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There were only the two of them, so who else could she be talking to? It actually made it easier for her to make her point by refusing to use his name or rank. And he was certain she would rather die than call him “Sir.”

He gri

It helped that the other Imperials were all veterans of their long, covert war. Their calm preparations had steadied his nerve more than he cared to admit … but that, in its own way, made it almost worse. Here he was, their commander-in-chief, and every one of his perso

He sealed his flight suit and checked the globular, one-way force field that served an Imperial pilot as a helmet. He had to admit it was a vast improvement to be able to reach in through his “helmet,” and the vision was superb, yet he felt something like nostalgia over the disappearance of all the little read-outs that had cluttered the interior of his NASA-issue gear.

He hung his gray gun on his suit webbing, not that the weapon was likely to do him much good if they had to ditch. Or, for that matter, that they were likely to have a chance to ditch if the bad guys managed to line up on them with anything in the way of heavy weapons.

There. He was ready, and he strolled out of the armory towards the ready room, glad that he and only he could read the adrenalin levels reported by the bio-sensors in everyone else’s implants.

The fighters’ crewmen sat quietly in Nergal’s ready room. There were only eight of them, for sublight battleships were not planetoids. They carried only a half-dozen fighters, and each one they crammed aboard cut into their internal weapon to

Most of the Imperials looked frighteningly old to Colin. Geb was flying wing on his and Jilanith’s fighter—the only one that would have an escort—and his weaponeer was the only other “youngster” present. Tamman had been ten at the time of the mutiny, but he hadn’t been sent back into stasis for as long as Jiltanith and he had a good two centuries of experience behind him.

Yet for all their apparent age, the other Imperials were Hector MacMahan’s hand—picked first team. This would be the first time in three thousand years that Nergal’s people had used Imperial technology in an open, full-blooded smash at their foes, but there had been occasional, unexpected clashes between the two sides’ small craft, and these were the victors from those skirmishes.

“All right.” MacMahan entered the compartment briskly and sat on the corner of the briefing officer’s console. “You’ve all been briefed, you all know the plan, and you all know the score. All I’ll say again is that all other attacks must be held until ’Ta

Heads nodded. Waiting might expose them to a bit more danger from the southerners, but attacking before Colin flashed his “strike report” and warned Dahak what was going on would be far riskier. The old starship was far more likely to get them than were Anu’s hopefully surprised perso

“Good,” MacMahan said. “Get saddled up, then.” The crews began to file out, but the colonel put a hand on Colin’s shoulder when he made to follow. “Wait a sec, Colin. I want to talk to you and ’Ta

Jiltanith waited with Colin while the others left, but even now she chose to stand on MacMahan’s other side, separating herself from her crewmate.





“I asked you to wait because I’ve just gotten an update on your target,” MacMahan said quietly. “Confirmation came in through one of our people in Black Mecca—Cuernavaca is definitely the base that mounted the hit on Cal, and, with just a bit of luck, Kirinal will be there when you go in.”

The hatred that flared in Jiltanith’s eyes was not directed at Colin this time, and he felt his own mouth twist in a teeth-baring grin.

Kirinal. He’d felt a cold, skin-crawling fascination as he sca

“I considered not telling you,” the colonel admitted, “but you’d’ve found out when you get back, and I’ve got enough trouble with you two without adding that to it! Besides, knowing Kirinal’s in there would make it personal for everyone we’ve got, I suppose. But now that you know, I want you to forget it. I know you can’t do that entirely, but if you can’t keep revenge from clouding your judgment, tell me now, and Geb and Tamman will take the primary strike.”

Colin wondered if Jiltanith could avoid that. For that matter, could he? But then his eyes met hers, and, for the first time, there was complete agreement between them.

MacMahan watched them, his expressionless face hiding his worry, and considered ordering them off the target whatever they said. Perhaps he shouldn’t have told them after all? No. They had a right to know.

“All right,” he said finally. “Go. And—” his voice stopped them in the hatchway and he smiled slightly “—good hunting, people.”

They vanished, and Colonel MacMahan sat alone in the empty briefing room, his face no longer expressionless. But he stood after a moment, straightening his shoulders and banishing the hopeless bitterness from his face. He was a highly skilled and experienced pilot, but one without the implants that would have let him execute his own plan, and that was all there was to it.

Colin’s neural feed tapped into what the U.S. Navy would have called the fighter’s “weapons and electronic warfare panel” as he and Jiltanith settled into their flight couches, and he felt a fierce little surge of eagerness from the computers. Intellectually, he knew a computer was no more than the sum of its programming, but Terra-born humans had anthropomorphized computers for generations, and the Imperials, with their far closer, far more intimate associations with their electronic minions, never even questioned the practice. Come to think of it, was a human mind that much more than the sum of its programming?

Yet however that might be, he knew what he felt. And what he felt was the fighter baring its fangs, expressing its eagerness in the system—ready signals it sent back to him.

“Weapons and support systems nominal,” he reported to Jiltanith, and she eyed him sidelong. She knew they were, of course; their neural feeds were cross—co

He felt her eyes upon him for a moment longer, then she tossed her head slightly. Her long, rippling hair was a tight chignon atop her head, held by glittering combs that must have been worth a small fortune just as antiques, and her gemmed dagger was at her belt beside the pistol she carried in place of his own heavy grav gun. It was semi-automatic, with a down-sized, thirty-round magazine, light enough for her unenhanced muscles. She’d designed and built it herself, and it looked both anachronistic and inevitable beside her dagger. She was, he thought wryly and not for the first time, a strange mixture of the ancient and the future. Then she spoke.