Close. Real fucking close.
And it wasn’t over yet.
Kowacs had been as prepared as you could be to hit the ground faster than humans were intended, but Bradley had released his right hand a fraction later than Sienkiewicz had dropped his left.
Kowacs twisted, hit on his left heel, and caromed like a ground-looping airplane instead of doing a neat tuck-and-roll as he’d intended. His left knee smashed him in the chest, his backpack and helmet slammed the ground, and when he caught himself, his rifle sprang back on its elastic sling to rap his hip and face shield.
Pain made his eyes flash with tears. His hands, now freed, gripped and aimed the automatic rifle.
Pain didn’t matter. He was alive, and there were Weasels to kill.
“Helmet,” Kowacs said, “translate Khalian,” enabling the program against the chance that he’d hear barked orders soon.
“Clear this way,” whispered Bradley, pointing his shotgun toward one end of the five-meter alley between warehouses in which they’d landed. He spoke over Band 3 of the radio, reserved for internal command-group discussion. The lowpower transmission permitted the three of them to coordinate without trying to shout over the ambient noise.
Which, now that they were down with no wind rush to blur other racket, seemed considerable.
“Clear mine,” echoed Sienkiewicz, covering the opposite direction with her rifle while they waited for their captain to get his bearings.
“Are there doors to these places?” Kowacs asked, pretending he didn’t feel a jabbing from his ankle up his left shin and praying it’d go away in another couple steps. He slouched past Bradley to a back corner. The two males curved around the warehouses in opposite directions, like the hooks of a grapnel, while Sienkiewicz covered their backs.
In the other direction, the starship’s lift jets snarled and blew fragments of baked sod into the air. A siren, perhaps mounted on the vehicle the marines had seen arriving, wound down with a querulous note of its own.
The buildings backed up to the perimeter fence. None of the inhabitants had interest to spare from the ship that had just landed in the center of the compound.
“No door here,” Bradley reported from the back of his building. He spoke with a rising inflection, nervous or just quivering with adrenaline, looking for a chance to kill or run.
“We’ll go this way,” Kowacs muttered to his team as his left hand switched on the forty-centimeter cutting blade he’d unslung in anticipation. The unloaded whine changed to a howl of pure delight as its diamond teeth sliced into the corrugated metal wall of the building.
This was the sort of job for which the cutter was intended, though the “tools” wouldn’t have been as popular in Marine Reaction Companies had they not been so effective in hand-to-hand—hand-to-paw—combat. Kowacs swept the powered blade in a wide arc while the noncoms poised to rake the interior if anything moved when the wall fell away.
Kowacs’s mouth was open. To someone outside his head, he looked as if he were leering in fierce anticipation.
In reality, he was stiffening his body to absorb a burst of shots. Weasels inside the warehouse might decide to fire into the center of the pattern his cutter drew, and the first he’d know of their intention was the impact of bullets sparking through the sheet metal.
Three-quarters of the way around the arc, Kowacs’s blade pinged on a brace; the section wobbled like a drumhead. Sienkiewicz leaped at the wall behind the heel of her right boot, burst into the dark warehouse, and sprawled over a pile of the furniture stored there.
“Bloody hell!” she snarled as she rolled to her feet, but their helmet sensors indicated the warehouse was cold and unoccupied. Kowacs and Bradley were laughing as they clambered over the accidental barrier.
Kowacs swept his eyes across the clutter, using sonic imaging rather than white light. Sienkiewicz had tripped on a sofa. Like the rest of the furniture stored in clear film against the back wall, it was ornate, upholstered—
And quite clearly designed for humans. Short-legged Khalians would find it as uncomfortable as humans did the meter-high ceiling of a Weasel bed alcove.
“Let’s go,” Kowacs said, but he and his two marines were already slipping down the aisle between stacked cubical boxes of several sizes. The glare of whatever was going on in the center of the compound flickered through the louvered windows at the front of the building.
Sergeant Bradley’s load of combat-gear bulked his wiry form, changing the texture of his appearance in a way that it didn’t his heavily built companions. He was taking shorter steps with his right leg than his left, and the twitch of his pack amplified the asymmetric motion.
Kowacs glanced at him.
Bradley Iooked back, his expression unreadable behind the face shield. “No problem, Cap’n,” he said. “We ain’t holdin’ a track meet.”
He pulled a five-unit grenade stick from his belt, poising his thumb above the rotary arming/delay switch that would tell the bombs when to detonate.
Kowacs didn’t have to see Bradley’s face to visualize the smile that was surely on it.
The sort of smile a cat wears with its teeth in a throat. The sort of smile Kowacs himself wore.
The windows were narrow but the full height of the front wall. They flanked a door whose crossbar had a manual unlocking mechanism on this side. Sienkiewicz worked it gently, holding her plasma weapon ready, while Kowacs and Bradley peered through the louvers.
The only light in the warehouse was what trickled through the windows themselves. There was no possibility that those outside would notice the Headhunters preparing for slaughter.
The Khalian vessel was small for a starship, a cylinder no more than sixty meters in length; but, unlike the Bonnie Parker, it wasn’t designed to land outside a proper spaceport. The pilot had given up trying to balance on his lift jets and had dropped to the ground. The narrow-footed landing legs, intended to stabilize the ship on a concrete pad, carved through the flame-blackened sod like knife blades; the belly of the craft sank deep enough to threaten an explosion when the jets fired again on lift-off.
The hundred or more waiting humans crowded close, some of them yelping as those behind pushed them against still-hot metal. Vapor puffed from the starship as an airlock started to valve open.
A big air-cushion vehicle with polished brightwork, its wheeled outriggers lowered for high-speed road travel, pushed close to the airlock with a careless disregard for the clamoring pedestrians. As a ramp extended from the starship, the car’s door opened and a plump, self-important man got out. His multicolored clothing was as rich and obviously civilian as the vehicle in which he’d arrived.
“Say when,” Sienkiewicz demanded, her foot poised to shove open the door and fire her plasma weapon. She had no view of what was going on outside. “Say when!”
“Sir, what the hell is going on?” Bradley whispered. “These aren’t—I mean, they’re ...”
“Sie,” Kowacs said in a calm, soft voice, “fire directly into the airlock, then flatten yourself. Top, you and I will throw grenades with three-second—” his own thumb armed a bundle of minigrenades just as he knew Bradley was doing with his own—“delay, airburst.”
“And duck out the back, Cap’n?” asked the field first.
“And rush the ship, Top,” Kowacs corrected with no more emotion than he’d shown when going over the munitions manifest three weeks earlier in Port Tau Ceti. “There won’t be time for anybody aboard to close the lock. Not after Sie lights ’em up.”
The man from the car strode up the ramp. The rest of the crowd—all males, so far as Kowacs could tell—jumped out of his way as if he were still driving his vehicle. The starship’s inner lock had opened, because when the fellow reached the top of the ramp, a human in a black-and-silver uniform appeared from inside the vessel and blocked his way.
For a moment the two men, sh
outed at one another in a language Kowacs didn’t recognize. The man in uniform unexpectedly punched the civilian in the stomach, rolling him back down the three-meter ramp. The crowd’s collective gasp was audible even over the hiss and pinging of the ship’s idling systems.
“Sir,” begged Sienkiewicz, staring at the blank panel before her. “Sir! When?”
The plump man got to his feet, shouting in fury. A figure stepped from the ship and stood next to the man in uniform.
The newcomer was a Weasel. As it barked to the man in uniform, the translation program in Kowacs’s helmet rasped, “What are we waiting for? Don’t you realize, even now a missile may be on the way?”
“Ready,” said Kowacs his rifle vertical, gripped in his left hand, and the stick of grenades ready in his right.
The uniformed human turned to the Khalian and barked.
“Shoot that one,” the helmet translated, “and we’ll cram the rest aboard somehow.”
The Weasel raised a submachine gun. The plump man leaped back into his car with a scream.
“Go,” whispered Kowacs.
Sienkiewicz kicked the warehouse door thunderously open an instant before the lightning flash of her plasma bolt lit the night.
The jet of plasma spat between the two figures in the airlock, struck a bulkhead inside the ship, and converted the entrance chamber into a fireball. The blast blew the Weasel and the uniformed human ten meters from the lock, their fur and hair alight.
Anybody inside the starship had burns unless they were separated from the entry chamber by a sealed door. As for the crowd outside ...
Kowacs’s and Bradley’s grenade sticks arced high over the crowd before the dispersion charges popped and scattered the units into five bomblets apiece. The bomblets went off an instant later with the noise of tree limbs breaking under the weight of ice.
Shrapnel ripped and rang on the front of the warehouse; the crowd flattened like scythed wheat.
Kowacs was up and moving as soon as the last bomblet went off. There was a spot of blood and a numb patch on the back of his right wrist, but nothing that’d keep him from functioning. The grenades spewed glass-fiber shrapnel that lost velocity fast in an atmosphere, but it wasn’t completely safe even at twenty meters. Closer up, it—
Sienkiewicz slipped on bloody flesh as she tried to fire a burst from her rifle into the men at the fringe of the grenade explosions. Her shots went off into the night sky, but that didn’t matter. The survivors who could move were running away, screaming; some of them blinded, some scattering drops of gore as they waved their arms in terror ...
The dispersion charges had spread the bombs well enough that most of the crowd wasn’t running.
The Khalian from the ship thrashed in its death agonies on a sprawl of humans. Kowacs’s rifle burped three rounds into it anyway as he passed, and Bradley, half a step behind, blew off the creature’s tusked face with his shotgun.
They weren’t so short on ammo that they couldn’t make sure of a Weasel.
Kowacs hit the ramp first and jumped it in a single stride despite the weight of his gear. His team faced around reflexively, just as he would have done if one of the others had been in the lead. Bradley fired at the backs of the survivors to keep them moving in the right direction. It was long range for the airfoil loads in his weapon, but one of the targets flung up his hands and dropped a meter short of shelter.
Sienkiewicz put surgical bursts into the windscreen, then the engine compartment of the ground vehicle. The idling turbine screamed, then the fans died and let the skirt flatten. Yellow flames started to flicker through the intake gratings.
A solenoid clacked behind Kowacs as a survivor in the starship’s cockpit tried desperately to close the airlock, but the jet of plasma had welded something or fried part of the circuitry.
Kowacs rolled into the ship-center room the plasma bolt had cleansed. A meter-broad circle’d been gouged from the hull metal opposite, the lock. Anything flammable at sun-core temperatures was burning or had burned, including a corpse too shrunken to be identified by species. Open hatches led sternward, toward two cabins and the sealed engineering spaces, and to the left—forward, to the cockpit.
Kowacs fired right and jumped left, triggering a short burst that sparked off the ceiling and bulkheads of the passageway it was supposed to clear.
None of the bullets hit the Khalian running from the cockpit with a submachine gun in one hand.
Kowacs hadn’t expected a real target. He tried to swing the muzzle on, but his right side slammed the deck so his shots sprayed beneath the leaping Khalian. The only mercy was that his opponent seemed equally surprised and tried clubbing the marine with his submachine gun. The Weasel had sprung instinctively on its victim instead of shooting as reason would have told him to do.
“Nest-fouling ape!” shouted the translation program as the submachine gun’s steel receiver crashed on the dense plastic of Kowacs’s helmet. The creature’s free hand tore the marine’s, left forearm as Kowacs tried to keep the claws from reaching beneath his chin and—
Bradley fired with his shotgun against the Weasel’s temple.
Kowacs couldn’t hear for a moment. He couldn’t see until he flipped up the visor that’d been splashed opaque by the contents of the Khalian’s skull.
The hatch at the other end of the short passageway was cycling closed. Kowacs slid his rifle into the gap. Its plastic grip cracked, but the beryllium receiver held even though the pressure deformed it.
Bradley cleared a grenade-stick.
“No!” Kowacs shouted. He aimed the Weasel submachine gun at the plate in the center of the cockpit hatch and squeezed the trigger. Nothing.
“Sir, they’ll be protected by acceleration pods!” Bradley cried. “This’ll cure ’em!”
The grenade stick was marked with three parallel red lines: a bunker buster.
There was a lever just above the submachine gun’s trigger, too close for a human to use it easily, but just right for a short-thumbed Weasel. Kowacs flipped it and crashed out a pair of shots.
“We need the ship flying!” he cried as his left hand reached for one of his own grenade sticks and the hatch began to open. He tossed the stick through the widening gap and leaped through behind them.
The bundle wasn’t armed. The Khalian pilot was gripping a machine pistol in the shelter of his acceleration pod, waiting to rise and shoot as soon as the grenades went off. He didn’t realize his mistake until Kowacs’s slugs ripped across his face.
“Get the stern cabins,” Kowacs ordered. “The cockpit’s clear.”
Kowacs glanced behind him at the control panel: undamaged, no bullet holes or melted cavities, no bitter haze of burning insulation.
No obvious controls either.
“Fire in the hole!” Bradley’s voice warned over the helmet link.
Kowacs stiffened. Grenades stuttered off in a chain of muffled explosions; then, as he starred to relax, another stick detonated.
“Starboard cabin clear,” Bradley reported laconically. He’d tossed in a pair of sticks with a two-second variation in delay. A Weasel leaping from cover after the first blast would be just in time for the follow-up.
Ruined the pelt, of course.
The cockpit’s four acceleration pods were contour-to-fit units that, when activated, compressed around the form within them. Three of the pods were shrunken tight to hold Khalians like the corpse in one of them, but a side couch was still shaped for a human.
“Port cabin’s locked!” Bradley shouted, his voice from the helmet earphones a disconcerting fraction of a second earlier than the same words echoing down the passageway at merely the speed of sound. “Sir, want I should blast it? Can you back me?”
Humans could fly the damned ship.
It was just that none of the humans aboard could fly the vessel. And if Kowacs understood the impli
cations of what that Weasel cried a moment before the plasma bolt gave him a foretaste of eternal hell, the ship was their only prayer of surviving the next—
“Cap’n,” Sienkiewicz reported, “I got a prisoner, and he says—”
Kowacs was already moving before the radio transmission cut off in a blast of static, hugely louder than the crack! of the plasma weapon that caused it.
Sergeant Bradley crouched at the corner of the stern passageway. Bradley’s shotgun was aimed at the stateroom he’d found locked, but his head craned back over his shoulder as he tried to see what was going on outside the vessel.
Kowacs skidded in the blood and film deposited on the deck of the central cabin when plasma-vaporized metal cooled. He made a three-point landing, his ass and both boot heels, but the captured submachine gun was pointed out the airlock where Sienkiewicz stood.
The plasma weapon was on Sienkiewicz’s shoulder; a glowing track still shimmered from its muzzle. One of the warehouses was collapsing around a fireball. A surviving local must’ve made the mistake of calling Sie’s attention to him.
“Move it! Move it, dog-brain!” she bellowed to somebody beneath Kowacs’s line of vision. “Or by God the next one’s in your face!”
As Sienkiewicz spoke, the translation program barked in Weasel through her helmet speaker. She couldn’t’ve captured a—
Kowacs stepped to the corporal’s side, then jumped so that the fat civilian scrambling up the ramp in blind panic wouldn’t bowl him over. It was the gorgeously-clad fellow who’d strode up the ramp before—and been knocked down by the human in uniform, with a promise of death if the Headhunter attack hadn’t intervened.
“Waved his shirt from the car, Cap’n,” Sienkiewicz explained. As she spoke, her eyes searched for snipers, movement, anything potentially dangerous in the night and sullen fires. “I thought ... well, I didn’t shoot him. And then he barked, you know, that the place was gonna be nuked, but he could fly us out.”
“Sure, you did right,” Kowacs said without thinking it even vaguely surprising that Sienkiewicz apologized for taking a prisoner alive.
The Fleet Book Three: Break Through Page 33