War World X Takeover

The first problem with hiring the River Dragon was finding her. The rather large Harmony beadle—if you please!—patrolling the dock had no idea when the ship might come in, though he offered several kindly suggestions as to who might know. Trotting from warehouse to warehouse Sanchez garnered no further information, except that the warehouse managers themselves indulged in a bit of primitive banking, evaluating goods for barter, and changing CoDo creds for gold, goods or out-world currencies.

A visit to the town hospital—likewise guarded by a sturdy beadle—revealed only that it was actually quite a good clinic, employing both off-world techniques and tools and local herbal cures. Another visit around the bars and restaurants likewise revealed nothing new. By the time dim-dark was approaching, Sanchez was beyond impatience and into steaming.

He finally saw a bizarre-looking riverboat approaching, learned that this was indeed the legendary River Dragon and took care to be waiting on the new dock when the ship came in. He noticed that her captain looked oddly familiar, enough like the pilot of the ferry-raft to be a close relative. Sanchez bothered to ask the man his name, which he couldn’t recall hearing before, and asked when the boat would be heading down river. He was not pleased by the answer.

“Yes, four T-days,” Makhno repeated, idly scratching his new beard. “I have a lot of trips to and from the shuttle. There are some shimmer stone miners going home this time, in case you hadn’t noticed.”

“But four days!”

“That’s the least I can make it. The ships come in intermittently, you know.”

“And usually stay in orbit for ninety days! Don’t tell me you’re not taking goods and passengers straight down to Kennicott Camp!”

“Sure, but they usually wait until I’ve got the full cargo for the town. What’s your hurry, anyway? It’s not like anything’s going to change in four days. Besides, you’ll need to collect your own provisions for the trip, unless you want to stop at local settlements every T-day—which I can’t guarantee, anyway. I’d say, bring two weeks’ provisions—just in case.”

With that Sanchez had to be content. He went stomping back to the Starman’s Inn, pausing only to buy a cheap packet of euph-leaf and make an offer to another Red-Scarf, one that spoke a civilized language this time. He was already starting to hate this planet. Besides the usual discomforts of gravity that didn’t feel right, air that didn’t smell right and light that didn’t look right, there was something about the people here that turned him off. Even the whores seemed harder and more secretive than usual.

Makhno found work enough to occupy him for the stated four days, but after that he had no further excuses. He arranged for one of Himself’s crew to come along as unofficial bodyguard, took Sanchez and his gear aboard, and made a short speech about the time and hazards of river travel.

“Don’t trail your hands in the water; plenty of newcomers have lost fingers, and more, that way. Use the chamber-pots under the seats, and then empty them over the side. Do not, under any circumstances, hang your bare butt out over the water; riverjacks can jump. Once on the water, obey my orders instantly. This is a rough world, and there are a lot of dangers on the river. With any luck, we’ll reach Kenny-Camp in twelve to fourteen T-days.”


“Twelve days!” fumed Sanchez. “With the speed this craft can make?”

“In case you hadn’t noticed, it’s going to be dim-dark soon. That makes river-traffic risky enough. After that comes truenight, and nobody with any sense travels in that. If we’re lucky, we’ll be near a settlement by then, where we can pull up and spend the night on shore. If not, I put down anchor and we wait it out on the water. When we get light again I’ll start the boat, but we don’t travel fast until full-light when we can see everything around us. That’s the way it is on the river. If you’ve got a problem with that, I’ll pull over to shore and you can walk. Got it?”

Sanchez grumbled, but agreed to stay put. The Dragon was making fairly good time right now. After a year’s travel to reach this benighted ice-ball world, he could wait another dozen days to confront Van Damm.

Besides, there were questions he could ask this ornery captain. The big miner coming down river with them spoke only in monosyllables, but Makhno might be made to yield some useful information, better than the scraps he’d gotten from the Red-Scarf.

“Less than ten years ago, the companies brought in riverboat designs and encouraged building the ships to facilitate river traffic. What happened to them?”

“Well…” Makhno scratched his chin. “The Rosie’s engine blew up. The Putty Princess just plain sank. The Rockhammer was sunk in a storm. The Elisabet got her guts ripped out on the rocks near shore, and nobody could agree on how much money and labor to spend on salvage. The Last Resort… Well, I expect you heard what happened to her.”

“No, I hadn’t.”

“A thug named Jomo commandeered her to take his army upstream and rob the farms. The farmers shot back, and sank her in shallow water a good ways upstream, and they salvaged her afterward. There’s talk of building another boat from the pieces, but I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting.” Makhno frowned. “Kenny-Co promised it would bring in supplies for half a dozen more, but they never arrived: something about ‘production shortfalls’ and ‘restricted budgets’ and crap like that. So anyway, everybody built what they could from their own designs, from local wood and metal-scrap and bits brought in from the off-world trade.”

Sanchez fell silent, wondering if the companies could be pressured into footing the bill for a few more boats. It would be a damn-sight cheaper than building roads around the valley, even after the CoDominium took over.

The T-day ended with dim-dark descending. Makhno scanned the shore, found no settlements close, shut off the engine and put out the anchor. The miner emptied out the chamber-pots, washed his hands with what smelled like rotgut whiskey, pulled a wrapped sandwich out of the basket he’d brought with him, and ate silently. Sanchez had no choice but to copy him as the captain seemed to be doing. When Makhno finished, rolled up in a foil-and-plastic blanket and stretched out to sleep, the miner pulled out a battered old tin flute and began playing it. Sanchez fell asleep to the notes of what sounded like Danny Boy echoing across the water.

He woke at the sound of the engine starting, raised his head and saw the miner put away his tin-whistle and wrap himself up in a blanket.

“Stay awake,” the captain said, obviously meaning Sanchez. “I’ll make as good speed as I can, but I’ll need you to help scan the river. Some creatures come close to surface during dim-dark, and we’ll need to watch for them. And that’s not counting tree-snags fallen in from the bank.”

Sanchez duly watched, noting that the raft was moving at half-speed now. He also noted that the captain steered away from certain long barrel-like waves that rolled across the water. “What are those—” he started to ask.

Makhno cut him off. “Don’t distract me,” he snapped, peering at the water ahead. “Just sing out if you see anything approaching from either side.”

The next several hours were tense, wet, cold and nerve-wracking. Only twice did Sanchez actually see what the captain was dodging: once the crown of a half-submerged tree, once a snakelike head rearing out of the water several meters off. The miner slept like a log through the maneuvering, and Sanchez wondered how he managed. Half a dozen times he saw small docks along the bank, leading to roads that were barely openings in the forest wall. Makhno didn’t stop at any of them, but drove his meandering course onward down the river.

Finally, on a completely isolated stretch of the river, the captain cut the engine and tossed out the anchor. The miner promptly woke up, yawned, stretched and reached for his basket again. Sanchez gratefully made use of the chamber-pot, dumped it and rinsed the pot quickly in the water. He was obliged to ask the miner for the use of his rotgut hand-washing fluid before he dared open his own satchel and bring out a thermos bottle and a pair of Fleet-issue ration-bars. Makhno pulled a hefty sandwich out of his own basket, and kept scanning the river as he ate.

“If we don’t reach Chang’s landing before Full-Dark,” he commented, “We’ll have to spend it on the water. That won’t be fun, but it’s safer than being on land without a roof and walls.”

“Why aren’t there more fueling stops along the river?” Sanchez wanted to know.

“Bad harvests, nasty wildlife, robbers,” said Makhno with a shrug. “A lot of shimmer stone prospectors wind up broke and take to piracy. None of these settlements can survive on river trade alone; they have to farm and that’s a risky business. The mining companies have no interest in helping settlers.”

The silent miner laughed.

Makhno turned on the engine, and the Dragon sailed on.

As Cat’s Eye set and the light grew steadily dimmer, Makhno piloted slower and slower. Sanchez noted odd ripplings on the water, and didn’t ask about them. Finally, as the last dim light stretched low across the water, Makhno turned off the engine and threw out the anchor. There was no landing, nor even a hint of a path through the forest, visible anywhere.

“All right,” said the captain, pulling up a waterproof lantern. “We didn’t reach Chang’s, so we’re stuck here for the duration. I’m taking the first sleep-shift, so both of you stay awake and alert. If you hear anything splashing near the boat, turn on the lantern and shine the light on it; the critters that come up during Full-Dark don’t like the light. But don’t leave it on all the time, or you’ll drain the batteries. You don’t want to be stuck out here with no light, believe me. Don’t wake me up unless it’s important. See you in a few.”

With that, he rolled up in his blanket and lay down. Almost at once his breathing grew deep and steady. The miner pulled out his tin-whistle again and began playing. The sweet lonely notes echoed out over the dark water.

Sanchez hitched to the center of the main hull and set the lantern in his lap, wondering if the odd river sounds were growing any louder. He was sure that the noises from the forest were changing. Something far off roared like a lion. Cliff lion, he guessed. Everything he’d read about the wildlife on Haven was unpleasant. Even the river smelled of sour spices—gods only knew what caused that.

There was a nearby splashing, then a faint thump and the slightest feel of vibration. Sanchez flicked on the light and turned it to where he’d heard the sound.

For an instant he saw the thing clearly, perched on the port gunwale; it looked like a cross between a boiled crab and a pink octopus, as big as a seat cushion, holding onto the slick wood with its suckers. The light made it retract its eyestalks quickly, and then it slid off the raft and back into the water. It was, Sanchez, reflected, one of the ugliest creatures he’d ever seen.


“What the hell was that?!” he couldn’t help saying. “Was that a riverjack?”

“Nah,” said the miner, around the mouthpiece of his tin-whistle. “Just a crawler.”

That was as much as Sanchez had heard out of him in the past two days of travel. Unwilling to let the chance slip, Sanchez asked: “Do they attack humans?”

“Nah, they can’t eat us.” The miner shrugged. “But then, we can’t eat them, either. Turn off the light. Save batteries.” Before Sanchez could think to ask anything more, the miner put the tin-whistle back in his mouth and resumed his playing.

A dedicated musician, Sanchez thought, dutifully turning out the light. It occurred to him to wonder just what the hell he was doing, sitting out here in a wooden boat in total darkness on a river full of unknown dangers, with no companionship but a near-mute primitive and a sleeping sailor who probably doubled as a smuggler. He should have made Van Damm come to him, instead of going there. Why the hell wasn’t the man in Castell City, anyway?

But the answer to that was too obvious. The city had been cleaned up; it was prosperous, clean and peaceful. The Harmonies and the settlers were getting along well and there was no chance to stir up any serious trouble between them. The only possible hot-spot was at Kenny-Camp, so of course Van Damm had gone there. Unfortunately, the only space-capable radio in the valley was back in Castell City—except for those in the hands of the mining companies’ local managers, who were mostly in Kenny-Camp. For long minutes Sanchez pondered whether it was worth the security risk to send a message through Kennicott’s radio—which would necessarily involve the company managers—assuming that the radio staff even knew who and where Van Damm was.

Then another splash and thump drew his attention, and he turned on the light to see another damned crawler climbing up the other side of the craft. Again, it fled the moment the light touched it. The miner played on, not pausing for a second.

Sanchez huddled down in his blanket, clutched the lamp close to him, and settled in for a very long night.





The attack came in the middle of Full-Dark: A series of explosions that shook the Reynolds’ Camp awake, followed by merrily burning chemical fires that wreathed the main digger in a halo of flame. The newly recruited miners scrambled out of their tents and got out of range, stopping only at the edge of the light. The company safety-crew turned out with fire-extinguishers and hosed down the flame-wrapped machine, but it took them nearly half an hour to kill the blaze.

The engineers, searching the smoking metal with hand-lamps, declared that the damage was minimal—nothing that couldn’t be repaired in a turn or two—but was definitely caused by enemy action: well-made incendiary bombs, propelled from a distance—by rockets, perhaps. Who, the hastily-wakened managers considered, had the resources to get such weapons and the motivation to use them?

The answer was obvious.





Sanchez was awakened by the sound of the engine starting and a rough hand shaking his shoulder. He pulled one eye open to see the miner shuffling away to his usual spot, barely visible in the faint glow of long-approaching dawn. Captain Makhno sat at the stern, tinkering with the engine, and the River Dragon was beginning to move, slowly but steadily, downstream again.

“We should be a quarter of the way to Kenny-Camp by the end of dim,” the captain announced. “We won’t be able to make any better than half-speed til then, anyway. Go up to the bow and look ahead for snags.”

“Right,” Sanchez muttered, taking the lantern and shuffling forward. “God, another week of this….”

“And remember,” Makhno called after him, “‘Port’ is left. ‘Starboard’ is right.”





The company loudspeaker at Kenny-Camp censored the news, of course, but it took only a few prospectors coming in from the hills to spread the tale. Within a few T-days everyone knew that Kennicott agents had firebombed Reynolds’ Camp, and Reynolds was coming for revenge. It was anyone’s guess what form that vengeance would take, but it would be a good idea to stay away from the mine-pit—and the company offices—for a while. Everyone did so, except for the indentured miners who had no choice in the matter. Even they went to work carrying survival-packs and looking around for handy escape-routes. The company engineers, it was noted, clustered around the landing field and spent an inordinate amount of time checking the company shuttlecrafts. dim-day passed with no lessening of the tension, even though nothing obvious happened.

Almost a T-week later, the River Dragon came chuffing up to the dock. Word spread quickly, and buyers came down to crowd the dock for deliveries. Not a few dickered for passage upriver. Vincent Sanchez had trouble getting out of the boat past them. The big miner simply got up and bulled his way through the crowd and headed off in the direction of what appeared to be the nearest bar. Seeing no better objective, Sanchez followed him. He didn’t look back to see Makhno pulling out a small and efficient radio-phone, nor hear what the man reported.

The bar had the look of old company housing gone to seed, but there was a sizeable crowd inside. Sanchez wondered if the furtive looks and general nervousness of the clientele were the usual state of affairs, settled at the far end of the bar and waited to have a word with the bartender. A few hours of drinking not-too-bad beer and asking questions won him directions to a ramshackle grocery store. Once there, the right words—and a CoDo cred-bill—got him entry to a storeroom that doubled as an office.

At a rickety table behind a wall of crates sat Owen Van Damm, drinking more of the local beer and brooding over a stained and ancient map of the valley. He looked up as Sanchez entered, and said only: “I hear you’ve been looking for me.”

“Long and far,” said Sanchez, dropping onto the only other seat, a large and presumably empty crate. “I’m Vincent Sanchez, your new contact from BuIntel.” He flashed his ID, along with the expected hand sign. “You’re a hard man to find.”

“I didn’t think it prudent to make myself known to the Kennicott management.” Van Damm shrugged.

Sanchez frowned. This wasn’t going at all well; he hadn’t impressed the man sufficiently with his position, and why this reluctance to deal with Kennicott? “You had a task to do,” he growled. “You haven’t accomplished it in almost a year and now you say you need to avoid Kennicott. Explain yourself!” He wondered if he’d put enough snap into the order.

Van Damm only gave him a weary look. “The Powers That Be at HQ have very little idea of what the situation is here on Haven. It can’t have escaped your attention that this is a very harsh world, where most of the population is struggling for bare survival. The only people who came here well equipped to deal with the environment are the Harmonies, so the settlers depend on them for supplies, construction, medicine and all other assistance. The mining companies haven’t exactly provided those things.”

Sanchez briefly recalled what he’d seen at Castell City, and on the long voyage down here. “That’s why we have to get the Harmonies under control,” he growled. “With a CoDo administrator—”

“—the mining companies still wouldn’t spend a credit more than they had to on what the settlers need,” Van Damm cut in. “The Harmonies finally had the sense to make deals with the settlers and both of them are profiting from it. The settlers won’t turn on the Harmonies. End of discussion. The only pot that’s likely to boil is right here, in the heart of the mining country. It’s likely to be the companies versus the miners, or companies versus the settlers, or the companies versus each other. In any case, the companies will come off being the bad guys. There’s simply no way around that, Mr. Sanchez. Believe me, I’ve looked.”


“There must be something you can do! Set the miners against the settlers….”

“It cannot be done. The miners need the settlers for such basic things as food.”

“The miners against the Harmonies?”

“Too distant, and the same problem applies.”

Sanchez rattled his fingers irritably on the table-top. “The miners against the companies, then—but make the miners look bad. Arrange for them to commit some atrocity, something the Harmonies can’t prevent, something to justify CoDo interference.”

“That may be taken out of our hands very shortly.” Van Damm gave him a hard look. “Had you not heard? Kennicott agents attacked Reynolds Camp a T-week ago and firebombed the machinery, and everyone knows that Reynolds will strike back soon.”

“What?! How could Kennicott be so stupid—”

“They’re denying it, of course, but the evidence is pretty damning. Nobody else on the planet could have produced those explosives.” Van Damm gave a sour smile. “It’s no use, Mr. Sanchez. The mining companies are about to go to war with each other and there’s no way to blame the Harmonies for it.”

Sanchez swore and rubbed his forehead. “There must be some way to spin this, or at least keep it quiet. Keep the damage minimal….”

Right then came the rolling boom of a distant explosion. Van Damm sat bolt upright, listening.

“Was that normal mining operations…?” Sanchez hoped desperately.

“That wasn’t from the pit!” Van Damm shoved back his chair and lunged to his feet. “It was nearer—somewhere near the equipment shed or the company office.”

Another explosion boomed, closer.

“The company office!” Van Damm shouted, running for the door. “They’ll hit the landing-field next, or the warehouses!”

Sanchez jumped up and ran after him. In the main room, everyone else was running toward the front door. Through the open doorway they could see great clouds of dust rolling down the street.

Another explosion, closer yet, shook the ground. Everyone scrambled out the door and began running through the dust in different directions.

“The ore-shed!” Van Damm yelled through the noise. “They could flatten the whole town before they’re done!” He grabbed Sanchez by the shoulder and pointed him toward the dock. “Get out on the water,” he shouted. “The boat should still be there—”

Sanchez needed no further urging. He ran through the roiling dust, guided more by the smell of the river than by the sight of landmarks, not seeing where Van Damm went. Running bodies loomed out of the dust and vanished. There was another explosion, sounding as if it came from the same distance, as if Reynolds’ avengers were determined to destroy the warehouse completely. Shouts and screams didn’t cover the ominous sound of crackling flames, and drifts of smoke began mingling with the blowing dust.

Sanchez blundered his way into buildings, down obscured streets, following the smell and sound of the river until the road disappeared, almost under his feet, at the water’s edge. He turned to run along the riverbank until he saw the outline of the dock. He hurried down it, searching through the choking clouds, until at last he saw the River Dragon huddled against the piers. Yes, thankfully, her captain was still aboard, shoving the last of his cargo up onto the dock. Sanchez practically fell into the craft, shouting: “Get out on the river! Get away from here!”

Captain Makhno needed no further urging. He cast off the mooring lines, ran to the engine and started it. In another moment he was backing the Dragon away from the dock, then turning it, then steering out into deep water.

Sanchez looked back and saw, above the dust, the Kennicott company shuttles rising fast into the air. No doubt they were carrying the company managers and engineers to safety, wherever that might be. All else was dust, smoke, flames and confusion.

“Hopeless,” he muttered. If the company’s office radio still survived, there was no way to reach it. The nearest space-capable radio was all the way back in Castell City.

“What happened?” the captain was bawling at him, like an idiot. “What’s going on?”

Quick, put the right spin on this! “Miners’ revolt!” Sanchez shouted. “They didn’t like the prices they were getting for the stones, so they attacked the company.”

“That makes no sense,” said Makhno, looking innocently astonished. “Everybody knows that the best prices for shimmer stones are back in Castell City. All anyone had to do was take the supply boat upstream. And I was right here, ready to take on passengers.”

That won’t work, Sanchez silently cursed himself. “Maybe they were mad about wages, then. They’ve rebelled before.”

“Damn,” said Makhno, turning the raft to face the current. “That doesn’t make sense either. Everyone knows that Reynolds, inland, pays better wages. All anyone had to do was sneak off to Reynolds’ Camp.… Say, do you think Kennicott was locking miners up to keep ’em from getting away? That would qualify as slavery!”

Worse and worse! Sanchez rubbed his forehead. Think of something… “We have to get back to Castell City,” he announced. “This place is burning down.” And I need to get to a decent communications center….

“No, look.” Makhno pointed. “There’re no more explosions, and the fire doesn’t seem to be spreading. Besides, I don’t have a cargo. Let’s wait until the noise dies down and go back to the dock.”

And nothing would move him from that decision. They sat out on the water and watched for hours, seeing the fire shrink under the steady work of a bucket-brigade. Sanchez noted that the impromptu firemen all had the look of indentured miners, and wondered where everyone else was. Eventually the cloud of smoke and dust sank down, revealing the extent of the damage.

Yes, the Kennicott equipment-shed was a wreck, as were several machines inside it. Yes, the ore-warehouse had been blown flat, with the burned wreckage lying atop the muddied pile of ore. Yes, there were gaping holes in the sides of the Kennicott office building. Yes, the shuttles were landing again, and the engineers—identifiable by their work uniforms—were coming out and cautiously approaching the office building.

Sanchez groaned inwardly, realizing that the engineers would go for the radio first and call for assistance. If they could cut through the static and interference, they would spread the story all over the Shangri-La Valley and up to the waiting ship, and to whomever was listening in on the ship near Ayesha. Of course, once the shuttles returned to the ship it wouldn’t make any difference, whether or not the land-based radio transmissions got through, word of the attack would be broadcast from the ship to Castell City and all interested parties. There was no chance of keeping this quiet, or of blaming it on anyone but Reynolds.

The Church of New Harmony would come out of this looking innocent as lambs and the mining companies would stink to high heaven, no matter what anyone did.

Sanchez felt a twinge of sympathy for Van Damm, wondering if the man were still alive in all this mess.