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“All right, people,” he said softly to his team, “let’s ease out of here. Joe—” Joe Crynz, a distant cousin of Tamman’s and the last man in line, carried a warp grenade launcher “—get ready to lay down covering fire. The rest of you, just ease on back. Let’s get out quietly if we can.”

There were no acknowledgments as his team came slowly to a halt and started drifting backward. Tamman held his breath, praying they would get away with it. They were naked down here, sitting ducks for—

“Breaker take you, Tarban!” Shirhansu snarled, and braced her energy gun on the window sill. She had the best vantage point of all her twenty people, and she could see only three of the bastards. Her senses—natural and implants alike—were alive through the slit in her stealth field, but their fields interfered badly. She couldn’t make them out well enough for a sure kill at this range, but, thanks to Tarban, they weren’t going to come any closer.

“Take them now!” she ordered coldly over her com.

Tamman bit back a scream as an energy bolt flashed through the edge of his stealth field. His physical senses—boosted almost to max as he tried to work his team out of the trap—were a flare of agony in the beam’s corona. But it had missed him, and he flung himself aside with the dazzling quickness of his enhanced reaction time.

Larry Clintock was less lucky; at least three snipers had taken him for a target. He never even had time to scream as energy blasts tore him apart … but Amanda did, and Tamman’s blood ran cold as he heard her.

He sheltered automatically—and uselessly—behind a potted tree, and his enhanced vision caught the energy flare at an upper window. His own energy gun tore the window frame apart, spraying the street with broken bits of brick, and whoever had been firing opted for discretion, assuming he was still alive.

Joe’s grenade launcher burped behind him, and a gaping hole appeared in another building front, but the other side had warp grenades as well. A huge chunk of paving vanished, water spurting like a fountain from a severed main, and Tamman hurled himself to his feet. He should flee to join Joe and the others, but his feet carried him forward to where Amanda’s scream had ended in terrifying silence.

More bolts of disruption slashed at him, splintering the paving, but his own people knew what was happening. Their stealth fields were in phase with his, letting them see him, and they spread out under whatever cover they could find while their weapons raked the buildings fronting on the plaza. They were shooting blind, but they were throwing a lot of fire, and he was peripherally aware of the grav gun darts chewing at stonework, the shivering pulsations of warp grenades, and the susuration of more energy guns trying to mark him down.

Amanda’s left thigh was a short, ugly stump, but no blood pulsed from the wound. Her Imperial commando smock had fastened down in an automatic tourniquet as soon as she was hit, yet she was no Imperial, and she was unconscious from shock—or dead. His mind flinched away from the possibility, and he scooped her up in a fireman’s carry and sprinted back up the street.

Devastation lashed at his heels, and he cried out in agony as an energy beam tore a quarter pound of flesh from the back of one leg. He nearly went down, but his own implants—partial though they were—damped the pain as quickly as it had come. Tissues sealed themselves, and he ran on frantically.

A warp grenade’s field missed him by centimeters, the rush of displaced air snatching at him like an invisible demon, and he heard another scream as an energy gun found Frank Cauphetti. He spared a glance as he went by, but Frank no longer had a torso.

Then he was around the corner, his surviving teammates closing in about him, and the four of them were dashing through the night.

“Shouldn’t we follow them, ’Hansu?”

“Sure, Tarban, you do that little thing! You and your damn gabble just cost us a complete kill! Not to mention Hanshar—that bastard with the energy gun cut him in half. So, please, go right ahead and follow them … I’m sure their cutter pilot will be delighted to vaporize your worthless ass!”

There was silence over the com, and Shirhansu forced her rage back under control. Maker, they’d come so close! But at least they’d gotten two of them, maybe even three, and that was the best they’d done yet against an actual attack force. Not that it would be good enough to please Anu. Still, if they cleaned up their report a little bit first…

“All right,” she sighed finally. “Let’s get out of here before the locals get too nosy. Meet me at the cutter.”

Chapter Nineteen





“How is she?”

Tamman looked up at Colin’s soft question. He sat carefully, one leg extended to keep his thigh off his chair, and his face was worn with worry.

“They say she’ll be all right.” He reached out to the young woman in the narrow almost—bed, her lower body cocooned in the sophisticated appliances of Imperial medicine, and smoothed her brown hair gently.

“ ‘All right,’ “ he repeated bitterly, “but with only one leg. Maker, it’s unfair! Why her?!”

“Why anyone?” Colin asked sadly. He looked at Amanda Givens’ pale, plain face and sighed. “At least you got her out alive. Remember that.”

“I will. But if she had the biotechnics she deserves, she wouldn’t be in that bed—and she could grow a new leg, too.” He looked back down at Amanda. “It’s not even their fault, yet they give so much, Colin. All of them do.”

“All of you do,” Colin corrected gently. “It’s not as if you had anything to do with the mutiny either.”

“But at least I got a child’s biotechnics.” Tamman’s voice was very low. “She didn’t get even that much. Hector didn’t. My children didn’t. They live their lives like candle flames, and then they’re gone. So many of them.” He smoothed Amanda’s hair once more.

“We’re trying to change that, Tamman. That’s what she was doing.”

“I know,” the Imperial half-whispered.

“Then don’t take that away from her,” Colin said levelly. “Yes, she’s Terra-born, just like I am, but I was drafted; she chose to fight, knowing the odds. She’s not a child. Don’t treat her like one, because that’s the one thing she’ll never forgive you for.”

“How did you get so wise?” Tamman asked after a moment.

“It’s in the genes, buddy,” Colin said, and gri

Ganhar cocked back his chair and rested one heel on the edge of his desk. He’d just endured a rather stormy interview with Shirhansu, but, taken all in all, she was right—they’d been lucky to get any of Nergal’s people, and the odds were against doing it twice. Tarban’s blathering com traffic had given them away this time, but now that the other side had walked into one trap, they damned well wouldn’t walk into another. They’d cover any attacking force with active sca

He pondered unhappily, trying to decide what to recommend this time. The logical thing was to withdraw a few fighters from offensive sweeps and use them to nail any of Nergal’s cutters that came in with active sca

The very idea reeked of further escalation, and he was sick of it. They couldn’t match his resources, but they knew where they were going to strike, and they could concentrate their forces accordingly; he had to cover all the places they might strike. He couldn’t have overwhelming force anywhere, unless Anu would let him back off on offensive operations and smother all possible targets with their own fighters.