Re: (TGG) The Cardinal Files: An Inside Job.
Posted: 2009-09-02 01:08am
Chapter Twenty-one: The only mercy left.
authored by Marina and Christopher Purnell.
Pavel Yeremeyev’s Yacht,
In deep space.
For Isabella Sanchez, consciousness resolved only slowly, and when it did it showed her the familiar form of Sophia… But now dressed, not undressed, and in the dull black and sharply modest clothes which were, indeed, the stereotypical style of female Evidenzburo agents. She had been dragged up onto the bed in the master bedroom before waking, and Sophia sat on the edge, a plasma pistol in her lap with her right hand resting on it.
The situation slowly settled on Isabella, and a wave of anger and revulsion swept over her. The agent hardly needed to be a telepath to see her tense up, or spear Sophia with a look that combined shock, betrayal, and outrage. But before she spoke she thought better, and shook her head sadly. "So stupid... I let myself be led around by you because you slept with me, just like a man would. You used me the way you used Pavel." She smiled thinly, an edge of grim humor coming to her. "I feel sorry for the old pirate. Are you going to kill me the way you killed him?"
"No," Sophia laughed. "Because I haven't killed Pavel Yeremeyev. I carried him up to the Grom Pobedy in the yacht’s escape pod," she gestured to the hatch. "Since I did, after all, need a suitable distraction to keep your strike team from blowing the yacht out of the stars when we escaped. And yes, we’re in hyper and well beyond pursuit now, Isabella, and Pavel Yeremeyev is free to return home… And stop the invasion of Vladimir. So as you can see he was worth much more to me alive than dead."
"Nearly killed myself dragging him here from the banya, though. Would have, except I've already blown my heart up with drugs in the service of His Majesty, so the artificial one is rather tougher than the original. Sorry, Isabella. For what it's worth I genuinely wish you'd just chosen to be another quietly happy belter sapphist, instead of making it all political."
"Repressed my behavior and beliefs to fit in with the sour old men and priests who rule over us, you mean." Isabella shook her head, marvelling in some ways at the brilliance and cunning of the woman across from her, who could have been so much… And had instead been subordinated into an agent of oppression. "Why should we belters be ruled over by people who don't understand us, never will, and actively consider us all deviants and perverts? Why should we have to kowtow to their stupid mores and medieval codes of behavior, that they flout anyway? The Empire is an empire of hypocrisy draining out the life of its people, and I couldn't sit idly by why it does that to the people I love. Better an honest revolutionary than a hypocritical police agent. You enjoyed every minute of it… Sophia."
“I'm not hypocritical," Sophia answered with an amused snort. "Because I'm not a belter. I was born on a Bogumil world and adopted by a sergeant in the force that liberated us from their tyranny. I was raised on a humble Croat farming colony by my adoptive family, we didn't even get a computer until I was nearly a teenager. I still make the most on my rather modest civil service salary out of that of the entire family, and we've never even had a commissioned officer in our family line. I'm just... Good at giving empathy to peoples of deviant sexuality, I suppose."
Isabella stuck out her tongue and made a lewd wriggling motion with it. "Deviant, hah. You took to it as naturally as a fish to freefall. And how many Imperial nobles keep a mistress on the side, while their wives keep close to each other, and how many officers are fucking their comrades? We belters are just honest about biology, and there is no objective standard to call me wrong in how I live my life. And if the Empire does truly, truly believe that everyone who doesn't fit their one man, one woman, in marriage standard is going to burn in hell, how can it ask you to go out and endanger your soul, and entrap other people?" She laughed, bitterly. 'It can because it wants to retain power, to maintain the privilege of the aristocracy. All the religious cloaking just hides that fact."
Sophia’s eyes wavered for a sad moment, and she indulged the impulse to continue the debate. What was coming, afer all, was if it worked going to keep Isabella from holding a coherent debate ever again. "Isabella, I wear goat hair shirts and rocks in my shoes when I return from missions. My penance is to medieval levels, because I am a sincere believer in the Lord God. I simply have the unique talent to... Enjoy everything that anyone else would enjoy. I have put it to good use, so that my nieces and nephews will always be safe and free from fear to live the lives they deserve."
"So what does it say about your superiors that they sanction your sins?" She shook her head, sadly. "And suppose your niece wants to be more than a broodmare, or one of your nephews is a homosexual? Where's the room for safety and happiness for them in the society you defend? Or would they deserve to be stricken down by God for the so-called flaws they were born with?"
“I don't presume to question the divine mysteries of God," Sophia answered as her eyes hardened again, but only for a moment. "As doubtless strange as this is for you to swallow out of an Imperial agent, I try to go through life hurting as few people as I can, and making as many happy as I can. I don't like to leave strife and suffering in my wake, if it can be avoided in the service of His Majesty. As it happens, for you, I would seek to keep you from the gallow’s if I may."
“There’s no way you could stop me,” Isabella answered sharply. “I’ll at least be a martyr for my cause.”
“A martyr with no afterlife…” Sophia turned away for a moment and shrugged. “I will not give up so easily.”
“If you truly care about me,” Isabella thought better of lunging, realizing the true capabilities of the woman before her were likely barely pressed if she’d managed to actually carry Yeremeyev at twice her weight through the snow. “Then sleep with me again before we arrive in Imperial space. The priests can just wash the sin away from you, and…”
Sophia flushed and smiled almost fondly. “Tempting, but even I don’t have that long of a leash. And what I definitely have none of, is a cavalier attitude about confession. The Devil may have tempted greater people than I, but lesser than I have resisted him, too.”
Isabella laughed dismissively at the religious words. “You’re educated, and you know at heart, I’m sure, how much nonsense that is. And it seems you can't deny that we belters are right about sex, can you? That it is wonderful and healthy, nothing mystical about it, positive feelings and personal bonding. And from that you can see the Empire isn't suited to ruling over us. That it's stifling and pays no attention to the realities of our people. That's why I'm justified. Please... see reason. You can still cast off those superiors who are using you this way. You can join us, for real, and we can make a change for the better."
"I lived with a girl for a year in the Alliance," Sophia answered rather quietly, "And we were engaged to be married when I disappeared, carrying with me about every single bit of de-classified information on their society which I could manage, when the Empire first contacted them. Her name is Contessa, and, in this strange way, I do hope she's found someone else, and doesn't wonder what's happened to me anymore. But it isn't becaue I am like you," Sophia answered. "Emotions are just energy produced by our bodies. You should be able to resist it ably enough.. But I understand not wanting to. Thus the offer. I understand happiness, for all that I admire the strength of the monks and nuns I can never match. Sex does seem to please most people, but, ah, I've never been interested in it, myself. It’s just easy for me to pretend.”
"You don't have anything that makes your life worth living for its own sake, do you?" Isabella laughed, sharply. "Religion, that's the ultimate expression of just living by someone else's rules, justified because they say so. Blind defense of the society you were raised in. Unfortunately we belters don't have your chameleon skills." She gave Sophia a smoldering look. "For someone so puritanical I've never had anyone eat me out as well as you did, and I loved it, and you orgasmed rather nicely yourself…”
"Let's see if you're still interested after I tell you why," Sophia answered, and turned back to levelly face Isabella, with the plasma pistol still easily in her lap. "I'm a telempath, and a P-5. One of the most powerful telepaths in the Empire, certainly; but also, as a telempath, someone who is locked in a permanent feedback cycle of emotions. I live for the emotions of other people; I barely have any of my own. Do you understand, Isabella, how you were deceived? I picked up your emotions, and by doing so, they became my emotions. I picked up Yeremeyev's emotions, and they became my emotions. I am simply a blank slate in which every person who interacts with me draws whatever they please. That is why I am such a fine intelligence agent; you were scarcely fucking me, Isabella, you were fucking yourself. I naturally try to please people, to the point of sin, because their pleasure is, by definition, my pleasure. I have like any good Christian learned to resist this, but of course in my service to the Empire I am much more successful by not doing so. I'm scarcely a real person, Isabella--more a tableau rasa for your own emotions and desires. And that is why I'm such a good spy."
Isabella took in the revelation her lover and betrayer had made. It was a lot to digest and she was quiet, deathly quiet as she considered it. She looked at Sophia with a sadness and pity in her eyes as she did so. "You poor dear," she finally began. "Is that what you believe? That being a telempath means you have no nature of your own, no desires... that you're just a tool for other people to leech off of. I can see why the Evidenzburo would value you so much." She sighed, not sure how to say what she wanted to.
"Sophia, you can choose to be whatever you want to be. And you can feel and have emotions like any other human being. Surely, you've felt joy and pleasure and happiness before, and if it's because you're intimately connected to someone else..." She shrugged her shoulders. "That's how we all are. Everyone tries to please the people around them. You've just got an advantage at that. And why do you want to use that for people who will look down on you, call you a whore or inhuman because of your nature, who can never understand you? Why not choose happiness with someone else over this thankless existence as a tool for a state that despises you? Why heed a Bronze Age tribal mythology when it tells you what you feel is wrong? That Contessa... she wasn't a terrible person, was she? Why did you value some priest over her?"
"Because I didn't really love her," Sophia answered simply. "I simply knew how to mimic it perfectly. If God hadn't made me useful to the security of the Empire with my talents, you realize, I'd have entered a religious life myself and taken up the vows of a nun. You misestimate me, Isabella Sanchez. But I suppose that is par for the course with Desrolinists. You've forgotten the magical in the world, and the grandeur of symbolism. It was the philosopher from the Alliance histories, Schopenhauer, who said that for the common person about the only way they could experience aesthetic absolute Truth was through art; and that is why the Church is a crazy tangle of traditions piled on top of each other. Because the aesthetic, even those who are not believers have acknowledged, brings us closer to God. And you've forgotten that, and forgotten the supreme comfort it gives to the common person. I, however, do indeed know that the Lord God is my saviour and that my sins are not without redemption. And I do sin, for the Empire didn't force me into this. I volunteered, because I love to feed on the emotions of others. I am a parasite, but one who has found a way to perform a useful social function."
"The claims the Church makes are false, provably false." Isabella tried to keep from snapping, or rolling her eyes, but it was a hard fight. Sophia had seemed so intelligent, so enlightened. "Aesthetics doesn't change reality, and using it to justify your actions by appealing to transcendence is obscurantist cant. People exist, God doesn't. And forcing them, forcing us, to deny our basic natures because an obsolete power structure rests on fairy tales about an omnipotent deity is immoral. For that matter the Hindus, the Muslims, the Buddhists, they all have beautiful temples too, and so did the Canaanites and Aztecs and Inca. This surety, this... fanaticism, is based on your blind acceptance of the propaganda of the ruling elite, nothing rational."
Sophia offered that faint gallic shrug again. "I've seen that ruling elite and their efforts to make society seem better than it is. I don't care. I've also spent most of my life among the poor--I wish I could take you to my penthouse in the worst district in Prague--trying to help them. The intellectual sophistry of the Desrolinist and the grand and high ideals of the nobility and the Church are both irrelevant to them in the end; what matters is the charity of the village or borough priests, the compassion of the orders, the touches where, in the end, Christendom exists to make their lives bearable. And I've seen the results of the programmes like Desrolinism--and they all end in a bankruptcy of the human spirit and accomplishment, a replacement of all the high ideals of both religion and your own ideology, with base materialism. Yet I recognize that I cannot convert you; so I will offer you the only comfort I can give to a condemned soul who rejects religion."
Isabella thought about continuing the argument but it was going nowhere. She pondered a lunge at the shorter woman but Sophia’s claimed mental abilities, even if a considerable exagerration, would make that absolutely hopeless. At last she settled for another thought on Sophia’s telempathy. “Well, if you can't develop a genuine bond with other human beings, then I truly pity you."
"Oh, I say that I do pretty good for myself, all things said," Sophia smiled secretly.
Isabella walked back over to sit on the bed, deciding that she was going to be comfortable if she was going to spend any more time arguing with the Evidenzburo agent. "I don't regret anything I've done, except trusting you. I stood up for my people, to win their freedom to be who they are. It's ridiculous to demand we lash ourselves to accord with some archaic system of values, and however beautiful the church can wrap up its absurdities it's still nothing but fantasy. A pretty fantasy to twist the thinking of people, to beat them down with guilt until they accept what they're told without questioning."
"You have your reasons for complaint," Sophia agreed. "You should be allowed your differences as much as the Delphinians are, I suppose; we are all spirits, so why distinguish one group from another on account of form? Why forbid one group from sin and allow another on account of different biology? Perhaps that’s a valid argument though Christendom remains the cultural base of the vast bulk of the Empire, and that cannot be denied, nor should it." She paused and looked levelly across the bed to Isabella. Her effort to keep things going as long as she could, had run its course, and what she must now do filled her stomach with self-loathing.
"I suppose, then, all that remains is the necessary task I find utterly disgusting. I am not an interrogator, yet in these circumstances the job is mine, however-much it pains me. We are outside of Imperial space; not even the review of the State of Siege exists here." She swallowed visibly, and sighed. "We'll see what you think of me after I've raped your mind more thoroughly than anyone could manage of the body." In the end even that was a false comfort to Isabella.
Isabella smiled sadly as she laid herself out on the bed. "I knew this was coming, when you made your confession. Well, you can only rape my mind if I choose to view it that way. It's not my fault and regardless, I don't have anything in my life to be ashamed of. You can't violate me just by peering into my mind." And then she began clearing her thoughts. "But I'm not going to give you anything easily..."
"If only you knew quite what I meant when I said I was a P-5." With that reluctant comment, she pulled her knees into herself, turning to stare at Isabella... And hit her, telepathically, with a level of force she knew was highly damaging. Not high enough to destroy her mind outright, but easily enough to cause psychosis, while still leaving information intact for future interrogations. The range of the Habsburg scale was much greater than for others, and she had less than half a dozen equals in power.
In a strange way, though, it was the highest mercy she could offer the belter. Since the initial detention of Isabella into Imperial custody would now be taking place outside the sector of the State of Siege, she would be subject to a regular civilian trial... And being mentally incompetent to stand trial was the only way she'd avoid the gallows. Sophia even did her best to try and limit the damage to the minimal necessary to render her unfit for trial. It was rather sinful to hurt her that much, and slightly disingenuous toward doubtless what her superiours would have wanted, but Sophia’s innate compassion forced her to it: The Church held out hope for the mentally incognizant in the supreme mercy of God, and so Sophia made Isabella one of their number. And if not that, then at least she’d avoid Hell for another few more centuries, more than a short and gallant trip of mad Desrolinist fantasy straight to the gallows could ever offer.
Isabella's calm facade and meditation technique shattered under the blow of raw power Sophia sent her way. She wailed aloud as the psychic brushed aside her mind's rudimentary efforts to defend itself, and the alien presence seemed to fill every corner of her psyche. Her very sense of self was under assault, her ego fragmenting and reuniting and threatening to leech uncontrollably into Sophia's mind. The P5's mental shields were too good to allow that kind of disaster, but it demonstrated the difference between a merely mundane human and a high level telepath no longer concerned with being gentle.
With a grim and deathless expression on her face, Sophia reached out to Lida, who clearly feel the raw energy of it, for a centering focus, and then plunged into Isabella's mind. There'd be a high toll for the hangman on account of this information, she was sure, and there was not time to be wasted, even as she did spend a considerable degree of her energy on making sure she didn’t go too far, indeed, as short of a distance into the destruction of Isabella Sanchez’s mind as she could without putting her back on a couse for the gallows.
Mathersburg Colony, a few days later.
They'd had to restrain Isabella in the master stateroom after her interrogation, which Sophia didn't really want to sleep in after sharing it with Pavel and tearing apart Isabella's mind there. No, no, she had no interest in ever sleeping there again. She’d instead slept in one of the crew cabins, and slept a lot as her battered body tried to recover from both the intensity of her interrogation effort and the damaging power of the adrenaline and other stimulant drugs she’d used. When alert, she had focused single-mindedly on the ship's course while Lida guarded Isabella. And so it had gone through days of travel until they arrived at the planet in the neighbouring sector, Mathersburg, which had been listed as having a small military listening post on the surface which would have the necessary comms gear. The population of the planet was less than fourty million and Sophia had no idea what kind of reception they'd get coming in the yacht or what sort of defences there might be, lacking the necessary records to check.
So rather than attempt to assume anything in advance, when the yacht jumped out of hyper, she held position and immediately radioed to the surface, with a tense glance to Lida beside her before she started talking. There was plenty of urgency to getting a warning to Vladimir and Dvonomir in case the attack went ahead anyway, after all, which had necessitated the stop instead of going straight back to Dvonomir. Miscommunications would be unacceptable in the circumstances. "Mathersburg control, Mathersburg control, I am requesting a secured approach vector with very urgent priority." She intentionally didn’t initially identify herself, though.
A response came from the planet's orbital station, a shared military/civilian installation hosting a squadron of patrol corvettes. The arrival of the unidentified yacht was certainly out of routine, but not a cause for panic. The bored voice of an orbital controller answered. "Unidentified private starship, this is Mathersburg orbital station. Provide identification credentials and state your purpose, over."
"Name is Red Falcon identification code EXS-98989806." Evidenzburo agents with reason to believe they might need to identify themselves from a private vessel in an official capacity were issued a random name and EXS--Evidenzburo Unclassified Ship--number designator which was randomly generated and would last in the computers for a specificed set of time before becoming invalid, lest it be used by an enemy force in the future. Sophia was certainly highly placed enough, and reliable enough, to have been issued one and it was used with some relish, as she added much more authoritatively: "Clear me an approach vector to the naval station immediately, Mathersburg control."
The operator had entered the registry code as it came in, and gaped at his screen. He sent a flash alert to the station commander before entering in a projected course for the yacht. Fortunately the system was mostly empty, but clearing away an orbital approach to the naval station required moving several merchant freighters out of the way. "Red Falcon, this Mathersburg control. Am sending you a secured approach vector. Do you request military escort?"
"I'm coming in under a full burn, Mathersburg control, but scramble them anyway," Sophia answered. "Also I expect the station commander to be alerted that I need to use the hyperlight transmitters/receivers for the border listening post on a maximal priority level the moment I arrive."
The operator repressed a groan. Scrambling the corvettes would take even more time and attention, but under standing orders the request had to be granted with alacrity. "Will notify station command immediately, Red Falcon. I am sending you an updated vector including the projected rendezvous with the system defense patrol."
It took fifteen minutes for the first corvette to decouple from the military side of the station and began a burn toward the yacht. It was accompanied by a second that had been policing civilian traffic in orbit. The relatively small vessels, barely massing over 100,000 metric tons, were useful only for such minor tasks but still had enough firepower to handily destroy any civilian vessel. The approach vector established a turnover for the ships after a full burn of twenty minutes, joining a standard escort formation with the two ships flanking Red Falcon. They would proceed with her until the yacht reached orbit and began maneuvering for docking with an already-cleared slip.
Sophia waited with growing tension until they had arrived at the station, and then used her abilities as a smallship pilot and DNI to safely navigate in to dock. Virtually the moment they were secured, she was already jacking out and turning to her partner. "Stay with our prisoner, Lida--I'm going to notify Dvonomir immediately and then we'll replenish and rope in two of those corvettes as an escort on our journey back." She flashed a jaunty wave to the woman, who slumped back to luxuriate in very considerable relief before rising to head down to the stateroom where they were holding the now rather psychotic Isabella.
Lida rose to follow her, part way, down to the stateroom where the Desrolinist was kept. The exhausting feeling of completion at the end of such a mission seemed nearly incredible, and she was deeply relieved to feel it, and privately wondered how she’d stay awake to guard Isabella until they had more personnel aboard.
Sophia for her part keyed her way straight through the airlock into whatever sort of welcoming committee they had for her; she was already rolling up her sleeve, though, as the only way they could reliably prove who she was was with a genetic sample coming back like this, but they'd have to send that sample back to Dvonomir at the same time as the hyperlight communications link was established. There was another way to do it, but that would actually be up to Markus. Sophia was smiling at that prospect, her memory having finally clued her in as to when she’d last met the Unteranalytiker, and influenced her mood as, with a faint flourish, she stepped out on the other side....
Two marines in light shipboard armor waited on her, both wearing the obscuring combat helmets and toting plasma carbines at the ready. A lieutenant in the field-grey duty uniform stood by, and doffed his peaked cap in welcome. "Kapitan Loesch sends his regards. We are to escort you immediately to the communications facility and remain available for as long as you require."
"Good. If Kapitan Loesch could meet me there, I'd greatly appreciate it. I am Inspektor Sophia Vuletic of the Evidenzburo, on detached surface from central headquarters in Wien," she crisply answered as she turned to lead them onwards, wondering how much they'd press on further security and identity checks. "I have a prisoner aboard the ship, as well as my assistant Unterinspektor Alilova, but we will be taking the prisoner directly to Dvonomir from here, though I will probably prefer to continue with a guard detachment aboard my ship."
"I'm sure that can be arranged." The junior officer placed his cap back on his head, and swept an arm down the corridor leading away from the airlock. "Follow me, ma'am. We'll need to take a lift up to the command deck to the communication room."
"Thank you kindly," she answered with a soft smile, walking rather briskly to keep up with him considering her short stature, though she didn't mind it. The danger of being undercover was gone, for all that they still had the same urgency.
He led her down the corridor, with the armed escort following behind them. They passed by curious looking naval personnel, though few enough in the corridors before the main lift. The ride up was awkwardly silent, the marines evidently having been sternly warned against any attempt to pry into her purpose or business. The lift itself was well-maintained, though with older aesthetic stylings and archaic push button controls it hinted at the age of the station, possibly still the first orbital built by the colony. It admitted them into another central hub with corridors leading off in six directions, and the lieutenant taking her past the one marked "Secured Area - Authorized Personnel Only" in big, bright red letters.
The door to the communications room was guarded by a biometrics scanner regulating access. The lieutenant used his own hand to open the door, before chivalrously extending an arm to allow her to enter first. The marines took up guard positions outside.
Sophia smiled and stepped graciously past him and into the room, her eyes glancing around as alertly as ever. The trip to Mathersburg had served to give her enough time to largely rest and recuperate from the use of so many high-end adrenaline and stimulant drugs, and she was even feeling rather healthy. Still, no time to waste in trivialities.
It was a smaller, less high-tech version of the room used for secure communications at the Vladimir Evidenzburo facility. A large holotank dominated the room, with individual seats arrayed in a half-ring around and consoles for controlling both the transmission and reception located behind. There were two jumpsuited technicians operating the console, with a tall, well proportioned man in tailored dark-blue naval dress standing between them, hunched over at the console. He looked up as Sophia entered and stood upright, allowing her to confirm the rank insignia on his collar tabs. "Inspektor, Kapitan Johann Loesch at your service. The code you provided indicated serious urgency in your mission. Is there anything more you need beside the use of the facility here?"
"Yes, Kapitan: I'll require escort by half your squadron as I continue to Dvonomir with a high value detainee. High value enough that completely denuding Mathersburg of defences would be a suitable response to the need for security in transport," Sophia answered levelly. "To elaborate, Kapitan, I am in posession of information which raises the serious possibility of a surprise attack on the world of Vladimir with a force consisting of at least four battle divisions in strength taking place within the fortnight, and this does not even pertain to the information my detainee possesses, and that I now possess, about which I cannot explain anything to you."
"I'll make the arrangements." He stepped back from the console, passing by the holotank. "In the meantime, the facility is yours. The technicians are cleared for secret work and will remove themselves after setting up the transmission and verifying your credentials with the Evidenzburo facility on Dvonomir."
"Of course. Well, thank you very much, Kapitan. If you can prep the corvette flight I'd deeply appreciate it. I only want to remain here long enough to refuel the yacht." There was a faint twinkle in her eye as she added, rather offhand, "and just between the two of us in a secured room, that is Pavel Yeremeyev's private yacht I arrived on."
That perked the officer's ears right up. "Sounds like you've had a damned interesting adventure," he said, shaking his head. "I'm not sure if I'm dying to know, or will be very happy to never know. But it certainly suggests you need my corvettes more than Mathersburg does. I'll make sure the seamen are giving your refuelling a full priority and kick their... them into action if they aren't."
"Well, I can't claim to have Yeremeyev aboard, but I'm going to have to look up if prize law applies to the Evidenzburo," Sophia answered as she waited for the connection to go through now. "As I sort of want to keep the yacht."
The technicians finished adjusting the communications system for compatibility with Evidenzburo encryption standards, and established the initial connection with Dvonomir branch. The holotank sprang to life, though without a holovid transmission signal it remained in the default green-outline orb. Loesch gave a tip of his own cap to Sophia before leaving the room to see to his own duties.
"We are receiving instructions to have you plug into the system to allow a verification of your implant codes," the senior tech alerted. Each set of DNI implants carried a unique signature, with Evidenzburo sets augmented by specialized codes and programs to prevent them from being hacked and to provide an alternative means of identification. Dvonomir control evidently had faith that she had not lost her head, figuratively or literally.
"Not a problem," Sophia answered, having expected as much as she slipped over to the nearest DNI and jacked herself into the system to the respond to the prompt. The implants were set to display her actual identity, which means the Unteranalytiker would be in for a bit of a surprise; about four bouts of bone reconstruction surgery and twenty-five years in the past, Sophia had remembered that she'd taught him classes in computer security cracking on one of her desk assignments she rotated through between missions. Short of an encounter like this, the agents in advanced training at Evidenzburo headquarters would never know of the potential actual jobs of their instructors, and especially so "Instructor Vuletic".
As she plugged in, the two technicians left. There was a brief query/response exchange, purely automated, and over within seconds. With the other end satisfied by the response, the green orb expanded outward and filled in, displaying a white sterile room laid out more or less the same way, if much larger, than the station communications room. Markus Eindrecht stood alone before her, this time in a well-maintained civilian business suit and sporting a new, cavalier style haircut. His eyes widened in surprise as he recognized the form before him, leaving him speechless for a moment before he began to laugh.
"You're Cardinal?" It seemed absurd, almost. The restrained, puritanical, fussily precise instructor he had known briefly on Terra was really the most glamorous and celebrated agent in the service. But then she had always clinically precise and utterly devoted, so perhaps... but it was still an enormous surprise. Especially because of the lack of immediate similarity in facial structure, but then… the devotion would well explain that, too, and a few surgeries.
"And you managed to leave your name off an assignment," she answered jauntily. "Still gave you an A for it, though. I hadn't had all the mercy squeezed out of me, back then. Sorry about not remembering sooner, not like I could have precisely told you before now, though." She stretched. "Anyway, Unteranalytiker, I'll give you the bad news first. There is a chance, unknown probability, of the Rus fleet, which is at least sixteen of the wall, attacking Vladimir within the next fortnight. The mission I participated in on the behalf of the CFL was to bring about this attack... Silly Desrolinists, stabbing their allies in the back. But it gave me a chance to escape, and I, ah, currently have someone working to stop that attack for me, though he doesn't realize he's serving my interests as well as his own. So I'm hoping it doesn't materialize, but it might and the appropriate warnings need to be issued."
Eindrecht nodded, deciding to forgo a request for more details right away. "I have to notify the Viceroy and sector headquarters immediately. They'd have to concentrate nearly the entire sector fleet's wall to handle that kind of massed attack, and that could take days if we're lucky. This isn't coordinated with any exterauniversal threat, is it?"
"No. The CFL was bluffing with their allies. We do however have a smuggling ring and conspiracy in some of the highest echelons of the civil service and government, Unteranalytiker. I'm proceeding from this point in Yeremeyev's captured yacht and with the escort of four of the station corvettes here. I have a high value prisoner aboard, you should prepare for receipt but I'd prefer for the news not to spread. She's a member of the inner circle of the CFL--I cracked her and retrieved more valuable information than I think you can even imagine, Unteranalytiker, and managed to keep her mind intact enough that she can be easily probed to confirm the details by other telepaths. Well, easily in a mechanical sense; it will be a very unpleasant business, because the damage I had to inflict to break through her defences like that necessarily entailed turning her into a psychotic."
"Well, there goes prosecution. Although much of this will probably remain in the black for some time." The colloquialism referred to the covert operations required to break up a large and entrenched cell. In practice it might mean foregoing trials to eliminate the threat permanently. "We have facilities for handling prisoners who have gone through that, but I expect headquarters will want her bundled on a fast transport to Earth as soon as possible. No doubt they'll want you to accompany the prisoner in person as well. I'll send a preliminary report as soon as I've spoken with Earl Stephens, and Vienna will be very relieved."
"Very well. I think I should make the greatest haste in returning to Dvonomir then, basically leaving as soon as the yacht's refueled," Sophia answered cheerfully. "That said, Unteranalytiker, while you're at it--a personal favour to me--I would like you to look up what kind of legal precedent there is for Evidenzburo agents being able to make claims in prize court, since a state of siege involving a foreign power qualifies under the laws of war. I suspect my hopes will be cruelly dashed, but, you see, I want to keep the yacht."
That took Markus by surprise, another rare event twice in the same transmission, but he nodded and smiled gaily. "Alright, Inspektor Vuletic. I'll have our staff lawyers work on that. I think I can even recall a similar incident back in the sector's history, during the consolidation of Imperial authority. A group of agents using a merchant freighter from the state run lines to escape. Don't recall what happened to the freighter. But if there's a way to twist precedent and statutes to your favor, I'm sure the agency will oblige."
"Just got attached to it while undercover, that's all," Sophia answered with an equally amused look. "See you soon, Unteranalytiker."
authored by Marina and Christopher Purnell.
Pavel Yeremeyev’s Yacht,
In deep space.
For Isabella Sanchez, consciousness resolved only slowly, and when it did it showed her the familiar form of Sophia… But now dressed, not undressed, and in the dull black and sharply modest clothes which were, indeed, the stereotypical style of female Evidenzburo agents. She had been dragged up onto the bed in the master bedroom before waking, and Sophia sat on the edge, a plasma pistol in her lap with her right hand resting on it.
The situation slowly settled on Isabella, and a wave of anger and revulsion swept over her. The agent hardly needed to be a telepath to see her tense up, or spear Sophia with a look that combined shock, betrayal, and outrage. But before she spoke she thought better, and shook her head sadly. "So stupid... I let myself be led around by you because you slept with me, just like a man would. You used me the way you used Pavel." She smiled thinly, an edge of grim humor coming to her. "I feel sorry for the old pirate. Are you going to kill me the way you killed him?"
"No," Sophia laughed. "Because I haven't killed Pavel Yeremeyev. I carried him up to the Grom Pobedy in the yacht’s escape pod," she gestured to the hatch. "Since I did, after all, need a suitable distraction to keep your strike team from blowing the yacht out of the stars when we escaped. And yes, we’re in hyper and well beyond pursuit now, Isabella, and Pavel Yeremeyev is free to return home… And stop the invasion of Vladimir. So as you can see he was worth much more to me alive than dead."
"Nearly killed myself dragging him here from the banya, though. Would have, except I've already blown my heart up with drugs in the service of His Majesty, so the artificial one is rather tougher than the original. Sorry, Isabella. For what it's worth I genuinely wish you'd just chosen to be another quietly happy belter sapphist, instead of making it all political."
"Repressed my behavior and beliefs to fit in with the sour old men and priests who rule over us, you mean." Isabella shook her head, marvelling in some ways at the brilliance and cunning of the woman across from her, who could have been so much… And had instead been subordinated into an agent of oppression. "Why should we belters be ruled over by people who don't understand us, never will, and actively consider us all deviants and perverts? Why should we have to kowtow to their stupid mores and medieval codes of behavior, that they flout anyway? The Empire is an empire of hypocrisy draining out the life of its people, and I couldn't sit idly by why it does that to the people I love. Better an honest revolutionary than a hypocritical police agent. You enjoyed every minute of it… Sophia."
“I'm not hypocritical," Sophia answered with an amused snort. "Because I'm not a belter. I was born on a Bogumil world and adopted by a sergeant in the force that liberated us from their tyranny. I was raised on a humble Croat farming colony by my adoptive family, we didn't even get a computer until I was nearly a teenager. I still make the most on my rather modest civil service salary out of that of the entire family, and we've never even had a commissioned officer in our family line. I'm just... Good at giving empathy to peoples of deviant sexuality, I suppose."
Isabella stuck out her tongue and made a lewd wriggling motion with it. "Deviant, hah. You took to it as naturally as a fish to freefall. And how many Imperial nobles keep a mistress on the side, while their wives keep close to each other, and how many officers are fucking their comrades? We belters are just honest about biology, and there is no objective standard to call me wrong in how I live my life. And if the Empire does truly, truly believe that everyone who doesn't fit their one man, one woman, in marriage standard is going to burn in hell, how can it ask you to go out and endanger your soul, and entrap other people?" She laughed, bitterly. 'It can because it wants to retain power, to maintain the privilege of the aristocracy. All the religious cloaking just hides that fact."
Sophia’s eyes wavered for a sad moment, and she indulged the impulse to continue the debate. What was coming, afer all, was if it worked going to keep Isabella from holding a coherent debate ever again. "Isabella, I wear goat hair shirts and rocks in my shoes when I return from missions. My penance is to medieval levels, because I am a sincere believer in the Lord God. I simply have the unique talent to... Enjoy everything that anyone else would enjoy. I have put it to good use, so that my nieces and nephews will always be safe and free from fear to live the lives they deserve."
"So what does it say about your superiors that they sanction your sins?" She shook her head, sadly. "And suppose your niece wants to be more than a broodmare, or one of your nephews is a homosexual? Where's the room for safety and happiness for them in the society you defend? Or would they deserve to be stricken down by God for the so-called flaws they were born with?"
“I don't presume to question the divine mysteries of God," Sophia answered as her eyes hardened again, but only for a moment. "As doubtless strange as this is for you to swallow out of an Imperial agent, I try to go through life hurting as few people as I can, and making as many happy as I can. I don't like to leave strife and suffering in my wake, if it can be avoided in the service of His Majesty. As it happens, for you, I would seek to keep you from the gallow’s if I may."
“There’s no way you could stop me,” Isabella answered sharply. “I’ll at least be a martyr for my cause.”
“A martyr with no afterlife…” Sophia turned away for a moment and shrugged. “I will not give up so easily.”
“If you truly care about me,” Isabella thought better of lunging, realizing the true capabilities of the woman before her were likely barely pressed if she’d managed to actually carry Yeremeyev at twice her weight through the snow. “Then sleep with me again before we arrive in Imperial space. The priests can just wash the sin away from you, and…”
Sophia flushed and smiled almost fondly. “Tempting, but even I don’t have that long of a leash. And what I definitely have none of, is a cavalier attitude about confession. The Devil may have tempted greater people than I, but lesser than I have resisted him, too.”
Isabella laughed dismissively at the religious words. “You’re educated, and you know at heart, I’m sure, how much nonsense that is. And it seems you can't deny that we belters are right about sex, can you? That it is wonderful and healthy, nothing mystical about it, positive feelings and personal bonding. And from that you can see the Empire isn't suited to ruling over us. That it's stifling and pays no attention to the realities of our people. That's why I'm justified. Please... see reason. You can still cast off those superiors who are using you this way. You can join us, for real, and we can make a change for the better."
"I lived with a girl for a year in the Alliance," Sophia answered rather quietly, "And we were engaged to be married when I disappeared, carrying with me about every single bit of de-classified information on their society which I could manage, when the Empire first contacted them. Her name is Contessa, and, in this strange way, I do hope she's found someone else, and doesn't wonder what's happened to me anymore. But it isn't becaue I am like you," Sophia answered. "Emotions are just energy produced by our bodies. You should be able to resist it ably enough.. But I understand not wanting to. Thus the offer. I understand happiness, for all that I admire the strength of the monks and nuns I can never match. Sex does seem to please most people, but, ah, I've never been interested in it, myself. It’s just easy for me to pretend.”
"You don't have anything that makes your life worth living for its own sake, do you?" Isabella laughed, sharply. "Religion, that's the ultimate expression of just living by someone else's rules, justified because they say so. Blind defense of the society you were raised in. Unfortunately we belters don't have your chameleon skills." She gave Sophia a smoldering look. "For someone so puritanical I've never had anyone eat me out as well as you did, and I loved it, and you orgasmed rather nicely yourself…”
"Let's see if you're still interested after I tell you why," Sophia answered, and turned back to levelly face Isabella, with the plasma pistol still easily in her lap. "I'm a telempath, and a P-5. One of the most powerful telepaths in the Empire, certainly; but also, as a telempath, someone who is locked in a permanent feedback cycle of emotions. I live for the emotions of other people; I barely have any of my own. Do you understand, Isabella, how you were deceived? I picked up your emotions, and by doing so, they became my emotions. I picked up Yeremeyev's emotions, and they became my emotions. I am simply a blank slate in which every person who interacts with me draws whatever they please. That is why I am such a fine intelligence agent; you were scarcely fucking me, Isabella, you were fucking yourself. I naturally try to please people, to the point of sin, because their pleasure is, by definition, my pleasure. I have like any good Christian learned to resist this, but of course in my service to the Empire I am much more successful by not doing so. I'm scarcely a real person, Isabella--more a tableau rasa for your own emotions and desires. And that is why I'm such a good spy."
Isabella took in the revelation her lover and betrayer had made. It was a lot to digest and she was quiet, deathly quiet as she considered it. She looked at Sophia with a sadness and pity in her eyes as she did so. "You poor dear," she finally began. "Is that what you believe? That being a telempath means you have no nature of your own, no desires... that you're just a tool for other people to leech off of. I can see why the Evidenzburo would value you so much." She sighed, not sure how to say what she wanted to.
"Sophia, you can choose to be whatever you want to be. And you can feel and have emotions like any other human being. Surely, you've felt joy and pleasure and happiness before, and if it's because you're intimately connected to someone else..." She shrugged her shoulders. "That's how we all are. Everyone tries to please the people around them. You've just got an advantage at that. And why do you want to use that for people who will look down on you, call you a whore or inhuman because of your nature, who can never understand you? Why not choose happiness with someone else over this thankless existence as a tool for a state that despises you? Why heed a Bronze Age tribal mythology when it tells you what you feel is wrong? That Contessa... she wasn't a terrible person, was she? Why did you value some priest over her?"
"Because I didn't really love her," Sophia answered simply. "I simply knew how to mimic it perfectly. If God hadn't made me useful to the security of the Empire with my talents, you realize, I'd have entered a religious life myself and taken up the vows of a nun. You misestimate me, Isabella Sanchez. But I suppose that is par for the course with Desrolinists. You've forgotten the magical in the world, and the grandeur of symbolism. It was the philosopher from the Alliance histories, Schopenhauer, who said that for the common person about the only way they could experience aesthetic absolute Truth was through art; and that is why the Church is a crazy tangle of traditions piled on top of each other. Because the aesthetic, even those who are not believers have acknowledged, brings us closer to God. And you've forgotten that, and forgotten the supreme comfort it gives to the common person. I, however, do indeed know that the Lord God is my saviour and that my sins are not without redemption. And I do sin, for the Empire didn't force me into this. I volunteered, because I love to feed on the emotions of others. I am a parasite, but one who has found a way to perform a useful social function."
"The claims the Church makes are false, provably false." Isabella tried to keep from snapping, or rolling her eyes, but it was a hard fight. Sophia had seemed so intelligent, so enlightened. "Aesthetics doesn't change reality, and using it to justify your actions by appealing to transcendence is obscurantist cant. People exist, God doesn't. And forcing them, forcing us, to deny our basic natures because an obsolete power structure rests on fairy tales about an omnipotent deity is immoral. For that matter the Hindus, the Muslims, the Buddhists, they all have beautiful temples too, and so did the Canaanites and Aztecs and Inca. This surety, this... fanaticism, is based on your blind acceptance of the propaganda of the ruling elite, nothing rational."
Sophia offered that faint gallic shrug again. "I've seen that ruling elite and their efforts to make society seem better than it is. I don't care. I've also spent most of my life among the poor--I wish I could take you to my penthouse in the worst district in Prague--trying to help them. The intellectual sophistry of the Desrolinist and the grand and high ideals of the nobility and the Church are both irrelevant to them in the end; what matters is the charity of the village or borough priests, the compassion of the orders, the touches where, in the end, Christendom exists to make their lives bearable. And I've seen the results of the programmes like Desrolinism--and they all end in a bankruptcy of the human spirit and accomplishment, a replacement of all the high ideals of both religion and your own ideology, with base materialism. Yet I recognize that I cannot convert you; so I will offer you the only comfort I can give to a condemned soul who rejects religion."
Isabella thought about continuing the argument but it was going nowhere. She pondered a lunge at the shorter woman but Sophia’s claimed mental abilities, even if a considerable exagerration, would make that absolutely hopeless. At last she settled for another thought on Sophia’s telempathy. “Well, if you can't develop a genuine bond with other human beings, then I truly pity you."
"Oh, I say that I do pretty good for myself, all things said," Sophia smiled secretly.
Isabella walked back over to sit on the bed, deciding that she was going to be comfortable if she was going to spend any more time arguing with the Evidenzburo agent. "I don't regret anything I've done, except trusting you. I stood up for my people, to win their freedom to be who they are. It's ridiculous to demand we lash ourselves to accord with some archaic system of values, and however beautiful the church can wrap up its absurdities it's still nothing but fantasy. A pretty fantasy to twist the thinking of people, to beat them down with guilt until they accept what they're told without questioning."
"You have your reasons for complaint," Sophia agreed. "You should be allowed your differences as much as the Delphinians are, I suppose; we are all spirits, so why distinguish one group from another on account of form? Why forbid one group from sin and allow another on account of different biology? Perhaps that’s a valid argument though Christendom remains the cultural base of the vast bulk of the Empire, and that cannot be denied, nor should it." She paused and looked levelly across the bed to Isabella. Her effort to keep things going as long as she could, had run its course, and what she must now do filled her stomach with self-loathing.
"I suppose, then, all that remains is the necessary task I find utterly disgusting. I am not an interrogator, yet in these circumstances the job is mine, however-much it pains me. We are outside of Imperial space; not even the review of the State of Siege exists here." She swallowed visibly, and sighed. "We'll see what you think of me after I've raped your mind more thoroughly than anyone could manage of the body." In the end even that was a false comfort to Isabella.
Isabella smiled sadly as she laid herself out on the bed. "I knew this was coming, when you made your confession. Well, you can only rape my mind if I choose to view it that way. It's not my fault and regardless, I don't have anything in my life to be ashamed of. You can't violate me just by peering into my mind." And then she began clearing her thoughts. "But I'm not going to give you anything easily..."
"If only you knew quite what I meant when I said I was a P-5." With that reluctant comment, she pulled her knees into herself, turning to stare at Isabella... And hit her, telepathically, with a level of force she knew was highly damaging. Not high enough to destroy her mind outright, but easily enough to cause psychosis, while still leaving information intact for future interrogations. The range of the Habsburg scale was much greater than for others, and she had less than half a dozen equals in power.
In a strange way, though, it was the highest mercy she could offer the belter. Since the initial detention of Isabella into Imperial custody would now be taking place outside the sector of the State of Siege, she would be subject to a regular civilian trial... And being mentally incompetent to stand trial was the only way she'd avoid the gallows. Sophia even did her best to try and limit the damage to the minimal necessary to render her unfit for trial. It was rather sinful to hurt her that much, and slightly disingenuous toward doubtless what her superiours would have wanted, but Sophia’s innate compassion forced her to it: The Church held out hope for the mentally incognizant in the supreme mercy of God, and so Sophia made Isabella one of their number. And if not that, then at least she’d avoid Hell for another few more centuries, more than a short and gallant trip of mad Desrolinist fantasy straight to the gallows could ever offer.
Isabella's calm facade and meditation technique shattered under the blow of raw power Sophia sent her way. She wailed aloud as the psychic brushed aside her mind's rudimentary efforts to defend itself, and the alien presence seemed to fill every corner of her psyche. Her very sense of self was under assault, her ego fragmenting and reuniting and threatening to leech uncontrollably into Sophia's mind. The P5's mental shields were too good to allow that kind of disaster, but it demonstrated the difference between a merely mundane human and a high level telepath no longer concerned with being gentle.
With a grim and deathless expression on her face, Sophia reached out to Lida, who clearly feel the raw energy of it, for a centering focus, and then plunged into Isabella's mind. There'd be a high toll for the hangman on account of this information, she was sure, and there was not time to be wasted, even as she did spend a considerable degree of her energy on making sure she didn’t go too far, indeed, as short of a distance into the destruction of Isabella Sanchez’s mind as she could without putting her back on a couse for the gallows.
Mathersburg Colony, a few days later.
They'd had to restrain Isabella in the master stateroom after her interrogation, which Sophia didn't really want to sleep in after sharing it with Pavel and tearing apart Isabella's mind there. No, no, she had no interest in ever sleeping there again. She’d instead slept in one of the crew cabins, and slept a lot as her battered body tried to recover from both the intensity of her interrogation effort and the damaging power of the adrenaline and other stimulant drugs she’d used. When alert, she had focused single-mindedly on the ship's course while Lida guarded Isabella. And so it had gone through days of travel until they arrived at the planet in the neighbouring sector, Mathersburg, which had been listed as having a small military listening post on the surface which would have the necessary comms gear. The population of the planet was less than fourty million and Sophia had no idea what kind of reception they'd get coming in the yacht or what sort of defences there might be, lacking the necessary records to check.
So rather than attempt to assume anything in advance, when the yacht jumped out of hyper, she held position and immediately radioed to the surface, with a tense glance to Lida beside her before she started talking. There was plenty of urgency to getting a warning to Vladimir and Dvonomir in case the attack went ahead anyway, after all, which had necessitated the stop instead of going straight back to Dvonomir. Miscommunications would be unacceptable in the circumstances. "Mathersburg control, Mathersburg control, I am requesting a secured approach vector with very urgent priority." She intentionally didn’t initially identify herself, though.
A response came from the planet's orbital station, a shared military/civilian installation hosting a squadron of patrol corvettes. The arrival of the unidentified yacht was certainly out of routine, but not a cause for panic. The bored voice of an orbital controller answered. "Unidentified private starship, this is Mathersburg orbital station. Provide identification credentials and state your purpose, over."
"Name is Red Falcon identification code EXS-98989806." Evidenzburo agents with reason to believe they might need to identify themselves from a private vessel in an official capacity were issued a random name and EXS--Evidenzburo Unclassified Ship--number designator which was randomly generated and would last in the computers for a specificed set of time before becoming invalid, lest it be used by an enemy force in the future. Sophia was certainly highly placed enough, and reliable enough, to have been issued one and it was used with some relish, as she added much more authoritatively: "Clear me an approach vector to the naval station immediately, Mathersburg control."
The operator had entered the registry code as it came in, and gaped at his screen. He sent a flash alert to the station commander before entering in a projected course for the yacht. Fortunately the system was mostly empty, but clearing away an orbital approach to the naval station required moving several merchant freighters out of the way. "Red Falcon, this Mathersburg control. Am sending you a secured approach vector. Do you request military escort?"
"I'm coming in under a full burn, Mathersburg control, but scramble them anyway," Sophia answered. "Also I expect the station commander to be alerted that I need to use the hyperlight transmitters/receivers for the border listening post on a maximal priority level the moment I arrive."
The operator repressed a groan. Scrambling the corvettes would take even more time and attention, but under standing orders the request had to be granted with alacrity. "Will notify station command immediately, Red Falcon. I am sending you an updated vector including the projected rendezvous with the system defense patrol."
It took fifteen minutes for the first corvette to decouple from the military side of the station and began a burn toward the yacht. It was accompanied by a second that had been policing civilian traffic in orbit. The relatively small vessels, barely massing over 100,000 metric tons, were useful only for such minor tasks but still had enough firepower to handily destroy any civilian vessel. The approach vector established a turnover for the ships after a full burn of twenty minutes, joining a standard escort formation with the two ships flanking Red Falcon. They would proceed with her until the yacht reached orbit and began maneuvering for docking with an already-cleared slip.
Sophia waited with growing tension until they had arrived at the station, and then used her abilities as a smallship pilot and DNI to safely navigate in to dock. Virtually the moment they were secured, she was already jacking out and turning to her partner. "Stay with our prisoner, Lida--I'm going to notify Dvonomir immediately and then we'll replenish and rope in two of those corvettes as an escort on our journey back." She flashed a jaunty wave to the woman, who slumped back to luxuriate in very considerable relief before rising to head down to the stateroom where they were holding the now rather psychotic Isabella.
Lida rose to follow her, part way, down to the stateroom where the Desrolinist was kept. The exhausting feeling of completion at the end of such a mission seemed nearly incredible, and she was deeply relieved to feel it, and privately wondered how she’d stay awake to guard Isabella until they had more personnel aboard.
Sophia for her part keyed her way straight through the airlock into whatever sort of welcoming committee they had for her; she was already rolling up her sleeve, though, as the only way they could reliably prove who she was was with a genetic sample coming back like this, but they'd have to send that sample back to Dvonomir at the same time as the hyperlight communications link was established. There was another way to do it, but that would actually be up to Markus. Sophia was smiling at that prospect, her memory having finally clued her in as to when she’d last met the Unteranalytiker, and influenced her mood as, with a faint flourish, she stepped out on the other side....
Two marines in light shipboard armor waited on her, both wearing the obscuring combat helmets and toting plasma carbines at the ready. A lieutenant in the field-grey duty uniform stood by, and doffed his peaked cap in welcome. "Kapitan Loesch sends his regards. We are to escort you immediately to the communications facility and remain available for as long as you require."
"Good. If Kapitan Loesch could meet me there, I'd greatly appreciate it. I am Inspektor Sophia Vuletic of the Evidenzburo, on detached surface from central headquarters in Wien," she crisply answered as she turned to lead them onwards, wondering how much they'd press on further security and identity checks. "I have a prisoner aboard the ship, as well as my assistant Unterinspektor Alilova, but we will be taking the prisoner directly to Dvonomir from here, though I will probably prefer to continue with a guard detachment aboard my ship."
"I'm sure that can be arranged." The junior officer placed his cap back on his head, and swept an arm down the corridor leading away from the airlock. "Follow me, ma'am. We'll need to take a lift up to the command deck to the communication room."
"Thank you kindly," she answered with a soft smile, walking rather briskly to keep up with him considering her short stature, though she didn't mind it. The danger of being undercover was gone, for all that they still had the same urgency.
He led her down the corridor, with the armed escort following behind them. They passed by curious looking naval personnel, though few enough in the corridors before the main lift. The ride up was awkwardly silent, the marines evidently having been sternly warned against any attempt to pry into her purpose or business. The lift itself was well-maintained, though with older aesthetic stylings and archaic push button controls it hinted at the age of the station, possibly still the first orbital built by the colony. It admitted them into another central hub with corridors leading off in six directions, and the lieutenant taking her past the one marked "Secured Area - Authorized Personnel Only" in big, bright red letters.
The door to the communications room was guarded by a biometrics scanner regulating access. The lieutenant used his own hand to open the door, before chivalrously extending an arm to allow her to enter first. The marines took up guard positions outside.
Sophia smiled and stepped graciously past him and into the room, her eyes glancing around as alertly as ever. The trip to Mathersburg had served to give her enough time to largely rest and recuperate from the use of so many high-end adrenaline and stimulant drugs, and she was even feeling rather healthy. Still, no time to waste in trivialities.
It was a smaller, less high-tech version of the room used for secure communications at the Vladimir Evidenzburo facility. A large holotank dominated the room, with individual seats arrayed in a half-ring around and consoles for controlling both the transmission and reception located behind. There were two jumpsuited technicians operating the console, with a tall, well proportioned man in tailored dark-blue naval dress standing between them, hunched over at the console. He looked up as Sophia entered and stood upright, allowing her to confirm the rank insignia on his collar tabs. "Inspektor, Kapitan Johann Loesch at your service. The code you provided indicated serious urgency in your mission. Is there anything more you need beside the use of the facility here?"
"Yes, Kapitan: I'll require escort by half your squadron as I continue to Dvonomir with a high value detainee. High value enough that completely denuding Mathersburg of defences would be a suitable response to the need for security in transport," Sophia answered levelly. "To elaborate, Kapitan, I am in posession of information which raises the serious possibility of a surprise attack on the world of Vladimir with a force consisting of at least four battle divisions in strength taking place within the fortnight, and this does not even pertain to the information my detainee possesses, and that I now possess, about which I cannot explain anything to you."
"I'll make the arrangements." He stepped back from the console, passing by the holotank. "In the meantime, the facility is yours. The technicians are cleared for secret work and will remove themselves after setting up the transmission and verifying your credentials with the Evidenzburo facility on Dvonomir."
"Of course. Well, thank you very much, Kapitan. If you can prep the corvette flight I'd deeply appreciate it. I only want to remain here long enough to refuel the yacht." There was a faint twinkle in her eye as she added, rather offhand, "and just between the two of us in a secured room, that is Pavel Yeremeyev's private yacht I arrived on."
That perked the officer's ears right up. "Sounds like you've had a damned interesting adventure," he said, shaking his head. "I'm not sure if I'm dying to know, or will be very happy to never know. But it certainly suggests you need my corvettes more than Mathersburg does. I'll make sure the seamen are giving your refuelling a full priority and kick their... them into action if they aren't."
"Well, I can't claim to have Yeremeyev aboard, but I'm going to have to look up if prize law applies to the Evidenzburo," Sophia answered as she waited for the connection to go through now. "As I sort of want to keep the yacht."
The technicians finished adjusting the communications system for compatibility with Evidenzburo encryption standards, and established the initial connection with Dvonomir branch. The holotank sprang to life, though without a holovid transmission signal it remained in the default green-outline orb. Loesch gave a tip of his own cap to Sophia before leaving the room to see to his own duties.
"We are receiving instructions to have you plug into the system to allow a verification of your implant codes," the senior tech alerted. Each set of DNI implants carried a unique signature, with Evidenzburo sets augmented by specialized codes and programs to prevent them from being hacked and to provide an alternative means of identification. Dvonomir control evidently had faith that she had not lost her head, figuratively or literally.
"Not a problem," Sophia answered, having expected as much as she slipped over to the nearest DNI and jacked herself into the system to the respond to the prompt. The implants were set to display her actual identity, which means the Unteranalytiker would be in for a bit of a surprise; about four bouts of bone reconstruction surgery and twenty-five years in the past, Sophia had remembered that she'd taught him classes in computer security cracking on one of her desk assignments she rotated through between missions. Short of an encounter like this, the agents in advanced training at Evidenzburo headquarters would never know of the potential actual jobs of their instructors, and especially so "Instructor Vuletic".
As she plugged in, the two technicians left. There was a brief query/response exchange, purely automated, and over within seconds. With the other end satisfied by the response, the green orb expanded outward and filled in, displaying a white sterile room laid out more or less the same way, if much larger, than the station communications room. Markus Eindrecht stood alone before her, this time in a well-maintained civilian business suit and sporting a new, cavalier style haircut. His eyes widened in surprise as he recognized the form before him, leaving him speechless for a moment before he began to laugh.
"You're Cardinal?" It seemed absurd, almost. The restrained, puritanical, fussily precise instructor he had known briefly on Terra was really the most glamorous and celebrated agent in the service. But then she had always clinically precise and utterly devoted, so perhaps... but it was still an enormous surprise. Especially because of the lack of immediate similarity in facial structure, but then… the devotion would well explain that, too, and a few surgeries.
"And you managed to leave your name off an assignment," she answered jauntily. "Still gave you an A for it, though. I hadn't had all the mercy squeezed out of me, back then. Sorry about not remembering sooner, not like I could have precisely told you before now, though." She stretched. "Anyway, Unteranalytiker, I'll give you the bad news first. There is a chance, unknown probability, of the Rus fleet, which is at least sixteen of the wall, attacking Vladimir within the next fortnight. The mission I participated in on the behalf of the CFL was to bring about this attack... Silly Desrolinists, stabbing their allies in the back. But it gave me a chance to escape, and I, ah, currently have someone working to stop that attack for me, though he doesn't realize he's serving my interests as well as his own. So I'm hoping it doesn't materialize, but it might and the appropriate warnings need to be issued."
Eindrecht nodded, deciding to forgo a request for more details right away. "I have to notify the Viceroy and sector headquarters immediately. They'd have to concentrate nearly the entire sector fleet's wall to handle that kind of massed attack, and that could take days if we're lucky. This isn't coordinated with any exterauniversal threat, is it?"
"No. The CFL was bluffing with their allies. We do however have a smuggling ring and conspiracy in some of the highest echelons of the civil service and government, Unteranalytiker. I'm proceeding from this point in Yeremeyev's captured yacht and with the escort of four of the station corvettes here. I have a high value prisoner aboard, you should prepare for receipt but I'd prefer for the news not to spread. She's a member of the inner circle of the CFL--I cracked her and retrieved more valuable information than I think you can even imagine, Unteranalytiker, and managed to keep her mind intact enough that she can be easily probed to confirm the details by other telepaths. Well, easily in a mechanical sense; it will be a very unpleasant business, because the damage I had to inflict to break through her defences like that necessarily entailed turning her into a psychotic."
"Well, there goes prosecution. Although much of this will probably remain in the black for some time." The colloquialism referred to the covert operations required to break up a large and entrenched cell. In practice it might mean foregoing trials to eliminate the threat permanently. "We have facilities for handling prisoners who have gone through that, but I expect headquarters will want her bundled on a fast transport to Earth as soon as possible. No doubt they'll want you to accompany the prisoner in person as well. I'll send a preliminary report as soon as I've spoken with Earl Stephens, and Vienna will be very relieved."
"Very well. I think I should make the greatest haste in returning to Dvonomir then, basically leaving as soon as the yacht's refueled," Sophia answered cheerfully. "That said, Unteranalytiker, while you're at it--a personal favour to me--I would like you to look up what kind of legal precedent there is for Evidenzburo agents being able to make claims in prize court, since a state of siege involving a foreign power qualifies under the laws of war. I suspect my hopes will be cruelly dashed, but, you see, I want to keep the yacht."
That took Markus by surprise, another rare event twice in the same transmission, but he nodded and smiled gaily. "Alright, Inspektor Vuletic. I'll have our staff lawyers work on that. I think I can even recall a similar incident back in the sector's history, during the consolidation of Imperial authority. A group of agents using a merchant freighter from the state run lines to escape. Don't recall what happened to the freighter. But if there's a way to twist precedent and statutes to your favor, I'm sure the agency will oblige."
"Just got attached to it while undercover, that's all," Sophia answered with an equally amused look. "See you soon, Unteranalytiker."