Vol. 1 Refugee
CALIGULA OF THE STARS
Though he was later accused of every
crime and sexual perversion in the galaxy, Hope Hubris began as an innocent.
Because he defended his older sister against the violent lusts of a wealthy
scion, Hope and his peasant family were forced to flee Callisto, one of
the moons of Jupiter. Pursued by the bloodthirsty scions across the airless
desert, they barely escaped with their lives. The illegal space bubble
was overcrowded with refugees, all hoping to reach Jupiter for asylum.
But the space travelers had not reckoned
on the terrible threat of high space—the pirates, barbaric men who rape,
rob, and murder, with no thought but to satisfy their bestial appetites.
It will take all Hope’s ingenuity to survive, but the atrocities he witnesses
will never die. There is only one way he can be rid of them… REVENGE!
Chapter I
RAPE OF THE BUBBLE
Jupiter Orbit 2-8-2615-The shell of the bubble was opaque, for
it had to be thick and solid to contain the pressure of air and to insulate
against the cold of empty space. But there were portholes, multiply glazed
tunnels that offered views outside, and naturally I was interested.
The view really wasn't much. Jupiter, the
colossus of the system, dominated as it always did, about the apparent
size of my outstretched fist. Its turbulent cloud-currents and great red
eye were looking right back at me. The planet was almost full-face right
now, because the sun was behind us. Our progress toward the planet was
so slow that the disk seemed hardly larger than it had been when we started
three days before. But giant Jove was always impressive, however distant
and whatever the phase.
"Ship ahoy!" our temporary navigator cried.
I didn't know whether this was standard space procedure, but it was good
enough for us, who were less experienced than the rankest of amateurs.
A ship! Excitement rippled through the refugees
massed in the bubble. What could
this mean?
Soon we all saw it through the portholes:
a somewhat bloated barrel with attachments. Of course streamlining was
not needed in space, and a tub like this one was never intended to land
on any significant solid body. Still, I felt a certain disappointment.
Perhaps I had been spoiled by all those dramatic holographs of the Jupiter
Space Navy in action, with needle-sleek missile ships homing in on decoy
drones and exploding with instant fireballs. I had always known that real
spacecraft were not like that, and yet my mental picture remained shaped
by the Jupe publicity ads.
The ship overhauled us readily, for it had
chemical jets to boost its gravity shields. It closed on us, and its blunt
nose clanged against our access port with a jolt that shook us all. What
was it up to?
I turned to discover my big sister, Faith,
immediately behind me. She was absolutely beautiful in her excitement,
though as always I pretended not to notice. I had the chore of staying
near her during this voyage, to discourage mischief. Faith attracted men
the way garbage draws flies in the incredible films of old Earth -perhaps
it would be kinder to say the way flowers draw bees -partly because no
man had touched her. We Latins place importance on that sort of thing;
I understand there are other cultures that don't.
"Who are they?" Faith asked.
"Maybe traders," I answered, feeling a mild
burgeoning of importance in the expressing of such an opinion. But I felt
a slow clutch of apprehension. We were refugees; we had nothing to trade.
In any event, we were powerless to oppose
their boarding. Our bubble had only one weak propulsive jet; we were virtually
free-floating in space. Our main physical motivation was the selected gravity
of Jupiter and the forces of inertia. We could not have performed an evasive
maneuver had we known how. The entry ports could be operated from either
side; this was to prevent anyone from being trapped outside. Our competence
was such that this was a necessary safety feature, but it did leave us
open to boarding by any craft that chose to do so.
The seal was made and the port opened, making
an open window to the other craft. There were of course safety features
to prevent the lock opening both doors simultaneously when the pressure
was unequal, but the normal air pressure of the ship did equalize it. In
space, safety had to be balanced by convenience; it would have been awkward
to transfer any quantity of freight from one vessel to another if one panel
of the air lock always had to be sealed.
A burly, bearded man appeared, garbed in soiled
yellow pantaloons, a black shirt, and a bright red sash. He needed no space
suit, of course; the merged air lock mechanism made exit into the vacuum
of space unnecessary. Most striking was his headdress: a kind of broad,
split hat like that of the classical buccaneers. There is a lot of conscious
imitation of the past, so archaic costumes are not unusual.
Buccaneers. I had been uneasy before; now
I was scared. I was aware that not all of those who emulated buccaneers
in costume were playing innocent games. Some took the part more seriously,
particularly in this region of the system. "We've got to hide, Faith,"
I said, in our natural Spanish. The translation of course is not perfect,
and neither is my memory; allowance must be made.
Her clear brow furrowed. "Why, Hope?" she
asked. "I want to meet the traders. Maybe they have soap." She had been
unable to wash her luxuriant tresses, and so she fretted. It was the way
of pretty girls.
"They're not traders," I snapped. "Come on!"
She frowned. She was three years older than
I, and did not like taking orders from me. I could hardly blame her for
that, but I really feared the trouble that could come if my suspicion was
correct. I took her by the arm and drew her along with me.
"But you said-" she protested as she moved.
It was already too late, for several more
brutish men had crowded through the open port, and they were armed with
clubs and knives. "Line up here on the main floor!" their leader cried.
I found it mildly anomalous that he did not use the proper term, "deck."
Maybe he did not consider our little bubble to be a true spacecraft.
The refugees looked at our navigator, who
seemed to be most likely authority in a situation like this. He looked
suddenly tired.
"I think we must do as they say," he said.
"They are armed and we are not."
"Stay back," I whispered to Faith. "Stand
behind me. Try to-you know-make yourself inconspicuous."
"Oh, no!" she breathed. She had a very feminine
way of expressing herself, even when under stress. She had the business
of being pretty down virtually to a science. "You don't think-?"
"I think they're pirates," I said, trying
to speak without moving my lips as I faced the intruders, so they wouldn't
know I was talking. "They're going to rob us." I hoped that would be the
limit of it.
We moved slowly to merge with the mass of
people forming on the designated portion of the deck. Fortunately the bubble's
spin was high at the moment, so there was enough centrifugal gravity to
hold us firm. Our concentration at this spot did cause the bubble to wobble
slightly, however.
"Now, I'm called the Horse, because of the
way I smell," the red-sashed leader said. "I run, this party. That's
about all you need to know about me. Just do what I say, and no one will
be hurt too much." He chuckled, but none of us saw any humor in this. We
were frightened.
The pirates spread out around the bubble,
around the curve of the deck, poking into things. The leader and several
others attended to the refugees. "All right, come on up here, you," the
Horse said, beckoning an older man.
"What?" the man asked in Spanish, startled.
The pirate leaped and grabbed him by the arm,
hauling him roughly forward. "Move!" he shouted.
The man recovered his balance, nonplused.
"But, Señor Horse-"
Deliberately, yet almost carelessly, the pirate
struck him on the head, backhanded. It was no token blow; the man cried
out and fell to the deck. A trace of blood showed on his lip as he put
one hand to his face.
"Check him," the Horse said brusquely. Two
others stepped up, hauled the old man to his feet, and searched him roughly.
They found his wallet and a small bag of golden coins, his fortune. They
dumped these in a central box and threw him to the side. I think the violence
upset him and us more than the actual robbery did. We were plainly unprepared
for this.
"You," the Horse said, pointing to a middle-aged
woman.
She screamed and shrank back into the crowd,
but he was too quick for her. He caught her by the shoulder and dragged
her into the open. "Strip!" he ordered.
Horrified, unmoving, she stared at him.
The Horse did not repeat his order. He gestured
to the two assistant pirates. They grabbed the woman and literally ripped
the clothing from her body, shaking it so that all objects in her pockets
fell to the deck. These were mostly feminine articles: a comb, a mirror,
a vial of perfume, and a small change purse. The pirates took the change
and cast her aside, naked and sobbing.
Now the pirate's eye fell on Faith. My effort
to conceal her had been unsuccessful; there were too many of the intruders
scattered around the bubble. Also, the curve of the deck meant that those
of us who stood behind the group actually were more visible than those
near the center, because the curve had the effect of elevating us.
"Here's something better than money!" he exclaimed,
beckoning her.
Faith shrank away, of course. My father shoved
his way out of the crowd. "She has nothing!" he cried.
One of the peripheral pirates strode forward
to intercept my father. Another went after Faith. My father was not a man
of violence, but he could not tolerate abuse of his children. He raised
one fist in warning as he met the pirate. It was not that he wanted to
fight, but that he had to give some signal that the limit of our tolerance
had been approached. Even confused refugees could only be pushed so far.
The pirate drew his curved sword. "Get back!"
another refugee cried, catching my father by his other arm and drawing
him back into the throng. The pirate, satisfied by this act of retreat,
scowled and did not pursue.
Meanwhile, the other pirate reached Faith,
who now stood close beside me, no longer protesting my leadership. He caught
her by the elbow. She screamed-and I launched myself at the man.
I caught him in a clumsy tackle about the
legs, making him stumble. This brought a feeling of deja vu to me, the
sensation of having been here before. My mind is like that; I make odd
connections at the least convenient times. A teacher once told me that
it is a sign of creativity, that can be useful if properly harnessed. I
had tackled a man before, rescuing my sister-
A fist like a block of ice-rock clubbed me
on the ear. There is a peculiar agony to the injured ear; my very brain
seemed to shake inside my skull.
The pirate had knocked me down with the same
almost careless contempt the Horse had applied to the old man. It was as
effective. I sat up, my ear seeing red stars. For a moment I was disorganized,
not doing more than hurting and watching.
The pirate hauled Faith into the open. She
screamed again and wrenched herself away. Her blouse tore, leaving a shred
in the man's grip. He cursed in the manner of his kind and lunged for her
again.
I scrambled up and launched myself at him
a second time. This time I didn't tackle, I butted. The man was leaning
toward me, reaching for Faith; I brushed past her and struck him dead center
with the top, of my head.
His arms were outstretched; he had no protection
from my blow. His mouth was open, as he was about to say something. I was
braced for the impact; even so, it was one spine-deadening collision.
The air whooshed out of the pirate like gas
from a punctured bag, while I dropped half-stunned to the deck. Now my
whole head saw stars, and they had heated from red to white. We were both
lightweight in the fractional gravity of the bubble, but our inertial mass
remained intact; there had been nothing light about the butt.
I lay prone, waiting for the shock to let
go of my system. I was conscious, but somehow couldn't get my limbs to
coordinate. I heard the pirates shouting, and Faith's voice as she turned
about and returned to me.
"Hope!" she cried. "Are you all right? Oh,
they've hurt him!"
I presumed that "him" was me, news for a third
party. I tried to tell her I would be all right in a moment, when the universe
stopped gyrating quite so wildly and my head shrank back to manageable
dimension, but only a grunt came out. Maybe that sound actually issued
from the pirate next to me, who was surely hurting as much as I was.
Maybe with luck, I had managed to separate his ribs.
But now other pirates charged in. "Hack that
boy apart!" the Horse cried, and rough hands hauled me into the air.
My dizziness abated rapidly; there is nothing
like a specific threat to one's life to concentrate one's attention!
Faith screamed again-that was one thing she
was good at-and flung her arms about me as my feet touched the deck. The
scream was ill-timed; at that moment all the pirates were doing was standing
me on my feet and supporting me as I wobbled woozily. Their intent was
unlikely to be kind, but in that instant no one was actually doing me violence,
despite their leader's order. Maybe it had been intended to cow the other
refugees, rather than to be implemented literally. I make this point, with
the advantage of retrospection, because of the importance of that particular
scream.
Ill-timed it was, but that scream electrified
the refugees in a manner no prior event had. Suddenly they were acting,
all at once, as if choreographed by a larger power. Four of them grabbed
the pirate beside me, stripping him from me. Others jumped on the one I
had stunned with my butt. Still others went after the oncoming pirates.
The refugee throng had been transformed from
an apathetic, frightened mass to a fighting force. Faith's third scream
had done it. It remains unclear to me why her first or second screams had
not had that effect. Perhaps the first ones had primed the group. I like
to understand human motives, and sometimes they defy reasonable explanation.
At any rate, in moments all the pirates except
their leader had been caught and disarmed, surprised by the suddenness
and ferocity of the refugee reaction and overwhelmed by our much greater
number.
The Horse stood, however, not with a drawn
sword, but with a drawn laser pistol. This was another matter, for though
a laser lacked the brute force of a sword, it could do its damage a great
deal faster, particularly when played across the face.
"Turn loose my men," the Horse said sternly.
My father spoke up. I knew he did not like
this sort of showdown, but he was, after all, our leader, and with Faith
and me involved he was also personally responsible.
"Get out of this bubble!" he said. "You're
nothing but robbers!"
The Horse's weapon swung to cover my father.
I tensed despite my continuing discomfort, knowing that little weapon could
puncture a man's eyeballs and cruelly blind him before he could even blink.
"Who are you?" said the pirate.,
"Major Hubris," my father responded.
"You're no military man."
"It's my name, not a title. Fire that laser,
and the rest of us will swamp you before I fall."
The Horse grinned humorlessly. "I can take
out five or six of you first."
"Two or three of us," my father corrected
him evenly, and I felt a surging pride at his courage. My father had always
had the nerve to do what he had to do, even when he disliked it. This was
an example. "And there are two hundred of us. We've already got your men.
You stand to lose, regardless."
The pirate leader considered. "There is that.
All right-you release my men, and we'll leave you alone."
My father turned to the crowd. "That seems
fair enough." He noted the scattered nods of approval, then turned back
to the pirate. "But you have to leave the things you stole from us. No
robbery."
The Horse scowled. "Agreed."
By this-time I had recovered most of my wits.
"Don't trust him, Father!" I cried. "These are pirates!"
"I am a pirate," the Horse said. "But I keep
my word. We will not rob you, and we will leave the bubble."
My father, like most men of honor, tended
to believe the best of people. He nodded at the men who held the pirates,
and the pirates were released. They quickly recovered their weapons and
rejoined their leader, somewhat shame-faced.
The Horse stood for a moment,, considering.
Then he indicated me. "That's your boy who floored my man?"
My father nodded grimly. "And my daughter,
whom he was defending."
As I mentioned, thoughts scurry through my
head at all times, not always relevant to the issue of the moment. Right
now I wondered where my little sister Spirit was, as I didn't see her.
I don't know why I thought of her right then. Maybe it was because, the
way my father spoke, it sounded as though he had only two children, when
in fact he had three. Of course, he wasn't trying to deceive anyone; the
pirate hadn't asked how many he had, just whether I was one. It was just
that my meandering brain insisted on exploring surplus details.
"And when she screamed, the others rallied
around," the Horse said. "We misjudged that, it seems."
"Yes."
"So we'll just have to try it again," the
Horse concluded.
He made a signal with his hand. "Take them."
Suddenly the nine other pirates advanced on
us again, each with his sword or club
ready.
"Hey!" my father protested. "You agreed-"
"Not to rob you," the Horse said. "And to
leave the bubble. We'll honor that. But first we have some business that
wasn't in the contract." He looked at Faith and me. "Don't hurt the boy
or the girl or the man," he ordered. "Bring them here."
Pirates grabbed the three of us. In each case,
two men menaced the refugees nearby while the third cornered the victim.
They were much more careful than before. It was not possible to resist
without immediate disaster, for the Horse backed them up with his laser.
More than that, it was psychological: The remaining refugees, rendered
leaderless again, did nothing. The dynamics had changed.
That's another phenomenon that has perplexed
me. The mechanism by which a few uninhibited individuals can cow a much
larger number, when both groups know the larger group has the power to
prevail. It seems impossible, yet it happens all the time. Whole governments
exist in opposition to the will of the people they govern, because of this.
If I could just comprehend that dynamic-
"Bind father and son," the Horse said. "String
them up to the baggage rack."
I struggled, but lacked the strength and mass
of any one of the pirates. They tied my hands behind me, cruelly tight,
and suspended me from the guyed baggage net in the center of the bubble.
My father suffered a similar fate. We hung at a slight angle, overlooking
the proceedings, helpless.
Now the Horse turned to Faith. He whistled.
"She's a looker!" he exclaimed. His vernacular expression may have been
cruder, but that was the essence. Faith, of course, blushed.
"Leave her alone!" I cried foolishly.
"No, we won't let this piece go to waste,"
the Horse said, running his tongue around his lips. "Prepare her."
The pirates held Faith and methodically tore
the rest of her clothing from her struggling body, grinning salaciously.
Oh, yes, they enjoyed doing this! In my mind they resembled burning demons
from the depths of Hell. Someone among the refugees cried out, but the
swords of the other pirates on guard prevented any action.
When Faith was naked, they hauled a box out
of the baggage and held her supine, spread-eagled across it. The Horse
ran his rough hands over her torso and squeezed her breasts, then dropped
his pantaloons.
There was a gasp of incredulity from the refugees.
This was not because of any special quality of the Horse's anatomy, which
was unimpressive and unclean, but because of the open manner in which he
exhibited himself before such a company of men, women, and children. The
man was completely without shame.
I am striving to record this sequence objectively,
for this is my personal biography: the description of the things that have
made me what I am. I strive always to comprehend the true nature of people,
myself most of all. There is a place for subjectivity-or so I believe.
My feelings about a given event may change with time and mood and memory,
but the facts of the event will never change. So I must describe precisely
what occurred, as though it were recorded by videotape, uncluttered by
emotion, then proceed to the subjective analysis and interpretation.
Perhaps there should be several interpretations,
separated by years, so that the change in them becomes apparent and helps
lead to the truest possible comprehension of the whole.
But in this case I find I cannot adequately
perform the first requirement. My hand balks, my very mind veers away from
the enormity of the outrage and hurt. I can only say that I loved my two
sisters with a love that was perhaps more than brotherly, though never
would I have thought that there was any incestuous element. Faith was beautiful,
and nice, and I was charged with her protection, though she was a woman
while I was a mere adolescent. I had in fact never before witnessed the
sexual act, either in holo or in person, and had never imagined it to be
so brutal.
[End of Excerpt]
|