VENGEANCE

[1130 HOURS LOCAL TIME]

[OLD PARLIAMENT HOUSE, CANBERRA]

Chisnall followed Azoh into the council chamber. The council was in heated debate. The noise in the room swelled, then stilled as they entered through shadows in the main entrance. Above them came a mixture of sharp thumps and rumbling booms as the air raid continued. The chamber vibrated with each explosion.

Those close to the doors saw Azoh first and their quietening spread around the room like the wash of a wave on a beach.

There was surprise and confusion on many of their faces. Perhaps in part due to seeing Azoh in the uniform and armour of a soldier, and without her facial jewellery. Perhaps also because of what she carried: a bundle wrapped in black cloth. Perhaps because Azoh, the spiritual leader of all Bzadia, was crying.

There was a collective gasp from the room as Kriz entered with a small group of Nzgali. In their midst was Colonel Nokz’z. He was in neck-cuffs.

Chisnall and Brogan were directed to stand against the wall by the entrance, where Jazki kept a close eye on them.

Azoh, Kriz and Nokz’z walked to the centre of the chamber. Kriz stood behind Nokz’z, her hand resting on her side-arm in its holster.

There was silence as Azoh began to speak, her voice quivering with emotion.

“You must cancel the orders to destroy the free human territories,” she said.

Leozii was the first to respond. He spoke carefully, as though to a troublesome and volatile child. “Your advice is always welcome here,” he said, making it very clear that it wasn’t. “But it is too late. The council has voted.”

“Have the bombs detonated?” Azoh asked.

Leozii looked away and drew a deep breath. “There has been a delay, a temporary one. Our technicians have been unable to connect to the devices. All lines are down.”

“Then it is not too late,” Azoh said. “Cancel the order.”

“We cannot do that,” Leozii said. “The council has voted. Already we have aircraft moving towards the Americas to detonate the devices by radio signal.”

Azoh moved to the central council table and set down the object in her arms. Those nearest shifted uncomfortably in their seats. Others strained for a better look.

“Then vote again,” she said. “And this time make the right decision. This time make the Bzadian decision. Call back those planes.”

“But Azoh–” Leozii began.

“Azoh cares more for the enemy than for our people!” The voice came from Colonel Nokz’z. “She stands together with Chizna, who tried to kill her!”

Azoh had to wait for the uproar to subside.

“Chizna was sent to assassinate me, not by humans, but by Bzadians,” Azoh said. “He refused, even though it put his own life in great danger.”

Now the air in the chamber seemed alive with murmurs and muted conversations.

“A few minutes ago Colonel Nokz’z tried to kill me and Azoh-zu. My life was saved by these two young humans,” Azoh said. She indicated Brogan and Chisnall. “Azoh-zu was not as lucky.”

There was utter silence as she lifted a flap of the cloth, revealing the still, lifeless face of the child.

“Is this what we have become?” Azoh’s voice, previously calm, now rose in anger. “Thousands of years of evolution, yet civilisation, it turns out, is a thin veneer. Our wild and brutal past still lurks, just below the surface. We came here expecting to fight savages and found that the savages were us.”

“So what would you have us do?” Leozii asked. “If we do not destroy the humans, they will destroy us.”

A crashing explosion outside, somewhere close by, underlined his point. From within the building came the sound of smashing glass.

“We must learn from the children of our enemy,” Azoh said.

“The humans even now attack our capital city,” Nokz’z shouted. “We must have vengeance!”

Azoh did not respond, but simply turned to stare at Nokz’z.

The word “vengeance” seemed to hang in the air as the echoes of Nokz’z’s voice slowly died away. There was movement in the chamber and all eyes were on Goezlin, the skull-faced commandant of the PGZ, who rose and stepped towards Azoh.

“Have you still got that bugging device?” Chisnall whispered to Brogan.

Brogan nodded.

“Think you could activate it?” Chisnall asked.

“Cover me,” Brogan said.

Chisnall moved slightly in front of Brogan, blocking her from view as she removed the bugging device from her belt pack and pressed it into a nearby wall.

Goezlin stopped at the centre table and closed the flap of cloth, covering Azoh-zu’s face once again.

“Vengeance,” he said softly. He too turned abruptly and glared at Nokz’z. His eyes were dark pits. “This is the result of your desire for vengeance.”

“An accident,” Nokz’z cried. “A terrible tragedy but not one that should affect our resolve!”

“A tragedy,” Goezlin echoed. His quiet voice seemed denser somehow than Nokz’z’s shrill shouting. “This death was not the only tragedy today.”

He turned from Nokz’z and addressed the High Council directly. “A young human, barely older than my own son, gave his life today to protect the lives of others. His death disturbed me. More than it should have. It was not the loss of an enemy soldier, or even his young age. It was that it was a very Bzadian thing to do. Azoh is right. This war has changed us and I do not like what we have become. I do not like what I have had to become. And I detest what Colonel Nokz’z has become.”

Nokz’z started to interject, but Goezlin stood in front of him, unspeaking. His very presence, so close, was enough to make Nokz’z fall silent.

Only then did Goezlin speak. “We have ignored our past. We have closed our ears to Azoh. Today, of all days, we should listen to her. I propose a motion for a High Council vote that we immediately recall the planes and deactivate the positronium weapons. That we seek peace with humans.”

There was uproar in the council chamber. Chisnall stepped forwards and the uproar diminished.

Jazki moved to stop him, but stopped at a glance from Kriz.

“May I be permitted to speak?” Chisnall asked.

“A human!” Nokz’z spat.

“Let him,” Azoh said.

“The council will hear what the human has to say,” Leozii said.

Chisnall walked to the very centre of the room then turned to face the council.

“I am Lieutenant Ryan Chisnall of the Fourth Reconnaissance Team of the Allied Combined Operation Group, First Reconnaissance Battalion,” he said, identifying himself for the listeners back at the Pentagon as much as for those in the council chamber. “This war began with fear,” he said. “Our fear of strangers, of intruders coming to our home. Our fear that you would do to us what we have done when we have encountered native cultures.”

He lowered his head for a moment.

“And your fear of what you, rightly, saw as a savage race, and that some of you, wrongly, saw as a subspecies. The Bzadian race is older than humans. We could have learned from you. Instead, in our fear and ignorance, we tried to confine you. Driven by your own fear, you decided to take over. We were both wrong. There is no way of undoing what has been already done. But we can start over. Instead of prolonging this insanity of death and destruction, we can agree to stop fighting. To negotiate. To seek peace. Let me be clear, I am just a soldier. Of low rank. I do not represent my government or my people. But I believe we can both put aside our fears and move forwards as friends not as adversaries. Down that path I see only the destruction of this world.”

As he walked back towards Brogan, Chisnall was conscious of the silence. Not just within the chamber.

Above them, the bombing had stopped.