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This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in
this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
DRAGON AND SOLDIER: THE SECOND DRAGONBACK ADVENTURE Copyright © 2004 by
Timothy Zahn
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof, in any form.
This book is printed on acid-free paper. Edited by James Frenkel
A Starscape Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.starscape.com
ISBN 0-765-30125-3 BAN 978-0765-30125-3
First Edition: June 2004
Printed in the United States of America
0987654321
For Sable
who has taught me
what it means to be a symbiont
Books by Timothy Zahn
Dragonback (Starscape Books)
Book 1: Dragon and Thief *
Book 2: Dragon and Soldier*
The Blackcollar
A Coming of Age
Cobra
Spinneret
Cobra Strike
Cascade Point and Other Stories
The Backlash Mission
Triplet
Cobra Bargain
Time Bomb and Zahndry Others
Deadman Switch
Warhorse
Cobras Two (omnibus)
Star Wars: Heir to the Empire
Star Wars: Dark Force Rising
Star Wars: The Last Command
Conqueror's Pride
Conqueror's Heritage
Conqueror's Legacy
The Hand of Thrawn
Book 1: Specter of the Past
Book 2: Vision of the Future
The Icarus Hunt
Angelmass*
Mania's Gift*
*Denotes a Tor Book
Chapter 1
The screams of the dying K'da and Shontine in the Havenseeker's engine
room were growing louder. Draycos tried to shut out the soundstried to cover
his pointed ears with his paws. But nothing helped.
He could see them now, back there in the engine room. Which was odd, because Draycos
himself was up in the Havenseeker's control complex, all the way at the other end
of the ship. He could see outside through the navigation bubble as the unfamiliar enemy
ships sent the all too familiar violet beams of the Death twisting and sweeping across the
Havenseeker's hull. The Death was coming closer to him . . . closer . . . closer. .
.
With a jerk that sent his claws scratching across the soft plastic coating of the
floor beneath him, Draycos woke up.
"Bad dream?" a soft voice came from across the room.
Draycos blinked his eyes, clearing away the last images of the nightmare. The room was
mostly dark, but there was enough light for him to see the narrow cot built into the wall
at the other end of the small cabin. His new companion, Jack Morgan, was propped up on one
elbow, his hair sticking out in a dozen different directions. "Yes," Draycos
told him. "I apologize for waking you."
" 'S okay," Jack said, yawning. He ran a hand through his hair without making
any noticeable improvement in the mess. "I'm just glad you weren't on my back when
you started twitching. What was it this time?"
"The same," Draycos said, the tip of his tail curving into a K'da frown. Odd;
he had started out the sleep period pressed against Jack's back in his
two-dimensional form. When had he jumped off and become fully three-dimensional again?
During the terrible dream? "I saw again the destruction of our advance team."
"I don't suppose you happened to notice any markings on those Djinn-90 pursuit
fighters this time," Uncle Virge put in.
Draycos glared over at the monitor camera. Uncle Virge was the Essenay's computer,
with an artificial personality designed by Jack's late Uncle Virgil. A personality,
Draycos had discovered, that often seemed to go out of its way to be irritating. "No,
I did not see any markings," he told the computer stiffly. "I saw no markings
when they first attacked our ships. I do not expect to see any now that I am merely
dreaming of them, either."
"Okay, okay, keep your scales on," Uncle Virge said in a huffy tone.
"You're the one who's so hot to track down these pirates or smugglers or
whoever."
"They were mercenaries," Draycos said firmly. "Military units of some
sort. I have told you that before."
"Yeah," Uncle Virge said. "Whatever."
"And it's not just Draycos who wants to find them, Uncle Virge," Jack said.
"I do, too."
"Then let's get serious about it," Uncle Virge said. "Face it, Jack lad;
we simply haven't got the resources for this kind of nickel-in-Nevada search. Not even
with our noble K'da poet-warrior standing brave and true at our side. Watching us do all
the work."
"We have only just begun our task," Draycos reminded him, ignoring the
implied insult. Uncle Virge had made it abundantly clear that he didn't think much of the
K'da warrior ethic and its strict emphasis on doing what was right, whatever such actions
might cost. He considered such behavior to be impractical, a waste of effort, and
fundamentally stupid.
"We've been chasing data for ten days and have come up dry and poor each
time," Uncle Virge countered. "I vote we chuck the whole thing and drop it into
StarForce's lap where it belongs."
"We cannot do that," Draycos insisted. "Until we know who was
responsible for the attack, I cannot risk revealing myself to anyone else. The lives of my
people depend on it."
"Oh, come on," Uncle Virge said, and Draycos could almost see a
scowling human face behind that voice. "It wasn't StarForce that attacked your ships.
The Internos government doesn't go in for genocide."
"Yet someone in StarForce or the Internos may have made a private arrangement
without official consent," Draycos pointed out. "I cannot take that risk. We
must do this ourselves."
"And what if we can't?" Uncle Virge shot back. "In case you hadn't
noticed, friend, the Orion Arm covers a lot of territory. We are one very small frog in
one very big pond. Maybe the whole thing makes for a great heroic poem, but we could
search from here till geepsday and still not come up with anything."
"What we need is a break," Jack muttered. "Just one. Something to point
us in the right direction."
"Don't you think I want that, too, lad?" Uncle Virge asked, his tone suddenly
turning earnest and soothing.
Draycos felt his crest stiffen with frustration. In point of fact, Uncle Virge didn't
want a break. Uncle Virge wanted Jack to turn his back on Draycos, and on the millions
of K'da and Shontine refugees who were even now fleeing to the Orion Arm from the threat
of the Valahgua and their unstoppable Death weapon.
Uncle Virge, in short, wanted Jack Morgan to go back to the simple day-to-day business
of looking out for Jack Morgan.
But he didn't dare point that out. Jack's Uncle Virgil had been a criminal, a con
artist and thief, a man who had spent his entire life thinking only of himself. He'd
programmed that same self-centered viewpoint into his computerized alter ego before he'd
died, and he'd done his best to hammer it into Jack, as well.
Jack had a good heart. Draycos could tell that much. But the boy was only fourteen, and
this was an awesome task that Draycos had laid before him.
And even a good heart required training and discipline. Draycos had had only a month to
work with him, while Uncle Virgil and the computer had had the past eleven years. If
Draycos pushed too hard, the boy might well back away onto the path of long habit.
Besides which, down deep, Draycos had to concede that Uncle Virge wasn't being entirely
unfair. With the lives of his people at stake, Draycos perhaps was pushing a little
too hard.
But what else could he do?
"I know you want this to work, Draycos," Jack said, running his fingers
through his hair again, still without improving the mess. "But face it. This approach
just isn't working."
"I agree," Uncle Virge said. "And frankly, I can't see how it ever will.
There are just too many Djinn-90s flying around the Orion Arm for us to hunt down the
records of all of them. More to the point, there are too many that have changed hands
under, shall we way, unofficial circumstances. No matter how many manufacturing records or
registration listings we dig up, we still won't have them all."
"Then we need a different approach," Jack concluded. "Draycos, you seem
convinced they were mercenaries. How come?"
"I saw them function in battle," Draycos reminded him, the tip of his tail
making slow circles as he studied Jack's face in the dim light. The boy's expression was
tense, as if he was screwing up his courage toward an unpleasant decision he didn't want
to make.
But if that decision was to back away, this was an odd way of leading up to it.
"Twice, in fact, both in their attack on our ships and later during our escape from
the planet," he went on. "Their maneuvering and tactics were quite
professional."
"Doesn't mean they're necessarily soldiers for hire," Uncle Virge argued, his
voice gone suddenly cautious. Perhaps he'd picked up on Jack's expression, too.
"Maybe they're someone's official military. Maybe some planet has made a deal with
your Valahgua enemies."
"An official military would have had backup forces ready," Draycos pointed
out. "Our escape would have been far more difficult than it was."
Uncle Virge sniffed. "So maybe they're a stupid military. What's your point, Jack
lad?"
"My point is that mercenary groups probably keep close tabs on each other,"
Jack said slowly. "Including what kinds of pursuit fighters all the other guys have.
You think?"
"I suppose," Uncle Virge said. "But I can tell you right now that
getting hold of encrypted mercenary files is going to be a lot trickier than pulling up
Djinnrabi Aerospace Corporation manufacturing records. I thought we were trying to make
this job easier, not harder."
"We're trying to make it work any way we can," Jack said. He paused, and
Draycos could see him brace himself. "And you're right. The only way to get mere
records will be from the inside."
"You must be joking," Uncle Virge said, his voice sounding like he'd suddenly
been hit with a small tree. "Come on, Jack lad. Jump up and say 'surprise,'
and let's get on with our plans."
"What, you think I can't do it?" Jack snapped. "Fourteen-year-old kids
are indentured to mercenary groups all the time."
"And you know what happens to them?" Uncle Virge countered harshly.
"They get sent off to war."
Jack seemed to shrink a little in his nightshirt. "I'll be all right," he
said, sounding like he was trying to convince himself of that. "There aren't any big
wars going on anywhere right now."
"Mercenaries don't hire teenagers just to polish their boots," Uncle Virge
insisted. "And you can get just as dead from a little war as you can from a big
one."
"I'll be all right." Jack peered across the cabin at Draycos. "Draycos?
You're a soldier. You tell him."
"Yes, tell him, Draycos," Uncle Virge demanded, an almost frantic undertone
to his voice now. Small wonder: as a computer, even a computer that controlled the entire
ship, he had no physical power to make Jack do anything he didn't want to do. All Uncle
Virge could do was persuade.
And unless Draycos was misjudging Jack's expression, the boy's mind was already made
up. Not enthusiastically, but definitely made up. "Tell him what it takes to be a
soldier," Uncle Virge went on. "Tell him how old you were when you went
into your first battle. Tell him how many friends you've seen die."
"In many ways, Uncle Virge is right, Jack," Draycos said. "If it were
for anything less important I would agree that this was too dangerous for you. But."
"Don't say it," Uncle Virge warned. "Draycos, don't say it."
"I am sorry, but I must," Draycos said. "The fate of the K'da and
Shontine races hang by the edge of a single torn scale. With only five months remaining
until they arrive, we have no choice but to take chances."
"Maybe you have to take chances," Uncle Virge snapped. "But why
does Jack have to?"
"Because I promised to help him," Jack said.
"And I will be with him the whole way," Draycos added.
"Wonderful," Uncle Virge said sarcastically. "A golden dragon plastered
flat across his back. That gives me such confidence."
"Oh, stop being melodramatic," Jack scolded. "It's not like I'm making a
career of this. I'll get in, scam their computer and find their records on their
competitors, and get back out. Piece of fudge cake."
"Unless they catch you," Uncle Virge said. "You ever think of that?"
"I'll be fine," Jack insisted. "Anyway, like Draycos says, he'll be
with me the whole way."
Uncle Virge didn't answer. "So that's settled," Jack said, flopping back flat
onto the cot again. "If you want to be helpful, you can find us a good mere group to
try. Something not too big, but with jobs all across the Orion Arm. We don't want someone
who just works locally. And make sure it's someone who hires a lot of kids my
age"
"And isn't too fussy about who they take," Uncle Virge cut him off
grudgingly. "Yes, yes, I know what to look for."
"And when you find one, put us on ECHO for their nearest recruitment center,"
Jack added. "No point in wasting time."
"No, of course not," Uncle Virge muttered. "Good night, Jack lad."
Jack pushed himself up off the cot again. "Draycos, you getting back aboard?
You're going to need to do it sometime before morning anyway."
Draycos focused on the clock built into the wall beside Jack's cot. Yes; even if he had
broken contact with the boy just before his dream began, he would still come close to his
limit before the sleep period was over. A K'da could only go six hours before he needed to
return to two-dimensional form against a host's body. If he stayed away longer than that,
he would still become two-dimensional, and ripple away into death.
But he had time. And his body always gave him plenty of warning. "I will join you
later," he decided, standing up and stretching all four legs. "I believe I will
go watch Uncle Virge work through the mercenary information."
"Going to be some awfully big words there," Uncle Virge warned sourly.
"You may not be up to third-grade reading level yet."
"I can use the practice," Draycos assured him calmly. After only ten days of
study, he had already made good headway in learning to read the humans' written language.
His progress had pleased him, amazed Jack, and no doubt irritated Uncle Virge. A
worthwhile accomplishment on all three counts. "Rest well, Jack," he added as he
headed across the cabin.
"Sure," Jack said, already starting to sound sleepy again. "By the way,
how old were you when you were in your first battle?"
Draycos paused in the doorway. "I was younger than you," he said quietly,
turning his long neck to look around behind him. "And the K'da and Shontine lost that
battle."
"Younger than me," Jack repeated, his voice sounding odd. "You had loose
rules, didn't you?"
"We were fighting for our survival," Draycos reminded him. "We still
are."
Jack didn't say anything. For a wonder, neither did Uncle Virge.
Chapter 2
The planet Carrion was, in Jack's opinion, a very appropriately named world.
Or so it seemed as he paid the taxi driver and joined the stream of pedestrians
hurrying along the wide sidewalks. Even just glancing around, he could spot the uniforms
of a half dozen different mercenary groups among the crowds. The men and women inside the
uniforms were rough-looking types, all of them with small areas of empty space around them
as they strode along. Like arrogant vultures gathered to feed on their prey, he thought
darkly, with the ordinary citizens trying to keep as far away from them as possible.
Or maybe he was imagining the citizens' reaction. Maybe he was just projecting his own
feelings onto the people around him.
What in the world was he doing here, anyway?
"Is that it ahead?" Draycos murmured from his right shoulder.
Jack made a face as he focused on the plain white building half a block down the street
ahead of them. "That's it," he confirmed. "The main Carrion recruitment
office of the Whinyard's Edge."
"A whinyard was a Scottish name for a dagger or short sword," Uncle Virge put
in from the comm clip fastened to Jack's left collar. "It dates back to"
"Thank you, Professor," Jack cut him off. The last thing he was in the mood
for right now was a history lesson. "Unless you've got something useful to say,
everyone just shut up. Okay?"
"Have the young people from the spaceport arrived yet?" Draycos asked.
"I don't see them," Jack said, craning his neck to try to look over the crowd
and slowing down a little. He didn't want to reach the recruitment office before the group
he and Draycos had spotted being gathered together at the spaceport. The idea was to blend
in with them when they went in to sign their enlistment papers, not to be the one leading
the charge. "They were probably getting them here by bus. Busses always take longer
than cabs."
"A bus also implies they're expected, Jack lad," Uncle Virge warned.
"That means the Whinyard's Edge will know how many of them there are supposed to
be."
"Maybe," Jack said. "I can handle that."
"It's not too late to back out," Uncle Virge went on. "We could try to
put together enough money to simply buy the information we need from them."
"And if they refuse, it'll just put them on their guard," Jack pointed out.
"Hang on a second."
Ahead, a sleek bus pulled to the curb in front of the white building. "Okay,
they're here," Jack confirmed as a boy his age got rather hesitantly off the bus.
"I'm shutting down," he added, reaching for the comm clip. "Wish me
luck."
There was an electronic sigh. "Good luck," Uncle Virge said.
Jack clicked off the clip, unfastened it, and slipped it into his pocket. The first
kids off the bus had gathered into a little group by the curb, hanging back instead of
going directly into the building. Either they were nervous, or else they were waiting for
someone who was still behind them.
"You have not yet explained this indenture process," Draycos said from his
shoulder.
"It's sort of like an apprenticeship," Jack said. An adult was getting off
now, a woman wearing a Whinyard's Edge uniform. Not only were they expected, but the
mercenaries had even sent a babysitter to the spaceport to herd them in. "Parents
hire their kids out to different mere groups, usually for two to five years."
"And what do they receive in exchange?"
"Cash," Jack told him. "Lots of it."
"It is a form of slavery," Draycos declared, his voice dark. "Your
people permit this?"
"Not exactly," Jack said. The woman was striding toward the white building,
the kids following like scared but obedient ducklings. This was probably the first time
most of them had ever been away from home, he suspected. "The Internos government
officially condemns it, but there are plenty of human worlds that sort of wink at the
whole thing. Mostly the poorer ones where the people don't have any other way to make a
living."
"There are always other ways," Draycos insisted. "This is not the
behavior of a civilized society."
"No, of course not," Jack soothed. Uncivilized this, uncivilized
thatthe dragon needed to lighten up a little. Things were the way they were; and
like it or not, there wasn't a thing you could do about it.
The universe was a giant mulching machine, Uncle Virgil had often said. If you were
smart, you rolled with the gears. If you weren't, you got chewed up by them.
"And there are so very many of them," Draycos murmured, obviously still
brooding about it.
"Which is what we want, remember?" Jack reminded him patiently. "Uncle
Virge said this was one of only a couple of groups who were hiring lots of kids right now.
The more they've got coming in, the easier it'll be for me to slip in and get lost in the
crowd."
"I understand the reasoning," Draycos said, a bit tartly. "That does not
mean I have to enjoy my part in this."
The last kid had gotten off the bus. "Okay," Jack muttered, taking a deep
breath and picking up his pace. "Nice and easy. Here we go."
And as the last boy in line walked through the white building's door, Jack closed the
gap and stepped in right behind him.
He found himself in a large reception room with a pair of ornate desks at the far end
beneath a huge wood carving of the Whinyard's Edge insignia. The woman who had escorted
the teens in from the bus was seated at one of the desks, while an older gray-haired man
sat at the other.
Off to either side of the main room, near where Jack had entered, were a pair of
unmarked doorways. One of the doors was slightly ajar, and through it Jack caught a
glimpse of the simple desk and filing cabinets of a secretarial work station. On the far
back wall, behind the fancy desks and directly beneath the wooden insignia, was a door
with a picture of a dagger painted on it and what looked like a motto stenciled around its
edge.
The number of teens in the reception room was a surprise. Even huddled together like
sheep the way they were, they filled the room all the way to the walls. The bus Jack had
seen pull up must have been only the last of a group of them, possibly bringing in new
recruits from several different parts of the spaceport. Apparently, the Whinyard's Edge
was holding an even bigger recruitment drive than he'd realized.
Briefly, his mind flicked back to his confident statement to Uncle Virge that there
were no major wars going on anywhere. He hoped he hadn't been wrong about that.
"Over there," Draycos murmured, just loud enough for Jack to hear over the
soft buzz of conversation. The dragon's snout rose slightly from Jack's upper chest
beneath his shirt, pointing to the left. "That boy has papers."
"Uh-huh," Jack said. More than just papers: it was an official looking
document with a blue-paper backing sheet. A document that Jack himself didn't have.
This was not good.
Carefully, casually, he eased through the crowd and came up behind the boy. "Some
place, huh?" he commented.
"Terrific," the other said, his voice trembling slightly. First time away
from home, all right.
"Hey, buck up," Jack said, trying for a cheerfully encouraging tone he
suddenly wasn't feeling anymore. The paper the boy was holding was an official indenture
agreement.
On an official Whinyard's Edge form. With an official Whinyard's Edge signature on the
bottom.
And suddenly Jack's plan of simply talking his way inside as part of the group wasn't
looking so hot anymore.
"Yeah, right," the boy said. "Just like summer camp. How long you in
for?"
"Probably the same as you," Jack improvised, searching the form for the
correct number. There was a small bit of weight at his collarbone as Draycos lifted an eye
up to look over the boy's shoulder. "Two years, right?"
The boy snorted under his breath. "I guess your folks must not need the
money," he said, waving the form up into Jack's face. The name at the top caught
Jack's eye: Jommy Randolph. "I'm in for five. Five whole years."
"Put a quark in it," a girl at Jack's other side growled. She was maybe
thirteen, with jet-black hair and eyes that were so dark they were almost black, too.
"You talking to me?" Jommy demanded, his voice threatening.
"You see anyone else in here whining about life?" she countered.
"Maybe it's just that no one else gets it," Jommy said, taking a half step
toward her. Clearly, he wasn't in the mood for criticism.
The girl stood her ground. "Or maybe it's just that no one else's glue is
melting," she said. "You'd think they were drop-kicking you into prison or
something."
"Oh, they're drop-kicking us, all right," Jommy shot back. "I had an
uncle once-"
"Quiet back there!" a deep voice snapped from the far end of the room, the
words cutting through the buzz.
The buzz instantly evaporated. Grimacing to himself, Jack backed away from Jommy and
the girl and started to ease his way to the exit. Uncle Virge had been right; this had
been a lousy idea. Time to wave bye-bye and head for the tall grass.
"There is a guard," Draycos whispered.
Jack looked over his shoulder. There was a guard, all right, standing at attention
between him and the door. A very big guard, in full uniform, with a very big gun belted at
his waist.
So much for a gracious retreat. "I'm open to suggestions," he muttered,
turning away from the guard.
"To your left," Draycos said. "The room with the open door."
"Good idea," Jack said, drifting in that direction. The buzz of whispered
conversation was starting to come back now, despite the order for silence. Maybe they all
thought it was going to be like summer camp. "We'll try for a window."
"You will not be going into the room," Draycos said. "I will need five
minutes alone. Unfasten your sleeve."
Jack frowned. But he obeyed, unsnapping the cuffs of his leather jacket as he eased
toward the slightly open door. Beneath his shirt, he could feel Draycos sliding along his
skin, moving as much of his two-dimensional form as he could onto Jack's left arm.
Obviously preparing to spring out the end of that sleeve. Problem was, Jack couldn't
see what that would gain them.
He had reached the door now, listening as best he could over the murmurs of the crowd.
He hadn't spotted anyone in the room earlier, and he couldn't hear anyone in there now.
But that didn't prove anything. They would just have to gamble that the office was indeed
empty. "Ready?" he whispered.
Draycos's affirmative was signaled by a light claw-tap on his arm. Jack stepped to the
office door, swung his left hand smoothly into the open gap
And with a sudden brief surge of weight, Draycos went three-dimensional as he leaped
out through the end of the sleeve. Jack caught a flicker of gold scales as the dragon
dodged out of sight behind the door, and then was gone.
Keeping his movements smooth, Jack dropped his arm back to his side and kept moving. No
startled screams came from behind him; the office must have been empty after all.
He continued his apparently aimless wandering along the edge of the crowd, trying to
figure out what Draycos had in mind. Was he planning on going out a window and jumping the
door guard from behind? Jack had seen the K'da poet-warrior in action, and knew he could
pull it off.
But going outside and coming in again would mean showing himself on a busy street.
Surely he wouldn't do that. Not unless they were desperate. They weren't that desperate
yet, were they?
The minutes ticked by. Jack stayed near the back of the crowd, occasionally wandering
around some more so that it wouldn't look suspicious when he eventually returned to the
office. The guard at the door stayed put, and no golden-scaled dragon suddenly appeared
from the doorway behind him.
Slowly, the crowd shrank as the teens were processed and disappeared through the
dagger-decorated door. Slowly; but still too fast for Jack's comfort. Already the back of
the group had pulled away from the area around Draycos's office. That meant that when Jack
went back to retrieve his companion, he would no longer have people standing all around to
help mask his movements.
Too bad he hadn't known any of this was coming. Aboard the Essenay he had a
whole collection of time-delay firecrackers designed for use as diversions. Too late now.
In the old days, Uncle Virgil would have been right there beside him, ready to jump in
with an improvised change of plans. But then, in the old days he and Uncle Virgil never
had any life-and-death situations hanging over them. They never had the fate of two entire
species depending on whether they could pull off some scam or theft. All they'd ever had
to worry about was closing a deal, or popping a safe, and then getting out before the cops
arrived.
How had he gotten himself into this, anyway?
Jack looked around the room at the other kids, feeling his throat tighten. He knew the
facts of how this had happened, of course. How he'd bumped into the ambushed K'da/Shontine
ship and found Draycos dying amid the wreckage. How they'd escaped from the people who had
attacked Draycos's people, and gone on to solve the frame-up that Jack had been hiding
from in the first place.
But in the old days, that would have been the end of it. Uncle Virgil would have calmly
and cheerfully gone back on his promise to help Draycos find the people who had attacked
him. He would have kicked the dragon out to fend for himself, and he and Jack would have
flown off to get on with their lives. Nice, neat, and very simple.
So what was Jack doing here? Draycos had already said he wouldn't force himself
on a host who didn't want him. Why didn't Jack simply dump him on StarForce like Uncle
Virge wanted?
Was it because he'd made Draycos a promise? Could this K'da warrior-ethic thing
actually be starting to rub off on him?
He hoped not. He desperately hoped not. It was all well and good for Draycos to be
strong and noblehe was an adult, and he'd been trained for that sort of thing. But
Jack was only fourteen years old, and very much alone in the universe. There was no way he
could deal with the complications a K'da warrior ethic demanded of a person.
More to the point, he didn't want to deal with them. Life was hard enough
without making it any harder.
Draycos's five minutes were up. As casually as he could manage, Jack strolled back to
the office door.
He reached it and turned to lean his back against the jamb, gazing blankly out at the
crowd. As he did so, he dropped one hand to his side and scratched gently against the
wood.
From inside came an answering scratch. Good; Draycos was ready. Now if only the guard
over by the exit could conveniently be looking somewhere else.
He wasn't. He was staring straight at Jack, a very unpleasant look on his face.
Jack let his eyes drift away, trying hard to look as innocent as a newborn kitten. It
looked like he was going to have to do this right under the guard's nose.
Okay. No problem. Bracing himself, hoping the dragon really was ready, he turned
around suddenly as if startled and leaned his head slightly into the office. As he did so,
his right hand dipped into the open doorway
The sudden weight on his palm nearly toppled him over onto his nose. Fortunately, it
disappeared almost immediately as Draycos flattened himself into two-dimensional form onto
Jack's skin and slithered up his arm beneath his shirt. Jack regained his balance and
turned back around.
And was suddenly hauled nearly off his feet by the front of his jacket.
The door guard was no longer at the door. He was standing right in front of Jack, a
fistful of Jack's jacket clutched in his hand.
And the unpleasant expression had become downright ugly.
Chapter 3
"What do you think you're doing?" the guard demanded. His voice
was surprisingly quiet, almost civilized. It made the glare on his face even scarier by
contrast.
"I thought I heard something," Jack said, trying to sound nervous and
flustered. It didn't take much acting. "Like there was someone in there."
"So?" the guard demanded. He turned his hand a little, twisting the wad of
jacket in his grip. "What's it to you?"
Jack would have thought the conversation was quiet enough to have escaped notice. He
was wrong. "Sergeant?" the deep voice called from the other end of the room.
"Got a candidate here for an Intelligence assignment, sir," the guard called
back. "Caught his nose where it wasn't supposed to be."
"Bring him," the voice ordered.
The guard let go of the front of Jack's coat, shifting his grip to the back collar, and
quick-marched him across the room. The crowd of teens magically parted in front of them,
leaving a clear path to the two desks.
Jack hadn't yet had a good look at the man at the second desk. Now, as the guard shoved
him forward, he saw that the other was younger than he'd first thought. He was probably no
older than his late twenties, though the gray hair made him seem twice that age. His
expression was cool and thoughtful as he watched Jack approach. His collar insignia was
that of a lieutenant; the small nameplate over his right shirt pocket read BASHT.
He waited until Jack had been deposited directly in front of him before speaking again.
"Name?" he asked.
"Jack Montana," Jack said, pulling out the fake ID he'd put together aboard
the Essenay. "From Carrier," he added, holding it out.
Lieutenant Basht made no move to take the card. "What was the commotion
about?"
Jack swallowed. "I thought I heard a noise in there," he said. "I just
looked in, just for a second."
"He didn't just look in," the guard insisted. "He had his hand inside
the door"
Basht silenced him with a glance. "You always investigate noises in places you
have no business being?" he asked.
"It's my uncle," Jack explained hesitantly. "He told me once about a
mere group that liked to hide soldiers in their recruitment centers. They'd pop out
suddenly and start shooting."
A murmur of reaction went through the teens behind him. Basht's face didn't even
twitch. "No reputable mercenary organization would ever do a thing like that,"
he said in a precise voice. "We don't waste people for no good reason."
"They figured anyone who was fast enough to duck had what they were looking
for," Jack said, making his voice tremble a little. "The rest weren't worth the
effort to train."
For a long moment Basht stared up at him in silence. Jack dropped into what Uncle
Virgil used to call "little-boy mode": making eye contact with the man, cringing
and letting his gaze drop away, then forcing himself to look at him again. It was supposed
to make Jack look all innocent and scared, and to hopefully squeeze a little pity out of
the opposition.
Problem was, he wasn't sure that was the effect he wanted here. It might get him off
this particular hook, but it might also get him booted straight out the door behind him.
That wasn't exactly what he and Draycos had had in mind.
"So," Basht said at last. "You looked in."
Jack nodded. "Yes, sir."
"Just looked in?"
"Yes, sir."
"Really," Basht said, his voice suddenly the temperature of a walk-in
freezer. "Then how do you explain that your papers are halfway into the
office?"
Jack blinked. "Excuse me?"
Basht pointed past Jack's side. "Those are your papers, aren't they?"
Jack turned around. Lying on the floor partway into the office, half visible from where
he stood, was a neatly folded set of papers with a blue backing. The same blue backing, he
realized, that had been on Jommy Randolph's indenture agreement.
Only then did he finally catch on. An office, a secretary's work station, neat stacks
of blank Whinyard's Edge forms conveniently lying around . . .
And a clever and resourceful K'da poet-warrior.
Score one for the dragon.
"I don't know," he said, fumbling at his inside jacket pockets as if looking
for something that should have been there. "I guess ... I guess so."
Basht's eyes flicked to the side. "You," he said to one of the teens.
"Go get it."
The teen hurried to the office and returned with the blue-backed paper. "Jack
Montana," Basht read aloud. He frowned as he looked down the sheet. "Who filled
this out, your baby sister?"
"My parents didn't have much school-learning," Jack improvised. Draycos's
reading skills were improving rapidly, but his penmanship still needed a lot of work.
"Let's hope yours was better," Basht said. "Are you satisfied yet that
we aren't going to shoot you in the back?"
Jack swallowed again. "Yes, sir. I'm ... I guess I was just. . ."
"Don't make excuses, Montana," Basht said coldly. "Edgemen do their jobs
right and take the credit, or they do them wrong and take the consequences. There's no
middle ground. Is that clear?"
Jack straightened up. "Yes, sir."
Basht watched him a few seconds longer, as if determined to make him wiggle as much as
possible. Then he jerked his head fractionally toward the door behind him. "Go get
your gear," he ordered.
For the first time in several minutes, Jack took a clear breath. "Yes, sir."
Behind the door a short corridor branched off in two directions, the doors marked by
the interstellar symbols for male and female. Jack took the door to the right, and found
himself in a large chamber filled with locker-roomstyle changing benches. Along one
wall was a long supply counter with a dozen men working behind it. At the far end was a
stack of footlockers. Fifty or so of Jack's fellow recruits were already gathered around
the changing benches, in various stages of changing from their street clothes into light
gray Whinyard's Edge uniforms.
"Welcome to paradise," Jack murmured to himself, and joined the line at the
counter.
The supply men were very efficient. In a few dizzying minutes Jack had had a quick
blood sample drawn and a full-body scan taken, been issued a dress uniform, boots, and
four sets of fatigues, collected a field kit and operations manual, and had been pointed
toward the stack of footlockers. Finding an open space at a bench along the back wall, he
started to change.
He had stripped to his underwear, and was shaking out the uniform shirt, when he
suddenly realized all conversation in the room had stopped.
He turned around. The whole room was standing frozen in place, from the new teenage
recruits to the supply men behind their counter. All of them staring at him.
No. Not at him. At the K'da warrior wrapped around his body.
Jack felt suddenly sick. He'd gotten so used to having Draycos riding his skin that
he'd completely forgotten about him. With his mind still focused on his near-miss out in
the reception room, he hadn't even stopped to think about what he was doing.
Now, with a single act of unthinking carelessness, he'd ruined everything. Draycos's
secret was gone, announced to the whole Orion Arm from a grubby mercenary changing room.
And as Draycos's secret crumbled, so did any hope for his people. Their enemies would
silence him with ease now; and in five months the K'da and Shontine refugee fleet would
arrive at their new home only to find a deadly ambush waiting.
They were dead. They were all dead. And Jack was the one who had killed them.
"Wow!" the kid beside Jack said, his eyes wide.
Jack focused on him. "You like my dragon?" he asked. The words came out with
difficulty, his voice sounding in his ears like it was coming from deep inside a well.
"It's cool," the kid said. "I've never seen a tattoo that big
before."
For a long heartbeat Jack just stared at him. And then, as abruptly as it had crumbled
to dust, the whole thing uncrum-bled itself back together again.
He'd gotten used to Draycos riding his skin, all right. So used to it that he'd also
forgotten what the K'da looked like stretched out back there. "Biggest one in the
Orion Arm," he bragged. His voice sounded just fine now. "At least, that's what
the guy said."
The kid shook his head in wonder, leaning forward for a better look. "How long did
it take him to do it?" he asked.
"Couple of months," Jack improvised, hoping that wasn't a ridiculous number.
He didn't have the faintest idea how long it took to put on a tattoo. "He did part of
it every day until it was done."
The kid shook his head again. "Cool."
Jack frowned at him. The kid was a good head shorter than he was, with a wide, round
face and ears that stuck out to the sides. Like a hot-air balloon with twin air scoops
attached, he decided. "I'm Jack Montana," he introduced himself.
"Rogan Mbusu," the other said.
"Uh-huh," Jack said. "How old are you, Rogan?"
The kid drew back a little. "I'm fourteen," he said, a little defiantly.
"I'll be fifteen on my next birthday."
"Yeah, that's the way birthdays usually work," Jack said, frowning. No way
the kid was fourteen. Even twelve would be pushing it. "Fourteen, huh?"
Rogan's eyes drifted away. "Sure," he said. Turning back to his own section
of the bench, he resumed changing into his new uniform.
Jack looked back around the room. A few of the boys were still staring at him, but most
had had their fill of the show and were going about their business again. Turning his back
to them, Jack did likewise.
A few minutes later he was finished. Folding his civilian clothing into the footlocker,
he pulled the "dog-collar" wristband from its pouch inside the lid and closed
it, making sure all the locks were fastened. He slid the wristband around his right wrist
and headed toward the line of uniformed kids at the wide exit door. The footlocker,
following the signal from his wristband, rolled along at his side like an obedient puppy.
On the far side of the exit door was another supply counter. There Jack picked up a
combat vest with a dozen pockets, a condensation canteen, a shirt nameplate, and the
results of the medical scan they'd done on him at the other end of the line.
Last of all, he was issued his weapons.
"Moray pistol and Gompers flash rifle," the supply man identified the handgun
and snub-nosed rifle as he slid them across the counter. His voice had the bored tone of
someone who's been saying the same thing once a minute since breakfast. "Holster's in
the side trouser pocketpick either left- or right-handed. Rifle goes over the
shoulder, barrel down, grip back."
"Uh" Jack frowned at the guns as he picked them up. They were a lot
heavier than he'd expected. "Grip how?"
"Come on, come on, move along," the man snapped, already pushing the next
recruit's weapons across the counter.
Fumbling the guns into an awkward grip, Jack moved away. At the end of the room ahead
was one final door, with glimpses of daylight shining through each time one of the new
recruits went out. He looped the rifle sling over one shoulder, just to get it out of the
way, and slid his hand into his right-hand pocket. The man had said there was a holster
somewhere in there?
"It goes like this," a girl's voice said from behind him. Jack turned, to see
the dark-eyed girl who'd had the brief run-in earlier with Jommy Randolph.
"What?" he asked.
"I said it goes like this," she repeated. She patted her right hip, where her
Moray was already nestled in its holster. "You pull the tab and it folds out into
shape."
"Oh." Jack located the tab and pulled. Sure enough, the holster folded out.
"Right. Thanks."
"The rifle goes like this," she added, looping the sling over her right
shoulder with the gun pointed down and the top of the barrel facing forward. "This
way you can just grab the grip and swing it up on its strap into firing position."
She demonstrated. "See?"
"Yeah," Jack said, tucking his Moray away and redoing the rifle. Gingerly, he
swung it up. "Yeah, I see."
"Don't worry, it won't bite," she assured him, her face somewhere between
contempt and amusement. "See the red spirals along the barrels? These are candy
canes."
"They're what?"
"Candy canes. Non-functional guns."
Jack frowned down at his rifle. "What are they giving us non-functional guns
for?"
She shrugged. "Get us used to carrying the weight, I suppose."
"But why not use real ones?" Jack persisted. "They're going to give us
those before we go into the field anyway, aren't they?"
She snorted. "If you want to get on a crowded transport with a hundred farm boys
like you who've never seen a gun before and who have live ammo, go ahead. Me, I'll
stick with Santa's elves and their candy canes."
"I have too seen guns before," Jack insisted irritably. This girl had a
genuine knack for rubbing people the wrong way. "Just not this particular type."
"Sure," she said. "Just keep 'em pointed at the ground, okay?" She
nodded toward his left hand. "You need help with that, too?"
Jack looked down at the nameplate still in his hand. "I think I can figure that
one out for myself, thanks," he growled.
"I'm sure," she said. Her own name plate, he saw, was already neatly pinned
over her right shirt pocket. KAYNA, it said. "The name's Montana, right?"
"Yes," Jack said. "Call me Jack."
"Call me Kayna," she said pointedly. She took another look at his face, and
her lip twitched. "Or Alison," she added, almost grudgingly.
"Nice to meet you, Alison," Jack said.
"Yeah. Right." She tapped her own name plate. "And remember: If you can
read it, it's upside down."
She smiled sweetly and moved off, her footlocker rolling along beside her. Muttering
under his breath, Jack pinned his nameplate into place and followed.
Maybe Jommy had been right. Maybe this was going to be like prison.
Chapter 4
Half an hour later, after a lot of jostling and confusion, the new recruits
and their luggage were finally aboard the transports.
The seats were hard and narrow, and the teens were squeezed together like slabs of
packaged meat. Jammed against the two boys on either side of him, apologizing as his
equipment poked into their ribs and wincing as theirs poked into his, Jack had to admit
Alison had been right. He was just as glad no one aboard had live ammo.
He tried a few times to strike up conversations, but no one nearby seemed interested in
talking. Eventually he gave up the effort and spent the rest of the trip gazing moodily at
the seat in front of him. With his comm clip connection to Uncle Virge buried inside his
footlocker, and with too many people pressed around for him to risk talking to Draycos, he
felt strangely lonely.
It was an hour before they set down in the center of what looked like a random
collection of small huts, large prefabricated buildings, and a scattering of tents of
various colors and styles. The recruits were herded off their transports and ordered into
one of three long barracks buildings nestled under the trees.
Jack had hoped to get a bed near one of the handful of tall, narrow windows, with an
eye toward the kind of midnight computer raid he and Draycos were probably going to have
to make. But everyone else seemed to want a bunk with a view, too, and he had to settle
for a lower bunk pressed up against the washroom wall. It wasn't exactly a prime location,
but the washroom had some windows high up in the walls that might do.
The recruits spent the next two hours sitting on their bunks filling out more
paperwork. After that, they were taken outside into an open field and taught how to stand
at attention, turn precise corners, and march in unison.
Dinner time was a real treat. Jack had heard once that the stronger the army, the more
disgusting its food. By that standard, the Whinyard's Edge was a very good army indeed. An
early round of muttered complaints was quickly cut off by a large sergeant, who ordered
one of the complainers to stand at attention while he verbally took him apart inch by
inch. Sergeant Grisko, someone at Jack's table whispered the man's name, rumored to be the
meanest of the Edge's drill instructors. After that, everyone ate in silence.
After dinner it was back to the barracks, with orders to study their training manuals.
The ten-minute warning sounded at eight-fifty, and at precisely nine o'clock the lights
went out. Many of the teens were caught unprepared, and there was a lot of stumbling
around and clunking into bunks and each other for the next half hour.
Only then, after the barracks was quiet, did Jack finally have a chance to talk to
Draycos.
"So," he whispered, his head half under the blankets to muffle his voice.
"This is what it's like to be a soldier, huh?"
"Not precisely," Draycos murmured back. Even in a whisper, his voice sounded
odd. "It is similar, though."
Jack craned his neck to try to look down at the dragon's face lying against his
shoulder. "You all right?"
For a long moment Draycos was silent. "This is not right," he said. "For
children so young to be sold into such a life without cause is not right."
"You said you were younger than this when you became a soldier," Jack
reminded him.
"We were in a war for survival," Draycos said. "There is no such
reasoning here."
"I suppose not," Jack conceded. "Though I know there are sometimes big
fights off on backwater worlds that the rest of us never hear about."
The dragon shook his head. At least that was what it felt like against Jack's skin.
"Cornelius Braxton would not approve of this situation."
"Braxton?" Jack echoed, frowning. "How did Braxton get into this?"
"I believe him to be an honorable human," Draycos said. "He would be
strongly opposed to children being used for such a purpose."
"Fine, but how didoh, never mind," Jack said, giving up. Sometimes
Draycos's mind wandered off onto the strangest bunny trails. "Just don't forget that
he didn't build Braxton Universis into one of the Orion Arm's biggest megacorpora-tions by
being Saint Boy Scout. The only reason he was so nice to me was because we did him a big
favor. If he had to indenture kids to get something he wanted, I bet he'd do it. He might
not like it, but he'd do it."
"Perhaps," Draycos said. "Still, you and I at least should have nothing
to fear from him."
"I'm not so sure about that, either," Jack said, thinking back to the glint
in Braxton's eye at their last meeting. "I wasn't exactly telling him the whole truth
about what happened, you know. I get the feeling people don't tell half-truths to
Cornelius Braxton and get away with it. He may not be finished with us yet." He
grimaced. "I'd lay odds that Arthur Neverlin isn't finished with us, either."
"Perhaps," Draycos said. "But I would suspect that Neverlin has all he
can do right now trying to conceal himself from Braxton."
"Don't you believe it," Jack warned. "Snakes like Neverlin can always
find time for a little revenge when someone's double crossed him. Especially when they've
double-crossed him as badly as we did."
"A double cross implies there was a legitimate agreement to begin with,"
Draycos pointed out. "You were blackmailed into assisting him."
"You think that's going to matter to Neverlin?"
"I suppose not," Draycos conceded, his voice thoughtful.
Again, Jack tried to get a look at the dragon's face. "So where exactly are you
going with this line of conversation?" he asked. "You suggesting we ask Braxton
for help?"
"Certainly not," Draycos said firmly, his mind apparently finished with
wherever it had been wandering. "You know we cannot afford to let anyone know there
was a survivor of the Valahgua attack. I have simply been thinking about Braxton
today."
"And I'm sure he appreciates it," Jack said. "Can we forget him now and
concentrate on the problem at hand?"
"Yes, of course," Draycos said. "What do you wish me to do?"
"First of all, you eat," Jack said, reaching under his bunk to the
napkin-wrapped slices of meat he'd managed to smuggle out of the mess hall. "There
isn't much here, I'm afraid. I'll try to do better tomorrow."
"I am grateful." Draycos's head rose from Jack's chest, pushing up the
blankets.
One by one, Jack fed the meat slices into his open mouth, maneuvering carefully between
the sharp teeth. It felt rather like feeding a pet dog, he thought.
He quickly and firmly put the warm-fuzzy image away. Draycos had already made it clear
he wasn't anyone's pet. "I can hunt if necessary, as well," the dragon said,
still chewing as his head sank flat against Jack's chest again. "What is next?"
"The main computer system is probably in the headquarters," Jack said.
"It's a big, three-story gray building through the trees facing the landing area. It
had a flag flying in front of it earlier."
"I saw it."
"Good," Jack said. He was never quite sure how much Draycos could see riding
his skin that way. "There may be a way to tap into their records from somewhere else,
but I'm guessing the HQ is our best bet. And since they probably aren't going to let us
just walk in and sift through their files during the day, it's going to have to be at
night."
"There will be guard patrols," Draycos pointed out. "As well as
alarms."
"Right," Jack agreed. "Nothing we can do about the alarms until we can
get a close look at them. But we should at least be able to figure out the patrols."
"Yes," Draycos said. The blankets swelled upward again as the dragon raised
his head from Jack's shoulder and poked his snout into the open air. "These windows
do not face the proper direction."
"There are some in the washroom that do," Jack said. "High up on the
walls. You should be able to see the HQ and most of the area around it from there."
"Good." Draycos rose higher off Jack's skin and stretched his neck, the
movement shaking his head completely out of concealment. "Hold your breath."
Frowning, Jack took a deep breath and held it. For perhaps twenty seconds the dragon
sat there like a statue, his golden scales seeming to glow in the pale light. Every few
seconds his ears would twitch; and then, abruptly, he nodded. "They are all
asleep," he said, dropping lightly onto the floor beside Jack's cot. "I will
need your watch."
Jack handed it over. "They said reveille would be at four-thirty," he warned
the dragon. "Don't pull a Cinderella on me."
"Pardon?"
"Skip it," Jack said, resettling the blankets over his shoulders and rolling
onto his side. It had been a long day, and he suddenly realized he was very tired indeed.
"Just don't be late. And try not to wake me up when you get home."
Chapter 5
Reveille came precisely at four-thirty, a raucous trumpet blare that sent
bunks jerking all through the barracks. Thirty seconds later, Sergeant Grisko himself came
striding through the door, bellowing for all the greasy maggot-infested sacks of lard to
get their hind ends out of bed and stand at attention.
"Sloppy, maggots," he growled when the teens were standing stiffly at the
ends of their bunks. "What do you think this is, summer camp? Well, it's not. Who do
you think I am, your mother? Well, I'm not."
He stomped slowly down the room between the lines, looking each recruit up and down
as he went, describing in vivid detail exactly what he thought of them, their parents,
their expectations, and their chances of becoming successful soldiers. It was highly
intimidating, as it was no doubt meant to be.
At the same time, Jack couldn't help but admire the range of the man's vocabulary. He'd
spent a fair amount of time over the years in the company of Uncle Virgil's associates,
and he'd always assumed their language was as vile as it got.
Grisko's loud defense of the cooking staff the previous evening had already put him in
the same high-level cursing league as those men. Only now did Jack realize how restrained
the sergeant's mess hall tirade had actually been.
And this was just the first early-morning wakeup. He wondered how much the man still
had in reserve.
He reached Jack . . . and suddenly stopped cold. "What in the name of Cutter's
Hind End are you supposed to be?" he demanded, looking Jack up and down.
"Sir?" Jack asked between stiff lips. "Is this some kind of joke?"
Grisko bit out, waving a hand at him.
Jack looked down at Draycos, back in his proper place wrapped around his body.
"It's a tattoo, sir."
"It's a tattoo, sir," Grisko mimicked. "Get rid of it." Jack
blinked. "Sir?"
"I said get rid of it," Grisko snapped. "Wash it off, sandblast it
offwhatever it takes."
"But it's a tattoo," Jack protested. "It doesn't come off." Grisko
had been starting to turn back toward the door. Instead, he turned back to Jack, gazing
down his nose directly into Jack's face. "Are you arguing with me, Montana?" he
asked, his voice suddenly very quiet. "Are you disobeying a direct order?"
"No, sir," Jack said, thinking fast. "Request permission to return home
to visit a removal clinic."
The corner of Grisko's mouth twitched into something that was probably as close to a
smile as he ever got. "That's better," he said. "When I give you an order,
you jump to obey it. Clear?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said.
"Good," Grisko said. "Permission denied. You don't skip out on basic for
anything. You'll get it removed during first liberty."
He made a precise about-face, just like the ones Jack and the others had practiced the
previous afternoon, except that Grisko got it right. "All right, maggots," he
announced, starting back down the line. "You've got five minutes to suit up in
fatigues and report to the mess hall. Thirty minutes from right now, you will have eaten
and assembled on the Number Three parade ground. Now move!"
They spent the morning practicing more drills and formations. By the time the lunch
trumpet sounded some of them were nearly as good at turns and about-faces as Grisko.
Not that Grisko would ever admit that, of course. To hear him talk and complain, they
would never be anything more than undisciplined, incompetent maggots.
Though as Jack watched some of his fellow recruits fumbling around, he had to admit the
sergeant might have a point.
After lunch it was more drills, this time with their candy-cane weapons. The extra
weight didn't seem that important at first, but after the first hour of spinning it back
and forth the Gompers flash rifle in particular began to feel like it was made of solid
lead. By midafternoon, whatever crispness had been in their movements was long gone. An
hour after that, a couple of the younger kids were whimpering under their breath with the
effort.
That was a mistake. Sergeant Grisko disliked whimpering even more than he disliked
full-body dragon tattoos. Each time he caught even a hint of it, he stopped the drill flat
and laid into the offender.
One of them was Rogan Mbusu, the eleven-year-old masquerading as fourteen who had so
admired Jack's dragon back at the recruitment center. By the time Grisko finished with him
and stalked away, Rogan was nearly in tears.
There were, however, two notable exceptions to the group's overall fatigue and
clumsiness. One of them was Jommy Randolph, the boy who had complained to Jack about his
indenture at the recruitment center. For all his dread back then, he seemed to be quickly
settling into the role of the perfect trainee.
Maybe he was good at this. Or maybe he was simply fighting hard to keep from getting
shown up.
Because the other exception was Alison Kayna.
Jack found himself watching her as they went through the drills. She was two rows up
from Jack's position in the formation and a little to the right, easy enough for him to
see without turning his head. Like Jommy, she was quick to pick up the techniques and
routines. Unlike Jommy, she didn't seem to be working all that hard at it.
Uncle Virgil had often said that there were only two types of people who could pick up
a skill at the drop of a hat. One group was people who already had some idea what they
were doing, while the other was natural con artists with an inborn knack for learning new
skills. Natural con artists like Jack himself.
Of course, Uncle Virgil had only brought that up when trying to talk Jack into an
especially tricky job. But the point was still valid. Either Alison had already had some
military training, or else she was one of those very special people.
The first possibility seemed ridiculous. She was only fourteen, after all, hardly
ex-StarForce material. But the second wasn't any better. If she was that special, what was
she doing in the middle of a small-time mercenary training camp?
The more Jack thought about it, and the more he watched her, the more it bothered him.
But there was nothing specific about her behavior that he could put his finger on. He
thought about discussing it with Draycos, but aside from the few minutes between
lights-out and Draycos taking off for the evening's observation duty there wasn't much
time for them to talk.
So he kept his thoughts to himself, and waited for a chance to talk to Alison directly.
After all, he was a pretty good thief and con artist, too. With a little luck, he should
be able to figure out what she was up to.
To his surprise, it wasn't that easy.
It should have been. It really should have. After all, he and Alison were two of a
couple hundred teenagers who'd been thrown into the close quarters of basic training. They
were living this soldier stuff; living it, breathing it, dreaming it, and if you globbed
enough ketchup on it you could choke it down in the mess hall. It should have been simple
to find a way to bump into her during a free moment and strike up a conversation.
There was certainly no lack of possible topics. Sergeant Grisko alone took top three
places on any likely list.
But as that first full day turned into the second, and then dragged into the third,
Jack discovered the recruits were being allowed very few free moments.
Most of their time was taken up by organized group activities like calisthenics or
marching and field drills. At those times he could see Alison, but there was no chance of
talking to her. Most of the rest of their day was spent reading from their manuals or
sitting in classrooms quoting sections of those manuals back to their instructors.
Mealtimes, which were about as close to free time as they got, were also no good. There
weren't a lot of girls in the group to begin with, and they all seemed to cluster together
at the same three tables at every meal. Alison, naturally, sat at the center table, which
meant Jack would have to push his way through everyone else to get to her.
Which pretty much left the middle of the night. With the barracks blacked out and
roving patrols moving around the camp, that was a dead end, too. Even if he had been
willing to try, he desperately needed the sleep.
By the fourth day he was half inclined to just give it up. Every muscle ached from the
calisthenics, his head hurt from all the technical information he was cramming into it,
and he was starting to do parade-ground drills in his dreams. If Alison was pulling some
scam on this bunch, he was about ready to sit back and cheer her on.
On the other hand, his own goal here wasn't simply to survive basic training, either.
He couldn't afford to trip over some scheme of Alison's while he was trying to break into
the Edge's computer records. One way or another, he had to find out what she was up to.
And so he waited, and watched, and tried to be patient. And on the fifth day, that
patience was finally rewarded.
"The targets are set up over there," Sergeant Grisko told them, pointing as
the trainees filed by the weapons table that had been set up in the woods. Through the
trees, a hundred yards away, Jack could see a ragged edge of rocks. "Go pick a firing
position and have at it."
The trainees fanned out through the trees. Gingerly hefting his Gompers flash rifle,
Jack headed off toward the right flank. "This is a different style of weapon than the
one carried by the Brummga we saw aboard the Havenseeker" Draycos murmured
from beneath his shirt.
"That one was some kind of machine gun," Jack told him. "It fired
bullets. Little projectiles, driven by small explosions."
"I understand the concept."
"Okay. This thing is a chemically pumped laser. Big difference. Hurts just as bad
if it goes off in your face, though."
Draycos stirred against his skin. "You seem uncomfortable with it."
"Try scared to death," Jack growled back. "Two hours' worth of training,
and we're supposed to know how to fire these things?"
"You are not familiar with this weapon?"
Jack snorted. "You kidding? I don't even like looking at it."
"Yet you were carrying a hand weapon when we first met."
"I was carrying a tangler," Jack corrected tartly. "There's about fifty
light-years' difference between that and one of these."
"You!" Grisko called from behind him. "Dragonback!"
Confused, Jack swiveled around. "Sir?"
The sergeant was standing back by the weapons table, his fists resting on his hips.
"Someday, if you're really, really good at this, maybe they'll issue you a weapon
with a vocal rangefmder chip," Grisko told him. "Until then, don't talk to your
gun. It won't talk back."
Jack felt his ears reddening. "Yes, sir," he said. Turning around again, he
stalked off through the trees. "Thanks, Draycos," he muttered under his breath.
"Like I needed more trouble."
"My apologies," the dragon said quietly.
Jack sighed. "Forget it."
He got a few more steps before Draycos spoke again. "I am still confused."
"A tangler is a nonlethal weapon," Jack explained tiredly. Draycos could go
off on bunny trails of his own all day, but once he got an idea or question stuck between
those pointy ears, you couldn't shake it loose with a pry bar. "That means it doesn't
kill anyone. Hey, you used the thingyou saw what it did."
"I understand the difference," Draycos said, a little stiffly. "I am a
K'da warrior. My surprise is that someone from your former profession would not be
familiar with many different styles of weapons."
Jack shook his head. "You've got it backwards," he said. "Someone in my
former profession couldn't afford not to be choosy about his choice of guns. Ever
hear of felony murder?"
"No."
"A felony is a major crime," Jack explained. A few trees ahead, he could see
a section of jagged rocks. It looked like as good a place as any for target practice.
"Like armed robbery or kidnapping or something."
"Or murder," Draycos added quietly.
Jack shivered. He'd already seen what Draycos and his K'da warrior ethic thought about
murderers. "Anyway, felony murder is when someone dies while you're committing a
crime like that."
"Even if you did not intend for it to happen?"
"Even if it wasn't even your fault," Jack said. "No matter how it
happens, if you were the one committing the crime, you can be charged with murder. That's
why Uncle Virgil and I never, ever carried weapons that could kill."
"Interesting," Draycos said thoughtfully. "K'da and Shon-tine law
requires intent to be considered. Is this universal in the Orion Arm?"
"On most Internos planets it is," Jack told him. "A lot of the alien
worlds do things differently."
"Stop," Draycos said suddenly.
Jack froze, half concealed behind a particularly large tree. "What?" he
demanded, his eyes nicking around.
"Beyond this tree is open ground," Draycos said. "You must go low to
cross it."
"Oh, for" Jack threw a glare down at his shirt. "It is only a
training exercise, you know."
"Then let us properly train you," Draycos said. "Go low."
Jack sighed. "Just what I've always wanted," he muttered, slinging the
Gompers over his back and getting down on his hands and knees. "My own personal drill
sergeant."
"Use your center joints," Draycos advised. "You will stay lower and be
able to move more quickly."
"My center? Oh. Knees and elbows."
"Correct. I am surprised they have not already taught you that."
Jack frowned as he started across the patch of open ground toward the rocks ahead. Come
to think of it, why hadn't they?
The knees-elbows waddle was easier than he would have expected. It was still a lot more
awkward than just walking, though. Reaching a convenient notch in the rocks, he carefully
eased his head up for a look.
He was at the edge of a large gravel pit that stretched out for probably a hundred
yards, maybe fifty feet deep at its lowest point. A dozen electronic targets had been set
up at various places in the pit.
"Nothing like starting us off at long-range work," Jack muttered, unlimbering
his rifle and flipping off the safety. "Whatever happened to 'Don't fire until you
see the whites of their eyes'?"
"Pardon?"
"Skip it." At least there was a conveniently shaped notch on top of one of
the rocks where he could brace the rifle. Setting the muzzle into the notch, he started to
get to his knees.
"Keep your head down," a girl's voice ordered.
Frowning, Jack rolled over onto his side and looked behind him.
It was Alison Kayna.
Chapter 6
She was coming from the trees behind him, wriggling across the open ground
using the same elbows-and-knees crawl Dray-cos had just taught him. Naturally, she was
doing it better. "What did you say?" he asked.
"I said keep your head down," she repeated, angling toward a section of rock
near Jack's. "They'll have snipers targeting us from the far side of the gravel
pit."
Jack shrunk down a little behind the protection of the rocks. "Snipers?"
"You don't think this is just target practice, do you?" Alison asked, puffing
a little as she reached the rocks. "You've seen the games Grisko likes to play. You
think he'd pass up a golden opportunity like this?"
"A golden opportunity for what?" Jack demanded. Suddenly the rock he was
leaning against didn't feel nearly so solid and secure anymore. "Blowing our heads
off?"
"Oh, get real," she scolded, unslinging her Gompers from across her back.
"They'll just be using marker lasers."
"Never heard of them."
"They cause a mild skin reaction. You don't even feel it, but the mark shows up
like a spot of sunburn."
Jack began to breathe a little easier. "Temporary, I hope."
"It lasts a day or two." Alison eased an eye up into a gap between two rocks.
"Shows where you got careless."
"Nice of them to tell us about this," Jack grumbled, rolling back onto his
stomach and sidling his way over toward a lower and better protected gap in the rocks.
"Good thing you know your way around this stuff."
"I did some research," Alison said. "I gather you didn't."
"Not really," Jack said. He lined up his sights on one of the distant
targets, wondering if someone across the way was lining up sights on him. "I figured
they'd be giving us all the training we needed."
"I wasn't talking about training," Alison said. "But that's another
point."
Carefully, Jack squeezed the trigger. There was a brief flash of laser light
accompanied by a soft hiss, and the spent power cartridge ejected from the chamber. It
rolled across the grass, trailing the stink of chemical reactant behind it. "What's
another point?"
"The training." There was a hiss from her direction as she squeezed off a
shot of her own. "Doesn't it strike you as odd that we haven't even gotten to look at
real weapons until now?"
Jack shrugged, lining up on another target. "It's only been five days," he
pointed out.
"Out of a total of ten," she countered. "Ten days of basic training,
then off we go. With most armies, this would run six weeks or more."
"Yeah, but most of them would be going off to real wars," Jack reminded her.
"We'll just be doing garrison support duty."
"That's what Grisko says," she said ominously. There were two more
hisses from her position. "You run into a boy named Rogan Mbusu yet?"
"Sure," Jack said. "Short kid, big ears. Claims to be fourteen."
Alison snorted. "Yeah, I've talked to him," she said scornfully. "He's
lucky if he's even seen twelve. Legally, you know, you're only supposed to indenture kids
fourteen and older."
"So the Edge bends the rules a little," Jack said. "What's your
point?"
"My point is I don't want to do even garrison duty with some kid who's too young
to know which end of his rifle goes where," she said darkly. "Garrison workers
can get just as dead as regular troops, you know."
Jack grimaced. "You sound like my uncle. How come you know so much?"
"Like I said, research," she said.
"Like my Aunt Fanny," Jack retorted. "Come on, you didn't get this from
any book."
Her lips compressed into a thin line. "If you must know, this is my second try at
this," she said. "I washed out of the first mere group I was indentured
to."
"And you came back for more?"
She shot him an icy glare. "My parents need the money.
Yours don't?" Without waiting for a reply, she turned back to her shooting.
Which was just as well, since Jack didn't have a ready answer for that one.
For a few minutes they shot side by side in silence. Jack alternated between several
targets, wondering how he was doing. Probably pretty lousy. Grisko would have a way of
matching up the hits to each of the trainees' guns after they were all done, but that
didn't do Jack any good right now.
"Why 'Dragonback'?" Alison asked suddenly.
Jack frowned. "What?"
"Grisko called you Dragonback earlier. When you walked off talking to your
gun."
Jack's ears reddened again. Probably the whole group had heard that. Terrific. "I
have a tattoo of a dragon across my back," he said. "A big one."
"Something to do with the old Dragonback warriors?"
"Nope," Jack assured her. "In fact, I never even heard of them until a
month ago."
She grunted and resumed her firing. Five minutes later, her clip of cartridges was
empty. "I'm off," she announced, slinging the Gompers over her back again and
starting backwards in a reverse elbows-and-knees crawl. "Make sure you fire your
whole clip before going back if you don't want Grisko to scorch your ears off Hitting the
targets once in awhile would be nice, too."
"Thanks," Jack said dryly. "I'll see what I can do."
"And keep your head down," she warned.
A minute later, she was gone, vanished into the cover of the trees. "Well, that
was fun," he muttered.
"She has great courage," Draycos said. "I can hear it in her
voice."
"Or else she's just plain stupid," Jack said, picking a target and firing off
a round at it. "Her and her family both. How do people let themselves get so
desperate for money?"
"Many times it is not their fault."
"Most of the time it is," Jack said stubbornly.
"That sounds like your Uncle Virgil's philosophy."
"Leave Uncle Virgil out of this," Jack said, firing two more shots. Missing
both, probably. "Anyway, he knew how the real world worked."
There was a short silence, just long enough for Jack to realize that Draycos could
easily have reminded him what Uncle Virgil had done for a living. "Have you no
compassion for the weak?" the dragon asked instead.
"Compassion wasn't a big priority where I grew up," Jack said. "And I
never saw it do anyone any good."
"No one?"
Jack glanced a glare down at him. "How come we only have these big moral
discussions when Uncle Virge isn't around to help me defend myself?"
"Do such discussions make you uncomfortable?"
Jack shook his head impatiently. "Can we just skip this?"
"Of course," Draycos said, as if he hadn't been the one who'd brought it up
in the first place. "Shall I give you my report on the nighttime patrols?"
"Yeah, sure," Jack said. "Go ahead."
"There are four separate teams," Draycos said. "Two soldiers in each.
They pass within view of the main headquarters' entrance approximately once every twenty
minutes."
"How regular is that twenty minutes?" Jack asked.
"Close, but not exact," Draycos said. "The period has ranged from
eighteen to twenty-five minutes."
"Do they always come from the same directions each time?"
"Again, approximately," the dragon said. "I have noted slight
differences in the direction of approach, but nothing significant."
"A regular patrol pattern, then," Jack decided, his annoyance at the dragon
forgotten. Draycos might be the local expert on morals and ethics, but putting puzzle
pieces together was where Jack got to shine. "If there's one thing Uncle Virgil
taught me to love, it's regular patterns."
"There may still be alarms on the doors," Draycos warned.
"I'm sure there are," Jack agreed. "And on the computer, too. But I know
how to handle those. My biggest worry was getting shot on the way there."
"Do we then make our attempt tonight?" Jack fired his last two rounds while
he considered. "Let's give it one more night," he said. "If the patrol
pattern is still the same, we'll go tomorrow."
"And if we are successful?"
"Well, we're sure not going to hang around any longer than we have to," Jack
told him, slinging his rifle and starting to back up. As before, the technique felt a lot
more awkward than Alison had made it look. "If Uncle Virge is on the ball, he'll have
the Essenay stashed somewhere nearby. Once we've pulled everything the Edge has on
Djinn-90 fighters, we'll whistle him up and get out of here."
"And if we do not find what we need?"
"If they've got it, we'll find it," Jack said confidently. "If not. . .
well, we'll worry about that when it happens."
He reached the cover of the trees and stood up. "Come on. Let's go see how I
did."
"Not very well, I am afraid," Draycos said. "But do not be discouraged.
Long-range shooting is difficult to master."
"It could have been a lot harder," Jack pointed out. "A machine gun, or
even a semiautomatic projectile rifle ..." He trailed off, a strange thought striking
him.
"Is there trouble?" Draycos asked.
"I was just thinking," Jack said slowly. "A flash rifle doesn't have any
kick. No recoil. You understand?"
"Yes."
"That makes it a lot easier to learn," Jack went on. "But it's also a
whole lot more expensive to shoot. Does that sound like the kind of weapon you'd want
beginners to start with?"
Draycos was silent a moment. "You are being taught to march and stand in
formation," he said. "From your books you are being taught the words and
expressions soldiers use, and a great deal of technical information. Now you are learning
how to shoot the easiest of possible weapons."
"And, if you believe Alison's numbers, all of this is happening in a
quarter of the time regular soldiers need for their training," Jack finished for him.
"This is starting to feel a little creepy."
"Yet as you yourself said, you are only being trained as garrison
assistants," Draycos reminded him. "Perhaps this is adequate for such
duty."
"Maybe," Jack said. "But like Alison said, you can get just as dead in a
garrison as you can out in the field."
Still, he reminded himself as he continued through the trees, he wouldn't be staying
for that part of the operation. Tomorrow night he and Draycos would pull the information
they needed, and then they would be out of here. "Anyway, I'll bet I did better than
you think," he added.
"You have a tendency to shoot high," Draycos told him.
"I do not," Jack insisted. "You wait and see. You'll be eating those
words for your dinner."
"Pardon?"
Jack sighed. "Skip it."
Alison and Jommy, to Jack's complete lack of surprise, came out first and second in the
final tally.
To his rather annoyed surprise, he found that Draycos's evaluation of his own shooting
skills had been correct. He himself had finished a less than glorious eighty-seventh.
But at least he'd only collected three sniper hits. Most of the others, blissfully
unaware of their true position in Grisko's shooting gallery, had up to two dozen of the
little marks.
Alison, naturally, had only one.
Dinner that night was grumpier than usual. Most of the recruits seemed to think it had
been a highly unfair trick to play on them, and the majority seemed to blame Sergeant
Grisko personally for it. Jommy in particular was highly indignant, apparently feeling
that his twenty-one hits took a lot away from his otherwise impressive second-place score.
Jack stayed out of the debate as best he could. There was no need to get them thinking
about his own low sniper hit rate. It might lead to the unpleasant suspicion that he had
been in on the scam from the start.
After dinner there was a twilight marching drill, using real Gompers flash rifles this
time instead of the candy canes. Unloaded, fortunately. Then came more study time, bedtime
preparations, and finally lights-out. Jack waited until the rest of the barracks was
asleep, then gave Draycos his meager meal and sent him to his washroom window to watch.
It was somewhere in the middle of the night when he suddenly awoke.
For a minute he lay motionless in bed, trying to figure out what had awakened him.
Then, suddenly, he got it.
There was a rush of cool air rippling over him from the washroom area where Draycos was
supposed to be watching. Not the usual light breeze that came from having the window open
a crack while the dragon peered out, but something stronger.
Silently, he climbed out of bed and padded barefoot across the cold floor to the
washroom. If this was nothing but a matter of the wind having shifted direction during the
night, he promised himself darkly, he was going to be very annoyed.
The wind hadn't shifted direction. The breeze was stronger because the window had been
propped wide open. And Draycos was gone.
Chapter 7
AH right, Jack told himself urgently. Don't panic. Draycos
wasn't lost, after all. He was just misplaced a little.
All right. First off, it was for sure that none of the roving patrols could have
gotten him. Certainly not without making a lot of noise in the process. Wherever
Draycos had gotten to, he'd gotten there voluntarily.
Could he have decided to tackle the HQ building on his own? Ridiculous. Draycos might
be a first-class warrior, but he didn't know the first thing about human-designed locks
and alarms. He wouldn't have gone there without Jack.
And then the obvious answer struck him. Of course: Draycos was hungry. After nearly a
week of the starvation diet Jack had put him on, the dragon had finally given up and gone
hunting.
Jack felt his face warm with shame. He should have tried better to bring Draycos more
food. Tried, nothinghe should have done better. But with all those kids
bustling around, and Grisko and the other drill instructors likely to drop in without
warning
He shook his head firmly. Those were cheap excuses. And as Uncle Virgil would have
said, yesterday's cheap excuses were tomorrow's fish wrap. As of tomorrow, he would
starting bringing a decent meal home to his partner.
Partner. He frowned at the word. Uncle Virge didn't want him to have any
partners. Uncle Virge especially didn't want him having a partner with Draycos's rigid,
self-sacrificing K'da warrior ethic. Uncle Virge would be very unhappy if he knew Jack was
starting to think of Draycos in that way.
The open window was next to the low wall of the washroom's big shower area. Carefully,
trying not to make any noise, Jack pulled himself up onto the wall. He steadied himself
with a grip on the edge of the window and looked out.
The camp was actually rather pretty by starlight. To look on it now you wouldn't think
there was so much grunting and sweating and agony out there during the day. He looked
through the trees toward the dark windows of the headquarters building, trying to imagine
what kind of security they might have there.
And then, he caught a flicker of movement from his right. Something that looked like a
black shadow was moving swiftly and silently along the ground toward the barracks.
It was Draycos. It had to be. And the fact that the dragon's golden scales had turned
to combat black meant there was trouble.
He slid off the wall onto the shower area's tile floor. If Draycos was moving that fast
down there, he wasn't likely to slow down much coming through the window.
He didn't. Without any hint of warning, the dragon was suddenly there, leaping with
bull's-eye accuracy straight through the center of the opening. His tail caught the edge
of the window with a soft slap as he passed, slowing him down and deflecting his arc just
enough to drop him soundlessly into the center of the shower area.
"What's the matter?" Jack hissed.
Draycos did a startled spin, twisting around like a cat on a hot charcoal grill. The
sudden arching of his neck crest relaxed as he saw it was Jack. "I went out to better
study the movements of the patrols," the dragon said, his tail twitching restlessly.
"I am sorry, but I may have been seen."
Jack glanced up at the window. "Where?"
"To the north," Draycos said. "I heard movement nearby and went up into
the trees."
"What happened then?"
"I eluded the patrols without difficulty," Draycos said. "I do not think
they really know what they are looking for. But they may still be searching for me. I am
sorry."
"Wait a second," Jack said as a sudden thought struck him. "The patrols
are off chasing each other's tails up north?"
"They have gone all directions," Draycos said. "From the movements of
lights, it would seem they are searching the entire perimeter of the camp."
"Are they, now," Jack said, scratching his cheek. "All of them, you
think?"
The tail twitching suddenly stopped. "What are you suggesting?" Draycos asked
cautiously.
Jack nodded toward the window. "I'm thinking this might be a good time to go crash
the party."
Draycos's neck crest stiffened a little. "But the patrols are on alert."
"Right," Jack agreed. "But they're on alert somewhere else. Give me a
second to get dressed."
Two minutes later he was back. Draycos had closed the window down to a crack again and
was crouched on top of the shower wall peering out. With the immediate excitement over,
his scales had returned to their usual red-edged gold. "I see and hear no evidence of
movement," he reported. "But I am not convinced this is a wise move."
"The worst that can happen is that we have to dodge the patrols," Jack
pointed out as he pulled on the thin plastic camouflage gloves that had come with his
field kit. No point leaving fingerprints or traces of sweat where someone could find them.
"If we wait until tomorrow, we'll have to do that anyway. At least here we start with
an open playing field."
"Tomorrow the patrols will be on a known schedule," Draycos countered. But
nevertheless he pushed open the window and slid through.
Climbing up onto the shower wall, Jack got his legs through the opening and followed.
The window was pretty high, and as he lowered himself he wondered briefly about his
chances of twisting an ankle as he hit the ground.
He needn't have worried. Draycos had taken up position beneath the window, stretching
up on his hind legs with his front paws braced against the wall. Jack's feet found spots
on the dragon's shoulders, and a second later he was safely on the ground.
"Looks clear," Jack whispered as they crouched together beside the barracks.
"Let's go."
Draycos put a paw on Jack's outstretched hand and disappeared up the sleeve. Jack
waited until he had slithered along his skin to his usual position with his head at Jack's
right shoulder. Then, with one final look around, he headed off toward the headquarters
building at a quick trot.
He had paced off the distance two days ago on his way to the mess hall and knew it to
be about a hundred yards. Sneaking through the trees in the dead of night, senses alert
for trouble, it seemed a lot farther.
There were no shouts of discovery as they reached the front corner of the headquarters
building. "Do we enter through the main door?" Draycos murmured.
"Probably not," Jack puffed. "But I'll check."
One glance was all it took. "Not a chance," he told the dragon, slipping
around the side of the building. "The lock's armed six ways from August. We're not
going to pop it without a set of tools."
"What then?" Draycos asked.
"We find a likely window," Jack said, pausing at the first window and giving
its edge a quick examination. "Maybe on the second floor where they might not be so
careful."
"Or perhaps the third?" Draycos's head lifted out of Jack's shoulder, pushing
aside the shirt material. His tongue flicked out, pointing toward the stars.
Jack looked up. Directly above them, two windows up, was a darkened third floor window.
Even in the dim light, he could see it was open a few inches. "Looks promising,"
he agreed doubtfully. "Can you jump that high?"
"Brace yourself," Draycos said in reply. "What do I do when I am
inside?"
"Find a way down here," Jack told him, pointing at the first-floor window in
front of them. "Doesn't look like there's too much of an alarm here. I should be able
to talk you through the disarming procedure."
"Very well. Are you ready?"
Jack planted his feet firmly against the ground and loosened his shirt at the back.
"Ready."
An instant later he was nearly knocked off his feet as the dragon leaped upward from
his back, his front paws shoving down hard on Jack's shoulders for momentum as they
passed. Before Jack could even flail for balance the dragon's rear paws thudded down in
the same spots, giving himself an extra push upward. Jack grabbed for the edge of the
window in front of him, nearly putting his hand through the plastic in the process, and
looked up.
Draycos was hanging by his front paws from the third-floor window ledge. For a moment
he peered inside, his tongue flicking through the gap to taste the air. Then, working his
snout into the opening, he pushed upward, levering the window all the way open. A quick
pull, a lunge of golden scales, and he was inside.
Jack turned and looked at the silent woods and the darkened buildings half-seen through
them. With Draycos gone, he suddenly felt a lot more exposed out here. He hoped the dragon
would hurry.
Too late, he also hoped the Edge hadn't loaded their headquarters with hidden security
cameras. Getting Draycos recorded on videotube would be all they needed.
The light touch that brushed across his shoulder was like a high-voltage electric
shock. He twitched violently, nearly wrenching his back as he twisted around, half
expecting to see Sergeant Grisko grinning at him over the muzzle of a gun.
It wasn't Grisko. It wasn't a gun, either. It was, instead, the plug end of an
electrical extension cord.
He looked up. Draycos had reappeared in the window, the cord dangling from between his
front paws. "A change of plan," he whispered down at Jack. "It may be safer
to stay on this floor."
Jack took a deep breath, sternly ordering his heart to start beating again.
"Right," he muttered. Getting a grip on the cord, he started to climb.
Between his climbing and Draycos's pulling, he made it up and through the window in
record time. "It appears to be an assembly area," the dragon suggested as Jack
peered around at the long tables stacked with electronics gear.
"Probably maintenance," Jack said, his nose wrinkling at the faint stench of
burned insulation. The smell was probably why whoever worked here had decided to leave the
window open overnight. "I don't see any computers, though," he added, closing
the window back down to its original crack.
The dragon's ears twitched toward the closed door. "I hear no movement
outside."
"Good," Jack said, heading toward the door. A gray plastic bag caught his eye
as he passed, and he scooped it up. "Hold it a second," he added as Draycos
reached for the door handle. "They may have cameras out there."
He slid his hands into the bag, stretching the heavy plastic taut.
"Hereyou've got the claws in the family," he said. "Cut me a couple
of eye holes, will you?"
Draycos's neck arched and he extended a claw. A couple of quick slashes, and he had a
neat slit visor carved into the plastic. "Will that do?"
"Let's see," Jack said, wincing a little as he slid the bag over his head.
He'd seen those claws slice grooves in solid metal, and they'd come a little too close to
his hands just now. The positioning was perfect. The bag settled onto the top of his head
with the slit directly in front of his eyes. And unlike the eye holes he'd asked for, the
slit even allowed him some peripheral vision. "Perfect," he told the dragon.
"Get aboard and let's go."
The hallway outside was dark and silent. Jack stayed close to the wall, trying to
ignore the rustling of the plastic bag in his ears. The main offices would probably be on
the first and second floors, but with luck one of the rooms up here would have the
computer link he needed.
He struck gold with the second room he tried. Not only were there three terminals in
the center of the room, but two of the walls were lined with file cabinets.
"Bingo," Jack murmured as he closed the door behind him. "Looks like
we've found the main file room."
Draycos's head rose from Jack's shoulder, his green eyes glittering in the dim
starlight filtering in through the window. "We have found old records," he
corrected. "The labels on the cabinets indicate the information is over five years
old."
Jack felt his lip twist. So much for hunting down the right tube and studying it later
in the safety and convenience of the barracks. "Well, we can't expect them to just
hand it to us," he said philosophically, closing the door and heading for the
computers. "You want to keep watch?"
Draycos dropped to the floor from his sleeve. He opened the door a crack and pressed
his ear to the opening. "Do not take too long," he warned.
"Thanks," Jack said dryly, turning on the computer. "I wouldn't have
thought of that."
"Will there not be code-locks?" the dragon asked, ignoring the sarcasm.
"Like cold on ice." "Pardon?"
"They'll be all over the place," Jack translated. "But Uncle Virgil
taught me a few tricks."
For a few minutes he worked in silence. The sewer-rat approach, as Uncle Virgil had
called this technique, was nearly always effective with human-designed computers.
Trouble was, it was also pretty slow. Jack could feel sweat gathering on his forehead
beneath his mask as he punched the keys. Sooner or later, he knew, the patrols out there
were going to get tired of their search and come home. The computer chugged on, the
sewer-rat code words chewing away at the defenses.
And then, abruptly, Draycos stiffened. "Footsteps," he hissed. "Someone
is coming."
Chapter 8
For a second Jack hesitated. To give up now, when they were so close . . .
"Where?" he hissed back.
"On the stairway at the near end of the corridor," Dray-cos said.
"Moving slowly upward."
"Which floor?" Jack asked. "I mean, are they coming from first to second
or second to third?"
Draycos's other ear twitched toward the cracked door. "First to second," he
said. "And there is only one person."
Jack chewed at his lip. A single person implied a night watchman making his rounds. If
he went through the second floor before coming up here to the third, there might still be
time to find and pull the records he needed.
And then Draycos's tongue flicked out. "There is an odd odor," he said.
"It tastes . . . unpleasant."
Frowning, Jack crossed to his side. "Let me smell," he whispered. The dragon
moved away, and Jack took a careful sniff.
One was enough. "We're out of here," he muttered, closing the door all the
way and heading for the window at the far side of the room. As he passed the computer, he
shut it off. "Come on."
"What is it?" Draycos asked, hurrying to catch up with him.
"He's laying a sopor mist ahead of himself," Jack said, looking around.
Unfortunately, this room hadn't come equipped with any handy extension cords. "A few
more whiffs and you and I would have been snoozing blissfully away. You see anything to
climb with?"
"No need," Draycos said, stepping to the window. With forepaws and muzzle he
slid it open. "I will jump first and stand below. You may drop onto my back."
"You must be kidding," Jack growled, going back to the desks. The computers
themselves were standard fold-top portables, with a whole spaghetti mix of cables
connecting them to printers and scanners and other equipment. "I'd break your back.
Or else miss completely and break mine. Help me get these cables loose."
Two minutes later, Jack had the cables knotted together. "It will be too
short," Draycos warned, running an eye over the makeshift rope.
"It'll be close enough," Jack insisted, carrying the lumpy coil across the
room and feeding one end out the window. "Here," he added, handing the other end
to the dragon. "Hold tight."
There was no way he could slide down quickly, not on a rope with as many knots in it as
this one had. Just the same, he went down as fast as he could manage. The watchman back
there could burst in on Draycos at any time, and he probably had something a lot nastier
than sopor mist in his arsenal.
But there were no shots from above, and none of the knots gave way, and a few seconds
later he had reached the end. Draycos had been right; he found his feet dangling about six
feet short of the ground. Bending his knees slightly, he dropped the rest of the way.
He'd barely landed when the collection of cables fell into a heap beside him. Draycos
was right behind them, dropping into a crouch away from the tangle. "Anyone
nearby?" Jack whispered.
The dragon's long neck turned back and forth, his green eyes glowing like a pair of
control panel status lights as they probed the darkness. His tongue darted out, and his
ears twitched back and forth like small, pointed radar dishes. "I sense no one,"
he said.
"Okay." Pulling off his bag mask, Jack tossed it to the breeze. It would have
been nice to have its protection all the way back to the barracks, but he didn't dare risk
it getting caught in some bush nearby once he finally threw it away. Grisko and his
buddies would come hunting for the intruder soon enough, and marking which of the three
barracks he had come from would be making it far too easy for them. He would just have to
trust that Draycos was right about the coast being clear. "Let's go."
The trip seemed even longer this direction than it had going the other way. But again,
there were no shouts or lights or other signs of discovery. Either they'd made it out
ahead of the general alarm, or else Grisko had decided to play it cool. Draycos boosted
Jack up to the window, then followed.
Three minutes later, undressed again, he was safely back under the blankets.
"What now?" the dragon murmured from his shoulder.
Jack took a slow, deep breath, listening to his heart thudding in his ears. That had
been close. Too close. Uncle Virge would definitely not be happy with this one.
Especially since they hadn't even accomplished what they'd set out to do. "I don't
know," he had to admit. "If we hadn't left that pile of computer cables on the
ground, they might have figured it was a false alarm. No chance of that now, though."
"My fault," Draycos said, his whisper sounding subdued. "I am accustomed
to thinking as a warrior. Not as" He paused.
"A thief?" Jack suggested.
"Yes," Draycos said reluctantly. "I apologize. I know you are trying to
move away from that part of your life."
"It's okay," Jack soothed him. "Actually, it's kind of nice to know I've
got something useful to bring to this team."
"You are the reason I am alive," Draycos reminded him. "For my part,
that is very useful."
"And you're very welcome for it," Jack said. "I just meant it's good to
be something other than your personal KV."
"Pardon?"
"Recreational vehicle. Mobile home." Jack shook his head. "Skip
it."
"Ah. I see."
"Anyway, don't worry about the cables," Jack went on. "Even if you'd
thought to pull them back inside, leaving them tied together like that would still have
been a dead giveaway. You sure didn't have time to put everything back the way it
was."
"What will we do next?"
Jack stared at the dark underside of the bunk above him. "Depends on whether they
nail us or not," he said. "If they grab me tomorrow, we wait our chance and try
to break out."
"It would be useful in that case to have transport ready."
Jack peered down his nose at his chest. "Are you suggesting we ask Uncle Virge for
help? You?"
"My feelings about Uncle Virge's life philosophy do not prevent me from
working with him," Draycos said stiffly. He shifted a little across Jack's skin, like
a K'da version of fidgeting.
"Even if Uncle Virge isn't exactly your sort of soul mate?"
"I do not know that word," the dragon growled. "The point remains. I am
a poet-warrior of the K'da. My personal feelings cannot be permitted to intrude upon my
work."
"Glad to hear it," Jack said, rather enjoying this. Draycos was always so
calm and in control that it was nice to see him squirm a little for a change. "I'll
make sure I have my comm clip along tomorrow in case we have to whistle him up."
"Assuming he is close enough to be of assistance."
"He is," Jack assured him. "Anyway, if they don't grab me, we
might as well finish the last four days of training before we take off."
"We will not try again?"
"With them alerted?" Jack retorted. "Not a chance. We'll have to pick
another mercenary group and try again."
"Then why not leave now?"
"Because it'll be easier to sneak out after graduation than before," Jack
told him. "And because Alison has proved it helps if you're not starting from
scratch."
"Perhaps," Draycos said, sounding doubtful. "We must be alert, though.
They may decide not to take you immediately."
"Oh, I'll be careful," Jack said. "Trust me. I've had enough people do
that slow vulture circle around me, watching and hoping I'll make a wrong move. I know
what it looks like."
"That will be helpful," Draycos said, not sounding entirely convinced.
"You had best sleep now."
"Sounds good to me," Jack said with a sigh. The excitement and tension of
their midnight excursion was fading, and his eyelids were suddenly feeling very heavy.
"See you at reveille."
"Yes," Draycos murmured. "I wonder ..."
With an effort,Jack propped open one eyelid. "You wonder what?"
"I wonder if perhaps I was not seen at all," the dragon said. "Perhaps
it was something else that drew the patrols to the camp perimeter."
"Such as?"
"Perhaps the Essenay," Draycos said. "You suggested it would be
close at hand."
Jack thought it over. It was possible, he had to admit. After five days of not
hearing from him, Uncle Virge might well have gotten impatient and brought the ship in for
a closer look. Without knowing the Edge's security system, he could have tripped some
alarm in the process. "Could be," he told Draycos. "We'll ask him about it
later." He lifted his eyebrows. "If it was Uncle Virge, you have my
permission to never let him live it down."
"I was not thinking of how to place blame," the dragon said. "I was
merely wondering if the ship might have taken damage."
Jack winced. "I guess we'll find that out soon enough, too."
Chapter 9
No one came storming into the barracks in the predawn darkness before
reveille. No one came and grabbed him in the shower, or on his way to breakfast, or even
at breakfast. Everything, in fact, settled nicely into the normal morning routine, from
the rotten food to the blaring trumpet calling the recruits to the morning parade-ground
maneuver.
It wasn't until they'd finished the first two drills that the routine was abruptly
broken.
He spotted the officer angling across the field toward Grisko as the sergeant shouted
out the commands that ended the second drill. Grisko set the recruits to attention and for
a moment he and the officer talked quietly together. Then the officer turned to face the
trainees, and Jack saw that it was Lieutenant Basht from the recruiting office.
"All right, listen up," Grisko bellowed across the ranks. "The following
fall out and go with Lieutenant Basht: Brinkster, Kayna, Li, Mbusu, Montana,
Randolph."
The sodden breakfast, which had already been lying heavily on Jack's stomach, suddenly
picked up about a ton of extra weight. Heart pounding in his ears, he left his position
and moved up through the ranks.
"Form up: two by three," Basht ordered as the six recruits reached the front.
They did so, Alison and Jommy taking the front two spots. Jack stepped into place behind
Jommy, with Rogan Mbusu falling in behind him. Brinkster and Li, both girls, took their
places behind Alison.
Basht glanced over their formation, and for a second Jack thought he was going to make
some snide comment. But he merely did a crisp military turn and strode off the field.
They followed, automatically falling into step with him. As they walked, Jack tried to
puzzle out what was going on.
His analysis didn't get very far. Jommy and Alison were certainly the best of the
bunch, which might imply this group had been singled out for special commendation. Problem
was, he and Rogan were here, too, and neither of them was exactly near the top of the
list. As for Brinkster and Li, Jack had noticed them along the way but neither had struck
him as being either particularly good or particularly bad. So ordinary and unnoticeable
were they, in fact, that he'd never even heard their first names.
Maybe it was a random sample, then. But with a hundred eighty boys and only twenty
girls in the group, it didn't seem likely that a spin of the dart board would end up with
three of each.
He was still trying to come up with some explanation when he suddenly realized that
Lieutenant Basht was leading them straight toward the headquarters building.
Jack's heart had been starting to quiet down. Now, it picked up its pace again. So that
was it. They'd figured out somehow that he was last night's casual visitor, and this whole
thing was a smokescreen to get him away from the main group.
Beneath his shirt, he felt Draycos shifting around against his skin. Apparently, the
K'da had figured it out, too. "Easy," he muttered a warning. The first rule
Uncle Virgil had hammered into him when facing the authorities was not to do their job for
them. You're innocent until they absolutely prove otherwise, he had told Jack over
and over. And for ten minutes after that, too, he'd usually added.
There didn't seem to be any extra security hanging around the building as Basht opened
the door and led the way inside. Jack rather expected him to take them straight upstairs
to the records room, or maybe to split Jack off from the others and take him up there. To
his mild surprise, Basht led them instead to a first-floor room.
To his even greater surprise, the room was filled with computer stations. The stations
were unoccupied, but a thin man wearing colonel's insignia was standing near the front
beside a double stack of sealed cartons. From the way he eyed them as they filed in, Jack
guessed he'd been waiting specifically for them.
"Parade rest," Basht ordered as they formed into their two-by-three again.
"Mbusu. Tell me about Sunright."
Sunright? Frantically, Jack searched his memory. Then he remembered: it was one
of the worlds that had been listed in the Current Whinyard's Edge Missions section
of their training manual.
And that was about all he remembered. If Basht called on him, he was going to be in
serious trouble.
For a second it looked like Rogan was already there. "Uh" the boy
floundered. His voice quavered the way it always did whenever he had to talk to a superior
officer, and Jack winced in sympathy.
Then the mental wheels seemed to catch. "Sunright, sir," Rogan said, his
voice still trembling a little. "Third planet of the Gamma Lartrin system. Human
colonized in 2115; ceded to the Parprins and Agri by the Treaty of Mcdougall
in"
"Lose the sniveling," Basht cut him off. "Kayna? What are the Edge's
interests in the place?"
"The Edge has been hired by a Parprin daublite mining colony to protect its
interests from a group of Agrist claim-jumpers," Alison said briskly. So she was on
top of this, too. That figured. "Troops have been in position on the ground for the
past sixteen months."
"Planetary bio stats?"
"Atmosphere is slightly oxygen-heavy, but well within human tolerances,"
Alison said. "Gravity is three percent less than Earth Standard; temperatures average
two degrees cooler."
Basht nodded. "Who are we facing there? Randolph?"
"The Agri have their local military group," Jommy said. "Mostly
volunteers. They've also hired units of the Shamshir mercenaries."
"Relative strengths?" Basht asked. "Li?"
Li seemed to shrink behind the smooth skin of her face. "I don't remember,
sir," she said in a barely audible voice.
For a long second Basht's eyes burned into her, as if he was trying to set her on fire.
Then, the glare flicked over her shoulder. "Brinkster? What's our strength?"
Out of the corner of his eye Jack saw the girl wince. "I think we have eight
hundred troops on the ground, sir."
"You think?"
"We have eight hundred troops, sir," she said, more firmly this time.
"And the Shamshir?" Basht asked, his eyes finally focusing on Jack.
"Montana?"
Jack braced himself to follow Li down in flames. But even as he opened his mouth to
tell Basht he didn't know, there were seven rapid pinpricks on the back of his forearm,
the urgent tapping of a K'da claw. "They have seven hundred, sir," he said,
hoping he was reading Draycos's signal right.
He held his breath. Basht's eyes flicked again to Li, as if silently pointing out that
she was the only one not up to speed here. Then he turned and nodded curdy to the colonel.
tto- "
Sir.
He stepped back as the colonel came forward, and Jack let out a silent sigh of relief.
He hadn't realized that during all those hours of study Draycos had actually been reading
the manual over his shoulder. Lucky for him.
Over his shoulder. On top of his shoulder. Whatever.
"My name is Colonel Elkor," the other introduced himself. "Late
yesterday we received word from Sunright that the Shamshir have made a major blunder.
We've been nibbling around the edges of their main InterWorld transmission station, so
they've set up a new one. It's in a mountainous area marked as November Six on our
maps."
He looked them all over, as if expecting them all to know where November Six was. Jack
tried to remember if the Missions section had included a map of the Sunright area, but he
couldn't.
"The convenient part about that is that we happen to have a forward observation
outpost in that region," Elkor went on. "That means that if we put some
specialized computer equipment in there, we'll be able to tap directly into all their
off-planet transmissions."
He jerked his head back at the boxes he'd been standing beside when the group came in.
"Those are the computers," he said. "You are now the computer operators.
Any questions?"
There was a moment of uncertain silence. "Why aren't there any
questions?" Elkor demanded. "You all already know everything?"
Jornmy lifted a hesitant hand. "Sir? I don't know anything about communications
work."
"That's better," Elkor rumbled. "Fact is, none of you do. That's why
you're here. Lieutenant Basht will be running you through three days of training that will
include electronic eavesdropping, decoding, and some preliminary analysis
techniques."
"Plus giving you all the access codes you'll need to work our systems," Basht
added. "By the time you're done, each of you will be a fully qualified Whinyard's
Edge systems operator."
"I presume none of you objects to a change in specialties?" Elkor said,
lifting his eyebrows. "If you do, say so now. Plenty of other recruits marching back
and forth out there for us to choose from."
The implications were obvious: stay here and do inside work, or go back outside and
sweat. There was another silence from the group, this one a lot more positive than the
last. "Good," Elkor said briskly. "The six of you are now designated as
Technical Squad Tango Five Zulu. Carry on, Lieutenant."
He strode from the room. "All right," Basht said, gesturing toward the
computer stations. "Everyone pick a station, and let's get started."
They took a short break for lunch, and an even shorter one for dinner. Throughout the
day the noise outside rose and fell as the rest of the recruits were drilled and
exercised, then taken away for more target practice, then brought back for more drills and
exercise.
The noise inside the room, consisting mostly of Basht's steady drone of information,
seemed to go on forever.
The sky was already darkening when they were finally turned loose. "I guess that's
what they mean by information overload," Jack commented to Draycos as he trudged
alone toward the barracks. "My head is so full it hurts."
"Perhaps the next two days will be easier," Draycos suggested from his
shoulder. "You seem to have been given most of the necessary information."
"Yeah, but the next thing will be drilling us in how to use it," Jack pointed
out. "That's always a lot harder than just memorizing facts and figures."
He glanced down at the dragon's head, just visible beneath his collar opening.
"Speaking of facts and figures, thanks for bailing me out when Basht started lobbing
pan-fried rocks into our laps. I'm amazed you even bothered reading all that stuff, let
alone memorized it."
"I am a poet-warrior of the K'da," Draycos reminded him. "The gathering
of military information is part of my profession."
"Yeah, maybe," Jack said suspiciously. "Let me guess: you made up a
little song about the Edge's expeditions. Right?"
There was a short pause, and then the dragon's voice rose in gentle melody from beneath
his shirt. "On Eagles' Rock two hundred strong, where humans fight a Trin-trang
throng," the dragon sang. "Eight hundred fight at Sunright here:Agri and seven
friend Shamshir."
Jack rolled his eyes. "Words fail me."
"Thank you," Draycos said dryly. "There are thirty more verses if you
would care to hear them."
"Some other time."
They walked in silence a few more steps. "I trust you realize," Draycos said
at last, "that this is a trap."
"Oh, I know," Jack assured him. "Let's hear your take on it."
"They know that someone tried to break into their system last night," the
dragon said. "They suspect it was you, but are not certain. They therefore offer you
the chance to learn their access codes, in the hope that you will try again tonight."
"Not bad," Jack said. "You're getting better at this sneaky stuff."
"I will take that as a compliment," Draycos said gravely. "Thank
you."
"You're welcome," Jack said. "Only one thing. Unless they also think I'm
dumber than dirt soup, they know I won't try another midnight stroll. Not with them
alerted like this."
"What then do they expect?"
"I figure there are two possibilities," Jack said. "One, that I'll go
straight off the chutzpah meter and try to break into the records while Basht is standing
right there teaching me how to do it."
"What is a chutzpah meter?"
"Chutzpah is sheer, blatant nerve," Jack growled. Having to stop every third
sentence to explain something was starting to get really old. The minute they were back on
the Esse-nay, he promised himself, he was going to sit the dragon in front of a
dictionary and not let him get up until he'd memorized it. "The classic definition is
a kid on trial for murdering both parents, who pleads for mercy on the grounds that he's
an orphan."
"An interesting term," Draycos said thoughtfully. "An equally
interesting concept. What is the other possibility?"
"That I'll wait until we get to Sunright and try to tap into the computer at the
outpost they're sending us to."
"Will an outpost computer have the information on the Djinn-90 fighters that we
seek?"
"I don't know," Jack said. "I hope so, since that's mostly what I am planning
to do." " 'Mostly'?"
"Right," Jack said, smiling tightly. "You see, they'll figure they can
just put a watchdog program on the computers before I arrive. That way, the minute I try
to break in, they'll have me."
"But you will instead be using your special access system?"
"Actually, we can do even better than that," Jack told him. "The local
Edge group will have to have a mainframe set up somewhere, and it certainly won't be off
at some little observation outpost."
"It will be in their main encampment." "Right," Jack agreed.
"And since the outpost computer has to be able to talk to that one, it'll need a
transmission pathway. And unless they went to the trouble of stringing a cable out into
the middle of nowhere, that means a radio link." Draycos stirred suddenly on his
skin. "The Essenay." "Bingo," Jack said, nodding. "Once I
give Uncle Virge the access codes, he can tap into the signal and pull up whatever the
mainframe has on Djinn-90 fighters. And since I won't have used the outpost computer to do
it, they won't be able to trace it back to me."
Draycos was silent a moment. "That will require us to travel to Sunright," he
pointed out. "You will be entering a combat zone."
"That is the downside to this whole thing," Jack admitted. "What
do you know about observation outposts? Do they get attacked much?"
"That depends on the situation," Draycos said. "If the outpost is not
considered a danger, it may be left alone as a ranging marker for artillery attacks."
"And if it is considered a danger?"
"It will be destroyed," Draycos said. "As quickly as possible."
Jack grimaced. "I suppose eavesdropping on the other side's communications would
fall into that second category?"
"Correct," Draycos said. "Assuming the other side is aware of it."
"Figures." Jack sighed. "Okay. So the goal is to get there, pull the
records, and disappear before the Shamshir figure it out."
"If they have not done so already," Draycos warned. "Perhaps it would be
better to leave now and try a different group."
For a long moment Jack was sorely tempted. He already had his comm clip handy, hidden
at his waist beneath his shirt. He could just keep walking until they reached the
perimeter, jump the fence, and have Uncle Virge and the Essenay in and out before
the Edge even knew what had happened.
Then it would be out to another mercenary group, one that wasn't already suspicious of
him like the Edge was. He had enough fake IDs aboard the ship to try a dozen of them if he
had to.
But he'd already invested six days here, not to mention the time they'd spent getting
to Carrion in the first place. And time was definitely something they couldn't afford to
waste. "No," he said, trying to feel like he really meant it. "We've come
this far. Let's see it through."
"You do this for my people," Draycos said quietly. "Once again, I am in
your debt."
"Yeah, well, I wouldn't start writing checks just yet if I were you," Jack
warned.
"Pardon?"
Jack closed his eyes. "Skip it."
Chapter 10
Four days later, the recruits graduated.
Jack had never been through a graduation ceremony before. Of course, he'd never been in
a school before, either. All of his formal education had been given to him aboard the Essenay,
with Uncle Virgil more or less presiding over the procedure.
He would have laid good odds, though, that this graduation was vastly different from
most.
The ceremony didn't last very long, for one thing. Grisko and the other drill sergeants
got the recruits into formation and ran them through a few maneuvers in front of a small
group of officers in full dress uniform. Colonel Elkor and Lieutenant Basht were among
them, but Jack didn't recognize any of the others.
After the maneuvers, they all stood at attention while Elkor gave a speech. A short
speech, fortunately, mostly consisting of telling them how lucky they were to be members
of the Whinyard's Edge and how proud the Whinyard's Edge was to have them. After that,
Lieutenant Basht read off the squad and platoon listings, told them they would be leaving
camp at oh-seven-hundred the next morning, and ordered them to fall out.
And after that, the sergeants loaded their new mercenaries aboard transports and flew
them to a nearby town for a party.
"A curious ritual," Draycos commented as Jack headed toward the restroom for
his third time. "But is not alcohol a depressant to your people?"
"Sure is," Jack confirmed, looking around as he pushed his way past the
groups of brand-new Edgemen crowding the tavern. Most of them were already half drunk,
either laughing and staggering or else passed out on the tables where they sat. A few were
huddled in corners, looking miserable, probably trying not to throw up. "I don't know
why Grisko and the others are even putting up with this, let along encouraging it."
Draycos remained silent until Jack reached the privacy and relative quiet of the restroom.
"There is no deep mystery to their actions," the dragon said. "The children
are drinking alcohol to pretend they have become adults. The officers allow it because
they believe the experience will bond the members of each platoon together."
Jack snorted. "Mostly what it'll do is make them feel lousy," he said.
"Not a single one of these kids has any idea what they're doing. Probably the first
time any of them has even tasted the stuff." "Unlike you?"
Jack shrugged. "Uncle Virgil taught me to drink in case I ever had to do it for
some con scheme," he told the dragon. "And right after he did, he told me to
never even look at the stuff if I didn't absolutely have to. In case you hadn't noticed,
I'm still on my first beer, and I've only finished half of that. Mostly, I've been
drinking water."
"I had noticed," Draycos said. "I see that in some areas Uncle Virgil
did indeed have good judgment."
"What Uncle Virgil had was a well-developed survival instinct," Jack said as
he dug under his shirt and pulled out his comm clip. "In our business even a little
fog in the brain could be fatal. Fogged reflexes, too. I never knew when we might have to
drop everything and make a run for the tall grass."
He took a deep breath as he lifted the comm clip. "Uncle Virge isn't going to like
this," he warned.
Uncle Virge didn't. "This is not the deal we made, Jack lad," the computer
growled. "Not the deal at all."
"You don't hear me doing cartwheels of joy either, do you?" Jack asked.
"There just isn't any other way."
"Of course there is," Uncle Virge said, suddenly gone all soothing and
persuasive. "Look, lad, it's over. I know you've done your best. But the hand's been
lost, the jackpot's been taken off the table, and it's time to face reality. You and your
poet-warrior friend have no choice but to take this to the StarForce."
"We've been through this, Uncle Virge," Jack reminded him. "It isn't
safe for Draycos to show himself around."
"But it's safe for him to drag you into a war zone?" Uncle Virge countered.
"Besides, if Draycos gets himself killed, what happens to his people?"
"I will not be killed," Draycos said calmly. "Nor will I allow Jack to
be harmed."
"Big promises," Uncle Virge huffed. "How exactly do you intend to make
amends if you're wrong? A signed apology from the grave?"
"I'm not going to argue with you," Jack cut him off. He was nervous enough
without bringing up the subject of graves. "We're going, and that's that. You want to
hear the plan, or don't you?"
"Go ahead," Uncle Virge muttered, sulking now.
Jack laid it out for him. Uncle Virge was not impressed. "That's the
plan?" he demanded scornfully. "That house of buttered toast is the best our
poet-warrior can come up with? No wonder his people are losing their war."
Jack winced, not daring to look down at Draycos. "Yes, that's it," he told
Uncle Virge stubbornly. "The only question is whether we do it on our own or whether
you come along to help. Well?"
"Of course I'll help," Uncle Virge muttered, back to sulking again. "You
know where you'll be?"
"It's the Edge's November Six outpost," Jack told him. "According to the
map they showed us, it's just to the south of Bear Mountain in the southwestern part of
the Gray Hills. Can you pull up a map?"
"Yes," Uncle Virge said. "Yes, I have it."
"Basht said we'd be flying into a major Parprin town called Mer'seb," Jack
told him. "From there, our squad will take a transport up to November Six. I'm
guessing Mer'seb is where the Edge's HQ and mainframe computer are, but you'll need to
check on that. Got it?"
"Of course," Uncle Virge said.
"Okay," Jack said. "Incidentally, you weren't by any chance poking
around the training camp lastlet's seelast Tuesday night, were you?"
"Certainly not," Uncle Virge said. "I'm right here in the spaceport
where you left me. Why?"
"Just wondering," Jack said. "There was a something off by the fence
that night that had the patrols stirred up for awhile, that's all."
"Did it cause you any trouble?"
"Actually, it did us a favor," Jack said. "That's what opened up the
grounds and gave us a clear run at the HQ building."
"Where you weren't able to get what we needed," Uncle Virge said pointedly.
"Which is why we're going with this other lunatic plan. Some favor."
Jack felt his lip twitch. "I suppose." "But I suppose we're stuck with
it now," Uncle Virge went on. "I don't suppose you happen to know where the
actual battle lines are drawn on Sunright?"
Jack glanced down at Draycos, got a sideways slide of the head in return. "Not a
clue," he said. "But we should be able to figure it out once we see which
direction the shots are coming from."
"Not funny, Jack lad," Uncle Virge said darkly. He had a point.
"Sorry," Jack apologized. " 'With tired arms,'" Draycos murmured,
" 'and eyes fatigued, the soldiers stood to mark the deed.' "
"That isn't funny, either," Uncle Virge growled.
"Sorry for both of us, in that case," Jack said, frowning down at Draycos.
What had that been all about? "I have to go. We'll see you on Sunright."
He clicked off the comm clip and tucked it away again inside his shirt. "Well,
he's not happy," he commented. "But he didn't go completely frantic on us,
either. That's a good sign."
"Or else he merely recognizes he has no choice but to obey."
"Maybe," Jack conceded. "What was that 'tired arms' thing you said to
him?"
"It was part of a poem," Draycos said. "I have been working on
translating my poetry into your language. I often recite parts of it to Uncle Virge late
at night, while you sleep."
Jack had to grin at that. Uncle Virgil had always despised poetry, which meant that the
computerized Uncle Virge probably did, too. "I'll bet he just loves that. So what
part didn't he think was funny?"
"It was a poem about the Battle of Chatii," Draycos said, his voice low and
grim. "There the K'da and Shontine held a bridge against the Valahgua while a group
of alien civilians escaped behind them. What the warriors did not know was that some of
the civilians had been turned by the enemy, and soon they were being attacked from both
sides."
Jack winced. "I can see why he didn't like it. Did they allI mean . . .
die?"
"Actually, most of them escaped safely," Draycos said. "It was your
comment about not knowing where the battle lines were drawn that brought that part of our
war to my mind. So it was not Uncle Virge near the camp that night."
"I guess not," Jack said. "I hadn't really thought he would have been
that careless, anyway."
"Which returns us to the question of what did stir up the patrols,"
Draycos pointed out.
"I don't know," Jack said. "Maybe they were just jumping at
shadows."
"Trained soldiers usually do not do that."
"I suppose." Jack looked down at the dragon's head beneath his shirt.
"By the way, I want to apologize for what Uncle Virge said about your people losing
their war."
"No apology is necessary," the dragon said calmly. "I understand his
motivation. Having failed to argue us out of our plan, he was attempting to shame us out
of it."
"Ah," Jack said. Yes, that was definitely something from Uncle Virgil's old
bag of tricks. "Anyway, I'm sorry. I'm glad you didn't take offense."
"I did not say I did not take offense," Draycos said. His voice was still
calm, but there was a thin layer of ice on it. "I merely said I understood. Either
way, though, the fault is not yours."
Jack swallowed. "Okay," was all he could think of to say. "Well. Let's
get back to the party."
The transports left the camp at precisely oh-seven-hundred the next morning, bright and
shiny and efficient.
Unfortunately, the same could not be said of their passengers.
Most of them, to quote one of Uncle Virgil's favorite phrases, looked like death warmed
over and stuck to the pan. Most were pale and limp, some looked like they'd just done a
twenty-mile hike, and a few were practically sleepwalking as they stumbled aboard the
transports.
Amid such company, Jack knew, someone as fresh and un-hungover as he was would be a
little too noticeable. He picked a role somewhere in the middle of the spectrum, hanging
his head as he shuffled along. Occasionally, he made sure to bump into the person on
either side of him.
The transfer to the various spacecraft that were waiting for them an hour later wasn't
much better, but at least no one got accidentally left behind. As far as Jack ever heard,
none of them fogged their way aboard the wrong ship, either.
The trip to Sunright took seven days. Tango Five Zulu was one of three squads from
their training group going to this particular world. Sergeant Grisko and Lieutenant Basht
were along, too, though Basht made it clear he would only be staying long enough to write
up a report on the current situation there.
There were also two hundred regular Whinyard's Edge mercenaries aboard, heading in to
reinforce the eight hundred troops already there.
The numbers struck Jack as rather ominous. A twenty-five percent increase in ground
forces meant the Edge was either making a major push for victory or scrambling madly to
avoid defeat.
Either way, it was likely there was going to be shooting. Possibly a lot of it.
Starting with the second day of the flight, after everyone had recovered from their
hangovers, Basht had Tango Five Zulu start their equipment preparation. They now had the
actual fold-top computers they would be taking up to November Six with them, and it took
the better part of two days to load the various codes and data onto them from the ship's
main system.
The rest of the time was spent practicing the computer drills they'd learned back on
Carrion. They would continue practicing, Basht declared several times, until they were
able to run them in their sleep.
Jack wasn't sure they ever got that good at it. But he had to admit that Basht
pushed them at least halfway there. By the time they reached Sunright, the whole squad was
dreaming about the drills.
Finally, yet all too soon, they had arrived.
The town of Mer'seb was nestled into a narrow river valley, its tightly packed
buildings surrounded by tall, thickly forested hills. A slow river wound lazily through
the center of town from the east, taking a sharp southern turn a half mile or so beyond
the western edges.
Between the town and the river curve was a large area of mostly flat stone. It was on
this natural landing pad that the Whinyard's Edge spaceship set down.
The adult Edgemen had obviously been through this routine before. They lined up at the
airlock hatchway in full combat gear, rifles and machine guns slung for marching.
When the hatch opened, they strode out and down the ramp, forming quickly into six-man
ranks. Marching in step, they headed into the city along a typically Parprin
straight-as-an-arrow street. At Grisko's direction, the three teenage squads fell in at
the back end of the column.
"Well, this is fun," Jommy muttered under his breath from beside Jack as they
marched past the first row of houses at the edge of town. "They planning to walk us
the whole way to the outpost?"
"Probably just to the main Edge HQ," Alison said from Jommy's other side.
"It's on the far side of town."
"How do you know where it is?" Jommy asked suspiciously.
"I saw the flag from the top of the ramp," she said mildly. "You really
need to pay more attention to details, Randolph."
Jommy muttered something inaudible under his breath. "Oh, come on," she
chided him. "Frost up, okay? It can't be more than a mile or two."
"Yeah, but what's the point?" he growled.
"They're probably showing us off," Alison said. "Look at the
people."
Keeping his face forward as he'd been taught, Jack threw a sideways glance at the
Parprins lining the street. Quite a few of them had come out to see the parade, all right.
Mostly females and their children, though there were also a few of the taller males mixed
in.
He frowned, taking a second look. The thin Parprin face always seemed sad to him; but
these Parprins looked even sadder than usual. The children huddled close by their mothers,
and the males tended to stand in groups of two or three, talking softly together.
"They don't look very happy to see us," he pointed out quietly.
"Maybe they don't know we're here to help them," Jommy muttered
sarcastically.
"Or maybe they think this whole thing has gotten out of hand," Alison
suggested slowly. "Maybe they don't think their mine is worth all this."
"Isn't worth what?" Jommy scoffed. "Defending from poachers?"
"Not worth completely scrambling their lives for," Alison countered. "My
father used to say that lawyers and soldiers came out of the same expensive box. If you
couldn't settle things without them, you weren't going to like what it cost to settle
things with them."
Jommy grunted. "Your dad must have been a real kick to grow up with."
Alison didn't answer.
They continued on in silence. Jack kept his eyes moving, wishing he knew how to read
Parprin faces better. Maybe he was only imagining their discomfort.
Still, he couldn't shake the feeling that they looked like people watching an occupying
army march through their town.
They reached an area of three- and four-story buildings, obviously the town's main
business district. Here the females and their children were replaced by Parprin males,
many of them wearing the brightly colored robes of shopkeepers or the only slightly
drabber sparkle-cloth of businessmen. There were also quite a few aliens of different
species represented in the crowd, and even an occasional human. Apparently, Mer'seb was a
trading center for many of the alien enclaves and colonies scattered around this region of
the planet.
Again, it seemed to Jack that a lot of the Parprins were whispering together as the
mercenaries marched past. The rest stood in silence, watching the procession. The other
aliens, in contrast, mostly glanced at the spectacle and then moved on. No one cheered or
waved.
"I got it," Jommy said suddenly. "They just don't realize it's a parade,
that's all. We should have brought a brass band with us."
"That's funny," Alison said scornfully. "Personally, I was just thinking
about how much I was enjoying the silence."
And at that instant, almost as if on cue, the silence of the crowd was abruptly broken.
From all around them, the city erupted in noise: the distant thunder of small rockets, the
closer rattle of machine gun fire, the shouts and screams of the injured and the dying and
the terrified.
The Whinyard's Edge was under attack.
Chapter 11
The chatter of gunshots filled the air. The deeper, slower rhythm of heavier
weaponry and small explosions added counterpoint, the noise echoing from the sides of the
buildings. The entire column of soldiers was under attack.
And like the raw recruit that he was, Jack just stood there in the middle of it.
"Move!" Draycos snarled, his whole body aching for action. An attack.
Soldiers being shot at and probably killed where they stood. Civilians possibly caught in
the line of fire, with nowhere to escape to.
And he, a poet-warrior of the K'da, lying uselessly in two-dimensional form against
Jack's skin.
It was a horrible situation. A horrible, shameful situation. For a K'da warrior in the
midst of combat to sit idly by, not lifting a claw to help, was a violation of all he'd
ever stood for.
But he had no choice. To move now, to give in to the urge to defend and protect, would
doom the K'da and Shon-tine to ultimate destruction.
Because if the unknown enemies who had slaughtered his advance party ever learned that
someone had survived, they would hunt him down like a newborn cub. And when he died, the
last chance to warn the refugee fleet would be gone.
But even as his frustration rose like poison in his throat, Jack finally freed himself
from his stunned paralysis. "What do I do?" he hissed, breaking into a run
toward the edge of the street.
"Find cover," Draycos told him. Sliding along Jack's body, he got a claw
beneath the collar of the boy's shirt and popped open the sealing seam. Bad enough being
trapped here unable to help, without being mostly blind, too. He ran the claw down far
enough to open the shirt to midchest and peered out.
It was about as bad a place to be caught in an ambush as he could have asked for. All
around them, medium-tall buildings provided high ground for the attackers, and they were
taking full advantage of it. A cloud of drifting smoke was starting to collect overhead by
the rooftops, and he could see muzzle flashes from several windows. Most of the attack
seemed to be coming from three buildings: the three-story structure next to the building
Jack was heading toward, plus the two four-story ones across the street from it.
He could also see now that the city was surrounded by forested hills. More high ground,
probably the source of the deeper and more distant sounds of heavy weapons. The enemy had
planned their attack well.
There was a jarring thud as Jack reached the building and slammed hard into the wall
beside a large decorative planter with a red-blue bush sprouting out of it. "I don't
think I like this," the boy muttered in a shaky voice as he fumbled his Gompers flash
rifle off his shoulder and dropped into a squat beside the planter. "How
in?"
He broke off as an angry face suddenly filled Draycos's field of view.
The K'da froze in place. But the Whinyard's Edge mercenary wasn't interested in dragon
tattoos just then. "Gimme that," he barked, snatching the rifle from Jack's
grip. Holding it across his chest, he took off to the left.
"Oh, that's terrific," Jack muttered, curling into a tight ball behind the
planter. "Now what?"
Draycos raised his head from Jack's skin far enough to press an eye through the open
gap in his shirt, and caught a glimpse of the mercenary as he disappeared around the
corner of the building. The man's own machine gun, he noted, was still bouncing against
his back. "He wanted a long-range weapon to use against the hillside attackers,"
he decided. "His own weapon is for closer work."
"Right," Jack groused, curling up a little tighter. "Like there isn't
enough to shoot at here."
He had a point. Gunfire was pouring down from the three buildings Draycos had
already identified as being held by the enemy. The Edgemen were returning fire, but they
were pinned down and mostly without cover. Even as he watched, three of them tried to
charge the door of one of the buildings, only to be scattered back by a peppering of small
explosions.
Fortunately, most of the civilians seemed to have vanished. Some had ducked into
walkways and alleys or else had taken refuge inside buildings not held by the enemy. Those
outside the immediate battle zone were running in all directions, their brightly colored
outfits bouncing like flowers in a stiff wind.
And then, as Draycos looked over the top of the planter, his eyes caught a horrible
sight. Three Parprins, one tall and two very short, were huddled together in obvious
terror against the side of Jack's building. A mother and her cubs, trapped in the middle
of the firefight. "There," he said urgently. "Civilians."
"What?" Jack asked, not moving a muscle.
"Civilians," Draycos repeated, lifting a claw through the open shirt and
pointing.
Reluctantly, Jack untucked his head far enough to throw a quick glance over the
planter. "Okay, yeah, I see them."
"Stop merely seeing and give them aid," Draycos snapped. "Get them to
cover."
"What? Look, Draycos"
"Do not argue!" Draycos cut him off.
Small objects were starting to rain down from the enemy buildings' rooftops now,
objects that exploded on impact. Popcorn bombs, he remembered them being called in Jack's
mercenary manual, thrown by something called a popcorn machine. The three Parprins huddled
even tighter together in response, the mother wrapping her arms protectively around her
cubs. "You are a soldier," Draycos said. "The job of a soldier is to
protect those in danger. Now, protect them."
"How?" Jack demanded, sounding scared and miserable. "I can't even
protect myself. What do you want me to do?"
Draycos leaned out from Jack's shirt as far as he dared. On the far side of the
planter, between Jack and the Parprins, was a set of steps leading upward into an alcove.
He couldn't be certain at his angle, but it looked like the alcove led up into a doorway.
"That opening to your right," he told Jack. "Move them in there. It may be
a doorway that will allow you into the building. If it is not, it will at least provide
cover from the popcorn bombs."
Jack shook his head. "I can't," he said. "It's too far."
A shot slammed into the far side of the planter, nearly toppling it over onto Jack. The
boy jerked, then curled even more tightly around himself. "Listen to me,"
Draycos said, keeping his voice quiet and steady. "The enemy is not trying to shoot
civilians. If they were, those three would already be dead. We may assume they will
therefore not deliberately shoot at you if you are merely trying to help them."
Jack shivered. "But if no one's shooting at them, why should I do anything?"
"Because a random shot may still find them if they stay where they are,"
Draycos said. "And because it is your duty."
Beneath him, he felt Jack's muscles tense. "All right," the boy said, taking
a deep breath. He hunched his shoulders, taking another careful look over the top of the
planter.
And then, so suddenly it startled even Draycos, he was on his feet, running a zigzag
path toward the Parprins.
Draycos had just enough time to flatten himself onto Jack's skin before they were
there. "Come on," Jack urged, tugging at the mother's arm. "Come on. We've
got to get inside."
For a second the Parprin female just stared blankly up at him. Jack tugged at her arm
again, pointing toward the stairs and the alcove.
Then, just as suddenly as Jack had made his decision, the mother made hers. Scrambling
upright, she grabbed her cubs' hands and raced toward the alcove.
Jack stayed right behind them until they reached the steps. Then, bounding up past them
as they climbed, he pushed the door open and hurried them inside.
The room they found themselves in took up the entire front of the building. Small round
tables were laid out in what seemed to be a random pattern, with tiny colored disks neatly
arranged on them. The windows were large, facing onto the street and also to both sides.
None of them had curtains or barriers of any sort.
Near the center of the room was a wide staircase leading up to the second floor, with a
set of curved metal railings on both sides. "Make them sit beside the
staircase," Draycos whispered to Jack. "It will give some protection from fire
through the windows."
"I should be out there," Jack muttered as he herded the Parprins to the side
of the stairway. "I should be out helping them."
"You cannot," Draycos told him firmly. "You have no weapon. You can only
stay here and guard the civilians."
"But those are supposed to be my comrades out there," Jack insisted.
"You're the one who's always talking about duty. How can I just sit here while
they're getting shot at?"
"You cannot help them," Draycos repeated, flicking his tongue out once
through the gap in Jack's shirt. The smell of Parprin wasn't one he had tasted before, and
he made a mental note of its texture. "But I can. And I will."
Jack exhaled in a huff. "Okay," he said. "Be careful." He helped
the Parprins down with their backs against the stairway wall; and as he did so, he lifted
his left hand over the top of the railing.
Draycos was out of the sleeve in an instant, leaping onto the stairs. With his scales
tingling, his battle senses fully alert, he headed up.
Chapter 12
The second floor was much like the first: wide spaces, tables with
merchandise, no cover near the windows. Draycos didn't pause, but continued up the next
stairway to the third floor.
There he found what he was looking for. This floor, instead of being devoted to
merchandise, had been divided by low partitions into an orderly maze of small ofEce-like
areas. Even better, the windows were partially covered by thick, decorative drapes.
Keeping to the cover of the partitions, he made his way to one of the side windows and
looked cautiously out.
The side of the next building was perhaps ten feet away, an easy leap for a K'da
warrior. He scanned all the windows, but there was no one in sight. Apparently, the
attackers were concentrating on the street side, where the Edgemen were pinned down.
Still, they hadn't completely neglected their defense of this side. Between the two
buildings a steady trickle of popcorn bombs was raining down.
It was an interesting defensive method, one which the K'da and Shontine had never used.
The popcorn bombs were propelled outward from a central launcher somewhere on top of the
building. As each bomb cleared the edge of the roof, it sprouted a small parachute, which
stopped its outward motion and turned it instead to fall straight down. The parachute then
popped off, sending the bomb falling at normal speed toward the street below.
For a few seconds Draycos watched the bombs, studying their pattern. With the proper
timing, it should be cub's play to get though it.
The rooftop was a little ways above his position as he looked out the window, and he
couldn't see if there was anyone up there tending the popcorn machine. Still, the Edge
manual had said such devices ran automatically, so it had probably been left on its own.
He would have to risk it.
He looked down, and felt his jaws crack open in a tight smile. Whatever else the
popcorn bombs were supposed to do, they were also having an unintended but useful side
effect. Just as the gunfire from the windows was creating a hazy smoke screen around the
tops of the buildings, so too the bombs were creating a smoky mist of their own at ground
level.
Which meant that, when he made his move, neither the attackers nor the defenders would
see a thing.
He pushed open the window and backed up to midway across the room. There he crouched
low, watching the bombs fall past the window. He could feel the blood pounding through his
body, pouring oxygen and nutrients into his muscles in preparation for the effort ahead.
Out of the edge of his eye he could see the golden color in his scales turn to black as
some of the extra blood flow trickled into them.
The K'da warrior was ready.
Across the room, the pattern of falling bombs reached the proper point. Digging his
claws into the carpet, he charged.
A quick sprint took him back to the window. He jumped up to the sill with his front
paws, got his rear paws planted on the sill behind them, and leaped up and outward.
There was no time to wonder what would happen if he had made a mistake in the pattern.
Fortunately, he hadn't. His jump took him sailing cleanly through a gap in the artificial
hailstorm and landed him on top of the low parapet around the edge of the roof.
The popcorn machine had been set up near the center of the roof, spitting its deadly
dispatches toward and over the edges. As Draycos had expected, there was no one tending
it. Staying low beneath the stream of bombs, he sprinted across the roof.
This particular machine was slightly different from the one that had been shown in
Jack's manual. But it was similar enough. Two quick slashes through the power and control
cables, and the rain of bombs stopped.
Beside the machine was a trap door leading down into the building. Prying open the
popcorn machine's magazine, he pulled out two of the small bombs. Then, ready to toss them
in if necessary, he pulled the trap door open a crack.
He flicked his tongue into the gap. There was an alien tang in the air, almost buried
beneath the taste of the explosive powder of the guns. The taste of Parprin was there,
too, but faint and stale, plus the stronger scent of a human. Neither the human nor alien
scents seemed to be nearby.
He lifted the trap door the rest of the way up. Below was a narrow stairway leading
down to a door that had been propped open. No one was visible, and the enemy did not seem
to have set any alarms or booby traps. Tucking his two popcorn bombs out of the way
beneath his forearms, he headed down.
The open door below led into the center of a corridor lined with ten doors. Apartments,
he decided, or possibly private offices. Silently, he prowled down the hallway, listening
and tasting at each door.
At the second and fourth doors to the left, on the side facing the street, he found the
enemy.
He took a moment to lay the two bombs on the hallway floor by the fourth door, where
the door would strike them if it was opened carelessly. Then, returning to the second
door, he pulled it open.
The attacker's setup was again something he'd seen in Jack's manual. At the window sat
a slender, long-barreled weapon on a tripod, angled sharply downward to fire at the
street. A belt of ammunition ran up to it from a small suitcase on the floor.
The gunner himself was of a species Draycos hadn't met before: short and stocky, with
large ears and clumps of feathers poking out of a mottled red-and-purple skin. His heavy
battle vest had a shoulder patch showing a long, curved sword, and his scent matched the
alien smell Draycos had tasted by the trap door.
He was seated cross-legged in the center of the room, well back from the window,
leaning comfortably against the front corner of a large desk. With the help of a small
video monitor in one hand and a control stick in the other, he was firing the weapon by
remote control.
Foolishly enough, he was sitting with his back to the door. Perhaps he assumed his
large ears would warn him of any intruders.
Draycos didn't give him the chance to correct that error. A single leap across the room
landed him behind the alien. A single slap of his forepaw bounced the other's head against
the desk and sent him sprawling unconscious onto the floor.
For a moment Draycos crouched beside him, listening to the rhythm of his breathing. The
soldier was alive, but definitely out of the fight.
One room down. One more room to go, and then he would have done all he could. He turned
back to the door.
And paused as a sudden thought struck him. Perhaps he wasn't quite finished here yet.
He spent a minute learning how to work the control stick. Then, manipulating the
buttons and wheels delicately with his claws, he raised the muzzle of the gun to point at
the building across the street. Studying the monitor, he located one of the windows where
a similar gun was firing down into the street.
Smiling to himself, he lined up the crosshairs on the other gun and fired.
The result was all he could have hoped for. His bullets hammered into the other weapon,
shaking it like a puppet with tangled strings and toppling it back out of sight. Swinging
the gun to the right, he found the next enemy weapon and again opened fire. This gun was
sturdier, and it took him two bursts to knock it out of action.
He swung the gun toward the next building over, aware that his time was rapidly running
out. If the operators of the two ruined weapons were quick and smart, they would alert the
soldier two rooms away from him that this weapon had fallen into enemy hands. The soldier
would then come and try to take it back.
The enemy was definitely smart, and even a little quicker than Draycos had expected.
From down the corridor came a pair of sharp cracks as the two popcorn bombs he'd left
behind the other door went off.
The enemy was coming.
He took another two seconds to ruin one more enemy weapon, then dropped the control
stick and loped back toward the door. Leaping up, twisting to the side in midair, he
landed with a gentle thud against the wall just above the door. His claws dug into the
hard wood and held on.
Just in time. Beneath him, the door was pulled violently open, and a burst of gunfire
spattered across the empty space.
Seeing no one but his unconscious comrade, the soldier shifted his aim toward the desk,
the only reasonable hiding place in the room. The bullets slammed into the wood, sending
clouds of splinters flying. It was just as well, Draycos decided as he gazed down, that he
hadn't tried to hide there.
The gunfire stopped, and a human soldier eased cautiously into the doorway, his gun
held ready. Unhooking one paw from the wall, Draycos leaned over and slapped hard at the
side of the man's head.
This one was tougher than his alien comrade had been. The blow sent him staggering to
the side, but he managed to stay on his feet. He shook his head once, as if to clear it,
just in time to catch the slap of Draycos's tail as it struck him in the same spot where
the first blow had landed. The man toppled to the floor, his gun clattering out of his
grip, and stayed down.
Draycos slipped out of the room and headed back toward the stairway. The hallway was
empty, but he knew it wouldn't be for long. Already he could hear several pairs of
footsteps moving upward from the floor below. Either more of the attackers were coming to
investigate, or an advance party of Whinyard's Edge defenders was on its way.
Either way, his time had run out. He reached the stairway and climbed toward the roof,
noticing as he did so that all the gunfire outside seemed to have ceased.
And as he eased his head up through the trap door, he found out why. In the distance,
heading toward them at high speed, were three small aircraft.
So the Whinyard's Edge had finally called in air support. About time.
He raced across the roof, hoping Jack was still where he'd left him. He reached the
edge, and in a single move leaped up onto the parapet and then threw himself into a flat
dive toward the window he'd originally left.
His jump was slightly off, and his paws fumbled a bit as he ducked in through the
window. Regaining his balance, he retraced his steps through the partitions and back to
the wide stairway.
He made his way down to the second floor landing. There he paused, listening. The three
Parprins were talking quietly, and from the direction of their tense voices he could tell
they were still sitting or standing at the bottom of the stairway.
Unfortunately, Jack was keeping quiet. Had he moved away somewhere? If so, there might
be a problem getting back to him without the Parprins seeing him.
And if he didn't move quickly, the Parprins would be the least of his worries. With
much of the attack broken, and the aircraft dealing with the rest, he could see through
the windows that the Edgemen were beginning to move purposefully around in the street. One
of their first tasks, he knew, would be to check the nearby buildings for enemies.
All the buildings. Including this one.
He focused his attention on the stairway railing. A metal railing; and metal, he knew,
conducted sound quite well. Reaching up, he gave it three gentle scratches with his claws.
To his relief, there was an immediate answering scratch.
He lifted his head carefully, just far enough to see. Jack had one hand resting on the
railing, the fingers beckoning impatiently.
Slinking down the stairs, Draycos reached the spot where Jack stood. He touched the
boy's hand and slid quickly up his sleeve as he changed into two-dimensional form.
Shifting along Jack's skin, he worked his way around into his accustomed position.
Just in time. Across the room, the door slammed open. Moving carefully, Draycos peeked
out through Jack's shirt.
Sergeant Grisko stood framed in the doorway, a small machine gun held high across his
chest. Behind him, Draycos could see Alison Kayna andjommy Randolph.
"There he is," Jommy said, pointing past Grisko's shoulder. "I told
you."
"Yeah, you sure did." Grisko leveled the full power of his glare at Jack.
"And what the frinking rip," he demanded, "are you doing here?"
Chapter 13
Quickly, Jack got his hand down off the railing and stiffened to attention.
"I was moving these civilians out of danger, sir," he explained, giving a short
nod toward the Parprins still huddled on the floor beside him. "They were caught in
the fire zone."
"Very commendable," Grisko said tardy. If he was pleased with Jack's answer,
it didn't show on his face. "Anyone give you any actual orders to that effect? Or did
you dream it up on your own?"
"And then decide to hide in here with them?" Jommy muttered.
"Shut up, Randolph," Grisko snapped, his eyes never leaving Jack's face.
"Someone give you orders, Montana? Anyone give you orders, Montana?"
"Not exactly, sir," Jack admitted, feeling a fresh batch of sweat breaking
out on his forehead. This was just great. He'd survived an enemy attack; and now he was
going to catch it from his own side?
And possibly catch it even worse than just being shot at. The manual had listed some
pretty severe penalties for desertion under fire. "There wasn't anyone nearby to give
me any orders," he went on, trying desperately to think his way out of this.
"The manual lists twelve standing orders for behavior in a firefight," Grisko
ground out. "You remember any of them being to turn tail and run like a rabbit?"
Jack clamped down on his tongue. "No, sir," he conceded. Beside him, one of
the Parprins whimpered.
And at last, inspiration. "But I do remember that an Edge-man's primary job
is service to our employer," he continued more confidently. "Since our employer
on Sunright is a Par-prin group, I assume all local Parprins come under that
heading."
"Nice try," Grisko said. "Problem is, the protection of civilians comes
three points below support of your comrades on the list."
Beside him, Alison stirred. "I wonder where his gun is," she murmured.
Grisko frowned, his eyes flicking to Jack's shoulder and then glancing at the floor and
tables around him. "That's a good question. You got a good answer?"
Jack would have smiled with relief if he'd dared. Of course; the escape hatch he'd been
trying to find. "One of the other Edgemen took it, sir," he said.
A slight frown creased Grisko's forehead. "Why?"
"I believe he wanted to use it against the snipers up in the hillside," Jack
explained. "All he was carrying was a Heckler-Colt MP-50. Not really suitable for
long-range work."
"So why didn't he give you his H-C?" Grisko demanded.
"I didn't have time to ask him, sir," Jack said. "He just took my
Gompers and ran with it. To be honest," he added with what he hoped was just the
right touch of humility, "I don't think the regulars think very much of us as combat
soldiers."
Grisko's lip twisted. "I can't really say I blame them." He looked at the
Parprins, back at Jack. "All right, get outside," he growled. "We're
forming up. Go get your Gompers back, then get your carcass into position."
He turned sharply and stalked outside. Jommy gave Jack a dark look, then strode out
behind him. "I guess we don't get to see a court-martial, after all," Alison
remarked. "Too bad. Might have been interesting."
"Sorry to disappoint you," Jack said, waving a farewell to the Parprins and
heading toward the door. "At least you got to watch me squirm. Was that enough
entertainment for one afternoon?"
She lifted her eyebrows. "Hey, I got you off the hook. What more do you
want?"
"You could have mentioned a little earlier that you saw that thug-ugly take my
gun," Jack pointed out stiffly.
"Yes, I could have said something earlier," Alison agreed. "But why
should I?"
"Maybe because Grisko was getting himself worked up into a real froth about
this?" Jack suggested as he stepped up to her. "By the time you actually spoke
up, there was half a chance he wouldn't have even cared anymore that I hadn't had a gun.
He would have been ready to nail me to the wall right there. Ever think of that?"
"Sure," she agreed. "And maybe if I had said something right off
the top, he'd have thought I was just covering for a deserter. Then we'd both have
been for the hot seat. Ever think of that?"
Jack frowned, his annoyance fading a little as he gazed into her eyes. There was
something odd there, simmering beneath the surface like a churning of molten rock.
Anger, and frustration, and determination. And perhaps more than a little fear.
A lot like the way he'd been feeling lately himself. For about the last year, in fact,
ever since Uncle Virgil had died.
"I thought we were comrades in arms," he said quietly.
She regarded him coolly. "I don't stick my neck out for you, Montana," she
said, just as quietly. "You or anyone else."
Turning, she walked out the door. "Okay," Jack muttered aloud to himself.
"Good to have that settled."
"An interesting person," Draycos murmured from his shoulder.
"Oh, yeah," Jack said sourly. "Interesting like a rare and delicate
tropical disease. Come on, let's go find the clown who's got my gun."
It took several minutes for Jack to track down the man who'd taken his flash rifle. It
took several more to actually get the weapon back. Still eyeing the hillside suspiciously,
the soldier was clearly not interested in giving up his long-range firing capability, and
told Jack so in language that would have made Grisko proud.
But by then the officers were starting to call the troops back into formation, and
Jack's mention of Grisko's name also seemed to carry a certain amount of weight.
Eventually, with one last muttered curse, the soldier shoved the Gompers back into Jack's
hands and stomped back to rejoin the column. On Draycos's advice, Jack replaced the
half-used clip with a fresh one, then hurried back to his own place in line. A few minutes
later, the whole group resumed their march through town.
But not with nearly the brash confidence they'd shown earlier. Now, they marched with
their attention turned upward, toward the windows and rooftops as they passed beneath
them. Their weapons were again slung over their shoulders, but it seemed to Jack that none
of them let his or her hand get too far from the trigger. And, of course, the combat
aircraft floating watchfully overhead were a continual reminder of what had just happened.
The Whinyard's Edge had gotten its nose bloodied today.
There was a change in the townspeople, too. Not surprisingly, the crowds that had been
lining the street earlier were gone. Those who found themselves near the marching soldiers
seemed intent on hurrying to be somewhere else.
Earlier, the people had seemed nervous and uncertain. Now, they were flat-out afraid.
Mentally, Jack shook his head. Whatever result the Edge commanders had hoped for with
this stroll through the city, he was pretty sure that wasn't it.
They reached the headquarters compound without any further trouble. A pair of carriers
loaded with their equipment rumbled in behind them, and there was a sort of confused chaos
as footlockers and other gear were sorted out.
Back on Carrion, Jack had gotten the impression that his squad would be staying in
Mer'seb for a few days before moving up to the November Six observation post. But barely
an hour after their arrival, the order came down for eight of the new squads to assemble
immediately for transport to their field destinations. Tango Five Zulu was one of them.
They boarded their transport, a Lynx Personnel Carrier, in the courtyard of the HQ
compound. Along with Tango Five Zulu, two squads of regular Edgemen would also be
traveling to November Six. Sergeant Grisko was along, too, at least long enough to help
them set up.
The Lynx was a good-sized transport, designed to haul at least three times the number
of people they had on this trip. That meant some elbow room for a change, and Jack took
quick advantage of the situation by staking out a pair of seats in the back next to one of
the small windows. Setting his pack down on one of the seats, he strapped himself into the
other. If he kept his eyes glued to the scenery, maybe he could pretend he was heading out
on some sort of vacation.
On a vacation, and not into a war zone.
It turned out to be a futile hope. Unlike the other Edge transports Jack had traveled
on so far, the Lynx actually looked like a military vehicle. Intruding constantly on his
view of the landscape were the muzzles of two large-caliber machine guns poking out from
under one of the stubby wings. The wing itself was painted in a camouflage pattern
designed to help it blend in while on the ground.
The landscape itself wasn't all that exciting, either. The hilly ground around Mer'seb
soon gave way to a short stretch of plains and small lakes, then began to turn hilly
again. Grisko had said the trip to November Six would take two hours, and Jack found
himself wondering just how big the territory was that this handful of Edgemen was supposed
to be protecting.
With such cheery thoughts dancing around his brain, he huddled over with his forehead
against the cold plastic of the window and drifted to sleep.
He awoke suddenly, startled by a light jab on his wrist. He snapped his eyes open and
looked around.
No one was leaning intently over him. For that matter, no one was paying any attention
to him at all. The nearest other person, Rogan Mbusu, was sprawled limply two seats over,
snoring quietly to himself. Outside the window, the afternoon sunlight was throwing long
shadows across the ground.
The light jab came again; and this time, Jack recognized it as the touch of a dragon's
claw. The signal of a dragon's nagging. "What?" he muttered toward his shoulder.
"I must speak with you," Draycos murmured back.
"Now?"
"Now."
Jack glared down at his shoulder, a wasted effect with his shirt and jacket mostly in
the way. Draycos had a real gift for rotten timing.
But there was nothing to do but go along. Unstrapping, he headed past the equipment
storage area to one of the tiny restrooms in the far rear of the transport. He closed the
door, sealed it, and did a quick check for monitors. There weren't any. "This had
better be good," he warned as he closed the toilet lid and sat down.
With the usual sudden surge of weight, Draycos popped out of Jack's collar. He landed
on the area around the sink and turned around, balancing himself there with apparent ease.
"It is important," he promised. "Do you remember the map we were shown of
the area around November Six?"
Jack frowned. "You woke me from a good nap for this? A geography
quiz?"
"Please," Draycos said earnestly. "The Gray Hills flow from northeast to
southwest, with Bear Mountain to the north of the base. Correct?"
"Right," Jack said. "Then the Gray Hills continue down toward Octrani
Lake, with the Partanra River flowing out mostly west from there."
"While a tributary of that same river is the water that flows through
Mer'seb," Draycos said. "The Parprin town we have just left. Correct?"
"Sounds right," Jack confirmed, stifling a yawn. "So what?"
"So this," Draycos said. "The place we were shown on the map is not the
place we are going."
Chapter 14
Jack sat up straight, his tiredness suddenly gone. "How do you
know?"
"I am a poet-warrior of the K'da," Draycos reminded him. "The reading of
maps is part of my profession. I have been watching the ground through the window."
Jack's stomach was trying to do somersaults. "How far off are we?"
"Our course from Mer'seb should have taken us at an angle slightly north of
east," Draycos said. "We did indeed set out in that direction. But approximately
one hour ago we changed gradually to a more northerly direction."
Jack glanced at his watch. They'd been in the air about an hour and a half. Thirty more
minutes until landing.
Or at least, that was what Grisko had told them. Maybe the sergeant didn't know
something had gone weird, either.
Then again, maybe he did. "So where are we headed?"
"If we are still to land in one half hour, I believe we will arrive near the
western edge of the Gray Hills," Draycos said. "Perhaps three hundred miles
north of November Six.
"And if we don't stop in half an hour?"
"All regions beyond that are either neutral or considered enemy-controlled."
Jack chewed at his lip. Terrific. "So what do we do?"
"There are two squads of fully armed soldiers aboard," Draycos reminded him.
"They could be made aware of the situation."
The dragon had a point. If the pilot was an enemy agent trying to take them to the
wrong place, two squads of Edge-men ought to be able to argue the point with him. Surely
none of them wanted to end their trip in enemy territory, either.
On the other hand, having a gun battle in the middle of a flying transport didn't sound
like a very smart idea. "I'd better talk to Grisko," he decided. "Come on,
get aboard."
Obediently, the dragon stepped onto Jack's outstretched hand and slithered up his
sleeve. Sealing the neck of his shirt again, Jack headed out.
Grisko was sitting alone in the back, on the opposite side of the Lynx from Jack's
seat. He'd probably picked that spot so he could watch the rest of the group.
Though at the moment he wasn't watching anything at all. His eyes were closed, his head
sagging slightly against the headrest.
Jack pursed his lips. The sergeant was probably not going to like this. "Sergeant
Grisko?" he said quietly.
Grisko's eyes remained closed. "What is it, Montana?"
"I think we're off course, sir."
Grisko pried one eye open and squinted up at him. "Excuse me?"
"We're not headed for November Six," Jack told him. "We seem to be going
somewhere north of there."
Grisko pried the other eye open, and for a long moment he seemed to be studying Jack's
face. "Good observation," he said at last. "As it happens, our orders have
been changed. The Shamshir moved their transmitter yesterday to point Kilo Seven. We're
moving with it."
"Oh," Jack said. So that was it. All nice and simple and reasonable.
Certainly a lot less threatening than a daring midair hijacking.
Which left only one little problem. Uncle Virge was still heading for the area around
November Six, which meant that Jack's plan for getting the Djinn-90 information was no
longer going to work. Worse, when it came time to wrap this up and make a run for the tall
grass, his primary escape route was going to be sitting on the ground three hundred miles
away.
Grisko was still gazing up at him. "Is this a problem for you?" he asked.
"No, sir," Jack said, trying to sound as unconcerned as possible. "Sorry
to have wakened you."
"Half an hour to the base," Grisko said, closing his eyes again. "Better
get some rest. I've got a strange feeling you're going to be on sentry duty tonight."
Jack grimaced. "Yes, sir."
He returned to his seat and curled up again beside the window. Even in the few minutes
he'd been away the shadows of the trees had visibly lengthened along the ground. Sunset
couldn't be too far away.
"I do not like it," Draycos murmured from his shoulder as he slid open the
neck of Jack's shirt again.
"Me, neither," Jack agreed. He pulled his shirt open a little more and
shifted in his seat so that the dragon would have a better view out the window. "You
first."
"I am not familiar with your transmission science," the dragon said.
"But with the K'da and Shontine, a device that can reach between stars is large and
not easily moved. Certainly not in a single day."
"That's mostly true here, too," Jack agreed. "The Esse-nay's got
a compact InterWorld transmitter built into it, but Uncle Virgil was always setting up
deals and scams across the Orion Arm. He couldn't risk having them traced back to him
through a commercial InterWorld site."
"Even our largest ships cannot carry such a transmitter," Draycos said.
"Are such common here?"
"Not really," Jack said, frowning. "Actually, not at all. The biggest
StarForce ships have them, I know, and I'm pretty sure a few starliners do, too. But now
that I think about it, I can't remember anyone else in Uncle Virgil's circle having one
aboard their ships. Whatever he paid for ours, the price must have been
astronomical." He snorted. "Either that, or he stole it."
"Then let us assume the Shamshir transmitter is not easily portable," Draycos
said. "Moving it would cost them considerable time and effort. It would not be an
operation they could hide."
Jack nodded. He and Draycos were definitely thinking along the same lines. "In
other words, it should have taken a couple of weeks to get a new site prepared, break down
the transmitter, and then move it. Which means we should have heard about this before we
left Carrion."
"Correct," Draycos said. "And if they only began moving it yesterday,
there would be no need for us to travel there tonight."
"We could have hung around Mer'seb for a few days while they got it set up."
"Correct," Draycos said. "That may imply the Shamshir are aware of our
interest and are trying to keep us from succeeding. But it may also imply there is
something else about this mission that we are not being told."
"Could be." Jack scratched his cheek. "Though I suppose there could be a
simpler explanation."
"Which is?"
"That the Shamshir simply changed their minds about where to put their
transmitter," Jack said. "And no one bothered to tell any of us about it until
now."
"But timely information is vital to a warrior's job," the dragon objected.
"Surely they would not hold it back from us."
"Hey, I'm just a raw recruit," Jack said. "Remember? Nobody has to tell me
anything."
"Talking to the window?" a familiar voice asked pleasantly from behind his
shoulder.
Jack clamped down on his tongue as he felt Draycos slide quickly back to his usual
position. "Hello, Alison," he said, turning to face her. "Sure. Doesn't
everybody?"
"Don't tell me," she said. She plucked his pack from the seat beside him,
dropped it unceremoniously onto the floor, and sat down. "Let me guess. You were
staring at the window because you needed a moment to reflect."
Jack made a face. "That was pathetic. I hope you didn't come all the way over here
just for that."
"No, mostly I wanted to see what the view was like out there," she said,
craning her neck to look past him. "And to find out what you and Grisko were talking
about."
Jack felt his eyes narrowing. "What do you mean?"
She gave him a patient look. "You. Grisko. Talk. Two minutes ago. You need me to
spell any of the words for you?"
"No, I've got it, thank you," Jack growled. "Not that it's any of your
immediate business, but we were discussing the fact that we're not going to November Six.
We're going to Kilo Seven instead."
It was Alison's turn for narrowed eyes. "Why?"
"According to Grisko, the Shamshir moved their transmitter."
For a brief moment he thought he could see an echo of the emotional swirl in her eyes
that he'd noticed once before. But then she just nodded. "Oh," she said.
" 'Oh'?" he repeated. "That's all? Just 'oh'?"
"What more is there?" she countered reasonably. "If the transmitter's
been moved, we move with it."
He shrugged. "I suppose."
She tilted her head, her eyes shifting down from his face to his chest. "So that's
what they're all talking about, huh?"
Jack frowned. "What?"
She nodded toward his chest. "Your dragon tattoo. Nice."
Jack looked down. Sure enough, part of Draycos's jaw was visible through the partially
open shirt. "Oh, it's lots nicer than that," he assured her, putting a little
boasting into his tone. "It goes all the way around, and then some. See?"
He pulled the collar a little to the side to reveal more of the dragon's face. The last
thing he really wanted to do was advertise Draycos's presence this way, and he was pretty
sure Draycos felt the same way. But he'd met enough men with tattoos to know you didn't
get one with the idea of hiding it. Alison was pretty sharp, and if he didn't brag about
his dragon, she might wonder why. "Herethe head's the best part," he went
on, reaching for the shirt's sealing seam. "Let me get this open a little
more"
"No, that's all right," Alison said hastily. "Really. I was just
wondering if it was like the one the Dragonbacks wore."
"I already told you I never heard of the Dragonbacks until a month ago."
"Maybe you didn't," she pointed out. "But your tattoo artist
might have."
"Oh." That angle hadn't occurred to him. "Is it?"
"Is it what? Oh." Alison shook her head. "Not even close. The
Dragonbacks had their tattoos between their shoulder-blades, just below the neck. A little
dragon, coiled around itself into a circle. Nowhere near as big as yours."
"You seem to know a lot about them."
She shrugged. "Like I said, I do my research. Always terrific to talk to
you."
She got up and headed back forward to her own seat. "Interesting," Draycos
murmured.
"What is?" Jack asked, turning back to the window. "Her obsession with
dragon tattoos?"
"That she noticed your conversation with Sergeant Grisko and wondered about
it," Draycos said. "She is quite observant."
Jack closed his shirt down to where it had been before Alison showed up.
"Observant and nosy," he agreed. "I wonder if they know this is her
second try at joining a mercenary group."
"I do not know," Draycos said. "Do you think you should tell them?"
Jack gazed out the window, weighing his options. Below them, the shadows were
lengthening still more. Above them, the sky was definitely beginning to darken.
"No," he decided at last. "But let's keep an eye on her."
The last twenty miles were spent traveling at treetop height, with the Lynx dodging its
way around the handful of taller trees and an occasional hill or tall rock.
Jack gazed out at the blur of green shooting past his window, fully expecting to crash
and burn any minute. Uncle Virge could have pulled off this kind of maneuver easily. But
it wasn't Uncle Virge running the controls up there.
Fortunately, the pilot knew what he was doing. He ran the course without so much as a
single serious bump, and a few minutes later had set them down in a small clearing at the
base of a rocky cliff face.
If parts of the Carrion training base had been spartan, the Kilo Seven outpost was
downright primitive. The only solid structure was a flimsy looking prefab building about
the size of a one-bedroom hotel room. Grisko identified it as the outpost HQ, and the
place where Tango Five Zulu would be setting up their computers and listening gear.
The rest of the outpost consisted of four tents scattered beneath the trees. Two of
them looked like sleeping quarters for the soldiers, with the other two probably serving
as mess tent and storage facility. To the west, downslope from the rest of the camp, was
the distinctive narrow tent of a latrine.
Further out, to the north and south of the camp, Jack spotted two small defensive
positions. They weren't much, little more than foxholes with a couple of long gun muzzles
poking out. Still, it was nice to know that the enemy couldn't overrun the place without
the Edge at least being able to put up a fight.
The sun was down by the time they left the Lynx. The mercenaries set to work
immediately, unloading their gear and taking it to their assigned tents. Jommy and the
rest of Tango Five Zulu were also busy, lugging their computers and other equipment to the
headquarters building.
Jack, to his complete lack of surprise, found himself assigned to night sentry duty.
His post was about sixty yards south of the camp, perhaps forty yards beyond the
defensive foxhole on that side. All sixty yards of it were downhill. "Here's your
cage," Grisko said, stopping beside a tree that looked rather like an elm with a bad
skin condition.
"Cage?"
"Your sentry post," Grisko said with exaggerated patience. "Didn't you
read the manual?"
"I must have missed that part," Jack murmured. He had read the manual,
thank you, and there had been no mention of the term "cage" being used for a
sentry post.
But there was nothing to gain by pointing that out. He'd apparently been put on sentry
duty for waking up Grisko aboard the transport. He didn't really want to see what would
happen if he added to his crimes by arguing with the man.
"Well, then, pay attention now," Grisko growled. He pointed to a group of
four small round monitors that had been nailed to the tree trunk. Each of the monitors
showed a slightly fuzzy image, and each had a control stick embedded in the trunk beneath
it. "There's your Argus system. You do remember Argus systems, don't
you?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said, more confidently this time. Argus was a passive
observation system for sending images from one area to another. The far end, called the
eye, could be up to five hundred feet away, with a fiber-optic cable linking it to one of
the monitors here at the sentry post. The direction each viewer was pointing could be
shifted by means of a wire control system. The control line ran through its own cable
alongside the fiber-optic one, connecting to the lever beneath the monitor.
Jack could remember thinking when he first read about it that Argus had to be the most
ridiculously primitive system in the known universe. It was only later, as he read about
electronics and power-source detectors, that he had realized there was actually a good
reason for the system. Out here in the middle of a forest, the electronics of a normal
sensor system would stand out like a nightlight in a dark room. Argus, on the other hand,
would never even be noticed unless the enemy happened to trip over one of the cables.
"Yeah, I'll bet you do," Grisko grunted. Reaching to a small rectangular
plate beneath the monitors, he flipped up its protective cover. Underneath was a
glow-in-the-dark schematic of the area, with Jack's outpost in the middle and the edge of
the main camp behind him along the bottom. "Here's where your eyes are located,"
he said, tapping the map in four places. "You'll be relieved at midnight. Don't fall
asleep."
He turned back toward the camp. "What if there's trouble?" Jack asked.
Grisko frowned. "Like what?"
"Like the enemy shows up," Jack said. "Do I get a comm clip or something
to call in an alarm?"
Grisko was looking at him as if he was crazy. "Don't be absurd," he said.
"The enemy doesn't even know we're here."
"But"
"Tell you what," Grisko cut him off. "If they come this way, you haul
out your Gompers and start shooting. We'll notice. Trust me."
With that he stalked off into the growing darkness, the matting of dead leaves
crunching under his feet. He disappeared from sight, leaving only the sound of his
footsteps to mark where he was. A dozen seconds later, even those had faded into silence.
And Jack and Draycos were alone.
Chapter 15
Jack had never liked the woods. He'd never much liked the outdoors in
general, for that matter. Nearly all of his life had been spent in cities or spaceports,
or in spaceships like the Essenay. Places with bright lights, and people, and no
strange noises.
Occasionally when he and Uncle Virgil had been running a scam, they'd had to spend time
in someone's country estate or mountain retreat. But at least there they'd mostly been
inside at night. Nature had been something beyond the walls, safely out of view.
His last brush with nature had been on Iota Klestis a month and a half ago. He'd taken
a few short trips outside the ship, mostly during the day but once or twice at night. That
was how bored and restless he'd been.
But at least there he'd had the comforting bulk of the Es-senay at his back, and
Uncle Virge's watchful eye on the surrounding terrain.
Uncle Virge.
He stared out into the woods, an all-too-familiar pang of uncertainty and loss and fear
whispering through him. The first time he'd felt it was back when he was three years old
and finally realized that his parents weren't coming back to him. He'd felt it again a
year ago at Uncle Virgil's death, when he'd suddenly found himself alone in the universe
with nothing but a computerized personality to look after him.
Now, here in the darkness of the night, he was feeling it for a third time. Because
whatever happened with Draycos, he knew down deep that his relationship with Uncle Virge
had been changed forever.
The thought was as frightening and alien as the dark woods around him. Up to the time
when he'd met Draycos, Jack's life had been fairly simple and more or less comfortable.
For all the annoyances inherent in Uncle Virge's personality, the computer really was
mostly easy to get along with.
More to the point, he was the only friend Jack had.
The strange noises of nature were beginning to whisper through the darkness around him.
Mostly insects and small animals, he guessed, with an occasional bird or bat-like
something flapping past overhead. Up above the trees he could still see the sky, but here
at ground level it was already night.
And then, suddenly, something big and heavy landed on the back of his neck.
He jerked away with a gasp, his hand reaching automatically to swat it away, even as he
realized it was just Draycos popping out from his jacket collar. "Geez!" he
hissed. "Don't do that."
"Do not do what?" Draycos asked, landing on the leaves beside him with a soft
crunch.
"Never mind," Jack growled, feeling like an idiot. "You startled me,
that's all."
The dragon cocked his head. "You do not like it out here," he declared.
Jack snorted. "No kidding, Sherlock."
"Pardon?"
"Skip it." Shaking away the introspective thoughts, Jack stepped over to the
Argus monitors for a closer look. There were two filters on each, he saw, either of which
could be slid over the image. Experimentally, he tried one.
The image didn't change much. He tried the other, and suddenly, the darkness was
pockmarked with scattered bits of light. "Ah-ha," he said, feeling about as
pleased as he could under the circumstances. "That's the infrared. The other one must
be deep UV."
"Pardon?"
" 'UV' is short for ultraviolet," Jack explained, sliding the infrared
filters over the rest of the monitors. "It's a kind of light we can't see directly,
but there are some species and some kinds of equipment that show up real well with
it."
"And infrared?"
"Infrared is heat," Jack told him, peering at each of the monitors in turn.
Nothing but small animals and birds, at least as far as he could see. "Anything warm
gives that off. Those thugs who were looking for us back on Vagran were using IR
detectors. Back when we were hiding out on that Wistawki balcony, remember?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "I was somewhat surprised at the time that they did
not locate us."
Jack shrugged. "You probably don't look like anything anyone's ever seen before.
Matter of fact, you might not even look alivewe'd have to do a heat profile on you
to know for sure. Either way, I guarantee you don't look like a human."
"That could be useful."
"It already has been," Jack pointed out.
"True." Draycos studied the monitors. "The images are not very
clear."
"They sure aren't," Jack agreed. "I guess that's the best you can do
without electronics and power sources."
The dragon hopped up onto a nearby stump and craned his neck. "Perhaps I should
explore the perimeter."
"Oh, no," Jack said quickly. "Forget it. You just stay put, right
here."
Draycos twisted his head around to look back at him. "You do not need to be
afraid, Jack," he said, his voice low and soothing. "I am a poet-warrior of the
K'da. I will protect you."
"I appreciate your confidence," Jack said. "But Good Intention Highway
isn't one I want to travel just yet."
The tip of Draycos's tail twitched. "Do you refer to the saying, 'The road to hell
is paved with good intentions'?"
Jack frowned. "Yeah. Where did you hear that?"
"Uncle Virge quoted it to me," the dragon said. From his stump he jumped up
onto the side of one of the trees and clung there by his claws, gazing out into the night.
"During one of your late-night poetry sessions?"
"Yes. He has many such sayings with which to illustrate his points."
Jack felt his mouth twist. "Let me guess. His main point is that he wants you to
go away and leave us alone."
"That is the core of it," Draycos confirmed. "He does not feel that the
survival of my people should be any concern of yours."
Somewhere ahead, a twig suddenly snapped. Jack jerked, snatching up his Gompers and
pointing it into the darkness. "Do not be afraid," Draycos assured him quickly.
"It was merely a small animal obtaining a meal."
Jack lowered the flash rifle, letting his breath out silently. "Okay," he
said.
Draycos pushed off the tree trunk and dropped back down to Jack's side. "I do not
understand your fear," he said, looking up at Jack's face. "I would have thought
that in your previous profession you must have faced danger many times."
"Not like this," Jack said, shaking his head. "I was always a kid
before. Even when we were breaking into bank vaults, I knew the police weren't going to
shoot unless I pointed a gun at them or tried to get away."
He plucked at a fold of his uniform jacket. "Here, it's all different. Here, I'm a
target. Not because I'm breaking any laws, but because I'm wearing this uniform. Just because
I'm wearing this uniform."
"That is the way of the soldier," Draycos reminded him. "Part of your
task is to draw danger away from the weak and powerless."
Jack snorted. "Just what I always wanted."
Draycos cocked his head. "It is an honorable profession, Jack."
"Maybe where you come from it is," Jack retorted.
"It is not so here?"
"How would I know?" Jack sighed. "All right, yeah, I suppose it
is," he conceded. "At least most of the time. But we sure don't seem very
popular here on Sunright."
"I do not understand."
"You saw the people on the march through town today," Jack said. "Well,
no, probably you didn't. The point is that they weren't exactly cheering us on."
"One does not usually cheer in the middle of an attack."
"This was before the attack," Jack told him. "They were just staring at
us, watching us march. Like we were invaders instead of protectors." He snorted. "After
the attack, it was even worse. Then, they were afraid to even get near us."
Draycos was silent a moment. "You are mercenaries, not regular soldiers," he
pointed out. "Perhaps that is the difference."
"Maybe," Jack said. "I don't know. But according to Uncle Virge's
history lessons, people sometimes treated regular soldiers the same way when they were in
a war the people didn't like."
"That is wrong," Draycos said firmly. "The soldiers deserve the respect
and honor of the people they defend. If the war is wrong or misguided, the people's
objections should be directed at the leaders."
"Hey, I'm just telling you how it is," Jack said. "I don't write the
history, I just report it."
"I understand," Draycos murmured.
He hopped up onto his stump again, peering off into the night. Jack found himself
studying the dragon's silhouette, a black shadow against a slightly lighter background.
"It was different for you, wasn't it?" he asked. "I mean, your people were
fighting for their lives. That must make a difference."
"It does," Draycos agreed. "There were still objections at times, of
course, but they were settled by the leaders."
"Pretty quickly, I'd guess," Jack said. "Did all of you have to become
warriors?"
"All had to have soldiers' training," Draycos said. His voice was soft and
oddly distant. "Those who did not serve directly were required to fill support
positions. There was no other way."
"I suppose," Jack said. So when Draycos called himself a poet-warrior it
wasn't really that big a deal? Or was it maybe the poet part he was so proud of? "So
basically any K'da can do what you do?"
The dragon seemed to draw himself up. "Not at all," he said stiffly.
"All indeed can become soldiers. But not all are warriors."
Jack frowned. "What's the difference?"
"A warrior of the K'da is a special person," Draycos explained, and there was
no mistaking the pride in his voice. "He or she has certain inborn talents and
abilities, plus the desire to turn those talents in the direction of protecting the K'da
people. We are found at an early age, and offered this position."
The tip of his tail twitched. "No, Jack. One without poetic talent may be able to
make two sentences rhyme on occasion. But you would not call him a poet, with the true
gift of poetry. So is the difference between soldier and warrior."
Jack nodded. He'd tried writing a poem once, back when he was ten. The result had been
pretty pitiful. "So how old were you when they started your training?" he asked.
"You said once you were younger than I was when you had your first battle."
"That is true," Draycos acknowledged. "I was not yet a warrior at that
time, though, but was still in training. My full training lasted nearly four years."
"Four years'?"
"Yes," the dragon said. "Though I was of course a soldier during
much of that time. We could not afford for warriors-in-training to merely be students
during a war for survival."
"Yeah," Jack murmured. Four years, compared to the ten days he'd just gone
through. "I guess I must seem pretty pathetic to you. I'm barely even a soldier, let
alone a warrior."
"You do as well as your abilities allow," Draycos said diplomatically.
"Your talents lie in other areas."
"Right," Jack said with a sigh. "And I bet you'd trade three of me right
now for a single good soldier."
"Perhaps that could be arranged," the dragon suggested dryly. "Shall I
go get Alison?"
Jack glared at him, a waste of effort in the darkness. "Very funny."
From behind them came the faint sound of lifters. "There goes the Lynx," Jack
commented, turning to look.
But nothing could be seen though the trees. The sound changed pitch as the transport
shifted to horizontal motion and headed away from the camp. Jack looked up, trying to
catch a glimpse of it through the trees. Again, nothing. "Could you tell which
direction it was headed?"
"From the sound, it appeared to be traveling southwest," the dragon said.
"Back to Mer'seb," Jack said. Somehow, the sound of the departing shuttle
made the darkness out here seem a little deeper. "Well, good luck to them. They're
sure not going to find a welcome carpet spread out."
"Do you refer to the citizens?" Draycos asked. "Or do you expect another
Shamshir attack?"
"I was talking about the people," Jack said. "But as long as you've
brought it up, I did overhear Lieutenant Basht telling someone they'd found two Shamshir
mercenaries in one of the buildings. They'd been knocked cold, but weren't hurt otherwise.
Your handiwork?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "The tides of warfare flowed to my advantage."
"Whatever," Jack said. "How come you didn't kill them?"
The dragon's tail arched. "There was no need. I wished merely to halt their
attack. That I did."
"Yeah, but they'd already killed about ten Edgemen," Jack pointed out.
"I thought you didn't approve of killers."
"I do not approve of murderers," Draycos corrected. "There is a
difference between murder and warfare."
"That's not what some of our people say," Jack told him.
This was, he realized dimly, a pretty stupid argument to be having at a time like this.
Especially out here, with him wearing a soldier's uniform and carrying a soldier's gun.
But there was something about the darkness and the noises that was making him unusually
talkative tonight.
Or maybe it was the silence between the noises that he was trying to fill. "There
are peoplea lot of peoplewho think warfare is just the government's way
of"
"Quiet!" Draycos cut him off. He twisted his head away from Jack, his pointed
ears suddenly standing straight up.
For a second, Jack stared past him into the darkness. There was nothing out there he
could see. Then, suddenly, his brain caught up with him, and he turned instead to the
Argus monitors.
The dragon was right. Something had moved into view on one of the monitors. The image
was fuzzy, but it definitely had the basic shape of a human being, and it was moving
toward the camp.
Moving toward Jack.
He flipped up the schematic showing where the Argus eyes were positioned, his pulse
thudding hard in his neck. Okay; this was Eye Number Three. That was there; which
meant the figure coming toward him must be there . . .
He didn't realize Draycos had moved to his side until the dragon spoke. "They
are approaching," he murmured, his breath warm on Jack's ear.
Jack's pulse picked up speed. "They?" he muttered back. "There's
more than one?"
The dragon's tongue flicked out at one of the other monitors. "There," he
said. "And there," he added, pointing to another.
Jack gripped his flash rifle like he was trying to squeeze it in half. There were two
more figures, all right, half hidden behind rocks or trees. Even as he focused on one of
them, it moved away from its hiding place and crossed quickly to another one. "How
many are there?" he asked.
There was no answer. "Draycos?" he repeated, twisting around.
The dragon was gone.
"Draycos!" he called as loudly as he dared, his eyes darting around the
darkness. The K'da had vanished, all right. Probably gone ahead to check on the intruders.
Jack hissed between his teeth. Suddenly, he felt very exposed out here, standing in the
faint glow from the Argus monitors. He stepped away from them as quiedy as he could,
cringing every time his feet crunched into the leaves.
A few feet away was the tree stump Draycos had been perched on earlier. He dropped down
behind it, clutching the flash rifle as if his life depended on it. Which it probably did.
All right, Jack, calm down, he told himself sternly. Three of them wasn't too
bad, if that was all there were. It could be just a quiet scouting party, with none of
them actually looking for a fight.
If that was all there were. He looked over his shoulder at the Argus monitors,
but here at the stump he was too far away to see them clearly. What he needed was to be
over there watching the monitors, with Draycos nearby to protect his back.
Except Draycos was off who knew where. Doing who knew what.
Blast the dragon, anyway. Of all the times for him to run off and play soldier.
And then, from somewhere ahead, somewhere very close ahead, came the soft sound of a
footstep.
Chapter 16
Jack froze in place, hardly daring to breathe. Draycos? was his
first, hopeful thought.
But no. The dragon was a lot quieter than that.
There was another footstep, and another pause. Jack stared into the darkness, straining
so hard his eyeballs hurt. In the faint light from the stars overhead the forest was
little more than a jumble of dark gray shadows crisscrossed by even darker black ones.
The sound came again.
He had it placed now. It was just behind a tall bush about ten feet directly ahead of
his stump.
Had the intruder spotted him? That was the big question. It didn't seem likely to Jack
that he would still be moving forward if he had. After all, he had no way of knowing that
the sentry on duty was a scared fourteen-year-old with ten whole days of combat training
under his belt.
Unless the one behind the bush was only a decoy. Unless his job was to deliberately
make enough noise to draw Jack's attention while someone off to the side leisurely lined
up a rifle on him.
Jack crouched a little lower behind the stump, trying hard to become part of the
decaying wood. It was a useless attempt for someone shaking as badly as he was. Carefully,
he eased his flash rifle around to point toward the bush.
Now what?
Sure, he could fire. But if this one was only a decoy, the shot would show them exactly
where he was. In that case, Jack himself probably wouldn't live long enough to even see
the first guy hit the ground.
But if he didn't shoot, and this one was out there alone . . .
Draycos! he thought desperately toward the woods. Where are you? I need you!
Where was the blasted dragon, anyway?
There was another footstep. Swallowing hard, Jack got his finger on the trigger.
And suddenly, an animal the size of a large frog came hopping out from behind the bush.
Jack's breath went out in a silent whoosh, every muscle in his body suddenly turning to
jelly. The frog jumped again, its landing sounding exactly like a cautious human footstep.
He really, really didn't like the woods.
A flicker of motion caught the corner of his eye. He glanced up
And twitched violently as Draycos dropped into a crouch at his side. "You're going
to give me a heart attack yet," he growled at the dragon. "I swear"
"Quiet," Draycos bit out. "They are coming. You must retreat."
Jack's muscles went tight again. "There are more than three of them?"
"There are eight," Draycos said. "All wear the shoulder emblem of the
Shamshir. You must warn the others."
Jack felt cold all over as he stared frantically into the night. Three of them might
have been a scouting party. Eight of them meant an attack.
And attackers, he knew, always started by silencing the sentries.
He jerked as Draycos's snout jabbed impatiently into his ribs. "What?" he
gasped.
"Did you not hear me?" Draycos demanded. "I said you must warn the
others."
"I can't," Jack hissed. "They didn't give me a comm clip."
"I know that," Draycos said, his voice impatient. "You must leave here
and go to them."
Jack shuddered. The thought of eight guns pointed at his back ... "I can't,"
he said. "I'll never make it."
Draycos lifted his head to the level of Jack's face. The bright green eyes bored into
his face, the tip of the long snout nearly touching his nose. "Listen to me,
Jack," the dragon said. "They are coming. They are not yet close enough to harm
you. But they soon will be if you do not leave. You must go now."
Jack peered out into the shadows. Draycos was right, he knew.
But his legs still refused to move.
Because what if the dragon was wrong? What if he'd missed one or two of the enemy on
his scouting trip? What if there was someone right now hiding in the trees, waiting for
him to give away his position?
"Jack?"
Jack clenched his teeth together. No, the dragon was right. He'd been in this same kind
of situation before with Uncle Virgil. If he just sat here, sooner or later he would lose
by default.
Besides, how much more conspicuous could he be than sitting here with a bright,
gold-scaled dragon standing beside him?
"Okay," he breathed. Slowly, cautiously, he stood up into a crouch and backed
away from the stump.
No one shot at him. He kept backing up, passing the Argus monitors. Draycos stayed by
the stump, his tail arched, his ears pointed skyward as he listened. Jack reached the
first group of trees and passed between them.
Only then did Draycos turn and bound silently toward him. He reached Jack's side, then
stopped and turned around. "Keep moving," he ordered, his ears lifting again.
"I will guard you from any approach."
Jack kept going, walking as quickly as he dared. The night seemed alive around him, and
he could feel a thousand hidden eyes staring in his direction. Three more times along the
way Draycos caught up with him, and each time then stayed behind as guard. Wishing
fervently he'd listened to Uncle Virge and come up with a better way to trace those
blasted Djinn-90 pursuit fighters, Jack kept moving.
There was no one manning the defense position on this side of the camp. For a moment,
as he passed the foxhole, Jack was tempted to jump in. He could activate the weapons there
and spray the woods behind him with gunfire. That ought to discourage the Shamshir
soldiers.
But he was only tempted for a moment. It might discourage them, but it might also start
them shooting back at him. The longer he could put that off, the better.
Especially if he could get someone else to do both the shooting and the being shot at.
Directly ahead was one of the big tents, the ones he'd decided earlier were sleeping
quarters. Panting a little from the long uphill climb, he stumbled to the door and pulled
it open.
It was a sleeping tent, all right. There were twelve sets of bunk beds arranged around
a small table with four matching chairs. The chairs were empty.
So were all the bunks.
For a long moment Jack just stood there staring. Twelve bunk beds. Twenty-four beds.
All empty.
All of them?
All of them.
He stumbled back outside, to find Draycos lurking beside the corner of the tent.
"You did not alert them?" the dragon asked.
"There isn't anyone to alert," Jack told him tightly. "They're
gone."
The dragon's long neck arched back. "Gone? Gone where?"
"How should I know?" Jack countered, looking around the encampment.
Everything was dark and silent.
Everyone asleep, he had thought. Now, he wondered if anyone was even here.
"Shall we try the other tent?" Draycos asked.
"Let's try the HQ first," Jack said. "It's on the way, and the rest of
the squad should still be setting up."
"Yes," Draycos agreed. He leaped up to Jack's shoulder and disappeared down
the back of his neck. "Hurry. The Shamshir are still approaching."
With its windows shielded, the headquarters building was as dark as the rest of the
camp. But as Jack approached, he saw to his relief that there was a narrow sliver of soft
light coming from under the door. At least someone was home there.
Unless the rest of Tango Five Zulu had carelessly left the lights on before they
vanished into the night with everyone else. Mentally crossing his fingers, he pulled open
the door.
The rest of Tango Five Zulu hadn't vanished. They were all still there, kneeling in a
circle in the center of the room, their faces bowed toward the floor, their hands clasped
behind their necks. Two men in full nighttime camouflage outfits were standing behind
them, their weapons leveled at their backs.
But Jack only saw that out of the corner of his eye. His full attention was on the
other two men in the room, standing beside the squad's stack of fold-top computers.
Their guns pointed directly at Jack.
Chapter 17
"Walk inside," a hard, flat voice growled from somewhere to his
right. "No noise."
Carefully, trying not to make anything that looked like a suspicious move, Jack turned
his head that direction.
Standing in the corner of the room, positioned where he could guard the doorway Jack
was still standing in, was a Brummga.
Jack stared at the wide alien, his mouth dropping open a little. Suddenly, it was like
he'd gone back in time to the ruins of the Havenseeker and his first meeting with
Draycos.
But this Brummga wasn't wearing the same mismatched collection of clothing and combat
gear. He was dressed in the same camouflage outfit as the other Shamshir mercenaries, with
the same curved-sword patch on his shoulder. And the gun he was holding was smaller and
sleeker than the shiny black monstrosity the other Brummga had pointed at Jack back then.
Different Brummga. Different group.
Worse situation.
The Brummga twitched his weapon, emphasizing his order. Shaking away the uncomfortable
feeling of deja vu, Jack took another step into the room. Just to prove he knew how to
behave in a situation like this, he carefully closed the door behind him.
"Anyone else?" one of the men across the room asked.
Jack opened his mouth to tell him he had no idea "Okay," the man said.
"Keep sharp."
Jack closed his mouth again. Of course; the man hadn't been asking him. He'd been
talking to a spotter outside on a comm clip.
For a moment he wondered if the spotter might have caught a glimpse of Draycos. Maybe
even have seen the dragon go two-dimensional and slide onto Jack's skin.
But no. If he had, he surely would have said something. And the guy in here didn't seem
like he was that good of an actor.
"This the last of your tech squad?" one of the other men asked, slinging his
gun over his shoulder and striding over to Jack. He had thrown back the hood of his camo
jacket, and Jack could see that his head was totally bald beneath it. Like a billiard cue
ball with a face painted on it, he thought irreverently.
"Yeah, that's him," Jommy said, his voice low and surly. "He was on
sentry duty."
"Didn't do a very good job," Cue Ball commented, taking Jack's Gompers rifle
away from him.
Jack thought about it a second and decided he wasn't going to let that one pass.
"Oh, I don't know," he objected calmly. "I spotted the eight guys you've
got coming in from the south."
He had the minor satisfaction of seeing Cue Ball's face flicker with surprise.
"Sure you did," the other said suspiciously. "How many of them were
human?"
There were five quick taps on the back of Jack's arm. "Five," Jack said.
"Why? You taking inventory?"
Cue Ball snorted. "Get over there," he growled, jerking his head toward the
other teens. "Join your buddies."
Jack did as he was told, crossing the room and kneeling down between Brinkster and Li.
He could feel Brinkster's body trembling where her shoulder touched his. Li, on his other
side, seemed in shock, as if refusing to believe this was really happening.
"Come on, you know the drill," Cue Ball prompted, jabbing Jack's own gun into
the back of his neck. "Hands on your head; fingers laced together."
Again Jack obeyed, glancing around at the others. Jommy's surly tone, he could see now,
hadn't been entirely honest. The kid was angry, all right, and trying hard to look brave
and tough. But he was also scared. Very scared.
Eleven-year-old Rogan Mbusu wasn't even trying to put up a good front. He was crying
openly, tears streaming down his cheeks, his body shaking with silent sobs. Beside him,
Alison knelt without moving, her face expressionless.
Stunned by it all, like Li? Or was she simply better at burying her emotions than the
others?
It was only then that he realized Alison was staring back at him. Staring very
intently.
He frowned back at her. Was she trying to ask him something? Tell him something?
Concentrating on Alison, he jerked as a pair of hard hands slipped around his neck.
Before he could react further, the hands were gone.
Leaving something hard and cold snugged up around his throat.
"All right, listen up," Cue Ball said. Out of the corner of his eye, Jack saw
the man fasten a gray metal collar around Li's neck. "These things are called control
collars." He moved on to Alison. "In case the famous Whinyard's Edge ten-day
training course didn't cover them, let me explain. Their sole purpose in life is to choke
the living daylights out of you if you try to run or make trouble."
He stepped behind Rogan. The kid nearly collapsed at his touch; Cue Ball merely propped
him up with one hand and put on his collar with the other. "They can get triggered
one of two ways," he said. "First, if you wander too far from the tether marker.
One of us has that. I'm not going to tell you which one."
He slid on Jommy's collar. "The other way is for one of us to fire 'em directly.
That'll happen if we decide somewhere along the way that you're not worth the trouble of
taking back with us. And we're easily convinced. So don't try."
"This guy's just a bundle of charm," Jack muttered under his breath.
Cue Ball, now standing behind Brinkster, apparently had good ears. The next thing Jack
knew, the big man had slapped him hard against the side of his head. "Watch your
mouth, kid," he growled.
Jack grimaced. "Yes, sir," he said, trying to sound meek and subdued and
feeling annoyed with himself. He'd forgotten Uncle Virgil's first rule of being a
prisoner: always look as helpless and harmless as you possibly can. It tended to make the
enemy overlook you.
And if there was one thing he really wanted right now it was to be overlooked.
"One more thing," Cue Ball added as he snapped Brinkster's collar around her
neck. "All six of these collars are keyed together. Plus side for us: we don't have
to fumble for six different buttons if we have to drop a troublemaker. Minus side for you:
if one of you gets the chop, all of you do. Think about that if you're tempted to be a
hero."
"We're set here, Lieutenant," one of the other men reported.
Jack glanced that direction. The men had the squad's fold-top computers packed into a
couple of backpacks, and were hoisting them up onto their backs.
"Right," Cue Ball said. Lieutenant Cue Ball, rather. "We're heading out
now, kiddies. Keep it nice and easy and quiet. We've got people positioned all around the
camp, just like Sentry Smart Mouth here said. You whisde up an alarm, and all you'll do
will be to get the rest of your buddies slaughtered in their bunks. Understood?
Good."
They left the HQ building, the prisoners in single file, the Shamshir troops spread out
on both sides around them. It wasn't until they were halfway across the silent encampment
that Jack suddenly caught the full significance of that last comment.
Lieutenant Cue Ball had just threatened to shoot up the camp. But the threat didn't
make sense, because Jack already knew that the rest of the Edgemen had disappeared.
Which meant that Lieutenant Cue Ball didn't know that.
He puzzled at it all the way to the empty guard post and on into the woods. Okay. So
the Edgemen were gone. But the Shamshir raiders hadn't made them go away. Not by killing
them, or kidnapping them, or luring them out of camp.
So where had they gone? And why?
He still hadn't come up with any answers by the time they met up with the eight
soldiers Draycos had spotted earlier. The group was spread out near Jack's sentry cage,
clearly waiting for Lieutenant Cue Ball and his prisoners to show up. A backup force,
undoubtedly, in case something had gone wrong.
Jack found a minor bit of satisfaction in the fact that there were indeed five humans
in the group.
They continued on down the slope. Some clouds had rolled in, cutting off most of the
already dim starlight, and Jack found himself in a continual struggle with underbrush that
wanted to trip him up and low-hanging tree branches that wanted to take his forehead off.
But the darkness also provided an unexpected plus. With visibility near zero, he could
feel Draycos carefully probing at the collar with his claws, searching out its operation.
And then, the pressure around his neck disappeared.
The dragon had popped the collar.
Jack tensed, trying to decide which way he should jump. A second later he nearly yelped
in frustration as the pressure came back again.
A very rude word flashed across his mind. But Draycos was right. Walking through the
middle of an unfamiliar forest, with armed enemies all around, was not exactly the ideal
spot to make a break for it.
He just hoped they would find a better opportunity before Lieutenant Cue Ball stood all
of them in front of a firing squad.
Ten minutes later they reached a small clearing. An unmarked Flying Turtle 505
transport sat there, a much smaller vehicle than the Lynx the squad had arrived in
earlier. It was guarded by two more Brummgas with Shamshir shoulder patches. The whole
crowd piled aboard, and they headed up into the sky.
And finally Jack had it figured out. The whole thing was a clever trap, with Tango Five
Zulu and their computers as the bait. They'd been sent out here to draw Lieutenant Cue
Ball and his men into grabbing range. Now, as they lifted out of the woods, the hidden
Edge forces would spring their trap.
Only they didn't. The Flying Turtle slid along under the cloudy sky at treetop level,
without a single other vehicle in sight.
All right, then, Jack decided as the minutes slipped by and nothing happened. Change
in plan. The Edge wasn't out to trap Lieutenant Cue Ball at all. Instead, they were
looking for some secret Shamshir base. It was still a trap, Tango Five Zulu was still the
bait, only now the Edgemen would wait until they reached their destination to spring it.
He was still holding firmly to that idea fifteen minutes later when the transport
settled into a landing.
"Let's go, puppies," Lieutenant Cue Ball said, stepping to the hatchway and
waving his gun toward it. "Don't forget about your collars."
Jack was third in line out the door. He glanced first at the sky, to see if the Edge
fighters were on their way.
They weren't. Trying hard to keep his hopes up, he lowered his gaze to the area around
them.
And with that all of his secret hopes dropped straight into his boots, chewed their way
through the soles, and disappeared into the ground beneath him. If this was a secret
military base, then he was Draycos's maiden Aunt Matilda.
For starters, the place wasn't even remotely secret. It was completely out in the open,
without any large trees, overhanging cliffs, or even camouflage screens to protect it. The
Edge training camp on Carrion would have been harder to spot than this place.
It was also very definitely not a military base. The only vehicles in sight were two
more Flying Turtles, neither of which looked even slightly armed. A couple of human-style
buildings squatted at the edge of the landing area, probably service areas for the
transports, probably courtesy of the Shamshir. The rest of the town seemed to be composed
entirely of mud huts of various sizes.
"Welcome to Dahtill City," Lieutenant Cue Ball announced as the prisoners
looked around them. "Regional capital of this part of Agrist territory, and where
this whole thing started."
He smiled, possibly the most unfriendly smile Jack had ever seen. "And for you,
puppies," he added, "where it's all going to end."
Chapter 18
The mud hut Lieutenant Cue Ball led them to was larger than most of the ones
around it, with wide, fan-shaped leaves stuck into its sides at various spots. The doorway
was low, and all of them except Rogan had to duck to keep from hitting their heads.
Experimentally, Jack brushed his hand against the outer wall as he went through the
doorway. It might look like fresh mud, but it was as hard and unyielding as stone.
A single room took up the entire interior of the hut. There were three aliens seated
behind a table in the center: short, pale, hairless beings with round but hollow faces and
bright silvery eyes. Agri, Jack decided, though he'd never actually seen any of this
particular species up close before. Two of them were wearing the same camouflage military
clothing as the Shamshir mercenaries, while the third was dressed in a long white robe
with narrow red stripes.
The robe, in Jack's opinion, definitely suited them better. The ones playing soldier
looked ridiculous.
"Then tell me what it is this time," the robed Agrist said. His voice was a
lot more melodious than Jack would have guessed from the almost skull-like face. "Yet
another crushing defeat against the thieves? Another step toward total victory against our
oppressors?"
Jack frowned, taking another look. Even given that he didn't know the first thing about
reading Agrist faces, the robed guy did not seem very happy. In fact, from the tone of the
comments, he seemed downright angry. Not exactly the attitude he would have expected.
Unlike Jack, Lieutenant Cue Ball didn't seem surprised by the tone. "I don't blame
you for being skeptical, Your Honorest," he said, his voice calm and earnest.
"But this time, we have the key."
"These are children," one of the uniformed Agri said harshly. "Human
children. Did you think we would not know?"
"Even children can fight, Defense Master," Lieutenant Cue Ball pointed out.
"In the hands of capable soldiers like those of the Whinyard's Edge, they can be
molded into mighty warriors indeed."
Out of the corner of his eye Jack saw Alison stir. Probably thinking about their ten
whole days of training, he decided, and wanting very much to say something sarcastic. But
she remained silent.
"But that's not why these particular prisoners are important," Lieutenant Cue
Ball went on. "These six are far more valuable than mere warriors. They've been
trained in Whin-yard's Edge communications and computer access codes. And we've
also taken their computers intact. Soon we'll be able to break both their real-time
tactical data and also learn their long-term plans."
"And this will gain us what?" the robed Agrist asked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball seemed taken aback. "Why, victory, of course, Your
Honorest."
"Will it?" His Honorest asked. "Will it really?"
He turned his silvery eyes on Jack. "Will it force the Whinyard's Edge to abandon
their attacks on our mine? Will it persuade the Parprins to accept the ruling of the
courts that our mine is indeed ours? Will it finally persuade the Trade Association to
send a Judge-Paladin to confirm and enforce that ruling?"
Jack felt a funny tingling at the pit of his stomach. Lieutenant Basht had told them
that it was the Agri who had jumped the Parprins' mining claims. But according to this
Agrist, it was the other way around.
Which was none of his business, of course. He had no particular interest in local
politics, or what exactly was going on with a small-time mine that probably no one else in
the whole Orion Arm cared about. The only reason he was here was to try to collect
information on Djinn-90s, so that he could find out who had attacked Draycos's ships, so
that eventually he could get Draycos off his back.
Unfortunately, Draycos wasn't likely to see things quite that simply. Draycos and his
K'da warrior ethic were going to be very unhappy if it turned out that they were fighting
on the wrong side of this war.
Sure enough, he could feel the dragon moving softly along his skin. That was a sign
that usually meant he was uncomfortable or annoyed.
Jack could only hope he would keep his annoyance to himself long enough for them to get
out of this mess.
"The only reason the Parprins are still pushing this is because the Edge is
backing them," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. "And the only reason they're still
on Sunright is that they don't think we can beat them."
"You told us this afternoon's attack in Mer'seb would persuade them to
leave," His Honorest said.
"I said it would be the first step," Lieutenant Cue Ball corrected.
"What we need now is to bloody them in half a dozen places at once."
He slapped his fingertips at the Edge patch on Jommy's shoulder. "This is our
key."
"I do not like this," His Honorest said flatly. "They are children. It
is not right to make war against children."
"But it's all right for those same children to make war against us?"
Lieutenant Cue Ball demanded, starting to sound impatient. "Come on, think. Use those
heads of yours for a change."
"What do you require of us?" the Defense Master asked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball gave a sound that was almost a sniff. "Nothing at all,"
he said. "We'll get what we need by ourselves. I just thought you'd like to be
brought up to speed on what was happening, that's all."
He jerked his head toward the door. The Shamshir soldiers nudged the prisoners, and the
whole group turned and went outside again.
"Idiots," one of the soldiers muttered.
"Of course they're idiots," Lieutenant Cue Ball said as he led the way back
toward the human-style buildings by the landing area. "All aliens are. Ignore them
and concentrate on the job."
"What happens if we don't feel like cooperating?" Alison asked.
Jack winced. It was not a smart thing to say, and he was pretty sure everyone else in
the group knew it.
Lieutenant Cue Ball certainly did. "That sounded like a challenge, puppy," he
said quietly. "I like challenges. Don't worry, one of you will talk. Maybe you,
huh?"
"Lieutenant?" a melodious voice called.
Jack turned to see the second of the uniformed Agri hurrying up behind them. "The
Defense Master's compliments. He wishes the human children to be placed in custody under
Agrist Protector authority."
"Return the Defense Master's compliments fourfold," Lieutenant Cue Ball said
courteously. "And inform him that the prisoners will be delivered to his custody when
I'm finished with them."
"The Defense Master specifically said"
"You will deliver my compliments, and my message," Lieutenant Cue Ball said,
turning his back on the alien. "This way, puppies."
He took them into the larger of the two buildings, into a back room that seemed to have
been specifically designed to be a jail cell. There were no windows, the door was equipped
with two separate locks, and there were a dozen metal rings embedded halfway into the
concrete floor.
At Lieutenant Cue Ball's instructions, the soldiers produced handcuffs. Ordering the
prisoners to sit, they secured their wrists to the rings. "Right," he said
briskly when they were finished. "Someone want to save all of us a lot of time and
effort and give me the access codes right now?"
Jack didn't dare look around at the others. He kept his eyes on Lieutenant Cue Ball;
and after a moment the man gave a smirk. "Didn't think so," he said. "Fine.
We'll do it the hard way.
He looked around the room, and his gaze fell on Jack. "YouBright Eyes. Let's
go."
One of the soldiers unfastened the ring end of Jack's handcuffs, leaving the other end
attached to his wrist. Hauling him to his feet, he marched him out of the room. With
Lieutenant Cue Ball again in the lead, they took him back outside and into the other
building.
The whole procedure seemed to be taking a lot of unnecessary time, Jack thought,
especially for people who claimed to be in so much of a hurry. But he'd been through this
same routine a few times with various police departments across the Orion Arm. It was all
for show: dropping vague threats and then giving the victim time to think and sweat about
it.
And the fact that they'd taken Jack out of the room first meant that he wasn't the
primary target of the evening's entertainment. Lieutenant Cue Ball hadn't given him nearly
enough time to think and sweat, after all.
No, they were probably targeting little Rogan, he decided uncomfortably. Either him or
one of the girls.
This second building seemed to be set up more along the lines of the Edge's HQ back on
Carrion, with normal offices and hallways and everything. The soldiers took Jack to what
looked like a conference room, where he found Tango Five Zulu's fold-top computers laid
out neatly around a large oval table. They were plugged in, turned on, and ready to go.
All they were waiting for was the proper access code.
"Okay," Lieutenant Cue Ball said, gesturing to the computers. "Like I
said, we can do this easy or we can do it hard. You've got one last chance to be
smart."
"Oh, I'm already smart," Jack assured him, watching his face closely.
"Problem is, I'm also poor."
Lieutenant Cue Ball's eyes narrowed. "What's that supposed to mean?"
"It means I want to know what's in it for me," Jack said.
One of the other Shamshir snorted loudly. "You get to stay in one piece," he
said.
"That's important, all right," Jack agreed, shivering. He needed to play this
out, so that he knew how much wiggle room he had here. But at the same time, he definitely
didn't want to push these men too far. "But it sounds like you guys are in a hurry. I
work faster when I'm inspired."
One of the soldiers took a step forward. "You want inspiration?" he bit out,
drawing a long knife from a sheath at his side. "Let me give you some
inspiration."
Lieutenant Cue Ball twitched his hand. Reluctantly, Jack thought, the man stepped back.
"Okay, I'll play," the lieutenant said. "What do you want?"
"My aunt and uncle indentured me to the Whinyard's Edge," Jack said.
"Fifty thousand for two years of slave labor."
"And what, you want us to buy your contract?"
"Hardly," Jack said. "I want cash and a door out of here."
A cynical smile tugged at the corners of Lieutenant Cue Ball's mouth. "I see the
Edge is still squeezing a quart of loyalty out of each fresh recruit," he said.
"Fine. Cash on the drum for value received. What can you give us?"
"That depends on how much you can pay," Jack countered. "How does a
hundred thousand sound?"
"Like you think we're stupid," Lieutenant Cue Ball said darkly. "Or
desperate."
"I don't know about the first," Jack said thoughtfully, rubbing at his chin.
The loose end of his handcuffs bounced against his chest as he did so. "But on the
second, it seems to me that you're pushing up against a deadline here. The Defense Master
could send his people around at any time to collect us, you know. I don't think the Agri
would like it if they found out you were planning to torture a bunch of human
children."
Lieutenant Cue Ball smiled again, a very nasty smile this time. "You think anyone
in this room cares a dead frog what the Agri like or don't like?"
Jack frowned. That wasn't the response he'd been expecting. "This is their
world," he pointed out cautiously. "They hired you, not the other way
around."
"I guess maybe you're hard of hearing," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. He wasn't
smiling any more. "I'll say it again. I don't care what the Agri like or want, or
don't like or don't want. The mine they're sitting on is worth a lot of money. Get the
picture?"
Jack looked over at the soldiers standing by the door, feeling the ground sifting like
dry sand out from under his position. "So you're not here to defend the Agri at
all," he said slowly. "All you want is the mine."
"Catches on quick, don't he?" one of the Shamshir said sarcastically.
"And the only thing that stands in your way," Jack added, "is the
Whinyard's Edge."
"Who want the mine just as badly as we do," Lieutenant Cue Ball agreed.
He must have seen something in Jack's face, because he smiled again. "Oh, come
now. You weren't thinking noble thoughts about them, were you? Did you really think they
were here to help the Parprins take over the mine, collect their fee, and move on? Who do
you think they are, Drag-onbacks?"
Jack nodded, suddenly feeling very tired. Once, he'd thought he and Draycos were on the
right side, helping the Whinyard's Edge defend a Parprin mine from aggressors. A few
minutes ago, he'd begun to wonder if it was actually the Agri who were the innocent
victims here.
Now, he realized that there was no right side for him to be on. Both armies were out
for themselves, fighting solely for a share of the loot. The people who really owned the
mine, whichever group it actually was, weren't going to keep their property no matter who
won.
Ever since he'd started this scam, Draycos had been talking about how soldiers were the
protectors of the weak.
He wondered what the noble K'da poet-warrior would have to say about this.
He didn't have to guess what Uncle Virge would say. I told you so pretty well
covered that one.
"Yes," he said. "I understand."
He took a deep breath. Draycos had stopped his frustrated movements, he noticed.
Perhaps the dragon was offended beyond any reaction at all.
Or else he was preparing for action.
"Good," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. "Don't look so shocked. This is how
the universe operates. Get used to it." He folded his arms across his chest.
"Here's the offer. Twenty-five thousand, in cash, and a ticket off this mudball for
everything in those computers. If you can deliver it in one hour."
Jack sighed. Maybe Uncle Virge was right, after all. Maybe looking out for yourself was
all you could expect to do in this life. Trying to do anything else was inviting a whole
water buffalo stampede to charge right down on top of you.
And at the moment, looking out for himself meant getting out of here. Draycos would
understand. In fact, Draycos was probably tugging at the leash to get away from this soggy
mess himself.
Anyway, the whole only reason they'd come here in the first place was to track down
those Djinn-90s. Twenty-five thousand in Shamshir cash would give them whole new ways to
continue that search. That ought to calm the dragon's conscience.
He hoped.
"Deal," he said, stepping to the nearest computer and sitting down on the
chair in front of it. Briefly, he wondered if Draycos would consider this a betrayal of
his soldier's oath. But there was nothing he could do except hope the dragon understood.
Taking a deep breath, he keyed in the main access code they'd been taught. Nothing
happened.
Chapter 19
A quiet alarm bell began jingling in the back of Jack's brain. He tried the
access code again. Still nothing.
There were three other codes they'd been taught. He tried each of them in turn, typing
slowly and carefully to make sure he wasn't making any mistakes.
None of the codes did anything at all.
The soldiers gathered by the door were beginning to mutter among themselves. Feeling
sweat gathering on his forehead, Jack moved over one seat to the next computer in line and
tried again. He tried everything again. Still nothing worked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball had started out standing behind Jack, looking over his shoulder.
Now, he was crowding so closely against him that Jack could feel him breathing.
"What's the matter, Bright Eyes?" he rumbled softly. "Twenty-five thousand
suddenly not good enough for you?"
"I don't know what's wrong," Jack protested. "These are the codes they
taught us. They worked fine back on Carrion."
"Did they, now," Lieutenant Cue Ball said.
Swallowing hard, Jack attacked the computer one last time. He might as well have saved
himself the trouble. "Let rue try one more," he offered, starting to get up from
his chair.
A big hand landed on his shoulder and shoved him back down into his seat. "Save
it," Lieutenant Cue Ball snarled. "You've wasted enough of my time
already."
The pressure on Jack's shoulder shifted to a grip under his arm, and he was hauled
bodily out of the chair. "Panto, Crickput him on ice," the lieutenant
ordered, giving Jack a rough shove toward the soldiers at the door. "Number Two
storeroom. Then go get the Oriental girl. Maybe she'll be more cooperative."
The Number Two storeroom was the mud hut on the far side of the other human-designed
building. It was small, no bigger than the Essenay's cargo hold, with a bare dirt
floor. Metal shelves stacked with boxes filled most of the floor space, leaving only a few
square feet open in the middle. Panto and Crick sat him down in the middle of the open
area and attached his handcuff to one of the lower shelf supports. Then they left, turning
off the overhead light and closing the door behind them.
Jack sighed, rubbing his eyes tiredly with his free hand. Like the prison cell they'd
started out in, this storeroom had no windows, and it was pitch black. "Well,"
he said aloud. "Here we are."
"Yes," Draycos murmured from his right shoulder. "Can you press up
beside these boxes?"
"Yeah, hang on," Jack said, getting up into as high a crouch as he could with
his hand chained to the shelf that way. Turning around, he pressed his back against the
row of boxes. In their two-dimensional form, K'da had a trick that let them see right
through solid objectsthough Draycos insisted on saying he was seeing
"over" themprovided the walls were thin enough. "How's that?"
There was a sliding sensation on his back as Draycos moved into position.
"Anything useful in there?" he asked.
The dragon shifted again, paused, shifted again. Examining all the boxes within reach,
probably. There was one final movement, and Jack felt the dragon's head slide back around
to rest on his right shoulder. "There is nothing useful to us," he reported.
"Two of the boxes contain grenades, while the third contains ammunition. There is
nothing that will assist us in a quiet escape."
"Might be helpful in a noisy one, though," Jack pointed out.
"We do not wish a noisy escape, Jack," Draycos said.
"Personally, I don't care what flavor escape we get," Jack grumbled.
"You got any ideas?"
"Perhaps," Draycos said. A bit of weight came onto Jack's wrist near the
handcuff. "Tell me, what did you do to the computers?"
Jack shook his head. "Not a thing. The codes just didn't work."
"How can that be?"
"Only two possibilities I can think of," Jack said. "Either some idiot
got the computers mixed up, or else someone went in and changed all the codes."
Draycos was silent a moment. "Let us follow the chain of reason," he
suggested. "Your squad used the computers on the voyage to this world."
"Right," Jack said. "And they were fine during the whole trip."
"They were then transported across the town of Mer'seb to the headquarters
building," Draycos went on. "From there they were loaded aboard the Lynx and
brought to the outpost at Kilo Seven."
"So if they were switched, it had to have been done in Mer'seb," Jack
concluded. "And if they were repro-grammed ..."
He trailed off. "You have a thought?" Draycos prompted.
"I was just thinking," Jack said slowly. "During the trip to Kilo Seven,
they were stacked back in the storage compartment with the rest of the baggage. Anyone
could have gone back there and fiddled with them."
"How difficult would it be to alter the codes?"
"I don't know," Jack said. "Uncle Virgil always handled any
code-switching we had to do. But I suppose if you'd set up a program card in advance, it
could be done pretty quickly."
He tried to reach up to scratch his cheek. The hand came up short as it reached the end
of the handcuff chain. "In fact, I'll bet it could even have been done at Kilo Seven
while the rest of the squad was getting things set up," he added, examining the
restraints with his fingertips. The lock pressed up against the underside of his wrist
felt like a standard mechanical handcuff lock. With a proper lockpick, he should be able
to open it.
Trouble was, he didn't have a proper lockpick with him. Still, maybe he could find
something on the floor; a sliver of metal or something else he could bend into the proper
shape. With his free hand, he began feeling carefully around the packed dirt beneath the
shelves.
"Alison Kayna," Draycos said suddenly.
Jack's fingers paused in their search. "What about her?"
"She was moving around aboard the Lynx," the dragon reminded him. "She
came and spoke with you, in fact."
"Yes, I remember," Jack said, frowning. He'd assumed at the time that she'd
just noticed him talking with Sergeant Grisko and decided to be nosy.
But what if that wasn't all of it? What if she'd been back fiddling with the squad's
computers? She would have had a clear view of his chat with Grisko from there. "Do
you remember if she was in her seat when I was talking to Grisko?"
"I was not able to see in that direction," Draycos said. "At all other
times I was watching through the window."
And Jack himself was taking a snooze. The rest of Tango Five Zulu could have thrown a
dance party back there for all he knew. "But why would she sabotage the
computers?" he asked.
"Why would anyone do so?" Draycos countered.
Jack shrugged. "You got me."
"I do not know either," Draycos said. "However, we suspect that Alison
has had previous military training. Her own statement is that she was once with a
different group. I do not believe she ever stated which one."
Jack blinked in the darkness. "Are you suggesting she's a spy for the
Shamshir?"
"I do not suggest anything in particular," Draycos said. "This situation
is not like any I am familiar with."
"Yeah, I don't suppose it is," Jack conceded. "These aren't your kind of
soldiers, are they?"
"No, they are not," Draycos said, and Jack could hear the contempt in his
voice. "These are little more than thieves in uniforms."
Jack grimaced. "In uniforms, and with high-power rifles."
"The weapons do not matter," Draycos said. "What matters is that they
are not true soldiers. I do not believe they will think as warriors do. That gives us an
advantage."
"Right." Offhand, Jack couldn't think of any advantages they had at this
particular moment, but he wasn't going to argue the point.
For a couple of minutes neither of them spoke. The only sounds were the whistling of
the wind against the hardened mud swirls on the outside of their hut and an odd sort of
scratching noise Jack couldn't identify. "What are the Shon-tine like?" he asked
suddenly.
"What do you mean?" Draycos asked. "Are you asking about their physical
form?"
"No, I saw some of their bodies aboard the Havenseeker" Jack said,
shivering at the memory of that trek through debris and death. "I meant what are they
like as people. Their personalities, culturethat sort of thing. Are they like you,
or are they more like humans?"
Draycos seemed to gather his thoughts. "I do not yet know your people very
well," he said slowly. "You will therefore need to make your own comparisons.
The Shon-tine in general are not violent or aggressive beings. Few indeed are the true
warriors born to them, though those few are strongly gifted in their art. Still, even the
average Shontin is capable of fighting in his own defense when it becomes necessary to do
so."
"But only as a last resort?"
"Mostly," Draycos agreed. "The majority of them prefer to contemplate
and appreciate the various forms of their arts, or to create beautiful and useful things
with their hands, or to work the soil and bring forth food."
"Sounds like something you'd find on one of the Orion Arm's more backwater
worlds," Jack commented.
"I am sure some of your people would consider them primitive and naive,"
Draycos said, a little stiffly. "Others would recognize their strength of character
and purpose as signs of highly advanced beings. Until the Valahgua began their war against
us, their greatest heroes were those who throughout history had stood for what was right
amid opposition, even to the point of death."
He moved restlessly against Jack's skin. "Now, sadly, their warriors have become
the most esteemed among them. I can only hope they will be able to regain the culture and
dignity of their race once they are safely here."
"And I suppose when they are that you'll?" Jack broke off, suddenly
embarrassed at what he'd been about to ask.
But Draycos had caught it anyway. "Do you ask if I will be returning to one of
them if we should succeed in our task?"
"Don't get me wrong," Jack said quickly. Too quickly, probably. Uncle Virgil
had always said that he talked too fast when he was nervous. "I mean, this
arrangement is only supposed to be until they get here. And that's fine with me."
"I will not leave until you wish for me to do so," Draycos said quietly.
"I promise you that."
"Yeah," Jack said tardy, blinking back sudden moisture in his eyes. "But
no one's exactly sent you an engraved invitation to the royal banquet, either. Uncle Virge
and I were doing fine before you showed up, and we'll do fine after you leave."
He leaned back stiffly, wincing as his head bumped against the cold metal of the
shelves behind him. "Assuming we ever get out of here," he got himself back on
track, wishing he'd never brought up the subject of Draycos's future in the first place.
The dragon was a temporary associate. Nothing more. "What does a good poet-warrior do
in a situation like this?"
"He does his duty, of course," Draycos said. "The duty of all prisoners
of war is to escape."
Jack sighed. "One small problem with that," he said. He snapped his wrist out
again to rattle the handcuff chain in reminder.
Only this time the chain didn't rattle. At his first tug it clinked once
And with a soft thud, the chain snapped off at the cuff around his wrist and dropped in
a heap onto the dirt floor.
Jack jerked in surprise, grabbing reflexively at the handcuff around his wrist. Or
rather, the ordinary bracelet the cuff had suddenly become. "What in?"
He broke off, his mouth snapping firmly closed. Of course. The dragon's claws. The
claws that he'd once seen scratch a K'da letter into the end of a metal cylinder.
Only this time, the dragon hadn't just scratched. This time, so quietly and stealthily
that Jack hadn't even noticed, Draycos had cut his way straight through the handcuff
chain.
"You were saying there was a problem?" Draycos said blandly.
Jack glared down at his chest in the darkness. It was impossible to tell, but he could
swear the other was laughing at him. "Funny dragon," he growled. "Okay,
you're so smart. Now what?"
"As I said, our duty is to escape," Draycos said. Sliding up along Jack's
skin to his neck, he popped the control collar free. "But our duty is also to our
comrades. We must assist in their release."
"Hold on a second," Jack warned, shivering with relief as he dropped the
collar onto the floor and pushed it as far away from him as he could. "If you're
suggesting we take on Lieutenant Cue Ball and his troops all by ourselves, you've got a
serious argument coming."
"I do not suggest that at all," Draycos assured him. "Our chances for
success will be much higher if we leave this place and summon help."
"Now you're talking," Jack said, pushing himself to his feet and brushing the
dirt off his hands. "Any idea how we manage that without someone objecting?"
"We begin by opening the door," Draycos said. "Quietly, of course."
"Thanks," Jack said dryly, finding the door handle and easing it open a
crack. When it came to sneaking, at least, the noble K'da warrior and the lowly human
thief were thinking alike.
Everything seemed quiet outside. Jack stood without moving for a moment, listening to
the sounds of the night and watching all the shadows he could see from his angle. Most of
the faint background noise seemed to be coming from the Agrist huts in the distance behind
them, with nothing closer. Nothing moved, either, at least nothing that he could see.
"Looks clear," he murmured. "We going for the Flying Turtles?"
"Would you rather walk?"
Jack rolled his eyes. Draycos was in rare form tonight. Very pleased with himself over
the handcuffs, no doubt. "No, let's travel in style, shall we?" he said.
"You want to watch our backs?"
A weight formed on his shoulders in response, his jacket pulling tight against his
throat as Draycos's head rose up from his shoulder, facing backwards. "Ready."
"Okay." Bracing himself, Jack pulled the door all the way open and stepped
into the doorway. He paused there for a moment, watching and listening some more. Still
nothing. Closing the door behind him, he slipped out into the night.
Chapter 20
He had just reached the first human building, the one where the rest of
Tango Five Zulu were handcuffed to the floor, when a slab of light suddenly cut through
the darkness ahead.
He dropped into a crouch at the corner, pressing himself against the building. The
light, he saw, was coming from the doorway of the second human building. As he watched,
two Shamshir soldiers came striding out, supporting a staggering Li between them.
Jack felt his muscles tense. If they took her to the same hut they'd just locked him
into, the mustard was about to hit the wiener, big time.
But no. They turned the other direction, their backs to him, and headed toward another
row of the small mud huts on the other side of the building.
There was a soft hiss in his ear. "Easy," Jack soothed. "They're not
coming this way."
"She has been tortured," Draycos murmured back. There was an edge of barely
controlled fury in his voice. "Can you not see that?"
Jack frowned, studying Li's back as she stumbled along. "No, I don't think
so," he said. "I remember her looking like she was in shock earlier. I think
she's still just not clicking on all chips."
"She does not look right," Draycos insisted. "How can you be
certain?"
"Trust me," Jack assured him. "I've seen people scared out of their
braincases before."
He nodded toward Li and her escorts. "Besides, look where they're taking her.
They're putting her in isolation, same as they did me. That proves she wasn't
tortured." "I do not understand."
Jack sighed. "They're trying to get one of us to break. Right? So they want the
ones who are left to be as scared as possible. If they'd really tortured Li, they'd put
her back in with the others instead of off by herself." "Why?"
"So everyone could see firsthand all the gory details," Jack said. "The
more scared they are when their turns come, the more likely they'll be to give Lieutenant
Cue Ball what he wants."
Draycos's tongue flicked out restlessly. "They put you by yourselves so as to
frighten the others?"
"You got it," Jack said. "See, when people keep getting taken away and
no one comes back, the ones who are left start wondering what's happened to them.
Sometimes that's a whole lot scarier than anything they could dream up on their own."
Draycos was silent a moment. "It is barbaric."
"I suppose," Jack admitted. "But it's better than beating the sand out
of someone. Don't your people ever use psychological warfare?"
"I do not know that term," Draycos said stiffly. "But if it is like
this, I am certain we do not."
"Figures," Jack murmured. Sometimes the K'da were too noble for their own
good.
The two Shamshir emerged from the hut, minus Li, and turned purposefully toward the
building Jack was crouched beside. Going to collect the next contestant in Lieutenant Cue
Ball's little game, no doubt. "Keep quiet," he warned Draycos, easing back from
the corner out of their sight. "And get ready."
The soldiers reached the door and disappeared inside.
And the second they were out of sight, Jack sprinted for the Flying Turtle they'd been
brought here in.
He had estimated he would have about a minute to pop the hatchway and get inside before
the soldiers reappeared. As it turned out, the hatchway wasn't locked, and he made it with
a good twenty seconds to spare. He was already in the cockpit, studying the control board,
when the soldiers came back outside.
With Alison Kayna striding along between them.
"They have taken Alison," Draycos murmured, his head rising from Jack's
shoulder for a better look.
"Yeah, I saw," Jack grunted, still sorting out the board. This thing wasn't
going to fly much like the Essenay, but the controls were similar enough. "Was
there something you wanted me to do about it?"
"I was merely observing," Draycos said mildly. "She is not being treated
as a fellow Shamshir soldier."
Jack looked up again. The dragon was right. As far as he could tell, she was being
marched along the same way he had been earlier, like any other prisoner Lieutenant Cue
Ball was hoping to squeeze for information. "Okay, so maybe it isn't the Shamshir
she's working for," he conceded. "Maybe it's some other group. Maybe she
scrambled the computer codes so that she could be the only one who could pull out the data
for them."
"Why?"
"How should I know?" Jack growled. "Maybe she was hired to get in good
with the Shamshir. Maybe she was hired to chase the Whinyard's Edge off Sunright. Maybe
she just wants to make a cash deal, like I tried to."
Alison and the soldiers disappeared into the building. "And right now, I don't
much care," Jack added, keying for startup. "All I want is to get out of
here."
The weight on his shoulder shifted as Draycos looked around the cockpit. "Will
there not be a recognition code required to start the engines?"
"Probably." Jack gestured to the board. "Conveniently for us, the pilot
left this one on standby. I was hoping he had."
Draycos cocked his head. "Careless of him."
"Agreed," Jack said. "But like you said, these guys aren't really
soldiers."
He eased in the lifters, and the Flying Turtle rose gently into the sky. "Keep
your claws crossed," he warned. "If anyone's going to object, now's the time
they're going to do it."
But no one challenged them as they headed off into the night. No one challenged, or
signaled, or even seemed to notice. Jack kept the transport close to the ground, putting
distance between them and Dahtill City as quickly as he dared, wondering how in the world
it was they were getting away so easily.
"It would seem that proper military procedure does not exist here," Draycos
commented. "Perhaps the Agri have not allowed their city to be turned into a base for
the Shamshir."
"Maybe," Jack said. "Or maybe it's simpler. If this is where the mine is
that everybody wants, neither side will want to have any serious fighting nearby."
"Perhaps." Draycos's head rose up higher, his snout pointing past Jack's nose
to the left. "Could that be the mine?"
Jack looked that direction. A mile or so past the edge of the city were three dim
structures. The center one was much taller than the others, clearly built to house the
kind of crane and digging equipment necessary for a deep-ground mine shaft. The other two
buildings seemed to be support structures, probably containing supplies and extra
equipment. There were only a few lights in evidence, just enough to keep aircraft from
running into them. Apparently, the Agri weren't working a night shift.
"Probably," he confirmed. "I seem to remember that daublite is usually
deep enough that you have to sink a pretty long shaft to get anywhere near it."
"That sounds expensive."
"Expensive and time-consuming both," Jack agreed.
"The Agri have probably been at this project for years. Maybe even
generations."
"Only to then have others try to steal it away from them," Draycos said,
sounding disgusted. "Those structures are built over vertical shafts, then?"
"Just the one in the middle," Jack said. "It looks like the pictures
I've seen of deep mines."
"A delicate operation," Draycos murmured. "Easily destroyed by accident,
or by falling debris collapsing the shaft. I can understand why they do not wish battles
nearby."
His head swiveled back toward the view ahead. "This is not the direction to
Mer'seb," he said. "From Dahtill City we must turn southwest."
"Right," Jack agreed. "If we were heading for Mer'seb. But we're
not. We're going back to Kilo Seven."
The dragon's head pulled far enough away from Jack's skin that he could peer at his
face. "Is that wise?"
Jack snorted. "In my occasionally humble opinion, 'wise' hasn't been part of the
equation since we started this whole job," he said. "But yes, I think it'll get
us what we want."
"Explain it to me."
And convince him that Jack was acting like a properly noble K'da warrior? Probably.
"First off, the only things the Shamshir took were our squad's own computers,"
Jack said. "That means all the rest of the Edge stuff is still there. Computers and
comm equipment. Alison, or whoever, couldn't possibly have sabotaged all of it."
"Then your codes will still allow you access."
"Right," Jack nodded. "So the first thing we'll do is call Mer'seb and
whistle up a rescue team. After that, we'll tap into their mainframe and try to pull up
the Djinn-90 information that was the reason we came here in the first place."
"You will do that directly?" Draycos asked. "I thought your plan was to
use the Essenay's equipment and thereby protect yourself from discovery."
"It was," Jack said. "Problem is, the Essenay is way to the south
somewhere right now."
"Can you not summon it with your comm clip?"
Jack shook his head. "If Uncle Virge is still waiting at November Six, he's way
out of comm clip range."
"What about the transmitter in this vehicle? It is more powerful than your comm
clip. Could you not tune it to the correct frequency?"
"Sure, but then the conversation wouldn't be encrypted," Jack pointed out.
"That means anyone and his toy poodle Mitsy would be able to listen in."
"Perhaps we can use another form of coding," Draycos suggested.
"I don't know how," Jack said. "But it doesn't really matter. I wanted
to do a gentle tap into their records so that I could then do a quiet sneak away. But with
the Shamshir raid, there's no chance of a quiet sneak anyway. I might as well just
bulldoze my way into their mainframe, pull the records, and make a run for it."
"With the Essenay still at November Six?"
"Right, but we've got this now," Jack reminded him, tapping the edge of the
control panel. "If we're quick, we should be able to get ourselves down to Uncle
Virge before the balloon goes up."
Draycos digested all that. "And you believe you will be able to locate the Kilo
Seven outpost?"
"Piece of Boston cream pie." Jack pointed to one of the displays on the
board. "Along with not shutting down the transport, the pilot also didn't bother to
erase the course memory."
"I see," Draycos murmured. "Convenient."
"And sloppy," Jack said. "But then, they're not real soldiers, are
they?"
It had taken Lieutenant Cue Ball fifteen minutes to get them from Kilo Seven to Dahtill
City. Ten minutes into the return flight, just as Jack was thinking about cutting their
altitude a little, the comm suddenly twittered. "About time," he muttered.
"Draycos, how are you at imitating voices?"
"Not very good, I'm afraid," the dragon said.
"Me, neither," Jack said, reaching for the transmission switch. "But
maybe I can buy us at least a little more time."
He keyed on the microphone. "Yeah, what do you want?" he demanded in the best
imitation of Lieutenant Cue Ball's voice he could manage.
But it wasn't, as he'd expected, some Shamshir flunky wanting to know who had borrowed
their transport. "Flying Turtle 505, identify yourself," came an
all-too-familiar voice.
Draycos's ears went straight up. "It is Sergeant Grisko," he whispered in
Jack's ear.
Jack nodded, feeling suddenly limp with relief. The good guys had finally arrived.
Or at least, the side that wasn't going to be shooting at him had arrived. There were
no actual good guys anywhere in this game. "Sir, this is Private Montana," he
said, switching back to his normal voice. "Squad Tango Five Zulu. Our group was
captured by the Shamshir. I've just escaped."
"Really," Grisko said. "Congratulations."
"Thank you, sir," Jack said. "But they've still got the others. We have
to get them out."
"Of course," Grisko said. "Come on in and we'll set something up. You
can fly that thing all right?"
"Reasonably well, yes, sir."
"And you're all strapped in?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said, frowning at the speaker. That was a strange question.
Come to think of it, Grisko's whole voice was sounding strange. "Shall I put down
where our Lynx landed earlier?"
"Sounds good," Grisko said. "Keep 'er steady, and come on in."
The speaker clicked off". "Okay," Jack said, shutting off the comm at
his end. "We're set."
"I do not think so," Draycos said, his voice as strange as Grisko's.
"Are there emergency escape devices aboard this aircraft?"
Jack frowned. "What in the world?"
"Do not argue," Draycos snapped, shooting out of Jack's collar to land on the
deck behind him. Suddenly the dragon seemed charged with energy and nervous tension.
"We must leave this vehicle at once. Are there escape devices aboard?"
"I can check," Jack said, the urgency in the dragon's voice silencing all
questions. "Can you fly this thing?"
"Yes," Draycos said, moving aside to let Jack out of the pilot's seat.
"Go. Quickly."
There was a tall storage cabinet built into the wall beside the exit hatchway. Jack
started toward it, then changed his mind and instead got down on his knees beside the
nearest row of seats.
His second hunch turned out to be right. Strapped beneath each seat was the
orange-striped plastic bag of a drop-pack. "Got it," he reported, pulling one
free.
"How high must we be to use it?" Draycos asked. He was, Jack saw, curled
partially on his side in the pilot's seat, his paws on the transport's controls.
"As high or as low as you want," Jack told him. "It's not like a
parachute or hang glider where you need altitude for it to work."
"Then prepare yourself and wait by the door."
"Right," Jack said, ripping open the package tab and heading aft. The
drop-pack was similar to the ones he and Uncle Virgil had used once in a midnight skulk
onto the roof of a high-rise bank, except that this one had the typical drab-ness of
military surplus. By the time he reached the hatchway, he had it on. "Ready," he
called.
"Stand prepared to open the hatchway," Draycos ordered. "When I come to
you, we will jump."
Jack took a deep breath, checking all the drop-pack's straps one final time. The
scariest part was that he still didn't know what had spooked the dragon so badly. But
anything that worried a poet-warrior of the K'da was definitely something he wanted to be
worried about, too.
His eyes fell on the cabinet beside the hatchway. On impulse, he pulled it open.
Originally, he'd thought to find the drop-packs in there. What he found instead was
actually more reasonable considering the Flying Turtle's owners.
The cabinet was a weapons locker. The entire top half was filled with the sort of small
machine guns Lieutenant Cue Ball and his men had been carrying, with the middle part taken
up by shelves full of ammo clips for the guns. At the bottom, looking almost like an
afterthought, was a rack holding six slapsticks.
Jack hesitated. The heavier weapons were tempting, but only for a second. Machine guns
were mid-range weapons, which was good; but they were also lethal and very noisy, neither
of which was what he wanted right now. The slapsticks, on the other hand, were dead quiet
and did nothing but knock out your target with an electric shock.
Of course, you also had to get close enough to physically touch him. But you couldn't
have everything. Pulling out one of the slapsticks, he made sure it was fully charged,
checked to see that the safety catch was on, then stuck it in his belt.
"Prepare," Draycos called.
"Ready," Jack called back, getting a grip on the drop-pack rip cord with one
hand and resting the other on the hatchway release pad.
And suddenly, in a flash of golden scales, Draycos spun around and dived out of the
pilot's chair. Hitting the top of one of the rows of seats, he shoved off it and bounded
toward the hatch.
Jack was ready. He slapped the release; and as the sudden hurricane of wind tore at his
hair and clothes he stretched his hand out toward Draycos.
The outstretched forepaws struck his palm and the dragon melted up his sleeve. Pulling
the rip cord, Jack pushed off backwards into the night.
The wind grabbed him, and for a horribly tangled second it threw him around, turning
him upside down and twice slapping him in the face. It was like being thrown into a raging
river made up of air instead of water.
Then the tiny thrusters built into the drop-pack kicked into action. They turned him
upright, slowing both his descent and his forward motion. The wind faded, one last set of
tree branches grabbed at his sleeve as he passed, and then his feet slapped more or less
gently into the crunchy mat of leaves.
"Whew!" he puffed, regaining his balance and looking around. They had landed
in a reasonably clear area on a small rise, giving him a good view forward.
There, fading into the distance, he could see their transport. It was still skimming
cheerfully away into the night, with no hint of mechanical trouble that he could see.
He shook his head, wondering how many miles they were now going to have to walk.
"I don't suppose you happen to know where we are?" he asked.
And then, before Draycos could answer, there was a flicker of light in the distance.
Something dark and half-seen seemed to curve up from the forest.
And with a brilliant flash, it exploded against the underside of the Flying Turtle.
Chapter 21
The air went out of Jack as if he'd been kicked in the stomach.
"Wha?" he gasped, staring in disbelief at the fireball still hugging the
underside of the transport. Noit was impossible.
But even as he watched, even as his mind tried to convince itself that he wasn't seeing
what he was seeing, a second object rose from the forest, and a second explosion blasted
at the transport's underside.
"That attack was meant for us," Draycos said, his voice low and grim as his
head rose from Jack's shoulder. "I see your military vehicles are well equipped with
ventral armor."
The words seemed to bounce around Jack's brain like angry hornets trying to get through
a window. "What are you talking about?" he heard himself say.
"Ventral armor," Draycos repeated. "Protection for the underside of the
craft. Designed to protect the troops being carried."
Jack tore his eyes away from the Flying Turtle, wavering but still holding together,
and stared at the dragon's face. "Are you insane?" he demanded. "Someone
just tried to kill us, and you're talking equipment specs?"
"Be calm, Jack," Draycos advised. With a surge of weight and pressure, he
leaped out of Jack's collar and landed on the ground in front of him. "I do not
believe they intended to kill you. I believe they meant only to disable the craft, so that
you could be taken prisoner."
A distant clattering sound wafted toward them on the night air, like a bunch of spoons
that had been dropped into a sausage grinder. Jack looked over, to find that the Flying
Turtle had finally given up and disappeared into the trees.
He didn't have any trouble seeing where it had landed, though. The reddish glow of the
fire from its burning fuel tanks was plainly visible.
"I don't believe this," he muttered. "They shot down one of their own
transports just so they could grab me again? That's crazy. They already know I can't get
them into our computers."
Draycos twisted his long neck. "You misunderstand, Jack," he said darkly.
"It was not the Shamshir who did this."
Jack frowned at him. "You can't be serious."
"I am very serious," Draycos assured him. "It was the Whinyard's Edge
who shot down the transport."
"But that doesn't make sense," Jack protested. "I was already on my way
to meet them. Why shoot at me?"
"I do not know," Draycos said. "But remember: Sergeant Grisko asked if
you were strapped in. And he instructed you to keep your course steady."
"That was just a figure of speech," Jack muttered. But even as he argued, he
knew down deep that he was batting at flies here. He'd spent over two weeks with Grisko,
and never in that time had he heard the man utter a single word of concern for anyone's
safety. Plus, there'd been that odd tone in his voice just before he signed ofT.
And he and Uncle Virgil had been betrayed too many times over the years for him not to
know what it felt like to be stabbed in the back.
"But why?" he asked. "What did I ever do to him?"
"That is what we must find out," Draycos declared.
The dragon had been gazing out at the sky as if trying to find constellations in the
unfamiliar star patterns. Now, he looked back at Jack and flipped his tail up in front of
the boy's face. "The sky is clear of watchers. Take hold."
"Wait a second," Jack protested even as he got a grip on the end of the
dragon's tail. "Where are we going?"
Draycos lifted a forepaw. "The transport is there," he said, pointing a
forepaw toward the glow. "The Kolo Seven outpost is there," he went on, shifting
his forepaw about forty-five degrees to the right. "Between them is the sentry cage
you occupied earlier this evening. I wish to intercept them near there."
"Yeah, well, just wait a second," Jack said cautiously. This whole thing had
to be some kind of huge misunderstanding. The last thing he wanted was for a gung ho K'da
warrior to go off the high dive into the revenge pool. "They didn't kill anyone.
Right? No hospital, no foul."
Draycos tossed his head. "You misunderstand, Jack," he said. "I do not
seek vengeance, but information."
"And how exactly do you expect to get it?"
"We shall see," Draycos said. "Now. Let us go."
Earlier that nightwas it still just the same night?-Jack had hurried back
from the sentry cage to the outpost. At the time, he would have sworn that that was as
fast as it was possible for him to travel through a dark forest without breaking a leg or
clotheslining himself on a low-hanging branch.
He'd been wrong. He'd been very wrong.
They raced through the forest. Not a quick walk, not a cautious jog, but a flat-out
run. Draycos was in a hurry; and a K'da warrior in a hurry was a sight to behold.
And the most astonishing part of it was that Jack never even so much as twisted an
ankle.
He never did figure that one out. Yes, he knew that Dray-cos had a different kind of
eyesight than humans, which clearly included better night vision along with the rest of
the package. And yes, the dragon also had training and experience in moving around
different types of terrain.
But that only explained how Draycos kept from hurting himself. How he managed to also
keep Jack's feet from finding any dips or tree roots along the way remained a mystery.
For the first ten minutes or so Draycos kept the pace as fast as Jack could manage,
stopping every couple of hundred yards for a quick breather. Or at least, that was what
Jack first thought the rest stops were for. It was only after the third one that he
realized the dragon wasn't so much calling a time-out as he was pausing to listen for
signs of their opponents.
It was at the ninth rest stop that those sounds began to be heard, at least by K'da
ears. From that point on, they walked quietly instead of running.
There was no conversation. There was no need for any. Jack might not have K'da military
training, but he knew all about sneaking through hostile territory trying not to be
noticed.
They had gone another ten minutes, and Jack had just about gotten his breath back from
that mad dash, when Draycos abruptly came to a halt. Jack froze in place beside him,
listening hard.
For a moment there was nothing. Then, from somewhere ahead, he heard it: a quiet voice,
two more acknowledging voices, and then a faint crackle of leaves. Slowly, the crunching
sounds moved off.
"Careful," he whispered into Draycos's ear as the sounds faded away.
"They might have left a guard behind."
The dragon's tongue flicked out twice, tasting the air. "No," he whispered
back. "All three have gone ahead. But others are moving up behind them."
Jack swallowed. Terrific. "What now?"
"We need information," Draycos said. "We must therefore set a trap. You
spoke earlier of electronic detectors?"
Abruptly, belatedly, Jack remembered the slapstick at his side. "Oh, geez,"
he breathed, snatching it out of his belt like he'd suddenly found a snake riding his hip.
"I wasn't even thinking."
"Calm yourself," Draycos assured him. "I allowed you to bring it because
it may now be useful. Come."
He headed off at an angle. Gripping the slapstick in one hand and Draycos's tail in the
other, Jack followed.
The dragon led him in a curving path, stopping at last beside a small tree with
slender, multiple trunks poking out from a twisted root system. "Here," he said.
"You may put the weapon down."
Jack obeyed. As he did so, something set between two of the thin trunks caught his eye.
It was a small plastic object, shaped like a curved cone with a flat piece of glass or
plastic on the side facing away from him. A thin metal rod connected it to one of the
trunks, and he could see a double cable attached to the cone's pointy end hanging down to
the ground.
And suddenly he realized what it was. "That's one of the Argus eyes!"
"Yes," Draycos agreed. "Do not worry. We have come up behind it."
He reached out a claw and deftly sliced one of the two cables near where it went into the
cone. "At any rate, they cannot see from it now."
"Yes, but" With an effort,Jack choked back his protest. If anyone had
been looking at the monitor when Draycos cut the cable, he might just as well have sent up
a flare announcing where they were. "Fine. What now?"
The dragon's jaws opened slightly. "Now," he said, "we find you a
tree."
Jack blinked. "A tree?"
"One which will hide you, but which they will not expect you can climb,"
Draycos continued, looking around. "One which therefore they will not think to
examine. Ah there. Come."
He headed off toward a smooth-sided tree that showed a hint of a bush-like branch
structure beginning about fifty feet up. Rather like a giant dandelion, Jack thought as
they approached. "Hold tightly," Draycos ordered, leaping a few feet up onto the
side of the tree and again wagging his tail into Jack's face.
Swallowing hard, Jack got a firm grip on the tail. Without seeming to even notice the
extra weight, Draycos started to climb.
A minute later they had reached the branches. "This should conceal you well,"
Draycos decided, pushing aside one of the leafy branches with his forepaw.
"Yeah," Jack agreed. Actually, with the way the branches spread out in layers
from the trunk, each layer perhaps three feet higher up on the trunk than the previous
one, the setup was like a woody sort of hammock with an overhead canopy. A lot cozier than
some of the places he'd hidden out over the years.
Provided, of course, you weren't afraid of heights. "Where are you going to
be?"
Draycos turned head downward, again gripping the trunk with his claws. "As I said,
I will be setting a trap," he said. "Wait here until I return."
He headed down. "Sure," Jack murmured. "Whatever you say."
Chapter 22
Jack had been trying his best, Draycos knew. And he'd done a remarkably good
job, given his youth and inexperience. Draycos appreciated that well, and once again was
reminded that he could travel far and long here in the Orion Arm without finding a better
partner.
But for all his effort and willingness, the boy was not a warrior. And to be honest,
that meant he couldn't help but be a certain amount of dead weight. Both for that reason,
and of course for Jack's own safety, Draycos was glad to have the boy out of the way for
the moment.
Now, he thought grimly as he moved down the tree trunk, their opponents would see what
a poet-warrior of the K'da could do.
Or to be more precise, they wouldn't see it. If all went well, they wouldn't see
a thing.
The first advance team was long gone by now, heading downslope toward the wreckage of
the transport. But there were at least two more groups within earshot making their way
stealthily through the forest. All of them human, Draycos decided as he tasted the air.
He didn't know why the Whinyard's Edge seemed to have few if any nonhumans among their
ranks. But that curious fact would make this particular task easier. After nearly two
months with Jack, human physical capabilities were a known quantity to him, and fairly
easy to work into his strategy.
He made his way back to where he'd left the Argus sensor and Jack's slapstick. The
sensor was fastened solidly into the tree, but a little digging with his claws and he soon
had it free. Tucking the sensor and slapstick under his forearms, he headed back in the
direction of the Kilo Seven outpost, trailing the sensor's twin cables behind him.
He had to pause three times along the way, curling around himself and freezing to
complete morionlessness beneath a convenient bush or thicket, as he ran into more trios of
searchers. He studied each group carefully as they passed, trying to decide if they were
all mere foot soldiers or whether one of them might be the line commander he was seeking.
In each case, he concluded it was the former. Apparently, the commander was still
somewhere in the rear, allowing his men time to neutralize any threats before moving out
himself.
For their part, not surprisingly, none of the soldiers took any notice of him, despite
whatever sensor equipment and night-vision devices they might be carrying. Intent upon
locating a human fugitive, they had no interest in a motionless creature of an unfamiliar
type.
Even with the stops, it took only a few minutes for him to reach the sentry cage Jack
had been manning earlier that night. No one was visible there, and for a few seconds he
studied the area from cover, mentally putting the final touches on his plans. Then,
tasting the air once more to confirm that no one was nearby, he set to work.
The first step was to replant the Argus sensor where it would be partially visible from
the sentry cage. He found a good spot about fifty feet away to the south, half hidden
beneath a bush. He wedged the metal mounting rod into the ground, leaving the sensor
itself free to rotate. Then, leaving the slapstick beside it as bait, he began playing out
the cable toward the sentry cage.
But not directly toward it. Twenty feet to the east of the tree that marked the cage
was another of the puff-top trees like the one where he'd left Jack. Dropping his end of
the twin cables near the base, he crossed to the cage and sliced the cables at that end.
The two cables, he had already noted, were held only loosely together by a series of
connector loops. Gripping the monitor end of both cables in his jaws, he climbed up into
the puff-top tree.
Earlier, he had cut the sensor cable where it entered the Argus eye. Now, careful not
to let it get hung up, he pulled the sensor cable completely through the connectors,
freeing it from the control cable and coiling it up as it came. When the far end finally
came free, he had a coil of over two hundred fifty feet.
The other end of the control cable was still connected to the sensor. He gave it a
quick examination, confirming that he could operate the mechanical linkage with his claws,
then wrapped the end around a branch for safekeeping. Hoisting the coil of sensor cable
over his shoulder, he leaped across to the sentry-cage tree, the one the round Argus
monitors were attached to. He worked his way around the trunk, then jumped to the next
tree over.
He'd noticed this type of tree earlier that evening during his brief search for enemy
soldiers. It had two very different types of branches: one of them solid and unyielding,
the other equally solid but far more flexible and springy. Choosing one of the second
type, he tied one end of his sensor cable to it and threw the rest of the coil back over
to the Argus tree.
Leaping back to the Argus tree himself, he got a firm grip on the trunk and began to
pull on the cable, bending the springy branch back toward him.
The farther he bent it, naturally, the more resistant it became to being bent any
farther. It took every bit of his strength, plus some very fancy claw work, to finally
work it all the way into position.
But finally he had it in place. Tying the center of the cable to one of the Argus
tree's thickest branches with a quick-release knot, he gathered up the remainder of the
coil and leaped back to the puff-top tree on the other side. Climbing up to the third
layer of branches, he moved a few feet along one of the thicker limbs to a conveniently
placed fork. Looping his end of the cable around it, he returned the coil to his shoulder
and jumped back to the Argus tree.
He could hear the sound of footsteps now, several sets of them, coming from the
direction of the Kilo Seven outpost. Most were the cautious movements of the patrol
soldiers he'd evaded earlier, but one was the slightly noisier tread of a senior officer
who had perhaps forgotten proper sneaking technique.
The line commander, it seemed, had finally decided to join his men in the field.
Fortunately, the trap was nearly set.
He climbed down the Argus tree with what remained of his coil, taking care that the
cable not get hung up on any of the branches. At the lowest layer of brancheswith
this type of tree, they were no more than eight feet above the ground he pulled the
cable taut and tied another quick-release knot connecting it to a branch.
That left him perhaps ten feet of loose cable. He tied a slipknot loop in the end,
draped it out of sight across two branches, then climbed back to his first quick-release,
the one holding the springy branch taut. A gentle pull released it, and there was a soft
twanging sound as the rest of the cable took up the tension.
For a moment he crouched there in the upper branches, tracing the cable with his eyes,
making sure he'd gotten everything exactly as he'd planned. From the bent springy branch,
through the edge of the Argus tree to the puff-top tree. Looped around a third-level
branch there, back to the Argus tree, quick-release knot at the lowest branches, the rest
in a slipknotted loop.
Perfect.
Leaping once more to the puff-top, he retrieved the control cable and returned one last
time to the Argus tree. Moving down the trunk, he set himself on the far side from his
approaching opponents, hiding in a thick clump of leaves.
And everything was now ready. Everything, that was, except for the one unknown still in
the equation. The question of whether the commander and his men would behave as expected.
There was no way for him to know. No way even for him to guess, really, at least not
with any certainty. Human reflexes he understood; human eyesight, too, and hearing and
stamina and strength.
But in many ways, human ways of thinking were still foreign to him. Their ways of
thinking, and their behavior, and their basic fundamental reactions.
And if he had guessed wrong, all his effort would have been for nothing.
Still, he'd gone this far. He might as well see it through. Besides, Jack surely
understood his own species; and hadn't Jack agreed that these people didn't act like true
soldiers?
Peering around the side of the trunk, he could see the approaching group as they moved
cautiously through the trees toward him. There were five in all: four patrol soldiers plus
the one who didn't step as cautiously as his companions.
Like the others, the latter's face was obscured by the half-helmet he was wearing to
support his night-vision equipment. From his build, though, Draycos could see that it
wasn't Sergeant Grisko.
Pity. After Grisko's part in the betrayal and attack on the transport, he would rather
have liked to deal with that one personally.
The group was nearly to the sentry cage now. Keeping his movements small, Draycos dug
his claws delicately into the meshed steel lines inside the control cable and gently
tugged.
There was no reaction from the Edgemen. Draycos tugged again, this time risking a quick
look over at the half-hidden sensor. It was moving, all right, turning slowly back and
forth.
Still no response. Draycos tried again, beginning to think unkind thoughts about his
opponents' competence. He could see the faint reflection glinting from the sensor's
face. Why couldn't they?
And then, just as he was wondering whether he should give up the effort, one of the
soldiers spotted it. He snapped his arm up, his fingers rapidly tracing out hand signals
Grisko had never bothered to teach Jack and his fellow recruits.
The four patrol soldiers responded with all the smooth efficiency of professionals.
Without fuss or hesitation, they drifted to both sides as they continued forward, moving
to flank whoever it was watching them from beneath the bush.
The fifth man did not join them. Instead, he eased into the sentry cage and stopped,
watching nervously from behind the Argus tree.
Draycos felt his jaws crack in an ironic smile. So he and Jack had been right. A true
warrior line commander would have gone with his men into danger, taking the same risks
they did so that he could issue prompt and reasonable orders if it became necessary.
Instead, this commander was hiding from the danger. Sending his men into the unknown
was all right, but he wasn't willing to even get his own scales dusty.
As a warrior, Draycos could feel only contempt for such behavior. But as the man's
opponent, he could feel an equally strong satisfaction.
Because in his effort to protect himself, the commander now stood directly behind the
very tree Draycos was clinging to.
Exactly where Draycos wanted him. The control cable had served its purpose. Laying it
aside, Draycos got a good grip with his left forepaw on the slip-knotted loop of sensor
cable. Beside him was the quick-release knot that held the whole thing in place.
Carefully, he eased the tip of his tail into the release loop.
The patrol soldiers were closing on the sensor now. Draycos waited; and abruptly, one
of them snorted. "Cute," he murmured. "It's one of our own Argus eyes, sir.
No one there." "But I saw it moving," one of the others insisted. "So
did I," the first confirmed, hefting his gun as he looked around. "And the
slapstick Barkin spotted on the scan is here, too. Probably bait. Like I said, someone's
being cute." "Trace the cable," the commander ordered in a hoarse whisper.
"Find him."
"Yes, sir," the first soldier said, moving toward the Argus eye as the others
fanned out toward the surrounding trees.
The commander hesitated another moment. Then, cautiously, he slipped out from behind
the Argus tree. Either getting his courage back, or else simply unwilling to get too far
away from the protection of his men and their weapons. Circling the trunk, he started
toward them.
And in that fraction of a second, as he passed beneath Draycos, the K'da warrior
struck.
Releasing his rear claws, he dropped to the same level as the commander's head before
grabbing hold of the tree again.
With his right forepaw he slashed the chin strap holding the man's helmet in place, and
in the same motion flicked the helmet up and off his head.
Reflexively, the commander grabbed for the helmet as it spun away into the night.
Draycos was ready with the loop, dropping it over his head and arms and giving it a quick
tug to tighten the slipknot around his ribs. At the same time, he slammed his right paw
against the side of the commander's head behind his ear, a spot that experience had showed
was a good place to knock out a human without too much risk of serious damage.
And even as the commander sagged unconscious in the loop of cable, Draycos flicked the
quick-release with his tail and dropped to the ground.
The quiet of the night was abruptly shattered. As the cable tension was suddenly
released, the springy tree branch off to Draycos's right snapped back to its original
position. It slapped and scattered all the other branches in its way as it moved, sending
a small shower of leaves fluttering to the ground.
The unconscious commander, tied to the other end of the cable, went the other
direction. Shooting up and to the left, he disappeared up into the puff-tree's branches.
The soldiers, facing the wrong direction, saw none of it. But they could hear just
fine; and as they spun back around they could see the shower of leaves drifting down from
the springy tree. "Sir!" one of them snapped.
"He's gone!" someone else barked. "What the?"
"Over there," the first soldier said, pointing toward the springy tree with
his gun. "Barkin, Schmidtcheck it out. Watch for more booby traps. Tomasaki,
keep your eyes open. It might be a diversion."
Two of the soldiers ran toward the springy tree, alternately peering up into the
branches and watching the ground where they were walking. The other two crouched low where
they were, facing opposite directions with their guns held ready.
Keeping to the cover of the underbrush, Draycos crept out of the sentry cage and made a
wide circle back toward the pufF-top tree. The patrol soldiers knew their business, all
right. They'd quickly guessed the style of snare trap he'd just sprung on their commander.
The only trouble was, they were looking for him in the wrong tree.
He reached the pufF-top tree about the same time they arrived at their own destination.
Putting the trunk between him and the two guards, he started up. If either of the soldiers
at the springy tree happened to turn around, he knew, they would spot him easily. But with
their attention elsewhere, he wasn't expecting either to do so.
And they didn't. He made it to the safety of the branches while they were still staring
uselessly skyward.
The commander was hanging limply out of sight among the leaves, bobbing a little as the
springy tree branch across the way waved gently in the breeze. Draycos got him up and
lying securely across the branches, then cut the cable.
He climbed a little higher into the tree, coiling the cable as he went. He wasn't
really expecting the soldiers to go so far as to climb the springy tree in their search
for their missing commander. Still, it was a possibility; and if they did, he didn't want
them tracing the cable back here. Moving out onto one of the branches, he lobbed the coil
across into the upper part of the Argus tree.
"He's not here," one of the soldiers at the springy tree reported.
"That's impossible," the first soldier insisted. "Check it again."
"I did," the other said. "Twice, visual and IR both. He's not up
there."
The first soldier swore. "A diversion, all right. Okay, spread out. Let's find
him."
"Right. Better call it in."
"No kidding," the first said sarcastically. "Base, this is Hernandez.
We've got a problem."
Listening to the conversation with half an ear, Draycos climbed back down to the
unconscious commander. The human was wearing two separate comm clips, he discovered. Even
with them turned off, they might be traceable.
Easily dealt with. K'da forelegs were too short for him to throw anything that light
very far, but there were other ways. Making sure the comm clips were turned off, he placed
them together and wrapped them in the tip of his tail. A quick flip, sling-fashion, and
they sailed off into the night.
Using the short length of cable still looped under the commander's arms, Draycos tied
the human's wrists and ankles. One of his pockets yielded a headband, while another
contained a handkerchief. The handkerchief made an adequate gag; the headband was quite
suitable for securing the man's hood down over his eyes.
And now all that was left was to wait for the search to burn itself out and move to
another area. Crawling onto the underside of the branches, he found himself some
convenient claw-grips directly beneath the commander.
After all, the searchers might eventually think to look up into this tree. And as Jack
had pointed out, a K'da heat profile did not look anything like a human's.
An hour, he estimated, and he and Jack would be free to move again. Stretching
his muscles once, he settled down to wait.
Chapter 23
The commander was awake by the time Jack let go of Draycos's tail and got
himself seated more or less securely on the branches facing him. "You sure there
isn't anyone else around?" he muttered as Draycos climbed around behind the prisoner.
The dragon shook his head, but remained silent. Jack understood; he didn't want the
prisoner to hear his voice. "Okay," he said briskly. "Let's get this over
with." Grabbing hold of the cable tying the man's wrists together, he started to pull
him up into a sitting position.
The other responded by trying to grab Jack's hand. "Hey, hey, take it easy,"
Jack warned, yanking his hand back out of reach. "Don't struggle or try anything
stupid. You're fifty feet off the ground in a very leaky tree."
The man seemed to see the logic in that. He grunted behind his gag and subsided.
"All we want is a little chat," Jack went on, pulling him upright again. This
time the other didn't struggle. "A quiet little chat," he added.
"You try shouting for help and we'll have to shut you up. A fair chance we'll lose
your balance in the process. Understand?"
The man grunted again. Jack glanced at Draycos, making sure the dragon was standing
ready but out of the prisoner's sight. Then, reaching over, he pulled off the gag.
"Montana?" the other rumbled, his voice the croak of a man with too dry a
mouth. He worked his lips a moment and tried again. "It's Montana, isn't it?" he
demanded.
Jack started. He knew that voice. "Colonel Elkor?" he asked, pulling off the
headband and lifting the man's hood.
It was Colonel Elkor, all right, glaring at Jack like he was trying to push him out of
the tree by sheer willpower. "Well, well," Jack said, filling in time as he
tried to get his brain rebooted. He'd expected Sergeant Grisko or maybe Lieutenant Basht
to be leading this charge. To have a full colonel show up meant this was bigger than he'd
thought.
"You're a pretty big fish to be flopping around in this size pond," he went
on. "I guess I never saw you as the great outdoors type."
"I wondered about you," Elkor growled. "So is Kayna working for you? Or
is it the other way around?"
He started to turn. Draycos batted him warningly against the side of the head and he
seemed to think better of the idea. "I'll bet it's Kayna who's calling the
shots," he decided. "Who are you working for? The Shamshir, or someone
else?"
"This is my interrogation, thanks all the same," Jack said. "But just
for the record, I'm not working for anyone."
Elkor snorted derisively. "Right. You just felt like a midnight stroll one night.
And then, what, you needed to use the latrine?"
Jack shook his head. "I already told you. The Shamshir sneaked into the camp and
captured us. I escaped and"
"Don't play dumb," Elkor cut him off harshly. "I'm talking about back on
Carrion."
"Oh," Jack said, a little lamely. "That."
"Oh. That," Elkor mimicked. "Basht was pretty sure it was Kayna. But I
wondered about you. If we'd had time to really check out your application"
"Wait a second," Jack said, frowning as he thought back on that failed
midnight raid. Was he suggesting that had been Alison coming up the stairs?
"I'm sorry, but I'm confused here. What does Alison have to do with any of
this?"
For the first time Elkor's glare seemed to crack a little. "Are you saying that wasn't
you in the HQ building?"
Jack hesitated. Common sense, plus years of Uncle Virgil's tirades on the subject, said
you never gave away information for free. But he was thoroughly lost here, and he had the
odd feeling that Elkor wasn't exactly sitting steady on this stack of blocks either. Maybe
it would be worth pooling their information a little.
"I did sneak into the HQ, yes," he told Elkor. "I was looking for some
computer data. But I had to run for it when someone headed my direction laying down a
sopor gas pattern. I assumed at the time it was a guard."
Elkor snorted again. "Trust me, if it had been one of us you would have
known it. Sopor gas is for sissies."
"Or for people who don't want anyone knowing they'd been there," Jack pointed
out. "So you think that was Alison?"
Elkor regarded him coolly. "So what computer information were you looking
for?"
Jack shrugged. "Fine. Have it your way."
He began shaking out the handkerchief he'd taken from around the colonel's mouth.
"Even with the gag, I'll bet they'll be able to hear you from down there. Assuming
they ever come back to this area to look, of course."
He reached the handkerchief toward Elkor. The other leaned away, then jerked as Draycos
caught his head firmly between his forepaws. "Wait a second," he said hastily.
"All right, all right. What do you want to know?"
"I want to know what's going on," Jack told him, lowering the handkerchief
but keeping it in sight. "You can start by telling me what happened to the rest of
the Edgemen at Kilo Seven."
Elkor's lips compressed into a thin line. "We pulled them out," he said
grudgingly. "We knew the Shamshir would be raiding the place and didn't want them
getting hurt."
"Oh, I see," Jack said. "You didn't care enough about us to even
warn us, but"
He broke off, staring at the man. Suddenly, it was all making terrible sense. "You
called the Shamshir down on us, didn't you?" he said. "You let them
capture us."
"One of you was a spy and a traitor," Elkor said. "In the Whinyard's
Edge, we know how to deal with traitors."
He smiled unpleasantly, clearly enjoying Jack's discomfort. "Now, now, don't
pout," he said, mock-soothingly. "What are you going to do, call foul and run
crying home to Mommy? This is the real world, kid. Get used to it."
"What about the others?" Jack asked, ignoring the gibe. "Why didn't you
just take Alison and me out and shoot us, if that was what you wanted?"
"Not very sporting to line you up against a wall," Elkor said. "Besides,
we didn't just want you dead. We wanted information. We figured that if you were working
for the Shamshir, one of you would get a big welcome when they snatched you."
He cocked his head. "Or else one of you would come back and claim to be an escaped
hero."
"And if we weren't working for the Shamshir?"
Elkor shrugged. "You were working for someone. Might as well let the
Shamshir beat it out of you than bother with it ourselves."
Jack hissed between his teeth. "And of course, you couldn't let us take working
computer codes to them," he said. "So you made sure you scrambled them before we
landed on Sunright."
"After we landed, actually," Elkor said offhandedly. "Not that it
matters."
"No, not really," Jack said. "So who's behind all this?"
Elkor frowned. "Who's behind all what?"
"Who's pulling your strings?" Jack amplified. "Who's really after this
mine? Is it Cornelius Braxton?"
Elkor snorted. "Don't be ridiculous. You think someone as big as Braxton would
even notice an operation this small?"
"Arthur Neverlin, then?" Jack persisted.
"Never heard of him."
"But then"
"No one pulls our strings, kid," Elkor cut him off coldly. "No one but
us. If whoever you're working for is thinking about trying to bulldoze his way into this,
you can tell him to forget it. Once we've got hold of that mine, it's going to be ours,
period. No one else is going to get a piece of it. You got that?"
"Yeah, I got it," Jack said. So Lieutenant Cue Ball had been right. Neither
mercenary group cared a downwind spit about the people they'd been hired to protect. They
were in it for the daublite mine, and that was it. "It's so much easier to fight and
kill and steal someone else's mine than go dig one yourselves."
"Mines cost money," Elkor countered. "Lives are cheap. Do the
math."
"Yeah, well, some lives are apparently cheaper than others," Jack said.
"That still doesn't explain why you threw Jommy and the rest of them to the wolves
along with Alison and me."
Elkor sniffed. "What's this 'and me' stuff? Kayna was the chief suspect, not you.
You were just one of the known contacts."
Jack blinked. "The what?"
"She talked to you, Montana," Elkor said patiently. "Grisko told us.
Alone, and at length, out on the shooting range. Do I have to draw you a picture?"
Jack stared at him in disbelief. "Let me get this straight," he said slowly.
"Alison has a chat with, say, Rogan Mbusu, maybe about nothing more classified than
the lousy food. And suddenly you're just going to throw him away? Just on the off chance
that she might have passed secret information to him?"
"You make the assumption that any of you were worth much to begin with,"
Elkor said. "You ever hear the term 'cannon fodder'?"
Jack swallowed hard. "Yes."
"It's rather out of date, actually," Elkor went on. "No one but a few
primitives use real cannon anymore. But the term still applies."
"Kind of an expensive hobby," Jack murmured. "You still have to pay all
of our indenture fees."
"You should read the contract more closely sometime," Elkor suggested
blandly. "There are all sorts of neat clauses that cover death or capture in a war
zone when the subject has failed to properly defend himself. Another good reason to bring
you out here instead of dealing with you back on Carrion."
He lifted his eyebrows. "You did fail to defend yourselves, didn't you? I
hadn't heard any reports of gunfire."
For a long moment Jack just looked at him, wondering what Draycos would say if he
reached over and pushed the smug son of a snake out of the tree. Uncle Virgil would have,
he suspected. Even Draycos, for all his warrior ethic, was crouched there with his eyes
burning like those of an avenging angel. He probably wouldn't lift a single claw to save
scum like this.
He took a deep breath. No. He'd never been a killer, or even an avenger. He'd been a
thief; and even there he was supposed to be reformed.
And he was probably selling Draycos short anyway. The dragon had gotten that look in
his eye before, and he hadn't murdered anyone yet.
"You are a small, petty, pathetic little man," he told Elkor quietly.
"You deserve to die. With any justice, it'll be at the hands of your own
people."
Elkor's mouth twitched in a lopsided smile. "So you don't even have the guts to
kill me, huh? You're no soldier, Montana. You never will be."
"I can live with that," Jack told him. "Incidentally, I have lived
in the real world, sometimes among people who would have pushed you out of this tree ten
minutes ago if you'd done this to them."
Elkor snorted. "If you're hinting that you've got friends, save it," he said.
"I don't scare that easily."
"I'm not trying to scare you," Jack said. "And none of them are my
friends. I was simply pointing out that none of them ever tried to kill the casual
acquaintances of people they were mad at. Even they had more class than that."
"Did I say I needed your approval?" Elkor asked. "Or even wanted
it?"
"Hardly," Jack said, suddenly thoroughly weary of this man. "Fine. We're
going. Where are your transports?"
A slight frown creased Elkor's forehead. "Why?"
"Why do you think?" Jack retorted. "So we can get out of here. Don't
worry, I'm not going to steal it. All I want is to use the comm."
"And you think I'm going to tell you?"
With a sigh, Jack pulled out the small folding knife from his belt pack. He locked it
open and waved it under Elkor's eyes. "That cable you're tied with is pretty
tough," he reminded the other. "Even with this, it'll take you quite awhile to
cut through it. Would you rather use your teeth?"
Elkor eyed the knife. "They're on the west side of the outpost," he muttered.
"In a clearing about two hundred yards due west of the sentry cage on that side. But
you'll never make it past the guards."
"We'll take our chances." Reaching up, Jack drove the tip of the knife blade
into the tree trunk a couple of feet above Elkor's head. "Help yourself after we're
gone," he said, pulling the colonel's hood over his eyes again.
Catching Draycos's eye, he nodded. "Come on, buddy," he said. "Let's
go."
They headed down the tree, Draycos climbing down backwards as Jack dangled onto his
tail beneath him. They reached the ground without incident and headed off through the
woods toward the area where Elkor had said the transports were located. If they weren't
there, Jack promised himself darkly, he would make sure to send Draycos back up the tree
and get his knife back.
"Then the disturbance outside the training camp was a diversion for Alison's
benefit?" Draycos murmured as they slipped through the trees.
Jack blinked, forcing himself back from half-hoped-for scenarios of revenge.
"What? Oh. Yeah, I suppose that makes the most sense. I wonder who she's working
for."
"We had already decided it was not the Shamshir," Draycos reminded him.
"Could it be a different mercenary group?"
Jack frowned. With his own chances of escape weighing heavily on his mind, the last
thing he was interested in right now was Alison Kayna's possible background and friends.
Still, it was an intriguing question. "I don't think so," he told the dragon
slowly. "With all that's happening here, it would make sense for the Shamshir to send
in whoever they had handy to grab some quick information about the Edge's plans for
Sun-right. But any other mere group ought to be able to take the time to find an adult to
use as a spy instead of a kid."
Draycos seemed to digest that. "Then who is she working for? Were we wrong
about her connection to the Shamshir?"
"I don't know," Jack said as a sudden and very unpleasant thought sent a
creepy sensation tingling across the back of his neck. "You don't suppose she might
be working for Neverlin, do you?"
"I thought we decided he was too busy hiding from Braxton to bother us."
"You decided that," Jack countered, "I never did."
The dragon twitched his tail. "I do not believe Neverlin could have moved this
quickly," he said firmly. "And how could he have known we would be joining this
particular mercenary group? Alison was clearly already signed up before we arrived."
"I suppose," Jack conceded reluctantly. "Yeah, you're probably
right."
But the creepy sensation refused to fade completely away.
They were making their cautious way around the perimeter of the outpost before Draycos
spoke again. "Where are we going?"
"Weren't you listening?" Jack asked. "We're going to find a transport,
you're going to knock out whatever guards there are, and we're going to whistle up the Essenay."
"We are leaving, then?"
Jack grimaced. "Look, Draycos, I'm sorry," he said. "It just didn't work
out. We'll back off, regroup, and try to get the Djinn-90 data some other way."
"I was not thinking about the information," Draycos said. "I was
thinking about those still in Shamshir hands."
"What about them?"
"Did you intend to simply leave them there?"
Jack frowned down at the dragon padding soundlessly through the dead leaves at his
side. Uh-oh. "Hey, I know how you feel about that sort of thing," he said
cautiously. "K'da warrior ethic, and all that. But I think that asking Colonel Elkor
for a rescue party is pretty much out of the question."
"Certainly," Draycos agreed. "That means we will have to do it
alone."
Jack took a careful breath. "Look," he said, as if talking to a very small
child. "I know you're upset. But you have to understand the realities of the
situation. We're talking about two of usyou and meagainst a whole mercenary
force."
"Dahtill City is not a military base," Draycos pointed out. "There will
be a limit on the number of soldiers to oppose us."
"Unless they brought in more after our escape," Jack countered. "They
could have, you know."
"If more soldiers were summoned, it would be to search for you outside the
city," the dragon pointed out reasonably. "Not to reinforce those inside."
Jack clenched his teeth. This was not going well at all. "We hardly even know
these kids," he said. "Anyway, it's Alison's fault they're there, not
mine."
"Fault is of no matter," Draycos said. "They are your comrades. Your
fellow soldiers. A warrior does not simply abandon those of his own side. Not when there
is a chance of saving them."
"Even if it means getting killed?" Jack shot back harshly. "We could,
you know. Those guns of theirs weren't just for show. We go charging in, and they're going
to start shooting. What happens to your people then? Hmm?"
For a long minute they walked in silence. "Do you remember our first meeting,
Jack?" Draycos asked at last. "Despite your objections, I took the time to aid a
wounded soldier of the other side."
"You kept him from burning his hands and neck in hot dirt," Jack said,
grimacing at the memory. "And I still think it was a waste of time."
"The point is that a warrior does that which is right," the dragon said.
"Not because he may profit from it. Because it is right."
"What if I say no?" Jack challenged. "Are you going to go in without
me?"
Draycos didn't answer, and after a moment Jack sighed. "You got a plan?"
"I do not believe it will be difficult," Draycos said. "As you pointed
out, neither side wishes to risk a serious battle near the daublite mine. With two armed
vehicles, we may be able to persuade them to surrender the prisoners without a
fight."
It could work, Jack realized grudgingly. Particularly if Lieutenant Cue Ball had
already discovered that none of the squad could do anything with the stolen computers.
There wouldn't be much point in hanging onto them. "You mentioned two transports. You
planning on flying the second one yourself?"
"I actually referred to only one transport," Draycos said. "The other
armed vehicle will be the Essenay."
"And how do you expect to call in Uncle Virge without everyone from here to
Dahtill City knowing the plan?"
"You may leave that to me," Draycos said. "Will you assist me?"
Jack sniffed. "Do I have a choice?"
"Yes," Draycos said quietly. "You are my host. If you refuse to help me
rescue the others, I will honor your wishes."
"That's part of the warrior ethic, too, I suppose?"
"Yes."
They walked a few more steps in silence. "You're going to make a liar of me, you
know," Jack finally said in resignation. "I told Colonel Elkor we weren't going
to steal his transport. Now we're going to do it anyway."
"Do not worry," Draycos assured him. "When you made that statement, it
was indeed the truth. There was no intent to deceive. Hence, there was no lie."
Jack looked down at him. "That was supposed to be a joke."
The dragon turned his green eyes upward, his jaws opening slightly. "Yes, I
know," he said. "Shall we go?"
Jack shook his head. "Lead the way."
Chapter 24
There were two soldiers standing guard beside the Lynx transports when Jack
and Draycos arrived at the edge of the clearing. Two minutes later, the guards were no
longer standing.
"Can you start the engines?" Draycos asked as Jack dropped into the pilot's
seat.
"I think so," Jack said, studying the control board. "But it'll take a
couple of minutes. This pilot was smart enough to lock it down before he left."
"Your sewer-rat technique?"
"A version of it, yes," Jack said, keying in the program and then taking a
moment to peer out the cockpit windscreen. So far there weren't any other Edgemen in
sight. But that could change at any time.
"What about communications?"
"The comm isn't locked," Jack said doubtfully. "But I still don't know
how you're going to tell Uncle Virge anything without bringing the whole Shamshir army
down on top of us."
"You shall see," Draycos said. "Will you make the correct
settings?"
Jack reached over and tuned the equipment to his comrn clip's frequency. "Okay,
it's set," he said, pointing to the microphone switch. "Punch that, and you're
on the air."
"Understood," Draycos said, leaning his torso up onto the control board.
"You must stay quiet while I speak. Both Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge listeners may
recognize your voice."
Jack nodded. "Got it."
Reaching over, Draycos touched the switch. "Until the brave achieve their
rest," he called, his voice deep and formal, "the warrior must put forth his
best. And to the last our home defend."
Jack blinked. He knew that tone. Knew it all too well. It was the rather pretentious
style Draycos liked to use when reciting his poetry.
What in the world was he doing?
Uncle Virge must have been wondering that, too. For a handful of seconds there was no
response. Then, to Jack's amazement, the computer's voice came over the speaker, in the
same overbearing tone. "The warfire blazes all around, the killing fields do
beckon," he announced. "By curve or straight-line reckon?"
"The dog tells all; the fires blast," Draycos responded. "Until the
fury's spent at last."
There was another pause, a longer one this time. "You speak in riddles in my
ear," Uncle Virge said. "While all is dark and dank and drear, how can one
silence fears unseen?"
"By what foul deed is treason learned?" Draycos came back. "By what hand
are we crushed? The fields and vineyards hushed."
"They held it strong against our might," Uncle Virge said. "But through
the desert we did go, and took it ere the fall of night."
"The scoffers say we face the night," Draycos came back. "That none
shall from that road return. The scoffer's words and fears I spurn."
"The world will tremble, warns the foe," Uncle Virge said. "And all will
fall like burning leaves. To stand, though none endure to grieve."
With a delicate flick of his claw, Draycos shut off the comm. "How soon may we
leave?" he asked.
Jack had been staring at the dragon in fascination. Now, with an effort, he tore his
eyes away and found the status board. "Uh . . . we're ready now, looks like."
"Then let us be away," Draycos said. "The Essenay will meet us at
Dahtill City."
Jack cut in the lifters, and the transport started up into the night sky. No one
appeared at the edge of the clearing as he cleared the treetops, shouting at him to come
back. Even better, no one showed up and started shooting.
The nav system included a map of the local area. Jack studied it a moment, then turned
the transport's nose toward Dahtill City. He did a quick sensor scan of the sky around
them, but no one was visible there, either. Apparently, everyone was still out searching
for him.
"We are on course?" Draycos asked.
"Sure," Jack said, leaning back in his seat and looking over at the dragon.
"Okay, I give up. What in the name of self-buttering brussels sprouts was that all
about?"
"I was giving him information on our destination," the dragon said blandly.
"Did I not say I would do so?"
"Don't be cute," Jack growled. "It's not a good night for it. Just tell
me what you did."
Draycos ducked his head. "My apologies. As I have mentioned, I have been
translating my poetry into your language and reciting it to Uncle Virge."
Jack frowned, thinking back over the conversation he'd just heard. It had sounded like
poetry, all right. But there had been something wrong with it. Something odd about the
pacing, or the flow, or the rhyme scheme . . .
And then it hit him. "You were missing a line," he said. "Each stanza of
the poem was missing a line."
Draycos's neck arched. "Very good," he said. "I am impressed."
"Thank you," Jack said, rather pleased by it himself. "And the missing
line was the message?"
"Exactly," Draycos said. "The complete first stanza that I spoke should
have been: 'Until the brave achieve their rest, the warrior must put forth his best. Come
here to me, my oldest friend, and to the last our home defend.' "
Jack thought back. "The third line was missing," he said. " 'Come here
to me, my oldest friend.' "
"Correct," Draycos said. "Uncle Virge is not precisely my oldest friend,
but it was the closest line I knew to what we needed."
"Definitely close enough," Jack agreed. "Especially since he's pretty
much my oldest friend. What about the others? Uncle Virge said something next about
warfire?"
"'The warfire blazes all around, the killing fields do beckon,' " Draycos
recited. " 'How shall my warrior friend be found? By curve or straight-line reckon?'
"
" 'How shall my warrior friend be found,' "Jack repeated the missing line.
"He wanted to know where we were."
"Correct," Draycos said. "As you can see, he understood quickly what I
was doing."
"Uncle Virgil always was a smart old fox," Jack agreed. "Your next one
was shorter, wasn't it?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "It was the only one that did not come from one of
my poems. I created it on the moment to identify the place where we were headed."
Jack gazed out at the stars, thinking back. The dog tells all; the fires blast.
Until the fury's spent at last. It didn't make any more sense to him the second time
around than it had the first. "You got me," he said.
"Think of the words," Draycos suggested. "Think of where we are
going."
"I still don't"Jack broke off. "You're not serious. 'Dog tells'?
Dahtill? Dahtill City?"
"It was the best I could create," Draycos said apologetically. "I hoped
he would understand."
"I guess he didn't," Jack said. "You still had a lot more to say to each
other."
"True," the dragon conceded. "His next stanza was a question. 'You speak
in riddles in my ear. What do you say, what do you mean? While all is dark and dank and
drear, how can one silence fears unseen?' "
" 'What do you say, what do you mean?'" Jack murmured. "I don't blame
him."
"I then tried to give him a useful clue," Draycos said. " 'By what foul
deed is treason learned? By what hand are we crushed? The mines collapse, the cities
burned, the fields and vineyards hushed.'"
"The mines collapse, the cities burned," Jack said, nodding. "A city
with a mine beside it."
"He understood then, but was not absolutely certain," Draycos said. "
'We sought the city of our foe. They held it strong against our might. But through the
desert we did go, and took it ere the fall of night.' "
"The city of our foe," Jack said. "That covers Dahtill City, all right,
and probably fifty others along with it."
"But no other is so near to us," Draycos pointed out. "And none that I
know of is associated with an important mine. At any rate, I told him he was correct. 'The
scoffers say we face the night, that none shall from that road return. But I say that your
word is right; the scoffer's words and fears I spurn.'"
But I say that your word is right. "I just hope he really did get the
dog-tell pun."
"We shall soon find out," Draycos agreed. "At any rate, he then told me
he was leaving."
" 'The world will tremble, warns the foe,' " Jack quoted, just to show he
could do it. " 'And all will fall like burning leaves.' Next?"
"'But I must to my friends now go,'" Draycos supplied the missing line.
" 'To stand, though none endure to grieve.' "
For a moment the cockpit was silent. "Well, if it doesn't work, it sure
should have," Jack concluded. "Pretty classy."
"Thank you," the dragon said.
"You're welcome," Jack said. "I hope you've got an equally clever plan
for getting the others out."
"Actually . . ."
Jack eyed him. "You don't, do you?"
"It is difficult to plan with so many variables," the dragon hedged. "We
do not know where our enemies will be positioned."
"I thought they were all going to be out looking for me," Jack reminded him.
"Some may be," Draycos agreed. "But others will have stayed behind. At
any rate, even the searchers may have returned by this time."
"In other words, you're going to wing it."
The tip of the dragon's tail twitched. "That is not precisely how I would have
phrased it," he said. "But it is basically accurate."
Jack sighed. "I thought so."
Chapter 25
With Dahtill City five more minutes away, Jack took the Lynx down to treetop
height. "I take it we're not jumping out this time?" he asked Draycos.
"Correct," Draycos called from the back, where he was rummaging through the
various storage lockers. "We may require this vehicle to move the prisoners. Is its
ventral armor as strong as that of the Flying Turtle we used earlier?"
"They're similar models, so probably," Jack said. Not that any amount of
armor would do them any good if the Shamshir knocked out the lifters. "Any luck back
there?"
"Very little," Draycos reported. "The soldiers must have taken most of
the weapons with them on their search for you. I have found only two small MP-50 machine
guns, with two spare clips each."
Killing weapons, the kind Jack had spent his life avoiding. "Nothing else?"
he asked. "No sopor gas or slapsticks or anything like that?"
"The only other weapons are nine Class II explosive grenades," Draycos said.
"There are no nonlethal weapons of the sort you prefer. I am sorry."
Jack grimaced. "Me, too. Well, I guess we'll have to do what we can. Maybe we can
just pin the Shamshir down while Uncle Virge swoops in and"
"What was that?" Draycos cut him off.
Jack threw a quick look toward the horizon, then checked his sensor displays. There was
nothing unusual that he could see. "What was what?"
"A small flash of light directly ahead," Draycos said, covering the length of
the transport in two bounds to land at Jack's side. "Thereit came again."
"I didn't see anything," Jack said, learning forward and staring out into the
night. "What did it look like?"
"Like the discharge of a Gompers flash rifle," Draycos said. "As if far
in the distance"
And then, faintly, it came again. A flicker of light, like a small flash of lightning
coming from below the horizon. "You mean like that?" Jack asked.
"Exactly," Draycos said. "Thereanother."
"Someone's doing some shooting," Jack muttered, watching the flashes. "A
lot of shooting."
"The Shamshir would not execute their prisoners, would they?" Draycos asked,
his voice dark and ominous.
"I hope not," Jack said, studying the flickers of light. There didn't seem to
be any pattern to them, no nice neat one-two-three sequence. "Anyway, that doesn't
look like a firing squad."
"Then there is a battle," Draycos concluded. "I will fly. You will
shoot."
"Wait a second," Jack objected. "I will shoot what?"
"We will know when we arrive," Draycos said, nudging Jack impatiently with
the side of his head. "Go. You must prepare."
"But the Essenay's not here yet."
"We have no choice," Draycos said firmly. "We must see what is
happening. Go."
Reluctantly, Jack climbed out of the pilot's seat. "I don't like this," he
said. "Why don't we land someplace near the city and take a quiet look instead of
charging blindly in?"
"There is no time," Draycos said, sliding into Jack's seat and gripping the
controls with his paws. "Whether the Agri are fighting the Shamshir, or whether the
Whinyard's Edge has launched their own strike, we cannot afford a delay."
"What makes you think that?"
"Call it warrior's instinct." Draycos turned his green eyes on Jack,
"Go. Prepare."
"Terrific," Jack muttered, heading aft to where Draycos had laid out the
MP-50s. Why the Agri should suddenly have risen up against the Shamshir he couldn't
imagine. And the idea that the Edge would have gotten involved was completely ridiculous.
Unless they'd gone to Dahtill City looking for him. Maybe Colonel Elkor was madder at
getting stuck up that tree than he'd thought.
He reached the back and picked up one of the MP-50s. For such a relatively small gun,
it was awfully heavy. Fortunately, Draycos had already loaded the ammo clip into it, since
Jack couldn't remember exactly how to do that. "Any particular side you want me
on?" he called.
"Use the right-hand side," Draycos said.
"Okay." Grabbing two spare clips and stuffing them into his jacket pockets,
he crossed to the right-hand hatchway.
Unlike the Flying Turtle they'd escaped in earlier, the Lynx had a pair of safety
harnesses attached to the bulkhead beside each of the side hatches. Designed for soldiers
to use while shooting outside, he decided as he slipped one of them on and tightened it
into place. "How am I supposed to know what to shoot at?" he called to Draycos.
"I will direct your fire," the dragon said. "We have cleared the last
trees now and are approaching the city from the southwest. Prepare."
Taking a deep breath, Jack got a firm grip on his gun and hit the hatchway release. The
panel slid up into the ceiling, and for the second time that night he found himself
standing at the edge of a hurricane.
He took another deep breath, his mind flashing back to some of the stupider jobs he and
Uncle Virgil had pulled when he was little. Back then, he'd often felt himself standing
just like this, balanced at the edge of disaster, waiting for Uncle Virgil to give the
signal. Wondering the whole time whether either of them would be alive to see another
sunrise.
Here, the sun wouldn't be up for at least a couple more hours. He wondered if he would
be alive to see it.
And then, from the cockpit, he heard a startled bark. "What?" he demanded,
his heartbeat suddenly thudding extra hard in his throat.
"They are free," Draycos called back. "Observe." He twisted the
transport around, sending Jack swinging on his harness halfway out the hatchway.
And as he hung balanced there, he was treated to a bird's-eye view of an amazing scene.
Directly ahead was the landing area at the edge of the city, the one he and Draycos had
escaped from. The two Flying Turtles he'd left behind were still there, facing the two
Shamshir buildings. From the windows of those buildings a hail of machine gun bullets was
blasting out at one of the transports, accompanied by an occasional flash of laser fire.
And at the focus of all that fury, firing gamely back at their attackers, was the rest
of Technical Squad Tango Five Zulu.
Jommy and Li were crouched in the open hatchway, Jommy with some kind of machine gun,
Li firing blasts with a Gompers flash rifle. Below them, lying flat on the ground behind
one of the transport's landing skids, were Rogan and Brinkster, also with machine guns.
Alison was nowhere in sight, but it wasn't hard to guess where she was. Ten to one she
was already inside the transport, trying to get it started.
Jack shook his head, half amazed, half annoyed. Here he'd come all this way back to
rescue them, and they'd already gotten out on their own.
"You must give covering fire," Draycos called from the cockpit.
Jack took another look. The dragon was right. The squad was fighting back well enough,
but unless Alison could get the Flying Turtle started real soon, they were going to run
out of ammunition long before the Shamshir gave up and went away. "Right," he
called back between clenched teeth. "What do I do?"
A second later he was thrown back inside as the dragon swung them around in a tight
circle. Just in time; even as he grabbed for a strap to steady himself, a burst of gunfire
raked across the side of the transport, some of the rounds chewing up the ceiling and far
wall. "Stay clear!" Draycos shouted.
"You bet," Jack ground out, suddenly remembering what exacdy it was he had
gotten himself into. This wasn't some practice drill, and those Shamshir soldiers out
there weren't firing marker lasers.
Draycos straightened the Lynx out, and Jack pulled himself cautiously back to the door.
They had overshot the scene of the battle, he saw, and were coming back around behind the
buildings. Apparently Draycos meant for him to shoot at the Shamshir from behind.
That was fine with him. He'd just as soon fire from a direction the other guys' guns
weren't pointed at. He flipped the firing lever like the Whinyard's Edge manual had
showed, pointed the gun in the general direction of the buildings, and pulled the trigger.
If it hadn't been for the harness holding him up, he would have instantly found himself
flat on his back. As it was, he nearly wound up there anyway. The MP-50 had a kick like an
angry Brummga, a hundred times more powerful than the simple little tangler gun he was
used to.
The weapon also had a definite mind of its own. Even as he staggered backward, the
muzzle seemed to jump upward, and before he could get his finger off the trigger his burst
had chewed up a little more of the transport's ceiling.
"Jack!"
"I'm okay," Jack called back, struggling back to his feet and trying to
salvage some shreds of dignity. "I've never fired one of these things, that's
all."
"Come up here," Draycos ordered. "You will fly. I will shoot."
So much for dignity. So much, too, for any possible career as a soldier. Just in case
he'd been interested in one. "Sure," Jack muttered, untangling himself from his
harness and running forward.
They were nearly back to the edge of the forest now, Jack saw as Draycos hopped out of
the pilot's seat and he hopped in. "What do you want me to do?" he asked.
"Take us behind the Shamshir buildings," Draycos instructed. Snatching the
MP-50 from Jack's hands, he headed aft, loping along on three legs as he hugged the
machine gun to his belly with the other.
"Pvight," Jack said, sending the transport around again in a smooth curve. He
caught a glimpse of the darkened mine buildings as he swung past, and then they were
sweeping back toward the firefight.
There was a fresh sound of wind behind him. He glanced back, saw that Draycos had
opened the left-hand hatchway door and was crouching beside it. "Better use the
safety harness," Jack called.
"I will be all right," the dragon replied. "Just keep your flight
movements smooth."
Jack turned back to his flying, feeling his stomach trying hard to turn itself inside
out. Now that the element of surprise was gone, the Shamshir weren't going to just sit
there and let the intruder take potshots at them.
And indeed, the transport's bow and windscreen were already starting to crackle with
the impact of bullets. Biting down hard on his lip, trying to remember Draycos's
optimistic assumptions about the Lynx's armor, he forced himself to ignore the deadly hail
and to keep his head high enough to see where he was going. From the rear he could hear
the chatter of Draycos's gun as they buzzed past the building.
And then, even as he cautiously lifted his head, the landscape ahead of him suddenly
flared with light.
For that first awful second, he thought the Shamshir had blown up the Flying Turtle,
killing the rest of his squad. Heart pounding in his ears, he swung the Lynx around.
It hadn't been the Flying Turtle that had blown up. Instead, it was one of the Agri
hardened-mud huts that was now blazing furiously away. The very hut, in fact, that he'd
been locked into after his little chat with Lieutenant Cue Ball.
The hut that had contained, among other things, grenades and spare ammunition.
"Did it work?" Draycos asked. He was at Jack's side now, peering over his
shoulder.
"I don't know," Jack said. "How exactly was it supposed to
work?"
The dragon's tongue flicked out. "Like so."
To Jack's amazement, the Shamshir soldiers were on the move. Not toward the transport,
like they had decided to rush it, but away.
All of them. Running away from the two buildings like the whole Whinyard's Edge was
after them.
Jack cleared his throat. "You think they're running because of the risk of burning
explosives next door?" he asked carefully.
"Of course," Draycos said, a distinct note of satisfaction in his voice.
"Not maybe because there might be something else in the hut?" Jack went on.
"Something maybe a little nastier than grenades?"
"I" Draycos broke off. "I do not know."
"Me, neither," Jack said grimly. "What do you say we get the squad
aboard and get out of here?"
"Agreed," Draycos said. Setting his gun onto the deck, he leaped up and
vanished down the back of Jack's shirt. "And Jack?"
"Yes?"
The dragon's head rose a little from his shoulder. "Do not land us too close to
the fire. Just in case."
Chapter 26
Jack put the Lynx down between the burning hut and the squad's chosen Flying
Turtle. "Jommy?" he shouted through the open hatchway before stepping into view.
"It's Jack Montana. Don't shoot."
"Okay," Jommy called back. "Come on."
Jack hopped down from the door. "Everyone okay?" he called as he hurried
toward them.
"So far," Jommy grunted. "Though if Kayna can't get this thing started,
that could change real fast."
"I told him it was you," Rogan piped up. The smaller boy was shaking where he
lay, but he held his gun bravely at the ready. "I told him. He didn't believe
me."
"Don't worry, I wouldn't have believed you, either," Jack said, jerking his
head back toward his transport. "Come on everybody get aboard and let's get out
of here."
"We won't get far in that one," Li warned. She gestured over Jack's shoulder
with the muzzle of her Gompers. "They got your tanks."
Jack turned and looked. Sure enough, there was a ragged gash in the side of the
transport that was leaking fuel like a miniature waterfall. "We'll have to take
yours, then," he said. "You said Alison's in there?"
"Yeah," Jommy said, glancing around. "She said she could get it
started."
"I'll give her a hand," Jack said, slinging his MP-50 over his shoulder.
"Keep a sharp eye. When the Shamshir ran off, I don't think they were really giving
up."
He found Alison in the pilot's seat, muttering darkly at the control board. "How's
it going?" Jack asked, coming up beside her.
"It's frozen solid," she growled, throwing him a curious look. "So you
came back, huh?"
"That's the rumor, anyway," Jack said, leaning over her shoulder to try a
couple of keys. It was frozen, all right. "What have you tried?"
"What, are you an expert on computer systems?"
"On breaking into them, yes," Jack shot back, trying to think. The good news
was that the computer setup was probably similar to the Edge system he'd successfully
hacked into on the leaking shuttle out there.
The bad news was that whatever Alison had done to it, she'd probably locked it down so
tight that his sewer-rat trick wouldn't work.
Which left them only one option. "We need the start key," he told her,
turning and heading aft. "There ought to be a copy on one of the computers in the
Shamshir HQ. I'll go get it."
She was at his side before he even got to the hatchway. "I'll go with you,"
she said, snatching up a machine gun from the floor.
"Forget it," he said, throwing her an annoyed glare. There was a fair chance
there were still some soldiers lurking in the building, and the last thing he wanted was
to have Draycos's freedom of action cramped by the presence of an unwelcome witness.
"Stay here and"
"And what?" she cut him off. "It won't start. Anyway, two soldiers
together always have a better chance than one."
Jack grimaced. That was probably true . . . except when one of them had a K'da warrior
on his back.
They made it to the HQ building's outer door without anyone shooting at them. The
distant mud hut, Jack noted uneasily, seemed to be burning even more furiously than it had
been when he'd first landed. He wondered what the blast range was of the grenades Draycos
had spotted in there.
"I'll go first," Alison said. Without waiting for argument she ducked inside.
Setting his teeth firmly together, Jack followed.
No one shot at them in here, either. In fact, for all they could tell, the whole place
was indeed deserted. "I don't like this," Jack murmured as they eased along the
darkened corridor. "They shouldn't all have run. Should they?"
"Depends on what they were running from," Alison said. "Or maybe what
they were running to."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning maybe they're afraid of something in that shed you torched," she
said, peering around an open doorway and then moving on. "Or maybe they just decided
on a tactical retreat."
"Like I said: meaning?" Jack repeated, starting to feel annoyed again. This
wasn't any time to be playing word games.
"Meaning maybe they didn't feel like facing a bunch of Edge combat transports all
alone." She glanced over her shoulder. "There are more transports on the
way, aren't there?"
Jack shook his head. "Sorry."
Alison's forehead creased, but she merely turned back and continued on. "Well, the
Shamshir don't know that," she pointed out. "I just hope they don't have any air
power of their own on the way. Though they probably do."
She paused at another doorway and looked in. "Here we go," she said, and went
inside.
The room was small and bare of any ornamentation, Jack noted as he slipped in behind
her. But from the size of the desk, and the amount of padding on the chair, it looked like
they'd found the commanding officer's office.
With a nice little computer humming away on a corner of the desk.
Alison made a beeline for the computer. Jack brushed past her elbow and got there
first. "Uh-uh," he said firmly, setting his gun down on the desk and dropping
into the chair. "You already messed up the transport's computer. This one's
mine."
She made as if to object, hesitated, then nodded. "Fine," she said, going
back to the doorway and peering cautiously down the hall with her machine gun ready.
"You just better know what you're doing."
"Trust me," Jack said, testing the keys. The computer was still running, but
the owner had remembered to lock it down before making his tactical retreat. Sewer-rat
time. "It'll take a few minutes," he added, keying in the program.
"Not too many, I hope," she said. "So if you aren't leading a charge,
what are you doing here?"
"I came to get you guys out," Jack said. "Or are you going to try to
tell me you didn't need any help?"
"I never turn down free help," she told him tightly. "Especially right
now. If we can't get that transport started, it's going to be a long walk to
anywhere."
"With unhappy Shamshir behind us the whole way," Jack agreed. "Boy, I'd
hate to be in our shoes. How'd you get out, anyway?"
There was just the slightest pause. "The hut they put me in had a dirt
floor," she said. "They'd fastened the other end of my handcuffs to the leg of
one of the shelves.
"Same thing they did to me," Jack said. "Not very imaginative, are
they?"
"Hey, whatever works," she said with a shrug. "Anyway, all I had to do
was dig enough dirt out from under the leg, and I could slip the handcuff right out. Nice
and neat."
"Yeah," Jack said, frowning. Nice and neat, all right.
Except that when they'd locked him up, they'd made sure the handcuff was
attached above the bottom shelf. How had she managed to get that shelf unfastened?
"And then you just went around and popped the others?"
"More or less," she said. "How about you?" I notice you even
managed to get yourself a transport."
Jack snorted gently. "I have friends."
She frowned across the room at him. "And?"
"That's all," he said. "I have friends."
"What sort of friends does an Edgeman have in a Shamshir camp?"
"You'd be surprised," Jack said. The computer was coming loose now, and he
keyed for a directory. "Anyway, you've got as good a chance of finding friends here
right now as you do in the Whinyard's Edge."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning it turns out our group was thrown to the wolves." He looked up and
caught her eyes in a hard stare. "Thanks to you and your little midnight visit to the
Edge HQ back on Carrion."
Her lip twitched. "So they knew about that."
"Not only did they know about it, they decided to fry your whole circle of friends
along with you," Jack told her. "What were you doing there that night,
anyway?"
"Looking for some information."
"What kind?"
"The kind that's none of your business," she said tartly. "Aren't you
supposed to be breaking into a computer or something?"
"Patience, dear, patience," Jack said. Scrolling down the pilot/aircraft
listing, he found the Flying Turtle section. The computerized start key . . . there it
was. "Here we go," he said, grabbing a data tube from a stack beside the
computer and popping it in. He keyed for copy, there was a brief hum, and the data tube
popped back out. "Got it," he announced, standing up.
And then, even as he started toward Alison, a strange thought suddenly struck him. He
stopped, his eyes flicking back to the computer . . .
"What's wrong?" Alison asked.
"Nothing," Jack said, flipping the tube to her. "Go get it started. I'll
be right there."
She caught the tube, her expression suddenly wary. "What kind of heroics are you
thinking about now?"
"The kind that are none of your business," he said. "Go on, get out.
That air support could be here any time."
Alison's mouth compressed tightly, but she nodded. "Don't take too long," she
warned, and vanished down the hall.
"Jack?" Draycos murmured from Jack's shoulder. "What are you
doing?"
"Completing my primary mission, as you warrior types would say," Jack said,
sitting back down at the computer. "Or did you forget why we came here in the first
place?"
The dragon's head rose up out of his jacket. "The Djinn-90 information?"
"Why not?" Jack said, keying for a new directory. "Unless you're finicky
about which mercenary group we get it from."
"I do not know that word." With a bound, the dragon leaped from Jack's back,
landing halfway to the door. "But the meaning is clear. I will stand guard."
"Good idea," Jack said absently, his full attention on the screen. Okay;
there were the Shamshir's own records. But where were the ones they kept on other groups?
Surely they kept records on other groups.
"Jack?"
"I'm hurrying, I'm hurrying," Jack growled. Finally, there it was. Now all he
had to do was find the section on aircraft. . .
"Jack, we must go," Draycos insisted, his tone suddenly urgent. "We must
go now."
Jack looked up. The dragon was standing at the door, his tongue flicking in and out
with the speed of a blackjack dealer throwing cards. "What is it?" he asked,
reaching for his gun.
"The taste of death," Draycos said. "Coming from the fire."
Chapter 27
Cautiously, Jack sniffed at the air. His own nose couldn't find anything
other than simple basic smoke. "Are you sure?"
"I have tasted many such poisons before," Draycos said, his voice even more
urgent. "Come."
Jack looked back at the computer, a tight feeling in the pit of his stomach.
Nothis couldn't be happening. Not twice on the same job. To have come this
closeagain!only to get chased away before he could finish it?
"Jack!" Draycos called.
And then, like one of Uncle Virgil's dope-slaps on the side of his head, the obvious
answer struck him.
If there wasn't time to pick and choose what he wanted, he would just take everything.
"Thirty seconds," he promised Draycos, grabbing another tube and jamming it
into the receptacle. "Make sure the coast is clear," he added, keying for a
complete copy of the Shamshir's rival mercenary data lists.
And then, with a terrific concussion, the whole building seemed to lift itself up and
drop back onto the ground.
"What was that?" Jack yelled. At least, he thought he yelled it. With his
ears ringing from the blast, he couldn't even hear his own voice.
Draycos was at his side, mouthing something. "What?" Jack shouted back.
In answer, the dragon hooked the claws of one of his forepaws into Jack's jacket sleeve
and tugged him toward the door. "Wait a second," Jack said, reaching over and
popping the data tube.
Just in time. Even as he pulled the tube free, the building's power shut down, taking
the computer with it. Draycos tugged again. "Right," Jack agreed, shoving the
data tube deep into an inner pocket. "Let's go."
He fully expected there to be another blast or two along the way. But they reached the
outer door without that happening. Jack peered outside, started to step through the
doorway
And found himself yanked back inside by the claws still hooked into his sleeve as a
dark aircraft roared past overhead.
Reflexively, he dropped into a crouch. "Uh-oh," he muttered.
"We are under attack," he heard Draycos's voice distantly through his slowly
recovering hearing.
"No kidding, Sherlock," Jack said, looking carefully around the door jamb. In
the flickering light of the burning hut, the Lynx transport he'd arrived in seemed intact.
Or at least as intact as it had been when he'd left it. Beyond it...
He tensed. Beyond the Lynx, where Tango Five Zulu's borrowed Flying Turtle had been,
there was nothing but a gaping crater.
"There," Draycos said, pointing a claw. "They are there."
Jack looked. In the near distance he could see the shape of the Flying Turtle scooting
across the sky.
So Alison had managed to get the thing started and into the air. And not a borrowed
second too soon, either, from the looks of it. "Who else is around?" he asked.
"I can hear two Shamshir fighter craft," Draycos said. "Both are in
pursuit of Alison's vehicle."
"Okay," Jack said, getting back to his feet again. "Let's see if we can
make it to the Lynx."
"It is damaged," Draycos reminded him.
"Would you rather walk away from poison gas?"
"Point," Draycos conceded, putting a paw on Jack's hand and slithering up his
sleeve. "Let us go."
Again, they made it across the open area without drawing fire. Apparently, none of
Lieutenant Cue Ball's men wanted him badly enough to stick around near the burning hut.
"We're not going to get very far," he warned, glancing at the fuel reading as he
dropped into the pilot's seat. "But we should at least make it to the woods."
The comm beeped. "Montana?" Alison's voice came.
Jack flipped the switch. "I'm here," he confirmed. "You all right?"
"Oh, we're just sweetness and light out here," she growled back. "Sorry,
but we had to pull out. If I can shake these two birds, I'll circle back and get
you."
"No, don't," Jack said. "You just stay ahead of them and head for the
hills. I can get out on my own."
"But"
And suddenly, outside the windscreen, the ground flashed with light. Jack leaned
forward over the control board, trying to see what had happened.
One of the Shamshir fighters had become an airborne fireball.
Jack blinked. No. Not even Alison. Not even Alison and Jommy together, hotshot teenage
mercenaries that they were, could have taken out a professional combat pilot. Could they?
And then, even as his brain tried to make sense of it, the second fighter veered away
from its prey. It cut hard to the left, its guns blazing full power, and exploded into a
fireball of its own.
"Jack?" a familiar voice called.
Jack felt his breath go out of him in a whoosh, his muscles going limp with relief.
He'd forgotten all about Uncle Virge.
"I'm here, Uncle Virge," he called back. "On the ground, in the Lynx
near the burning hut. Leave the Flying Turtle alonethey're on our side. Anyone else
in the area?"
"Looks like they've got three more fighters coming in from the south," Uncle
Virge reported. "Still a few minutes away. Pretty amateurish for supposed
professionals, if you want my humble opinion."
"They weren't expecting to have to fight around here," Jack said, gazing
thoughtfully out the windscreen into the distance. An idea was starting to form in the
back of his mind.
"I'm coming in to get you," Uncle Virge said. "Did you know that fire is
putting out xancrene gas?"
"Yeah, I did, thanks," Jack said, keying on the engines. "On second
thought, I'll meet you two miles west of the city."
"There's no need for that, Jack lad," Uncle Virge protested. "I wouldn't
trust that flying cattle car of yours farther than I can bounce a barge. Don't worry; the
xancrene is mostly blowing north."
"I wasn't worried about the xancrene," Jack told him, lifting the transport
into the air. "And relax, this thing will get me far enough."
"Jack lad"
"Look, I know what I'm doing," Jack interrupted him. "Alison? You still
there?"
"Still here," she confirmed. "Thanks for the assist."
"Like I said, I have friends," Jack said. "Look, I'd ask you all aboard,
but we really don't have the space. I'm afraid you'll have to find your own way off
Sunright."
"That's okay," she assured him. "We'll manage."
"The Edge will be watching for you," he warned.
"Like I said, we'll manage," she said. "I have friends, too. See
you."
The comm clicked off. "Yeah," Jack muttered, her last words tingling across
his mind. I have friends too . . .
He headed off into the night. Directly ahead, the dim lights of the mine buildings
loomed against the darkness.
The mine that had sparked all this trouble in the first place. The mine that had
trapped both the Agri and the Parprins into devil's bargains with greedy mercenaries. The
jackpot both the Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge were playing their deadly little games for.
As Uncle Virgil would have said, it was time to take the jackpot off the table.
He lined up the transport's nose on the entrance to the main mine building.
"Draycos, you said there were some grenades back there?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "Nine of them."
"I don't suppose you'd know how to rig a delay fuse on something like that."
"Explosives are not to be dealt with lightly or casually," the dragon said,
his voice starting to sound suspicious. "I am not trained with these particular
devices."
"Never mind, then," Jack said. "We'll do it the old-fashioned way. Can
you get them out of the locker and line them up along the floor? Straight down the middle
should do just fine."
Draycos's head lifted up from Jack's shoulder. "Jack, what is it you intend to
do?"
Jack nodded toward the mine buildings. "The Shamshir want the mine," he said.
"So do the Whinyard's Edge, if you believe Lieutenant Cue Ball. What do you suppose
they'd do if the mine wasn't there anymore?"
Draycos pondered a moment. "Those who care only for its wealth would leave this
world."
He twisted his head around to look squarely into Jack's eyes. "But this is not
your property, Jack," he added. "You have no right to choose its
destruction."
"Not even to save people caught in a war none of them want?" Jack countered.
"Come on, K'da warrior, let's hear those ethics of yours. Is the wealth from a mine
more important than the people who own it?"
"The people are of course more important," the dragon said, his voice oddly
sad. "But there must be another way."
"There isn't," Jack said firmly. "Look, I trust you in warrior stuff.
Trust me in this, okay?"
Draycos bounded from Jack's collar, landing on the deck behind him. "Very
well," he said reluctantly. "If there is no other way, then let us do it."
Jack smiled tightly. The K'da poet-warrior had done his part of the job. Now it was
time for the human con artist to do his. "Just line up those grenades," he said.
"I'll do the rest."
The main doors were wide and tall, designed to let large ore-carrying vehicles in and
out. They were also built pretty strong.
Fortunately, the Lynx was built even stronger. With a crash of breaking wood and the
screech of torn metal, it broke through the doors and rumbled into the main building
beyond.
"How are you doing?" Jack shouted over the crunch of demolished support beams
and wall siding as he drove the Lynx inward toward the tall tower that stood over the mine
opening itself.
"I am nearly ready," Draycos called back.
"Good," Jack said. "Brace yourself."
And with a final thunderous crash, he slammed the transport through the lower part of
the tower and settled to the floor squarely on top of the shaft leading down into the
ground.
"We're here," Jack announced, shutting off the engines and sliding out of his
seat. "Let's make tracks."
Draycos looked up from the neat row of grenades he had laid out from the rear of the
compartment to just behind Jack's seat. "Pardon?"
"Let's get out of here," Jack clarified. "Come aboard."
With Draycos on his back, Jack picked his way through the splintered wood and other
debris outside. The Essenay was waiting just outside the entrance, bobbing slighdy
on its lifters with an air of worried impatience. "Come on, lad, come on," Uncle
Virge urged as Jack ran up the ramp. "Those other fighters will be here any
minute."
"Then let's give them something to light their way," Jack said as he raced to
the cockpit and slid into the pilot's seat. "I want a quick laser burst straight in
the hole we made."
"Targeted where?" Uncle Virge asked.
"Targeted on the back of the transport we made the hole with," Jack said,
doing a quick check of the Essenay's weapons systems.
"The transport?" Uncle Virge asked, sounding confused. "But?"
"Never mind," Jack said. "You just aim. I'll fire."
"We should move back," Draycos murmured. "The blast could be
considerable."
"Good point," Jack agreed, keying the Essenay into a fast backward
drift. "Everyone ready?"
"I suppose," Uncle Virge said. Draycos didn't answer.
"Good," Jack said. "Here goes."
The lasers flickered, and he held his breath. If this didn't work . . .
And then, from the entrance came a flash of return light, then the roiling flicker of
fire. The rest of the Lynx's fuel had caught. "That should do it," Jack said,
pulling the Essenay around and heading for the sky. "Let's grab some distance
before the grenades go."
"The grenades?" Uncle Virge echoed. "Jack, lad"
And then, the grenades went.
It was even more spectacular than Jack had expected. The sides of the main building
blew out as a ring of fire sliced horizontally outward in all directions. The tower,
directly above the explosion, shot probably half a dozen feet straight up, then toppled
over. It landed on one of the two side buildings, crashing through its roof.
A few seconds after it had begun, it was over. The buildings had collapsed into
shattered ruin, with everything flammable in them burning furiously. It was like one of
the triumphal bonfires Jack had read about, except that there was no one here celebrating
anything.
Maybe the Agri who had worked so hard to create the mine would thank him. Eventually.
He took a deep breath. "Well," he said, to no one in particular. "I
guess that's that."
"It is indeed," Uncle Virge agreed, sounding rather awestruck himself.
"Never let it be said that you do things halfway, Jack lad."
Jack pursed his lips. Maybe. Maybe not. For now, he could only hope he'd accomplished
what he'd set out to do. "We'd better get out of here before those fighters
arrive," he said, reaching for the controls. "You with me, Draycos?"
"I am here," the dragon said softly. "Yes; let us go."
Chapter 28
"Sorry, lad," Uncle Virge said, his voice as quiet and apologetic
and sincere as a professional fundraiser. "I'm afraid the Shamshir Mercenaries keep
pretty sloppy records on their competitors' aircraft. There isn't any way we're going to
be able to trace those Djinn-90s from this."
"Uh-huh," Jack said, gazing across the table with a fascinated repugnance as
he watched Draycos tearing into his fourth soup bowl full of hamburger, tuna fish,
chocolate sauce, and motor oil.
It wasn't that he couldn't understand the dragon's hunger. After all, Draycos hadn't
had much to eat for the past three weeks. But the thought of that particular food
combination still sent Jack's own taste buds screaming for cover. "So that's it,
huh?"
"That's it," Uncle Virge confirmed. "And if I may say so, you might
recall that I thought the idea was doomed idiocy from the start. So now we can get on with
a proper job of saving Draycos's people?"
"By which you mean turning him over to the Star-Force?" Jack suggested.
Draycos looked up, his long tongue nicking a bit of tuna fish off one corner of his
snout. "We cannot do that, Jack," he protested. "It is too dangerous."
"Relax," Jack said, taking a sip of his fizzy-soda. Yes, Uncle Virge had
sounded quiet and apologetic and sincere, all right. Unfortunately for him, Jack had heard
that tone of voice before. Many times before. "You know, Draycos, for being such a
clever K'da poet-warrior, you're kind of slow on the uptake sometimes."
The dragon's neck arched warningly. "What do you mean?" he asked, his voice
ominous.
"Relax," Jack hastened to reassure him. Apparently, the dragon wasn't in a
mood for joking. "Watch and learn."
He cleared his throat. "Okay, Uncle Virge," he said. "So we don't have
anything on the Djinn-90s. What interesting tidbits did you happen to find in the
Shamshir data?"
"You only asked for the Djinn-90 information," Uncle Virge reminded him.
"I know what I asked for," Jack said firmly. "Quit stalling. What did
you find?"
There was a moment of sulky silence. "There's one small piece that might be
considered interesting," Uncle Virge conceded at last. "But, really, it's so
minuscule"
"I said quit stalling," Jack interrupted. "Give."
"It's just an item about the Brummgas," Uncle Virge groused. "Remember
how you ran into a Brummga on Iota Klestis, at the site of Draycos's crash?"
"Like I'd forget," Jack said with a grimace. If Draycos hadn't used Jack's
tangler gun on the big alien, both he and the dragon would have wound up very dead.
"And Lieutenant Cue Ball had a couple on his staff, too, hanging around looking
ugly," he added. "So?"
"So at least from the Shamshir data," Uncle Virge said grudgingly, "it
looks like all the Brummgas in the various mercenary forces come from the same
place."
Jack sat up a little straighter. "What do you mean, the same place?" he
asked. "The same city? Same province?"
Uncle Virge sighed audibly. "Same dealer."
Draycos's neck was still arched. "What do you mean by 'dealer'?" he asked.
"I'm not sure," Jack said grimly. "But I can guess. Are you talking
about a slave dealer, Uncle Virge?"
"Well, of course, mercenaries are considered skilled labor," Uncle Virge
hedged. "And Brummgan law isn't quite, shall we say, up to Internos
standards"
"They deal in slavery," Draycos cut him off.
Uncle Virge sighed again. "Yes."
Draycos hissed like he had a bad taste in his mouth, his neck crest stiffer than Jack
had ever seen it. "The indenture of children was barbaric enough," he bit out,
his eyes glittering like lasers filtered through a pair of emeralds. "But for
intelligent beings to be owned like animals"
"Easy, pal, easy," Jack said hastily, holding up his hands. "Don't get
mad at me. Or at the Internos government, for that matter. Like I've told you
before, we humans aren't in charge of everything that happens out there."
"What about the Trade Association?" Draycos demanded. "Are there not
laws concerning such things?"
"There are some, sure," Jack said. "But you can only enforce what you
can see. And there are only so many Judge-Paladins to go around. Come onwe're
trying."
Slowly, the crest softened. "I understand," he murmured. "It is still an
abomination."
"No argument there," Jack agreed, shivering. He'd seen a group of slaves on
one of the worlds he and Uncle Virgil had visited once. The memory of their haunted eyes
and faces had stuck with him ever since. "But in this case, it could be a useful
abomination."
"What do you mean?" Draycos asked.
"Nothing good," Uncle Virge cut in. "You can wager your teeth and tail
on that. Jacklook, lad"
"We need to find those mercenaries, Uncle Virge," Jack said. "And since
we aren't having any luck tracing their fighters, maybe we can trace their
personnel."
"And how do you intend to do that?" Uncle Virge demanded. "How do you
expect to get close enough to a Brum-mga slave lord to get a look at his records?"
"Perhaps as a soldier for hire," Draycos suggested.
"Forget it," Jack said firmly. "I'm not cut out to be a soldier."
"You did not do badly," Draycos said. "Do not forget that you were not
properly trained or led. And you were certainly not among true warriors."
"I appreciate the vote of confidence," Jack said dryly. "But I think
we'll find a different way in, if it's all the same to you."
"That is your option," Draycos said. "Still, whether you accept it or
not, you are showing great progress in living by a warrior's ethic."
Jack snorted gently. "I don't know how you figure that one."
"You told Alison not to risk coming back for you," Draycos reminded him.
"That showed your consideration of others' safety before your own."
Jack felt his lip twist. "Well. . . actually, no, it didn't. I just didn't want
her bringing the Shamshir chase ships back my direction."
Draycos's tail arched. "Truly?"
Jack shrugged. "Sorry."
Uncle Virge laughed out loud. "That's my boy," he said smugly. "See
there, Draycos, old snake? Jack's not as easily corrupted by this warrior ethic nonsense
as you'd like to think."
"Perhaps," Draycos said, his eyes seeming to measure Jack. "Perhaps it
is merely a path that will require many small steps. Do not forget he did return to
rescue the others."
"Only because you pressured him, I'd wager," Uncle Virge said. "Like I
suppose you also pressured him into wrecking that daublite mine for no good reason."
"I suggested nothing of the sort," Draycos protested. "Furthermore,
there was a good reason. The Agri had become virtual prisoners of the Shamshir
mercenaries they had hired. From all appearances, the Parprins were in same situation with
the Whinyard's Edge."
"And whose fault was that?" Uncle Virge shot back. "Theirs, that's
whose."
"Is it a fault to work to create a source of profit, only to have it stolen
away?" Draycos countered.
"Of course not," Jack put in. "That's as bad as a bunch of mercenaries
trying to steal someone else's property and having a kid come along and con it right out
from under them."
The budding argument stopped dead on its rails. "What did you say?" Uncle
Virge demanded suspiciously.
"Yes," Draycos seconded. "What did that mean?"
Jack smiled. Yes, his relationship with Draycos was going to change his relationship
with Uncle Virge. Maybe it would indeed change it forever, the way he'd wondered and
worried about earlier as he stood alone in the darkness of the forest.
But maybe that wasn't such a bad thing. Maybe the three of them together were going to
hammer themselves into a better team than he'd ever thought they could be. Certainly a
better team than he'd ever dared to hope. "Remember, Uncle Virge, when we were
leaving Sunright you said that I didn't do things halfway?" he said. "Well, as a
matter of fact. . ."
The thin young man's name was Louie, and he was red-faced and panting as he lugged the
two footlockers through the door and into the middle of the run-down hotel room.
"Okay," he puffed, dropping the end of the first footlocker onto the floor with
a thud. "Yours."
He dropped the second footlocker with an equally loud thud. "His."
"You sure it's the right one?" Alison Kayna asked, glancing both ways down
the hallway before closing the door behind him.
"The name tag says 'Jack Montana' in big letters," Louie pointed out. "I
deserve a bonus for this one, kiddo."
"What for, lugging and handling charges?" Alison countered scornfully.
"Come on, be real. The way I hear it, the Whinyard's Edge was pulling off Sunright so
fast the whole base was running in ten directions at once. You could have loaded one of
their own Lynxes with goodies and flown it out without anyone noticing."
"Busy or not, they all still had guns," Louie said pointedly.
"And you could con the bullets right out of them," Alison said. "It was
a stroll to the backyard compost heap, and you know it."
Louie shook his head. "You are the cheapest kid with a nickel I've ever
seen," he grumbled.
"Blame it on my upbringing," Alison said. "You'll get your usual fee, by
the usual channels. A pleasure doing business with you."
"Yeah, I'm sure," Louie said, gazing her direction. "How about
information? You pay anything for information?"
"What kind of information?" Alison asked.
"Oh, you know," Louie said, waving a hand vaguely around. "I hear
stories. Listen to rumors. That sort of thing."
"Rumors aren't usually worth much."
"The ones I listen to are," Louie assured her. "An extra five
hundred?"
"One hundred."
"Three hundred."
Alison studied his face. "All right, three hundred. Let's hear it."
Louie lowered his voice. "You know that big mine explosion? The one that got both
the Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge to cancel their contracts with the locals and pull
out?"
"I was there when Montana blew it," Alison said dryly. "Lit up the sky
for miles. You'd better have more than just a colorful commentary on the event."
"Oh, I've got more," Louie promised with a sly smile. "Turns out our boy
Montana was either very, very stupid or very, very clever. When the fires finally went out
and the Agri got busy clearing away the wreckage, they found what was left of the
transport sitting flat-square on top of the mine shaft."
"Okay," Alison said, frowning. "So?"
"So?" Louie echoed. "Oh, come on, girl. You just finished playing
soldier. Don't you remember anything about troop transport design?"
"I'm too tired for games, Louie," Alison said patiently. "Just spill
it."
"Troop transports," he said, in a tone like someone lecturing a small child.
"They carry soldiers into battlefields. Where people will be shooting at you. From
below."
Alison frowned. "You talking about armor plating?"
"See?" Louie said, looking pleased. "You did learn something.
Yes, I'm talking about at least twenty inches of Hy-Dense cerametal on the underside of
every modern troop transport. With that model of Lynx, it's closer to thirty inches."
And then, suddenly, Alison got it. "The mine shaft didn't collapse!"
"Bingo," Louie said, looking extremely pleased with himself. "And with
the meres already having cancelled their contracts, there's no way for them to reverse
themselves and get their hooks into the locals again. Like I said: either really stupid,
or really clever."
In her mind's eye, Alison could see that last look on Jack Montana's face. The look
he'd been giving the Shamshir computer as he sent her back to their transport with the
pilot code. "Not stupid," she murmured. "Clever."
"Whichever," Louie said. "Worth that extra three hundred?"
"I suppose," Alison said, keeping her voice casual. "I'll send a note
about it."
"Yeah," Louie said. "Well, have fun with your new stuff. And let me know
whenever I can be of service. Always happy to work with you."
"As long as the money's good?" Alison suggested.
"Your money's always good," Louie said with another sly smile. "See you,
kiddo." Turning, he left the room.
Alison went to the door and made sure it was locked. Then she returned to the two
footlockers. Ignoring her own for the momentshe knew what was in that one, after
all she knelt down beside Jack's.
So Jack Montana had pulled a fast one there at the end. On her, and on everyone else.
He'd conned both sets of mercenaries into pulling out, thinking the mine they both wanted
was permanently ruined, and left matters for the Agri and Parprins to work out between
themselves.
Clever, all right. And it made Jack an even more interesting puzzle than she'd thought
when she'd hired Louie to sneak his footlocker out of the Edge camp.
The footlocker was, of course, locked. But that wouldn't be a problem. Squeezing on the
base of her left-hand forefinger, she slid out the plastic lockpick that had been
surgically implanted beneath the fingernail.
She hadn't told Jack about this little gem, naturally. He would have wanted to know how
a simple indentured teenager could afford this kind of high-tech gimmick, or what she
would even have wanted with it in the first place. Instead, she'd spun him that bogus
story about having dug her handcuffs out from under the shelving in the Shamshir storage
hut.
Now, it seemed, Jack hadn't been entirely honest with her, either.
Because Alison listened to stories, too. And one of the most interesting ones recently
concerned an incident a month ago aboard a liner called the Star of Wonder. An
incident centering on a high-level power struggle between Cornelius Braxton and his board
director Arthur Neverlin for control of the huge megacorporation Braxton Universis.
And right in the middle of that struggle had been a boy named Jack. A boy who was
reported to have an uncle named Virgil, like the Uncle Virge Jack had called to when that
spaceship had shown up and shot those Shamshir fighters off her back.
Trouble was, the name of the kid on the Star of Wonder hadn't been Jack Montana.
It had been Jack Morgan.
Was Jack Montana really Jack Morgan? Very possibly. Maybe there would be something in
his footlocker that would confirm that. Maybe there would be other interesting items, as
well.
And if so, there were people out there who would pay money for that information. A
great deal of money.
Slipping the tip of her lockpick into the lock, she set to work.
|
About the Author
Timothy Zahn is the author of twenty-three original science fiction novels, including
the very popular Cobra and Black-collar series. His recent novels include Angelmass and
Mania's Gift. His first novel of the Dragonback series, Dragon and Thief, was
named a Best Book for Young Adults. He has had many short works published in the major SF
magazines, including "Cascade Point," which won the Hugo Award for best novella
in 1984. He is also author of the bestselling Star Wars: Heir to the Empire, among
other works. He currently resides in Oregon.
Zahn - Dragon and Soldier v1.11.htm
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This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in
this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
DRAGON AND SOLDIER: THE SECOND DRAGONBACK ADVENTURE Copyright © 2004 by
Timothy Zahn
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof, in any form.
This book is printed on acid-free paper. Edited by James Frenkel
A Starscape Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.starscape.com
ISBN 0-765-30125-3 BAN 978-0765-30125-3
First Edition: June 2004
Printed in the United States of America
0987654321
For Sable
who has taught me
what it means to be a symbiont
Books by Timothy Zahn
Dragonback (Starscape Books)
Book 1: Dragon and Thief *
Book 2: Dragon and Soldier*
The Blackcollar
A Coming of Age
Cobra
Spinneret
Cobra Strike
Cascade Point and Other Stories
The Backlash Mission
Triplet
Cobra Bargain
Time Bomb and Zahndry Others
Deadman Switch
Warhorse
Cobras Two (omnibus)
Star Wars: Heir to the Empire
Star Wars: Dark Force Rising
Star Wars: The Last Command
Conqueror's Pride
Conqueror's Heritage
Conqueror's Legacy
The Hand of Thrawn
Book 1: Specter of the Past
Book 2: Vision of the Future
The Icarus Hunt
Angelmass*
Mania's Gift*
*Denotes a Tor Book
Chapter 1
The screams of the dying K'da and Shontine in the Havenseeker's engine
room were growing louder. Draycos tried to shut out the soundstried to cover
his pointed ears with his paws. But nothing helped.
He could see them now, back there in the engine room. Which was odd, because Draycos
himself was up in the Havenseeker's control complex, all the way at the other end
of the ship. He could see outside through the navigation bubble as the unfamiliar enemy
ships sent the all too familiar violet beams of the Death twisting and sweeping across the
Havenseeker's hull. The Death was coming closer to him . . . closer . . . closer. .
.
With a jerk that sent his claws scratching across the soft plastic coating of the
floor beneath him, Draycos woke up.
"Bad dream?" a soft voice came from across the room.
Draycos blinked his eyes, clearing away the last images of the nightmare. The room was
mostly dark, but there was enough light for him to see the narrow cot built into the wall
at the other end of the small cabin. His new companion, Jack Morgan, was propped up on one
elbow, his hair sticking out in a dozen different directions. "Yes," Draycos
told him. "I apologize for waking you."
" 'S okay," Jack said, yawning. He ran a hand through his hair without making
any noticeable improvement in the mess. "I'm just glad you weren't on my back when
you started twitching. What was it this time?"
"The same," Draycos said, the tip of his tail curving into a K'da frown. Odd;
he had started out the sleep period pressed against Jack's back in his
two-dimensional form. When had he jumped off and become fully three-dimensional again?
During the terrible dream? "I saw again the destruction of our advance team."
"I don't suppose you happened to notice any markings on those Djinn-90 pursuit
fighters this time," Uncle Virge put in.
Draycos glared over at the monitor camera. Uncle Virge was the Essenay's computer,
with an artificial personality designed by Jack's late Uncle Virgil. A personality,
Draycos had discovered, that often seemed to go out of its way to be irritating. "No,
I did not see any markings," he told the computer stiffly. "I saw no markings
when they first attacked our ships. I do not expect to see any now that I am merely
dreaming of them, either."
"Okay, okay, keep your scales on," Uncle Virge said in a huffy tone.
"You're the one who's so hot to track down these pirates or smugglers or
whoever."
"They were mercenaries," Draycos said firmly. "Military units of some
sort. I have told you that before."
"Yeah," Uncle Virge said. "Whatever."
"And it's not just Draycos who wants to find them, Uncle Virge," Jack said.
"I do, too."
"Then let's get serious about it," Uncle Virge said. "Face it, Jack lad;
we simply haven't got the resources for this kind of nickel-in-Nevada search. Not even
with our noble K'da poet-warrior standing brave and true at our side. Watching us do all
the work."
"We have only just begun our task," Draycos reminded him, ignoring the
implied insult. Uncle Virge had made it abundantly clear that he didn't think much of the
K'da warrior ethic and its strict emphasis on doing what was right, whatever such actions
might cost. He considered such behavior to be impractical, a waste of effort, and
fundamentally stupid.
"We've been chasing data for ten days and have come up dry and poor each
time," Uncle Virge countered. "I vote we chuck the whole thing and drop it into
StarForce's lap where it belongs."
"We cannot do that," Draycos insisted. "Until we know who was
responsible for the attack, I cannot risk revealing myself to anyone else. The lives of my
people depend on it."
"Oh, come on," Uncle Virge said, and Draycos could almost see a
scowling human face behind that voice. "It wasn't StarForce that attacked your ships.
The Internos government doesn't go in for genocide."
"Yet someone in StarForce or the Internos may have made a private arrangement
without official consent," Draycos pointed out. "I cannot take that risk. We
must do this ourselves."
"And what if we can't?" Uncle Virge shot back. "In case you hadn't
noticed, friend, the Orion Arm covers a lot of territory. We are one very small frog in
one very big pond. Maybe the whole thing makes for a great heroic poem, but we could
search from here till geepsday and still not come up with anything."
"What we need is a break," Jack muttered. "Just one. Something to point
us in the right direction."
"Don't you think I want that, too, lad?" Uncle Virge asked, his tone suddenly
turning earnest and soothing.
Draycos felt his crest stiffen with frustration. In point of fact, Uncle Virge didn't
want a break. Uncle Virge wanted Jack to turn his back on Draycos, and on the millions
of K'da and Shontine refugees who were even now fleeing to the Orion Arm from the threat
of the Valahgua and their unstoppable Death weapon.
Uncle Virge, in short, wanted Jack Morgan to go back to the simple day-to-day business
of looking out for Jack Morgan.
But he didn't dare point that out. Jack's Uncle Virgil had been a criminal, a con
artist and thief, a man who had spent his entire life thinking only of himself. He'd
programmed that same self-centered viewpoint into his computerized alter ego before he'd
died, and he'd done his best to hammer it into Jack, as well.
Jack had a good heart. Draycos could tell that much. But the boy was only fourteen, and
this was an awesome task that Draycos had laid before him.
And even a good heart required training and discipline. Draycos had had only a month to
work with him, while Uncle Virgil and the computer had had the past eleven years. If
Draycos pushed too hard, the boy might well back away onto the path of long habit.
Besides which, down deep, Draycos had to concede that Uncle Virge wasn't being entirely
unfair. With the lives of his people at stake, Draycos perhaps was pushing a little
too hard.
But what else could he do?
"I know you want this to work, Draycos," Jack said, running his fingers
through his hair again, still without improving the mess. "But face it. This approach
just isn't working."
"I agree," Uncle Virge said. "And frankly, I can't see how it ever will.
There are just too many Djinn-90s flying around the Orion Arm for us to hunt down the
records of all of them. More to the point, there are too many that have changed hands
under, shall we way, unofficial circumstances. No matter how many manufacturing records or
registration listings we dig up, we still won't have them all."
"Then we need a different approach," Jack concluded. "Draycos, you seem
convinced they were mercenaries. How come?"
"I saw them function in battle," Draycos reminded him, the tip of his tail
making slow circles as he studied Jack's face in the dim light. The boy's expression was
tense, as if he was screwing up his courage toward an unpleasant decision he didn't want
to make.
But if that decision was to back away, this was an odd way of leading up to it.
"Twice, in fact, both in their attack on our ships and later during our escape from
the planet," he went on. "Their maneuvering and tactics were quite
professional."
"Doesn't mean they're necessarily soldiers for hire," Uncle Virge argued, his
voice gone suddenly cautious. Perhaps he'd picked up on Jack's expression, too.
"Maybe they're someone's official military. Maybe some planet has made a deal with
your Valahgua enemies."
"An official military would have had backup forces ready," Draycos pointed
out. "Our escape would have been far more difficult than it was."
Uncle Virge sniffed. "So maybe they're a stupid military. What's your point, Jack
lad?"
"My point is that mercenary groups probably keep close tabs on each other,"
Jack said slowly. "Including what kinds of pursuit fighters all the other guys have.
You think?"
"I suppose," Uncle Virge said. "But I can tell you right now that
getting hold of encrypted mercenary files is going to be a lot trickier than pulling up
Djinnrabi Aerospace Corporation manufacturing records. I thought we were trying to make
this job easier, not harder."
"We're trying to make it work any way we can," Jack said. He paused, and
Draycos could see him brace himself. "And you're right. The only way to get mere
records will be from the inside."
"You must be joking," Uncle Virge said, his voice sounding like he'd suddenly
been hit with a small tree. "Come on, Jack lad. Jump up and say 'surprise,'
and let's get on with our plans."
"What, you think I can't do it?" Jack snapped. "Fourteen-year-old kids
are indentured to mercenary groups all the time."
"And you know what happens to them?" Uncle Virge countered harshly.
"They get sent off to war."
Jack seemed to shrink a little in his nightshirt. "I'll be all right," he
said, sounding like he was trying to convince himself of that. "There aren't any big
wars going on anywhere right now."
"Mercenaries don't hire teenagers just to polish their boots," Uncle Virge
insisted. "And you can get just as dead from a little war as you can from a big
one."
"I'll be all right." Jack peered across the cabin at Draycos. "Draycos?
You're a soldier. You tell him."
"Yes, tell him, Draycos," Uncle Virge demanded, an almost frantic undertone
to his voice now. Small wonder: as a computer, even a computer that controlled the entire
ship, he had no physical power to make Jack do anything he didn't want to do. All Uncle
Virge could do was persuade.
And unless Draycos was misjudging Jack's expression, the boy's mind was already made
up. Not enthusiastically, but definitely made up. "Tell him what it takes to be a
soldier," Uncle Virge went on. "Tell him how old you were when you went
into your first battle. Tell him how many friends you've seen die."
"In many ways, Uncle Virge is right, Jack," Draycos said. "If it were
for anything less important I would agree that this was too dangerous for you. But."
"Don't say it," Uncle Virge warned. "Draycos, don't say it."
"I am sorry, but I must," Draycos said. "The fate of the K'da and
Shontine races hang by the edge of a single torn scale. With only five months remaining
until they arrive, we have no choice but to take chances."
"Maybe you have to take chances," Uncle Virge snapped. "But why
does Jack have to?"
"Because I promised to help him," Jack said.
"And I will be with him the whole way," Draycos added.
"Wonderful," Uncle Virge said sarcastically. "A golden dragon plastered
flat across his back. That gives me such confidence."
"Oh, stop being melodramatic," Jack scolded. "It's not like I'm making a
career of this. I'll get in, scam their computer and find their records on their
competitors, and get back out. Piece of fudge cake."
"Unless they catch you," Uncle Virge said. "You ever think of that?"
"I'll be fine," Jack insisted. "Anyway, like Draycos says, he'll be
with me the whole way."
Uncle Virge didn't answer. "So that's settled," Jack said, flopping back flat
onto the cot again. "If you want to be helpful, you can find us a good mere group to
try. Something not too big, but with jobs all across the Orion Arm. We don't want someone
who just works locally. And make sure it's someone who hires a lot of kids my
age"
"And isn't too fussy about who they take," Uncle Virge cut him off
grudgingly. "Yes, yes, I know what to look for."
"And when you find one, put us on ECHO for their nearest recruitment center,"
Jack added. "No point in wasting time."
"No, of course not," Uncle Virge muttered. "Good night, Jack lad."
Jack pushed himself up off the cot again. "Draycos, you getting back aboard?
You're going to need to do it sometime before morning anyway."
Draycos focused on the clock built into the wall beside Jack's cot. Yes; even if he had
broken contact with the boy just before his dream began, he would still come close to his
limit before the sleep period was over. A K'da could only go six hours before he needed to
return to two-dimensional form against a host's body. If he stayed away longer than that,
he would still become two-dimensional, and ripple away into death.
But he had time. And his body always gave him plenty of warning. "I will join you
later," he decided, standing up and stretching all four legs. "I believe I will
go watch Uncle Virge work through the mercenary information."
"Going to be some awfully big words there," Uncle Virge warned sourly.
"You may not be up to third-grade reading level yet."
"I can use the practice," Draycos assured him calmly. After only ten days of
study, he had already made good headway in learning to read the humans' written language.
His progress had pleased him, amazed Jack, and no doubt irritated Uncle Virge. A
worthwhile accomplishment on all three counts. "Rest well, Jack," he added as he
headed across the cabin.
"Sure," Jack said, already starting to sound sleepy again. "By the way,
how old were you when you were in your first battle?"
Draycos paused in the doorway. "I was younger than you," he said quietly,
turning his long neck to look around behind him. "And the K'da and Shontine lost that
battle."
"Younger than me," Jack repeated, his voice sounding odd. "You had loose
rules, didn't you?"
"We were fighting for our survival," Draycos reminded him. "We still
are."
Jack didn't say anything. For a wonder, neither did Uncle Virge.
Chapter 2
The planet Carrion was, in Jack's opinion, a very appropriately named world.
Or so it seemed as he paid the taxi driver and joined the stream of pedestrians
hurrying along the wide sidewalks. Even just glancing around, he could spot the uniforms
of a half dozen different mercenary groups among the crowds. The men and women inside the
uniforms were rough-looking types, all of them with small areas of empty space around them
as they strode along. Like arrogant vultures gathered to feed on their prey, he thought
darkly, with the ordinary citizens trying to keep as far away from them as possible.
Or maybe he was imagining the citizens' reaction. Maybe he was just projecting his own
feelings onto the people around him.
What in the world was he doing here, anyway?
"Is that it ahead?" Draycos murmured from his right shoulder.
Jack made a face as he focused on the plain white building half a block down the street
ahead of them. "That's it," he confirmed. "The main Carrion recruitment
office of the Whinyard's Edge."
"A whinyard was a Scottish name for a dagger or short sword," Uncle Virge put
in from the comm clip fastened to Jack's left collar. "It dates back to"
"Thank you, Professor," Jack cut him off. The last thing he was in the mood
for right now was a history lesson. "Unless you've got something useful to say,
everyone just shut up. Okay?"
"Have the young people from the spaceport arrived yet?" Draycos asked.
"I don't see them," Jack said, craning his neck to try to look over the crowd
and slowing down a little. He didn't want to reach the recruitment office before the group
he and Draycos had spotted being gathered together at the spaceport. The idea was to blend
in with them when they went in to sign their enlistment papers, not to be the one leading
the charge. "They were probably getting them here by bus. Busses always take longer
than cabs."
"A bus also implies they're expected, Jack lad," Uncle Virge warned.
"That means the Whinyard's Edge will know how many of them there are supposed to
be."
"Maybe," Jack said. "I can handle that."
"It's not too late to back out," Uncle Virge went on. "We could try to
put together enough money to simply buy the information we need from them."
"And if they refuse, it'll just put them on their guard," Jack pointed out.
"Hang on a second."
Ahead, a sleek bus pulled to the curb in front of the white building. "Okay,
they're here," Jack confirmed as a boy his age got rather hesitantly off the bus.
"I'm shutting down," he added, reaching for the comm clip. "Wish me
luck."
There was an electronic sigh. "Good luck," Uncle Virge said.
Jack clicked off the clip, unfastened it, and slipped it into his pocket. The first
kids off the bus had gathered into a little group by the curb, hanging back instead of
going directly into the building. Either they were nervous, or else they were waiting for
someone who was still behind them.
"You have not yet explained this indenture process," Draycos said from his
shoulder.
"It's sort of like an apprenticeship," Jack said. An adult was getting off
now, a woman wearing a Whinyard's Edge uniform. Not only were they expected, but the
mercenaries had even sent a babysitter to the spaceport to herd them in. "Parents
hire their kids out to different mere groups, usually for two to five years."
"And what do they receive in exchange?"
"Cash," Jack told him. "Lots of it."
"It is a form of slavery," Draycos declared, his voice dark. "Your
people permit this?"
"Not exactly," Jack said. The woman was striding toward the white building,
the kids following like scared but obedient ducklings. This was probably the first time
most of them had ever been away from home, he suspected. "The Internos government
officially condemns it, but there are plenty of human worlds that sort of wink at the
whole thing. Mostly the poorer ones where the people don't have any other way to make a
living."
"There are always other ways," Draycos insisted. "This is not the
behavior of a civilized society."
"No, of course not," Jack soothed. Uncivilized this, uncivilized
thatthe dragon needed to lighten up a little. Things were the way they were; and
like it or not, there wasn't a thing you could do about it.
The universe was a giant mulching machine, Uncle Virgil had often said. If you were
smart, you rolled with the gears. If you weren't, you got chewed up by them.
"And there are so very many of them," Draycos murmured, obviously still
brooding about it.
"Which is what we want, remember?" Jack reminded him patiently. "Uncle
Virge said this was one of only a couple of groups who were hiring lots of kids right now.
The more they've got coming in, the easier it'll be for me to slip in and get lost in the
crowd."
"I understand the reasoning," Draycos said, a bit tartly. "That does not
mean I have to enjoy my part in this."
The last kid had gotten off the bus. "Okay," Jack muttered, taking a deep
breath and picking up his pace. "Nice and easy. Here we go."
And as the last boy in line walked through the white building's door, Jack closed the
gap and stepped in right behind him.
He found himself in a large reception room with a pair of ornate desks at the far end
beneath a huge wood carving of the Whinyard's Edge insignia. The woman who had escorted
the teens in from the bus was seated at one of the desks, while an older gray-haired man
sat at the other.
Off to either side of the main room, near where Jack had entered, were a pair of
unmarked doorways. One of the doors was slightly ajar, and through it Jack caught a
glimpse of the simple desk and filing cabinets of a secretarial work station. On the far
back wall, behind the fancy desks and directly beneath the wooden insignia, was a door
with a picture of a dagger painted on it and what looked like a motto stenciled around its
edge.
The number of teens in the reception room was a surprise. Even huddled together like
sheep the way they were, they filled the room all the way to the walls. The bus Jack had
seen pull up must have been only the last of a group of them, possibly bringing in new
recruits from several different parts of the spaceport. Apparently, the Whinyard's Edge
was holding an even bigger recruitment drive than he'd realized.
Briefly, his mind flicked back to his confident statement to Uncle Virge that there
were no major wars going on anywhere. He hoped he hadn't been wrong about that.
"Over there," Draycos murmured, just loud enough for Jack to hear over the
soft buzz of conversation. The dragon's snout rose slightly from Jack's upper chest
beneath his shirt, pointing to the left. "That boy has papers."
"Uh-huh," Jack said. More than just papers: it was an official looking
document with a blue-paper backing sheet. A document that Jack himself didn't have.
This was not good.
Carefully, casually, he eased through the crowd and came up behind the boy. "Some
place, huh?" he commented.
"Terrific," the other said, his voice trembling slightly. First time away
from home, all right.
"Hey, buck up," Jack said, trying for a cheerfully encouraging tone he
suddenly wasn't feeling anymore. The paper the boy was holding was an official indenture
agreement.
On an official Whinyard's Edge form. With an official Whinyard's Edge signature on the
bottom.
And suddenly Jack's plan of simply talking his way inside as part of the group wasn't
looking so hot anymore.
"Yeah, right," the boy said. "Just like summer camp. How long you in
for?"
"Probably the same as you," Jack improvised, searching the form for the
correct number. There was a small bit of weight at his collarbone as Draycos lifted an eye
up to look over the boy's shoulder. "Two years, right?"
The boy snorted under his breath. "I guess your folks must not need the
money," he said, waving the form up into Jack's face. The name at the top caught
Jack's eye: Jommy Randolph. "I'm in for five. Five whole years."
"Put a quark in it," a girl at Jack's other side growled. She was maybe
thirteen, with jet-black hair and eyes that were so dark they were almost black, too.
"You talking to me?" Jommy demanded, his voice threatening.
"You see anyone else in here whining about life?" she countered.
"Maybe it's just that no one else gets it," Jommy said, taking a half step
toward her. Clearly, he wasn't in the mood for criticism.
The girl stood her ground. "Or maybe it's just that no one else's glue is
melting," she said. "You'd think they were drop-kicking you into prison or
something."
"Oh, they're drop-kicking us, all right," Jommy shot back. "I had an
uncle once-"
"Quiet back there!" a deep voice snapped from the far end of the room, the
words cutting through the buzz.
The buzz instantly evaporated. Grimacing to himself, Jack backed away from Jommy and
the girl and started to ease his way to the exit. Uncle Virge had been right; this had
been a lousy idea. Time to wave bye-bye and head for the tall grass.
"There is a guard," Draycos whispered.
Jack looked over his shoulder. There was a guard, all right, standing at attention
between him and the door. A very big guard, in full uniform, with a very big gun belted at
his waist.
So much for a gracious retreat. "I'm open to suggestions," he muttered,
turning away from the guard.
"To your left," Draycos said. "The room with the open door."
"Good idea," Jack said, drifting in that direction. The buzz of whispered
conversation was starting to come back now, despite the order for silence. Maybe they all
thought it was going to be like summer camp. "We'll try for a window."
"You will not be going into the room," Draycos said. "I will need five
minutes alone. Unfasten your sleeve."
Jack frowned. But he obeyed, unsnapping the cuffs of his leather jacket as he eased
toward the slightly open door. Beneath his shirt, he could feel Draycos sliding along his
skin, moving as much of his two-dimensional form as he could onto Jack's left arm.
Obviously preparing to spring out the end of that sleeve. Problem was, Jack couldn't
see what that would gain them.
He had reached the door now, listening as best he could over the murmurs of the crowd.
He hadn't spotted anyone in the room earlier, and he couldn't hear anyone in there now.
But that didn't prove anything. They would just have to gamble that the office was indeed
empty. "Ready?" he whispered.
Draycos's affirmative was signaled by a light claw-tap on his arm. Jack stepped to the
office door, swung his left hand smoothly into the open gap
And with a sudden brief surge of weight, Draycos went three-dimensional as he leaped
out through the end of the sleeve. Jack caught a flicker of gold scales as the dragon
dodged out of sight behind the door, and then was gone.
Keeping his movements smooth, Jack dropped his arm back to his side and kept moving. No
startled screams came from behind him; the office must have been empty after all.
He continued his apparently aimless wandering along the edge of the crowd, trying to
figure out what Draycos had in mind. Was he planning on going out a window and jumping the
door guard from behind? Jack had seen the K'da poet-warrior in action, and knew he could
pull it off.
But going outside and coming in again would mean showing himself on a busy street.
Surely he wouldn't do that. Not unless they were desperate. They weren't that desperate
yet, were they?
The minutes ticked by. Jack stayed near the back of the crowd, occasionally wandering
around some more so that it wouldn't look suspicious when he eventually returned to the
office. The guard at the door stayed put, and no golden-scaled dragon suddenly appeared
from the doorway behind him.
Slowly, the crowd shrank as the teens were processed and disappeared through the
dagger-decorated door. Slowly; but still too fast for Jack's comfort. Already the back of
the group had pulled away from the area around Draycos's office. That meant that when Jack
went back to retrieve his companion, he would no longer have people standing all around to
help mask his movements.
Too bad he hadn't known any of this was coming. Aboard the Essenay he had a
whole collection of time-delay firecrackers designed for use as diversions. Too late now.
In the old days, Uncle Virgil would have been right there beside him, ready to jump in
with an improvised change of plans. But then, in the old days he and Uncle Virgil never
had any life-and-death situations hanging over them. They never had the fate of two entire
species depending on whether they could pull off some scam or theft. All they'd ever had
to worry about was closing a deal, or popping a safe, and then getting out before the cops
arrived.
How had he gotten himself into this, anyway?
Jack looked around the room at the other kids, feeling his throat tighten. He knew the
facts of how this had happened, of course. How he'd bumped into the ambushed K'da/Shontine
ship and found Draycos dying amid the wreckage. How they'd escaped from the people who had
attacked Draycos's people, and gone on to solve the frame-up that Jack had been hiding
from in the first place.
But in the old days, that would have been the end of it. Uncle Virgil would have calmly
and cheerfully gone back on his promise to help Draycos find the people who had attacked
him. He would have kicked the dragon out to fend for himself, and he and Jack would have
flown off to get on with their lives. Nice, neat, and very simple.
So what was Jack doing here? Draycos had already said he wouldn't force himself
on a host who didn't want him. Why didn't Jack simply dump him on StarForce like Uncle
Virge wanted?
Was it because he'd made Draycos a promise? Could this K'da warrior-ethic thing
actually be starting to rub off on him?
He hoped not. He desperately hoped not. It was all well and good for Draycos to be
strong and noblehe was an adult, and he'd been trained for that sort of thing. But
Jack was only fourteen years old, and very much alone in the universe. There was no way he
could deal with the complications a K'da warrior ethic demanded of a person.
More to the point, he didn't want to deal with them. Life was hard enough
without making it any harder.
Draycos's five minutes were up. As casually as he could manage, Jack strolled back to
the office door.
He reached it and turned to lean his back against the jamb, gazing blankly out at the
crowd. As he did so, he dropped one hand to his side and scratched gently against the
wood.
From inside came an answering scratch. Good; Draycos was ready. Now if only the guard
over by the exit could conveniently be looking somewhere else.
He wasn't. He was staring straight at Jack, a very unpleasant look on his face.
Jack let his eyes drift away, trying hard to look as innocent as a newborn kitten. It
looked like he was going to have to do this right under the guard's nose.
Okay. No problem. Bracing himself, hoping the dragon really was ready, he turned
around suddenly as if startled and leaned his head slightly into the office. As he did so,
his right hand dipped into the open doorway
The sudden weight on his palm nearly toppled him over onto his nose. Fortunately, it
disappeared almost immediately as Draycos flattened himself into two-dimensional form onto
Jack's skin and slithered up his arm beneath his shirt. Jack regained his balance and
turned back around.
And was suddenly hauled nearly off his feet by the front of his jacket.
The door guard was no longer at the door. He was standing right in front of Jack, a
fistful of Jack's jacket clutched in his hand.
And the unpleasant expression had become downright ugly.
Chapter 3
"What do you think you're doing?" the guard demanded. His voice
was surprisingly quiet, almost civilized. It made the glare on his face even scarier by
contrast.
"I thought I heard something," Jack said, trying to sound nervous and
flustered. It didn't take much acting. "Like there was someone in there."
"So?" the guard demanded. He turned his hand a little, twisting the wad of
jacket in his grip. "What's it to you?"
Jack would have thought the conversation was quiet enough to have escaped notice. He
was wrong. "Sergeant?" the deep voice called from the other end of the room.
"Got a candidate here for an Intelligence assignment, sir," the guard called
back. "Caught his nose where it wasn't supposed to be."
"Bring him," the voice ordered.
The guard let go of the front of Jack's coat, shifting his grip to the back collar, and
quick-marched him across the room. The crowd of teens magically parted in front of them,
leaving a clear path to the two desks.
Jack hadn't yet had a good look at the man at the second desk. Now, as the guard shoved
him forward, he saw that the other was younger than he'd first thought. He was probably no
older than his late twenties, though the gray hair made him seem twice that age. His
expression was cool and thoughtful as he watched Jack approach. His collar insignia was
that of a lieutenant; the small nameplate over his right shirt pocket read BASHT.
He waited until Jack had been deposited directly in front of him before speaking again.
"Name?" he asked.
"Jack Montana," Jack said, pulling out the fake ID he'd put together aboard
the Essenay. "From Carrier," he added, holding it out.
Lieutenant Basht made no move to take the card. "What was the commotion
about?"
Jack swallowed. "I thought I heard a noise in there," he said. "I just
looked in, just for a second."
"He didn't just look in," the guard insisted. "He had his hand inside
the door"
Basht silenced him with a glance. "You always investigate noises in places you
have no business being?" he asked.
"It's my uncle," Jack explained hesitantly. "He told me once about a
mere group that liked to hide soldiers in their recruitment centers. They'd pop out
suddenly and start shooting."
A murmur of reaction went through the teens behind him. Basht's face didn't even
twitch. "No reputable mercenary organization would ever do a thing like that,"
he said in a precise voice. "We don't waste people for no good reason."
"They figured anyone who was fast enough to duck had what they were looking
for," Jack said, making his voice tremble a little. "The rest weren't worth the
effort to train."
For a long moment Basht stared up at him in silence. Jack dropped into what Uncle
Virgil used to call "little-boy mode": making eye contact with the man, cringing
and letting his gaze drop away, then forcing himself to look at him again. It was supposed
to make Jack look all innocent and scared, and to hopefully squeeze a little pity out of
the opposition.
Problem was, he wasn't sure that was the effect he wanted here. It might get him off
this particular hook, but it might also get him booted straight out the door behind him.
That wasn't exactly what he and Draycos had had in mind.
"So," Basht said at last. "You looked in."
Jack nodded. "Yes, sir."
"Just looked in?"
"Yes, sir."
"Really," Basht said, his voice suddenly the temperature of a walk-in
freezer. "Then how do you explain that your papers are halfway into the
office?"
Jack blinked. "Excuse me?"
Basht pointed past Jack's side. "Those are your papers, aren't they?"
Jack turned around. Lying on the floor partway into the office, half visible from where
he stood, was a neatly folded set of papers with a blue backing. The same blue backing, he
realized, that had been on Jommy Randolph's indenture agreement.
Only then did he finally catch on. An office, a secretary's work station, neat stacks
of blank Whinyard's Edge forms conveniently lying around . . .
And a clever and resourceful K'da poet-warrior.
Score one for the dragon.
"I don't know," he said, fumbling at his inside jacket pockets as if looking
for something that should have been there. "I guess ... I guess so."
Basht's eyes flicked to the side. "You," he said to one of the teens.
"Go get it."
The teen hurried to the office and returned with the blue-backed paper. "Jack
Montana," Basht read aloud. He frowned as he looked down the sheet. "Who filled
this out, your baby sister?"
"My parents didn't have much school-learning," Jack improvised. Draycos's
reading skills were improving rapidly, but his penmanship still needed a lot of work.
"Let's hope yours was better," Basht said. "Are you satisfied yet that
we aren't going to shoot you in the back?"
Jack swallowed again. "Yes, sir. I'm ... I guess I was just. . ."
"Don't make excuses, Montana," Basht said coldly. "Edgemen do their jobs
right and take the credit, or they do them wrong and take the consequences. There's no
middle ground. Is that clear?"
Jack straightened up. "Yes, sir."
Basht watched him a few seconds longer, as if determined to make him wiggle as much as
possible. Then he jerked his head fractionally toward the door behind him. "Go get
your gear," he ordered.
For the first time in several minutes, Jack took a clear breath. "Yes, sir."
Behind the door a short corridor branched off in two directions, the doors marked by
the interstellar symbols for male and female. Jack took the door to the right, and found
himself in a large chamber filled with locker-roomstyle changing benches. Along one
wall was a long supply counter with a dozen men working behind it. At the far end was a
stack of footlockers. Fifty or so of Jack's fellow recruits were already gathered around
the changing benches, in various stages of changing from their street clothes into light
gray Whinyard's Edge uniforms.
"Welcome to paradise," Jack murmured to himself, and joined the line at the
counter.
The supply men were very efficient. In a few dizzying minutes Jack had had a quick
blood sample drawn and a full-body scan taken, been issued a dress uniform, boots, and
four sets of fatigues, collected a field kit and operations manual, and had been pointed
toward the stack of footlockers. Finding an open space at a bench along the back wall, he
started to change.
He had stripped to his underwear, and was shaking out the uniform shirt, when he
suddenly realized all conversation in the room had stopped.
He turned around. The whole room was standing frozen in place, from the new teenage
recruits to the supply men behind their counter. All of them staring at him.
No. Not at him. At the K'da warrior wrapped around his body.
Jack felt suddenly sick. He'd gotten so used to having Draycos riding his skin that
he'd completely forgotten about him. With his mind still focused on his near-miss out in
the reception room, he hadn't even stopped to think about what he was doing.
Now, with a single act of unthinking carelessness, he'd ruined everything. Draycos's
secret was gone, announced to the whole Orion Arm from a grubby mercenary changing room.
And as Draycos's secret crumbled, so did any hope for his people. Their enemies would
silence him with ease now; and in five months the K'da and Shontine refugee fleet would
arrive at their new home only to find a deadly ambush waiting.
They were dead. They were all dead. And Jack was the one who had killed them.
"Wow!" the kid beside Jack said, his eyes wide.
Jack focused on him. "You like my dragon?" he asked. The words came out with
difficulty, his voice sounding in his ears like it was coming from deep inside a well.
"It's cool," the kid said. "I've never seen a tattoo that big
before."
For a long heartbeat Jack just stared at him. And then, as abruptly as it had crumbled
to dust, the whole thing uncrum-bled itself back together again.
He'd gotten used to Draycos riding his skin, all right. So used to it that he'd also
forgotten what the K'da looked like stretched out back there. "Biggest one in the
Orion Arm," he bragged. His voice sounded just fine now. "At least, that's what
the guy said."
The kid shook his head in wonder, leaning forward for a better look. "How long did
it take him to do it?" he asked.
"Couple of months," Jack improvised, hoping that wasn't a ridiculous number.
He didn't have the faintest idea how long it took to put on a tattoo. "He did part of
it every day until it was done."
The kid shook his head again. "Cool."
Jack frowned at him. The kid was a good head shorter than he was, with a wide, round
face and ears that stuck out to the sides. Like a hot-air balloon with twin air scoops
attached, he decided. "I'm Jack Montana," he introduced himself.
"Rogan Mbusu," the other said.
"Uh-huh," Jack said. "How old are you, Rogan?"
The kid drew back a little. "I'm fourteen," he said, a little defiantly.
"I'll be fifteen on my next birthday."
"Yeah, that's the way birthdays usually work," Jack said, frowning. No way
the kid was fourteen. Even twelve would be pushing it. "Fourteen, huh?"
Rogan's eyes drifted away. "Sure," he said. Turning back to his own section
of the bench, he resumed changing into his new uniform.
Jack looked back around the room. A few of the boys were still staring at him, but most
had had their fill of the show and were going about their business again. Turning his back
to them, Jack did likewise.
A few minutes later he was finished. Folding his civilian clothing into the footlocker,
he pulled the "dog-collar" wristband from its pouch inside the lid and closed
it, making sure all the locks were fastened. He slid the wristband around his right wrist
and headed toward the line of uniformed kids at the wide exit door. The footlocker,
following the signal from his wristband, rolled along at his side like an obedient puppy.
On the far side of the exit door was another supply counter. There Jack picked up a
combat vest with a dozen pockets, a condensation canteen, a shirt nameplate, and the
results of the medical scan they'd done on him at the other end of the line.
Last of all, he was issued his weapons.
"Moray pistol and Gompers flash rifle," the supply man identified the handgun
and snub-nosed rifle as he slid them across the counter. His voice had the bored tone of
someone who's been saying the same thing once a minute since breakfast. "Holster's in
the side trouser pocketpick either left- or right-handed. Rifle goes over the
shoulder, barrel down, grip back."
"Uh" Jack frowned at the guns as he picked them up. They were a lot
heavier than he'd expected. "Grip how?"
"Come on, come on, move along," the man snapped, already pushing the next
recruit's weapons across the counter.
Fumbling the guns into an awkward grip, Jack moved away. At the end of the room ahead
was one final door, with glimpses of daylight shining through each time one of the new
recruits went out. He looped the rifle sling over one shoulder, just to get it out of the
way, and slid his hand into his right-hand pocket. The man had said there was a holster
somewhere in there?
"It goes like this," a girl's voice said from behind him. Jack turned, to see
the dark-eyed girl who'd had the brief run-in earlier with Jommy Randolph.
"What?" he asked.
"I said it goes like this," she repeated. She patted her right hip, where her
Moray was already nestled in its holster. "You pull the tab and it folds out into
shape."
"Oh." Jack located the tab and pulled. Sure enough, the holster folded out.
"Right. Thanks."
"The rifle goes like this," she added, looping the sling over her right
shoulder with the gun pointed down and the top of the barrel facing forward. "This
way you can just grab the grip and swing it up on its strap into firing position."
She demonstrated. "See?"
"Yeah," Jack said, tucking his Moray away and redoing the rifle. Gingerly, he
swung it up. "Yeah, I see."
"Don't worry, it won't bite," she assured him, her face somewhere between
contempt and amusement. "See the red spirals along the barrels? These are candy
canes."
"They're what?"
"Candy canes. Non-functional guns."
Jack frowned down at his rifle. "What are they giving us non-functional guns
for?"
She shrugged. "Get us used to carrying the weight, I suppose."
"But why not use real ones?" Jack persisted. "They're going to give us
those before we go into the field anyway, aren't they?"
She snorted. "If you want to get on a crowded transport with a hundred farm boys
like you who've never seen a gun before and who have live ammo, go ahead. Me, I'll
stick with Santa's elves and their candy canes."
"I have too seen guns before," Jack insisted irritably. This girl had a
genuine knack for rubbing people the wrong way. "Just not this particular type."
"Sure," she said. "Just keep 'em pointed at the ground, okay?" She
nodded toward his left hand. "You need help with that, too?"
Jack looked down at the nameplate still in his hand. "I think I can figure that
one out for myself, thanks," he growled.
"I'm sure," she said. Her own name plate, he saw, was already neatly pinned
over her right shirt pocket. KAYNA, it said. "The name's Montana, right?"
"Yes," Jack said. "Call me Jack."
"Call me Kayna," she said pointedly. She took another look at his face, and
her lip twitched. "Or Alison," she added, almost grudgingly.
"Nice to meet you, Alison," Jack said.
"Yeah. Right." She tapped her own name plate. "And remember: If you can
read it, it's upside down."
She smiled sweetly and moved off, her footlocker rolling along beside her. Muttering
under his breath, Jack pinned his nameplate into place and followed.
Maybe Jommy had been right. Maybe this was going to be like prison.
Chapter 4
Half an hour later, after a lot of jostling and confusion, the new recruits
and their luggage were finally aboard the transports.
The seats were hard and narrow, and the teens were squeezed together like slabs of
packaged meat. Jammed against the two boys on either side of him, apologizing as his
equipment poked into their ribs and wincing as theirs poked into his, Jack had to admit
Alison had been right. He was just as glad no one aboard had live ammo.
He tried a few times to strike up conversations, but no one nearby seemed interested in
talking. Eventually he gave up the effort and spent the rest of the trip gazing moodily at
the seat in front of him. With his comm clip connection to Uncle Virge buried inside his
footlocker, and with too many people pressed around for him to risk talking to Draycos, he
felt strangely lonely.
It was an hour before they set down in the center of what looked like a random
collection of small huts, large prefabricated buildings, and a scattering of tents of
various colors and styles. The recruits were herded off their transports and ordered into
one of three long barracks buildings nestled under the trees.
Jack had hoped to get a bed near one of the handful of tall, narrow windows, with an
eye toward the kind of midnight computer raid he and Draycos were probably going to have
to make. But everyone else seemed to want a bunk with a view, too, and he had to settle
for a lower bunk pressed up against the washroom wall. It wasn't exactly a prime location,
but the washroom had some windows high up in the walls that might do.
The recruits spent the next two hours sitting on their bunks filling out more
paperwork. After that, they were taken outside into an open field and taught how to stand
at attention, turn precise corners, and march in unison.
Dinner time was a real treat. Jack had heard once that the stronger the army, the more
disgusting its food. By that standard, the Whinyard's Edge was a very good army indeed. An
early round of muttered complaints was quickly cut off by a large sergeant, who ordered
one of the complainers to stand at attention while he verbally took him apart inch by
inch. Sergeant Grisko, someone at Jack's table whispered the man's name, rumored to be the
meanest of the Edge's drill instructors. After that, everyone ate in silence.
After dinner it was back to the barracks, with orders to study their training manuals.
The ten-minute warning sounded at eight-fifty, and at precisely nine o'clock the lights
went out. Many of the teens were caught unprepared, and there was a lot of stumbling
around and clunking into bunks and each other for the next half hour.
Only then, after the barracks was quiet, did Jack finally have a chance to talk to
Draycos.
"So," he whispered, his head half under the blankets to muffle his voice.
"This is what it's like to be a soldier, huh?"
"Not precisely," Draycos murmured back. Even in a whisper, his voice sounded
odd. "It is similar, though."
Jack craned his neck to try to look down at the dragon's face lying against his
shoulder. "You all right?"
For a long moment Draycos was silent. "This is not right," he said. "For
children so young to be sold into such a life without cause is not right."
"You said you were younger than this when you became a soldier," Jack
reminded him.
"We were in a war for survival," Draycos said. "There is no such
reasoning here."
"I suppose not," Jack conceded. "Though I know there are sometimes big
fights off on backwater worlds that the rest of us never hear about."
The dragon shook his head. At least that was what it felt like against Jack's skin.
"Cornelius Braxton would not approve of this situation."
"Braxton?" Jack echoed, frowning. "How did Braxton get into this?"
"I believe him to be an honorable human," Draycos said. "He would be
strongly opposed to children being used for such a purpose."
"Fine, but how didoh, never mind," Jack said, giving up. Sometimes
Draycos's mind wandered off onto the strangest bunny trails. "Just don't forget that
he didn't build Braxton Universis into one of the Orion Arm's biggest megacorpora-tions by
being Saint Boy Scout. The only reason he was so nice to me was because we did him a big
favor. If he had to indenture kids to get something he wanted, I bet he'd do it. He might
not like it, but he'd do it."
"Perhaps," Draycos said. "Still, you and I at least should have nothing
to fear from him."
"I'm not so sure about that, either," Jack said, thinking back to the glint
in Braxton's eye at their last meeting. "I wasn't exactly telling him the whole truth
about what happened, you know. I get the feeling people don't tell half-truths to
Cornelius Braxton and get away with it. He may not be finished with us yet." He
grimaced. "I'd lay odds that Arthur Neverlin isn't finished with us, either."
"Perhaps," Draycos said. "But I would suspect that Neverlin has all he
can do right now trying to conceal himself from Braxton."
"Don't you believe it," Jack warned. "Snakes like Neverlin can always
find time for a little revenge when someone's double crossed him. Especially when they've
double-crossed him as badly as we did."
"A double cross implies there was a legitimate agreement to begin with,"
Draycos pointed out. "You were blackmailed into assisting him."
"You think that's going to matter to Neverlin?"
"I suppose not," Draycos conceded, his voice thoughtful.
Again, Jack tried to get a look at the dragon's face. "So where exactly are you
going with this line of conversation?" he asked. "You suggesting we ask Braxton
for help?"
"Certainly not," Draycos said firmly, his mind apparently finished with
wherever it had been wandering. "You know we cannot afford to let anyone know there
was a survivor of the Valahgua attack. I have simply been thinking about Braxton
today."
"And I'm sure he appreciates it," Jack said. "Can we forget him now and
concentrate on the problem at hand?"
"Yes, of course," Draycos said. "What do you wish me to do?"
"First of all, you eat," Jack said, reaching under his bunk to the
napkin-wrapped slices of meat he'd managed to smuggle out of the mess hall. "There
isn't much here, I'm afraid. I'll try to do better tomorrow."
"I am grateful." Draycos's head rose from Jack's chest, pushing up the
blankets.
One by one, Jack fed the meat slices into his open mouth, maneuvering carefully between
the sharp teeth. It felt rather like feeding a pet dog, he thought.
He quickly and firmly put the warm-fuzzy image away. Draycos had already made it clear
he wasn't anyone's pet. "I can hunt if necessary, as well," the dragon said,
still chewing as his head sank flat against Jack's chest again. "What is next?"
"The main computer system is probably in the headquarters," Jack said.
"It's a big, three-story gray building through the trees facing the landing area. It
had a flag flying in front of it earlier."
"I saw it."
"Good," Jack said. He was never quite sure how much Draycos could see riding
his skin that way. "There may be a way to tap into their records from somewhere else,
but I'm guessing the HQ is our best bet. And since they probably aren't going to let us
just walk in and sift through their files during the day, it's going to have to be at
night."
"There will be guard patrols," Draycos pointed out. "As well as
alarms."
"Right," Jack agreed. "Nothing we can do about the alarms until we can
get a close look at them. But we should at least be able to figure out the patrols."
"Yes," Draycos said. The blankets swelled upward again as the dragon raised
his head from Jack's shoulder and poked his snout into the open air. "These windows
do not face the proper direction."
"There are some in the washroom that do," Jack said. "High up on the
walls. You should be able to see the HQ and most of the area around it from there."
"Good." Draycos rose higher off Jack's skin and stretched his neck, the
movement shaking his head completely out of concealment. "Hold your breath."
Frowning, Jack took a deep breath and held it. For perhaps twenty seconds the dragon
sat there like a statue, his golden scales seeming to glow in the pale light. Every few
seconds his ears would twitch; and then, abruptly, he nodded. "They are all
asleep," he said, dropping lightly onto the floor beside Jack's cot. "I will
need your watch."
Jack handed it over. "They said reveille would be at four-thirty," he warned
the dragon. "Don't pull a Cinderella on me."
"Pardon?"
"Skip it," Jack said, resettling the blankets over his shoulders and rolling
onto his side. It had been a long day, and he suddenly realized he was very tired indeed.
"Just don't be late. And try not to wake me up when you get home."
Chapter 5
Reveille came precisely at four-thirty, a raucous trumpet blare that sent
bunks jerking all through the barracks. Thirty seconds later, Sergeant Grisko himself came
striding through the door, bellowing for all the greasy maggot-infested sacks of lard to
get their hind ends out of bed and stand at attention.
"Sloppy, maggots," he growled when the teens were standing stiffly at the
ends of their bunks. "What do you think this is, summer camp? Well, it's not. Who do
you think I am, your mother? Well, I'm not."
He stomped slowly down the room between the lines, looking each recruit up and down
as he went, describing in vivid detail exactly what he thought of them, their parents,
their expectations, and their chances of becoming successful soldiers. It was highly
intimidating, as it was no doubt meant to be.
At the same time, Jack couldn't help but admire the range of the man's vocabulary. He'd
spent a fair amount of time over the years in the company of Uncle Virgil's associates,
and he'd always assumed their language was as vile as it got.
Grisko's loud defense of the cooking staff the previous evening had already put him in
the same high-level cursing league as those men. Only now did Jack realize how restrained
the sergeant's mess hall tirade had actually been.
And this was just the first early-morning wakeup. He wondered how much the man still
had in reserve.
He reached Jack . . . and suddenly stopped cold. "What in the name of Cutter's
Hind End are you supposed to be?" he demanded, looking Jack up and down.
"Sir?" Jack asked between stiff lips. "Is this some kind of joke?"
Grisko bit out, waving a hand at him.
Jack looked down at Draycos, back in his proper place wrapped around his body.
"It's a tattoo, sir."
"It's a tattoo, sir," Grisko mimicked. "Get rid of it." Jack
blinked. "Sir?"
"I said get rid of it," Grisko snapped. "Wash it off, sandblast it
offwhatever it takes."
"But it's a tattoo," Jack protested. "It doesn't come off." Grisko
had been starting to turn back toward the door. Instead, he turned back to Jack, gazing
down his nose directly into Jack's face. "Are you arguing with me, Montana?" he
asked, his voice suddenly very quiet. "Are you disobeying a direct order?"
"No, sir," Jack said, thinking fast. "Request permission to return home
to visit a removal clinic."
The corner of Grisko's mouth twitched into something that was probably as close to a
smile as he ever got. "That's better," he said. "When I give you an order,
you jump to obey it. Clear?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said.
"Good," Grisko said. "Permission denied. You don't skip out on basic for
anything. You'll get it removed during first liberty."
He made a precise about-face, just like the ones Jack and the others had practiced the
previous afternoon, except that Grisko got it right. "All right, maggots," he
announced, starting back down the line. "You've got five minutes to suit up in
fatigues and report to the mess hall. Thirty minutes from right now, you will have eaten
and assembled on the Number Three parade ground. Now move!"
They spent the morning practicing more drills and formations. By the time the lunch
trumpet sounded some of them were nearly as good at turns and about-faces as Grisko.
Not that Grisko would ever admit that, of course. To hear him talk and complain, they
would never be anything more than undisciplined, incompetent maggots.
Though as Jack watched some of his fellow recruits fumbling around, he had to admit the
sergeant might have a point.
After lunch it was more drills, this time with their candy-cane weapons. The extra
weight didn't seem that important at first, but after the first hour of spinning it back
and forth the Gompers flash rifle in particular began to feel like it was made of solid
lead. By midafternoon, whatever crispness had been in their movements was long gone. An
hour after that, a couple of the younger kids were whimpering under their breath with the
effort.
That was a mistake. Sergeant Grisko disliked whimpering even more than he disliked
full-body dragon tattoos. Each time he caught even a hint of it, he stopped the drill flat
and laid into the offender.
One of them was Rogan Mbusu, the eleven-year-old masquerading as fourteen who had so
admired Jack's dragon back at the recruitment center. By the time Grisko finished with him
and stalked away, Rogan was nearly in tears.
There were, however, two notable exceptions to the group's overall fatigue and
clumsiness. One of them was Jommy Randolph, the boy who had complained to Jack about his
indenture at the recruitment center. For all his dread back then, he seemed to be quickly
settling into the role of the perfect trainee.
Maybe he was good at this. Or maybe he was simply fighting hard to keep from getting
shown up.
Because the other exception was Alison Kayna.
Jack found himself watching her as they went through the drills. She was two rows up
from Jack's position in the formation and a little to the right, easy enough for him to
see without turning his head. Like Jommy, she was quick to pick up the techniques and
routines. Unlike Jommy, she didn't seem to be working all that hard at it.
Uncle Virgil had often said that there were only two types of people who could pick up
a skill at the drop of a hat. One group was people who already had some idea what they
were doing, while the other was natural con artists with an inborn knack for learning new
skills. Natural con artists like Jack himself.
Of course, Uncle Virgil had only brought that up when trying to talk Jack into an
especially tricky job. But the point was still valid. Either Alison had already had some
military training, or else she was one of those very special people.
The first possibility seemed ridiculous. She was only fourteen, after all, hardly
ex-StarForce material. But the second wasn't any better. If she was that special, what was
she doing in the middle of a small-time mercenary training camp?
The more Jack thought about it, and the more he watched her, the more it bothered him.
But there was nothing specific about her behavior that he could put his finger on. He
thought about discussing it with Draycos, but aside from the few minutes between
lights-out and Draycos taking off for the evening's observation duty there wasn't much
time for them to talk.
So he kept his thoughts to himself, and waited for a chance to talk to Alison directly.
After all, he was a pretty good thief and con artist, too. With a little luck, he should
be able to figure out what she was up to.
To his surprise, it wasn't that easy.
It should have been. It really should have. After all, he and Alison were two of a
couple hundred teenagers who'd been thrown into the close quarters of basic training. They
were living this soldier stuff; living it, breathing it, dreaming it, and if you globbed
enough ketchup on it you could choke it down in the mess hall. It should have been simple
to find a way to bump into her during a free moment and strike up a conversation.
There was certainly no lack of possible topics. Sergeant Grisko alone took top three
places on any likely list.
But as that first full day turned into the second, and then dragged into the third,
Jack discovered the recruits were being allowed very few free moments.
Most of their time was taken up by organized group activities like calisthenics or
marching and field drills. At those times he could see Alison, but there was no chance of
talking to her. Most of the rest of their day was spent reading from their manuals or
sitting in classrooms quoting sections of those manuals back to their instructors.
Mealtimes, which were about as close to free time as they got, were also no good. There
weren't a lot of girls in the group to begin with, and they all seemed to cluster together
at the same three tables at every meal. Alison, naturally, sat at the center table, which
meant Jack would have to push his way through everyone else to get to her.
Which pretty much left the middle of the night. With the barracks blacked out and
roving patrols moving around the camp, that was a dead end, too. Even if he had been
willing to try, he desperately needed the sleep.
By the fourth day he was half inclined to just give it up. Every muscle ached from the
calisthenics, his head hurt from all the technical information he was cramming into it,
and he was starting to do parade-ground drills in his dreams. If Alison was pulling some
scam on this bunch, he was about ready to sit back and cheer her on.
On the other hand, his own goal here wasn't simply to survive basic training, either.
He couldn't afford to trip over some scheme of Alison's while he was trying to break into
the Edge's computer records. One way or another, he had to find out what she was up to.
And so he waited, and watched, and tried to be patient. And on the fifth day, that
patience was finally rewarded.
"The targets are set up over there," Sergeant Grisko told them, pointing as
the trainees filed by the weapons table that had been set up in the woods. Through the
trees, a hundred yards away, Jack could see a ragged edge of rocks. "Go pick a firing
position and have at it."
The trainees fanned out through the trees. Gingerly hefting his Gompers flash rifle,
Jack headed off toward the right flank. "This is a different style of weapon than the
one carried by the Brummga we saw aboard the Havenseeker" Draycos murmured
from beneath his shirt.
"That one was some kind of machine gun," Jack told him. "It fired
bullets. Little projectiles, driven by small explosions."
"I understand the concept."
"Okay. This thing is a chemically pumped laser. Big difference. Hurts just as bad
if it goes off in your face, though."
Draycos stirred against his skin. "You seem uncomfortable with it."
"Try scared to death," Jack growled back. "Two hours' worth of training,
and we're supposed to know how to fire these things?"
"You are not familiar with this weapon?"
Jack snorted. "You kidding? I don't even like looking at it."
"Yet you were carrying a hand weapon when we first met."
"I was carrying a tangler," Jack corrected tartly. "There's about fifty
light-years' difference between that and one of these."
"You!" Grisko called from behind him. "Dragonback!"
Confused, Jack swiveled around. "Sir?"
The sergeant was standing back by the weapons table, his fists resting on his hips.
"Someday, if you're really, really good at this, maybe they'll issue you a weapon
with a vocal rangefmder chip," Grisko told him. "Until then, don't talk to your
gun. It won't talk back."
Jack felt his ears reddening. "Yes, sir," he said. Turning around again, he
stalked off through the trees. "Thanks, Draycos," he muttered under his breath.
"Like I needed more trouble."
"My apologies," the dragon said quietly.
Jack sighed. "Forget it."
He got a few more steps before Draycos spoke again. "I am still confused."
"A tangler is a nonlethal weapon," Jack explained tiredly. Draycos could go
off on bunny trails of his own all day, but once he got an idea or question stuck between
those pointy ears, you couldn't shake it loose with a pry bar. "That means it doesn't
kill anyone. Hey, you used the thingyou saw what it did."
"I understand the difference," Draycos said, a little stiffly. "I am a
K'da warrior. My surprise is that someone from your former profession would not be
familiar with many different styles of weapons."
Jack shook his head. "You've got it backwards," he said. "Someone in my
former profession couldn't afford not to be choosy about his choice of guns. Ever
hear of felony murder?"
"No."
"A felony is a major crime," Jack explained. A few trees ahead, he could see
a section of jagged rocks. It looked like as good a place as any for target practice.
"Like armed robbery or kidnapping or something."
"Or murder," Draycos added quietly.
Jack shivered. He'd already seen what Draycos and his K'da warrior ethic thought about
murderers. "Anyway, felony murder is when someone dies while you're committing a
crime like that."
"Even if you did not intend for it to happen?"
"Even if it wasn't even your fault," Jack said. "No matter how it
happens, if you were the one committing the crime, you can be charged with murder. That's
why Uncle Virgil and I never, ever carried weapons that could kill."
"Interesting," Draycos said thoughtfully. "K'da and Shon-tine law
requires intent to be considered. Is this universal in the Orion Arm?"
"On most Internos planets it is," Jack told him. "A lot of the alien
worlds do things differently."
"Stop," Draycos said suddenly.
Jack froze, half concealed behind a particularly large tree. "What?" he
demanded, his eyes nicking around.
"Beyond this tree is open ground," Draycos said. "You must go low to
cross it."
"Oh, for" Jack threw a glare down at his shirt. "It is only a
training exercise, you know."
"Then let us properly train you," Draycos said. "Go low."
Jack sighed. "Just what I've always wanted," he muttered, slinging the
Gompers over his back and getting down on his hands and knees. "My own personal drill
sergeant."
"Use your center joints," Draycos advised. "You will stay lower and be
able to move more quickly."
"My center? Oh. Knees and elbows."
"Correct. I am surprised they have not already taught you that."
Jack frowned as he started across the patch of open ground toward the rocks ahead. Come
to think of it, why hadn't they?
The knees-elbows waddle was easier than he would have expected. It was still a lot more
awkward than just walking, though. Reaching a convenient notch in the rocks, he carefully
eased his head up for a look.
He was at the edge of a large gravel pit that stretched out for probably a hundred
yards, maybe fifty feet deep at its lowest point. A dozen electronic targets had been set
up at various places in the pit.
"Nothing like starting us off at long-range work," Jack muttered, unlimbering
his rifle and flipping off the safety. "Whatever happened to 'Don't fire until you
see the whites of their eyes'?"
"Pardon?"
"Skip it." At least there was a conveniently shaped notch on top of one of
the rocks where he could brace the rifle. Setting the muzzle into the notch, he started to
get to his knees.
"Keep your head down," a girl's voice ordered.
Frowning, Jack rolled over onto his side and looked behind him.
It was Alison Kayna.
Chapter 6
She was coming from the trees behind him, wriggling across the open ground
using the same elbows-and-knees crawl Dray-cos had just taught him. Naturally, she was
doing it better. "What did you say?" he asked.
"I said keep your head down," she repeated, angling toward a section of rock
near Jack's. "They'll have snipers targeting us from the far side of the gravel
pit."
Jack shrunk down a little behind the protection of the rocks. "Snipers?"
"You don't think this is just target practice, do you?" Alison asked, puffing
a little as she reached the rocks. "You've seen the games Grisko likes to play. You
think he'd pass up a golden opportunity like this?"
"A golden opportunity for what?" Jack demanded. Suddenly the rock he was
leaning against didn't feel nearly so solid and secure anymore. "Blowing our heads
off?"
"Oh, get real," she scolded, unslinging her Gompers from across her back.
"They'll just be using marker lasers."
"Never heard of them."
"They cause a mild skin reaction. You don't even feel it, but the mark shows up
like a spot of sunburn."
Jack began to breathe a little easier. "Temporary, I hope."
"It lasts a day or two." Alison eased an eye up into a gap between two rocks.
"Shows where you got careless."
"Nice of them to tell us about this," Jack grumbled, rolling back onto his
stomach and sidling his way over toward a lower and better protected gap in the rocks.
"Good thing you know your way around this stuff."
"I did some research," Alison said. "I gather you didn't."
"Not really," Jack said. He lined up his sights on one of the distant
targets, wondering if someone across the way was lining up sights on him. "I figured
they'd be giving us all the training we needed."
"I wasn't talking about training," Alison said. "But that's another
point."
Carefully, Jack squeezed the trigger. There was a brief flash of laser light
accompanied by a soft hiss, and the spent power cartridge ejected from the chamber. It
rolled across the grass, trailing the stink of chemical reactant behind it. "What's
another point?"
"The training." There was a hiss from her direction as she squeezed off a
shot of her own. "Doesn't it strike you as odd that we haven't even gotten to look at
real weapons until now?"
Jack shrugged, lining up on another target. "It's only been five days," he
pointed out.
"Out of a total of ten," she countered. "Ten days of basic training,
then off we go. With most armies, this would run six weeks or more."
"Yeah, but most of them would be going off to real wars," Jack reminded her.
"We'll just be doing garrison support duty."
"That's what Grisko says," she said ominously. There were two more
hisses from her position. "You run into a boy named Rogan Mbusu yet?"
"Sure," Jack said. "Short kid, big ears. Claims to be fourteen."
Alison snorted. "Yeah, I've talked to him," she said scornfully. "He's
lucky if he's even seen twelve. Legally, you know, you're only supposed to indenture kids
fourteen and older."
"So the Edge bends the rules a little," Jack said. "What's your
point?"
"My point is I don't want to do even garrison duty with some kid who's too young
to know which end of his rifle goes where," she said darkly. "Garrison workers
can get just as dead as regular troops, you know."
Jack grimaced. "You sound like my uncle. How come you know so much?"
"Like I said, research," she said.
"Like my Aunt Fanny," Jack retorted. "Come on, you didn't get this from
any book."
Her lips compressed into a thin line. "If you must know, this is my second try at
this," she said. "I washed out of the first mere group I was indentured
to."
"And you came back for more?"
She shot him an icy glare. "My parents need the money.
Yours don't?" Without waiting for a reply, she turned back to her shooting.
Which was just as well, since Jack didn't have a ready answer for that one.
For a few minutes they shot side by side in silence. Jack alternated between several
targets, wondering how he was doing. Probably pretty lousy. Grisko would have a way of
matching up the hits to each of the trainees' guns after they were all done, but that
didn't do Jack any good right now.
"Why 'Dragonback'?" Alison asked suddenly.
Jack frowned. "What?"
"Grisko called you Dragonback earlier. When you walked off talking to your
gun."
Jack's ears reddened again. Probably the whole group had heard that. Terrific. "I
have a tattoo of a dragon across my back," he said. "A big one."
"Something to do with the old Dragonback warriors?"
"Nope," Jack assured her. "In fact, I never even heard of them until a
month ago."
She grunted and resumed her firing. Five minutes later, her clip of cartridges was
empty. "I'm off," she announced, slinging the Gompers over her back again and
starting backwards in a reverse elbows-and-knees crawl. "Make sure you fire your
whole clip before going back if you don't want Grisko to scorch your ears off Hitting the
targets once in awhile would be nice, too."
"Thanks," Jack said dryly. "I'll see what I can do."
"And keep your head down," she warned.
A minute later, she was gone, vanished into the cover of the trees. "Well, that
was fun," he muttered.
"She has great courage," Draycos said. "I can hear it in her
voice."
"Or else she's just plain stupid," Jack said, picking a target and firing off
a round at it. "Her and her family both. How do people let themselves get so
desperate for money?"
"Many times it is not their fault."
"Most of the time it is," Jack said stubbornly.
"That sounds like your Uncle Virgil's philosophy."
"Leave Uncle Virgil out of this," Jack said, firing two more shots. Missing
both, probably. "Anyway, he knew how the real world worked."
There was a short silence, just long enough for Jack to realize that Draycos could
easily have reminded him what Uncle Virgil had done for a living. "Have you no
compassion for the weak?" the dragon asked instead.
"Compassion wasn't a big priority where I grew up," Jack said. "And I
never saw it do anyone any good."
"No one?"
Jack glanced a glare down at him. "How come we only have these big moral
discussions when Uncle Virge isn't around to help me defend myself?"
"Do such discussions make you uncomfortable?"
Jack shook his head impatiently. "Can we just skip this?"
"Of course," Draycos said, as if he hadn't been the one who'd brought it up
in the first place. "Shall I give you my report on the nighttime patrols?"
"Yeah, sure," Jack said. "Go ahead."
"There are four separate teams," Draycos said. "Two soldiers in each.
They pass within view of the main headquarters' entrance approximately once every twenty
minutes."
"How regular is that twenty minutes?" Jack asked.
"Close, but not exact," Draycos said. "The period has ranged from
eighteen to twenty-five minutes."
"Do they always come from the same directions each time?"
"Again, approximately," the dragon said. "I have noted slight
differences in the direction of approach, but nothing significant."
"A regular patrol pattern, then," Jack decided, his annoyance at the dragon
forgotten. Draycos might be the local expert on morals and ethics, but putting puzzle
pieces together was where Jack got to shine. "If there's one thing Uncle Virgil
taught me to love, it's regular patterns."
"There may still be alarms on the doors," Draycos warned.
"I'm sure there are," Jack agreed. "And on the computer, too. But I know
how to handle those. My biggest worry was getting shot on the way there."
"Do we then make our attempt tonight?" Jack fired his last two rounds while
he considered. "Let's give it one more night," he said. "If the patrol
pattern is still the same, we'll go tomorrow."
"And if we are successful?"
"Well, we're sure not going to hang around any longer than we have to," Jack
told him, slinging his rifle and starting to back up. As before, the technique felt a lot
more awkward than Alison had made it look. "If Uncle Virge is on the ball, he'll have
the Essenay stashed somewhere nearby. Once we've pulled everything the Edge has on
Djinn-90 fighters, we'll whistle him up and get out of here."
"And if we do not find what we need?"
"If they've got it, we'll find it," Jack said confidently. "If not. . .
well, we'll worry about that when it happens."
He reached the cover of the trees and stood up. "Come on. Let's go see how I
did."
"Not very well, I am afraid," Draycos said. "But do not be discouraged.
Long-range shooting is difficult to master."
"It could have been a lot harder," Jack pointed out. "A machine gun, or
even a semiautomatic projectile rifle ..." He trailed off, a strange thought striking
him.
"Is there trouble?" Draycos asked.
"I was just thinking," Jack said slowly. "A flash rifle doesn't have any
kick. No recoil. You understand?"
"Yes."
"That makes it a lot easier to learn," Jack went on. "But it's also a
whole lot more expensive to shoot. Does that sound like the kind of weapon you'd want
beginners to start with?"
Draycos was silent a moment. "You are being taught to march and stand in
formation," he said. "From your books you are being taught the words and
expressions soldiers use, and a great deal of technical information. Now you are learning
how to shoot the easiest of possible weapons."
"And, if you believe Alison's numbers, all of this is happening in a
quarter of the time regular soldiers need for their training," Jack finished for him.
"This is starting to feel a little creepy."
"Yet as you yourself said, you are only being trained as garrison
assistants," Draycos reminded him. "Perhaps this is adequate for such
duty."
"Maybe," Jack said. "But like Alison said, you can get just as dead in a
garrison as you can out in the field."
Still, he reminded himself as he continued through the trees, he wouldn't be staying
for that part of the operation. Tomorrow night he and Draycos would pull the information
they needed, and then they would be out of here. "Anyway, I'll bet I did better than
you think," he added.
"You have a tendency to shoot high," Draycos told him.
"I do not," Jack insisted. "You wait and see. You'll be eating those
words for your dinner."
"Pardon?"
Jack sighed. "Skip it."
Alison and Jommy, to Jack's complete lack of surprise, came out first and second in the
final tally.
To his rather annoyed surprise, he found that Draycos's evaluation of his own shooting
skills had been correct. He himself had finished a less than glorious eighty-seventh.
But at least he'd only collected three sniper hits. Most of the others, blissfully
unaware of their true position in Grisko's shooting gallery, had up to two dozen of the
little marks.
Alison, naturally, had only one.
Dinner that night was grumpier than usual. Most of the recruits seemed to think it had
been a highly unfair trick to play on them, and the majority seemed to blame Sergeant
Grisko personally for it. Jommy in particular was highly indignant, apparently feeling
that his twenty-one hits took a lot away from his otherwise impressive second-place score.
Jack stayed out of the debate as best he could. There was no need to get them thinking
about his own low sniper hit rate. It might lead to the unpleasant suspicion that he had
been in on the scam from the start.
After dinner there was a twilight marching drill, using real Gompers flash rifles this
time instead of the candy canes. Unloaded, fortunately. Then came more study time, bedtime
preparations, and finally lights-out. Jack waited until the rest of the barracks was
asleep, then gave Draycos his meager meal and sent him to his washroom window to watch.
It was somewhere in the middle of the night when he suddenly awoke.
For a minute he lay motionless in bed, trying to figure out what had awakened him.
Then, suddenly, he got it.
There was a rush of cool air rippling over him from the washroom area where Draycos was
supposed to be watching. Not the usual light breeze that came from having the window open
a crack while the dragon peered out, but something stronger.
Silently, he climbed out of bed and padded barefoot across the cold floor to the
washroom. If this was nothing but a matter of the wind having shifted direction during the
night, he promised himself darkly, he was going to be very annoyed.
The wind hadn't shifted direction. The breeze was stronger because the window had been
propped wide open. And Draycos was gone.
Chapter 7
AH right, Jack told himself urgently. Don't panic. Draycos
wasn't lost, after all. He was just misplaced a little.
All right. First off, it was for sure that none of the roving patrols could have
gotten him. Certainly not without making a lot of noise in the process. Wherever
Draycos had gotten to, he'd gotten there voluntarily.
Could he have decided to tackle the HQ building on his own? Ridiculous. Draycos might
be a first-class warrior, but he didn't know the first thing about human-designed locks
and alarms. He wouldn't have gone there without Jack.
And then the obvious answer struck him. Of course: Draycos was hungry. After nearly a
week of the starvation diet Jack had put him on, the dragon had finally given up and gone
hunting.
Jack felt his face warm with shame. He should have tried better to bring Draycos more
food. Tried, nothinghe should have done better. But with all those kids
bustling around, and Grisko and the other drill instructors likely to drop in without
warning
He shook his head firmly. Those were cheap excuses. And as Uncle Virgil would have
said, yesterday's cheap excuses were tomorrow's fish wrap. As of tomorrow, he would
starting bringing a decent meal home to his partner.
Partner. He frowned at the word. Uncle Virge didn't want him to have any
partners. Uncle Virge especially didn't want him having a partner with Draycos's rigid,
self-sacrificing K'da warrior ethic. Uncle Virge would be very unhappy if he knew Jack was
starting to think of Draycos in that way.
The open window was next to the low wall of the washroom's big shower area. Carefully,
trying not to make any noise, Jack pulled himself up onto the wall. He steadied himself
with a grip on the edge of the window and looked out.
The camp was actually rather pretty by starlight. To look on it now you wouldn't think
there was so much grunting and sweating and agony out there during the day. He looked
through the trees toward the dark windows of the headquarters building, trying to imagine
what kind of security they might have there.
And then, he caught a flicker of movement from his right. Something that looked like a
black shadow was moving swiftly and silently along the ground toward the barracks.
It was Draycos. It had to be. And the fact that the dragon's golden scales had turned
to combat black meant there was trouble.
He slid off the wall onto the shower area's tile floor. If Draycos was moving that fast
down there, he wasn't likely to slow down much coming through the window.
He didn't. Without any hint of warning, the dragon was suddenly there, leaping with
bull's-eye accuracy straight through the center of the opening. His tail caught the edge
of the window with a soft slap as he passed, slowing him down and deflecting his arc just
enough to drop him soundlessly into the center of the shower area.
"What's the matter?" Jack hissed.
Draycos did a startled spin, twisting around like a cat on a hot charcoal grill. The
sudden arching of his neck crest relaxed as he saw it was Jack. "I went out to better
study the movements of the patrols," the dragon said, his tail twitching restlessly.
"I am sorry, but I may have been seen."
Jack glanced up at the window. "Where?"
"To the north," Draycos said. "I heard movement nearby and went up into
the trees."
"What happened then?"
"I eluded the patrols without difficulty," Draycos said. "I do not think
they really know what they are looking for. But they may still be searching for me. I am
sorry."
"Wait a second," Jack said as a sudden thought struck him. "The patrols
are off chasing each other's tails up north?"
"They have gone all directions," Draycos said. "From the movements of
lights, it would seem they are searching the entire perimeter of the camp."
"Are they, now," Jack said, scratching his cheek. "All of them, you
think?"
The tail twitching suddenly stopped. "What are you suggesting?" Draycos asked
cautiously.
Jack nodded toward the window. "I'm thinking this might be a good time to go crash
the party."
Draycos's neck crest stiffened a little. "But the patrols are on alert."
"Right," Jack agreed. "But they're on alert somewhere else. Give me a
second to get dressed."
Two minutes later he was back. Draycos had closed the window down to a crack again and
was crouched on top of the shower wall peering out. With the immediate excitement over,
his scales had returned to their usual red-edged gold. "I see and hear no evidence of
movement," he reported. "But I am not convinced this is a wise move."
"The worst that can happen is that we have to dodge the patrols," Jack
pointed out as he pulled on the thin plastic camouflage gloves that had come with his
field kit. No point leaving fingerprints or traces of sweat where someone could find them.
"If we wait until tomorrow, we'll have to do that anyway. At least here we start with
an open playing field."
"Tomorrow the patrols will be on a known schedule," Draycos countered. But
nevertheless he pushed open the window and slid through.
Climbing up onto the shower wall, Jack got his legs through the opening and followed.
The window was pretty high, and as he lowered himself he wondered briefly about his
chances of twisting an ankle as he hit the ground.
He needn't have worried. Draycos had taken up position beneath the window, stretching
up on his hind legs with his front paws braced against the wall. Jack's feet found spots
on the dragon's shoulders, and a second later he was safely on the ground.
"Looks clear," Jack whispered as they crouched together beside the barracks.
"Let's go."
Draycos put a paw on Jack's outstretched hand and disappeared up the sleeve. Jack
waited until he had slithered along his skin to his usual position with his head at Jack's
right shoulder. Then, with one final look around, he headed off toward the headquarters
building at a quick trot.
He had paced off the distance two days ago on his way to the mess hall and knew it to
be about a hundred yards. Sneaking through the trees in the dead of night, senses alert
for trouble, it seemed a lot farther.
There were no shouts of discovery as they reached the front corner of the headquarters
building. "Do we enter through the main door?" Draycos murmured.
"Probably not," Jack puffed. "But I'll check."
One glance was all it took. "Not a chance," he told the dragon, slipping
around the side of the building. "The lock's armed six ways from August. We're not
going to pop it without a set of tools."
"What then?" Draycos asked.
"We find a likely window," Jack said, pausing at the first window and giving
its edge a quick examination. "Maybe on the second floor where they might not be so
careful."
"Or perhaps the third?" Draycos's head lifted out of Jack's shoulder, pushing
aside the shirt material. His tongue flicked out, pointing toward the stars.
Jack looked up. Directly above them, two windows up, was a darkened third floor window.
Even in the dim light, he could see it was open a few inches. "Looks promising,"
he agreed doubtfully. "Can you jump that high?"
"Brace yourself," Draycos said in reply. "What do I do when I am
inside?"
"Find a way down here," Jack told him, pointing at the first-floor window in
front of them. "Doesn't look like there's too much of an alarm here. I should be able
to talk you through the disarming procedure."
"Very well. Are you ready?"
Jack planted his feet firmly against the ground and loosened his shirt at the back.
"Ready."
An instant later he was nearly knocked off his feet as the dragon leaped upward from
his back, his front paws shoving down hard on Jack's shoulders for momentum as they
passed. Before Jack could even flail for balance the dragon's rear paws thudded down in
the same spots, giving himself an extra push upward. Jack grabbed for the edge of the
window in front of him, nearly putting his hand through the plastic in the process, and
looked up.
Draycos was hanging by his front paws from the third-floor window ledge. For a moment
he peered inside, his tongue flicking through the gap to taste the air. Then, working his
snout into the opening, he pushed upward, levering the window all the way open. A quick
pull, a lunge of golden scales, and he was inside.
Jack turned and looked at the silent woods and the darkened buildings half-seen through
them. With Draycos gone, he suddenly felt a lot more exposed out here. He hoped the dragon
would hurry.
Too late, he also hoped the Edge hadn't loaded their headquarters with hidden security
cameras. Getting Draycos recorded on videotube would be all they needed.
The light touch that brushed across his shoulder was like a high-voltage electric
shock. He twitched violently, nearly wrenching his back as he twisted around, half
expecting to see Sergeant Grisko grinning at him over the muzzle of a gun.
It wasn't Grisko. It wasn't a gun, either. It was, instead, the plug end of an
electrical extension cord.
He looked up. Draycos had reappeared in the window, the cord dangling from between his
front paws. "A change of plan," he whispered down at Jack. "It may be safer
to stay on this floor."
Jack took a deep breath, sternly ordering his heart to start beating again.
"Right," he muttered. Getting a grip on the cord, he started to climb.
Between his climbing and Draycos's pulling, he made it up and through the window in
record time. "It appears to be an assembly area," the dragon suggested as Jack
peered around at the long tables stacked with electronics gear.
"Probably maintenance," Jack said, his nose wrinkling at the faint stench of
burned insulation. The smell was probably why whoever worked here had decided to leave the
window open overnight. "I don't see any computers, though," he added, closing
the window back down to its original crack.
The dragon's ears twitched toward the closed door. "I hear no movement
outside."
"Good," Jack said, heading toward the door. A gray plastic bag caught his eye
as he passed, and he scooped it up. "Hold it a second," he added as Draycos
reached for the door handle. "They may have cameras out there."
He slid his hands into the bag, stretching the heavy plastic taut.
"Hereyou've got the claws in the family," he said. "Cut me a couple
of eye holes, will you?"
Draycos's neck arched and he extended a claw. A couple of quick slashes, and he had a
neat slit visor carved into the plastic. "Will that do?"
"Let's see," Jack said, wincing a little as he slid the bag over his head.
He'd seen those claws slice grooves in solid metal, and they'd come a little too close to
his hands just now. The positioning was perfect. The bag settled onto the top of his head
with the slit directly in front of his eyes. And unlike the eye holes he'd asked for, the
slit even allowed him some peripheral vision. "Perfect," he told the dragon.
"Get aboard and let's go."
The hallway outside was dark and silent. Jack stayed close to the wall, trying to
ignore the rustling of the plastic bag in his ears. The main offices would probably be on
the first and second floors, but with luck one of the rooms up here would have the
computer link he needed.
He struck gold with the second room he tried. Not only were there three terminals in
the center of the room, but two of the walls were lined with file cabinets.
"Bingo," Jack murmured as he closed the door behind him. "Looks like
we've found the main file room."
Draycos's head rose from Jack's shoulder, his green eyes glittering in the dim
starlight filtering in through the window. "We have found old records," he
corrected. "The labels on the cabinets indicate the information is over five years
old."
Jack felt his lip twist. So much for hunting down the right tube and studying it later
in the safety and convenience of the barracks. "Well, we can't expect them to just
hand it to us," he said philosophically, closing the door and heading for the
computers. "You want to keep watch?"
Draycos dropped to the floor from his sleeve. He opened the door a crack and pressed
his ear to the opening. "Do not take too long," he warned.
"Thanks," Jack said dryly, turning on the computer. "I wouldn't have
thought of that."
"Will there not be code-locks?" the dragon asked, ignoring the sarcasm.
"Like cold on ice." "Pardon?"
"They'll be all over the place," Jack translated. "But Uncle Virgil
taught me a few tricks."
For a few minutes he worked in silence. The sewer-rat approach, as Uncle Virgil had
called this technique, was nearly always effective with human-designed computers.
Trouble was, it was also pretty slow. Jack could feel sweat gathering on his forehead
beneath his mask as he punched the keys. Sooner or later, he knew, the patrols out there
were going to get tired of their search and come home. The computer chugged on, the
sewer-rat code words chewing away at the defenses.
And then, abruptly, Draycos stiffened. "Footsteps," he hissed. "Someone
is coming."
Chapter 8
For a second Jack hesitated. To give up now, when they were so close . . .
"Where?" he hissed back.
"On the stairway at the near end of the corridor," Dray-cos said.
"Moving slowly upward."
"Which floor?" Jack asked. "I mean, are they coming from first to second
or second to third?"
Draycos's other ear twitched toward the cracked door. "First to second," he
said. "And there is only one person."
Jack chewed at his lip. A single person implied a night watchman making his rounds. If
he went through the second floor before coming up here to the third, there might still be
time to find and pull the records he needed.
And then Draycos's tongue flicked out. "There is an odd odor," he said.
"It tastes . . . unpleasant."
Frowning, Jack crossed to his side. "Let me smell," he whispered. The dragon
moved away, and Jack took a careful sniff.
One was enough. "We're out of here," he muttered, closing the door all the
way and heading for the window at the far side of the room. As he passed the computer, he
shut it off. "Come on."
"What is it?" Draycos asked, hurrying to catch up with him.
"He's laying a sopor mist ahead of himself," Jack said, looking around.
Unfortunately, this room hadn't come equipped with any handy extension cords. "A few
more whiffs and you and I would have been snoozing blissfully away. You see anything to
climb with?"
"No need," Draycos said, stepping to the window. With forepaws and muzzle he
slid it open. "I will jump first and stand below. You may drop onto my back."
"You must be kidding," Jack growled, going back to the desks. The computers
themselves were standard fold-top portables, with a whole spaghetti mix of cables
connecting them to printers and scanners and other equipment. "I'd break your back.
Or else miss completely and break mine. Help me get these cables loose."
Two minutes later, Jack had the cables knotted together. "It will be too
short," Draycos warned, running an eye over the makeshift rope.
"It'll be close enough," Jack insisted, carrying the lumpy coil across the
room and feeding one end out the window. "Here," he added, handing the other end
to the dragon. "Hold tight."
There was no way he could slide down quickly, not on a rope with as many knots in it as
this one had. Just the same, he went down as fast as he could manage. The watchman back
there could burst in on Draycos at any time, and he probably had something a lot nastier
than sopor mist in his arsenal.
But there were no shots from above, and none of the knots gave way, and a few seconds
later he had reached the end. Draycos had been right; he found his feet dangling about six
feet short of the ground. Bending his knees slightly, he dropped the rest of the way.
He'd barely landed when the collection of cables fell into a heap beside him. Draycos
was right behind them, dropping into a crouch away from the tangle. "Anyone
nearby?" Jack whispered.
The dragon's long neck turned back and forth, his green eyes glowing like a pair of
control panel status lights as they probed the darkness. His tongue darted out, and his
ears twitched back and forth like small, pointed radar dishes. "I sense no one,"
he said.
"Okay." Pulling off his bag mask, Jack tossed it to the breeze. It would have
been nice to have its protection all the way back to the barracks, but he didn't dare risk
it getting caught in some bush nearby once he finally threw it away. Grisko and his
buddies would come hunting for the intruder soon enough, and marking which of the three
barracks he had come from would be making it far too easy for them. He would just have to
trust that Draycos was right about the coast being clear. "Let's go."
The trip seemed even longer this direction than it had going the other way. But again,
there were no shouts or lights or other signs of discovery. Either they'd made it out
ahead of the general alarm, or else Grisko had decided to play it cool. Draycos boosted
Jack up to the window, then followed.
Three minutes later, undressed again, he was safely back under the blankets.
"What now?" the dragon murmured from his shoulder.
Jack took a slow, deep breath, listening to his heart thudding in his ears. That had
been close. Too close. Uncle Virge would definitely not be happy with this one.
Especially since they hadn't even accomplished what they'd set out to do. "I don't
know," he had to admit. "If we hadn't left that pile of computer cables on the
ground, they might have figured it was a false alarm. No chance of that now, though."
"My fault," Draycos said, his whisper sounding subdued. "I am accustomed
to thinking as a warrior. Not as" He paused.
"A thief?" Jack suggested.
"Yes," Draycos said reluctantly. "I apologize. I know you are trying to
move away from that part of your life."
"It's okay," Jack soothed him. "Actually, it's kind of nice to know I've
got something useful to bring to this team."
"You are the reason I am alive," Draycos reminded him. "For my part,
that is very useful."
"And you're very welcome for it," Jack said. "I just meant it's good to
be something other than your personal KV."
"Pardon?"
"Recreational vehicle. Mobile home." Jack shook his head. "Skip
it."
"Ah. I see."
"Anyway, don't worry about the cables," Jack went on. "Even if you'd
thought to pull them back inside, leaving them tied together like that would still have
been a dead giveaway. You sure didn't have time to put everything back the way it
was."
"What will we do next?"
Jack stared at the dark underside of the bunk above him. "Depends on whether they
nail us or not," he said. "If they grab me tomorrow, we wait our chance and try
to break out."
"It would be useful in that case to have transport ready."
Jack peered down his nose at his chest. "Are you suggesting we ask Uncle Virge for
help? You?"
"My feelings about Uncle Virge's life philosophy do not prevent me from
working with him," Draycos said stiffly. He shifted a little across Jack's skin, like
a K'da version of fidgeting.
"Even if Uncle Virge isn't exactly your sort of soul mate?"
"I do not know that word," the dragon growled. "The point remains. I am
a poet-warrior of the K'da. My personal feelings cannot be permitted to intrude upon my
work."
"Glad to hear it," Jack said, rather enjoying this. Draycos was always so
calm and in control that it was nice to see him squirm a little for a change. "I'll
make sure I have my comm clip along tomorrow in case we have to whistle him up."
"Assuming he is close enough to be of assistance."
"He is," Jack assured him. "Anyway, if they don't grab me, we
might as well finish the last four days of training before we take off."
"We will not try again?"
"With them alerted?" Jack retorted. "Not a chance. We'll have to pick
another mercenary group and try again."
"Then why not leave now?"
"Because it'll be easier to sneak out after graduation than before," Jack
told him. "And because Alison has proved it helps if you're not starting from
scratch."
"Perhaps," Draycos said, sounding doubtful. "We must be alert, though.
They may decide not to take you immediately."
"Oh, I'll be careful," Jack said. "Trust me. I've had enough people do
that slow vulture circle around me, watching and hoping I'll make a wrong move. I know
what it looks like."
"That will be helpful," Draycos said, not sounding entirely convinced.
"You had best sleep now."
"Sounds good to me," Jack said with a sigh. The excitement and tension of
their midnight excursion was fading, and his eyelids were suddenly feeling very heavy.
"See you at reveille."
"Yes," Draycos murmured. "I wonder ..."
With an effort,Jack propped open one eyelid. "You wonder what?"
"I wonder if perhaps I was not seen at all," the dragon said. "Perhaps
it was something else that drew the patrols to the camp perimeter."
"Such as?"
"Perhaps the Essenay," Draycos said. "You suggested it would be
close at hand."
Jack thought it over. It was possible, he had to admit. After five days of not
hearing from him, Uncle Virge might well have gotten impatient and brought the ship in for
a closer look. Without knowing the Edge's security system, he could have tripped some
alarm in the process. "Could be," he told Draycos. "We'll ask him about it
later." He lifted his eyebrows. "If it was Uncle Virge, you have my
permission to never let him live it down."
"I was not thinking of how to place blame," the dragon said. "I was
merely wondering if the ship might have taken damage."
Jack winced. "I guess we'll find that out soon enough, too."
Chapter 9
No one came storming into the barracks in the predawn darkness before
reveille. No one came and grabbed him in the shower, or on his way to breakfast, or even
at breakfast. Everything, in fact, settled nicely into the normal morning routine, from
the rotten food to the blaring trumpet calling the recruits to the morning parade-ground
maneuver.
It wasn't until they'd finished the first two drills that the routine was abruptly
broken.
He spotted the officer angling across the field toward Grisko as the sergeant shouted
out the commands that ended the second drill. Grisko set the recruits to attention and for
a moment he and the officer talked quietly together. Then the officer turned to face the
trainees, and Jack saw that it was Lieutenant Basht from the recruiting office.
"All right, listen up," Grisko bellowed across the ranks. "The following
fall out and go with Lieutenant Basht: Brinkster, Kayna, Li, Mbusu, Montana,
Randolph."
The sodden breakfast, which had already been lying heavily on Jack's stomach, suddenly
picked up about a ton of extra weight. Heart pounding in his ears, he left his position
and moved up through the ranks.
"Form up: two by three," Basht ordered as the six recruits reached the front.
They did so, Alison and Jommy taking the front two spots. Jack stepped into place behind
Jommy, with Rogan Mbusu falling in behind him. Brinkster and Li, both girls, took their
places behind Alison.
Basht glanced over their formation, and for a second Jack thought he was going to make
some snide comment. But he merely did a crisp military turn and strode off the field.
They followed, automatically falling into step with him. As they walked, Jack tried to
puzzle out what was going on.
His analysis didn't get very far. Jommy and Alison were certainly the best of the
bunch, which might imply this group had been singled out for special commendation. Problem
was, he and Rogan were here, too, and neither of them was exactly near the top of the
list. As for Brinkster and Li, Jack had noticed them along the way but neither had struck
him as being either particularly good or particularly bad. So ordinary and unnoticeable
were they, in fact, that he'd never even heard their first names.
Maybe it was a random sample, then. But with a hundred eighty boys and only twenty
girls in the group, it didn't seem likely that a spin of the dart board would end up with
three of each.
He was still trying to come up with some explanation when he suddenly realized that
Lieutenant Basht was leading them straight toward the headquarters building.
Jack's heart had been starting to quiet down. Now, it picked up its pace again. So that
was it. They'd figured out somehow that he was last night's casual visitor, and this whole
thing was a smokescreen to get him away from the main group.
Beneath his shirt, he felt Draycos shifting around against his skin. Apparently, the
K'da had figured it out, too. "Easy," he muttered a warning. The first rule
Uncle Virgil had hammered into him when facing the authorities was not to do their job for
them. You're innocent until they absolutely prove otherwise, he had told Jack over
and over. And for ten minutes after that, too, he'd usually added.
There didn't seem to be any extra security hanging around the building as Basht opened
the door and led the way inside. Jack rather expected him to take them straight upstairs
to the records room, or maybe to split Jack off from the others and take him up there. To
his mild surprise, Basht led them instead to a first-floor room.
To his even greater surprise, the room was filled with computer stations. The stations
were unoccupied, but a thin man wearing colonel's insignia was standing near the front
beside a double stack of sealed cartons. From the way he eyed them as they filed in, Jack
guessed he'd been waiting specifically for them.
"Parade rest," Basht ordered as they formed into their two-by-three again.
"Mbusu. Tell me about Sunright."
Sunright? Frantically, Jack searched his memory. Then he remembered: it was one
of the worlds that had been listed in the Current Whinyard's Edge Missions section
of their training manual.
And that was about all he remembered. If Basht called on him, he was going to be in
serious trouble.
For a second it looked like Rogan was already there. "Uh" the boy
floundered. His voice quavered the way it always did whenever he had to talk to a superior
officer, and Jack winced in sympathy.
Then the mental wheels seemed to catch. "Sunright, sir," Rogan said, his
voice still trembling a little. "Third planet of the Gamma Lartrin system. Human
colonized in 2115; ceded to the Parprins and Agri by the Treaty of Mcdougall
in"
"Lose the sniveling," Basht cut him off. "Kayna? What are the Edge's
interests in the place?"
"The Edge has been hired by a Parprin daublite mining colony to protect its
interests from a group of Agrist claim-jumpers," Alison said briskly. So she was on
top of this, too. That figured. "Troops have been in position on the ground for the
past sixteen months."
"Planetary bio stats?"
"Atmosphere is slightly oxygen-heavy, but well within human tolerances,"
Alison said. "Gravity is three percent less than Earth Standard; temperatures average
two degrees cooler."
Basht nodded. "Who are we facing there? Randolph?"
"The Agri have their local military group," Jommy said. "Mostly
volunteers. They've also hired units of the Shamshir mercenaries."
"Relative strengths?" Basht asked. "Li?"
Li seemed to shrink behind the smooth skin of her face. "I don't remember,
sir," she said in a barely audible voice.
For a long second Basht's eyes burned into her, as if he was trying to set her on fire.
Then, the glare flicked over her shoulder. "Brinkster? What's our strength?"
Out of the corner of his eye Jack saw the girl wince. "I think we have eight
hundred troops on the ground, sir."
"You think?"
"We have eight hundred troops, sir," she said, more firmly this time.
"And the Shamshir?" Basht asked, his eyes finally focusing on Jack.
"Montana?"
Jack braced himself to follow Li down in flames. But even as he opened his mouth to
tell Basht he didn't know, there were seven rapid pinpricks on the back of his forearm,
the urgent tapping of a K'da claw. "They have seven hundred, sir," he said,
hoping he was reading Draycos's signal right.
He held his breath. Basht's eyes flicked again to Li, as if silently pointing out that
she was the only one not up to speed here. Then he turned and nodded curdy to the colonel.
tto- "
Sir.
He stepped back as the colonel came forward, and Jack let out a silent sigh of relief.
He hadn't realized that during all those hours of study Draycos had actually been reading
the manual over his shoulder. Lucky for him.
Over his shoulder. On top of his shoulder. Whatever.
"My name is Colonel Elkor," the other introduced himself. "Late
yesterday we received word from Sunright that the Shamshir have made a major blunder.
We've been nibbling around the edges of their main InterWorld transmission station, so
they've set up a new one. It's in a mountainous area marked as November Six on our
maps."
He looked them all over, as if expecting them all to know where November Six was. Jack
tried to remember if the Missions section had included a map of the Sunright area, but he
couldn't.
"The convenient part about that is that we happen to have a forward observation
outpost in that region," Elkor went on. "That means that if we put some
specialized computer equipment in there, we'll be able to tap directly into all their
off-planet transmissions."
He jerked his head back at the boxes he'd been standing beside when the group came in.
"Those are the computers," he said. "You are now the computer operators.
Any questions?"
There was a moment of uncertain silence. "Why aren't there any
questions?" Elkor demanded. "You all already know everything?"
Jornmy lifted a hesitant hand. "Sir? I don't know anything about communications
work."
"That's better," Elkor rumbled. "Fact is, none of you do. That's why
you're here. Lieutenant Basht will be running you through three days of training that will
include electronic eavesdropping, decoding, and some preliminary analysis
techniques."
"Plus giving you all the access codes you'll need to work our systems," Basht
added. "By the time you're done, each of you will be a fully qualified Whinyard's
Edge systems operator."
"I presume none of you objects to a change in specialties?" Elkor said,
lifting his eyebrows. "If you do, say so now. Plenty of other recruits marching back
and forth out there for us to choose from."
The implications were obvious: stay here and do inside work, or go back outside and
sweat. There was another silence from the group, this one a lot more positive than the
last. "Good," Elkor said briskly. "The six of you are now designated as
Technical Squad Tango Five Zulu. Carry on, Lieutenant."
He strode from the room. "All right," Basht said, gesturing toward the
computer stations. "Everyone pick a station, and let's get started."
They took a short break for lunch, and an even shorter one for dinner. Throughout the
day the noise outside rose and fell as the rest of the recruits were drilled and
exercised, then taken away for more target practice, then brought back for more drills and
exercise.
The noise inside the room, consisting mostly of Basht's steady drone of information,
seemed to go on forever.
The sky was already darkening when they were finally turned loose. "I guess that's
what they mean by information overload," Jack commented to Draycos as he trudged
alone toward the barracks. "My head is so full it hurts."
"Perhaps the next two days will be easier," Draycos suggested from his
shoulder. "You seem to have been given most of the necessary information."
"Yeah, but the next thing will be drilling us in how to use it," Jack pointed
out. "That's always a lot harder than just memorizing facts and figures."
He glanced down at the dragon's head, just visible beneath his collar opening.
"Speaking of facts and figures, thanks for bailing me out when Basht started lobbing
pan-fried rocks into our laps. I'm amazed you even bothered reading all that stuff, let
alone memorized it."
"I am a poet-warrior of the K'da," Draycos reminded him. "The gathering
of military information is part of my profession."
"Yeah, maybe," Jack said suspiciously. "Let me guess: you made up a
little song about the Edge's expeditions. Right?"
There was a short pause, and then the dragon's voice rose in gentle melody from beneath
his shirt. "On Eagles' Rock two hundred strong, where humans fight a Trin-trang
throng," the dragon sang. "Eight hundred fight at Sunright here:Agri and seven
friend Shamshir."
Jack rolled his eyes. "Words fail me."
"Thank you," Draycos said dryly. "There are thirty more verses if you
would care to hear them."
"Some other time."
They walked in silence a few more steps. "I trust you realize," Draycos said
at last, "that this is a trap."
"Oh, I know," Jack assured him. "Let's hear your take on it."
"They know that someone tried to break into their system last night," the
dragon said. "They suspect it was you, but are not certain. They therefore offer you
the chance to learn their access codes, in the hope that you will try again tonight."
"Not bad," Jack said. "You're getting better at this sneaky stuff."
"I will take that as a compliment," Draycos said gravely. "Thank
you."
"You're welcome," Jack said. "Only one thing. Unless they also think I'm
dumber than dirt soup, they know I won't try another midnight stroll. Not with them
alerted like this."
"What then do they expect?"
"I figure there are two possibilities," Jack said. "One, that I'll go
straight off the chutzpah meter and try to break into the records while Basht is standing
right there teaching me how to do it."
"What is a chutzpah meter?"
"Chutzpah is sheer, blatant nerve," Jack growled. Having to stop every third
sentence to explain something was starting to get really old. The minute they were back on
the Esse-nay, he promised himself, he was going to sit the dragon in front of a
dictionary and not let him get up until he'd memorized it. "The classic definition is
a kid on trial for murdering both parents, who pleads for mercy on the grounds that he's
an orphan."
"An interesting term," Draycos said thoughtfully. "An equally
interesting concept. What is the other possibility?"
"That I'll wait until we get to Sunright and try to tap into the computer at the
outpost they're sending us to."
"Will an outpost computer have the information on the Djinn-90 fighters that we
seek?"
"I don't know," Jack said. "I hope so, since that's mostly what I am planning
to do." " 'Mostly'?"
"Right," Jack said, smiling tightly. "You see, they'll figure they can
just put a watchdog program on the computers before I arrive. That way, the minute I try
to break in, they'll have me."
"But you will instead be using your special access system?"
"Actually, we can do even better than that," Jack told him. "The local
Edge group will have to have a mainframe set up somewhere, and it certainly won't be off
at some little observation outpost."
"It will be in their main encampment." "Right," Jack agreed.
"And since the outpost computer has to be able to talk to that one, it'll need a
transmission pathway. And unless they went to the trouble of stringing a cable out into
the middle of nowhere, that means a radio link." Draycos stirred suddenly on his
skin. "The Essenay." "Bingo," Jack said, nodding. "Once I
give Uncle Virge the access codes, he can tap into the signal and pull up whatever the
mainframe has on Djinn-90 fighters. And since I won't have used the outpost computer to do
it, they won't be able to trace it back to me."
Draycos was silent a moment. "That will require us to travel to Sunright," he
pointed out. "You will be entering a combat zone."
"That is the downside to this whole thing," Jack admitted. "What
do you know about observation outposts? Do they get attacked much?"
"That depends on the situation," Draycos said. "If the outpost is not
considered a danger, it may be left alone as a ranging marker for artillery attacks."
"And if it is considered a danger?"
"It will be destroyed," Draycos said. "As quickly as possible."
Jack grimaced. "I suppose eavesdropping on the other side's communications would
fall into that second category?"
"Correct," Draycos said. "Assuming the other side is aware of it."
"Figures." Jack sighed. "Okay. So the goal is to get there, pull the
records, and disappear before the Shamshir figure it out."
"If they have not done so already," Draycos warned. "Perhaps it would be
better to leave now and try a different group."
For a long moment Jack was sorely tempted. He already had his comm clip handy, hidden
at his waist beneath his shirt. He could just keep walking until they reached the
perimeter, jump the fence, and have Uncle Virge and the Essenay in and out before
the Edge even knew what had happened.
Then it would be out to another mercenary group, one that wasn't already suspicious of
him like the Edge was. He had enough fake IDs aboard the ship to try a dozen of them if he
had to.
But he'd already invested six days here, not to mention the time they'd spent getting
to Carrion in the first place. And time was definitely something they couldn't afford to
waste. "No," he said, trying to feel like he really meant it. "We've come
this far. Let's see it through."
"You do this for my people," Draycos said quietly. "Once again, I am in
your debt."
"Yeah, well, I wouldn't start writing checks just yet if I were you," Jack
warned.
"Pardon?"
Jack closed his eyes. "Skip it."
Chapter 10
Four days later, the recruits graduated.
Jack had never been through a graduation ceremony before. Of course, he'd never been in
a school before, either. All of his formal education had been given to him aboard the Essenay,
with Uncle Virgil more or less presiding over the procedure.
He would have laid good odds, though, that this graduation was vastly different from
most.
The ceremony didn't last very long, for one thing. Grisko and the other drill sergeants
got the recruits into formation and ran them through a few maneuvers in front of a small
group of officers in full dress uniform. Colonel Elkor and Lieutenant Basht were among
them, but Jack didn't recognize any of the others.
After the maneuvers, they all stood at attention while Elkor gave a speech. A short
speech, fortunately, mostly consisting of telling them how lucky they were to be members
of the Whinyard's Edge and how proud the Whinyard's Edge was to have them. After that,
Lieutenant Basht read off the squad and platoon listings, told them they would be leaving
camp at oh-seven-hundred the next morning, and ordered them to fall out.
And after that, the sergeants loaded their new mercenaries aboard transports and flew
them to a nearby town for a party.
"A curious ritual," Draycos commented as Jack headed toward the restroom for
his third time. "But is not alcohol a depressant to your people?"
"Sure is," Jack confirmed, looking around as he pushed his way past the
groups of brand-new Edgemen crowding the tavern. Most of them were already half drunk,
either laughing and staggering or else passed out on the tables where they sat. A few were
huddled in corners, looking miserable, probably trying not to throw up. "I don't know
why Grisko and the others are even putting up with this, let along encouraging it."
Draycos remained silent until Jack reached the privacy and relative quiet of the restroom.
"There is no deep mystery to their actions," the dragon said. "The children
are drinking alcohol to pretend they have become adults. The officers allow it because
they believe the experience will bond the members of each platoon together."
Jack snorted. "Mostly what it'll do is make them feel lousy," he said.
"Not a single one of these kids has any idea what they're doing. Probably the first
time any of them has even tasted the stuff." "Unlike you?"
Jack shrugged. "Uncle Virgil taught me to drink in case I ever had to do it for
some con scheme," he told the dragon. "And right after he did, he told me to
never even look at the stuff if I didn't absolutely have to. In case you hadn't noticed,
I'm still on my first beer, and I've only finished half of that. Mostly, I've been
drinking water."
"I had noticed," Draycos said. "I see that in some areas Uncle Virgil
did indeed have good judgment."
"What Uncle Virgil had was a well-developed survival instinct," Jack said as
he dug under his shirt and pulled out his comm clip. "In our business even a little
fog in the brain could be fatal. Fogged reflexes, too. I never knew when we might have to
drop everything and make a run for the tall grass."
He took a deep breath as he lifted the comm clip. "Uncle Virge isn't going to like
this," he warned.
Uncle Virge didn't. "This is not the deal we made, Jack lad," the computer
growled. "Not the deal at all."
"You don't hear me doing cartwheels of joy either, do you?" Jack asked.
"There just isn't any other way."
"Of course there is," Uncle Virge said, suddenly gone all soothing and
persuasive. "Look, lad, it's over. I know you've done your best. But the hand's been
lost, the jackpot's been taken off the table, and it's time to face reality. You and your
poet-warrior friend have no choice but to take this to the StarForce."
"We've been through this, Uncle Virge," Jack reminded him. "It isn't
safe for Draycos to show himself around."
"But it's safe for him to drag you into a war zone?" Uncle Virge countered.
"Besides, if Draycos gets himself killed, what happens to his people?"
"I will not be killed," Draycos said calmly. "Nor will I allow Jack to
be harmed."
"Big promises," Uncle Virge huffed. "How exactly do you intend to make
amends if you're wrong? A signed apology from the grave?"
"I'm not going to argue with you," Jack cut him off. He was nervous enough
without bringing up the subject of graves. "We're going, and that's that. You want to
hear the plan, or don't you?"
"Go ahead," Uncle Virge muttered, sulking now.
Jack laid it out for him. Uncle Virge was not impressed. "That's the
plan?" he demanded scornfully. "That house of buttered toast is the best our
poet-warrior can come up with? No wonder his people are losing their war."
Jack winced, not daring to look down at Draycos. "Yes, that's it," he told
Uncle Virge stubbornly. "The only question is whether we do it on our own or whether
you come along to help. Well?"
"Of course I'll help," Uncle Virge muttered, back to sulking again. "You
know where you'll be?"
"It's the Edge's November Six outpost," Jack told him. "According to the
map they showed us, it's just to the south of Bear Mountain in the southwestern part of
the Gray Hills. Can you pull up a map?"
"Yes," Uncle Virge said. "Yes, I have it."
"Basht said we'd be flying into a major Parprin town called Mer'seb," Jack
told him. "From there, our squad will take a transport up to November Six. I'm
guessing Mer'seb is where the Edge's HQ and mainframe computer are, but you'll need to
check on that. Got it?"
"Of course," Uncle Virge said.
"Okay," Jack said. "Incidentally, you weren't by any chance poking
around the training camp lastlet's seelast Tuesday night, were you?"
"Certainly not," Uncle Virge said. "I'm right here in the spaceport
where you left me. Why?"
"Just wondering," Jack said. "There was a something off by the fence
that night that had the patrols stirred up for awhile, that's all."
"Did it cause you any trouble?"
"Actually, it did us a favor," Jack said. "That's what opened up the
grounds and gave us a clear run at the HQ building."
"Where you weren't able to get what we needed," Uncle Virge said pointedly.
"Which is why we're going with this other lunatic plan. Some favor."
Jack felt his lip twitch. "I suppose." "But I suppose we're stuck with
it now," Uncle Virge went on. "I don't suppose you happen to know where the
actual battle lines are drawn on Sunright?"
Jack glanced down at Draycos, got a sideways slide of the head in return. "Not a
clue," he said. "But we should be able to figure it out once we see which
direction the shots are coming from."
"Not funny, Jack lad," Uncle Virge said darkly. He had a point.
"Sorry," Jack apologized. " 'With tired arms,'" Draycos murmured,
" 'and eyes fatigued, the soldiers stood to mark the deed.' "
"That isn't funny, either," Uncle Virge growled.
"Sorry for both of us, in that case," Jack said, frowning down at Draycos.
What had that been all about? "I have to go. We'll see you on Sunright."
He clicked off the comm clip and tucked it away again inside his shirt. "Well,
he's not happy," he commented. "But he didn't go completely frantic on us,
either. That's a good sign."
"Or else he merely recognizes he has no choice but to obey."
"Maybe," Jack conceded. "What was that 'tired arms' thing you said to
him?"
"It was part of a poem," Draycos said. "I have been working on
translating my poetry into your language. I often recite parts of it to Uncle Virge late
at night, while you sleep."
Jack had to grin at that. Uncle Virgil had always despised poetry, which meant that the
computerized Uncle Virge probably did, too. "I'll bet he just loves that. So what
part didn't he think was funny?"
"It was a poem about the Battle of Chatii," Draycos said, his voice low and
grim. "There the K'da and Shontine held a bridge against the Valahgua while a group
of alien civilians escaped behind them. What the warriors did not know was that some of
the civilians had been turned by the enemy, and soon they were being attacked from both
sides."
Jack winced. "I can see why he didn't like it. Did they allI mean . . .
die?"
"Actually, most of them escaped safely," Draycos said. "It was your
comment about not knowing where the battle lines were drawn that brought that part of our
war to my mind. So it was not Uncle Virge near the camp that night."
"I guess not," Jack said. "I hadn't really thought he would have been
that careless, anyway."
"Which returns us to the question of what did stir up the patrols,"
Draycos pointed out.
"I don't know," Jack said. "Maybe they were just jumping at
shadows."
"Trained soldiers usually do not do that."
"I suppose." Jack looked down at the dragon's head beneath his shirt.
"By the way, I want to apologize for what Uncle Virge said about your people losing
their war."
"No apology is necessary," the dragon said calmly. "I understand his
motivation. Having failed to argue us out of our plan, he was attempting to shame us out
of it."
"Ah," Jack said. Yes, that was definitely something from Uncle Virgil's old
bag of tricks. "Anyway, I'm sorry. I'm glad you didn't take offense."
"I did not say I did not take offense," Draycos said. His voice was still
calm, but there was a thin layer of ice on it. "I merely said I understood. Either
way, though, the fault is not yours."
Jack swallowed. "Okay," was all he could think of to say. "Well. Let's
get back to the party."
The transports left the camp at precisely oh-seven-hundred the next morning, bright and
shiny and efficient.
Unfortunately, the same could not be said of their passengers.
Most of them, to quote one of Uncle Virgil's favorite phrases, looked like death warmed
over and stuck to the pan. Most were pale and limp, some looked like they'd just done a
twenty-mile hike, and a few were practically sleepwalking as they stumbled aboard the
transports.
Amid such company, Jack knew, someone as fresh and un-hungover as he was would be a
little too noticeable. He picked a role somewhere in the middle of the spectrum, hanging
his head as he shuffled along. Occasionally, he made sure to bump into the person on
either side of him.
The transfer to the various spacecraft that were waiting for them an hour later wasn't
much better, but at least no one got accidentally left behind. As far as Jack ever heard,
none of them fogged their way aboard the wrong ship, either.
The trip to Sunright took seven days. Tango Five Zulu was one of three squads from
their training group going to this particular world. Sergeant Grisko and Lieutenant Basht
were along, too, though Basht made it clear he would only be staying long enough to write
up a report on the current situation there.
There were also two hundred regular Whinyard's Edge mercenaries aboard, heading in to
reinforce the eight hundred troops already there.
The numbers struck Jack as rather ominous. A twenty-five percent increase in ground
forces meant the Edge was either making a major push for victory or scrambling madly to
avoid defeat.
Either way, it was likely there was going to be shooting. Possibly a lot of it.
Starting with the second day of the flight, after everyone had recovered from their
hangovers, Basht had Tango Five Zulu start their equipment preparation. They now had the
actual fold-top computers they would be taking up to November Six with them, and it took
the better part of two days to load the various codes and data onto them from the ship's
main system.
The rest of the time was spent practicing the computer drills they'd learned back on
Carrion. They would continue practicing, Basht declared several times, until they were
able to run them in their sleep.
Jack wasn't sure they ever got that good at it. But he had to admit that Basht
pushed them at least halfway there. By the time they reached Sunright, the whole squad was
dreaming about the drills.
Finally, yet all too soon, they had arrived.
The town of Mer'seb was nestled into a narrow river valley, its tightly packed
buildings surrounded by tall, thickly forested hills. A slow river wound lazily through
the center of town from the east, taking a sharp southern turn a half mile or so beyond
the western edges.
Between the town and the river curve was a large area of mostly flat stone. It was on
this natural landing pad that the Whinyard's Edge spaceship set down.
The adult Edgemen had obviously been through this routine before. They lined up at the
airlock hatchway in full combat gear, rifles and machine guns slung for marching.
When the hatch opened, they strode out and down the ramp, forming quickly into six-man
ranks. Marching in step, they headed into the city along a typically Parprin
straight-as-an-arrow street. At Grisko's direction, the three teenage squads fell in at
the back end of the column.
"Well, this is fun," Jommy muttered under his breath from beside Jack as they
marched past the first row of houses at the edge of town. "They planning to walk us
the whole way to the outpost?"
"Probably just to the main Edge HQ," Alison said from Jommy's other side.
"It's on the far side of town."
"How do you know where it is?" Jommy asked suspiciously.
"I saw the flag from the top of the ramp," she said mildly. "You really
need to pay more attention to details, Randolph."
Jommy muttered something inaudible under his breath. "Oh, come on," she
chided him. "Frost up, okay? It can't be more than a mile or two."
"Yeah, but what's the point?" he growled.
"They're probably showing us off," Alison said. "Look at the
people."
Keeping his face forward as he'd been taught, Jack threw a sideways glance at the
Parprins lining the street. Quite a few of them had come out to see the parade, all right.
Mostly females and their children, though there were also a few of the taller males mixed
in.
He frowned, taking a second look. The thin Parprin face always seemed sad to him; but
these Parprins looked even sadder than usual. The children huddled close by their mothers,
and the males tended to stand in groups of two or three, talking softly together.
"They don't look very happy to see us," he pointed out quietly.
"Maybe they don't know we're here to help them," Jommy muttered
sarcastically.
"Or maybe they think this whole thing has gotten out of hand," Alison
suggested slowly. "Maybe they don't think their mine is worth all this."
"Isn't worth what?" Jommy scoffed. "Defending from poachers?"
"Not worth completely scrambling their lives for," Alison countered. "My
father used to say that lawyers and soldiers came out of the same expensive box. If you
couldn't settle things without them, you weren't going to like what it cost to settle
things with them."
Jommy grunted. "Your dad must have been a real kick to grow up with."
Alison didn't answer.
They continued on in silence. Jack kept his eyes moving, wishing he knew how to read
Parprin faces better. Maybe he was only imagining their discomfort.
Still, he couldn't shake the feeling that they looked like people watching an occupying
army march through their town.
They reached an area of three- and four-story buildings, obviously the town's main
business district. Here the females and their children were replaced by Parprin males,
many of them wearing the brightly colored robes of shopkeepers or the only slightly
drabber sparkle-cloth of businessmen. There were also quite a few aliens of different
species represented in the crowd, and even an occasional human. Apparently, Mer'seb was a
trading center for many of the alien enclaves and colonies scattered around this region of
the planet.
Again, it seemed to Jack that a lot of the Parprins were whispering together as the
mercenaries marched past. The rest stood in silence, watching the procession. The other
aliens, in contrast, mostly glanced at the spectacle and then moved on. No one cheered or
waved.
"I got it," Jommy said suddenly. "They just don't realize it's a parade,
that's all. We should have brought a brass band with us."
"That's funny," Alison said scornfully. "Personally, I was just thinking
about how much I was enjoying the silence."
And at that instant, almost as if on cue, the silence of the crowd was abruptly broken.
From all around them, the city erupted in noise: the distant thunder of small rockets, the
closer rattle of machine gun fire, the shouts and screams of the injured and the dying and
the terrified.
The Whinyard's Edge was under attack.
Chapter 11
The chatter of gunshots filled the air. The deeper, slower rhythm of heavier
weaponry and small explosions added counterpoint, the noise echoing from the sides of the
buildings. The entire column of soldiers was under attack.
And like the raw recruit that he was, Jack just stood there in the middle of it.
"Move!" Draycos snarled, his whole body aching for action. An attack.
Soldiers being shot at and probably killed where they stood. Civilians possibly caught in
the line of fire, with nowhere to escape to.
And he, a poet-warrior of the K'da, lying uselessly in two-dimensional form against
Jack's skin.
It was a horrible situation. A horrible, shameful situation. For a K'da warrior in the
midst of combat to sit idly by, not lifting a claw to help, was a violation of all he'd
ever stood for.
But he had no choice. To move now, to give in to the urge to defend and protect, would
doom the K'da and Shon-tine to ultimate destruction.
Because if the unknown enemies who had slaughtered his advance party ever learned that
someone had survived, they would hunt him down like a newborn cub. And when he died, the
last chance to warn the refugee fleet would be gone.
But even as his frustration rose like poison in his throat, Jack finally freed himself
from his stunned paralysis. "What do I do?" he hissed, breaking into a run
toward the edge of the street.
"Find cover," Draycos told him. Sliding along Jack's body, he got a claw
beneath the collar of the boy's shirt and popped open the sealing seam. Bad enough being
trapped here unable to help, without being mostly blind, too. He ran the claw down far
enough to open the shirt to midchest and peered out.
It was about as bad a place to be caught in an ambush as he could have asked for. All
around them, medium-tall buildings provided high ground for the attackers, and they were
taking full advantage of it. A cloud of drifting smoke was starting to collect overhead by
the rooftops, and he could see muzzle flashes from several windows. Most of the attack
seemed to be coming from three buildings: the three-story structure next to the building
Jack was heading toward, plus the two four-story ones across the street from it.
He could also see now that the city was surrounded by forested hills. More high ground,
probably the source of the deeper and more distant sounds of heavy weapons. The enemy had
planned their attack well.
There was a jarring thud as Jack reached the building and slammed hard into the wall
beside a large decorative planter with a red-blue bush sprouting out of it. "I don't
think I like this," the boy muttered in a shaky voice as he fumbled his Gompers flash
rifle off his shoulder and dropped into a squat beside the planter. "How
in?"
He broke off as an angry face suddenly filled Draycos's field of view.
The K'da froze in place. But the Whinyard's Edge mercenary wasn't interested in dragon
tattoos just then. "Gimme that," he barked, snatching the rifle from Jack's
grip. Holding it across his chest, he took off to the left.
"Oh, that's terrific," Jack muttered, curling into a tight ball behind the
planter. "Now what?"
Draycos raised his head from Jack's skin far enough to press an eye through the open
gap in his shirt, and caught a glimpse of the mercenary as he disappeared around the
corner of the building. The man's own machine gun, he noted, was still bouncing against
his back. "He wanted a long-range weapon to use against the hillside attackers,"
he decided. "His own weapon is for closer work."
"Right," Jack groused, curling up a little tighter. "Like there isn't
enough to shoot at here."
He had a point. Gunfire was pouring down from the three buildings Draycos had
already identified as being held by the enemy. The Edgemen were returning fire, but they
were pinned down and mostly without cover. Even as he watched, three of them tried to
charge the door of one of the buildings, only to be scattered back by a peppering of small
explosions.
Fortunately, most of the civilians seemed to have vanished. Some had ducked into
walkways and alleys or else had taken refuge inside buildings not held by the enemy. Those
outside the immediate battle zone were running in all directions, their brightly colored
outfits bouncing like flowers in a stiff wind.
And then, as Draycos looked over the top of the planter, his eyes caught a horrible
sight. Three Parprins, one tall and two very short, were huddled together in obvious
terror against the side of Jack's building. A mother and her cubs, trapped in the middle
of the firefight. "There," he said urgently. "Civilians."
"What?" Jack asked, not moving a muscle.
"Civilians," Draycos repeated, lifting a claw through the open shirt and
pointing.
Reluctantly, Jack untucked his head far enough to throw a quick glance over the
planter. "Okay, yeah, I see them."
"Stop merely seeing and give them aid," Draycos snapped. "Get them to
cover."
"What? Look, Draycos"
"Do not argue!" Draycos cut him off.
Small objects were starting to rain down from the enemy buildings' rooftops now,
objects that exploded on impact. Popcorn bombs, he remembered them being called in Jack's
mercenary manual, thrown by something called a popcorn machine. The three Parprins huddled
even tighter together in response, the mother wrapping her arms protectively around her
cubs. "You are a soldier," Draycos said. "The job of a soldier is to
protect those in danger. Now, protect them."
"How?" Jack demanded, sounding scared and miserable. "I can't even
protect myself. What do you want me to do?"
Draycos leaned out from Jack's shirt as far as he dared. On the far side of the
planter, between Jack and the Parprins, was a set of steps leading upward into an alcove.
He couldn't be certain at his angle, but it looked like the alcove led up into a doorway.
"That opening to your right," he told Jack. "Move them in there. It may be
a doorway that will allow you into the building. If it is not, it will at least provide
cover from the popcorn bombs."
Jack shook his head. "I can't," he said. "It's too far."
A shot slammed into the far side of the planter, nearly toppling it over onto Jack. The
boy jerked, then curled even more tightly around himself. "Listen to me,"
Draycos said, keeping his voice quiet and steady. "The enemy is not trying to shoot
civilians. If they were, those three would already be dead. We may assume they will
therefore not deliberately shoot at you if you are merely trying to help them."
Jack shivered. "But if no one's shooting at them, why should I do anything?"
"Because a random shot may still find them if they stay where they are,"
Draycos said. "And because it is your duty."
Beneath him, he felt Jack's muscles tense. "All right," the boy said, taking
a deep breath. He hunched his shoulders, taking another careful look over the top of the
planter.
And then, so suddenly it startled even Draycos, he was on his feet, running a zigzag
path toward the Parprins.
Draycos had just enough time to flatten himself onto Jack's skin before they were
there. "Come on," Jack urged, tugging at the mother's arm. "Come on. We've
got to get inside."
For a second the Parprin female just stared blankly up at him. Jack tugged at her arm
again, pointing toward the stairs and the alcove.
Then, just as suddenly as Jack had made his decision, the mother made hers. Scrambling
upright, she grabbed her cubs' hands and raced toward the alcove.
Jack stayed right behind them until they reached the steps. Then, bounding up past them
as they climbed, he pushed the door open and hurried them inside.
The room they found themselves in took up the entire front of the building. Small round
tables were laid out in what seemed to be a random pattern, with tiny colored disks neatly
arranged on them. The windows were large, facing onto the street and also to both sides.
None of them had curtains or barriers of any sort.
Near the center of the room was a wide staircase leading up to the second floor, with a
set of curved metal railings on both sides. "Make them sit beside the
staircase," Draycos whispered to Jack. "It will give some protection from fire
through the windows."
"I should be out there," Jack muttered as he herded the Parprins to the side
of the stairway. "I should be out helping them."
"You cannot," Draycos told him firmly. "You have no weapon. You can only
stay here and guard the civilians."
"But those are supposed to be my comrades out there," Jack insisted.
"You're the one who's always talking about duty. How can I just sit here while
they're getting shot at?"
"You cannot help them," Draycos repeated, flicking his tongue out once
through the gap in Jack's shirt. The smell of Parprin wasn't one he had tasted before, and
he made a mental note of its texture. "But I can. And I will."
Jack exhaled in a huff. "Okay," he said. "Be careful." He helped
the Parprins down with their backs against the stairway wall; and as he did so, he lifted
his left hand over the top of the railing.
Draycos was out of the sleeve in an instant, leaping onto the stairs. With his scales
tingling, his battle senses fully alert, he headed up.
Chapter 12
The second floor was much like the first: wide spaces, tables with
merchandise, no cover near the windows. Draycos didn't pause, but continued up the next
stairway to the third floor.
There he found what he was looking for. This floor, instead of being devoted to
merchandise, had been divided by low partitions into an orderly maze of small ofEce-like
areas. Even better, the windows were partially covered by thick, decorative drapes.
Keeping to the cover of the partitions, he made his way to one of the side windows and
looked cautiously out.
The side of the next building was perhaps ten feet away, an easy leap for a K'da
warrior. He scanned all the windows, but there was no one in sight. Apparently, the
attackers were concentrating on the street side, where the Edgemen were pinned down.
Still, they hadn't completely neglected their defense of this side. Between the two
buildings a steady trickle of popcorn bombs was raining down.
It was an interesting defensive method, one which the K'da and Shontine had never used.
The popcorn bombs were propelled outward from a central launcher somewhere on top of the
building. As each bomb cleared the edge of the roof, it sprouted a small parachute, which
stopped its outward motion and turned it instead to fall straight down. The parachute then
popped off, sending the bomb falling at normal speed toward the street below.
For a few seconds Draycos watched the bombs, studying their pattern. With the proper
timing, it should be cub's play to get though it.
The rooftop was a little ways above his position as he looked out the window, and he
couldn't see if there was anyone up there tending the popcorn machine. Still, the Edge
manual had said such devices ran automatically, so it had probably been left on its own.
He would have to risk it.
He looked down, and felt his jaws crack open in a tight smile. Whatever else the
popcorn bombs were supposed to do, they were also having an unintended but useful side
effect. Just as the gunfire from the windows was creating a hazy smoke screen around the
tops of the buildings, so too the bombs were creating a smoky mist of their own at ground
level.
Which meant that, when he made his move, neither the attackers nor the defenders would
see a thing.
He pushed open the window and backed up to midway across the room. There he crouched
low, watching the bombs fall past the window. He could feel the blood pounding through his
body, pouring oxygen and nutrients into his muscles in preparation for the effort ahead.
Out of the edge of his eye he could see the golden color in his scales turn to black as
some of the extra blood flow trickled into them.
The K'da warrior was ready.
Across the room, the pattern of falling bombs reached the proper point. Digging his
claws into the carpet, he charged.
A quick sprint took him back to the window. He jumped up to the sill with his front
paws, got his rear paws planted on the sill behind them, and leaped up and outward.
There was no time to wonder what would happen if he had made a mistake in the pattern.
Fortunately, he hadn't. His jump took him sailing cleanly through a gap in the artificial
hailstorm and landed him on top of the low parapet around the edge of the roof.
The popcorn machine had been set up near the center of the roof, spitting its deadly
dispatches toward and over the edges. As Draycos had expected, there was no one tending
it. Staying low beneath the stream of bombs, he sprinted across the roof.
This particular machine was slightly different from the one that had been shown in
Jack's manual. But it was similar enough. Two quick slashes through the power and control
cables, and the rain of bombs stopped.
Beside the machine was a trap door leading down into the building. Prying open the
popcorn machine's magazine, he pulled out two of the small bombs. Then, ready to toss them
in if necessary, he pulled the trap door open a crack.
He flicked his tongue into the gap. There was an alien tang in the air, almost buried
beneath the taste of the explosive powder of the guns. The taste of Parprin was there,
too, but faint and stale, plus the stronger scent of a human. Neither the human nor alien
scents seemed to be nearby.
He lifted the trap door the rest of the way up. Below was a narrow stairway leading
down to a door that had been propped open. No one was visible, and the enemy did not seem
to have set any alarms or booby traps. Tucking his two popcorn bombs out of the way
beneath his forearms, he headed down.
The open door below led into the center of a corridor lined with ten doors. Apartments,
he decided, or possibly private offices. Silently, he prowled down the hallway, listening
and tasting at each door.
At the second and fourth doors to the left, on the side facing the street, he found the
enemy.
He took a moment to lay the two bombs on the hallway floor by the fourth door, where
the door would strike them if it was opened carelessly. Then, returning to the second
door, he pulled it open.
The attacker's setup was again something he'd seen in Jack's manual. At the window sat
a slender, long-barreled weapon on a tripod, angled sharply downward to fire at the
street. A belt of ammunition ran up to it from a small suitcase on the floor.
The gunner himself was of a species Draycos hadn't met before: short and stocky, with
large ears and clumps of feathers poking out of a mottled red-and-purple skin. His heavy
battle vest had a shoulder patch showing a long, curved sword, and his scent matched the
alien smell Draycos had tasted by the trap door.
He was seated cross-legged in the center of the room, well back from the window,
leaning comfortably against the front corner of a large desk. With the help of a small
video monitor in one hand and a control stick in the other, he was firing the weapon by
remote control.
Foolishly enough, he was sitting with his back to the door. Perhaps he assumed his
large ears would warn him of any intruders.
Draycos didn't give him the chance to correct that error. A single leap across the room
landed him behind the alien. A single slap of his forepaw bounced the other's head against
the desk and sent him sprawling unconscious onto the floor.
For a moment Draycos crouched beside him, listening to the rhythm of his breathing. The
soldier was alive, but definitely out of the fight.
One room down. One more room to go, and then he would have done all he could. He turned
back to the door.
And paused as a sudden thought struck him. Perhaps he wasn't quite finished here yet.
He spent a minute learning how to work the control stick. Then, manipulating the
buttons and wheels delicately with his claws, he raised the muzzle of the gun to point at
the building across the street. Studying the monitor, he located one of the windows where
a similar gun was firing down into the street.
Smiling to himself, he lined up the crosshairs on the other gun and fired.
The result was all he could have hoped for. His bullets hammered into the other weapon,
shaking it like a puppet with tangled strings and toppling it back out of sight. Swinging
the gun to the right, he found the next enemy weapon and again opened fire. This gun was
sturdier, and it took him two bursts to knock it out of action.
He swung the gun toward the next building over, aware that his time was rapidly running
out. If the operators of the two ruined weapons were quick and smart, they would alert the
soldier two rooms away from him that this weapon had fallen into enemy hands. The soldier
would then come and try to take it back.
The enemy was definitely smart, and even a little quicker than Draycos had expected.
From down the corridor came a pair of sharp cracks as the two popcorn bombs he'd left
behind the other door went off.
The enemy was coming.
He took another two seconds to ruin one more enemy weapon, then dropped the control
stick and loped back toward the door. Leaping up, twisting to the side in midair, he
landed with a gentle thud against the wall just above the door. His claws dug into the
hard wood and held on.
Just in time. Beneath him, the door was pulled violently open, and a burst of gunfire
spattered across the empty space.
Seeing no one but his unconscious comrade, the soldier shifted his aim toward the desk,
the only reasonable hiding place in the room. The bullets slammed into the wood, sending
clouds of splinters flying. It was just as well, Draycos decided as he gazed down, that he
hadn't tried to hide there.
The gunfire stopped, and a human soldier eased cautiously into the doorway, his gun
held ready. Unhooking one paw from the wall, Draycos leaned over and slapped hard at the
side of the man's head.
This one was tougher than his alien comrade had been. The blow sent him staggering to
the side, but he managed to stay on his feet. He shook his head once, as if to clear it,
just in time to catch the slap of Draycos's tail as it struck him in the same spot where
the first blow had landed. The man toppled to the floor, his gun clattering out of his
grip, and stayed down.
Draycos slipped out of the room and headed back toward the stairway. The hallway was
empty, but he knew it wouldn't be for long. Already he could hear several pairs of
footsteps moving upward from the floor below. Either more of the attackers were coming to
investigate, or an advance party of Whinyard's Edge defenders was on its way.
Either way, his time had run out. He reached the stairway and climbed toward the roof,
noticing as he did so that all the gunfire outside seemed to have ceased.
And as he eased his head up through the trap door, he found out why. In the distance,
heading toward them at high speed, were three small aircraft.
So the Whinyard's Edge had finally called in air support. About time.
He raced across the roof, hoping Jack was still where he'd left him. He reached the
edge, and in a single move leaped up onto the parapet and then threw himself into a flat
dive toward the window he'd originally left.
His jump was slightly off, and his paws fumbled a bit as he ducked in through the
window. Regaining his balance, he retraced his steps through the partitions and back to
the wide stairway.
He made his way down to the second floor landing. There he paused, listening. The three
Parprins were talking quietly, and from the direction of their tense voices he could tell
they were still sitting or standing at the bottom of the stairway.
Unfortunately, Jack was keeping quiet. Had he moved away somewhere? If so, there might
be a problem getting back to him without the Parprins seeing him.
And if he didn't move quickly, the Parprins would be the least of his worries. With
much of the attack broken, and the aircraft dealing with the rest, he could see through
the windows that the Edgemen were beginning to move purposefully around in the street. One
of their first tasks, he knew, would be to check the nearby buildings for enemies.
All the buildings. Including this one.
He focused his attention on the stairway railing. A metal railing; and metal, he knew,
conducted sound quite well. Reaching up, he gave it three gentle scratches with his claws.
To his relief, there was an immediate answering scratch.
He lifted his head carefully, just far enough to see. Jack had one hand resting on the
railing, the fingers beckoning impatiently.
Slinking down the stairs, Draycos reached the spot where Jack stood. He touched the
boy's hand and slid quickly up his sleeve as he changed into two-dimensional form.
Shifting along Jack's skin, he worked his way around into his accustomed position.
Just in time. Across the room, the door slammed open. Moving carefully, Draycos peeked
out through Jack's shirt.
Sergeant Grisko stood framed in the doorway, a small machine gun held high across his
chest. Behind him, Draycos could see Alison Kayna andjommy Randolph.
"There he is," Jommy said, pointing past Grisko's shoulder. "I told
you."
"Yeah, you sure did." Grisko leveled the full power of his glare at Jack.
"And what the frinking rip," he demanded, "are you doing here?"
Chapter 13
Quickly, Jack got his hand down off the railing and stiffened to attention.
"I was moving these civilians out of danger, sir," he explained, giving a short
nod toward the Parprins still huddled on the floor beside him. "They were caught in
the fire zone."
"Very commendable," Grisko said tardy. If he was pleased with Jack's answer,
it didn't show on his face. "Anyone give you any actual orders to that effect? Or did
you dream it up on your own?"
"And then decide to hide in here with them?" Jommy muttered.
"Shut up, Randolph," Grisko snapped, his eyes never leaving Jack's face.
"Someone give you orders, Montana? Anyone give you orders, Montana?"
"Not exactly, sir," Jack admitted, feeling a fresh batch of sweat breaking
out on his forehead. This was just great. He'd survived an enemy attack; and now he was
going to catch it from his own side?
And possibly catch it even worse than just being shot at. The manual had listed some
pretty severe penalties for desertion under fire. "There wasn't anyone nearby to give
me any orders," he went on, trying desperately to think his way out of this.
"The manual lists twelve standing orders for behavior in a firefight," Grisko
ground out. "You remember any of them being to turn tail and run like a rabbit?"
Jack clamped down on his tongue. "No, sir," he conceded. Beside him, one of
the Parprins whimpered.
And at last, inspiration. "But I do remember that an Edge-man's primary job
is service to our employer," he continued more confidently. "Since our employer
on Sunright is a Par-prin group, I assume all local Parprins come under that
heading."
"Nice try," Grisko said. "Problem is, the protection of civilians comes
three points below support of your comrades on the list."
Beside him, Alison stirred. "I wonder where his gun is," she murmured.
Grisko frowned, his eyes flicking to Jack's shoulder and then glancing at the floor and
tables around him. "That's a good question. You got a good answer?"
Jack would have smiled with relief if he'd dared. Of course; the escape hatch he'd been
trying to find. "One of the other Edgemen took it, sir," he said.
A slight frown creased Grisko's forehead. "Why?"
"I believe he wanted to use it against the snipers up in the hillside," Jack
explained. "All he was carrying was a Heckler-Colt MP-50. Not really suitable for
long-range work."
"So why didn't he give you his H-C?" Grisko demanded.
"I didn't have time to ask him, sir," Jack said. "He just took my
Gompers and ran with it. To be honest," he added with what he hoped was just the
right touch of humility, "I don't think the regulars think very much of us as combat
soldiers."
Grisko's lip twisted. "I can't really say I blame them." He looked at the
Parprins, back at Jack. "All right, get outside," he growled. "We're
forming up. Go get your Gompers back, then get your carcass into position."
He turned sharply and stalked outside. Jommy gave Jack a dark look, then strode out
behind him. "I guess we don't get to see a court-martial, after all," Alison
remarked. "Too bad. Might have been interesting."
"Sorry to disappoint you," Jack said, waving a farewell to the Parprins and
heading toward the door. "At least you got to watch me squirm. Was that enough
entertainment for one afternoon?"
She lifted her eyebrows. "Hey, I got you off the hook. What more do you
want?"
"You could have mentioned a little earlier that you saw that thug-ugly take my
gun," Jack pointed out stiffly.
"Yes, I could have said something earlier," Alison agreed. "But why
should I?"
"Maybe because Grisko was getting himself worked up into a real froth about
this?" Jack suggested as he stepped up to her. "By the time you actually spoke
up, there was half a chance he wouldn't have even cared anymore that I hadn't had a gun.
He would have been ready to nail me to the wall right there. Ever think of that?"
"Sure," she agreed. "And maybe if I had said something right off
the top, he'd have thought I was just covering for a deserter. Then we'd both have
been for the hot seat. Ever think of that?"
Jack frowned, his annoyance fading a little as he gazed into her eyes. There was
something odd there, simmering beneath the surface like a churning of molten rock.
Anger, and frustration, and determination. And perhaps more than a little fear.
A lot like the way he'd been feeling lately himself. For about the last year, in fact,
ever since Uncle Virgil had died.
"I thought we were comrades in arms," he said quietly.
She regarded him coolly. "I don't stick my neck out for you, Montana," she
said, just as quietly. "You or anyone else."
Turning, she walked out the door. "Okay," Jack muttered aloud to himself.
"Good to have that settled."
"An interesting person," Draycos murmured from his shoulder.
"Oh, yeah," Jack said sourly. "Interesting like a rare and delicate
tropical disease. Come on, let's go find the clown who's got my gun."
It took several minutes for Jack to track down the man who'd taken his flash rifle. It
took several more to actually get the weapon back. Still eyeing the hillside suspiciously,
the soldier was clearly not interested in giving up his long-range firing capability, and
told Jack so in language that would have made Grisko proud.
But by then the officers were starting to call the troops back into formation, and
Jack's mention of Grisko's name also seemed to carry a certain amount of weight.
Eventually, with one last muttered curse, the soldier shoved the Gompers back into Jack's
hands and stomped back to rejoin the column. On Draycos's advice, Jack replaced the
half-used clip with a fresh one, then hurried back to his own place in line. A few minutes
later, the whole group resumed their march through town.
But not with nearly the brash confidence they'd shown earlier. Now, they marched with
their attention turned upward, toward the windows and rooftops as they passed beneath
them. Their weapons were again slung over their shoulders, but it seemed to Jack that none
of them let his or her hand get too far from the trigger. And, of course, the combat
aircraft floating watchfully overhead were a continual reminder of what had just happened.
The Whinyard's Edge had gotten its nose bloodied today.
There was a change in the townspeople, too. Not surprisingly, the crowds that had been
lining the street earlier were gone. Those who found themselves near the marching soldiers
seemed intent on hurrying to be somewhere else.
Earlier, the people had seemed nervous and uncertain. Now, they were flat-out afraid.
Mentally, Jack shook his head. Whatever result the Edge commanders had hoped for with
this stroll through the city, he was pretty sure that wasn't it.
They reached the headquarters compound without any further trouble. A pair of carriers
loaded with their equipment rumbled in behind them, and there was a sort of confused chaos
as footlockers and other gear were sorted out.
Back on Carrion, Jack had gotten the impression that his squad would be staying in
Mer'seb for a few days before moving up to the November Six observation post. But barely
an hour after their arrival, the order came down for eight of the new squads to assemble
immediately for transport to their field destinations. Tango Five Zulu was one of them.
They boarded their transport, a Lynx Personnel Carrier, in the courtyard of the HQ
compound. Along with Tango Five Zulu, two squads of regular Edgemen would also be
traveling to November Six. Sergeant Grisko was along, too, at least long enough to help
them set up.
The Lynx was a good-sized transport, designed to haul at least three times the number
of people they had on this trip. That meant some elbow room for a change, and Jack took
quick advantage of the situation by staking out a pair of seats in the back next to one of
the small windows. Setting his pack down on one of the seats, he strapped himself into the
other. If he kept his eyes glued to the scenery, maybe he could pretend he was heading out
on some sort of vacation.
On a vacation, and not into a war zone.
It turned out to be a futile hope. Unlike the other Edge transports Jack had traveled
on so far, the Lynx actually looked like a military vehicle. Intruding constantly on his
view of the landscape were the muzzles of two large-caliber machine guns poking out from
under one of the stubby wings. The wing itself was painted in a camouflage pattern
designed to help it blend in while on the ground.
The landscape itself wasn't all that exciting, either. The hilly ground around Mer'seb
soon gave way to a short stretch of plains and small lakes, then began to turn hilly
again. Grisko had said the trip to November Six would take two hours, and Jack found
himself wondering just how big the territory was that this handful of Edgemen was supposed
to be protecting.
With such cheery thoughts dancing around his brain, he huddled over with his forehead
against the cold plastic of the window and drifted to sleep.
He awoke suddenly, startled by a light jab on his wrist. He snapped his eyes open and
looked around.
No one was leaning intently over him. For that matter, no one was paying any attention
to him at all. The nearest other person, Rogan Mbusu, was sprawled limply two seats over,
snoring quietly to himself. Outside the window, the afternoon sunlight was throwing long
shadows across the ground.
The light jab came again; and this time, Jack recognized it as the touch of a dragon's
claw. The signal of a dragon's nagging. "What?" he muttered toward his shoulder.
"I must speak with you," Draycos murmured back.
"Now?"
"Now."
Jack glared down at his shoulder, a wasted effect with his shirt and jacket mostly in
the way. Draycos had a real gift for rotten timing.
But there was nothing to do but go along. Unstrapping, he headed past the equipment
storage area to one of the tiny restrooms in the far rear of the transport. He closed the
door, sealed it, and did a quick check for monitors. There weren't any. "This had
better be good," he warned as he closed the toilet lid and sat down.
With the usual sudden surge of weight, Draycos popped out of Jack's collar. He landed
on the area around the sink and turned around, balancing himself there with apparent ease.
"It is important," he promised. "Do you remember the map we were shown of
the area around November Six?"
Jack frowned. "You woke me from a good nap for this? A geography
quiz?"
"Please," Draycos said earnestly. "The Gray Hills flow from northeast to
southwest, with Bear Mountain to the north of the base. Correct?"
"Right," Jack said. "Then the Gray Hills continue down toward Octrani
Lake, with the Partanra River flowing out mostly west from there."
"While a tributary of that same river is the water that flows through
Mer'seb," Draycos said. "The Parprin town we have just left. Correct?"
"Sounds right," Jack confirmed, stifling a yawn. "So what?"
"So this," Draycos said. "The place we were shown on the map is not the
place we are going."
Chapter 14
Jack sat up straight, his tiredness suddenly gone. "How do you
know?"
"I am a poet-warrior of the K'da," Draycos reminded him. "The reading of
maps is part of my profession. I have been watching the ground through the window."
Jack's stomach was trying to do somersaults. "How far off are we?"
"Our course from Mer'seb should have taken us at an angle slightly north of
east," Draycos said. "We did indeed set out in that direction. But approximately
one hour ago we changed gradually to a more northerly direction."
Jack glanced at his watch. They'd been in the air about an hour and a half. Thirty more
minutes until landing.
Or at least, that was what Grisko had told them. Maybe the sergeant didn't know
something had gone weird, either.
Then again, maybe he did. "So where are we headed?"
"If we are still to land in one half hour, I believe we will arrive near the
western edge of the Gray Hills," Draycos said. "Perhaps three hundred miles
north of November Six.
"And if we don't stop in half an hour?"
"All regions beyond that are either neutral or considered enemy-controlled."
Jack chewed at his lip. Terrific. "So what do we do?"
"There are two squads of fully armed soldiers aboard," Draycos reminded him.
"They could be made aware of the situation."
The dragon had a point. If the pilot was an enemy agent trying to take them to the
wrong place, two squads of Edge-men ought to be able to argue the point with him. Surely
none of them wanted to end their trip in enemy territory, either.
On the other hand, having a gun battle in the middle of a flying transport didn't sound
like a very smart idea. "I'd better talk to Grisko," he decided. "Come on,
get aboard."
Obediently, the dragon stepped onto Jack's outstretched hand and slithered up his
sleeve. Sealing the neck of his shirt again, Jack headed out.
Grisko was sitting alone in the back, on the opposite side of the Lynx from Jack's
seat. He'd probably picked that spot so he could watch the rest of the group.
Though at the moment he wasn't watching anything at all. His eyes were closed, his head
sagging slightly against the headrest.
Jack pursed his lips. The sergeant was probably not going to like this. "Sergeant
Grisko?" he said quietly.
Grisko's eyes remained closed. "What is it, Montana?"
"I think we're off course, sir."
Grisko pried one eye open and squinted up at him. "Excuse me?"
"We're not headed for November Six," Jack told him. "We seem to be going
somewhere north of there."
Grisko pried the other eye open, and for a long moment he seemed to be studying Jack's
face. "Good observation," he said at last. "As it happens, our orders have
been changed. The Shamshir moved their transmitter yesterday to point Kilo Seven. We're
moving with it."
"Oh," Jack said. So that was it. All nice and simple and reasonable.
Certainly a lot less threatening than a daring midair hijacking.
Which left only one little problem. Uncle Virge was still heading for the area around
November Six, which meant that Jack's plan for getting the Djinn-90 information was no
longer going to work. Worse, when it came time to wrap this up and make a run for the tall
grass, his primary escape route was going to be sitting on the ground three hundred miles
away.
Grisko was still gazing up at him. "Is this a problem for you?" he asked.
"No, sir," Jack said, trying to sound as unconcerned as possible. "Sorry
to have wakened you."
"Half an hour to the base," Grisko said, closing his eyes again. "Better
get some rest. I've got a strange feeling you're going to be on sentry duty tonight."
Jack grimaced. "Yes, sir."
He returned to his seat and curled up again beside the window. Even in the few minutes
he'd been away the shadows of the trees had visibly lengthened along the ground. Sunset
couldn't be too far away.
"I do not like it," Draycos murmured from his shoulder as he slid open the
neck of Jack's shirt again.
"Me, neither," Jack agreed. He pulled his shirt open a little more and
shifted in his seat so that the dragon would have a better view out the window. "You
first."
"I am not familiar with your transmission science," the dragon said.
"But with the K'da and Shontine, a device that can reach between stars is large and
not easily moved. Certainly not in a single day."
"That's mostly true here, too," Jack agreed. "The Esse-nay's got
a compact InterWorld transmitter built into it, but Uncle Virgil was always setting up
deals and scams across the Orion Arm. He couldn't risk having them traced back to him
through a commercial InterWorld site."
"Even our largest ships cannot carry such a transmitter," Draycos said.
"Are such common here?"
"Not really," Jack said, frowning. "Actually, not at all. The biggest
StarForce ships have them, I know, and I'm pretty sure a few starliners do, too. But now
that I think about it, I can't remember anyone else in Uncle Virgil's circle having one
aboard their ships. Whatever he paid for ours, the price must have been
astronomical." He snorted. "Either that, or he stole it."
"Then let us assume the Shamshir transmitter is not easily portable," Draycos
said. "Moving it would cost them considerable time and effort. It would not be an
operation they could hide."
Jack nodded. He and Draycos were definitely thinking along the same lines. "In
other words, it should have taken a couple of weeks to get a new site prepared, break down
the transmitter, and then move it. Which means we should have heard about this before we
left Carrion."
"Correct," Draycos said. "And if they only began moving it yesterday,
there would be no need for us to travel there tonight."
"We could have hung around Mer'seb for a few days while they got it set up."
"Correct," Draycos said. "That may imply the Shamshir are aware of our
interest and are trying to keep us from succeeding. But it may also imply there is
something else about this mission that we are not being told."
"Could be." Jack scratched his cheek. "Though I suppose there could be a
simpler explanation."
"Which is?"
"That the Shamshir simply changed their minds about where to put their
transmitter," Jack said. "And no one bothered to tell any of us about it until
now."
"But timely information is vital to a warrior's job," the dragon objected.
"Surely they would not hold it back from us."
"Hey, I'm just a raw recruit," Jack said. "Remember? Nobody has to tell me
anything."
"Talking to the window?" a familiar voice asked pleasantly from behind his
shoulder.
Jack clamped down on his tongue as he felt Draycos slide quickly back to his usual
position. "Hello, Alison," he said, turning to face her. "Sure. Doesn't
everybody?"
"Don't tell me," she said. She plucked his pack from the seat beside him,
dropped it unceremoniously onto the floor, and sat down. "Let me guess. You were
staring at the window because you needed a moment to reflect."
Jack made a face. "That was pathetic. I hope you didn't come all the way over here
just for that."
"No, mostly I wanted to see what the view was like out there," she said,
craning her neck to look past him. "And to find out what you and Grisko were talking
about."
Jack felt his eyes narrowing. "What do you mean?"
She gave him a patient look. "You. Grisko. Talk. Two minutes ago. You need me to
spell any of the words for you?"
"No, I've got it, thank you," Jack growled. "Not that it's any of your
immediate business, but we were discussing the fact that we're not going to November Six.
We're going to Kilo Seven instead."
It was Alison's turn for narrowed eyes. "Why?"
"According to Grisko, the Shamshir moved their transmitter."
For a brief moment he thought he could see an echo of the emotional swirl in her eyes
that he'd noticed once before. But then she just nodded. "Oh," she said.
" 'Oh'?" he repeated. "That's all? Just 'oh'?"
"What more is there?" she countered reasonably. "If the transmitter's
been moved, we move with it."
He shrugged. "I suppose."
She tilted her head, her eyes shifting down from his face to his chest. "So that's
what they're all talking about, huh?"
Jack frowned. "What?"
She nodded toward his chest. "Your dragon tattoo. Nice."
Jack looked down. Sure enough, part of Draycos's jaw was visible through the partially
open shirt. "Oh, it's lots nicer than that," he assured her, putting a little
boasting into his tone. "It goes all the way around, and then some. See?"
He pulled the collar a little to the side to reveal more of the dragon's face. The last
thing he really wanted to do was advertise Draycos's presence this way, and he was pretty
sure Draycos felt the same way. But he'd met enough men with tattoos to know you didn't
get one with the idea of hiding it. Alison was pretty sharp, and if he didn't brag about
his dragon, she might wonder why. "Herethe head's the best part," he went
on, reaching for the shirt's sealing seam. "Let me get this open a little
more"
"No, that's all right," Alison said hastily. "Really. I was just
wondering if it was like the one the Dragonbacks wore."
"I already told you I never heard of the Dragonbacks until a month ago."
"Maybe you didn't," she pointed out. "But your tattoo artist
might have."
"Oh." That angle hadn't occurred to him. "Is it?"
"Is it what? Oh." Alison shook her head. "Not even close. The
Dragonbacks had their tattoos between their shoulder-blades, just below the neck. A little
dragon, coiled around itself into a circle. Nowhere near as big as yours."
"You seem to know a lot about them."
She shrugged. "Like I said, I do my research. Always terrific to talk to
you."
She got up and headed back forward to her own seat. "Interesting," Draycos
murmured.
"What is?" Jack asked, turning back to the window. "Her obsession with
dragon tattoos?"
"That she noticed your conversation with Sergeant Grisko and wondered about
it," Draycos said. "She is quite observant."
Jack closed his shirt down to where it had been before Alison showed up.
"Observant and nosy," he agreed. "I wonder if they know this is her
second try at joining a mercenary group."
"I do not know," Draycos said. "Do you think you should tell them?"
Jack gazed out the window, weighing his options. Below them, the shadows were
lengthening still more. Above them, the sky was definitely beginning to darken.
"No," he decided at last. "But let's keep an eye on her."
The last twenty miles were spent traveling at treetop height, with the Lynx dodging its
way around the handful of taller trees and an occasional hill or tall rock.
Jack gazed out at the blur of green shooting past his window, fully expecting to crash
and burn any minute. Uncle Virge could have pulled off this kind of maneuver easily. But
it wasn't Uncle Virge running the controls up there.
Fortunately, the pilot knew what he was doing. He ran the course without so much as a
single serious bump, and a few minutes later had set them down in a small clearing at the
base of a rocky cliff face.
If parts of the Carrion training base had been spartan, the Kilo Seven outpost was
downright primitive. The only solid structure was a flimsy looking prefab building about
the size of a one-bedroom hotel room. Grisko identified it as the outpost HQ, and the
place where Tango Five Zulu would be setting up their computers and listening gear.
The rest of the outpost consisted of four tents scattered beneath the trees. Two of
them looked like sleeping quarters for the soldiers, with the other two probably serving
as mess tent and storage facility. To the west, downslope from the rest of the camp, was
the distinctive narrow tent of a latrine.
Further out, to the north and south of the camp, Jack spotted two small defensive
positions. They weren't much, little more than foxholes with a couple of long gun muzzles
poking out. Still, it was nice to know that the enemy couldn't overrun the place without
the Edge at least being able to put up a fight.
The sun was down by the time they left the Lynx. The mercenaries set to work
immediately, unloading their gear and taking it to their assigned tents. Jommy and the
rest of Tango Five Zulu were also busy, lugging their computers and other equipment to the
headquarters building.
Jack, to his complete lack of surprise, found himself assigned to night sentry duty.
His post was about sixty yards south of the camp, perhaps forty yards beyond the
defensive foxhole on that side. All sixty yards of it were downhill. "Here's your
cage," Grisko said, stopping beside a tree that looked rather like an elm with a bad
skin condition.
"Cage?"
"Your sentry post," Grisko said with exaggerated patience. "Didn't you
read the manual?"
"I must have missed that part," Jack murmured. He had read the manual,
thank you, and there had been no mention of the term "cage" being used for a
sentry post.
But there was nothing to gain by pointing that out. He'd apparently been put on sentry
duty for waking up Grisko aboard the transport. He didn't really want to see what would
happen if he added to his crimes by arguing with the man.
"Well, then, pay attention now," Grisko growled. He pointed to a group of
four small round monitors that had been nailed to the tree trunk. Each of the monitors
showed a slightly fuzzy image, and each had a control stick embedded in the trunk beneath
it. "There's your Argus system. You do remember Argus systems, don't
you?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said, more confidently this time. Argus was a passive
observation system for sending images from one area to another. The far end, called the
eye, could be up to five hundred feet away, with a fiber-optic cable linking it to one of
the monitors here at the sentry post. The direction each viewer was pointing could be
shifted by means of a wire control system. The control line ran through its own cable
alongside the fiber-optic one, connecting to the lever beneath the monitor.
Jack could remember thinking when he first read about it that Argus had to be the most
ridiculously primitive system in the known universe. It was only later, as he read about
electronics and power-source detectors, that he had realized there was actually a good
reason for the system. Out here in the middle of a forest, the electronics of a normal
sensor system would stand out like a nightlight in a dark room. Argus, on the other hand,
would never even be noticed unless the enemy happened to trip over one of the cables.
"Yeah, I'll bet you do," Grisko grunted. Reaching to a small rectangular
plate beneath the monitors, he flipped up its protective cover. Underneath was a
glow-in-the-dark schematic of the area, with Jack's outpost in the middle and the edge of
the main camp behind him along the bottom. "Here's where your eyes are located,"
he said, tapping the map in four places. "You'll be relieved at midnight. Don't fall
asleep."
He turned back toward the camp. "What if there's trouble?" Jack asked.
Grisko frowned. "Like what?"
"Like the enemy shows up," Jack said. "Do I get a comm clip or something
to call in an alarm?"
Grisko was looking at him as if he was crazy. "Don't be absurd," he said.
"The enemy doesn't even know we're here."
"But"
"Tell you what," Grisko cut him off. "If they come this way, you haul
out your Gompers and start shooting. We'll notice. Trust me."
With that he stalked off into the growing darkness, the matting of dead leaves
crunching under his feet. He disappeared from sight, leaving only the sound of his
footsteps to mark where he was. A dozen seconds later, even those had faded into silence.
And Jack and Draycos were alone.
Chapter 15
Jack had never liked the woods. He'd never much liked the outdoors in
general, for that matter. Nearly all of his life had been spent in cities or spaceports,
or in spaceships like the Essenay. Places with bright lights, and people, and no
strange noises.
Occasionally when he and Uncle Virgil had been running a scam, they'd had to spend time
in someone's country estate or mountain retreat. But at least there they'd mostly been
inside at night. Nature had been something beyond the walls, safely out of view.
His last brush with nature had been on Iota Klestis a month and a half ago. He'd taken
a few short trips outside the ship, mostly during the day but once or twice at night. That
was how bored and restless he'd been.
But at least there he'd had the comforting bulk of the Es-senay at his back, and
Uncle Virge's watchful eye on the surrounding terrain.
Uncle Virge.
He stared out into the woods, an all-too-familiar pang of uncertainty and loss and fear
whispering through him. The first time he'd felt it was back when he was three years old
and finally realized that his parents weren't coming back to him. He'd felt it again a
year ago at Uncle Virgil's death, when he'd suddenly found himself alone in the universe
with nothing but a computerized personality to look after him.
Now, here in the darkness of the night, he was feeling it for a third time. Because
whatever happened with Draycos, he knew down deep that his relationship with Uncle Virge
had been changed forever.
The thought was as frightening and alien as the dark woods around him. Up to the time
when he'd met Draycos, Jack's life had been fairly simple and more or less comfortable.
For all the annoyances inherent in Uncle Virge's personality, the computer really was
mostly easy to get along with.
More to the point, he was the only friend Jack had.
The strange noises of nature were beginning to whisper through the darkness around him.
Mostly insects and small animals, he guessed, with an occasional bird or bat-like
something flapping past overhead. Up above the trees he could still see the sky, but here
at ground level it was already night.
And then, suddenly, something big and heavy landed on the back of his neck.
He jerked away with a gasp, his hand reaching automatically to swat it away, even as he
realized it was just Draycos popping out from his jacket collar. "Geez!" he
hissed. "Don't do that."
"Do not do what?" Draycos asked, landing on the leaves beside him with a soft
crunch.
"Never mind," Jack growled, feeling like an idiot. "You startled me,
that's all."
The dragon cocked his head. "You do not like it out here," he declared.
Jack snorted. "No kidding, Sherlock."
"Pardon?"
"Skip it." Shaking away the introspective thoughts, Jack stepped over to the
Argus monitors for a closer look. There were two filters on each, he saw, either of which
could be slid over the image. Experimentally, he tried one.
The image didn't change much. He tried the other, and suddenly, the darkness was
pockmarked with scattered bits of light. "Ah-ha," he said, feeling about as
pleased as he could under the circumstances. "That's the infrared. The other one must
be deep UV."
"Pardon?"
" 'UV' is short for ultraviolet," Jack explained, sliding the infrared
filters over the rest of the monitors. "It's a kind of light we can't see directly,
but there are some species and some kinds of equipment that show up real well with
it."
"And infrared?"
"Infrared is heat," Jack told him, peering at each of the monitors in turn.
Nothing but small animals and birds, at least as far as he could see. "Anything warm
gives that off. Those thugs who were looking for us back on Vagran were using IR
detectors. Back when we were hiding out on that Wistawki balcony, remember?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "I was somewhat surprised at the time that they did
not locate us."
Jack shrugged. "You probably don't look like anything anyone's ever seen before.
Matter of fact, you might not even look alivewe'd have to do a heat profile on you
to know for sure. Either way, I guarantee you don't look like a human."
"That could be useful."
"It already has been," Jack pointed out.
"True." Draycos studied the monitors. "The images are not very
clear."
"They sure aren't," Jack agreed. "I guess that's the best you can do
without electronics and power sources."
The dragon hopped up onto a nearby stump and craned his neck. "Perhaps I should
explore the perimeter."
"Oh, no," Jack said quickly. "Forget it. You just stay put, right
here."
Draycos twisted his head around to look back at him. "You do not need to be
afraid, Jack," he said, his voice low and soothing. "I am a poet-warrior of the
K'da. I will protect you."
"I appreciate your confidence," Jack said. "But Good Intention Highway
isn't one I want to travel just yet."
The tip of Draycos's tail twitched. "Do you refer to the saying, 'The road to hell
is paved with good intentions'?"
Jack frowned. "Yeah. Where did you hear that?"
"Uncle Virge quoted it to me," the dragon said. From his stump he jumped up
onto the side of one of the trees and clung there by his claws, gazing out into the night.
"During one of your late-night poetry sessions?"
"Yes. He has many such sayings with which to illustrate his points."
Jack felt his mouth twist. "Let me guess. His main point is that he wants you to
go away and leave us alone."
"That is the core of it," Draycos confirmed. "He does not feel that the
survival of my people should be any concern of yours."
Somewhere ahead, a twig suddenly snapped. Jack jerked, snatching up his Gompers and
pointing it into the darkness. "Do not be afraid," Draycos assured him quickly.
"It was merely a small animal obtaining a meal."
Jack lowered the flash rifle, letting his breath out silently. "Okay," he
said.
Draycos pushed off the tree trunk and dropped back down to Jack's side. "I do not
understand your fear," he said, looking up at Jack's face. "I would have thought
that in your previous profession you must have faced danger many times."
"Not like this," Jack said, shaking his head. "I was always a kid
before. Even when we were breaking into bank vaults, I knew the police weren't going to
shoot unless I pointed a gun at them or tried to get away."
He plucked at a fold of his uniform jacket. "Here, it's all different. Here, I'm a
target. Not because I'm breaking any laws, but because I'm wearing this uniform. Just because
I'm wearing this uniform."
"That is the way of the soldier," Draycos reminded him. "Part of your
task is to draw danger away from the weak and powerless."
Jack snorted. "Just what I always wanted."
Draycos cocked his head. "It is an honorable profession, Jack."
"Maybe where you come from it is," Jack retorted.
"It is not so here?"
"How would I know?" Jack sighed. "All right, yeah, I suppose it
is," he conceded. "At least most of the time. But we sure don't seem very
popular here on Sunright."
"I do not understand."
"You saw the people on the march through town today," Jack said. "Well,
no, probably you didn't. The point is that they weren't exactly cheering us on."
"One does not usually cheer in the middle of an attack."
"This was before the attack," Jack told him. "They were just staring at
us, watching us march. Like we were invaders instead of protectors." He snorted. "After
the attack, it was even worse. Then, they were afraid to even get near us."
Draycos was silent a moment. "You are mercenaries, not regular soldiers," he
pointed out. "Perhaps that is the difference."
"Maybe," Jack said. "I don't know. But according to Uncle Virge's
history lessons, people sometimes treated regular soldiers the same way when they were in
a war the people didn't like."
"That is wrong," Draycos said firmly. "The soldiers deserve the respect
and honor of the people they defend. If the war is wrong or misguided, the people's
objections should be directed at the leaders."
"Hey, I'm just telling you how it is," Jack said. "I don't write the
history, I just report it."
"I understand," Draycos murmured.
He hopped up onto his stump again, peering off into the night. Jack found himself
studying the dragon's silhouette, a black shadow against a slightly lighter background.
"It was different for you, wasn't it?" he asked. "I mean, your people were
fighting for their lives. That must make a difference."
"It does," Draycos agreed. "There were still objections at times, of
course, but they were settled by the leaders."
"Pretty quickly, I'd guess," Jack said. "Did all of you have to become
warriors?"
"All had to have soldiers' training," Draycos said. His voice was soft and
oddly distant. "Those who did not serve directly were required to fill support
positions. There was no other way."
"I suppose," Jack said. So when Draycos called himself a poet-warrior it
wasn't really that big a deal? Or was it maybe the poet part he was so proud of? "So
basically any K'da can do what you do?"
The dragon seemed to draw himself up. "Not at all," he said stiffly.
"All indeed can become soldiers. But not all are warriors."
Jack frowned. "What's the difference?"
"A warrior of the K'da is a special person," Draycos explained, and there was
no mistaking the pride in his voice. "He or she has certain inborn talents and
abilities, plus the desire to turn those talents in the direction of protecting the K'da
people. We are found at an early age, and offered this position."
The tip of his tail twitched. "No, Jack. One without poetic talent may be able to
make two sentences rhyme on occasion. But you would not call him a poet, with the true
gift of poetry. So is the difference between soldier and warrior."
Jack nodded. He'd tried writing a poem once, back when he was ten. The result had been
pretty pitiful. "So how old were you when they started your training?" he asked.
"You said once you were younger than I was when you had your first battle."
"That is true," Draycos acknowledged. "I was not yet a warrior at that
time, though, but was still in training. My full training lasted nearly four years."
"Four years'?"
"Yes," the dragon said. "Though I was of course a soldier during
much of that time. We could not afford for warriors-in-training to merely be students
during a war for survival."
"Yeah," Jack murmured. Four years, compared to the ten days he'd just gone
through. "I guess I must seem pretty pathetic to you. I'm barely even a soldier, let
alone a warrior."
"You do as well as your abilities allow," Draycos said diplomatically.
"Your talents lie in other areas."
"Right," Jack said with a sigh. "And I bet you'd trade three of me right
now for a single good soldier."
"Perhaps that could be arranged," the dragon suggested dryly. "Shall I
go get Alison?"
Jack glared at him, a waste of effort in the darkness. "Very funny."
From behind them came the faint sound of lifters. "There goes the Lynx," Jack
commented, turning to look.
But nothing could be seen though the trees. The sound changed pitch as the transport
shifted to horizontal motion and headed away from the camp. Jack looked up, trying to
catch a glimpse of it through the trees. Again, nothing. "Could you tell which
direction it was headed?"
"From the sound, it appeared to be traveling southwest," the dragon said.
"Back to Mer'seb," Jack said. Somehow, the sound of the departing shuttle
made the darkness out here seem a little deeper. "Well, good luck to them. They're
sure not going to find a welcome carpet spread out."
"Do you refer to the citizens?" Draycos asked. "Or do you expect another
Shamshir attack?"
"I was talking about the people," Jack said. "But as long as you've
brought it up, I did overhear Lieutenant Basht telling someone they'd found two Shamshir
mercenaries in one of the buildings. They'd been knocked cold, but weren't hurt otherwise.
Your handiwork?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "The tides of warfare flowed to my advantage."
"Whatever," Jack said. "How come you didn't kill them?"
The dragon's tail arched. "There was no need. I wished merely to halt their
attack. That I did."
"Yeah, but they'd already killed about ten Edgemen," Jack pointed out.
"I thought you didn't approve of killers."
"I do not approve of murderers," Draycos corrected. "There is a
difference between murder and warfare."
"That's not what some of our people say," Jack told him.
This was, he realized dimly, a pretty stupid argument to be having at a time like this.
Especially out here, with him wearing a soldier's uniform and carrying a soldier's gun.
But there was something about the darkness and the noises that was making him unusually
talkative tonight.
Or maybe it was the silence between the noises that he was trying to fill. "There
are peoplea lot of peoplewho think warfare is just the government's way
of"
"Quiet!" Draycos cut him off. He twisted his head away from Jack, his pointed
ears suddenly standing straight up.
For a second, Jack stared past him into the darkness. There was nothing out there he
could see. Then, suddenly, his brain caught up with him, and he turned instead to the
Argus monitors.
The dragon was right. Something had moved into view on one of the monitors. The image
was fuzzy, but it definitely had the basic shape of a human being, and it was moving
toward the camp.
Moving toward Jack.
He flipped up the schematic showing where the Argus eyes were positioned, his pulse
thudding hard in his neck. Okay; this was Eye Number Three. That was there; which
meant the figure coming toward him must be there . . .
He didn't realize Draycos had moved to his side until the dragon spoke. "They
are approaching," he murmured, his breath warm on Jack's ear.
Jack's pulse picked up speed. "They?" he muttered back. "There's
more than one?"
The dragon's tongue flicked out at one of the other monitors. "There," he
said. "And there," he added, pointing to another.
Jack gripped his flash rifle like he was trying to squeeze it in half. There were two
more figures, all right, half hidden behind rocks or trees. Even as he focused on one of
them, it moved away from its hiding place and crossed quickly to another one. "How
many are there?" he asked.
There was no answer. "Draycos?" he repeated, twisting around.
The dragon was gone.
"Draycos!" he called as loudly as he dared, his eyes darting around the
darkness. The K'da had vanished, all right. Probably gone ahead to check on the intruders.
Jack hissed between his teeth. Suddenly, he felt very exposed out here, standing in the
faint glow from the Argus monitors. He stepped away from them as quiedy as he could,
cringing every time his feet crunched into the leaves.
A few feet away was the tree stump Draycos had been perched on earlier. He dropped down
behind it, clutching the flash rifle as if his life depended on it. Which it probably did.
All right, Jack, calm down, he told himself sternly. Three of them wasn't too
bad, if that was all there were. It could be just a quiet scouting party, with none of
them actually looking for a fight.
If that was all there were. He looked over his shoulder at the Argus monitors,
but here at the stump he was too far away to see them clearly. What he needed was to be
over there watching the monitors, with Draycos nearby to protect his back.
Except Draycos was off who knew where. Doing who knew what.
Blast the dragon, anyway. Of all the times for him to run off and play soldier.
And then, from somewhere ahead, somewhere very close ahead, came the soft sound of a
footstep.
Chapter 16
Jack froze in place, hardly daring to breathe. Draycos? was his
first, hopeful thought.
But no. The dragon was a lot quieter than that.
There was another footstep, and another pause. Jack stared into the darkness, straining
so hard his eyeballs hurt. In the faint light from the stars overhead the forest was
little more than a jumble of dark gray shadows crisscrossed by even darker black ones.
The sound came again.
He had it placed now. It was just behind a tall bush about ten feet directly ahead of
his stump.
Had the intruder spotted him? That was the big question. It didn't seem likely to Jack
that he would still be moving forward if he had. After all, he had no way of knowing that
the sentry on duty was a scared fourteen-year-old with ten whole days of combat training
under his belt.
Unless the one behind the bush was only a decoy. Unless his job was to deliberately
make enough noise to draw Jack's attention while someone off to the side leisurely lined
up a rifle on him.
Jack crouched a little lower behind the stump, trying hard to become part of the
decaying wood. It was a useless attempt for someone shaking as badly as he was. Carefully,
he eased his flash rifle around to point toward the bush.
Now what?
Sure, he could fire. But if this one was only a decoy, the shot would show them exactly
where he was. In that case, Jack himself probably wouldn't live long enough to even see
the first guy hit the ground.
But if he didn't shoot, and this one was out there alone . . .
Draycos! he thought desperately toward the woods. Where are you? I need you!
Where was the blasted dragon, anyway?
There was another footstep. Swallowing hard, Jack got his finger on the trigger.
And suddenly, an animal the size of a large frog came hopping out from behind the bush.
Jack's breath went out in a silent whoosh, every muscle in his body suddenly turning to
jelly. The frog jumped again, its landing sounding exactly like a cautious human footstep.
He really, really didn't like the woods.
A flicker of motion caught the corner of his eye. He glanced up
And twitched violently as Draycos dropped into a crouch at his side. "You're going
to give me a heart attack yet," he growled at the dragon. "I swear"
"Quiet," Draycos bit out. "They are coming. You must retreat."
Jack's muscles went tight again. "There are more than three of them?"
"There are eight," Draycos said. "All wear the shoulder emblem of the
Shamshir. You must warn the others."
Jack felt cold all over as he stared frantically into the night. Three of them might
have been a scouting party. Eight of them meant an attack.
And attackers, he knew, always started by silencing the sentries.
He jerked as Draycos's snout jabbed impatiently into his ribs. "What?" he
gasped.
"Did you not hear me?" Draycos demanded. "I said you must warn the
others."
"I can't," Jack hissed. "They didn't give me a comm clip."
"I know that," Draycos said, his voice impatient. "You must leave here
and go to them."
Jack shuddered. The thought of eight guns pointed at his back ... "I can't,"
he said. "I'll never make it."
Draycos lifted his head to the level of Jack's face. The bright green eyes bored into
his face, the tip of the long snout nearly touching his nose. "Listen to me,
Jack," the dragon said. "They are coming. They are not yet close enough to harm
you. But they soon will be if you do not leave. You must go now."
Jack peered out into the shadows. Draycos was right, he knew.
But his legs still refused to move.
Because what if the dragon was wrong? What if he'd missed one or two of the enemy on
his scouting trip? What if there was someone right now hiding in the trees, waiting for
him to give away his position?
"Jack?"
Jack clenched his teeth together. No, the dragon was right. He'd been in this same kind
of situation before with Uncle Virgil. If he just sat here, sooner or later he would lose
by default.
Besides, how much more conspicuous could he be than sitting here with a bright,
gold-scaled dragon standing beside him?
"Okay," he breathed. Slowly, cautiously, he stood up into a crouch and backed
away from the stump.
No one shot at him. He kept backing up, passing the Argus monitors. Draycos stayed by
the stump, his tail arched, his ears pointed skyward as he listened. Jack reached the
first group of trees and passed between them.
Only then did Draycos turn and bound silently toward him. He reached Jack's side, then
stopped and turned around. "Keep moving," he ordered, his ears lifting again.
"I will guard you from any approach."
Jack kept going, walking as quickly as he dared. The night seemed alive around him, and
he could feel a thousand hidden eyes staring in his direction. Three more times along the
way Draycos caught up with him, and each time then stayed behind as guard. Wishing
fervently he'd listened to Uncle Virge and come up with a better way to trace those
blasted Djinn-90 pursuit fighters, Jack kept moving.
There was no one manning the defense position on this side of the camp. For a moment,
as he passed the foxhole, Jack was tempted to jump in. He could activate the weapons there
and spray the woods behind him with gunfire. That ought to discourage the Shamshir
soldiers.
But he was only tempted for a moment. It might discourage them, but it might also start
them shooting back at him. The longer he could put that off, the better.
Especially if he could get someone else to do both the shooting and the being shot at.
Directly ahead was one of the big tents, the ones he'd decided earlier were sleeping
quarters. Panting a little from the long uphill climb, he stumbled to the door and pulled
it open.
It was a sleeping tent, all right. There were twelve sets of bunk beds arranged around
a small table with four matching chairs. The chairs were empty.
So were all the bunks.
For a long moment Jack just stood there staring. Twelve bunk beds. Twenty-four beds.
All empty.
All of them?
All of them.
He stumbled back outside, to find Draycos lurking beside the corner of the tent.
"You did not alert them?" the dragon asked.
"There isn't anyone to alert," Jack told him tightly. "They're
gone."
The dragon's long neck arched back. "Gone? Gone where?"
"How should I know?" Jack countered, looking around the encampment.
Everything was dark and silent.
Everyone asleep, he had thought. Now, he wondered if anyone was even here.
"Shall we try the other tent?" Draycos asked.
"Let's try the HQ first," Jack said. "It's on the way, and the rest of
the squad should still be setting up."
"Yes," Draycos agreed. He leaped up to Jack's shoulder and disappeared down
the back of his neck. "Hurry. The Shamshir are still approaching."
With its windows shielded, the headquarters building was as dark as the rest of the
camp. But as Jack approached, he saw to his relief that there was a narrow sliver of soft
light coming from under the door. At least someone was home there.
Unless the rest of Tango Five Zulu had carelessly left the lights on before they
vanished into the night with everyone else. Mentally crossing his fingers, he pulled open
the door.
The rest of Tango Five Zulu hadn't vanished. They were all still there, kneeling in a
circle in the center of the room, their faces bowed toward the floor, their hands clasped
behind their necks. Two men in full nighttime camouflage outfits were standing behind
them, their weapons leveled at their backs.
But Jack only saw that out of the corner of his eye. His full attention was on the
other two men in the room, standing beside the squad's stack of fold-top computers.
Their guns pointed directly at Jack.
Chapter 17
"Walk inside," a hard, flat voice growled from somewhere to his
right. "No noise."
Carefully, trying not to make anything that looked like a suspicious move, Jack turned
his head that direction.
Standing in the corner of the room, positioned where he could guard the doorway Jack
was still standing in, was a Brummga.
Jack stared at the wide alien, his mouth dropping open a little. Suddenly, it was like
he'd gone back in time to the ruins of the Havenseeker and his first meeting with
Draycos.
But this Brummga wasn't wearing the same mismatched collection of clothing and combat
gear. He was dressed in the same camouflage outfit as the other Shamshir mercenaries, with
the same curved-sword patch on his shoulder. And the gun he was holding was smaller and
sleeker than the shiny black monstrosity the other Brummga had pointed at Jack back then.
Different Brummga. Different group.
Worse situation.
The Brummga twitched his weapon, emphasizing his order. Shaking away the uncomfortable
feeling of deja vu, Jack took another step into the room. Just to prove he knew how to
behave in a situation like this, he carefully closed the door behind him.
"Anyone else?" one of the men across the room asked.
Jack opened his mouth to tell him he had no idea "Okay," the man said.
"Keep sharp."
Jack closed his mouth again. Of course; the man hadn't been asking him. He'd been
talking to a spotter outside on a comm clip.
For a moment he wondered if the spotter might have caught a glimpse of Draycos. Maybe
even have seen the dragon go two-dimensional and slide onto Jack's skin.
But no. If he had, he surely would have said something. And the guy in here didn't seem
like he was that good of an actor.
"This the last of your tech squad?" one of the other men asked, slinging his
gun over his shoulder and striding over to Jack. He had thrown back the hood of his camo
jacket, and Jack could see that his head was totally bald beneath it. Like a billiard cue
ball with a face painted on it, he thought irreverently.
"Yeah, that's him," Jommy said, his voice low and surly. "He was on
sentry duty."
"Didn't do a very good job," Cue Ball commented, taking Jack's Gompers rifle
away from him.
Jack thought about it a second and decided he wasn't going to let that one pass.
"Oh, I don't know," he objected calmly. "I spotted the eight guys you've
got coming in from the south."
He had the minor satisfaction of seeing Cue Ball's face flicker with surprise.
"Sure you did," the other said suspiciously. "How many of them were
human?"
There were five quick taps on the back of Jack's arm. "Five," Jack said.
"Why? You taking inventory?"
Cue Ball snorted. "Get over there," he growled, jerking his head toward the
other teens. "Join your buddies."
Jack did as he was told, crossing the room and kneeling down between Brinkster and Li.
He could feel Brinkster's body trembling where her shoulder touched his. Li, on his other
side, seemed in shock, as if refusing to believe this was really happening.
"Come on, you know the drill," Cue Ball prompted, jabbing Jack's own gun into
the back of his neck. "Hands on your head; fingers laced together."
Again Jack obeyed, glancing around at the others. Jommy's surly tone, he could see now,
hadn't been entirely honest. The kid was angry, all right, and trying hard to look brave
and tough. But he was also scared. Very scared.
Eleven-year-old Rogan Mbusu wasn't even trying to put up a good front. He was crying
openly, tears streaming down his cheeks, his body shaking with silent sobs. Beside him,
Alison knelt without moving, her face expressionless.
Stunned by it all, like Li? Or was she simply better at burying her emotions than the
others?
It was only then that he realized Alison was staring back at him. Staring very
intently.
He frowned back at her. Was she trying to ask him something? Tell him something?
Concentrating on Alison, he jerked as a pair of hard hands slipped around his neck.
Before he could react further, the hands were gone.
Leaving something hard and cold snugged up around his throat.
"All right, listen up," Cue Ball said. Out of the corner of his eye, Jack saw
the man fasten a gray metal collar around Li's neck. "These things are called control
collars." He moved on to Alison. "In case the famous Whinyard's Edge ten-day
training course didn't cover them, let me explain. Their sole purpose in life is to choke
the living daylights out of you if you try to run or make trouble."
He stepped behind Rogan. The kid nearly collapsed at his touch; Cue Ball merely propped
him up with one hand and put on his collar with the other. "They can get triggered
one of two ways," he said. "First, if you wander too far from the tether marker.
One of us has that. I'm not going to tell you which one."
He slid on Jommy's collar. "The other way is for one of us to fire 'em directly.
That'll happen if we decide somewhere along the way that you're not worth the trouble of
taking back with us. And we're easily convinced. So don't try."
"This guy's just a bundle of charm," Jack muttered under his breath.
Cue Ball, now standing behind Brinkster, apparently had good ears. The next thing Jack
knew, the big man had slapped him hard against the side of his head. "Watch your
mouth, kid," he growled.
Jack grimaced. "Yes, sir," he said, trying to sound meek and subdued and
feeling annoyed with himself. He'd forgotten Uncle Virgil's first rule of being a
prisoner: always look as helpless and harmless as you possibly can. It tended to make the
enemy overlook you.
And if there was one thing he really wanted right now it was to be overlooked.
"One more thing," Cue Ball added as he snapped Brinkster's collar around her
neck. "All six of these collars are keyed together. Plus side for us: we don't have
to fumble for six different buttons if we have to drop a troublemaker. Minus side for you:
if one of you gets the chop, all of you do. Think about that if you're tempted to be a
hero."
"We're set here, Lieutenant," one of the other men reported.
Jack glanced that direction. The men had the squad's fold-top computers packed into a
couple of backpacks, and were hoisting them up onto their backs.
"Right," Cue Ball said. Lieutenant Cue Ball, rather. "We're heading out
now, kiddies. Keep it nice and easy and quiet. We've got people positioned all around the
camp, just like Sentry Smart Mouth here said. You whisde up an alarm, and all you'll do
will be to get the rest of your buddies slaughtered in their bunks. Understood?
Good."
They left the HQ building, the prisoners in single file, the Shamshir troops spread out
on both sides around them. It wasn't until they were halfway across the silent encampment
that Jack suddenly caught the full significance of that last comment.
Lieutenant Cue Ball had just threatened to shoot up the camp. But the threat didn't
make sense, because Jack already knew that the rest of the Edgemen had disappeared.
Which meant that Lieutenant Cue Ball didn't know that.
He puzzled at it all the way to the empty guard post and on into the woods. Okay. So
the Edgemen were gone. But the Shamshir raiders hadn't made them go away. Not by killing
them, or kidnapping them, or luring them out of camp.
So where had they gone? And why?
He still hadn't come up with any answers by the time they met up with the eight
soldiers Draycos had spotted earlier. The group was spread out near Jack's sentry cage,
clearly waiting for Lieutenant Cue Ball and his prisoners to show up. A backup force,
undoubtedly, in case something had gone wrong.
Jack found a minor bit of satisfaction in the fact that there were indeed five humans
in the group.
They continued on down the slope. Some clouds had rolled in, cutting off most of the
already dim starlight, and Jack found himself in a continual struggle with underbrush that
wanted to trip him up and low-hanging tree branches that wanted to take his forehead off.
But the darkness also provided an unexpected plus. With visibility near zero, he could
feel Draycos carefully probing at the collar with his claws, searching out its operation.
And then, the pressure around his neck disappeared.
The dragon had popped the collar.
Jack tensed, trying to decide which way he should jump. A second later he nearly yelped
in frustration as the pressure came back again.
A very rude word flashed across his mind. But Draycos was right. Walking through the
middle of an unfamiliar forest, with armed enemies all around, was not exactly the ideal
spot to make a break for it.
He just hoped they would find a better opportunity before Lieutenant Cue Ball stood all
of them in front of a firing squad.
Ten minutes later they reached a small clearing. An unmarked Flying Turtle 505
transport sat there, a much smaller vehicle than the Lynx the squad had arrived in
earlier. It was guarded by two more Brummgas with Shamshir shoulder patches. The whole
crowd piled aboard, and they headed up into the sky.
And finally Jack had it figured out. The whole thing was a clever trap, with Tango Five
Zulu and their computers as the bait. They'd been sent out here to draw Lieutenant Cue
Ball and his men into grabbing range. Now, as they lifted out of the woods, the hidden
Edge forces would spring their trap.
Only they didn't. The Flying Turtle slid along under the cloudy sky at treetop level,
without a single other vehicle in sight.
All right, then, Jack decided as the minutes slipped by and nothing happened. Change
in plan. The Edge wasn't out to trap Lieutenant Cue Ball at all. Instead, they were
looking for some secret Shamshir base. It was still a trap, Tango Five Zulu was still the
bait, only now the Edgemen would wait until they reached their destination to spring it.
He was still holding firmly to that idea fifteen minutes later when the transport
settled into a landing.
"Let's go, puppies," Lieutenant Cue Ball said, stepping to the hatchway and
waving his gun toward it. "Don't forget about your collars."
Jack was third in line out the door. He glanced first at the sky, to see if the Edge
fighters were on their way.
They weren't. Trying hard to keep his hopes up, he lowered his gaze to the area around
them.
And with that all of his secret hopes dropped straight into his boots, chewed their way
through the soles, and disappeared into the ground beneath him. If this was a secret
military base, then he was Draycos's maiden Aunt Matilda.
For starters, the place wasn't even remotely secret. It was completely out in the open,
without any large trees, overhanging cliffs, or even camouflage screens to protect it. The
Edge training camp on Carrion would have been harder to spot than this place.
It was also very definitely not a military base. The only vehicles in sight were two
more Flying Turtles, neither of which looked even slightly armed. A couple of human-style
buildings squatted at the edge of the landing area, probably service areas for the
transports, probably courtesy of the Shamshir. The rest of the town seemed to be composed
entirely of mud huts of various sizes.
"Welcome to Dahtill City," Lieutenant Cue Ball announced as the prisoners
looked around them. "Regional capital of this part of Agrist territory, and where
this whole thing started."
He smiled, possibly the most unfriendly smile Jack had ever seen. "And for you,
puppies," he added, "where it's all going to end."
Chapter 18
The mud hut Lieutenant Cue Ball led them to was larger than most of the ones
around it, with wide, fan-shaped leaves stuck into its sides at various spots. The doorway
was low, and all of them except Rogan had to duck to keep from hitting their heads.
Experimentally, Jack brushed his hand against the outer wall as he went through the
doorway. It might look like fresh mud, but it was as hard and unyielding as stone.
A single room took up the entire interior of the hut. There were three aliens seated
behind a table in the center: short, pale, hairless beings with round but hollow faces and
bright silvery eyes. Agri, Jack decided, though he'd never actually seen any of this
particular species up close before. Two of them were wearing the same camouflage military
clothing as the Shamshir mercenaries, while the third was dressed in a long white robe
with narrow red stripes.
The robe, in Jack's opinion, definitely suited them better. The ones playing soldier
looked ridiculous.
"Then tell me what it is this time," the robed Agrist said. His voice was a
lot more melodious than Jack would have guessed from the almost skull-like face. "Yet
another crushing defeat against the thieves? Another step toward total victory against our
oppressors?"
Jack frowned, taking another look. Even given that he didn't know the first thing about
reading Agrist faces, the robed guy did not seem very happy. In fact, from the tone of the
comments, he seemed downright angry. Not exactly the attitude he would have expected.
Unlike Jack, Lieutenant Cue Ball didn't seem surprised by the tone. "I don't blame
you for being skeptical, Your Honorest," he said, his voice calm and earnest.
"But this time, we have the key."
"These are children," one of the uniformed Agri said harshly. "Human
children. Did you think we would not know?"
"Even children can fight, Defense Master," Lieutenant Cue Ball pointed out.
"In the hands of capable soldiers like those of the Whinyard's Edge, they can be
molded into mighty warriors indeed."
Out of the corner of his eye Jack saw Alison stir. Probably thinking about their ten
whole days of training, he decided, and wanting very much to say something sarcastic. But
she remained silent.
"But that's not why these particular prisoners are important," Lieutenant Cue
Ball went on. "These six are far more valuable than mere warriors. They've been
trained in Whin-yard's Edge communications and computer access codes. And we've
also taken their computers intact. Soon we'll be able to break both their real-time
tactical data and also learn their long-term plans."
"And this will gain us what?" the robed Agrist asked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball seemed taken aback. "Why, victory, of course, Your
Honorest."
"Will it?" His Honorest asked. "Will it really?"
He turned his silvery eyes on Jack. "Will it force the Whinyard's Edge to abandon
their attacks on our mine? Will it persuade the Parprins to accept the ruling of the
courts that our mine is indeed ours? Will it finally persuade the Trade Association to
send a Judge-Paladin to confirm and enforce that ruling?"
Jack felt a funny tingling at the pit of his stomach. Lieutenant Basht had told them
that it was the Agri who had jumped the Parprins' mining claims. But according to this
Agrist, it was the other way around.
Which was none of his business, of course. He had no particular interest in local
politics, or what exactly was going on with a small-time mine that probably no one else in
the whole Orion Arm cared about. The only reason he was here was to try to collect
information on Djinn-90s, so that he could find out who had attacked Draycos's ships, so
that eventually he could get Draycos off his back.
Unfortunately, Draycos wasn't likely to see things quite that simply. Draycos and his
K'da warrior ethic were going to be very unhappy if it turned out that they were fighting
on the wrong side of this war.
Sure enough, he could feel the dragon moving softly along his skin. That was a sign
that usually meant he was uncomfortable or annoyed.
Jack could only hope he would keep his annoyance to himself long enough for them to get
out of this mess.
"The only reason the Parprins are still pushing this is because the Edge is
backing them," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. "And the only reason they're still
on Sunright is that they don't think we can beat them."
"You told us this afternoon's attack in Mer'seb would persuade them to
leave," His Honorest said.
"I said it would be the first step," Lieutenant Cue Ball corrected.
"What we need now is to bloody them in half a dozen places at once."
He slapped his fingertips at the Edge patch on Jommy's shoulder. "This is our
key."
"I do not like this," His Honorest said flatly. "They are children. It
is not right to make war against children."
"But it's all right for those same children to make war against us?"
Lieutenant Cue Ball demanded, starting to sound impatient. "Come on, think. Use those
heads of yours for a change."
"What do you require of us?" the Defense Master asked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball gave a sound that was almost a sniff. "Nothing at all,"
he said. "We'll get what we need by ourselves. I just thought you'd like to be
brought up to speed on what was happening, that's all."
He jerked his head toward the door. The Shamshir soldiers nudged the prisoners, and the
whole group turned and went outside again.
"Idiots," one of the soldiers muttered.
"Of course they're idiots," Lieutenant Cue Ball said as he led the way back
toward the human-style buildings by the landing area. "All aliens are. Ignore them
and concentrate on the job."
"What happens if we don't feel like cooperating?" Alison asked.
Jack winced. It was not a smart thing to say, and he was pretty sure everyone else in
the group knew it.
Lieutenant Cue Ball certainly did. "That sounded like a challenge, puppy," he
said quietly. "I like challenges. Don't worry, one of you will talk. Maybe you,
huh?"
"Lieutenant?" a melodious voice called.
Jack turned to see the second of the uniformed Agri hurrying up behind them. "The
Defense Master's compliments. He wishes the human children to be placed in custody under
Agrist Protector authority."
"Return the Defense Master's compliments fourfold," Lieutenant Cue Ball said
courteously. "And inform him that the prisoners will be delivered to his custody when
I'm finished with them."
"The Defense Master specifically said"
"You will deliver my compliments, and my message," Lieutenant Cue Ball said,
turning his back on the alien. "This way, puppies."
He took them into the larger of the two buildings, into a back room that seemed to have
been specifically designed to be a jail cell. There were no windows, the door was equipped
with two separate locks, and there were a dozen metal rings embedded halfway into the
concrete floor.
At Lieutenant Cue Ball's instructions, the soldiers produced handcuffs. Ordering the
prisoners to sit, they secured their wrists to the rings. "Right," he said
briskly when they were finished. "Someone want to save all of us a lot of time and
effort and give me the access codes right now?"
Jack didn't dare look around at the others. He kept his eyes on Lieutenant Cue Ball;
and after a moment the man gave a smirk. "Didn't think so," he said. "Fine.
We'll do it the hard way.
He looked around the room, and his gaze fell on Jack. "YouBright Eyes. Let's
go."
One of the soldiers unfastened the ring end of Jack's handcuffs, leaving the other end
attached to his wrist. Hauling him to his feet, he marched him out of the room. With
Lieutenant Cue Ball again in the lead, they took him back outside and into the other
building.
The whole procedure seemed to be taking a lot of unnecessary time, Jack thought,
especially for people who claimed to be in so much of a hurry. But he'd been through this
same routine a few times with various police departments across the Orion Arm. It was all
for show: dropping vague threats and then giving the victim time to think and sweat about
it.
And the fact that they'd taken Jack out of the room first meant that he wasn't the
primary target of the evening's entertainment. Lieutenant Cue Ball hadn't given him nearly
enough time to think and sweat, after all.
No, they were probably targeting little Rogan, he decided uncomfortably. Either him or
one of the girls.
This second building seemed to be set up more along the lines of the Edge's HQ back on
Carrion, with normal offices and hallways and everything. The soldiers took Jack to what
looked like a conference room, where he found Tango Five Zulu's fold-top computers laid
out neatly around a large oval table. They were plugged in, turned on, and ready to go.
All they were waiting for was the proper access code.
"Okay," Lieutenant Cue Ball said, gesturing to the computers. "Like I
said, we can do this easy or we can do it hard. You've got one last chance to be
smart."
"Oh, I'm already smart," Jack assured him, watching his face closely.
"Problem is, I'm also poor."
Lieutenant Cue Ball's eyes narrowed. "What's that supposed to mean?"
"It means I want to know what's in it for me," Jack said.
One of the other Shamshir snorted loudly. "You get to stay in one piece," he
said.
"That's important, all right," Jack agreed, shivering. He needed to play this
out, so that he knew how much wiggle room he had here. But at the same time, he definitely
didn't want to push these men too far. "But it sounds like you guys are in a hurry. I
work faster when I'm inspired."
One of the soldiers took a step forward. "You want inspiration?" he bit out,
drawing a long knife from a sheath at his side. "Let me give you some
inspiration."
Lieutenant Cue Ball twitched his hand. Reluctantly, Jack thought, the man stepped back.
"Okay, I'll play," the lieutenant said. "What do you want?"
"My aunt and uncle indentured me to the Whinyard's Edge," Jack said.
"Fifty thousand for two years of slave labor."
"And what, you want us to buy your contract?"
"Hardly," Jack said. "I want cash and a door out of here."
A cynical smile tugged at the corners of Lieutenant Cue Ball's mouth. "I see the
Edge is still squeezing a quart of loyalty out of each fresh recruit," he said.
"Fine. Cash on the drum for value received. What can you give us?"
"That depends on how much you can pay," Jack countered. "How does a
hundred thousand sound?"
"Like you think we're stupid," Lieutenant Cue Ball said darkly. "Or
desperate."
"I don't know about the first," Jack said thoughtfully, rubbing at his chin.
The loose end of his handcuffs bounced against his chest as he did so. "But on the
second, it seems to me that you're pushing up against a deadline here. The Defense Master
could send his people around at any time to collect us, you know. I don't think the Agri
would like it if they found out you were planning to torture a bunch of human
children."
Lieutenant Cue Ball smiled again, a very nasty smile this time. "You think anyone
in this room cares a dead frog what the Agri like or don't like?"
Jack frowned. That wasn't the response he'd been expecting. "This is their
world," he pointed out cautiously. "They hired you, not the other way
around."
"I guess maybe you're hard of hearing," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. He wasn't
smiling any more. "I'll say it again. I don't care what the Agri like or want, or
don't like or don't want. The mine they're sitting on is worth a lot of money. Get the
picture?"
Jack looked over at the soldiers standing by the door, feeling the ground sifting like
dry sand out from under his position. "So you're not here to defend the Agri at
all," he said slowly. "All you want is the mine."
"Catches on quick, don't he?" one of the Shamshir said sarcastically.
"And the only thing that stands in your way," Jack added, "is the
Whinyard's Edge."
"Who want the mine just as badly as we do," Lieutenant Cue Ball agreed.
He must have seen something in Jack's face, because he smiled again. "Oh, come
now. You weren't thinking noble thoughts about them, were you? Did you really think they
were here to help the Parprins take over the mine, collect their fee, and move on? Who do
you think they are, Drag-onbacks?"
Jack nodded, suddenly feeling very tired. Once, he'd thought he and Draycos were on the
right side, helping the Whinyard's Edge defend a Parprin mine from aggressors. A few
minutes ago, he'd begun to wonder if it was actually the Agri who were the innocent
victims here.
Now, he realized that there was no right side for him to be on. Both armies were out
for themselves, fighting solely for a share of the loot. The people who really owned the
mine, whichever group it actually was, weren't going to keep their property no matter who
won.
Ever since he'd started this scam, Draycos had been talking about how soldiers were the
protectors of the weak.
He wondered what the noble K'da poet-warrior would have to say about this.
He didn't have to guess what Uncle Virge would say. I told you so pretty well
covered that one.
"Yes," he said. "I understand."
He took a deep breath. Draycos had stopped his frustrated movements, he noticed.
Perhaps the dragon was offended beyond any reaction at all.
Or else he was preparing for action.
"Good," Lieutenant Cue Ball said. "Don't look so shocked. This is how
the universe operates. Get used to it." He folded his arms across his chest.
"Here's the offer. Twenty-five thousand, in cash, and a ticket off this mudball for
everything in those computers. If you can deliver it in one hour."
Jack sighed. Maybe Uncle Virge was right, after all. Maybe looking out for yourself was
all you could expect to do in this life. Trying to do anything else was inviting a whole
water buffalo stampede to charge right down on top of you.
And at the moment, looking out for himself meant getting out of here. Draycos would
understand. In fact, Draycos was probably tugging at the leash to get away from this soggy
mess himself.
Anyway, the whole only reason they'd come here in the first place was to track down
those Djinn-90s. Twenty-five thousand in Shamshir cash would give them whole new ways to
continue that search. That ought to calm the dragon's conscience.
He hoped.
"Deal," he said, stepping to the nearest computer and sitting down on the
chair in front of it. Briefly, he wondered if Draycos would consider this a betrayal of
his soldier's oath. But there was nothing he could do except hope the dragon understood.
Taking a deep breath, he keyed in the main access code they'd been taught. Nothing
happened.
Chapter 19
A quiet alarm bell began jingling in the back of Jack's brain. He tried the
access code again. Still nothing.
There were three other codes they'd been taught. He tried each of them in turn, typing
slowly and carefully to make sure he wasn't making any mistakes.
None of the codes did anything at all.
The soldiers gathered by the door were beginning to mutter among themselves. Feeling
sweat gathering on his forehead, Jack moved over one seat to the next computer in line and
tried again. He tried everything again. Still nothing worked.
Lieutenant Cue Ball had started out standing behind Jack, looking over his shoulder.
Now, he was crowding so closely against him that Jack could feel him breathing.
"What's the matter, Bright Eyes?" he rumbled softly. "Twenty-five thousand
suddenly not good enough for you?"
"I don't know what's wrong," Jack protested. "These are the codes they
taught us. They worked fine back on Carrion."
"Did they, now," Lieutenant Cue Ball said.
Swallowing hard, Jack attacked the computer one last time. He might as well have saved
himself the trouble. "Let rue try one more," he offered, starting to get up from
his chair.
A big hand landed on his shoulder and shoved him back down into his seat. "Save
it," Lieutenant Cue Ball snarled. "You've wasted enough of my time
already."
The pressure on Jack's shoulder shifted to a grip under his arm, and he was hauled
bodily out of the chair. "Panto, Crickput him on ice," the lieutenant
ordered, giving Jack a rough shove toward the soldiers at the door. "Number Two
storeroom. Then go get the Oriental girl. Maybe she'll be more cooperative."
The Number Two storeroom was the mud hut on the far side of the other human-designed
building. It was small, no bigger than the Essenay's cargo hold, with a bare dirt
floor. Metal shelves stacked with boxes filled most of the floor space, leaving only a few
square feet open in the middle. Panto and Crick sat him down in the middle of the open
area and attached his handcuff to one of the lower shelf supports. Then they left, turning
off the overhead light and closing the door behind them.
Jack sighed, rubbing his eyes tiredly with his free hand. Like the prison cell they'd
started out in, this storeroom had no windows, and it was pitch black. "Well,"
he said aloud. "Here we are."
"Yes," Draycos murmured from his right shoulder. "Can you press up
beside these boxes?"
"Yeah, hang on," Jack said, getting up into as high a crouch as he could with
his hand chained to the shelf that way. Turning around, he pressed his back against the
row of boxes. In their two-dimensional form, K'da had a trick that let them see right
through solid objectsthough Draycos insisted on saying he was seeing
"over" themprovided the walls were thin enough. "How's that?"
There was a sliding sensation on his back as Draycos moved into position.
"Anything useful in there?" he asked.
The dragon shifted again, paused, shifted again. Examining all the boxes within reach,
probably. There was one final movement, and Jack felt the dragon's head slide back around
to rest on his right shoulder. "There is nothing useful to us," he reported.
"Two of the boxes contain grenades, while the third contains ammunition. There is
nothing that will assist us in a quiet escape."
"Might be helpful in a noisy one, though," Jack pointed out.
"We do not wish a noisy escape, Jack," Draycos said.
"Personally, I don't care what flavor escape we get," Jack grumbled.
"You got any ideas?"
"Perhaps," Draycos said. A bit of weight came onto Jack's wrist near the
handcuff. "Tell me, what did you do to the computers?"
Jack shook his head. "Not a thing. The codes just didn't work."
"How can that be?"
"Only two possibilities I can think of," Jack said. "Either some idiot
got the computers mixed up, or else someone went in and changed all the codes."
Draycos was silent a moment. "Let us follow the chain of reason," he
suggested. "Your squad used the computers on the voyage to this world."
"Right," Jack said. "And they were fine during the whole trip."
"They were then transported across the town of Mer'seb to the headquarters
building," Draycos went on. "From there they were loaded aboard the Lynx and
brought to the outpost at Kilo Seven."
"So if they were switched, it had to have been done in Mer'seb," Jack
concluded. "And if they were repro-grammed ..."
He trailed off. "You have a thought?" Draycos prompted.
"I was just thinking," Jack said slowly. "During the trip to Kilo Seven,
they were stacked back in the storage compartment with the rest of the baggage. Anyone
could have gone back there and fiddled with them."
"How difficult would it be to alter the codes?"
"I don't know," Jack said. "Uncle Virgil always handled any
code-switching we had to do. But I suppose if you'd set up a program card in advance, it
could be done pretty quickly."
He tried to reach up to scratch his cheek. The hand came up short as it reached the end
of the handcuff chain. "In fact, I'll bet it could even have been done at Kilo Seven
while the rest of the squad was getting things set up," he added, examining the
restraints with his fingertips. The lock pressed up against the underside of his wrist
felt like a standard mechanical handcuff lock. With a proper lockpick, he should be able
to open it.
Trouble was, he didn't have a proper lockpick with him. Still, maybe he could find
something on the floor; a sliver of metal or something else he could bend into the proper
shape. With his free hand, he began feeling carefully around the packed dirt beneath the
shelves.
"Alison Kayna," Draycos said suddenly.
Jack's fingers paused in their search. "What about her?"
"She was moving around aboard the Lynx," the dragon reminded him. "She
came and spoke with you, in fact."
"Yes, I remember," Jack said, frowning. He'd assumed at the time that she'd
just noticed him talking with Sergeant Grisko and decided to be nosy.
But what if that wasn't all of it? What if she'd been back fiddling with the squad's
computers? She would have had a clear view of his chat with Grisko from there. "Do
you remember if she was in her seat when I was talking to Grisko?"
"I was not able to see in that direction," Draycos said. "At all other
times I was watching through the window."
And Jack himself was taking a snooze. The rest of Tango Five Zulu could have thrown a
dance party back there for all he knew. "But why would she sabotage the
computers?" he asked.
"Why would anyone do so?" Draycos countered.
Jack shrugged. "You got me."
"I do not know either," Draycos said. "However, we suspect that Alison
has had previous military training. Her own statement is that she was once with a
different group. I do not believe she ever stated which one."
Jack blinked in the darkness. "Are you suggesting she's a spy for the
Shamshir?"
"I do not suggest anything in particular," Draycos said. "This situation
is not like any I am familiar with."
"Yeah, I don't suppose it is," Jack conceded. "These aren't your kind of
soldiers, are they?"
"No, they are not," Draycos said, and Jack could hear the contempt in his
voice. "These are little more than thieves in uniforms."
Jack grimaced. "In uniforms, and with high-power rifles."
"The weapons do not matter," Draycos said. "What matters is that they
are not true soldiers. I do not believe they will think as warriors do. That gives us an
advantage."
"Right." Offhand, Jack couldn't think of any advantages they had at this
particular moment, but he wasn't going to argue the point.
For a couple of minutes neither of them spoke. The only sounds were the whistling of
the wind against the hardened mud swirls on the outside of their hut and an odd sort of
scratching noise Jack couldn't identify. "What are the Shon-tine like?" he asked
suddenly.
"What do you mean?" Draycos asked. "Are you asking about their physical
form?"
"No, I saw some of their bodies aboard the Havenseeker" Jack said,
shivering at the memory of that trek through debris and death. "I meant what are they
like as people. Their personalities, culturethat sort of thing. Are they like you,
or are they more like humans?"
Draycos seemed to gather his thoughts. "I do not yet know your people very
well," he said slowly. "You will therefore need to make your own comparisons.
The Shon-tine in general are not violent or aggressive beings. Few indeed are the true
warriors born to them, though those few are strongly gifted in their art. Still, even the
average Shontin is capable of fighting in his own defense when it becomes necessary to do
so."
"But only as a last resort?"
"Mostly," Draycos agreed. "The majority of them prefer to contemplate
and appreciate the various forms of their arts, or to create beautiful and useful things
with their hands, or to work the soil and bring forth food."
"Sounds like something you'd find on one of the Orion Arm's more backwater
worlds," Jack commented.
"I am sure some of your people would consider them primitive and naive,"
Draycos said, a little stiffly. "Others would recognize their strength of character
and purpose as signs of highly advanced beings. Until the Valahgua began their war against
us, their greatest heroes were those who throughout history had stood for what was right
amid opposition, even to the point of death."
He moved restlessly against Jack's skin. "Now, sadly, their warriors have become
the most esteemed among them. I can only hope they will be able to regain the culture and
dignity of their race once they are safely here."
"And I suppose when they are that you'll?" Jack broke off, suddenly
embarrassed at what he'd been about to ask.
But Draycos had caught it anyway. "Do you ask if I will be returning to one of
them if we should succeed in our task?"
"Don't get me wrong," Jack said quickly. Too quickly, probably. Uncle Virgil
had always said that he talked too fast when he was nervous. "I mean, this
arrangement is only supposed to be until they get here. And that's fine with me."
"I will not leave until you wish for me to do so," Draycos said quietly.
"I promise you that."
"Yeah," Jack said tardy, blinking back sudden moisture in his eyes. "But
no one's exactly sent you an engraved invitation to the royal banquet, either. Uncle Virge
and I were doing fine before you showed up, and we'll do fine after you leave."
He leaned back stiffly, wincing as his head bumped against the cold metal of the
shelves behind him. "Assuming we ever get out of here," he got himself back on
track, wishing he'd never brought up the subject of Draycos's future in the first place.
The dragon was a temporary associate. Nothing more. "What does a good poet-warrior do
in a situation like this?"
"He does his duty, of course," Draycos said. "The duty of all prisoners
of war is to escape."
Jack sighed. "One small problem with that," he said. He snapped his wrist out
again to rattle the handcuff chain in reminder.
Only this time the chain didn't rattle. At his first tug it clinked once
And with a soft thud, the chain snapped off at the cuff around his wrist and dropped in
a heap onto the dirt floor.
Jack jerked in surprise, grabbing reflexively at the handcuff around his wrist. Or
rather, the ordinary bracelet the cuff had suddenly become. "What in?"
He broke off, his mouth snapping firmly closed. Of course. The dragon's claws. The
claws that he'd once seen scratch a K'da letter into the end of a metal cylinder.
Only this time, the dragon hadn't just scratched. This time, so quietly and stealthily
that Jack hadn't even noticed, Draycos had cut his way straight through the handcuff
chain.
"You were saying there was a problem?" Draycos said blandly.
Jack glared down at his chest in the darkness. It was impossible to tell, but he could
swear the other was laughing at him. "Funny dragon," he growled. "Okay,
you're so smart. Now what?"
"As I said, our duty is to escape," Draycos said. Sliding up along Jack's
skin to his neck, he popped the control collar free. "But our duty is also to our
comrades. We must assist in their release."
"Hold on a second," Jack warned, shivering with relief as he dropped the
collar onto the floor and pushed it as far away from him as he could. "If you're
suggesting we take on Lieutenant Cue Ball and his troops all by ourselves, you've got a
serious argument coming."
"I do not suggest that at all," Draycos assured him. "Our chances for
success will be much higher if we leave this place and summon help."
"Now you're talking," Jack said, pushing himself to his feet and brushing the
dirt off his hands. "Any idea how we manage that without someone objecting?"
"We begin by opening the door," Draycos said. "Quietly, of course."
"Thanks," Jack said dryly, finding the door handle and easing it open a
crack. When it came to sneaking, at least, the noble K'da warrior and the lowly human
thief were thinking alike.
Everything seemed quiet outside. Jack stood without moving for a moment, listening to
the sounds of the night and watching all the shadows he could see from his angle. Most of
the faint background noise seemed to be coming from the Agrist huts in the distance behind
them, with nothing closer. Nothing moved, either, at least nothing that he could see.
"Looks clear," he murmured. "We going for the Flying Turtles?"
"Would you rather walk?"
Jack rolled his eyes. Draycos was in rare form tonight. Very pleased with himself over
the handcuffs, no doubt. "No, let's travel in style, shall we?" he said.
"You want to watch our backs?"
A weight formed on his shoulders in response, his jacket pulling tight against his
throat as Draycos's head rose up from his shoulder, facing backwards. "Ready."
"Okay." Bracing himself, Jack pulled the door all the way open and stepped
into the doorway. He paused there for a moment, watching and listening some more. Still
nothing. Closing the door behind him, he slipped out into the night.
Chapter 20
He had just reached the first human building, the one where the rest of
Tango Five Zulu were handcuffed to the floor, when a slab of light suddenly cut through
the darkness ahead.
He dropped into a crouch at the corner, pressing himself against the building. The
light, he saw, was coming from the doorway of the second human building. As he watched,
two Shamshir soldiers came striding out, supporting a staggering Li between them.
Jack felt his muscles tense. If they took her to the same hut they'd just locked him
into, the mustard was about to hit the wiener, big time.
But no. They turned the other direction, their backs to him, and headed toward another
row of the small mud huts on the other side of the building.
There was a soft hiss in his ear. "Easy," Jack soothed. "They're not
coming this way."
"She has been tortured," Draycos murmured back. There was an edge of barely
controlled fury in his voice. "Can you not see that?"
Jack frowned, studying Li's back as she stumbled along. "No, I don't think
so," he said. "I remember her looking like she was in shock earlier. I think
she's still just not clicking on all chips."
"She does not look right," Draycos insisted. "How can you be
certain?"
"Trust me," Jack assured him. "I've seen people scared out of their
braincases before."
He nodded toward Li and her escorts. "Besides, look where they're taking her.
They're putting her in isolation, same as they did me. That proves she wasn't
tortured." "I do not understand."
Jack sighed. "They're trying to get one of us to break. Right? So they want the
ones who are left to be as scared as possible. If they'd really tortured Li, they'd put
her back in with the others instead of off by herself." "Why?"
"So everyone could see firsthand all the gory details," Jack said. "The
more scared they are when their turns come, the more likely they'll be to give Lieutenant
Cue Ball what he wants."
Draycos's tongue flicked out restlessly. "They put you by yourselves so as to
frighten the others?"
"You got it," Jack said. "See, when people keep getting taken away and
no one comes back, the ones who are left start wondering what's happened to them.
Sometimes that's a whole lot scarier than anything they could dream up on their own."
Draycos was silent a moment. "It is barbaric."
"I suppose," Jack admitted. "But it's better than beating the sand out
of someone. Don't your people ever use psychological warfare?"
"I do not know that term," Draycos said stiffly. "But if it is like
this, I am certain we do not."
"Figures," Jack murmured. Sometimes the K'da were too noble for their own
good.
The two Shamshir emerged from the hut, minus Li, and turned purposefully toward the
building Jack was crouched beside. Going to collect the next contestant in Lieutenant Cue
Ball's little game, no doubt. "Keep quiet," he warned Draycos, easing back from
the corner out of their sight. "And get ready."
The soldiers reached the door and disappeared inside.
And the second they were out of sight, Jack sprinted for the Flying Turtle they'd been
brought here in.
He had estimated he would have about a minute to pop the hatchway and get inside before
the soldiers reappeared. As it turned out, the hatchway wasn't locked, and he made it with
a good twenty seconds to spare. He was already in the cockpit, studying the control board,
when the soldiers came back outside.
With Alison Kayna striding along between them.
"They have taken Alison," Draycos murmured, his head rising from Jack's
shoulder for a better look.
"Yeah, I saw," Jack grunted, still sorting out the board. This thing wasn't
going to fly much like the Essenay, but the controls were similar enough. "Was
there something you wanted me to do about it?"
"I was merely observing," Draycos said mildly. "She is not being treated
as a fellow Shamshir soldier."
Jack looked up again. The dragon was right. As far as he could tell, she was being
marched along the same way he had been earlier, like any other prisoner Lieutenant Cue
Ball was hoping to squeeze for information. "Okay, so maybe it isn't the Shamshir
she's working for," he conceded. "Maybe it's some other group. Maybe she
scrambled the computer codes so that she could be the only one who could pull out the data
for them."
"Why?"
"How should I know?" Jack growled. "Maybe she was hired to get in good
with the Shamshir. Maybe she was hired to chase the Whinyard's Edge off Sunright. Maybe
she just wants to make a cash deal, like I tried to."
Alison and the soldiers disappeared into the building. "And right now, I don't
much care," Jack added, keying for startup. "All I want is to get out of
here."
The weight on his shoulder shifted as Draycos looked around the cockpit. "Will
there not be a recognition code required to start the engines?"
"Probably." Jack gestured to the board. "Conveniently for us, the pilot
left this one on standby. I was hoping he had."
Draycos cocked his head. "Careless of him."
"Agreed," Jack said. "But like you said, these guys aren't really
soldiers."
He eased in the lifters, and the Flying Turtle rose gently into the sky. "Keep
your claws crossed," he warned. "If anyone's going to object, now's the time
they're going to do it."
But no one challenged them as they headed off into the night. No one challenged, or
signaled, or even seemed to notice. Jack kept the transport close to the ground, putting
distance between them and Dahtill City as quickly as he dared, wondering how in the world
it was they were getting away so easily.
"It would seem that proper military procedure does not exist here," Draycos
commented. "Perhaps the Agri have not allowed their city to be turned into a base for
the Shamshir."
"Maybe," Jack said. "Or maybe it's simpler. If this is where the mine is
that everybody wants, neither side will want to have any serious fighting nearby."
"Perhaps." Draycos's head rose up higher, his snout pointing past Jack's nose
to the left. "Could that be the mine?"
Jack looked that direction. A mile or so past the edge of the city were three dim
structures. The center one was much taller than the others, clearly built to house the
kind of crane and digging equipment necessary for a deep-ground mine shaft. The other two
buildings seemed to be support structures, probably containing supplies and extra
equipment. There were only a few lights in evidence, just enough to keep aircraft from
running into them. Apparently, the Agri weren't working a night shift.
"Probably," he confirmed. "I seem to remember that daublite is usually
deep enough that you have to sink a pretty long shaft to get anywhere near it."
"That sounds expensive."
"Expensive and time-consuming both," Jack agreed.
"The Agri have probably been at this project for years. Maybe even
generations."
"Only to then have others try to steal it away from them," Draycos said,
sounding disgusted. "Those structures are built over vertical shafts, then?"
"Just the one in the middle," Jack said. "It looks like the pictures
I've seen of deep mines."
"A delicate operation," Draycos murmured. "Easily destroyed by accident,
or by falling debris collapsing the shaft. I can understand why they do not wish battles
nearby."
His head swiveled back toward the view ahead. "This is not the direction to
Mer'seb," he said. "From Dahtill City we must turn southwest."
"Right," Jack agreed. "If we were heading for Mer'seb. But we're
not. We're going back to Kilo Seven."
The dragon's head pulled far enough away from Jack's skin that he could peer at his
face. "Is that wise?"
Jack snorted. "In my occasionally humble opinion, 'wise' hasn't been part of the
equation since we started this whole job," he said. "But yes, I think it'll get
us what we want."
"Explain it to me."
And convince him that Jack was acting like a properly noble K'da warrior? Probably.
"First off, the only things the Shamshir took were our squad's own computers,"
Jack said. "That means all the rest of the Edge stuff is still there. Computers and
comm equipment. Alison, or whoever, couldn't possibly have sabotaged all of it."
"Then your codes will still allow you access."
"Right," Jack nodded. "So the first thing we'll do is call Mer'seb and
whistle up a rescue team. After that, we'll tap into their mainframe and try to pull up
the Djinn-90 information that was the reason we came here in the first place."
"You will do that directly?" Draycos asked. "I thought your plan was to
use the Essenay's equipment and thereby protect yourself from discovery."
"It was," Jack said. "Problem is, the Essenay is way to the south
somewhere right now."
"Can you not summon it with your comm clip?"
Jack shook his head. "If Uncle Virge is still waiting at November Six, he's way
out of comm clip range."
"What about the transmitter in this vehicle? It is more powerful than your comm
clip. Could you not tune it to the correct frequency?"
"Sure, but then the conversation wouldn't be encrypted," Jack pointed out.
"That means anyone and his toy poodle Mitsy would be able to listen in."
"Perhaps we can use another form of coding," Draycos suggested.
"I don't know how," Jack said. "But it doesn't really matter. I wanted
to do a gentle tap into their records so that I could then do a quiet sneak away. But with
the Shamshir raid, there's no chance of a quiet sneak anyway. I might as well just
bulldoze my way into their mainframe, pull the records, and make a run for it."
"With the Essenay still at November Six?"
"Right, but we've got this now," Jack reminded him, tapping the edge of the
control panel. "If we're quick, we should be able to get ourselves down to Uncle
Virge before the balloon goes up."
Draycos digested all that. "And you believe you will be able to locate the Kilo
Seven outpost?"
"Piece of Boston cream pie." Jack pointed to one of the displays on the
board. "Along with not shutting down the transport, the pilot also didn't bother to
erase the course memory."
"I see," Draycos murmured. "Convenient."
"And sloppy," Jack said. "But then, they're not real soldiers, are
they?"
It had taken Lieutenant Cue Ball fifteen minutes to get them from Kilo Seven to Dahtill
City. Ten minutes into the return flight, just as Jack was thinking about cutting their
altitude a little, the comm suddenly twittered. "About time," he muttered.
"Draycos, how are you at imitating voices?"
"Not very good, I'm afraid," the dragon said.
"Me, neither," Jack said, reaching for the transmission switch. "But
maybe I can buy us at least a little more time."
He keyed on the microphone. "Yeah, what do you want?" he demanded in the best
imitation of Lieutenant Cue Ball's voice he could manage.
But it wasn't, as he'd expected, some Shamshir flunky wanting to know who had borrowed
their transport. "Flying Turtle 505, identify yourself," came an
all-too-familiar voice.
Draycos's ears went straight up. "It is Sergeant Grisko," he whispered in
Jack's ear.
Jack nodded, feeling suddenly limp with relief. The good guys had finally arrived.
Or at least, the side that wasn't going to be shooting at him had arrived. There were
no actual good guys anywhere in this game. "Sir, this is Private Montana," he
said, switching back to his normal voice. "Squad Tango Five Zulu. Our group was
captured by the Shamshir. I've just escaped."
"Really," Grisko said. "Congratulations."
"Thank you, sir," Jack said. "But they've still got the others. We have
to get them out."
"Of course," Grisko said. "Come on in and we'll set something up. You
can fly that thing all right?"
"Reasonably well, yes, sir."
"And you're all strapped in?"
"Yes, sir," Jack said, frowning at the speaker. That was a strange question.
Come to think of it, Grisko's whole voice was sounding strange. "Shall I put down
where our Lynx landed earlier?"
"Sounds good," Grisko said. "Keep 'er steady, and come on in."
The speaker clicked off". "Okay," Jack said, shutting off the comm at
his end. "We're set."
"I do not think so," Draycos said, his voice as strange as Grisko's.
"Are there emergency escape devices aboard this aircraft?"
Jack frowned. "What in the world?"
"Do not argue," Draycos snapped, shooting out of Jack's collar to land on the
deck behind him. Suddenly the dragon seemed charged with energy and nervous tension.
"We must leave this vehicle at once. Are there escape devices aboard?"
"I can check," Jack said, the urgency in the dragon's voice silencing all
questions. "Can you fly this thing?"
"Yes," Draycos said, moving aside to let Jack out of the pilot's seat.
"Go. Quickly."
There was a tall storage cabinet built into the wall beside the exit hatchway. Jack
started toward it, then changed his mind and instead got down on his knees beside the
nearest row of seats.
His second hunch turned out to be right. Strapped beneath each seat was the
orange-striped plastic bag of a drop-pack. "Got it," he reported, pulling one
free.
"How high must we be to use it?" Draycos asked. He was, Jack saw, curled
partially on his side in the pilot's seat, his paws on the transport's controls.
"As high or as low as you want," Jack told him. "It's not like a
parachute or hang glider where you need altitude for it to work."
"Then prepare yourself and wait by the door."
"Right," Jack said, ripping open the package tab and heading aft. The
drop-pack was similar to the ones he and Uncle Virgil had used once in a midnight skulk
onto the roof of a high-rise bank, except that this one had the typical drab-ness of
military surplus. By the time he reached the hatchway, he had it on. "Ready," he
called.
"Stand prepared to open the hatchway," Draycos ordered. "When I come to
you, we will jump."
Jack took a deep breath, checking all the drop-pack's straps one final time. The
scariest part was that he still didn't know what had spooked the dragon so badly. But
anything that worried a poet-warrior of the K'da was definitely something he wanted to be
worried about, too.
His eyes fell on the cabinet beside the hatchway. On impulse, he pulled it open.
Originally, he'd thought to find the drop-packs in there. What he found instead was
actually more reasonable considering the Flying Turtle's owners.
The cabinet was a weapons locker. The entire top half was filled with the sort of small
machine guns Lieutenant Cue Ball and his men had been carrying, with the middle part taken
up by shelves full of ammo clips for the guns. At the bottom, looking almost like an
afterthought, was a rack holding six slapsticks.
Jack hesitated. The heavier weapons were tempting, but only for a second. Machine guns
were mid-range weapons, which was good; but they were also lethal and very noisy, neither
of which was what he wanted right now. The slapsticks, on the other hand, were dead quiet
and did nothing but knock out your target with an electric shock.
Of course, you also had to get close enough to physically touch him. But you couldn't
have everything. Pulling out one of the slapsticks, he made sure it was fully charged,
checked to see that the safety catch was on, then stuck it in his belt.
"Prepare," Draycos called.
"Ready," Jack called back, getting a grip on the drop-pack rip cord with one
hand and resting the other on the hatchway release pad.
And suddenly, in a flash of golden scales, Draycos spun around and dived out of the
pilot's chair. Hitting the top of one of the rows of seats, he shoved off it and bounded
toward the hatch.
Jack was ready. He slapped the release; and as the sudden hurricane of wind tore at his
hair and clothes he stretched his hand out toward Draycos.
The outstretched forepaws struck his palm and the dragon melted up his sleeve. Pulling
the rip cord, Jack pushed off backwards into the night.
The wind grabbed him, and for a horribly tangled second it threw him around, turning
him upside down and twice slapping him in the face. It was like being thrown into a raging
river made up of air instead of water.
Then the tiny thrusters built into the drop-pack kicked into action. They turned him
upright, slowing both his descent and his forward motion. The wind faded, one last set of
tree branches grabbed at his sleeve as he passed, and then his feet slapped more or less
gently into the crunchy mat of leaves.
"Whew!" he puffed, regaining his balance and looking around. They had landed
in a reasonably clear area on a small rise, giving him a good view forward.
There, fading into the distance, he could see their transport. It was still skimming
cheerfully away into the night, with no hint of mechanical trouble that he could see.
He shook his head, wondering how many miles they were now going to have to walk.
"I don't suppose you happen to know where we are?" he asked.
And then, before Draycos could answer, there was a flicker of light in the distance.
Something dark and half-seen seemed to curve up from the forest.
And with a brilliant flash, it exploded against the underside of the Flying Turtle.
Chapter 21
The air went out of Jack as if he'd been kicked in the stomach.
"Wha?" he gasped, staring in disbelief at the fireball still hugging the
underside of the transport. Noit was impossible.
But even as he watched, even as his mind tried to convince itself that he wasn't seeing
what he was seeing, a second object rose from the forest, and a second explosion blasted
at the transport's underside.
"That attack was meant for us," Draycos said, his voice low and grim as his
head rose from Jack's shoulder. "I see your military vehicles are well equipped with
ventral armor."
The words seemed to bounce around Jack's brain like angry hornets trying to get through
a window. "What are you talking about?" he heard himself say.
"Ventral armor," Draycos repeated. "Protection for the underside of the
craft. Designed to protect the troops being carried."
Jack tore his eyes away from the Flying Turtle, wavering but still holding together,
and stared at the dragon's face. "Are you insane?" he demanded. "Someone
just tried to kill us, and you're talking equipment specs?"
"Be calm, Jack," Draycos advised. With a surge of weight and pressure, he
leaped out of Jack's collar and landed on the ground in front of him. "I do not
believe they intended to kill you. I believe they meant only to disable the craft, so that
you could be taken prisoner."
A distant clattering sound wafted toward them on the night air, like a bunch of spoons
that had been dropped into a sausage grinder. Jack looked over, to find that the Flying
Turtle had finally given up and disappeared into the trees.
He didn't have any trouble seeing where it had landed, though. The reddish glow of the
fire from its burning fuel tanks was plainly visible.
"I don't believe this," he muttered. "They shot down one of their own
transports just so they could grab me again? That's crazy. They already know I can't get
them into our computers."
Draycos twisted his long neck. "You misunderstand, Jack," he said darkly.
"It was not the Shamshir who did this."
Jack frowned at him. "You can't be serious."
"I am very serious," Draycos assured him. "It was the Whinyard's Edge
who shot down the transport."
"But that doesn't make sense," Jack protested. "I was already on my way
to meet them. Why shoot at me?"
"I do not know," Draycos said. "But remember: Sergeant Grisko asked if
you were strapped in. And he instructed you to keep your course steady."
"That was just a figure of speech," Jack muttered. But even as he argued, he
knew down deep that he was batting at flies here. He'd spent over two weeks with Grisko,
and never in that time had he heard the man utter a single word of concern for anyone's
safety. Plus, there'd been that odd tone in his voice just before he signed ofT.
And he and Uncle Virgil had been betrayed too many times over the years for him not to
know what it felt like to be stabbed in the back.
"But why?" he asked. "What did I ever do to him?"
"That is what we must find out," Draycos declared.
The dragon had been gazing out at the sky as if trying to find constellations in the
unfamiliar star patterns. Now, he looked back at Jack and flipped his tail up in front of
the boy's face. "The sky is clear of watchers. Take hold."
"Wait a second," Jack protested even as he got a grip on the end of the
dragon's tail. "Where are we going?"
Draycos lifted a forepaw. "The transport is there," he said, pointing a
forepaw toward the glow. "The Kolo Seven outpost is there," he went on, shifting
his forepaw about forty-five degrees to the right. "Between them is the sentry cage
you occupied earlier this evening. I wish to intercept them near there."
"Yeah, well, just wait a second," Jack said cautiously. This whole thing had
to be some kind of huge misunderstanding. The last thing he wanted was for a gung ho K'da
warrior to go off the high dive into the revenge pool. "They didn't kill anyone.
Right? No hospital, no foul."
Draycos tossed his head. "You misunderstand, Jack," he said. "I do not
seek vengeance, but information."
"And how exactly do you expect to get it?"
"We shall see," Draycos said. "Now. Let us go."
Earlier that nightwas it still just the same night?-Jack had hurried back
from the sentry cage to the outpost. At the time, he would have sworn that that was as
fast as it was possible for him to travel through a dark forest without breaking a leg or
clotheslining himself on a low-hanging branch.
He'd been wrong. He'd been very wrong.
They raced through the forest. Not a quick walk, not a cautious jog, but a flat-out
run. Draycos was in a hurry; and a K'da warrior in a hurry was a sight to behold.
And the most astonishing part of it was that Jack never even so much as twisted an
ankle.
He never did figure that one out. Yes, he knew that Dray-cos had a different kind of
eyesight than humans, which clearly included better night vision along with the rest of
the package. And yes, the dragon also had training and experience in moving around
different types of terrain.
But that only explained how Draycos kept from hurting himself. How he managed to also
keep Jack's feet from finding any dips or tree roots along the way remained a mystery.
For the first ten minutes or so Draycos kept the pace as fast as Jack could manage,
stopping every couple of hundred yards for a quick breather. Or at least, that was what
Jack first thought the rest stops were for. It was only after the third one that he
realized the dragon wasn't so much calling a time-out as he was pausing to listen for
signs of their opponents.
It was at the ninth rest stop that those sounds began to be heard, at least by K'da
ears. From that point on, they walked quietly instead of running.
There was no conversation. There was no need for any. Jack might not have K'da military
training, but he knew all about sneaking through hostile territory trying not to be
noticed.
They had gone another ten minutes, and Jack had just about gotten his breath back from
that mad dash, when Draycos abruptly came to a halt. Jack froze in place beside him,
listening hard.
For a moment there was nothing. Then, from somewhere ahead, he heard it: a quiet voice,
two more acknowledging voices, and then a faint crackle of leaves. Slowly, the crunching
sounds moved off.
"Careful," he whispered into Draycos's ear as the sounds faded away.
"They might have left a guard behind."
The dragon's tongue flicked out twice, tasting the air. "No," he whispered
back. "All three have gone ahead. But others are moving up behind them."
Jack swallowed. Terrific. "What now?"
"We need information," Draycos said. "We must therefore set a trap. You
spoke earlier of electronic detectors?"
Abruptly, belatedly, Jack remembered the slapstick at his side. "Oh, geez,"
he breathed, snatching it out of his belt like he'd suddenly found a snake riding his hip.
"I wasn't even thinking."
"Calm yourself," Draycos assured him. "I allowed you to bring it because
it may now be useful. Come."
He headed off at an angle. Gripping the slapstick in one hand and Draycos's tail in the
other, Jack followed.
The dragon led him in a curving path, stopping at last beside a small tree with
slender, multiple trunks poking out from a twisted root system. "Here," he said.
"You may put the weapon down."
Jack obeyed. As he did so, something set between two of the thin trunks caught his eye.
It was a small plastic object, shaped like a curved cone with a flat piece of glass or
plastic on the side facing away from him. A thin metal rod connected it to one of the
trunks, and he could see a double cable attached to the cone's pointy end hanging down to
the ground.
And suddenly he realized what it was. "That's one of the Argus eyes!"
"Yes," Draycos agreed. "Do not worry. We have come up behind it."
He reached out a claw and deftly sliced one of the two cables near where it went into the
cone. "At any rate, they cannot see from it now."
"Yes, but" With an effort,Jack choked back his protest. If anyone had
been looking at the monitor when Draycos cut the cable, he might just as well have sent up
a flare announcing where they were. "Fine. What now?"
The dragon's jaws opened slightly. "Now," he said, "we find you a
tree."
Jack blinked. "A tree?"
"One which will hide you, but which they will not expect you can climb,"
Draycos continued, looking around. "One which therefore they will not think to
examine. Ah there. Come."
He headed off toward a smooth-sided tree that showed a hint of a bush-like branch
structure beginning about fifty feet up. Rather like a giant dandelion, Jack thought as
they approached. "Hold tightly," Draycos ordered, leaping a few feet up onto the
side of the tree and again wagging his tail into Jack's face.
Swallowing hard, Jack got a firm grip on the tail. Without seeming to even notice the
extra weight, Draycos started to climb.
A minute later they had reached the branches. "This should conceal you well,"
Draycos decided, pushing aside one of the leafy branches with his forepaw.
"Yeah," Jack agreed. Actually, with the way the branches spread out in layers
from the trunk, each layer perhaps three feet higher up on the trunk than the previous
one, the setup was like a woody sort of hammock with an overhead canopy. A lot cozier than
some of the places he'd hidden out over the years.
Provided, of course, you weren't afraid of heights. "Where are you going to
be?"
Draycos turned head downward, again gripping the trunk with his claws. "As I said,
I will be setting a trap," he said. "Wait here until I return."
He headed down. "Sure," Jack murmured. "Whatever you say."
Chapter 22
Jack had been trying his best, Draycos knew. And he'd done a remarkably good
job, given his youth and inexperience. Draycos appreciated that well, and once again was
reminded that he could travel far and long here in the Orion Arm without finding a better
partner.
But for all his effort and willingness, the boy was not a warrior. And to be honest,
that meant he couldn't help but be a certain amount of dead weight. Both for that reason,
and of course for Jack's own safety, Draycos was glad to have the boy out of the way for
the moment.
Now, he thought grimly as he moved down the tree trunk, their opponents would see what
a poet-warrior of the K'da could do.
Or to be more precise, they wouldn't see it. If all went well, they wouldn't see
a thing.
The first advance team was long gone by now, heading downslope toward the wreckage of
the transport. But there were at least two more groups within earshot making their way
stealthily through the forest. All of them human, Draycos decided as he tasted the air.
He didn't know why the Whinyard's Edge seemed to have few if any nonhumans among their
ranks. But that curious fact would make this particular task easier. After nearly two
months with Jack, human physical capabilities were a known quantity to him, and fairly
easy to work into his strategy.
He made his way back to where he'd left the Argus sensor and Jack's slapstick. The
sensor was fastened solidly into the tree, but a little digging with his claws and he soon
had it free. Tucking the sensor and slapstick under his forearms, he headed back in the
direction of the Kilo Seven outpost, trailing the sensor's twin cables behind him.
He had to pause three times along the way, curling around himself and freezing to
complete morionlessness beneath a convenient bush or thicket, as he ran into more trios of
searchers. He studied each group carefully as they passed, trying to decide if they were
all mere foot soldiers or whether one of them might be the line commander he was seeking.
In each case, he concluded it was the former. Apparently, the commander was still
somewhere in the rear, allowing his men time to neutralize any threats before moving out
himself.
For their part, not surprisingly, none of the soldiers took any notice of him, despite
whatever sensor equipment and night-vision devices they might be carrying. Intent upon
locating a human fugitive, they had no interest in a motionless creature of an unfamiliar
type.
Even with the stops, it took only a few minutes for him to reach the sentry cage Jack
had been manning earlier that night. No one was visible there, and for a few seconds he
studied the area from cover, mentally putting the final touches on his plans. Then,
tasting the air once more to confirm that no one was nearby, he set to work.
The first step was to replant the Argus sensor where it would be partially visible from
the sentry cage. He found a good spot about fifty feet away to the south, half hidden
beneath a bush. He wedged the metal mounting rod into the ground, leaving the sensor
itself free to rotate. Then, leaving the slapstick beside it as bait, he began playing out
the cable toward the sentry cage.
But not directly toward it. Twenty feet to the east of the tree that marked the cage
was another of the puff-top trees like the one where he'd left Jack. Dropping his end of
the twin cables near the base, he crossed to the cage and sliced the cables at that end.
The two cables, he had already noted, were held only loosely together by a series of
connector loops. Gripping the monitor end of both cables in his jaws, he climbed up into
the puff-top tree.
Earlier, he had cut the sensor cable where it entered the Argus eye. Now, careful not
to let it get hung up, he pulled the sensor cable completely through the connectors,
freeing it from the control cable and coiling it up as it came. When the far end finally
came free, he had a coil of over two hundred fifty feet.
The other end of the control cable was still connected to the sensor. He gave it a
quick examination, confirming that he could operate the mechanical linkage with his claws,
then wrapped the end around a branch for safekeeping. Hoisting the coil of sensor cable
over his shoulder, he leaped across to the sentry-cage tree, the one the round Argus
monitors were attached to. He worked his way around the trunk, then jumped to the next
tree over.
He'd noticed this type of tree earlier that evening during his brief search for enemy
soldiers. It had two very different types of branches: one of them solid and unyielding,
the other equally solid but far more flexible and springy. Choosing one of the second
type, he tied one end of his sensor cable to it and threw the rest of the coil back over
to the Argus tree.
Leaping back to the Argus tree himself, he got a firm grip on the trunk and began to
pull on the cable, bending the springy branch back toward him.
The farther he bent it, naturally, the more resistant it became to being bent any
farther. It took every bit of his strength, plus some very fancy claw work, to finally
work it all the way into position.
But finally he had it in place. Tying the center of the cable to one of the Argus
tree's thickest branches with a quick-release knot, he gathered up the remainder of the
coil and leaped back to the puff-top tree on the other side. Climbing up to the third
layer of branches, he moved a few feet along one of the thicker limbs to a conveniently
placed fork. Looping his end of the cable around it, he returned the coil to his shoulder
and jumped back to the Argus tree.
He could hear the sound of footsteps now, several sets of them, coming from the
direction of the Kilo Seven outpost. Most were the cautious movements of the patrol
soldiers he'd evaded earlier, but one was the slightly noisier tread of a senior officer
who had perhaps forgotten proper sneaking technique.
The line commander, it seemed, had finally decided to join his men in the field.
Fortunately, the trap was nearly set.
He climbed down the Argus tree with what remained of his coil, taking care that the
cable not get hung up on any of the branches. At the lowest layer of brancheswith
this type of tree, they were no more than eight feet above the ground he pulled the
cable taut and tied another quick-release knot connecting it to a branch.
That left him perhaps ten feet of loose cable. He tied a slipknot loop in the end,
draped it out of sight across two branches, then climbed back to his first quick-release,
the one holding the springy branch taut. A gentle pull released it, and there was a soft
twanging sound as the rest of the cable took up the tension.
For a moment he crouched there in the upper branches, tracing the cable with his eyes,
making sure he'd gotten everything exactly as he'd planned. From the bent springy branch,
through the edge of the Argus tree to the puff-top tree. Looped around a third-level
branch there, back to the Argus tree, quick-release knot at the lowest branches, the rest
in a slipknotted loop.
Perfect.
Leaping once more to the puff-top, he retrieved the control cable and returned one last
time to the Argus tree. Moving down the trunk, he set himself on the far side from his
approaching opponents, hiding in a thick clump of leaves.
And everything was now ready. Everything, that was, except for the one unknown still in
the equation. The question of whether the commander and his men would behave as expected.
There was no way for him to know. No way even for him to guess, really, at least not
with any certainty. Human reflexes he understood; human eyesight, too, and hearing and
stamina and strength.
But in many ways, human ways of thinking were still foreign to him. Their ways of
thinking, and their behavior, and their basic fundamental reactions.
And if he had guessed wrong, all his effort would have been for nothing.
Still, he'd gone this far. He might as well see it through. Besides, Jack surely
understood his own species; and hadn't Jack agreed that these people didn't act like true
soldiers?
Peering around the side of the trunk, he could see the approaching group as they moved
cautiously through the trees toward him. There were five in all: four patrol soldiers plus
the one who didn't step as cautiously as his companions.
Like the others, the latter's face was obscured by the half-helmet he was wearing to
support his night-vision equipment. From his build, though, Draycos could see that it
wasn't Sergeant Grisko.
Pity. After Grisko's part in the betrayal and attack on the transport, he would rather
have liked to deal with that one personally.
The group was nearly to the sentry cage now. Keeping his movements small, Draycos dug
his claws delicately into the meshed steel lines inside the control cable and gently
tugged.
There was no reaction from the Edgemen. Draycos tugged again, this time risking a quick
look over at the half-hidden sensor. It was moving, all right, turning slowly back and
forth.
Still no response. Draycos tried again, beginning to think unkind thoughts about his
opponents' competence. He could see the faint reflection glinting from the sensor's
face. Why couldn't they?
And then, just as he was wondering whether he should give up the effort, one of the
soldiers spotted it. He snapped his arm up, his fingers rapidly tracing out hand signals
Grisko had never bothered to teach Jack and his fellow recruits.
The four patrol soldiers responded with all the smooth efficiency of professionals.
Without fuss or hesitation, they drifted to both sides as they continued forward, moving
to flank whoever it was watching them from beneath the bush.
The fifth man did not join them. Instead, he eased into the sentry cage and stopped,
watching nervously from behind the Argus tree.
Draycos felt his jaws crack in an ironic smile. So he and Jack had been right. A true
warrior line commander would have gone with his men into danger, taking the same risks
they did so that he could issue prompt and reasonable orders if it became necessary.
Instead, this commander was hiding from the danger. Sending his men into the unknown
was all right, but he wasn't willing to even get his own scales dusty.
As a warrior, Draycos could feel only contempt for such behavior. But as the man's
opponent, he could feel an equally strong satisfaction.
Because in his effort to protect himself, the commander now stood directly behind the
very tree Draycos was clinging to.
Exactly where Draycos wanted him. The control cable had served its purpose. Laying it
aside, Draycos got a good grip with his left forepaw on the slip-knotted loop of sensor
cable. Beside him was the quick-release knot that held the whole thing in place.
Carefully, he eased the tip of his tail into the release loop.
The patrol soldiers were closing on the sensor now. Draycos waited; and abruptly, one
of them snorted. "Cute," he murmured. "It's one of our own Argus eyes, sir.
No one there." "But I saw it moving," one of the others insisted. "So
did I," the first confirmed, hefting his gun as he looked around. "And the
slapstick Barkin spotted on the scan is here, too. Probably bait. Like I said, someone's
being cute." "Trace the cable," the commander ordered in a hoarse whisper.
"Find him."
"Yes, sir," the first soldier said, moving toward the Argus eye as the others
fanned out toward the surrounding trees.
The commander hesitated another moment. Then, cautiously, he slipped out from behind
the Argus tree. Either getting his courage back, or else simply unwilling to get too far
away from the protection of his men and their weapons. Circling the trunk, he started
toward them.
And in that fraction of a second, as he passed beneath Draycos, the K'da warrior
struck.
Releasing his rear claws, he dropped to the same level as the commander's head before
grabbing hold of the tree again.
With his right forepaw he slashed the chin strap holding the man's helmet in place, and
in the same motion flicked the helmet up and off his head.
Reflexively, the commander grabbed for the helmet as it spun away into the night.
Draycos was ready with the loop, dropping it over his head and arms and giving it a quick
tug to tighten the slipknot around his ribs. At the same time, he slammed his right paw
against the side of the commander's head behind his ear, a spot that experience had showed
was a good place to knock out a human without too much risk of serious damage.
And even as the commander sagged unconscious in the loop of cable, Draycos flicked the
quick-release with his tail and dropped to the ground.
The quiet of the night was abruptly shattered. As the cable tension was suddenly
released, the springy tree branch off to Draycos's right snapped back to its original
position. It slapped and scattered all the other branches in its way as it moved, sending
a small shower of leaves fluttering to the ground.
The unconscious commander, tied to the other end of the cable, went the other
direction. Shooting up and to the left, he disappeared up into the puff-tree's branches.
The soldiers, facing the wrong direction, saw none of it. But they could hear just
fine; and as they spun back around they could see the shower of leaves drifting down from
the springy tree. "Sir!" one of them snapped.
"He's gone!" someone else barked. "What the?"
"Over there," the first soldier said, pointing toward the springy tree with
his gun. "Barkin, Schmidtcheck it out. Watch for more booby traps. Tomasaki,
keep your eyes open. It might be a diversion."
Two of the soldiers ran toward the springy tree, alternately peering up into the
branches and watching the ground where they were walking. The other two crouched low where
they were, facing opposite directions with their guns held ready.
Keeping to the cover of the underbrush, Draycos crept out of the sentry cage and made a
wide circle back toward the pufF-top tree. The patrol soldiers knew their business, all
right. They'd quickly guessed the style of snare trap he'd just sprung on their commander.
The only trouble was, they were looking for him in the wrong tree.
He reached the pufF-top tree about the same time they arrived at their own destination.
Putting the trunk between him and the two guards, he started up. If either of the soldiers
at the springy tree happened to turn around, he knew, they would spot him easily. But with
their attention elsewhere, he wasn't expecting either to do so.
And they didn't. He made it to the safety of the branches while they were still staring
uselessly skyward.
The commander was hanging limply out of sight among the leaves, bobbing a little as the
springy tree branch across the way waved gently in the breeze. Draycos got him up and
lying securely across the branches, then cut the cable.
He climbed a little higher into the tree, coiling the cable as he went. He wasn't
really expecting the soldiers to go so far as to climb the springy tree in their search
for their missing commander. Still, it was a possibility; and if they did, he didn't want
them tracing the cable back here. Moving out onto one of the branches, he lobbed the coil
across into the upper part of the Argus tree.
"He's not here," one of the soldiers at the springy tree reported.
"That's impossible," the first soldier insisted. "Check it again."
"I did," the other said. "Twice, visual and IR both. He's not up
there."
The first soldier swore. "A diversion, all right. Okay, spread out. Let's find
him."
"Right. Better call it in."
"No kidding," the first said sarcastically. "Base, this is Hernandez.
We've got a problem."
Listening to the conversation with half an ear, Draycos climbed back down to the
unconscious commander. The human was wearing two separate comm clips, he discovered. Even
with them turned off, they might be traceable.
Easily dealt with. K'da forelegs were too short for him to throw anything that light
very far, but there were other ways. Making sure the comm clips were turned off, he placed
them together and wrapped them in the tip of his tail. A quick flip, sling-fashion, and
they sailed off into the night.
Using the short length of cable still looped under the commander's arms, Draycos tied
the human's wrists and ankles. One of his pockets yielded a headband, while another
contained a handkerchief. The handkerchief made an adequate gag; the headband was quite
suitable for securing the man's hood down over his eyes.
And now all that was left was to wait for the search to burn itself out and move to
another area. Crawling onto the underside of the branches, he found himself some
convenient claw-grips directly beneath the commander.
After all, the searchers might eventually think to look up into this tree. And as Jack
had pointed out, a K'da heat profile did not look anything like a human's.
An hour, he estimated, and he and Jack would be free to move again. Stretching
his muscles once, he settled down to wait.
Chapter 23
The commander was awake by the time Jack let go of Draycos's tail and got
himself seated more or less securely on the branches facing him. "You sure there
isn't anyone else around?" he muttered as Draycos climbed around behind the prisoner.
The dragon shook his head, but remained silent. Jack understood; he didn't want the
prisoner to hear his voice. "Okay," he said briskly. "Let's get this over
with." Grabbing hold of the cable tying the man's wrists together, he started to pull
him up into a sitting position.
The other responded by trying to grab Jack's hand. "Hey, hey, take it easy,"
Jack warned, yanking his hand back out of reach. "Don't struggle or try anything
stupid. You're fifty feet off the ground in a very leaky tree."
The man seemed to see the logic in that. He grunted behind his gag and subsided.
"All we want is a little chat," Jack went on, pulling him upright again. This
time the other didn't struggle. "A quiet little chat," he added.
"You try shouting for help and we'll have to shut you up. A fair chance we'll lose
your balance in the process. Understand?"
The man grunted again. Jack glanced at Draycos, making sure the dragon was standing
ready but out of the prisoner's sight. Then, reaching over, he pulled off the gag.
"Montana?" the other rumbled, his voice the croak of a man with too dry a
mouth. He worked his lips a moment and tried again. "It's Montana, isn't it?" he
demanded.
Jack started. He knew that voice. "Colonel Elkor?" he asked, pulling off the
headband and lifting the man's hood.
It was Colonel Elkor, all right, glaring at Jack like he was trying to push him out of
the tree by sheer willpower. "Well, well," Jack said, filling in time as he
tried to get his brain rebooted. He'd expected Sergeant Grisko or maybe Lieutenant Basht
to be leading this charge. To have a full colonel show up meant this was bigger than he'd
thought.
"You're a pretty big fish to be flopping around in this size pond," he went
on. "I guess I never saw you as the great outdoors type."
"I wondered about you," Elkor growled. "So is Kayna working for you? Or
is it the other way around?"
He started to turn. Draycos batted him warningly against the side of the head and he
seemed to think better of the idea. "I'll bet it's Kayna who's calling the
shots," he decided. "Who are you working for? The Shamshir, or someone
else?"
"This is my interrogation, thanks all the same," Jack said. "But just
for the record, I'm not working for anyone."
Elkor snorted derisively. "Right. You just felt like a midnight stroll one night.
And then, what, you needed to use the latrine?"
Jack shook his head. "I already told you. The Shamshir sneaked into the camp and
captured us. I escaped and"
"Don't play dumb," Elkor cut him off harshly. "I'm talking about back on
Carrion."
"Oh," Jack said, a little lamely. "That."
"Oh. That," Elkor mimicked. "Basht was pretty sure it was Kayna. But I
wondered about you. If we'd had time to really check out your application"
"Wait a second," Jack said, frowning as he thought back on that failed
midnight raid. Was he suggesting that had been Alison coming up the stairs?
"I'm sorry, but I'm confused here. What does Alison have to do with any of
this?"
For the first time Elkor's glare seemed to crack a little. "Are you saying that wasn't
you in the HQ building?"
Jack hesitated. Common sense, plus years of Uncle Virgil's tirades on the subject, said
you never gave away information for free. But he was thoroughly lost here, and he had the
odd feeling that Elkor wasn't exactly sitting steady on this stack of blocks either. Maybe
it would be worth pooling their information a little.
"I did sneak into the HQ, yes," he told Elkor. "I was looking for some
computer data. But I had to run for it when someone headed my direction laying down a
sopor gas pattern. I assumed at the time it was a guard."
Elkor snorted again. "Trust me, if it had been one of us you would have
known it. Sopor gas is for sissies."
"Or for people who don't want anyone knowing they'd been there," Jack pointed
out. "So you think that was Alison?"
Elkor regarded him coolly. "So what computer information were you looking
for?"
Jack shrugged. "Fine. Have it your way."
He began shaking out the handkerchief he'd taken from around the colonel's mouth.
"Even with the gag, I'll bet they'll be able to hear you from down there. Assuming
they ever come back to this area to look, of course."
He reached the handkerchief toward Elkor. The other leaned away, then jerked as Draycos
caught his head firmly between his forepaws. "Wait a second," he said hastily.
"All right, all right. What do you want to know?"
"I want to know what's going on," Jack told him, lowering the handkerchief
but keeping it in sight. "You can start by telling me what happened to the rest of
the Edgemen at Kilo Seven."
Elkor's lips compressed into a thin line. "We pulled them out," he said
grudgingly. "We knew the Shamshir would be raiding the place and didn't want them
getting hurt."
"Oh, I see," Jack said. "You didn't care enough about us to even
warn us, but"
He broke off, staring at the man. Suddenly, it was all making terrible sense. "You
called the Shamshir down on us, didn't you?" he said. "You let them
capture us."
"One of you was a spy and a traitor," Elkor said. "In the Whinyard's
Edge, we know how to deal with traitors."
He smiled unpleasantly, clearly enjoying Jack's discomfort. "Now, now, don't
pout," he said, mock-soothingly. "What are you going to do, call foul and run
crying home to Mommy? This is the real world, kid. Get used to it."
"What about the others?" Jack asked, ignoring the gibe. "Why didn't you
just take Alison and me out and shoot us, if that was what you wanted?"
"Not very sporting to line you up against a wall," Elkor said. "Besides,
we didn't just want you dead. We wanted information. We figured that if you were working
for the Shamshir, one of you would get a big welcome when they snatched you."
He cocked his head. "Or else one of you would come back and claim to be an escaped
hero."
"And if we weren't working for the Shamshir?"
Elkor shrugged. "You were working for someone. Might as well let the
Shamshir beat it out of you than bother with it ourselves."
Jack hissed between his teeth. "And of course, you couldn't let us take working
computer codes to them," he said. "So you made sure you scrambled them before we
landed on Sunright."
"After we landed, actually," Elkor said offhandedly. "Not that it
matters."
"No, not really," Jack said. "So who's behind all this?"
Elkor frowned. "Who's behind all what?"
"Who's pulling your strings?" Jack amplified. "Who's really after this
mine? Is it Cornelius Braxton?"
Elkor snorted. "Don't be ridiculous. You think someone as big as Braxton would
even notice an operation this small?"
"Arthur Neverlin, then?" Jack persisted.
"Never heard of him."
"But then"
"No one pulls our strings, kid," Elkor cut him off coldly. "No one but
us. If whoever you're working for is thinking about trying to bulldoze his way into this,
you can tell him to forget it. Once we've got hold of that mine, it's going to be ours,
period. No one else is going to get a piece of it. You got that?"
"Yeah, I got it," Jack said. So Lieutenant Cue Ball had been right. Neither
mercenary group cared a downwind spit about the people they'd been hired to protect. They
were in it for the daublite mine, and that was it. "It's so much easier to fight and
kill and steal someone else's mine than go dig one yourselves."
"Mines cost money," Elkor countered. "Lives are cheap. Do the
math."
"Yeah, well, some lives are apparently cheaper than others," Jack said.
"That still doesn't explain why you threw Jommy and the rest of them to the wolves
along with Alison and me."
Elkor sniffed. "What's this 'and me' stuff? Kayna was the chief suspect, not you.
You were just one of the known contacts."
Jack blinked. "The what?"
"She talked to you, Montana," Elkor said patiently. "Grisko told us.
Alone, and at length, out on the shooting range. Do I have to draw you a picture?"
Jack stared at him in disbelief. "Let me get this straight," he said slowly.
"Alison has a chat with, say, Rogan Mbusu, maybe about nothing more classified than
the lousy food. And suddenly you're just going to throw him away? Just on the off chance
that she might have passed secret information to him?"
"You make the assumption that any of you were worth much to begin with,"
Elkor said. "You ever hear the term 'cannon fodder'?"
Jack swallowed hard. "Yes."
"It's rather out of date, actually," Elkor went on. "No one but a few
primitives use real cannon anymore. But the term still applies."
"Kind of an expensive hobby," Jack murmured. "You still have to pay all
of our indenture fees."
"You should read the contract more closely sometime," Elkor suggested
blandly. "There are all sorts of neat clauses that cover death or capture in a war
zone when the subject has failed to properly defend himself. Another good reason to bring
you out here instead of dealing with you back on Carrion."
He lifted his eyebrows. "You did fail to defend yourselves, didn't you? I
hadn't heard any reports of gunfire."
For a long moment Jack just looked at him, wondering what Draycos would say if he
reached over and pushed the smug son of a snake out of the tree. Uncle Virgil would have,
he suspected. Even Draycos, for all his warrior ethic, was crouched there with his eyes
burning like those of an avenging angel. He probably wouldn't lift a single claw to save
scum like this.
He took a deep breath. No. He'd never been a killer, or even an avenger. He'd been a
thief; and even there he was supposed to be reformed.
And he was probably selling Draycos short anyway. The dragon had gotten that look in
his eye before, and he hadn't murdered anyone yet.
"You are a small, petty, pathetic little man," he told Elkor quietly.
"You deserve to die. With any justice, it'll be at the hands of your own
people."
Elkor's mouth twitched in a lopsided smile. "So you don't even have the guts to
kill me, huh? You're no soldier, Montana. You never will be."
"I can live with that," Jack told him. "Incidentally, I have lived
in the real world, sometimes among people who would have pushed you out of this tree ten
minutes ago if you'd done this to them."
Elkor snorted. "If you're hinting that you've got friends, save it," he said.
"I don't scare that easily."
"I'm not trying to scare you," Jack said. "And none of them are my
friends. I was simply pointing out that none of them ever tried to kill the casual
acquaintances of people they were mad at. Even they had more class than that."
"Did I say I needed your approval?" Elkor asked. "Or even wanted
it?"
"Hardly," Jack said, suddenly thoroughly weary of this man. "Fine. We're
going. Where are your transports?"
A slight frown creased Elkor's forehead. "Why?"
"Why do you think?" Jack retorted. "So we can get out of here. Don't
worry, I'm not going to steal it. All I want is to use the comm."
"And you think I'm going to tell you?"
With a sigh, Jack pulled out the small folding knife from his belt pack. He locked it
open and waved it under Elkor's eyes. "That cable you're tied with is pretty
tough," he reminded the other. "Even with this, it'll take you quite awhile to
cut through it. Would you rather use your teeth?"
Elkor eyed the knife. "They're on the west side of the outpost," he muttered.
"In a clearing about two hundred yards due west of the sentry cage on that side. But
you'll never make it past the guards."
"We'll take our chances." Reaching up, Jack drove the tip of the knife blade
into the tree trunk a couple of feet above Elkor's head. "Help yourself after we're
gone," he said, pulling the colonel's hood over his eyes again.
Catching Draycos's eye, he nodded. "Come on, buddy," he said. "Let's
go."
They headed down the tree, Draycos climbing down backwards as Jack dangled onto his
tail beneath him. They reached the ground without incident and headed off through the
woods toward the area where Elkor had said the transports were located. If they weren't
there, Jack promised himself darkly, he would make sure to send Draycos back up the tree
and get his knife back.
"Then the disturbance outside the training camp was a diversion for Alison's
benefit?" Draycos murmured as they slipped through the trees.
Jack blinked, forcing himself back from half-hoped-for scenarios of revenge.
"What? Oh. Yeah, I suppose that makes the most sense. I wonder who she's working
for."
"We had already decided it was not the Shamshir," Draycos reminded him.
"Could it be a different mercenary group?"
Jack frowned. With his own chances of escape weighing heavily on his mind, the last
thing he was interested in right now was Alison Kayna's possible background and friends.
Still, it was an intriguing question. "I don't think so," he told the dragon
slowly. "With all that's happening here, it would make sense for the Shamshir to send
in whoever they had handy to grab some quick information about the Edge's plans for
Sun-right. But any other mere group ought to be able to take the time to find an adult to
use as a spy instead of a kid."
Draycos seemed to digest that. "Then who is she working for? Were we wrong
about her connection to the Shamshir?"
"I don't know," Jack said as a sudden and very unpleasant thought sent a
creepy sensation tingling across the back of his neck. "You don't suppose she might
be working for Neverlin, do you?"
"I thought we decided he was too busy hiding from Braxton to bother us."
"You decided that," Jack countered, "I never did."
The dragon twitched his tail. "I do not believe Neverlin could have moved this
quickly," he said firmly. "And how could he have known we would be joining this
particular mercenary group? Alison was clearly already signed up before we arrived."
"I suppose," Jack conceded reluctantly. "Yeah, you're probably
right."
But the creepy sensation refused to fade completely away.
They were making their cautious way around the perimeter of the outpost before Draycos
spoke again. "Where are we going?"
"Weren't you listening?" Jack asked. "We're going to find a transport,
you're going to knock out whatever guards there are, and we're going to whistle up the Essenay."
"We are leaving, then?"
Jack grimaced. "Look, Draycos, I'm sorry," he said. "It just didn't work
out. We'll back off, regroup, and try to get the Djinn-90 data some other way."
"I was not thinking about the information," Draycos said. "I was
thinking about those still in Shamshir hands."
"What about them?"
"Did you intend to simply leave them there?"
Jack frowned down at the dragon padding soundlessly through the dead leaves at his
side. Uh-oh. "Hey, I know how you feel about that sort of thing," he said
cautiously. "K'da warrior ethic, and all that. But I think that asking Colonel Elkor
for a rescue party is pretty much out of the question."
"Certainly," Draycos agreed. "That means we will have to do it
alone."
Jack took a careful breath. "Look," he said, as if talking to a very small
child. "I know you're upset. But you have to understand the realities of the
situation. We're talking about two of usyou and meagainst a whole mercenary
force."
"Dahtill City is not a military base," Draycos pointed out. "There will
be a limit on the number of soldiers to oppose us."
"Unless they brought in more after our escape," Jack countered. "They
could have, you know."
"If more soldiers were summoned, it would be to search for you outside the
city," the dragon pointed out reasonably. "Not to reinforce those inside."
Jack clenched his teeth. This was not going well at all. "We hardly even know
these kids," he said. "Anyway, it's Alison's fault they're there, not
mine."
"Fault is of no matter," Draycos said. "They are your comrades. Your
fellow soldiers. A warrior does not simply abandon those of his own side. Not when there
is a chance of saving them."
"Even if it means getting killed?" Jack shot back harshly. "We could,
you know. Those guns of theirs weren't just for show. We go charging in, and they're going
to start shooting. What happens to your people then? Hmm?"
For a long minute they walked in silence. "Do you remember our first meeting,
Jack?" Draycos asked at last. "Despite your objections, I took the time to aid a
wounded soldier of the other side."
"You kept him from burning his hands and neck in hot dirt," Jack said,
grimacing at the memory. "And I still think it was a waste of time."
"The point is that a warrior does that which is right," the dragon said.
"Not because he may profit from it. Because it is right."
"What if I say no?" Jack challenged. "Are you going to go in without
me?"
Draycos didn't answer, and after a moment Jack sighed. "You got a plan?"
"I do not believe it will be difficult," Draycos said. "As you pointed
out, neither side wishes to risk a serious battle near the daublite mine. With two armed
vehicles, we may be able to persuade them to surrender the prisoners without a
fight."
It could work, Jack realized grudgingly. Particularly if Lieutenant Cue Ball had
already discovered that none of the squad could do anything with the stolen computers.
There wouldn't be much point in hanging onto them. "You mentioned two transports. You
planning on flying the second one yourself?"
"I actually referred to only one transport," Draycos said. "The other
armed vehicle will be the Essenay."
"And how do you expect to call in Uncle Virge without everyone from here to
Dahtill City knowing the plan?"
"You may leave that to me," Draycos said. "Will you assist me?"
Jack sniffed. "Do I have a choice?"
"Yes," Draycos said quietly. "You are my host. If you refuse to help me
rescue the others, I will honor your wishes."
"That's part of the warrior ethic, too, I suppose?"
"Yes."
They walked a few more steps in silence. "You're going to make a liar of me, you
know," Jack finally said in resignation. "I told Colonel Elkor we weren't going
to steal his transport. Now we're going to do it anyway."
"Do not worry," Draycos assured him. "When you made that statement, it
was indeed the truth. There was no intent to deceive. Hence, there was no lie."
Jack looked down at him. "That was supposed to be a joke."
The dragon turned his green eyes upward, his jaws opening slightly. "Yes, I
know," he said. "Shall we go?"
Jack shook his head. "Lead the way."
Chapter 24
There were two soldiers standing guard beside the Lynx transports when Jack
and Draycos arrived at the edge of the clearing. Two minutes later, the guards were no
longer standing.
"Can you start the engines?" Draycos asked as Jack dropped into the pilot's
seat.
"I think so," Jack said, studying the control board. "But it'll take a
couple of minutes. This pilot was smart enough to lock it down before he left."
"Your sewer-rat technique?"
"A version of it, yes," Jack said, keying in the program and then taking a
moment to peer out the cockpit windscreen. So far there weren't any other Edgemen in
sight. But that could change at any time.
"What about communications?"
"The comm isn't locked," Jack said doubtfully. "But I still don't know
how you're going to tell Uncle Virge anything without bringing the whole Shamshir army
down on top of us."
"You shall see," Draycos said. "Will you make the correct
settings?"
Jack reached over and tuned the equipment to his comrn clip's frequency. "Okay,
it's set," he said, pointing to the microphone switch. "Punch that, and you're
on the air."
"Understood," Draycos said, leaning his torso up onto the control board.
"You must stay quiet while I speak. Both Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge listeners may
recognize your voice."
Jack nodded. "Got it."
Reaching over, Draycos touched the switch. "Until the brave achieve their
rest," he called, his voice deep and formal, "the warrior must put forth his
best. And to the last our home defend."
Jack blinked. He knew that tone. Knew it all too well. It was the rather pretentious
style Draycos liked to use when reciting his poetry.
What in the world was he doing?
Uncle Virge must have been wondering that, too. For a handful of seconds there was no
response. Then, to Jack's amazement, the computer's voice came over the speaker, in the
same overbearing tone. "The warfire blazes all around, the killing fields do
beckon," he announced. "By curve or straight-line reckon?"
"The dog tells all; the fires blast," Draycos responded. "Until the
fury's spent at last."
There was another pause, a longer one this time. "You speak in riddles in my
ear," Uncle Virge said. "While all is dark and dank and drear, how can one
silence fears unseen?"
"By what foul deed is treason learned?" Draycos came back. "By what hand
are we crushed? The fields and vineyards hushed."
"They held it strong against our might," Uncle Virge said. "But through
the desert we did go, and took it ere the fall of night."
"The scoffers say we face the night," Draycos came back. "That none
shall from that road return. The scoffer's words and fears I spurn."
"The world will tremble, warns the foe," Uncle Virge said. "And all will
fall like burning leaves. To stand, though none endure to grieve."
With a delicate flick of his claw, Draycos shut off the comm. "How soon may we
leave?" he asked.
Jack had been staring at the dragon in fascination. Now, with an effort, he tore his
eyes away and found the status board. "Uh . . . we're ready now, looks like."
"Then let us be away," Draycos said. "The Essenay will meet us at
Dahtill City."
Jack cut in the lifters, and the transport started up into the night sky. No one
appeared at the edge of the clearing as he cleared the treetops, shouting at him to come
back. Even better, no one showed up and started shooting.
The nav system included a map of the local area. Jack studied it a moment, then turned
the transport's nose toward Dahtill City. He did a quick sensor scan of the sky around
them, but no one was visible there, either. Apparently, everyone was still out searching
for him.
"We are on course?" Draycos asked.
"Sure," Jack said, leaning back in his seat and looking over at the dragon.
"Okay, I give up. What in the name of self-buttering brussels sprouts was that all
about?"
"I was giving him information on our destination," the dragon said blandly.
"Did I not say I would do so?"
"Don't be cute," Jack growled. "It's not a good night for it. Just tell
me what you did."
Draycos ducked his head. "My apologies. As I have mentioned, I have been
translating my poetry into your language and reciting it to Uncle Virge."
Jack frowned, thinking back over the conversation he'd just heard. It had sounded like
poetry, all right. But there had been something wrong with it. Something odd about the
pacing, or the flow, or the rhyme scheme . . .
And then it hit him. "You were missing a line," he said. "Each stanza of
the poem was missing a line."
Draycos's neck arched. "Very good," he said. "I am impressed."
"Thank you," Jack said, rather pleased by it himself. "And the missing
line was the message?"
"Exactly," Draycos said. "The complete first stanza that I spoke should
have been: 'Until the brave achieve their rest, the warrior must put forth his best. Come
here to me, my oldest friend, and to the last our home defend.' "
Jack thought back. "The third line was missing," he said. " 'Come here
to me, my oldest friend.' "
"Correct," Draycos said. "Uncle Virge is not precisely my oldest friend,
but it was the closest line I knew to what we needed."
"Definitely close enough," Jack agreed. "Especially since he's pretty
much my oldest friend. What about the others? Uncle Virge said something next about
warfire?"
"'The warfire blazes all around, the killing fields do beckon,' " Draycos
recited. " 'How shall my warrior friend be found? By curve or straight-line reckon?'
"
" 'How shall my warrior friend be found,' "Jack repeated the missing line.
"He wanted to know where we were."
"Correct," Draycos said. "As you can see, he understood quickly what I
was doing."
"Uncle Virgil always was a smart old fox," Jack agreed. "Your next one
was shorter, wasn't it?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "It was the only one that did not come from one of
my poems. I created it on the moment to identify the place where we were headed."
Jack gazed out at the stars, thinking back. The dog tells all; the fires blast.
Until the fury's spent at last. It didn't make any more sense to him the second time
around than it had the first. "You got me," he said.
"Think of the words," Draycos suggested. "Think of where we are
going."
"I still don't"Jack broke off. "You're not serious. 'Dog tells'?
Dahtill? Dahtill City?"
"It was the best I could create," Draycos said apologetically. "I hoped
he would understand."
"I guess he didn't," Jack said. "You still had a lot more to say to each
other."
"True," the dragon conceded. "His next stanza was a question. 'You speak
in riddles in my ear. What do you say, what do you mean? While all is dark and dank and
drear, how can one silence fears unseen?' "
" 'What do you say, what do you mean?'" Jack murmured. "I don't blame
him."
"I then tried to give him a useful clue," Draycos said. " 'By what foul
deed is treason learned? By what hand are we crushed? The mines collapse, the cities
burned, the fields and vineyards hushed.'"
"The mines collapse, the cities burned," Jack said, nodding. "A city
with a mine beside it."
"He understood then, but was not absolutely certain," Draycos said. "
'We sought the city of our foe. They held it strong against our might. But through the
desert we did go, and took it ere the fall of night.' "
"The city of our foe," Jack said. "That covers Dahtill City, all right,
and probably fifty others along with it."
"But no other is so near to us," Draycos pointed out. "And none that I
know of is associated with an important mine. At any rate, I told him he was correct. 'The
scoffers say we face the night, that none shall from that road return. But I say that your
word is right; the scoffer's words and fears I spurn.'"
But I say that your word is right. "I just hope he really did get the
dog-tell pun."
"We shall soon find out," Draycos agreed. "At any rate, he then told me
he was leaving."
" 'The world will tremble, warns the foe,' " Jack quoted, just to show he
could do it. " 'And all will fall like burning leaves.' Next?"
"'But I must to my friends now go,'" Draycos supplied the missing line.
" 'To stand, though none endure to grieve.' "
For a moment the cockpit was silent. "Well, if it doesn't work, it sure
should have," Jack concluded. "Pretty classy."
"Thank you," the dragon said.
"You're welcome," Jack said. "I hope you've got an equally clever plan
for getting the others out."
"Actually . . ."
Jack eyed him. "You don't, do you?"
"It is difficult to plan with so many variables," the dragon hedged. "We
do not know where our enemies will be positioned."
"I thought they were all going to be out looking for me," Jack reminded him.
"Some may be," Draycos agreed. "But others will have stayed behind. At
any rate, even the searchers may have returned by this time."
"In other words, you're going to wing it."
The tip of the dragon's tail twitched. "That is not precisely how I would have
phrased it," he said. "But it is basically accurate."
Jack sighed. "I thought so."
Chapter 25
With Dahtill City five more minutes away, Jack took the Lynx down to treetop
height. "I take it we're not jumping out this time?" he asked Draycos.
"Correct," Draycos called from the back, where he was rummaging through the
various storage lockers. "We may require this vehicle to move the prisoners. Is its
ventral armor as strong as that of the Flying Turtle we used earlier?"
"They're similar models, so probably," Jack said. Not that any amount of
armor would do them any good if the Shamshir knocked out the lifters. "Any luck back
there?"
"Very little," Draycos reported. "The soldiers must have taken most of
the weapons with them on their search for you. I have found only two small MP-50 machine
guns, with two spare clips each."
Killing weapons, the kind Jack had spent his life avoiding. "Nothing else?"
he asked. "No sopor gas or slapsticks or anything like that?"
"The only other weapons are nine Class II explosive grenades," Draycos said.
"There are no nonlethal weapons of the sort you prefer. I am sorry."
Jack grimaced. "Me, too. Well, I guess we'll have to do what we can. Maybe we can
just pin the Shamshir down while Uncle Virge swoops in and"
"What was that?" Draycos cut him off.
Jack threw a quick look toward the horizon, then checked his sensor displays. There was
nothing unusual that he could see. "What was what?"
"A small flash of light directly ahead," Draycos said, covering the length of
the transport in two bounds to land at Jack's side. "Thereit came again."
"I didn't see anything," Jack said, learning forward and staring out into the
night. "What did it look like?"
"Like the discharge of a Gompers flash rifle," Draycos said. "As if far
in the distance"
And then, faintly, it came again. A flicker of light, like a small flash of lightning
coming from below the horizon. "You mean like that?" Jack asked.
"Exactly," Draycos said. "Thereanother."
"Someone's doing some shooting," Jack muttered, watching the flashes. "A
lot of shooting."
"The Shamshir would not execute their prisoners, would they?" Draycos asked,
his voice dark and ominous.
"I hope not," Jack said, studying the flickers of light. There didn't seem to
be any pattern to them, no nice neat one-two-three sequence. "Anyway, that doesn't
look like a firing squad."
"Then there is a battle," Draycos concluded. "I will fly. You will
shoot."
"Wait a second," Jack objected. "I will shoot what?"
"We will know when we arrive," Draycos said, nudging Jack impatiently with
the side of his head. "Go. You must prepare."
"But the Essenay's not here yet."
"We have no choice," Draycos said firmly. "We must see what is
happening. Go."
Reluctantly, Jack climbed out of the pilot's seat. "I don't like this," he
said. "Why don't we land someplace near the city and take a quiet look instead of
charging blindly in?"
"There is no time," Draycos said, sliding into Jack's seat and gripping the
controls with his paws. "Whether the Agri are fighting the Shamshir, or whether the
Whinyard's Edge has launched their own strike, we cannot afford a delay."
"What makes you think that?"
"Call it warrior's instinct." Draycos turned his green eyes on Jack,
"Go. Prepare."
"Terrific," Jack muttered, heading aft to where Draycos had laid out the
MP-50s. Why the Agri should suddenly have risen up against the Shamshir he couldn't
imagine. And the idea that the Edge would have gotten involved was completely ridiculous.
Unless they'd gone to Dahtill City looking for him. Maybe Colonel Elkor was madder at
getting stuck up that tree than he'd thought.
He reached the back and picked up one of the MP-50s. For such a relatively small gun,
it was awfully heavy. Fortunately, Draycos had already loaded the ammo clip into it, since
Jack couldn't remember exactly how to do that. "Any particular side you want me
on?" he called.
"Use the right-hand side," Draycos said.
"Okay." Grabbing two spare clips and stuffing them into his jacket pockets,
he crossed to the right-hand hatchway.
Unlike the Flying Turtle they'd escaped in earlier, the Lynx had a pair of safety
harnesses attached to the bulkhead beside each of the side hatches. Designed for soldiers
to use while shooting outside, he decided as he slipped one of them on and tightened it
into place. "How am I supposed to know what to shoot at?" he called to Draycos.
"I will direct your fire," the dragon said. "We have cleared the last
trees now and are approaching the city from the southwest. Prepare."
Taking a deep breath, Jack got a firm grip on his gun and hit the hatchway release. The
panel slid up into the ceiling, and for the second time that night he found himself
standing at the edge of a hurricane.
He took another deep breath, his mind flashing back to some of the stupider jobs he and
Uncle Virgil had pulled when he was little. Back then, he'd often felt himself standing
just like this, balanced at the edge of disaster, waiting for Uncle Virgil to give the
signal. Wondering the whole time whether either of them would be alive to see another
sunrise.
Here, the sun wouldn't be up for at least a couple more hours. He wondered if he would
be alive to see it.
And then, from the cockpit, he heard a startled bark. "What?" he demanded,
his heartbeat suddenly thudding extra hard in his throat.
"They are free," Draycos called back. "Observe." He twisted the
transport around, sending Jack swinging on his harness halfway out the hatchway.
And as he hung balanced there, he was treated to a bird's-eye view of an amazing scene.
Directly ahead was the landing area at the edge of the city, the one he and Draycos had
escaped from. The two Flying Turtles he'd left behind were still there, facing the two
Shamshir buildings. From the windows of those buildings a hail of machine gun bullets was
blasting out at one of the transports, accompanied by an occasional flash of laser fire.
And at the focus of all that fury, firing gamely back at their attackers, was the rest
of Technical Squad Tango Five Zulu.
Jommy and Li were crouched in the open hatchway, Jommy with some kind of machine gun,
Li firing blasts with a Gompers flash rifle. Below them, lying flat on the ground behind
one of the transport's landing skids, were Rogan and Brinkster, also with machine guns.
Alison was nowhere in sight, but it wasn't hard to guess where she was. Ten to one she
was already inside the transport, trying to get it started.
Jack shook his head, half amazed, half annoyed. Here he'd come all this way back to
rescue them, and they'd already gotten out on their own.
"You must give covering fire," Draycos called from the cockpit.
Jack took another look. The dragon was right. The squad was fighting back well enough,
but unless Alison could get the Flying Turtle started real soon, they were going to run
out of ammunition long before the Shamshir gave up and went away. "Right," he
called back between clenched teeth. "What do I do?"
A second later he was thrown back inside as the dragon swung them around in a tight
circle. Just in time; even as he grabbed for a strap to steady himself, a burst of gunfire
raked across the side of the transport, some of the rounds chewing up the ceiling and far
wall. "Stay clear!" Draycos shouted.
"You bet," Jack ground out, suddenly remembering what exacdy it was he had
gotten himself into. This wasn't some practice drill, and those Shamshir soldiers out
there weren't firing marker lasers.
Draycos straightened the Lynx out, and Jack pulled himself cautiously back to the door.
They had overshot the scene of the battle, he saw, and were coming back around behind the
buildings. Apparently Draycos meant for him to shoot at the Shamshir from behind.
That was fine with him. He'd just as soon fire from a direction the other guys' guns
weren't pointed at. He flipped the firing lever like the Whinyard's Edge manual had
showed, pointed the gun in the general direction of the buildings, and pulled the trigger.
If it hadn't been for the harness holding him up, he would have instantly found himself
flat on his back. As it was, he nearly wound up there anyway. The MP-50 had a kick like an
angry Brummga, a hundred times more powerful than the simple little tangler gun he was
used to.
The weapon also had a definite mind of its own. Even as he staggered backward, the
muzzle seemed to jump upward, and before he could get his finger off the trigger his burst
had chewed up a little more of the transport's ceiling.
"Jack!"
"I'm okay," Jack called back, struggling back to his feet and trying to
salvage some shreds of dignity. "I've never fired one of these things, that's
all."
"Come up here," Draycos ordered. "You will fly. I will shoot."
So much for dignity. So much, too, for any possible career as a soldier. Just in case
he'd been interested in one. "Sure," Jack muttered, untangling himself from his
harness and running forward.
They were nearly back to the edge of the forest now, Jack saw as Draycos hopped out of
the pilot's seat and he hopped in. "What do you want me to do?" he asked.
"Take us behind the Shamshir buildings," Draycos instructed. Snatching the
MP-50 from Jack's hands, he headed aft, loping along on three legs as he hugged the
machine gun to his belly with the other.
"Pvight," Jack said, sending the transport around again in a smooth curve. He
caught a glimpse of the darkened mine buildings as he swung past, and then they were
sweeping back toward the firefight.
There was a fresh sound of wind behind him. He glanced back, saw that Draycos had
opened the left-hand hatchway door and was crouching beside it. "Better use the
safety harness," Jack called.
"I will be all right," the dragon replied. "Just keep your flight
movements smooth."
Jack turned back to his flying, feeling his stomach trying hard to turn itself inside
out. Now that the element of surprise was gone, the Shamshir weren't going to just sit
there and let the intruder take potshots at them.
And indeed, the transport's bow and windscreen were already starting to crackle with
the impact of bullets. Biting down hard on his lip, trying to remember Draycos's
optimistic assumptions about the Lynx's armor, he forced himself to ignore the deadly hail
and to keep his head high enough to see where he was going. From the rear he could hear
the chatter of Draycos's gun as they buzzed past the building.
And then, even as he cautiously lifted his head, the landscape ahead of him suddenly
flared with light.
For that first awful second, he thought the Shamshir had blown up the Flying Turtle,
killing the rest of his squad. Heart pounding in his ears, he swung the Lynx around.
It hadn't been the Flying Turtle that had blown up. Instead, it was one of the Agri
hardened-mud huts that was now blazing furiously away. The very hut, in fact, that he'd
been locked into after his little chat with Lieutenant Cue Ball.
The hut that had contained, among other things, grenades and spare ammunition.
"Did it work?" Draycos asked. He was at Jack's side now, peering over his
shoulder.
"I don't know," Jack said. "How exactly was it supposed to
work?"
The dragon's tongue flicked out. "Like so."
To Jack's amazement, the Shamshir soldiers were on the move. Not toward the transport,
like they had decided to rush it, but away.
All of them. Running away from the two buildings like the whole Whinyard's Edge was
after them.
Jack cleared his throat. "You think they're running because of the risk of burning
explosives next door?" he asked carefully.
"Of course," Draycos said, a distinct note of satisfaction in his voice.
"Not maybe because there might be something else in the hut?" Jack went on.
"Something maybe a little nastier than grenades?"
"I" Draycos broke off. "I do not know."
"Me, neither," Jack said grimly. "What do you say we get the squad
aboard and get out of here?"
"Agreed," Draycos said. Setting his gun onto the deck, he leaped up and
vanished down the back of Jack's shirt. "And Jack?"
"Yes?"
The dragon's head rose a little from his shoulder. "Do not land us too close to
the fire. Just in case."
Chapter 26
Jack put the Lynx down between the burning hut and the squad's chosen Flying
Turtle. "Jommy?" he shouted through the open hatchway before stepping into view.
"It's Jack Montana. Don't shoot."
"Okay," Jommy called back. "Come on."
Jack hopped down from the door. "Everyone okay?" he called as he hurried
toward them.
"So far," Jommy grunted. "Though if Kayna can't get this thing started,
that could change real fast."
"I told him it was you," Rogan piped up. The smaller boy was shaking where he
lay, but he held his gun bravely at the ready. "I told him. He didn't believe
me."
"Don't worry, I wouldn't have believed you, either," Jack said, jerking his
head back toward his transport. "Come on everybody get aboard and let's get out
of here."
"We won't get far in that one," Li warned. She gestured over Jack's shoulder
with the muzzle of her Gompers. "They got your tanks."
Jack turned and looked. Sure enough, there was a ragged gash in the side of the
transport that was leaking fuel like a miniature waterfall. "We'll have to take
yours, then," he said. "You said Alison's in there?"
"Yeah," Jommy said, glancing around. "She said she could get it
started."
"I'll give her a hand," Jack said, slinging his MP-50 over his shoulder.
"Keep a sharp eye. When the Shamshir ran off, I don't think they were really giving
up."
He found Alison in the pilot's seat, muttering darkly at the control board. "How's
it going?" Jack asked, coming up beside her.
"It's frozen solid," she growled, throwing him a curious look. "So you
came back, huh?"
"That's the rumor, anyway," Jack said, leaning over her shoulder to try a
couple of keys. It was frozen, all right. "What have you tried?"
"What, are you an expert on computer systems?"
"On breaking into them, yes," Jack shot back, trying to think. The good news
was that the computer setup was probably similar to the Edge system he'd successfully
hacked into on the leaking shuttle out there.
The bad news was that whatever Alison had done to it, she'd probably locked it down so
tight that his sewer-rat trick wouldn't work.
Which left them only one option. "We need the start key," he told her,
turning and heading aft. "There ought to be a copy on one of the computers in the
Shamshir HQ. I'll go get it."
She was at his side before he even got to the hatchway. "I'll go with you,"
she said, snatching up a machine gun from the floor.
"Forget it," he said, throwing her an annoyed glare. There was a fair chance
there were still some soldiers lurking in the building, and the last thing he wanted was
to have Draycos's freedom of action cramped by the presence of an unwelcome witness.
"Stay here and"
"And what?" she cut him off. "It won't start. Anyway, two soldiers
together always have a better chance than one."
Jack grimaced. That was probably true . . . except when one of them had a K'da warrior
on his back.
They made it to the HQ building's outer door without anyone shooting at them. The
distant mud hut, Jack noted uneasily, seemed to be burning even more furiously than it had
been when he'd first landed. He wondered what the blast range was of the grenades Draycos
had spotted in there.
"I'll go first," Alison said. Without waiting for argument she ducked inside.
Setting his teeth firmly together, Jack followed.
No one shot at them in here, either. In fact, for all they could tell, the whole place
was indeed deserted. "I don't like this," Jack murmured as they eased along the
darkened corridor. "They shouldn't all have run. Should they?"
"Depends on what they were running from," Alison said. "Or maybe what
they were running to."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning maybe they're afraid of something in that shed you torched," she
said, peering around an open doorway and then moving on. "Or maybe they just decided
on a tactical retreat."
"Like I said: meaning?" Jack repeated, starting to feel annoyed again. This
wasn't any time to be playing word games.
"Meaning maybe they didn't feel like facing a bunch of Edge combat transports all
alone." She glanced over her shoulder. "There are more transports on the
way, aren't there?"
Jack shook his head. "Sorry."
Alison's forehead creased, but she merely turned back and continued on. "Well, the
Shamshir don't know that," she pointed out. "I just hope they don't have any air
power of their own on the way. Though they probably do."
She paused at another doorway and looked in. "Here we go," she said, and went
inside.
The room was small and bare of any ornamentation, Jack noted as he slipped in behind
her. But from the size of the desk, and the amount of padding on the chair, it looked like
they'd found the commanding officer's office.
With a nice little computer humming away on a corner of the desk.
Alison made a beeline for the computer. Jack brushed past her elbow and got there
first. "Uh-uh," he said firmly, setting his gun down on the desk and dropping
into the chair. "You already messed up the transport's computer. This one's
mine."
She made as if to object, hesitated, then nodded. "Fine," she said, going
back to the doorway and peering cautiously down the hall with her machine gun ready.
"You just better know what you're doing."
"Trust me," Jack said, testing the keys. The computer was still running, but
the owner had remembered to lock it down before making his tactical retreat. Sewer-rat
time. "It'll take a few minutes," he added, keying in the program.
"Not too many, I hope," she said. "So if you aren't leading a charge,
what are you doing here?"
"I came to get you guys out," Jack said. "Or are you going to try to
tell me you didn't need any help?"
"I never turn down free help," she told him tightly. "Especially right
now. If we can't get that transport started, it's going to be a long walk to
anywhere."
"With unhappy Shamshir behind us the whole way," Jack agreed. "Boy, I'd
hate to be in our shoes. How'd you get out, anyway?"
There was just the slightest pause. "The hut they put me in had a dirt
floor," she said. "They'd fastened the other end of my handcuffs to the leg of
one of the shelves.
"Same thing they did to me," Jack said. "Not very imaginative, are
they?"
"Hey, whatever works," she said with a shrug. "Anyway, all I had to do
was dig enough dirt out from under the leg, and I could slip the handcuff right out. Nice
and neat."
"Yeah," Jack said, frowning. Nice and neat, all right.
Except that when they'd locked him up, they'd made sure the handcuff was
attached above the bottom shelf. How had she managed to get that shelf unfastened?
"And then you just went around and popped the others?"
"More or less," she said. "How about you?" I notice you even
managed to get yourself a transport."
Jack snorted gently. "I have friends."
She frowned across the room at him. "And?"
"That's all," he said. "I have friends."
"What sort of friends does an Edgeman have in a Shamshir camp?"
"You'd be surprised," Jack said. The computer was coming loose now, and he
keyed for a directory. "Anyway, you've got as good a chance of finding friends here
right now as you do in the Whinyard's Edge."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning it turns out our group was thrown to the wolves." He looked up and
caught her eyes in a hard stare. "Thanks to you and your little midnight visit to the
Edge HQ back on Carrion."
Her lip twitched. "So they knew about that."
"Not only did they know about it, they decided to fry your whole circle of friends
along with you," Jack told her. "What were you doing there that night,
anyway?"
"Looking for some information."
"What kind?"
"The kind that's none of your business," she said tartly. "Aren't you
supposed to be breaking into a computer or something?"
"Patience, dear, patience," Jack said. Scrolling down the pilot/aircraft
listing, he found the Flying Turtle section. The computerized start key . . . there it
was. "Here we go," he said, grabbing a data tube from a stack beside the
computer and popping it in. He keyed for copy, there was a brief hum, and the data tube
popped back out. "Got it," he announced, standing up.
And then, even as he started toward Alison, a strange thought suddenly struck him. He
stopped, his eyes flicking back to the computer . . .
"What's wrong?" Alison asked.
"Nothing," Jack said, flipping the tube to her. "Go get it started. I'll
be right there."
She caught the tube, her expression suddenly wary. "What kind of heroics are you
thinking about now?"
"The kind that are none of your business," he said. "Go on, get out.
That air support could be here any time."
Alison's mouth compressed tightly, but she nodded. "Don't take too long," she
warned, and vanished down the hall.
"Jack?" Draycos murmured from Jack's shoulder. "What are you
doing?"
"Completing my primary mission, as you warrior types would say," Jack said,
sitting back down at the computer. "Or did you forget why we came here in the first
place?"
The dragon's head rose up out of his jacket. "The Djinn-90 information?"
"Why not?" Jack said, keying for a new directory. "Unless you're finicky
about which mercenary group we get it from."
"I do not know that word." With a bound, the dragon leaped from Jack's back,
landing halfway to the door. "But the meaning is clear. I will stand guard."
"Good idea," Jack said absently, his full attention on the screen. Okay;
there were the Shamshir's own records. But where were the ones they kept on other groups?
Surely they kept records on other groups.
"Jack?"
"I'm hurrying, I'm hurrying," Jack growled. Finally, there it was. Now all he
had to do was find the section on aircraft. . .
"Jack, we must go," Draycos insisted, his tone suddenly urgent. "We must
go now."
Jack looked up. The dragon was standing at the door, his tongue flicking in and out
with the speed of a blackjack dealer throwing cards. "What is it?" he asked,
reaching for his gun.
"The taste of death," Draycos said. "Coming from the fire."
Chapter 27
Cautiously, Jack sniffed at the air. His own nose couldn't find anything
other than simple basic smoke. "Are you sure?"
"I have tasted many such poisons before," Draycos said, his voice even more
urgent. "Come."
Jack looked back at the computer, a tight feeling in the pit of his stomach.
Nothis couldn't be happening. Not twice on the same job. To have come this
closeagain!only to get chased away before he could finish it?
"Jack!" Draycos called.
And then, like one of Uncle Virgil's dope-slaps on the side of his head, the obvious
answer struck him.
If there wasn't time to pick and choose what he wanted, he would just take everything.
"Thirty seconds," he promised Draycos, grabbing another tube and jamming it
into the receptacle. "Make sure the coast is clear," he added, keying for a
complete copy of the Shamshir's rival mercenary data lists.
And then, with a terrific concussion, the whole building seemed to lift itself up and
drop back onto the ground.
"What was that?" Jack yelled. At least, he thought he yelled it. With his
ears ringing from the blast, he couldn't even hear his own voice.
Draycos was at his side, mouthing something. "What?" Jack shouted back.
In answer, the dragon hooked the claws of one of his forepaws into Jack's jacket sleeve
and tugged him toward the door. "Wait a second," Jack said, reaching over and
popping the data tube.
Just in time. Even as he pulled the tube free, the building's power shut down, taking
the computer with it. Draycos tugged again. "Right," Jack agreed, shoving the
data tube deep into an inner pocket. "Let's go."
He fully expected there to be another blast or two along the way. But they reached the
outer door without that happening. Jack peered outside, started to step through the
doorway
And found himself yanked back inside by the claws still hooked into his sleeve as a
dark aircraft roared past overhead.
Reflexively, he dropped into a crouch. "Uh-oh," he muttered.
"We are under attack," he heard Draycos's voice distantly through his slowly
recovering hearing.
"No kidding, Sherlock," Jack said, looking carefully around the door jamb. In
the flickering light of the burning hut, the Lynx transport he'd arrived in seemed intact.
Or at least as intact as it had been when he'd left it. Beyond it...
He tensed. Beyond the Lynx, where Tango Five Zulu's borrowed Flying Turtle had been,
there was nothing but a gaping crater.
"There," Draycos said, pointing a claw. "They are there."
Jack looked. In the near distance he could see the shape of the Flying Turtle scooting
across the sky.
So Alison had managed to get the thing started and into the air. And not a borrowed
second too soon, either, from the looks of it. "Who else is around?" he asked.
"I can hear two Shamshir fighter craft," Draycos said. "Both are in
pursuit of Alison's vehicle."
"Okay," Jack said, getting back to his feet again. "Let's see if we can
make it to the Lynx."
"It is damaged," Draycos reminded him.
"Would you rather walk away from poison gas?"
"Point," Draycos conceded, putting a paw on Jack's hand and slithering up his
sleeve. "Let us go."
Again, they made it across the open area without drawing fire. Apparently, none of
Lieutenant Cue Ball's men wanted him badly enough to stick around near the burning hut.
"We're not going to get very far," he warned, glancing at the fuel reading as he
dropped into the pilot's seat. "But we should at least make it to the woods."
The comm beeped. "Montana?" Alison's voice came.
Jack flipped the switch. "I'm here," he confirmed. "You all right?"
"Oh, we're just sweetness and light out here," she growled back. "Sorry,
but we had to pull out. If I can shake these two birds, I'll circle back and get
you."
"No, don't," Jack said. "You just stay ahead of them and head for the
hills. I can get out on my own."
"But"
And suddenly, outside the windscreen, the ground flashed with light. Jack leaned
forward over the control board, trying to see what had happened.
One of the Shamshir fighters had become an airborne fireball.
Jack blinked. No. Not even Alison. Not even Alison and Jommy together, hotshot teenage
mercenaries that they were, could have taken out a professional combat pilot. Could they?
And then, even as his brain tried to make sense of it, the second fighter veered away
from its prey. It cut hard to the left, its guns blazing full power, and exploded into a
fireball of its own.
"Jack?" a familiar voice called.
Jack felt his breath go out of him in a whoosh, his muscles going limp with relief.
He'd forgotten all about Uncle Virge.
"I'm here, Uncle Virge," he called back. "On the ground, in the Lynx
near the burning hut. Leave the Flying Turtle alonethey're on our side. Anyone else
in the area?"
"Looks like they've got three more fighters coming in from the south," Uncle
Virge reported. "Still a few minutes away. Pretty amateurish for supposed
professionals, if you want my humble opinion."
"They weren't expecting to have to fight around here," Jack said, gazing
thoughtfully out the windscreen into the distance. An idea was starting to form in the
back of his mind.
"I'm coming in to get you," Uncle Virge said. "Did you know that fire is
putting out xancrene gas?"
"Yeah, I did, thanks," Jack said, keying on the engines. "On second
thought, I'll meet you two miles west of the city."
"There's no need for that, Jack lad," Uncle Virge protested. "I wouldn't
trust that flying cattle car of yours farther than I can bounce a barge. Don't worry; the
xancrene is mostly blowing north."
"I wasn't worried about the xancrene," Jack told him, lifting the transport
into the air. "And relax, this thing will get me far enough."
"Jack lad"
"Look, I know what I'm doing," Jack interrupted him. "Alison? You still
there?"
"Still here," she confirmed. "Thanks for the assist."
"Like I said, I have friends," Jack said. "Look, I'd ask you all aboard,
but we really don't have the space. I'm afraid you'll have to find your own way off
Sunright."
"That's okay," she assured him. "We'll manage."
"The Edge will be watching for you," he warned.
"Like I said, we'll manage," she said. "I have friends, too. See
you."
The comm clicked off. "Yeah," Jack muttered, her last words tingling across
his mind. I have friends too . . .
He headed off into the night. Directly ahead, the dim lights of the mine buildings
loomed against the darkness.
The mine that had sparked all this trouble in the first place. The mine that had
trapped both the Agri and the Parprins into devil's bargains with greedy mercenaries. The
jackpot both the Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge were playing their deadly little games for.
As Uncle Virgil would have said, it was time to take the jackpot off the table.
He lined up the transport's nose on the entrance to the main mine building.
"Draycos, you said there were some grenades back there?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "Nine of them."
"I don't suppose you'd know how to rig a delay fuse on something like that."
"Explosives are not to be dealt with lightly or casually," the dragon said,
his voice starting to sound suspicious. "I am not trained with these particular
devices."
"Never mind, then," Jack said. "We'll do it the old-fashioned way. Can
you get them out of the locker and line them up along the floor? Straight down the middle
should do just fine."
Draycos's head lifted up from Jack's shoulder. "Jack, what is it you intend to
do?"
Jack nodded toward the mine buildings. "The Shamshir want the mine," he said.
"So do the Whinyard's Edge, if you believe Lieutenant Cue Ball. What do you suppose
they'd do if the mine wasn't there anymore?"
Draycos pondered a moment. "Those who care only for its wealth would leave this
world."
He twisted his head around to look squarely into Jack's eyes. "But this is not
your property, Jack," he added. "You have no right to choose its
destruction."
"Not even to save people caught in a war none of them want?" Jack countered.
"Come on, K'da warrior, let's hear those ethics of yours. Is the wealth from a mine
more important than the people who own it?"
"The people are of course more important," the dragon said, his voice oddly
sad. "But there must be another way."
"There isn't," Jack said firmly. "Look, I trust you in warrior stuff.
Trust me in this, okay?"
Draycos bounded from Jack's collar, landing on the deck behind him. "Very
well," he said reluctantly. "If there is no other way, then let us do it."
Jack smiled tightly. The K'da poet-warrior had done his part of the job. Now it was
time for the human con artist to do his. "Just line up those grenades," he said.
"I'll do the rest."
The main doors were wide and tall, designed to let large ore-carrying vehicles in and
out. They were also built pretty strong.
Fortunately, the Lynx was built even stronger. With a crash of breaking wood and the
screech of torn metal, it broke through the doors and rumbled into the main building
beyond.
"How are you doing?" Jack shouted over the crunch of demolished support beams
and wall siding as he drove the Lynx inward toward the tall tower that stood over the mine
opening itself.
"I am nearly ready," Draycos called back.
"Good," Jack said. "Brace yourself."
And with a final thunderous crash, he slammed the transport through the lower part of
the tower and settled to the floor squarely on top of the shaft leading down into the
ground.
"We're here," Jack announced, shutting off the engines and sliding out of his
seat. "Let's make tracks."
Draycos looked up from the neat row of grenades he had laid out from the rear of the
compartment to just behind Jack's seat. "Pardon?"
"Let's get out of here," Jack clarified. "Come aboard."
With Draycos on his back, Jack picked his way through the splintered wood and other
debris outside. The Essenay was waiting just outside the entrance, bobbing slighdy
on its lifters with an air of worried impatience. "Come on, lad, come on," Uncle
Virge urged as Jack ran up the ramp. "Those other fighters will be here any
minute."
"Then let's give them something to light their way," Jack said as he raced to
the cockpit and slid into the pilot's seat. "I want a quick laser burst straight in
the hole we made."
"Targeted where?" Uncle Virge asked.
"Targeted on the back of the transport we made the hole with," Jack said,
doing a quick check of the Essenay's weapons systems.
"The transport?" Uncle Virge asked, sounding confused. "But?"
"Never mind," Jack said. "You just aim. I'll fire."
"We should move back," Draycos murmured. "The blast could be
considerable."
"Good point," Jack agreed, keying the Essenay into a fast backward
drift. "Everyone ready?"
"I suppose," Uncle Virge said. Draycos didn't answer.
"Good," Jack said. "Here goes."
The lasers flickered, and he held his breath. If this didn't work . . .
And then, from the entrance came a flash of return light, then the roiling flicker of
fire. The rest of the Lynx's fuel had caught. "That should do it," Jack said,
pulling the Essenay around and heading for the sky. "Let's grab some distance
before the grenades go."
"The grenades?" Uncle Virge echoed. "Jack, lad"
And then, the grenades went.
It was even more spectacular than Jack had expected. The sides of the main building
blew out as a ring of fire sliced horizontally outward in all directions. The tower,
directly above the explosion, shot probably half a dozen feet straight up, then toppled
over. It landed on one of the two side buildings, crashing through its roof.
A few seconds after it had begun, it was over. The buildings had collapsed into
shattered ruin, with everything flammable in them burning furiously. It was like one of
the triumphal bonfires Jack had read about, except that there was no one here celebrating
anything.
Maybe the Agri who had worked so hard to create the mine would thank him. Eventually.
He took a deep breath. "Well," he said, to no one in particular. "I
guess that's that."
"It is indeed," Uncle Virge agreed, sounding rather awestruck himself.
"Never let it be said that you do things halfway, Jack lad."
Jack pursed his lips. Maybe. Maybe not. For now, he could only hope he'd accomplished
what he'd set out to do. "We'd better get out of here before those fighters
arrive," he said, reaching for the controls. "You with me, Draycos?"
"I am here," the dragon said softly. "Yes; let us go."
Chapter 28
"Sorry, lad," Uncle Virge said, his voice as quiet and apologetic
and sincere as a professional fundraiser. "I'm afraid the Shamshir Mercenaries keep
pretty sloppy records on their competitors' aircraft. There isn't any way we're going to
be able to trace those Djinn-90s from this."
"Uh-huh," Jack said, gazing across the table with a fascinated repugnance as
he watched Draycos tearing into his fourth soup bowl full of hamburger, tuna fish,
chocolate sauce, and motor oil.
It wasn't that he couldn't understand the dragon's hunger. After all, Draycos hadn't
had much to eat for the past three weeks. But the thought of that particular food
combination still sent Jack's own taste buds screaming for cover. "So that's it,
huh?"
"That's it," Uncle Virge confirmed. "And if I may say so, you might
recall that I thought the idea was doomed idiocy from the start. So now we can get on with
a proper job of saving Draycos's people?"
"By which you mean turning him over to the Star-Force?" Jack suggested.
Draycos looked up, his long tongue nicking a bit of tuna fish off one corner of his
snout. "We cannot do that, Jack," he protested. "It is too dangerous."
"Relax," Jack said, taking a sip of his fizzy-soda. Yes, Uncle Virge had
sounded quiet and apologetic and sincere, all right. Unfortunately for him, Jack had heard
that tone of voice before. Many times before. "You know, Draycos, for being such a
clever K'da poet-warrior, you're kind of slow on the uptake sometimes."
The dragon's neck arched warningly. "What do you mean?" he asked, his voice
ominous.
"Relax," Jack hastened to reassure him. Apparently, the dragon wasn't in a
mood for joking. "Watch and learn."
He cleared his throat. "Okay, Uncle Virge," he said. "So we don't have
anything on the Djinn-90s. What interesting tidbits did you happen to find in the
Shamshir data?"
"You only asked for the Djinn-90 information," Uncle Virge reminded him.
"I know what I asked for," Jack said firmly. "Quit stalling. What did
you find?"
There was a moment of sulky silence. "There's one small piece that might be
considered interesting," Uncle Virge conceded at last. "But, really, it's so
minuscule"
"I said quit stalling," Jack interrupted. "Give."
"It's just an item about the Brummgas," Uncle Virge groused. "Remember
how you ran into a Brummga on Iota Klestis, at the site of Draycos's crash?"
"Like I'd forget," Jack said with a grimace. If Draycos hadn't used Jack's
tangler gun on the big alien, both he and the dragon would have wound up very dead.
"And Lieutenant Cue Ball had a couple on his staff, too, hanging around looking
ugly," he added. "So?"
"So at least from the Shamshir data," Uncle Virge said grudgingly, "it
looks like all the Brummgas in the various mercenary forces come from the same
place."
Jack sat up a little straighter. "What do you mean, the same place?" he
asked. "The same city? Same province?"
Uncle Virge sighed audibly. "Same dealer."
Draycos's neck was still arched. "What do you mean by 'dealer'?" he asked.
"I'm not sure," Jack said grimly. "But I can guess. Are you talking
about a slave dealer, Uncle Virge?"
"Well, of course, mercenaries are considered skilled labor," Uncle Virge
hedged. "And Brummgan law isn't quite, shall we say, up to Internos
standards"
"They deal in slavery," Draycos cut him off.
Uncle Virge sighed again. "Yes."
Draycos hissed like he had a bad taste in his mouth, his neck crest stiffer than Jack
had ever seen it. "The indenture of children was barbaric enough," he bit out,
his eyes glittering like lasers filtered through a pair of emeralds. "But for
intelligent beings to be owned like animals"
"Easy, pal, easy," Jack said hastily, holding up his hands. "Don't get
mad at me. Or at the Internos government, for that matter. Like I've told you
before, we humans aren't in charge of everything that happens out there."
"What about the Trade Association?" Draycos demanded. "Are there not
laws concerning such things?"
"There are some, sure," Jack said. "But you can only enforce what you
can see. And there are only so many Judge-Paladins to go around. Come onwe're
trying."
Slowly, the crest softened. "I understand," he murmured. "It is still an
abomination."
"No argument there," Jack agreed, shivering. He'd seen a group of slaves on
one of the worlds he and Uncle Virgil had visited once. The memory of their haunted eyes
and faces had stuck with him ever since. "But in this case, it could be a useful
abomination."
"What do you mean?" Draycos asked.
"Nothing good," Uncle Virge cut in. "You can wager your teeth and tail
on that. Jacklook, lad"
"We need to find those mercenaries, Uncle Virge," Jack said. "And since
we aren't having any luck tracing their fighters, maybe we can trace their
personnel."
"And how do you intend to do that?" Uncle Virge demanded. "How do you
expect to get close enough to a Brum-mga slave lord to get a look at his records?"
"Perhaps as a soldier for hire," Draycos suggested.
"Forget it," Jack said firmly. "I'm not cut out to be a soldier."
"You did not do badly," Draycos said. "Do not forget that you were not
properly trained or led. And you were certainly not among true warriors."
"I appreciate the vote of confidence," Jack said dryly. "But I think
we'll find a different way in, if it's all the same to you."
"That is your option," Draycos said. "Still, whether you accept it or
not, you are showing great progress in living by a warrior's ethic."
Jack snorted gently. "I don't know how you figure that one."
"You told Alison not to risk coming back for you," Draycos reminded him.
"That showed your consideration of others' safety before your own."
Jack felt his lip twist. "Well. . . actually, no, it didn't. I just didn't want
her bringing the Shamshir chase ships back my direction."
Draycos's tail arched. "Truly?"
Jack shrugged. "Sorry."
Uncle Virge laughed out loud. "That's my boy," he said smugly. "See
there, Draycos, old snake? Jack's not as easily corrupted by this warrior ethic nonsense
as you'd like to think."
"Perhaps," Draycos said, his eyes seeming to measure Jack. "Perhaps it
is merely a path that will require many small steps. Do not forget he did return to
rescue the others."
"Only because you pressured him, I'd wager," Uncle Virge said. "Like I
suppose you also pressured him into wrecking that daublite mine for no good reason."
"I suggested nothing of the sort," Draycos protested. "Furthermore,
there was a good reason. The Agri had become virtual prisoners of the Shamshir
mercenaries they had hired. From all appearances, the Parprins were in same situation with
the Whinyard's Edge."
"And whose fault was that?" Uncle Virge shot back. "Theirs, that's
whose."
"Is it a fault to work to create a source of profit, only to have it stolen
away?" Draycos countered.
"Of course not," Jack put in. "That's as bad as a bunch of mercenaries
trying to steal someone else's property and having a kid come along and con it right out
from under them."
The budding argument stopped dead on its rails. "What did you say?" Uncle
Virge demanded suspiciously.
"Yes," Draycos seconded. "What did that mean?"
Jack smiled. Yes, his relationship with Draycos was going to change his relationship
with Uncle Virge. Maybe it would indeed change it forever, the way he'd wondered and
worried about earlier as he stood alone in the darkness of the forest.
But maybe that wasn't such a bad thing. Maybe the three of them together were going to
hammer themselves into a better team than he'd ever thought they could be. Certainly a
better team than he'd ever dared to hope. "Remember, Uncle Virge, when we were
leaving Sunright you said that I didn't do things halfway?" he said. "Well, as a
matter of fact. . ."
The thin young man's name was Louie, and he was red-faced and panting as he lugged the
two footlockers through the door and into the middle of the run-down hotel room.
"Okay," he puffed, dropping the end of the first footlocker onto the floor with
a thud. "Yours."
He dropped the second footlocker with an equally loud thud. "His."
"You sure it's the right one?" Alison Kayna asked, glancing both ways down
the hallway before closing the door behind him.
"The name tag says 'Jack Montana' in big letters," Louie pointed out. "I
deserve a bonus for this one, kiddo."
"What for, lugging and handling charges?" Alison countered scornfully.
"Come on, be real. The way I hear it, the Whinyard's Edge was pulling off Sunright so
fast the whole base was running in ten directions at once. You could have loaded one of
their own Lynxes with goodies and flown it out without anyone noticing."
"Busy or not, they all still had guns," Louie said pointedly.
"And you could con the bullets right out of them," Alison said. "It was
a stroll to the backyard compost heap, and you know it."
Louie shook his head. "You are the cheapest kid with a nickel I've ever
seen," he grumbled.
"Blame it on my upbringing," Alison said. "You'll get your usual fee, by
the usual channels. A pleasure doing business with you."
"Yeah, I'm sure," Louie said, gazing her direction. "How about
information? You pay anything for information?"
"What kind of information?" Alison asked.
"Oh, you know," Louie said, waving a hand vaguely around. "I hear
stories. Listen to rumors. That sort of thing."
"Rumors aren't usually worth much."
"The ones I listen to are," Louie assured her. "An extra five
hundred?"
"One hundred."
"Three hundred."
Alison studied his face. "All right, three hundred. Let's hear it."
Louie lowered his voice. "You know that big mine explosion? The one that got both
the Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge to cancel their contracts with the locals and pull
out?"
"I was there when Montana blew it," Alison said dryly. "Lit up the sky
for miles. You'd better have more than just a colorful commentary on the event."
"Oh, I've got more," Louie promised with a sly smile. "Turns out our boy
Montana was either very, very stupid or very, very clever. When the fires finally went out
and the Agri got busy clearing away the wreckage, they found what was left of the
transport sitting flat-square on top of the mine shaft."
"Okay," Alison said, frowning. "So?"
"So?" Louie echoed. "Oh, come on, girl. You just finished playing
soldier. Don't you remember anything about troop transport design?"
"I'm too tired for games, Louie," Alison said patiently. "Just spill
it."
"Troop transports," he said, in a tone like someone lecturing a small child.
"They carry soldiers into battlefields. Where people will be shooting at you. From
below."
Alison frowned. "You talking about armor plating?"
"See?" Louie said, looking pleased. "You did learn something.
Yes, I'm talking about at least twenty inches of Hy-Dense cerametal on the underside of
every modern troop transport. With that model of Lynx, it's closer to thirty inches."
And then, suddenly, Alison got it. "The mine shaft didn't collapse!"
"Bingo," Louie said, looking extremely pleased with himself. "And with
the meres already having cancelled their contracts, there's no way for them to reverse
themselves and get their hooks into the locals again. Like I said: either really stupid,
or really clever."
In her mind's eye, Alison could see that last look on Jack Montana's face. The look
he'd been giving the Shamshir computer as he sent her back to their transport with the
pilot code. "Not stupid," she murmured. "Clever."
"Whichever," Louie said. "Worth that extra three hundred?"
"I suppose," Alison said, keeping her voice casual. "I'll send a note
about it."
"Yeah," Louie said. "Well, have fun with your new stuff. And let me know
whenever I can be of service. Always happy to work with you."
"As long as the money's good?" Alison suggested.
"Your money's always good," Louie said with another sly smile. "See you,
kiddo." Turning, he left the room.
Alison went to the door and made sure it was locked. Then she returned to the two
footlockers. Ignoring her own for the momentshe knew what was in that one, after
all she knelt down beside Jack's.
So Jack Montana had pulled a fast one there at the end. On her, and on everyone else.
He'd conned both sets of mercenaries into pulling out, thinking the mine they both wanted
was permanently ruined, and left matters for the Agri and Parprins to work out between
themselves.
Clever, all right. And it made Jack an even more interesting puzzle than she'd thought
when she'd hired Louie to sneak his footlocker out of the Edge camp.
The footlocker was, of course, locked. But that wouldn't be a problem. Squeezing on the
base of her left-hand forefinger, she slid out the plastic lockpick that had been
surgically implanted beneath the fingernail.
She hadn't told Jack about this little gem, naturally. He would have wanted to know how
a simple indentured teenager could afford this kind of high-tech gimmick, or what she
would even have wanted with it in the first place. Instead, she'd spun him that bogus
story about having dug her handcuffs out from under the shelving in the Shamshir storage
hut.
Now, it seemed, Jack hadn't been entirely honest with her, either.
Because Alison listened to stories, too. And one of the most interesting ones recently
concerned an incident a month ago aboard a liner called the Star of Wonder. An
incident centering on a high-level power struggle between Cornelius Braxton and his board
director Arthur Neverlin for control of the huge megacorporation Braxton Universis.
And right in the middle of that struggle had been a boy named Jack. A boy who was
reported to have an uncle named Virgil, like the Uncle Virge Jack had called to when that
spaceship had shown up and shot those Shamshir fighters off her back.
Trouble was, the name of the kid on the Star of Wonder hadn't been Jack Montana.
It had been Jack Morgan.
Was Jack Montana really Jack Morgan? Very possibly. Maybe there would be something in
his footlocker that would confirm that. Maybe there would be other interesting items, as
well.
And if so, there were people out there who would pay money for that information. A
great deal of money.
Slipping the tip of her lockpick into the lock, she set to work.
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About the Author
Timothy Zahn is the author of twenty-three original science fiction novels, including
the very popular Cobra and Black-collar series. His recent novels include Angelmass and
Mania's Gift. His first novel of the Dragonback series, Dragon and Thief, was
named a Best Book for Young Adults. He has had many short works published in the major SF
magazines, including "Cascade Point," which won the Hugo Award for best novella
in 1984. He is also author of the bestselling Star Wars: Heir to the Empire, among
other works. He currently resides in Oregon.
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