The sun glittered off the open gunports as the behemoth of the skies began its descent over the fabled city of Timbuktu. Home to the Empire's Forward Command, the son of the Emperor had come in person to inspect the troops, and to impart his own glory and honour upon the men and women desperately fighting for the name of Albion in these Godforsaken parts.
"Begin counting us in", Grand Captain Elijah Ramirez spoke into the web-like microphone before his throne-like position upon the bridge.
"One hundred" echoed a voice from out of the tinny speakers, "Ninety-nine, ninety-eight"
"Prepare to deploy" Ramirez bellowed and a half dozen underlings rushed out of the room, trained and ready to do his bidding.
"Passing over the palace now" reported a junior officer, her black hair streaming down her back over her gold and black uniform.
"Steady as she goes" Ramirez demanded
"Steady, aye!" the barrel-chested black man gripping the spokes of the huge wheel rolled the words off his tongue
Imperial Prince Alexander Roberto Heinrich looked out through the reinforced viewing port and saw the traditional buildings of mud and brick give way to the splendour of the marble palace, built in the heart of the city where once the mosque had stood. It was an amazing sight, made the more so since the marble had been imported from Italia, the water was channelled through a network of canals from the Niger River, and not less than two thousand slaves had died in the two decades it had taken to build. As a grand gesture of the power of Albion, it was without equal, given the circumstances of its construction.
"Eleven, ten, nine, eight", the tinny voice continued to count down over the speakers but was drowned out by the sudden hullaballoo upon the bridge.
"Deploy !" snapped Ramirez, and from a score of openings the ropes snapped down to the waiting crew below.
"Power back !" a tall man, his head crowned in a golden topknot snapped
"Powering to zero", the raven-haired female said calmly
"Steering locked", the black giant eased his words into the ether
"Take-up !", a second female officer reported from the forward viewing deck.
Below them, as they settled scarcely yards above the ground, a crew of hundreds of black slaves, ridden by their masters, had snagged the ropes, and were easing the gigantic craft into its berth.
"Lock down underway" the second female reported
She was stocky, not more than five foot tall, with the white blonde lockes of an Icelander.
"Locked !" she replied, as the ship steadied and settled slowly to a standstill.
Ramirez rose from his throne-like seat, and nodded slowly around to the bridge crew,
"A good landing, ladies and gentlemen. We depart in thirty-six hours"
It was tradition that they would have half that time to themselves, and even as the words were spoken, junior officers were approaching senior ones all over the vessel to have their cards marked. They would have exactly fifty-percent of downtime to themselves, but if they reported in more than ten minutes late they would find themselves in the brig.
Alexander Roberto Heinrich turned away from the viewport, and walked slowly towards the Captain,
"A smooth flight, sir, and a very smooth landing."
Ramirez took the praise as befitted his station, and made no direct reply. Instead he asked,
"Will Your Highness be dining in the palace tonight ?"
"I think not", Alexander laughed, "Cousin Gunther is not an inspiring speaker, I wish to avail myself of the pleasure of his company as little as possible"
What he meant was that the formal ball set for the following night would be enough of a drain, and he could do with some time to himself.
"You are welcome to dine with myself and the senior officers", the Grand Captain offered, and he seemed sincere.
Alexander was impressed; Ramirez had the reputation of a surly, haughty individual and to be invited to his table was praise indeed.
"If you mean that, sir, I would be most pleased."
The Grand Captain was taken aback by the acceptance, but his offer had been made in truth, so he nodded quickly,
"Yes, Your Highness. Midnight should find us ordering at The Lion and Lamb, if that is not too late for you?"
Meals round here rarely began before nightfall, and at this latitude ten o'clock was the earliest one usually saw anything like a nightlife in Timbuktu.
"I will be there, sir. Make sure there is a seat for me"
"I will scribe your name on it personally" Ramirez assured him.
With a nod, Alexander took his leave and made his way along the companionway to the ramp, joining a small throng of officers and passengers as they headed down towards the ground, incongruously green in this desert location.
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"I do not like it"
There were a great many things that Imperial Duke Gunther Luis Leander may have speaking of, not least the arrival of his cousin within his veceregal city, but there was only one which was occupying his attention at the moment.
"We do not know how it was done, sire"
General Alberto Smith was a career soldier, a self-made man, owning the ribbon of a Companion of the Golden Cavalry, and what he did not know about war was not worth knowing...except that somebody appeared to know it.
"A dozen patrols have perished in that area alone", Luisa Maria Valdez was all Galician, a strong woman of thirty, renowned for her wrestling, her cardplay, and not insignificantly her ability to read the enemy, who were numerous.
"I can read the dossier", Gunther was surly, upset with the news, not just because of the arrival of his more illustrious cousin, but because it caused great unease within him, "What I need to know is whether there were any common denominators ?"
"It is hard to tell" Smith pointed out, "Each patrol was annihilated, their bodies not found until days, even weeks afterwards"
"Tell it from the beginning", the Imperial Duke leant back upon his tiger-skin couch, about as expensive an import here in the heart of West Africa as one could get, Italian marble always excepted of course.
"Patrol G-P-095", Luisa began, "They are assigned random numbers by Cyclops"
"I am aware of that" Gunther grunted
"Of course. This patrol was on a routine mission to exterminate a Fulani rebel cell in an area we had recently pacified"
"How well pacified ?" the Viceroy interjected
"Ten thousand slaves, and ten times that number dead"
"Go on"
"The patrol initially reported strange lights in the night sky - one of their reports even mentioned...'willo the whisps'"
"Fancy ?", it was a question
"Description, I think" the woman officer replied without hesitation.
Gunther picked at an ingrown hair upon his chin,
"Very well, how experienced was the commander ?"
"Group Leader Sasha Johns had ten years in the field"
"Here ?"
"No, sire, eight in China, one in Georgia"
"Georgia ?", Gunther raised his eyebrows; it was a particular Hell-hole
"Yes sir. She transferred to here at her own request, upon attaining the Order of the Lion"
"I see"
That honour allowed the recipient to request a stationing that would further their own martial prowess. It was not a cop-out, even less a way out, and Sasha Johns had swapped one never-ending war for another. She had wanted to be in West Africa, and she had taken the chance with both hands.
"What about her second ?" Gunther asked
"Patrick Luis O'Donahue..."
"I have heard of him..." the Viceroy interrupted, "I had not known he was dead"
"We have not released the news to the broadcast stations", General Smith sounded somewhat apologetic, "It would be too severe a blow to morale if not handled in the correct manner"
"A more glorious death is being arranged for him?" Gunther asked
"The first occasion such a thing comes along"
The Viceroy nodded, gave up on his chin and nibbled at an olive,
"How many of these incidents has there been ?"
"Twelve" Luisa wondered why he was asking
"All patrols completely destroyed ?"
"Yes sire"
"And none of these would qualify for inserting the Hero of Gondar into as a casualty ?"
"With respect, sire, every patrol was wiped out in an almost identical fashion. If we could not release news of O'Donahue's death for the first one, we could not for any other."
"The incidents are that alike ?" Gunther furrowed his brow, and when he did so his brow was most deeply furrowed indeed
"Almost identical" Luisa responded, "An initial report of strange lights, then mention in various idioms of beings of light..."
"How so ?" Gunther rubbed at his head, "Various idioms ?"
"Willo-the-whisp, faeries, angels, daemons, giant glow-worms..." the Galician explained
"I see..."
There was silence for a moment, then the Viceroy collected himself,
"And now this ?" he said
"Yes sire, it is all part of the same pattern" Smith was confident
"A dozen patrols, and now this ?" Gunther pressed
"Yes sir", Luisa was keen, certain
"Thirteen", Gunther sat back and stared into the overhead lights, "It was number thirteen..."
"Er, we don't think that was significant...not numerically, sir" Luisa managed after a moment
"You are a soldier, I am a governor", he stirred himself, "It does not matter whether it was significant, but if news gets out then the rebels and the disenchanted will find their own significance. I do not care about the number for its intrinsic value, but only for the galvanising effect it will have on destablising elements here."
"I see", General Smith finally managed a genuine smile, then frowned, "Do you think They know that ?"
"Who is 'They' ?" the Viceroy asked, petulantly.
Smith and Luisa exchanged glances, then the general replied, seemingly addressing his reply to the Viceroy's maroon-slippered feet,
"The Fulani are not doing this themselves, and there is no way that the Egyptian Caliphate have weapons so exotic and this powerful."
"That is for certain" the Viceroy frowned
"The rebels must be receiving help from an outside power." Smith finished
"Hmm...", Gunther lay back upon the pillow and massaged his temples, "Someone with the technology and the power, and the will to defy us..."
"At a minimum", Luisa looked quickly at the general, who nodded his approval.
"Europa ? Halych ? Kazan ?" Gunther reviewed the other global empires with a technological level equal to Albion's, "I suppose that Brasil or Zanzibar could have afforded the technology, if not developed it."
"We have done some investigation, sir" Luisa was almost apologetic
"I suspect there are no traces to anywhere, and nothing to indicate that the Fulani did not manage this for themselves ?", Gunther may have been an Imperial Duke but he had not attained his viceregal status by being stupid about international politics.
"Nothing until tonight" Smith said
"Ah.." a slight smile played upon the Viceroy's lips, "Somebody slipped up?"
"Not quite, sir" Luisa managed.
Gunther looked back at the photographs set out before him, the scenes of devastation and destruction captured in silver by the overflight of Colonel Stavanger's Wildcats. Whatever had destroyed Fort Bastion was far from an ordinary rebel activity, far indeed from anything that any power ought to be able to project into the heart of occupied West Africa without leaving an obvious trail to follow. Many may hate the globe-spanning empire of Albion, but few could do this to it, and of those who could - how could it be done and not be obvious?
He stared particuarly at a shot showing the armoury; it had been blasted apart, apparently from the inside, the radius of the blast levelling buildings, trees and railstock as it went. But there was nothing in that armoury that could have done that - even a perusal of the confidential Section 11 report, here before him, stated that. None of the Special Units had anything there, none of the Scientific Faculties had rented premises in the fort, none of the Shadow Organs had come near to it. So, only the enemy could have made the armoury blow up like that, and to do so they would have had to penetrate it...and if they could do that, then nowhere was safe.
"I do not think I will like your answers" Gunther commented soberly, "Please make sure they are accurate before speaking them. My mood is turning decidedly sour"
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
"A hundred whores !" Sub-Commander James Bach bellowed, and the whole assemblage collapsed into laughter.
Imperial Prince Alexander Roberto Heinrich thought to himself that it was a long time since he had felt as relaxed as this, a long time indeed since he had felt as free to laugh as this. He raised his tankard to his lips and took a deep draught, as the female Sub-Commander, Katerina Delilah Spinks, she of the raven hair from the command bridge, took up the slack with her own story.
Without listening to her words, Alexander watched her lips, imagining them on his member, and feeling it respond to his imagine, getting painful before he began to think of pigs and cows, and hens to cool off his ardoue.
"Excuse me, sir" For a moment, the Imperial Prince feared he had been rumbled, then he saw that the red of the uniform of the man before him was not the garb of the waiters at The Lion and Lamb, but was the more resplendant uniform of the Imperial Messengers, the Red Guard. He sobered up immediately
"What is it?" he turned away from where another officer from the airship was now beginning his funniest tale, "Is my father...!"
"The Emperor is fine", this Messenger had the cool of a thousand cats, and the hauteur of a fair proportion to speak like that, "You are requested and required to present yourself at the Imperial Gate with immediate effect"
"Immediate effect ?!" Alexander could not believe he was being spoke to this in this manner
"If you questioned the order, I was instructed to quote a biblical passage to you - 'Every man of the children of Israel shall pitch by his own standard, with the ensign of their father's house'"
Alexander's blood ran cold, Numbers 2:2, there could be no doubting that the message came from his father, himself. He nodded, and the Messenger disappeared. The Imperial Prince reached across and picked up a silver salt cellar, banging it down. Most of those around him stuttered to a halt and looked at him in surprise,
"I must leave", he said, and motioned for the Grand Captain to join him as he rose
"What is it ?" Elijah was coolness itself despite the half dozen beers he had imbibed
"A summons from my father. I would suggest that when you leave here, you instruct the ship's constables to issue a five-hour warning."
Ramirez was silent a moment, then nodded,
"It will be done. I will have the bridge crew on a three-hour whip."
"That is wise"
Alexander squeezed his hand, and then was gone, leaving behind a perplexed but extremely worried Airship Captain.
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The Imperial Gate had once been a gate, but was now a slab-sided edificed of a building, constructed from imported granite, and with few adornments to show that it symbolised anything in particular from the Empire.
The long low automobile drew up with a sharp exhalation of steam, the boiler spraying hot water onto the flagstones below, its egress spurting occasional puffs of superheated water into the atmosphere. One of the newest vehicles from the Imperial Pool, it had come at once upon the prince's urgent command.
He stepped out now, dipping his hat to the chauffeur who nodded and withdrew a discreet distance into the shadow of some old mudbrick conglomeration.
Alexander approached the steps and looked the pair of guards in the eye,
"If you have not been ordered to expect me, I will leave now" he said
"We are expecting you, Your Highness", the more burly individual on the right stepped forward and yanked open the door, "Please go straight through"
"Thank you"; courtesy was at all times the mark of one born of Imperial rank
It was as well that he had that instruction for the entrance foyer was dark and uninhabited. Passing beyond into a corridor, he found warming light, and soon heard the agitated hub-bub of voices coming from behind a sturdy oak door. He raised his fist to knock and it was opened.
"Cousin"
Ramona Elise Carding was a bastard, but an Imperial bastard and whilst she enjoyed none of the priveleges of rank, she had enjoyed almost all those of birth, and had risen within the shadow service to head up this viceroyalty. She motioned her better-born cousin into the spare seat around the mahogany table, and indicated to the technician before the televisual apparatus to do whatever it was that he did.
Alexander sat transfixed as the one-foot diameter circle within the oak surround began to display pictures, live from a camera somewhere else. It was magic, as far as most people were concerned, but a whole Imperial Order was dedicated to it, of which the branch his cousin belonged to was simply the most...scary. As an Imperial Prince he felt that he could use that word, if even only within his own mind.
"What is...?" he began
But the pictures displayed their own message
"Holy Battle Rabbit..." said an old man opposite, the oath a favourite of a service that did not consider itself bound by any rules, even those of the Imperial Church
"Elven Battle boots !" another responded, rubbing at the bridge of his nose
Alexander took this for the noise that it was, and waited until somebody said something that had quality to it, as well as quantity. He was not surprised that it was Ramona,
"We have seen the answer to questions we had only just begun to ask" she said.
"This is directly upon our borders ?" Alexander could not keep the shock from out of his voice
"It is what is causing our borders to fall inwards", the old man had apparently now recovered his composure
"I do not understand" the Imperial Prince looked to his cousin in confusion
"The Viceroy has yet to inform you" she said.
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Fort Hardcastle was seven hundred miles South of Timbuktu, upon the Black Volta river, and as advanced a forward base as Albion had across the whole benighted theatre. Home to a thousand men and women, it presented a bluff black-stone front upon the riverbank, cannons protruding like the snouts of fearsome beasts, mortars hidden within the main courtyards, ready to launch deadly hidden fire upon anyone so foolish as to attack.
But attack they did, from out of the trees, a dozen moving globes of light, with hundreds of half-naked natives running silent in their lea. It was eery, that was the first thought of the sentries upon the walls, then to wonder what was causing the phenomenon, then to rush to ring out the alarms.
But it would not have mattered had they done so at once, for no gunfire could shatter the hovering lights, and no matter how many scores of natives behind them fell, the globes advanced inexorably.
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"There is no point !" Salvadore Hans Kant was the Imperial Chaplain of the fort, and despite his calling a committed pragmatist,
"Your machine can do nothing to them, Commander. Fly yourself North and give the warning"
Swift Commander Tomas Thorn looked at his boots, and then nodded,
"Your wisdom is worth twice my valour. Die with honour"
"We shall try", Jessica Parker was the Governor of the Fort, a woman in her forties, strong and weatherbeaten. She looked the Commander in the eye, and then they hugged like colleagues usually did not
"I see" said the priest
"God-speed" she whispered
But Thorn was already striding towards his aerial craft
The globes of light moved through the walls as if they were butter, and themselves a hot knife. In their wake, the natives crawled and clambered, slipped and fell, but were always ready to move up and take their comrades' places.
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
"It does not work !" Lieutenant Severian Pole slammed a fist down upon the bastard apparatus, "I tell you Captain, it is a pile of junk"
Herbert Kinsale moved past him and ran a hand along the transmitter
"It was never that much more than a pile of junk in the first place", he said, "Are you sure that we cannot repair it?"
"I cannot repair it!" Pole stressed the first person singular, "If you can, sir, please be my guest"
"No, I cannot" Kinsale rose up from inspecting it, "What is wrong with it?"
"It doesn't work !" Pole was not unaware that the fort was under attack, and felt trapped up here in the tower.
"Leave me", Kinsale settled himself into the only chair within the cramped room, "I will ponder on it"
Halfway to the door, Pole turned and stuttered,
"Sir...but sir that is insane !"
"Thank you, lieutenant, I wish you well"
Then he was alone, but not for long
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"The Wildcat is away", Jessica moved into the tower room slowly, "What of this ?"
She indicated the machinery all around that was singularly doing nothing.
"Whatever they are doing, it is killing this" Herbert Kinsale gestured the fort's governor to a perch upon a unit of redundant equipment.
"They are not....right" Jessica held her head in her hands, "The Empire cannot even conceive of this technology, I cannot see Kazan or Europa managing it"
"Or Halych or Brasil or Zanzibar or the Caliphate..." Kinsale slammed a piece of equipment back together, "Let us see what that does"
"Indeed ?", Jessica was on her feet to watch as the commander replaced it into a series of relays that were deader than an emir's dinner.
For a moment nothing happened, then suddenly a cacophany of voices erupted over it
"You repaired it ?!" Jessica eyed him with newfound wonder
"No", Kinsale shook his head, "I changed its function. We can receive again but never send"
"Oh..." she was crestfallen, "What good is this ?"
"Listen to them" he advised
Together they listened, and learnt. They were not alone in being destroyed. . .
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"Ten forts", General Alberto Smith spoke in a voice that the night had deadened, "All destroyed, all over-run with no survivors"
"But this time we have something to go on", Ramona Elise Carding rarely came within spitting distance of the Viceroy, but the shadow service had certain powers reserved to it in emergencies, and however much he may despise her birth, the Viceroy had no choice but to have her at this meeting.
"Cowards..." Archbishop Paolo Jansen was unrepetant in his condemnations, seeing it as his duty to hand down scorn upon the weakness of others.
"Do not be a fool", Gunther found his voice, "The pilots will have been ordered to leave, and will have seen enough firsthand to know that resistance was useless"
"What more could one pilot and one aerial machine do that was not being done already ?" it was Luisa Maria Valdez who spoke, as ever at her general's right hand.
"These lights..." Samuel Guy was an octogenarian, and though he might look his age he did not act nor feel it, heading up the Merchant Community within Timbuktu, and an ever-present in the council of the Viceroy who respected his tremendous knowledge and great experience.
"A trick..." the Archbishop was scathing, "A clever trick"
"So clever that guns could not fell them ?", Commander Tomas Thorn had been admitted to this council as an observer but few were going to deny him his right to speak, "So clever that a direct hit from a mortar killed only those natives standing behind?"
"Then it was not where it seemed to be" the Archbishop snapped
There was a moment of silence, before the Viceroy spoke again
"Cousin, is that feasible?"
Startled to be addressed in such a friendly fashion, it took Ramona a moment to realise that the enquiry had been directed at her,
"At the limit of theory, some speak of light-patterns, cast from behind but created some distance ahead"
"Explain that ?" Samuel Guy was never reticent in coming forwards
"Light can be weak as well as strong... Imagine a thousand weak and pale beams, on their own they are nothing, but project them towards a common area and the beams will merge and strengthen. This could give the appearance of there being an object, made up of light, at the conjunction of the beams..."
"Science..." the Archbishop protested weakly
"Were there a thousand natives standing behind them with light-beams ?" asked Samuel Guy
"That would appear to be the problem, sir" Ramona deferred to his age
"And the lights never dimmed no matter how many natives we killed", Thorn had been there, so his words carried weight, "We could kill natives, we could cut great swathes through their number, but the lights moved ever onward."
He was clearly shaken by the experience.
"We are left with answers that we do not like", Gunther summarised, "Let us hope that our cousin's mission is successful"
"Let us pray" said the Archbishop
And this time nobody challenged him