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Staff Sergeant Duncan Sellers, Earth Security, swore monotonously as he ran down the hall. He’d gotten separated from the rest of his team, and the entire floor had filled with smoke despite the fire suppression systems. His enhanced lungs handled the smoke easily, but he dreaded what could happen if he blundered into his friends and they mistook him for a Marine.
He turned a corner and gasped in relief as he picked up the implants of his fellows ahead. He opened his mouth to shout his own name, then whirled as some sixth sense warned him. A shape bounded towards him, but his instant spurt of panic eased as he realized it was only one of the Empress’s dogs. Big as it was, no dog was a threat to an enhanced human, and he raised his energy gun almost negligently.
Gaheris was four meters away when he left the floor in a prodigious spring. Sergeant Sellers got off one shot—then screamed in terror as bio-enhanced jaws ripped his throat out like tissue.
Alex Jourdain advanced in a crouch, weapon ready, and disbelief filled him. There were only twelve of them, damn it!
Perhaps so, but by the time his three assault teams merged at the foot of the single stair leading to the next floor, he’d lost over seventy men. Over seventy! Worse, he’d added up the Marine body count from all three teams and come up with only eight. Two more were pi
He shook his head. It was the stupid and incautious who died first, he told himself. The men he had left were survivors, or they wouldn’t have gotten this far. They could still do it—and they’d damned well better, because none of them could go home and pretend this hadn’t happened!
“Hose it!” he barked to his remaining grenadiers, and a hurricane of grenades lashed up the stairs and blew the doors at their head to bits.
“Go!” Jourdain shouted, and his men went forward in a rush.
Corporal A
Her muscles quivered with the need to do just that, for she was a Marine, handpicked to protect her Empress’ life, but she fought the urge down once more. She was going to die. She’d accepted that. And if she couldn’t kill the men attacking her (and she couldn’t), she could at least keep them occupied. And, she told herself grimly, she could make them pay cash when they came after her to finish off the witnesses.
Another string of grenades exploded, and she detected movement behind them. They were trying a rush under cover of the explosions, and she waited tensely. Now!
The grenadiers stopped firing to let their flankers go in, and A
Two more, she thought, and then the grenades began to explode once more.
Oscar Sanders unwrapped another stick of gum, shoved it into his mouth, and chewed rhythmically without ever taking his eyes from the HD. Every news service was covering the chaos at the mat-trans facility across the Concourse from Sanders’ position in the White Tower lobby, and he shook his head. Virtually every member of White Tower’s usual security force was over there trying to sort out the confusion, and they were fighting a losing battle. Sanders had never seen so many people in one place in his life, and the threat that could produce it was enough to make anyone nervous. Evacuating an entire planet because of one bomb? What the hell sort of bomb could—
He looked up at a sudden slamming sound. It came again, then again, and he frowned and glanced at his console. Every light glowed a steady green, but the slamming sound echoed yet again, and he stood.
He walked around the end of the counter and followed the sound up the corridor. It was coming from the stairwell door, and he drew his grav gun and reached for the latch. He gripped it firmly and yanked the door open, then relaxed. It was only a dog, one of Empress Jiltanith’s.
But Oscar Sanders’s relief vanished suddenly, and his gun snapped back up as he realized the dog was covered with blood. He almost squeezed the trigger, but his brain caught up with his instincts first. The dog was not only covered with blood; one of its forelegs was a mangled stub, and the door was slick with blood where the injured animal had tried repeatedly to spring the crash bar latch with its remaining leg.
It took only a fraction of a second for Sanders’ stu
“Help!” Gaheris’s vocoder said just before he collapsed. “Men come to kill Jiltanith! Help her!”
Vlad Chernikov turned the last corner, and the magnificent statue stood before him. Even now he felt a stir of awe for its beauty, but he hadn’t come to admire it, and he advanced cautiously.
The shaped charge on his back seemed to take on weight with every stride. It was silly, of course. He was already well inside a Mark Ninety’s interdiction perimeter; if the thing was going to decide the charge was a weapon, it would already have blown up the planet.
That, unfortunately, made him feel no less naked and vulnerable, and he missed his implants’ ability to manipulate his adrenaline level as he stepped around the inert sca
He moved to within two meters of the sculpture and studied it carefully. The problem was that his weapon was insufficient to reduce the entire statue to gravel, so he had to be certain that whatever bit he chose to blow up contained the bomb. And since neither he nor Dahak could scan the thing, he could only try to estimate where the bomb was.
It would help, he thought irritably, if they knew its dimensions. It was tempting to assume they’d used Tsien’s blueprints without alteration, but if that assumption proved inaccurate, the consequences would be extreme.
Well, there were certain constraints Mister X’s bomb-makers couldn’t avoid. The primary emitter, for example, had to be at least two meters long and twenty centimeters in diameter, and the focusing coils would each add another thirty centimeters to the emitter’s length. That gave him a minimum length of two hundred sixty centimeters, which meant the bomb couldn’t be inside the human half of the statue. It would have had to be in his torso, and while the Marine was more than life-sized, he wasn’t that much larger, so the bomb itself had to be inside the Narhani. Unfortunately, the Narhani was big enough that the thing could be oriented at any of several angles, and he couldn’t afford to miss. Of course, the power source for the bomb was a fair-sized target all on its own, and the designers had had to squeeze in the Mark 90, too. They’d undoubtedly put at least part of the hardware inside the Marine, but which part?