Honor and Fidelity
Book Description
It was an easy assignment on a peaceful alien world—until the natives attacked!
The Sandcastle, on a water world on the fringe of Earth’s expanding empire, houses the Fifth Foreign Legion—troops sent there to protect the interests of Seafarms Interstellar, a powerful Terran corporation.
At first, Captain Fraser thought his biggest problem would be keeping the Legionnaires from getting too bored. But that was before the Free Swimmers—the nomadic ocean clans—attacked and nearly overran the Sandcastle.
Suddenly, the Fifth Foreign Legion is facing a seemingly unstoppable alien army equipped not only with their native crossbows, but also high-tech offworld weapons that just might spell the end for the Fifth as well as the Seafarms civilians they have sworn to protect.
Fifth Foreign Legion Book 2
Digital Edition – 2016
WordFire Press
wordfirepress.com
ISBN: 978-1-61475-399-5
Copyright © 2016 Bill Fawcett & Associates, Inc.
Originally published by Roc Books 1992
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the copyright holder, except where permitted by law. This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously.
This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Cover design by Janet McDonald
Art Director Kevin J. Anderson
Cover artwork images by Dollar Photo Club
Book Design by RuneWright, LLC
www.RuneWright.com
Kevin J. Anderson & Rebecca Moesta, Publishers
Published by
WordFire Press, an imprint of
WordFire, Inc.
PO Box 1840
Monument, CO 80132
Contents
Book Description
Title Page
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Epilogue
Glossary
About the Author
If You Liked …
Other WordFire Press Titles by Andrew Keith & William H. Keith, Jr.
Prologue
Soldi Rochemont: Distance from Sol 138 light-years … Spectral class G1V; radius 1.006 Sol; mass 1.02 Sol; luminosity 1.102 Sol. Stellar Effective Temperature 5900°K … Four planets, one planetoid belt. There is only one habitable world, the innermost, designated “Polypheme”.…
I Polypheme: Orbital radius 0.90 AUs; eccentricity .0136; period 0.845 solar years (308.8 std. days) … One natural satellite, Nonhomme, mass 0.004 Terra; density 0.6 Terra (3.3 g/cc); orbital radius 130,269 kms; period 5.16 std. days (123.8 hours) … an airless, waterless body notable only for its significant tidal effects on Polypheme …
Planetary mass 1.1 Terra; density 0.85 Terra (4.675 g/cc); surface gravity 0.93 G. Radius 6950.4 kilometers; circumference 43,670.54 kilometers … Total surface area 607,054,524 square kilometers …
Hydrographic percentage 82 % … Atmospheric pressure 0.9 atm; composition oxygen/nitrogen. Oxygen content 18% …
Planetary axial tilt 17°40’57.4”. Rotation period 46 hours, 14 minutes, 28.9 seconds.…
Planetography: Polypheme’s close satellite produces tidal stresses which have shaped many facets of planetary development. The planet is more seismically active than Terra, with a consequently more rugged surface.… There are ten continents.… Tides cause broad coastal tracts to be regularly inundated and then exposed.…
Equatorial temperatures have been recorded as high as 45°C.… Polar temperatures rarely rise above freezing but are too warm to produce permanent ice packs.… There is a moderating influence exerted on the planet by the oceans, and humans find the climate tolerable outside the tropics.
The low planetary density is indicative of a general lack of worthwhile ore deposits, but there is an unusually high concentration of minerals in the planetary oceans, possibly caused by widespread undersea volcanic activity. By Commonwealth standards Polypheme is poor, and were it not for the twin interests of scientists studying tidal effects and miners lured by the high mineral content of the seas Polypheme might well have been ignored.…
Although the usual variety in terrain and ecology is present on Polypheme, of greatest interest are the many adaptations to the tidal conditions.… The tidal plains have become home to many species uniquely evolved for this strange environ, including the planet’s sapient race.…
Biology: Intelligent life arose in the tidal flats, in a species originally adapted to a dual existence built around the ebb and flow of the tides.… Equally at home as swimmers or clinging by sucker-like appendages to rocks exposed on the flood plains, this species found intelligence useful both to cope with the fast-changing conditions of their unique ecological niche and to handle certain swimming predators. The latter further spurred adaptation to a dry-land environment.…
The sophonts of Polypheme, the drooroukh, are a bilaterally symmetrical, bimodal race with four limbs all equally well adapted as hands, feet, or fins as circumstances warrant. A highly sophisticated pseudogill system can extract oxygen from air or water with equal proficiency, with membranes in the gill outlets serving as speech organs. They generally stand upright on land but can move on all fours very quickly and are superb swimmers. A flat, heavy tail provides propulsion in the water and balance ashore.… They are homeothermic, producing live young. The juveniles of the species cannot leave the water on their own, and they normally swim free except when feeding.… The young are parasitic, clinging to an adult and drawing nourishment from its blood. Although humanoid in gross appearance, the drooroukh have little in common with Mankind.…
The average local measures 1.7 meters in length, not including the tail, with hairless, slick skin which ranges from gray-green to black in color.… Although possessed of two sexes and a fairly typical reproductive cycle, the drooroukh have little concept of family, regarding child care as the collective responsibility of the group.…
Civilization: Several thousand years ago a schism developed among the inhabitants of Polypheme. Part of the population began spending more and more time on land, except as necessary for child-rearing and mariculture.… The process led to the development of a civilization along patterns similar to Terra, with metalworking, cities, and the rudiments of scientific thought.…
The second group, however, remained closely tied to the seas in a nomadic existence unchanged over a period of 50,000 years.… The nomads have enjoyed mixed relations with their land-dwelling cousins, sometimes trading with them, at other times in conflict.… Most researchers see them as locked in
a cultural dead-end.…
Commonwealth Contact: Prior to the Semti War Polypheme was nominally a part of the Semti Conclave, but the Semti had little interest in the planet and leased development rights to the neighboring Toeljuk Autarchy.… The Toels found conditions on Polypheme familiar and applied many of the techniques invented in their own climb to power to exploiting the new world.… Though poor in metals ashore, Polypheme offered resources in abundance at sea, where a species of small aquatic grazer, the “shelljet,” was found to extract and concentrate metals in its shell. A number of large harvester ships, and bases to support them, were established by the Toeljuks on Polypheme.… The project was abandoned about the time of the Semti War due to the collapse of the Autarchy’s economy in that period.…
For close to a century Commonwealth contact was limited to a few scientific teams and the missionary work of the Uplift Foundation.… Three years ago Seafarms Interstellar put forward a proposal to duplicate Toel harvesting techniques, using the abandoned Toeljuk facilities as a basis for new operations.…
—Excerpted from Leclerc’s Guide to the Commonwealth Volume VI: The Toel Frontier,
34th Edition, published 2848 AD
Chapter One
Is it how a soldier lives that matters? Isn’t it how he dies?
—Colonel Joseph Conrad,
French Foreign Legion, 1835
Legionnaire Second-Class Alois Trousseau shielded his eyes against the dazzling light of the setting sun. Twilight on Polypheme was the stuff of romantic poetry, long, lingering, with brilliant hues of red and orange illuminating the low-lying cloud banks and reflecting off the vast empty stretches of the Sea of Scylla. The light caught the crescent shape of Nonhomme, Polypheme’s satellite, as it loomed overhead looking close enough to reach out and touch, and reflections from the water rippled and danced everywhere.
But Trousseau paid little attention to the beauty that was Polypheme as he crossed the docking platform and knelt near the water’s edge.
Displacing just under a hundred thousand metric tons, Seafarms Cyclops was a huge vessel. There were four of these docks spaced around her wide hull, but this was the best one for Trousseau’s purposes. Designed to accommodate smaller ships with stores and equipment destined for the engineering spaces, this platform was rarely used or even visited.
And the setting sun would help hide Trousseau as he left the vessel in the raft he held bundled under one arm. By the time anyone noticed he was missing, he would be far from the confines of the huge harvester ship.
He’d planned his desertion carefully. Even the time was perfect. Not only would the sun help obscure his movements, but it was close to 0400 by standard ship-time. Polypheme’s 47-hour rotation didn’t mesh well with the cycles of bodies evolved for Terrestrial conditions. Most of the ship’s personnel were asleep, and those on watch were likely to be slow responding.
In another few hours they would be leaving the Cape of Storms behind, and with it their last contact with solid land for a month or more. He had to act tonight if he was to escape.
Trousseau pulled the ring and listened to the hiss of the raft’s inflation with a satisfied little smile. Once ashore it would be a long, hard march before he reached the native city of Ourgh. But it would be worth it to be quit of the Foreign Legion.
He knew some starport workers who would smuggle him aboard the next ship out for the hundred sols he’s been hoarding for the last few weeks. Once they put in to the systerm on the outermost planet of the system he’d be able to come out of hiding. Maybe a ship would need an electronics technician. He’d put in enough time as the platoon’s C3 operator to get a job handling any commlink or computer a small ship could mount.
The raft slid slowly into the water. Trousseau lashed it to the cleat and ran through a last mental checklist.
Free! He was finally going to be free of the Legion, of the martinet NCOs, of the overbearing officers. Free of the boredom. He’d never imagined it could be so boring until he joined the garrison on Polypheme.
With a last glance around, Trousseau turned his back on the Seafarms Cyclops—on the Fifth Foreign Legion.
Something splashed at the forward end of the dock, and Trousseau’s trained reflexes made him spin to face it before he was even consciously aware of the sound.
He found himself staring down at a bulky figure with smooth gray-green skin. It seemed to take forever for the legionnaire to register it as one of the Polypheme sophonts, a “polliwog” to use the slang of humans living on the planet. By the time he realized what it was it had already climbed free of the water to stand on the platform, its stalked eyes focused on Trousseau with an unfathomable alien expression.
It—no, he—was one of the planet’s ocean-dwelling nomads, clad in nothing more than a loose harness that held an assortment of primitive weapons and implements. An intricate pattern of tattoos on his chest identified his tribe, but Trousseau had never taken adchip instruction on nomad symbols or tribal signs, so it was unintelligible.
The wog was large for his kind, nearly two meters long without the flat tail that balanced his slightly forward-leaning posture.
But Trousseau was only vaguely aware of the creature’s size. His attention was focused, instead, on the small device clutched in one long-jointed, web-fingered hand. A slender tube mounted atop an alien pistol grip.…
The alien raised the tube to point at Trousseau’s chest and squeezed the trigger.
The impact of the 5 mm rocket projectile made Trousseau stagger back. His duraweave coverall—and the short range, which kept the rocket from building up to full impact velocity—had saved his life, but the legionnaire was stunned. He struggled to keep his balance, but couldn’t.
Suddenly his feet weren’t on the solid deck anymore. Salt stung his eyes and made him gag as he fell into the dark water. Trousseau came to the surface spluttering, gasping for air. Long fingers closed around his throat, pulling him down again.
Trousseau knew he would die.
He let himself go limp, then kicked away again as the grip relaxed. Wincing at the pain, he took another breath and let himself sink, his fingers operating the keys on his wristpiece computer. He couldn’t outfight the nomads in their own element, but at least he could warn the others they were here before it was too late.
An artificial voice whispered in his ear. “Please give the password for computer access.”
Damn! What was the password? Trousseau twisted away from another wog and broke the surface again. “Nightwing!” he spluttered, gasping for air. “Nightwing!”
“Access accepted. Please—”
“Security code India!” Trousseau shouted. A knife blade slashed through his coverall, and pain lanced through his back. “India! Intruders on Deck One, En—”
The knife struck again, and again.
And Legionnaire Alois Trousseau bobbed to the surface, staining the water with his blood.
O O O
Subaltern Toru Watanabe rolled out of his bunk as the ululating alarm shrieked through the bowels of the Seafarms Cyclops. The metal was cold under his bare feet, but the shiver that ran up his spine had nothing to do with the temperature.
Watanabe had hoped for a cruise as boring as garrison life back at the Legion’s base, in the installation the humans on Polypheme called “Sandcastle.” But the security alarm meant there was trouble aboard the harvester ship—serious trouble.
Still groggy, Watanabe crossed the cabin and slapped the call button on the intercom mounted above the desk. Like all the human equipment aboard Seafarms Cyclops the intercom had an improvised, unfinished look that stood out in contrast to the flowing lines and exotic patterns of the original vessel. The contrast reminded him vaguely of the blend of high-tech and traditional styles of art and architecture his Japanese ancestors had brought with them from Terra to his native world of Pacifica.
He forced himself to concentrate on the problem at hand as the heavy features of Sergeant Yussufu Muwanga filled the viewscreen.
“Operations,” the sergeant said gruffly.
“What have you got, Sergeant?”
“Computer just sounded the alarm, sir,” Muwanga replied. “We’re trying to find the source now. It wasn’t any of our lookouts.”
“A false alarm?” he asked hopefully.
Muwanga frowned. Watanabe rubbed his forehead absently. He knew the answer the man would give. Why had he let himself show his uncertainty so plainly?
“Someone put through an India code, sir,” the sergeant said slowly. “The computer can’t just come up with one on its own.”
“Then get Trousseau down there and ask him,” Watanabe snapped. “Meanwhile, order Sergeant Gessler to assemble the men in Hold Two. I’m on my way down.”
“Yessir,” the sergeant replied. The screen went dead.
Watanabe slumped into the chair behind the desk, feeling drained. Why can’t I keep a lid on my temper? he asked himself bitterly. A year ago he’d never have lost control like that. Toru Watanabe had the reputation for being quiet, soft-spoken, calm in any crisis—a competent platoon commander.
Since then, though, Toru Watanabe had changed.
He dressed quickly in duraweave fatigues, boots, and a beret, his mind on the past year. First, the excitement of getting his assignment. It was rare for a top Academy student to request the Fifth Foreign Legion, but Watanabe had gone after the posting with a single-minded determination to follow in his father’s footsteps and be a part of the Legion tradition. He’d made it, too, earning a platoon command.
But then came the fighting on Hanuman, the long overland retreat through hostile territory after a coup d’état had cut his company off from outside aid. And at the climax of the campaign the legionnaires had been forced to make a desperate stand against overwhelming odds, and Toru Watanabe had watched as his precious platoon was all but destroyed. Somehow he’d come through the fighting alive, but he knew he’d never be the same again.
War wasn’t like the stories you saw on the holovid shows, or the textbook accounts of maneuvers and counter-maneuvers. It took courage to command men in battle; not just personal bravery, but the kind of resolve that would let an officer order his men to their deaths. Toru Watanabe wasn’t sure he had that kind of courage anymore.