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He looked around at his remaining thirty troopers and saw the same "what the hell" grins looking back at him. He waved them forward.

Major M'boto squirmed around and headed down tu

"Charges!" he snapped. "There, there, and there. When the last of our people come by, blow the whole fucking thing in their races!"

"Aye, aye, sir!"

M ooto headed back up front. That took care of the back door. Unfortunately, it also meant the only way out was forward.

The Prophet shoved past Kirsal into the elevator and waited impatiently for the others. They crowded the large car uncomfortably, but his thoughts were on other things as he punched the "down" button.

Lantu sat on the disarmed bomb, holding his Thebanmade assault rifle across his lap. Terra, he was tired! He realized what he'd thought and gri

He inhaled deeply and marveled at the sheer, sensual joy of doing so. He'd never expected to be alive this long - hadn't, he finally admitted, wanted to be alive - but he was. And it felt remarkably good.

He gri

Escalante's tiny force stiffened as they heard the thunder ahead of them, and the lieutenant gri

"Well, Sar'major, sounds like some more of our people've dropped by."

"Can't hardly be anything else, Skipper," Abbot agreed with an answering grin.

"Let's go crash the party."

Sekah cringed as a fresh explosion sent rock dust eddying into the command center. Frantic voices in his headphones told him the infidels had dropped the tu

He punched commands into his console, looking desperately for troops to divert to the fire fight. If he could just bring in a few more -

Something made him look up, and he gawked in horror at the troll which had suddenly appeared in the unguarded hatch across the control room.

He was still lunging to his feet and clawing for his machine-pistol when Lieutenant Amleto Escalante, TFMC, blew him into bloody meat.





The Prophet swore with satisfaction as the elevator came to a halt. The doors slid open, and he stepped out, already turning towards the bomb.

The last thing he ever saw was the muzzle flash of First Admiral Lantu's assault rifle.

General Ma

But for the moment she pushed the thought aside and opened the visor of her bullet-spalled combat zoot. Even the smoke inside PDC Saint-Just smelled better than she did after nineteen hours of combat.

She was on her last set of power cells, like almost all of her people, but the destruction of the command center had been decisive. The defenders' coordination had vanished, and when Montoya brought an entire regiment right into the middle of their position, the Shellheads had nowhere to go but Hell.

Which, she thought grimly, was precisely where most of them had gone.

She stepped over a heap of Theban bodies into what had been the command center, and her eyebrows rose as she saw both of their Theban allies. Incredible. She'd never expected any of that forlorn hope to survive.

People saluted, and she returned their salutes wearily. MacRory, she saw - and what asshole ever let a sergeant with his potential slip away without re-upping? - and M'boto. And somebody else.

"General," MacRory said, "`tis a fine thing tae see ye."

"And you, Colonel." She nodded to Colonel Fraymak and Admiral Lantu, filing away the latter's strange, deeply satisfied expression for later consideration, then turned her attention to the young man sitting on the computer console between MacRory and M'boto. A big, grim-faced sergeant hovered protectively behind him, and Tie was no longer wearing his zoot - for obvious reasons, given the blood-soaked splints on his left leg and arm. There were more bandages strapped around nis torso, and his face was pasty gray. Nasty, Ma

"And who might this be?" she asked, for the youngster had lost his shirt in the first-aid process, and she saw no rank insignia.

"Och, tis the lad who saved M'boto's arse!" MacRory gri

"I'm afraid you're wrong, Colonel," Ma

"This, gentlemen," she a

It was really too bad, she always thought later, that she hadn't had a camera with her.