The Ruins of Karzelek (The Mandrake Company series Book 4) Read online

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  “Uhhh,” Striker said, “does anyone else feel like they just learned way more about their intelligence officer than they wanted to know?”

  Tick made a vaguely disgusted face. “Yes.”

  Ms. Blackwell’s face wasn’t quite so easy to read, but, curse his outstanding mastery of that intelligence officer training course on body language, she wasn’t intrigued or sympathetic. She merely appeared uncomfortable at this sharing of knowledge.

  Sedge slumped back in the seat and reached for his harness. Maybe it wasn’t too late to hide in the weapons locker after all. He stared straight ahead, avoiding all eye contact until the ship took off, Striker and Tick returned to their game, and Ms. Blackwell lowered her chin to focus on her tablet again.

  “Approximately forty-seven minutes until our landing spot,” Thatcher said after they had cleared the boulder field and were skimming the surface of the planet.

  Darkness had fallen during his briefing, not that there was much to see out there. Sedge’s interest in the planet lay beneath the surface.

  Reminded of his desire to find out more from Ms. Blackwell, he risked a glance at her. He thought she might be studying the plans of the base or be engrossed in some historical text, but she was poking at tiles with letters and parts of patterns shaded on them in gray and green. He recognized the game, having played it often with other linguistics students at the academy. He had even won a tournament there.

  “Crucible?” he asked.

  “Yes,” Ms. Blackwell said without looking up. She waved a finger through the air, pushing one of her tiles onto the top of the three-dimensional board, making four new words.

  “Good move. Although, if you consider the Q there, the two new words you would make would gain you more points, and you’d also block your opponent’s access point to the top of the pyramid bonus.”

  Ms. Blackwell’s expression wasn’t as grateful as he had hoped. She leveled a cool stare at him. “I don’t need help.”

  “Pardon me.” Maybe he should be studying the base plans. He had a feeling he was on the verge of being categorized as persona non grata for her.

  “If you think you’re so smart, why don’t you start your own game with me?”

  Sedge straightened. Had she just invited him to play her? She had.

  “I would be delighted to,” he said.

  Only after he spoke did he catch Val looking back at him and shaking her head in some warning. Belatedly, it occurred to him that he might have accepted a challenge that could not be won. If he beat their new employer, she might be irked with him when they were trying to gain her favor and win a contract. If he lost to her, she might think him an idiot, not capable of the job she was contemplating hiring the mercenaries for.

  He opened his mouth, about to rescind his acceptance, but she had already jabbed the “New Game” button and typed in Sedgwick. Well, at least she hadn’t entered Sniffles.

  “‘Nothing reveals humanity so well as the games it plays,’” Ms. Blackwell said, a challenge in her eyes.

  “David Hartley,” Sedge said.

  “What kind of mercenary knows Old Earth scientists and philosophers?” she asked.

  “The kind who spent a lot of time hiding from bullies in the library as a kid,” Striker said. “In fact, he does that on the Albatross too.”

  Sedge ignored him and pointed at his name on the display next to his side of the board. “You can call me Sedge,” he said. He offered a hopeful smile. Maybe she would invite him to use her first name. Kalish, the game had automatically filled in, but he wouldn’t presume.

  “You can call me Kalish,” she said, sticking out her hand.

  He clasped it, excited that she was not only talking to him but had offered this challenge. He probably shouldn’t have noticed the pleasant feel of her warm, smooth hand in his. He definitely shouldn’t have noticed the way some of her tiny braids of hair had fallen forward, tracing the outline of her breast.

  She added, “If you win,” and it broke the spell.

  Sedge let his hand fall away. Up front, Val sighed and returned her focus to the view screen and the dark boulders drifting past below them. He ought to throw the game, let their employer win. What kind of employer wanted to be bested by one of the scruffy mercenaries she had hired? But there was a prize dangling above the board game now, one that tempted him more than honor or pride. Her first name. He decided to use it in his mind, even if he hadn’t yet earned the right to say it out loud.

  Kalish took an early lead in their game, surprising him. It must be that her close presence, her shoulder barely an inch from his own, was distracting him. He noticed that she didn’t wear any perfume or scented shampoo, something he found quite appealing since his senses so often reacted poorly to artificial odors. Despite the lack of artifice, she did smell clean and... nice.

  Realizing he was more than thirty points behind, Sedge centered his focus on the game. He took a few extra moments to study his options, then dropped a J onto the long side of the pile, forming a sun pattern and three new words. He kept his smile to himself, though the move made him proud.

  Kalish glowered and said nothing. He was three points ahead now.

  Perhaps it was just as well that there wasn’t time to complete the game before Thatcher guided the shuttle into a cave.

  “We’ll finish this later,” Kalish said and snapped the tablet shut. Too bad it sounded more like some tedious chore that she had to return to rather than a game. He was enjoying himself.

  “We may have a problem,” Thatcher announced.

  “What is it?” Sedge unfastened his harness and jogged to the cockpit, kneeling between Val and Thatcher.

  “There are detector robots flying in a grid all around the complex. They were either too small for the satellite to pick up, or they’re cloaked in sensor-blocking armor.” Thatcher scratched his jaw thoughtfully. He had already killed all power except for the auxiliary lights and a few displays on the panel as well as the view screen itself. Most likely in an attempt to reduce their power signature, so the shuttle wouldn’t be detected. “If so, this is far more advanced security technology than we were led to believe this compound had.” He looked back at Kalish.

  She walked up to stand behind Val’s seat, her frown dark as she stared at the instruments. Thatcher pointed at a couple of dashes of white on his sensor panel. One was floating along, paralleling the distant wall of the complex, but another was drifting toward the butte the shuttle was hiding in.

  “Do you have any way to scramble their systems, Thomlin?” Thatcher asked.

  Sedge already had his tablet out, tying it into the shuttle’s sensors to get a reading on what they were dealing with. The flying robot was even more modern than Thatcher had implied, a unit not widely on the shelves yet. Sedge had read about them only recently making appearances at security demonstrations.

  “Not a Mig 3500,” he said. “Not on a minute’s notice. Maybe if I had a couple of days.”

  He called upon the network, trying to download information, but they were weeks out from the core of the system, and communications were about as speedy as sending messages by carrier pigeon.

  “We don’t have days.” Val leaned forward, squinting into the gloom in front of the cave the shuttle had backed into. “That dot is coming our way.”

  “Have to blow it up before it reports back,” Striker said.

  Sedge frowned. “That would be as telling as simply letting it report. Is it too late to abort? Slip away before it identifies us?”

  Kalish’s fingers dug into the back of Val’s chair. “We’re not aborting. Blow it up. They won’t know for sure what happened. It could have smashed against a boulder and knocked itself out.”

  Sedge bit his tongue to keep from saying how unlikely it was that even an older model of detector would make that mistake.

  The hatch seal hissed, and Striker and Tick jogged out into the dark cave with their rifles and explosives before Sedge could offer up a better solution.
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  “That’s disturbing,” Tick’s voice came over the comm. The beams of the two men’s flashlights grew visible on the shuttle’s view screen. They crossed to focus on something lumpy on the ground.

  “I’ll say.” Striker made a disgusted sound.

  “What is it?” Thatcher asked.

  “Animal scat, sir,” Tick said. “A big pile. Definitely from a predator. Looks like this planet has some more substantial critters than those little lizards we saw today.”

  “Noted. Focus on the drone, please.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “There it is.” Val pointed.

  A dark disk floated in the night air at the mouth of the cave, a few red dots blinking along its rim. A second later, two crimson beams shot out from beside the shuttle. The disk jerked in the air, spinning away. An impressive amount of shielding kept it from exploding outright. Striker and Tick charged after it, still firing, focusing their beams on it. It sped out of the cave, but just before it escaped sight, it blew up in a ball of fiery orange that lit up the boulders and dust. Blackened shrapnel flew away. Then the flames died out, leaving nothing but the night sky.

  “There’s no way that would have happened if it had simply run into a cliff,” Sedge said.

  Kalish frowned at him again, and he wished he hadn’t made the observation.

  “No,” Thatcher agreed, standing. “We’re dealing with more modern defenses than we were led to believe. Ms. Blackwell, do you wish us to go in anyway?”

  “Yes.”

  Chapter 2

  Kalish eyed the watchtowers along the dark wall ahead of them, the stars and the nebula filling the sky behind it. Lights glowed in those watchtowers, and men occasionally moved behind the windows. She tried to reassure herself by noting the large distance of unguarded wall between each tower. The compound was immense, with room for a shipyard, refineries, and giant warehouses as well as barracks and administration buildings. Even if people were standing guard in the towers, they should be bored, reading books or playing games on their tablets.

  Unless they were on high alert, thanks to the random explosion of one of their roaming detectors...

  Kalish felt vulnerable as she and the mercenaries jogged across the packed earth. The half mile around the walls had been cleared of rocks, cactus, and whatever else might have once occupied the area. Even with darkness shadowing the field, she feared the team would be easy for those in the towers to spot. Thatcher carried some sensor-scrambling shield that was supposed to blanket all of them from security devices, but that technology wouldn’t hide them from the human eye. Still, the mercenaries seemed to believe in it, because they stayed close together, nearly shoulder to shoulder as they ran.

  Kalish ran at Thomlin’s shoulder—or Sedge’s shoulder, she supposed it was, since he had offered her his first name. She was not sure yet she wanted to think of him as anything other than one of the mercenaries, another lieutenant so-and-so. His burbling of personal information had left her feeling awkward and uncomfortable. Who met a person for the first time, then started babbling about his premature birth? What an odd man.

  A dog barked inside the compound.

  “Looks like we’re dealing with some low-tech security too,” Striker whispered.

  “No blowing up any dogs,” Tick told him.

  “Wasn’t planning on it. I like dogs. Got one with cyborg parts in one of my earlier comic strips. He’s practically the hero of the whole story.”

  “Not now, Striker,” Tick said. “We’re almost there.”

  Thatcher veered, heading for a particular section of the wall. There weren’t any gates or other entrances along this stretch, but Kalish had not expected to stroll in through a door anyway. She had brought booster frames for her boots, and the mercenaries all had something similar. Everyone had donned them before heading across the field.

  Thatcher touched Kalish’s shoulder, pointed upward, then did the same to Tick and Sedge. Time to get serious.

  Kalish would have gone first—it was her mission after all—but she admitted a modicum of relief when the men activated their boots and drifted upward ahead of her. The jet boosters issued a faint hiss, but it shouldn’t be audible over the constant whistle of the wind gusting across the open field. Somewhere inside, an open door banged against a wall. She hoped that was a sign that most of the people were sleeping or busy down in the mines, and nobody was around to hear noises.

  When she reached the top of the twenty-foot wall, Kalish caught the lip at the same time as she turned off the boots. She came down on a wide parapet, almost landing on an unconscious man. She clamped her mouth shut before a startled gasp could escape.

  One of the men touched her shoulder, waving her down into the shadows of the low wall beside the walkway.

  “Ran right into that one,” Tick whispered. “He almost got to be a hero for his people. But I knocked him down and gave him a shot.” He waved a medical injector, the kind with multiple charges held in the handle, its silhouette visible against the lights in the courtyard. In addition to lamps glowing at the corners of intersections and on buildings, automated mining carts full of ore rolled along tracks, headlights gleaming at the front of each little train. “He’ll be out for an hour. That long enough? The captain said not to kill people down here if we didn’t have to, but we can hoist him over the side and let him accidentally break something vital if we have to.”

  Something vital? Like what? A neck? Kalish shook her head, then realized he wouldn’t see the gesture in the dark. “An hour should be fine. We need to go that way.”

  “Yup, saw the map,” Tick said. “Follow me down.”

  Sedge waved for her to go down first. He hadn’t said a word to her since they had left the shuttle. Maybe he had realized he had said far too many words to her inside. Although she supposed that under other circumstances she wouldn’t have minded listening to him talk. He seemed pleasant enough, and she ought to try to gain a good standing with these men. Their job was to keep her alive, but if she irked them, they might decide the money wasn’t worth it and leave her to deal with her problems on her own. Maybe she shouldn’t have glowered at Sedge so much during their word game. She had never been a good loser, and it would grate even more to lose to some... smudgy mercenary. Even if he was an educated smudgy mercenary.

  Tick walked openly past a train of mine carts—they must not have a security purpose or the means to notice intruders—then waved for them to follow him into the shadows between a smelter and another brick building, this one without chimneys. He wore a sensor over one eye and was receiving readings that she and Sedge were not.

  They had no sooner flattened their backs to a cool corrugated metal wall than a door slammed open. Two men stalked out in the middle of a conversation.

  “Round up some workers. Get the lights on around the warehouses.”

  “I was on shift in the control room earlier. Didn’t hear anything about any ships coming into orbit.”

  Kalish didn’t breathe as the pair of men strode past the mouth of their alley.

  “Not openly,” the first speaker said. “Wouldn’t be the first time someone’s used the nebula to sneak up on us from the other side of the planet. Go, hurry up. I have to check on that missing detector.”

  “Dumb of the company to put a mine next to a nebula.”

  His buddy grunted. “Right, they should have picked a more conveniently located barren rock. Don’t matter whether there’s ore or not.”

  “You know what I mean.”

  The rumble of another train of carts drowned out the rest of the conversation. The men had moved out of sight, so Kalish wouldn’t have heard much more anyway. Any thoughts she’d had of slipping in and out without being noticed had been thoroughly dashed at this point. She hoped they could still get to the maps.

  Tick led them back out onto the street, though he hugged the shadows alongside the buildings, something that grew harder a moment later when floodlights came on. Most of the illumination orig
inated on the other side of the compound—as Sedge had suggested, the miners seemed intent on guarding their vaults of metals over anything else—but their brightness stole shadows from all over the place. Kalish imagined the brilliant bank of lights being visible from space.

  They rounded a corner, and she paused to gape at a massive hole in the ground that took up the back third of the complex. Wooden platforms extended out over it in places, each holding several compact mining ships, most with huge cylindrical drill heads on the noses. The rails those carts had been following originated on one side of the hole, and even as she watched, another train rolled into view, laden with freshly blasted ore.

  “That’s a powerful big hole, isn’t it?” Tick whispered. “Bet the whole Albatross could fly down there.”

  “I told you the caverns were extensive,” Sedge whispered.

  “I didn’t doubt you. Is that the only way in?”

  “There are supposed to be some natural cave entrances here and there around the planet,” Kalish whispered. She almost added that she had been searching for ones large enough to fly their shuttles in before remembering that she wasn’t planning to tell them about Stage Two yet.