bastards steal anything that isn’t nailed down. Power receptors, hospital equipment, satellite communication gear, machine tools, precious metals, luxury export items . . . it’s like they have a shopping list of every item of value on the planet.
“Worse than that, they don’t care who they kill. In fact, they seem to enjoy killing, and if their window’s big enough, they take their time about it.” McIlheny’s face was grim. “This is the worst raid yet, but Brigadoon was almost as bad. I doubt we’d’ve had any survivors at all from Mathison’s if not for Gryphon, and her presence was a total fluke. Her skipper isn’t even assigned to Admiral Gomez—he was just passing through on his way to Trianon and decided to stop off at Mathison’s to pay his respects to Governor Brno. She’d been his first CO, and since a lot of his crew were fairly green and he was well ahead of schedule, he thought he’d surprise her wi
th a visit and kill a few days on sublight maneuvers. He was two days into them, well outside the outermost planet, when the raiders took out the governor’s residence, but she knew he was out there and got off a sublight message and fired out her SLAM drone before they killed her. The bastards caught the drone before it wormholed, but Commander Perez picked up the message—after a six-hour transmission delay—and went to maximum emergency power on his Fasset drive. He was well over drive mass redline, and it seems clear he came whooping in on them long before they expected anyone to turn up.”
“In a destroyer?” Keita’s was exactly the harsh, gravelly voice one might have expected. “That took guts.”
“He may not’ve been assigned here, sir, but Commander Perez had done his intelligence homework. He knew about the raids—and that we haven’t been able to get a sensor reading on any of their units. Analysis suggests they must have at least a few capital ships, and if we knew who’d built them we might be able to figure out where the raiders originated. He also knew the governor’s drone hadn’t made it out, and he had three SLAM drones of his own.”
“Which,” Ben Belkassem murmured, “is presumably why they didn’t just polish Gryphon off and get on with their business?”
“We believe so,” McIlheny agreed, upgrading his opinion of the inspector slightly.
“Continue, Colonel,’ Keita said.
“Actually, there’s not a lot more to say about their operational patterns, sir. Even with her Fleet strength, Admiral Gomez doesn’t have the ships to cover this volume of space effectively. We’ve tried picketing more likely target systems with corvettes, but they don’t have the firepower or speed to deal with whoever these people are, and they only carry a single SLAM drone each. We had a picket at Brigadoon, but the raiders either took her out before she got her drone off, or else nailed it before it wormholed. Either way, she wasn’t able to get her report to us, and Admiral Gomez isn’t happy about ‘staking out more goats for the tigers,’ as she puts it.”
“Don’t blame her.” Keita shook himself like an Old Earth bear. “No commander likes throwing away his people for no return.”
“Exactly. We’re trying to find some pattern that’ll let us put heavier forces in likely target systems, but no matter where we put them, the raiders always hit somewhere else.” McIlheny glared at the display again.
“Do they, now?” Ben Belkassem said softly. “I’d say that’s a pattern right there, Colonel.”
“I don’t like what you’re suggesting, Inspector,” Keita growled, and Ben Belkassem shrugged.
“Nonetheless, sir, four straight hits without any interception aside from one corvette—destroyed without getting out a contact message—and a destroyer with no official business in the vicinity, stretches well beyond the limits of probability. Unless we wish to assume the raiders are clairvoyant.”
“I resent that, Inspector.” The edge in McIlheny’s quiet voice was sharp enough to suggest he’d considered the same possibility.
“I name no names, Colonel,” Ben Belkassem replied mildly, “but logic suggests they must be getting inside information from someone. Which,” his own voice hardened just a bit, “is why I am here.”
McIlheny started to retort sharply, then pressed his lips together and sat back in his chair, eyes narrowed. Ben Belkassem nodded.
“Precisely. His Majesty has expressed personal concern to Minister of Justice Cortez. Justice has no desire to step on the military’s toes, but if someone is passing information to these pirates, His Majesty wishes him identified and stopped. And, with all due respect, you may be a bit too deep into the trees to see the forest.”
McIlheny’s face darkened, and the inspector raised a placating hand.
“Please, Colonel, I mean no disrespect. Your record is outstanding, and I’m certain you’re checking your internal security closely, but if the hare is running with the hounds, so to speak, an external viewpoint may be exactly what you need. And,” he smiled with genuine humor for the first time, “your people are bound to see me as an interloper. They’ll resent me whatever I do or don’t do, which means I can be as rude and insulting as I like without damaging your working relationships with them.”
The colonel’s eyes widened, and Keita gave a bark of laughter.
“He’s got you there, McIlheny! I was going to suggest I might help you out the same way, but damned if I wouldn’t rather let the inspector take the heat. I may have to work with some of your people in the future.”
“I . . . see.” McIlheny rubbed a fingertip on the table, then raised it and inspected it as if for dust. “Are you suggesting, Inspector, that I should simply hand my internal security responsibilities over to your”
“Of course not—and if I did, you’d be perfectly justified in kicking me clear back to Old Earth,” Ben Belkassem said cheerfully. “It’s your shop. You’re the proper person to run it, and your people know you’ll have to be looking very closely for possible leaks. They’ll expect a certain amount of that, and I couldn’t simply take over without undercutting your authority. I’d say your chances of finding whoever it is are probably about as good as mine, but if I stick in my oar in the role of an officious, pig-headed, empire-building interloper—a part, may I add, I play quite well—I can do a lot of your dirty work for you. Just tell them Justice has stuck you with an asshole from Intelligence Branch and leave the rest to me. Who knows? Even if I don’t find a thing, I may just scare our hare into the open for you.”
“I see.” McIlheny examined Ben Belkassem’s face intently. The inspector had placed an unerring finger on his own most private—and darkest—fear, and he was right. An outsider could play grand inquisitor without the devastating effect an internal witch hunt might produce.
“All right, Inspector, I may take you up on that. Let me run it by Admiral Gomez first, though.” Ben Belkassem nodded, and the colonel frowned.
“Actually, something we hit here on Mathison’s leaves me more inclined to think you have a point than I would’ve been,” he admitted unhappily.
The inspector quirked an eyebrow, but the colonel turned to Keita.
“We owe it to your Captain DeVries, Sir Arthur. I’m sure you’ve read my initial report on the affair at the DeVries Claim?”
“I have,” Keita said dryly. “Countess Miller personally starcommed it to me before her henchmen shoved me aboard Banshee and slammed the hatch.”
McIlheny blinked. He’d expected his report to make waves, but he hadn’t anticipated that the Minister of War herself might get involved.
“At any rate,” he shook himself back to the affair at hand, “we still haven’t been able to figure out how she happened to survive, and I’m afraid she’s a bit . . . well—“ He broke off uncomfortably, and Keita sighed.
“I said I’ve read the report, Colonel. The questions you raised are the main reason I got sent along with Major Gateau’s medical team, and I understand about Ali—Captain DeVries’ . . . mental state.” He closed his eyes briefly, as if in pain, then nodded again. “Go on, Colonel.”
“Yes, sir. We got a couple of intelligence breaks out of it. For one thing, she’s been able to identify the assault shuttles—or, at least one type of shuttle—these bastards are using. It was one of the old Leopard-class boats, which is the first hard ID we’ve gotten, since none of the other survivors who actually saw the shuttles were military types. A Leopard tends to confirm that we’re dealing with at least one capital ship, of course, but Fleet dumped so many of them on the surplus market when the Bengals came in that anyone could have snapped them up. We’re running searches on the disposal records to see if anyone out this way was stupid enough to buy up a clutch of them and leave us a paper trail, but I’m not very optimistic.
“But, more importantly, she took out the entire crew of the shuttle which went after her family. We’ve picked up a few dead pirates before, but they never told us much. Whoever’s running them sanitizes his troops pretty carefully, and we haven’t had a lot to go on fo
r IDs, aside from the obvious fact that they’ve all been human. In this case, however, she nailed the assault team commander. He didn’t have much on him, either, but we ran his retinal and genetic patterns and got a direct hit.”
He still wore his synth link headset, and the star map disappeared, replaced by an unfamiliar red-haired man in a very familiar uniform.
“Lieutenant Albert Singh, gentlemen.” McIlheny’s voice was light; his expression was not.
“An Imperial Fleet officer?!” Keita exploded. The colonel nodded, and Keita glared at the holo, teeth bared. Even Ben Belkassem seemed shocked.
“An Imperial Fleet officer. I don’t have his complete dossier yet, but what I’ve seen so far looks clean—except for the fact that Lieutenant Singh has now died twice: once from a fourteen-millimeter slug through the spine, and once in a shuttle accident in the Holderman Sector.”
“Vishnu!” Keita muttered. One large, hairy hand clenched into a fist and thumped the table gently. “How long ago?”
“Over two years,” McIlheny said, and glanced at Ben Belkassem. “Which, I very much fear, lends point to your suggestion that there has to be someone—possibly several someones—on the inside, Inspector. That shuttle accident happened, all right, but when I poked a bit deeper, I found something very interesting. Singh’s personnel jacket says he was aboard it and killed, but the original passenger manifest for the shuttle—which was, indeed, lost with all hands—doesn’t include his name. Someone between then and now, someone with access to Fleet personnel records added him to it as far as his jacket was concerned, which gave him a nice, clean termination and erased him from our active data base.”