The Court of a Thousand Suns (Sten #3). Allan Cole

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Название The Court of a Thousand Suns (Sten #3)
Автор произведения Allan Cole
Жанр Научная фантастика
Серия
Издательство Научная фантастика
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781434439024



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perfumed colors. They lived only a few short months, and during that time it was all loving and sexual intensity. If a Milchen male pair was fortunate, it might enjoy two or three such relationships in its lifetime. Out of each bonding came a “male” pair and half-a-dozen dormant Ursoolas. The mother would whisper a few last loving words to her broodsac and then die, leaving the care of the young to the father pair.

      For the Milchen, life was a never-ending breeding-cycle tragedy, that bred the kind of loneliness that can kill a loving race. And so they evolved the only system open to them — same-sex bonding. Like most of their people, Marr and Senn were passionately devoted to each other, and to all other things of beauty.

      They were slender creatures, a meter or so high, and covered with a downy, golden fur. They had enormous liquid-black eyes that enjoyed twice the spectrum of a human’s. Their heads were graced with sensitive smelling antennae that could also caress like a feather. Their small monkeylike hands contained the Empire’s most sensitive taste buds, and were largely the reason for Milchen’s being among the Empire’s greatest chefs. The Eternal Emperor himself grudgingly admitted they surpassed all other races in the preparation of fine meals. Except, of course, for chili.

      The two Milchen cuddled closer and drank in the ultimate spectacle that was Empire Day. Busybodies that the Milchen were, the beings around them were at least as interesting to them as the Imperial display.

      Marr’s eyes swept the VIP boxes. “Everyone, but everyone is here.”

      “I noticed,” Senn sniffed. “Including a few who ought not to be.”

      He pointed to a box across from them as an example — the box that held Kai Hakone and his party. “After the reviews of his last masque, I don’t know how he can even hold up his pâté in public.”

      Marr giggled. “I know. Isn’t it delicious? And the silly fool is such a bore, he even agreed to be the guest of honor at our party.”

      Senn snuggled closer in delight. “I can hardly wait! The blood will flow, flow, flow.”

      Marr gave his pairmate a suspicious look. “What did you do, Senn? Or dare I ask?”

      Senn laughed. “I also invited his critics.”

      “And?”

      “They were delighted. They’ll all be there.”

      The two chuckled over their evil little joke, and glanced at Hakone again, wondering if he suspected what was in store for him in a few short days.

      * * * *

      Marr and Senn would have been disappointed. Kai Hakone, a man some people called the greatest author of his day — and others the greatest hack — wasn’t even thinking of the party.

      Around him were a dozen or more fans, all very rich and very fawning. A constant stream of exotic dishes and drinks flowed in and out of the box. But it was hardly a party. Even before the celebration had begun, everyone had realized that Hakone was in “one of those moods.” And so the conversation was subdued, and there were many nervous glances at the brooding master, an enormous man with unfashionably bulging muscles, a thick shock of unruly hair, heavy eyebrows, and deep-set eyes.

      Hakone’s gut was tightening, his every muscle was tense, and he was perspiring heavily. His mind and mood were ricocheting wildly. Everything is ready, he would think one minute, and his spirits would soar. But what if there’s a mistake? Gloom would descend. What has been left undone? I should have done that myself. I shouldn’t have let them do it. I should have done it.

      And on and on, as he went over and over each detail of the plan. Thunder arose from the crowd as another spectacular event crashed to its conclusion; Kai Hakone barely heard it. He touched his hands together a few times, pretending to join in the applause. But his mind churned on with constantly changing images of death.

      * * * *

      The last of the marching bands and dancers cleared the field, and the crowd slowly chattered its way into semisilence.

      Two huge gravsleds whined through the end gates — gravsleds loaded with steel shrouding, lifting blocks, and ropes. They hummed slowly down the field, each only a meter from the ground, halting at frequent intervals. At each pause, sweating fatigue-clad soldiers jumped off the sleds and unloaded some of the shrouding or blocks. Ropes and cables were piled beside each assemblage. By the time the gravsled stopped next to the Imperial reviewing stand, the long field looked as if a child had scattered his building blocks across it. Or, as was the case, an obstacle course had been improvised.

      As the sleds lifted up over the castle itself, two large targets — solid steel backing, plus three-meter-thick padding — were lowered from the castle walls to dangle 400 meters above the field. Then six bands marched in through gates and blasted into sound. Some military-trivia types knew the tune was the official Imperial Artillery marching song, but none of them knew the tune itself was an old, bawdy song sometimes titled “Cannoneers have Hairy Ears.”

      Two smaller gravsleds then entered the parade ground through the gates. Each carried twenty beings and a cannon. The cannons weren’t the gigantic combat masers or the small but highly lethal laserblasts the Imperial Artillery actually used. The wheeled cannons — mountain guns — were only slightly less ancient than the black-powder, muzzle-loading cannons staring down from the battlements.

      After the forty men had unloaded the two mountain guns, they doubled into formation and froze. The leader of each group snapped to a salute and held it as a gunpowder weapon on the castle battlements boomed and a white cloud spread over the parade ground. Then the forty cannoneers began.

      The event was variously called “artillery competition.” “cannon carry,” or “impressive silliness.” The object of the competition between the two teams was fairly simple. Each team was to maneuver one mountain gun from where it sat, through the obstacles, to a site near the Imperial stand. There it was to be loaded, aimed at one of the targets, and fired. The first team to complete the exercise and strike the target won.

      No antigrav devices were allowed, nor was it permitted to run around the obstacles. Instead, each gun had to be disassembled and then carried/hoisted/levered/thrown over the blocks. The competition required gymnastic skills. Since each team was moving somewhat over a thousand kilograms of metal, the chances of crushed body parts was very high. Nevertheless, qualification for the Cannon Carry Teams was intense among Imperial Artillerymen.

      That year the competition was of particular interest; for the first time the finals were not between two of the Guards Divisions. Instead, one team of nonhumans, from the XVIII Planetary Landing Force, would challenge the top-ranked men and women of the Third Guards Division.

      Another reason for spectator interest, of course, was that the cannon carry was one Empire Day event that could be bet on. Official odds were unusual: eight to five in favor of the Third Guards. However, actual betting ran somewhat differently. Prime World humans felt that the nonhumans, the N’Ranya, were underdogs, and preferred to invest their credits accordingly. Non-humanoids felt somewhat differently, preferring to back the favorites.

      Sometimes the gods backed the sentimental. The N’Ranya were somewhat anthropoidal and weighed in at about 300 kilos apiece. Plus, their race, having developed as tree-dwelling carnivores on a jungle world, had an instinctual eye for geometry and trigonometry.

      Working against the N’Ranya was a long tradition of How a Cannon Carry Should Work. The drill went as follows for the Guardsmen: The gun captain took the sight off, doubled to the first obstacle. Waiting for him there were two men who’d already secured the gun’s aiming stakes. They literally pitched the gun captain and sight to the top of the wall. He helped his two men up, then went on toward the second obstacle.

      By this time the gun had been disassembled into barrel/ trail/carriage/recoil mechanism and was at the foot of that wall. Ropes were thrown to the first two men, and they became human pulleys and the guns went up the wall. Other men free-scaled that wall, grabbed the guns, and eased them down to the other side.

      The N’Ranya,