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They’d counted on the bomb’s never being detected, Vlad thought, so they probably hadn’t considered the need to design it to sustain damage and still function, which might mean the power source was inside the Marine and the rest of the hardware was inside the Narhani. That was a seductively attractive supposition, but again, he couldn’t afford to guess wrong.

He stepped even closer to the statue, considering the angle of the Narhani’s body as it reared against its chains. All right, the bomb wasn’t inside the human and it was the next best thing to three meters long. It couldn’t be placed vertically in the Narhani’s torso, either, because there wasn’t enough length. It could be partly inside the torso and angled down into the body’s barrel, though. The arch of the Narhani’s spine would make that placement tricky, but it was feasible.

He rocked back on his heels and wiped sweat from his forehead as the unhappy conclusion forced itself upon him. The possible bomb dimensions simply left too many possibilities. To be certain, he had to split the statue cleanly in two, and to be sure the break came within the critical length, he’d have to come up from below.

He sighed, wishing he dared activate his com implant to consult with Dahak, then shrugged. He couldn’t, and even if he could have, he already knew what Dahak would say.

He wiped his forehead one more time, took the bomb from his back, and bent cautiously to edge it under the marble Narhani’s belly.

The last exchange of fire faded into silence, and Brigadier Jourdain’s mouth was a bitter, angry line. Ten more of his men lay dead around the head of the ruined stairs. Two more were down, one so badly mangled only his implants kept him alive, and they wouldn’t do that much longer, but at least they’d accounted for the last two Marines.

He glared at the closed door to the foyer of Horus’s office and cranked his implant sensors to maximum power. Damn it, he knew the Governor was in there somewhere, but the cu

Well, there were drawbacks to that sort of game, the brigadier told himself grimly. If Horus had his implants down, he couldn’t see Jourdain or his men, either. He was limited to his natural senses. That ought to make him a bit slower off the mark when he opened fire, and even if he’d found an ambush position to let him get the first few men through the door, he’d reveal his position to the others the instant he fired.

“All right,” the brigadier said to his seven remaining men. “Here’s how we’re going to do this.”

Franklin Detmore ripped off another burst of grenades and grimaced. Whoever that Marine up there was, he was too damned good for Detmore’s taste. The ten men assigned to mop him up had been reduced to five, and Detmore was delighted to be the only remaining grenadier. He vastly preferred laying down covering fire to being the next poor son-of-a-bitch to rush the bastard.

He fed a fresh belt into his launcher and looked up. Luis Esteben was the senior man, and he looked profoundly unhappy. Their orders were to leave no witnesses; sooner or later, someone was going to have to go in after the last survivor, and Esteben had a sinking suspicion who Brigadier Jourdain was going to pick for the job if he hadn’t gotten it done by the time the Brigadier got here.

“All right,” he said finally. “We’re not going to take this bastard out with a frontal assault.” His fellows nodded, and he bared his teeth at their relieved expressions. “What we need to do is get in behind him.”

“We can’t. That’s a blind corridor,” someone pointed out.

“Yeah, but it’s got walls, and we’ve got energy guns,” Esteben pointed out. “Frank, you keep him busy, and the rest of us’ll go back and circle around to get into the conference room next door. We can blow through the wall from there and flank him out.”

“Suits me,” Detmore agreed, “but—” He broke off and his eyes widened. “What the hell is that?” he demanded, staring back up the corridor.





Esteben was still turning when Galahad and Gawain exploded into the Security men’s rear.

Vlad settled the charge delicately and sighed in relief. He was still alive; that was the good news. The bad news was that he couldn’t be certain this was going to work … and there was only one way to find out.

He set the timer, turned, and ran like hell.

Alarms screamed as Oscar Sanders hit every button on his panel. Security perso

The foyer door vanished in a hurricane of fire, and two men slammed through the opening. They saw the piled fortress of furniture facing the door and charged it frantically, firing on the run, desperate to reach it before Horus could pop up and return fire.

He let them get half way to it, and then, without moving from his position in the corner, cut both of them in half.

Jourdain cursed in mingled rage and triumph as his men went down. Damn that sneaky old bastard! But his fire had given away his position, and the brigadier and his five remaining Security men knew exactly where to look when they came through the door.

Energy guns snarled in a frenzy of destruction at a range of less than five meters. Men went down—screaming or dead—and then it was over. Two more attackers were down, one dead and one dying … and the Governor of Earth was down as well. Someone’s fire had smashed his energy gun, but it didn’t really matter, Jourdain thought as he glared down at him, for Horus was mangled and torn. Only his implants were keeping him alive, and they were failing fast.

Jourdain raised his weapon, only to lower it once more as the old man snarled at him. Horus couldn’t last ten more minutes, the brigadier thought coldly, but he could last long enough to know Jourdain had killed his daughter.

“Find the bitch,” he said coldly, turning away from the dying Governor. “Kill her.”

Vlad rounded the last corner, skidded to a halt, and flung himself flat.

The charge went off just before he landed, and the floor seemed to leap up and hit him in the face. His mouth filled with blood as he bit his tongue, and he yelped in pain.

It was only then that he realized he was still alive … which meant it must have worked.

Agony drowned Horus in red, screaming waves—the physical agony his implants couldn’t suppress, and the more terrible one of knowing men were hunting his daughter to kill her. He bit back a scream and made his broken body obey his will one last time. Both his legs were gone, and most of his left arm, but he dragged himself—slowly, painfully, centimeter by centimeter—across the carpet in a ribbon of blood. His entire, fading world was focused on the closest corpse’s holstered grav gun. He inched towards it, gasping with effort, and his fingers fumbled with the holster. His hand was slow and clumsy, shaking with pain, but the holster came open and he gripped the weapon.