McCade on the Run (Sam McCade Omnibus)

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McCade on the Run (Sam McCade Omnibus) Page 38

by William C. Dietz


  So, by the time the guard had made the decision to obey and had started to squeeze the trigger. Phil had located the second guard’s gun and freed it. There was no time to bring the weapon up, align it with the third guard’s face, and fire, so the variant did the only thing he could. He pointed the gun toward the front of the vehicle and squeezed the trigger.

  The weapon made a dull thumping sound as the slugs ripped through the second guard’s already dead body, the thin partition behind it, and hit guard number three in the abdomen.

  Guard number three looked surprised. Something hurt. What the hell was going on? Then he toppled over and crashed into Snake just as he brought the command car to a complete stop.

  Meanwhile, with the gun trapped between them, McCade and guard number one were still struggling for control. She had wiry little fingers and they moved in and around McCade’s to pull the trigger.

  McCade felt the weapon jerk under his hand and felt the impact of a slug punching its way through his left arm. Damn! McCade twisted the gun barrel in what he hoped was the right direction and felt the weapon go off again.

  The woman stiffened, tried to say something, and slumped sideways.

  Phil swore as Snake bailed out of the driver’s side door, slipped, fell, and got up running.

  The variant flexed massive muscles, snapped the durasteel chains on cuffs and leg irons, and tried the door. It was locked and the handle came off in his paw.

  It took a moment to find the key card in guard number two’s pocket, slide it into the proper recess, and push the door open. Once outside Phil saw that the driver had a huge head start. A really well-aimed shot might bring him down, but why bother? They were free, and that was the important thing.

  Now, with the adrenaline draining away, McCade’s arm was starting to hurt and he felt dizzy. He tried the door and found it was locked. He was just getting ready to search for a key card when Phil pulled it open from the outside.

  McCade swayed and Phil grabbed him. There was blood all over the place. “Whoa, Sam, you took one through the arm. Sit down and keep some pressure on it while I look for a first-aid kit.”

  McCade did as he was told and felt a little better. His arm still hurt but the dizziness began to fade. He heard a flight of aerospace fighters scream by overhead.

  The restraints fell away at the touch of the electronic key that Phil had retrieved from guard number one’s pocket. McCade rubbed his left wrist where the handcuffs had chaffed his skin.

  Phil found a well-stocked first-aid kit under the driver’s seat, cut McCade’s sleeve off, and examined the wound. The bullet had passed through the fleshy part of the bicep and missed the bone. Both the entry and exit wounds were reasonably small.

  The variant cleaned both holes, ignored the things McCade said when he poured half a bottle of antiseptic over them, and used butterfly strips for closure. The strips weren’t as good as sutures but were better than nothing.

  After that it was a simple matter to apply self-sealing dressings, bind them in place with gauze, and slap an injector against McCade’s good arm. The bounty hunter couldn’t feel the antibiotics going to work, but the pain killers made a big difference, giving McCade a warm fuzzy glow. He stood up and rotated his left arm.

  “Good work, Phil, I feel good as new.”

  “Well, you aren’t,” the variant replied sternly, “so don’t get carried away. You could do a lot of damage to that arm.”

  McCade nodded absently as he fumbled around for a cigar and eyed the horizon. They were exposed as hell, sitting right in the middle of the open desert, only miles from Pong’s HQ. The camp was a clearly visible smudge from which a variety of aircraft came and went on their various errands. A makeshift spaceport sat slightly to the south, clearly marked by fingers of flame as ships landed and took off.

  McCade found a cigar butt and lit it. The words came out with puffs of smoke. “Phil, we need to tidy up. Take what we need, lose the bodies, get our act together. We’d look real suspicious to a patrol or a recon drone.”

  The variant nodded, as if expecting something of the sort. “And then?”

  McCade’s eyes narrowed. “You heard him, Phil. The bastard has Molly. You can do whatever you want...but I’m going after her.”

  Phil snarled.“You mean we’re going after her. I’m her godfather remember?”

  McCade nodded soberly. “I remember. But the odds aren’t very good. You’ve done more than your share already.”

  Phil gave a disapproving snort. “What a lot of bull. Let’s clean up. We’ve got work to do.”

  Two hours later the command car rumbled up to the outermost checkpoint and came to a stop. The spaceport was a temporary affair, little more than fused sand and a collection of prefab buildings.

  It boasted some impressive defenses though, at least three rings of them, and the checkpoint was the first. It was little more than a break in the huge antitank ditch that surrounded the complex. A ditch that had been sown with mines, was preregistered with Pong’s computer-controlled artillery, and could be flooded with burning fuel.

  The corporal was reluctant to step out from under the square of plastic that protected her from Drang’s sun. She bent over to look in the driver’s side window and eyed the tabs pinned to McCade’s collar. The bounty hunter had ripped his right sleeve off to match his left, a practice that was nonreg, but winked at in Drang’s heat. He figured the battle dressing was safe enough this close to the front. A transport rumbled into the sky behind her. She waited for the noise to drop off. “Good afternoon, sir. Can I have your pass please?”

  McCade smiled reassuringly. “Of course. Here it is.”

  So saying McCade gave her the plastic card that they’d recovered from guard number three’s body. Phil had seen him use it as the command car made its way out of the main compound two miles to the north. With any luck at all the card, and the password that went with it, would work here as well. Their plan depended on it.

  But what if the spaceport used different codes? Or the driver had warned Pong’s MPs? Or a million other possibilities?

  The sentry smiled politely. “Thank you, sir. I’ll be back in a moment.”

  As the woman walked toward her rectangle of shade, and the computer terminal that rested there, McCade eyed the boxy-looking vehicle that sat a few yards away. He could hear the hum of its auxiliary generator and found himself staring into all four of its automatic cannons. Just one word from the sentry and those black holes would burp sudden death. Within seconds he and Phil would become little more than meat frying on what had been a command car.

  “Sir?”

  McCade jumped. The sentry had approached from his side this time. She handed his card through the open window.“You’re cleared all the way through. Today’s password?”

  “Trident.”

  “Thank you, sir. Have a nice day.”

  McCade croaked something appropriate, and for the first time noticed how pretty she was.

  The vehicle jerked as Phil stepped on the gas, then rolled through the checkpoint, and roared toward the next checkpoint.

  Though even more formidable than the antitank ditch, the second and third lines of defense were even easier to pass through, since they’d already cleared the computer checkpoint.

  In each case Phil simply slowed down, growled the password, and was waved through. In fact, the worst danger came from the hover truck convoys that were headed in the opposite direction. The trucks were heavily loaded with supplies and highballing for the front more than ninety miles away.

  They took up two thirds of the gravel road and their fans stirred up miniature dust storms that peppered the command car’s windshield with flying debris. The dust made it hard to see, and by way of adding insult to injury, the drivers took great pleasure in hitting their air horns.

  McCade breathed a sigh of relief as the command car rolled off the access road and into a large parking area. Another convoy was forming up and a small army of specialized
robots was whirring back and forth as they loaded the last few trucks. They looked strange in their desert camouflage, like huge insects, gathering food for their nest.

  The combined noise of hover truck engines, auto loaders, and spaceships was almost deafening.

  In the middle of all this, striding about on a stiltlike walker, was a stocky-looking officer. His face was concealed by a bulbous command helmet. From the way the officer moved, and the robots scurried around him, he was obviously in command.

  McCade was still debating the merits of asking the man for information when the decision was made for him. The officer took two giant steps and blocked their way. His voice boomed out of twin loudspeakers mounted on the exoskeleton’s ten-foot-long metal thigh bones. Noisy though the area was he had no difficulty in making himself heard.

  “Hey, you in the command car! What the hell are you doing in the middle of my loading zone?”

  Based on the officer’s belligerent tone, McCade assumed he carried lots of rank, or was some kind of a mean S.O.B. It seemed like a good idea to humor him either way.

  McCade triggered the command car’s PA system. “Sorry, sir...we’ve got an important package for General Pong. Could you direct us to his ship?”

  A beam of red light shot out from the walker to touch a distant ship. McCade did a quick count and found it was sixth in a row of eight. The light vanished.

  “You see that?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “That’s the general’s ship. Now get the hell out of my way before I load your car on a truck and send it to the front.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Phil tromped on the gas, swerved around a train of power pallets, and scooted onto the burn-blackened surface of the spaceport itself. Here there was even more activity as maintenance crews swarmed over ships, robotic fuel hoses snaked their way between pieces of equipment, and ground vehicles dashed in every direction.

  McCade hoped the hustle and bustle would help cover their activities.

  They passed ship after ship, boxy-looking freighters for the most part, until Pong’s lay just ahead. It looked like a greyhound sitting among mongrels. Slim and obviously fast it crouched low on its landing jacks as if ready to leap off the ground at any moment. The main lock was open and a short set of metal stairs reached down to touch the ground.

  Seeing the command car, and assuming it contained at least one officer, the single sentry popped to attention and delivered a rifle salute. He wore light armor, a combat helmet with the visor pushed back, and looked very warm. The sun was blistering hot, and the heat radiated off the surrounding ships, plus that reflected off the surface of the landing pad itself, made things even worse. Sweat rolled off the sentry’s farm-boy face.

  The command car screeched to a halt and McCade jumped out as if in a big hurry. The sentry knew his lines. “Sir, this is a class-three restricted vessel. Please present your class-three authorization code.”

  McCade summoned an officer-type frown.“At ease,Private.Tell me,is the general aboard?”

  “No, sir,” the sentry answered uneasily, “but he’s due soon.”

  Good! McCade felt downright jubilant. Things were definitely looking up. The sentry was their only remaining obstacle.

  McCade smiled disarmingly. “Excellent. I made it just in time. I have an important message for the general’s pilot. Is the pilot aboard?”

  The sentry remembered the somewhat arrogant cyborg who’d gone aboard earlier and shuddered. He didn’t like cyborgs. “Yes, sir, the pilot’s aboard, sir, but no one goes aboard without the correct code.”

  McCade nodded understandingly. “Of course, but this is an emergency. Why don’t you go aboard, tell the pilot I need to see him, and enjoy some of that nice cool air-conditioning? That way you obey orders, I get the message through, and there’s no harm done. I’ll stand guard in the meantime.”

  The sentry’s face worked along with his thoughts. This was a difficult situation. This was a captain and therefore a deity. The private didn’t wish to offend such a lofty being. But lofty or not, the captain was minus the necessary code, and other even higher gods must be taken into consideration. Their commands left no room for doubt. What about the captain’s proposal? Surely that was permissible.

  The sentry would enter the ship, careful to enjoy the air-conditioning for as long as possible, and find the pilot. The pilot would emerge, get the emergency message, and everything would be fine.

  The sentry grinned. “That should be fine, sir. Shall I leave my blast rifle with you?”

  McCade peered at the name embroidered just above the sentry’s left-hand breast pocket. “Good idea, Platz. That way I’ll have something a little more potent than my side arm in case there’s trouble.”

  Platz looked worried and McCade realized his mistake. “Not that there will be any trouble, mind you.” McCade waved toward their surroundings just as a Destroyer Escort roared into the sky. “I mean what could go wrong in the middle of all this?”

  Platz looked relieved as he removed his helmet, placed it on the stairs, and handed McCade his blast rifle. “There you go, sir...I’ll be right back.”

  The sentry’s boots made a clanging sound as he climbed the metal stairs.

  McCade looked at the command car and nodded toward the hatch.

  Phil slipped out of the vehicle, winked at McCade as he started up the stairs, and disappeared into the lock.

  McCade did his best to look sentrylike as he surveyed his surroundings. So far so good. The nearest ship was a reentry-scarred freighter. A group of techs were busily relining a tube with help from a sturdy-looking robot. They were completely uninterested in McCade’s activities.

  But then, just as McCade turned back toward the ship, he saw movement on the northern perimeter of the spaceport. It was a command car, newer then his, and flying some sort of pennant from a long whip-style antenna. The car was moving like a bat out of hell and heading straight at him. It didn’t take a genius to figure out who was in it. Mustapha Pong himself!

  In spite of Drang’s oppressive heat McCade felt suddenly cold. What to do? He couldn’t run, not with Phil trapped inside, and he couldn’t just stand there either.

  McCade heard a burst of static followed by some unintelligible gabble. The sentry’s helmet! They were calling Platz and warning him of Pong’s arrival. And unless they got some sort of answer, and got it real soon, all hell would break loose!

  McCade picked up the helmet, slipped it over his head, and pulled the visor down. The mirrorlike surface would cut the glare and would make him faceless besides. A female voice blasted both ears. “Platz! Wake up, you idiot! The general’s on the way.”

  McCade chinned the radio on. “I read you. The general’s on the way. Sorry...I had my helmet off for a moment.”

  “Yeah?” The voice came back, “Well, keep the damned thing on. You okay, Platz? You sound different.”

  “Just the heat I guess,” McCade mumbled. “I’ll be fine.”

  “If you say so,”the woman replied doubtfully.“I’ll bring you something to drink when I make my rounds. Take a salt tablet.”

  The radio clicked off and McCade snapped to attention. All he could do was pray that Pong didn’t notice his officer’s tabs, or try to speak with him.

  The command car came to a dignified halt. Pong got out, said something inaudible to the driver, and hurried toward the lock. The Melcetian didn’t like direct sunlight and urged him on. Pong didn’t even give McCade a second glance as he made his way up the stairs and disappeared into the lock. The moment Pong was gone the command car pulled away and headed toward one of the spaceport’s prefab buildings.

  McCade took one last look around to make sure no one was watching, slipped up the stairs, and entered the lock. It was well lit and, outside of some racked space suits, completely empty. Good. McCade palmed the control panel and heard the outer door close behind him.

  As he waited for the inner hatch to open, McCade removed the he
lmet, put it on a bench, and drew his slug gun. It had been the property of guard number one and it felt good in his hand.

  The inner hatch whirred open allowing a blast of cool air to fill the lock. Trying not to expose any more of his body than was absolutely necessary, Mc-Cade peeked into a long, narrow corridor and found himself looking straight down the barrel of a gun. A big gun in a furry paw. McCade gave a sigh of relief and stepped out of the lock.

  “What are you trying to do? Give me a heart attack?”

  Phil held a massive finger up to his muzzle and jerked his head toward the ship’s bow. McCade nodded and followed along behind as the variant moved up the corridor.

  Suddenly Phil paused, held up an enormous paw, and opened a door. McCade looked inside. Instead of the emergency equipment the locker was supposed to contain there was Platz, bound, gagged, and trying to signal Mc-Cade with his eyes.

  McCade smiled, winked, and closed the door. Thanks to Phil, the sentry was safely out of the way.

  From there the two of them eased their way up the corridor and paused outside the hatch marked Control Compartment. Pong was clearly visible. He and a humanoid-shaped cyborg were busy reviewing some date on the ship’s navcomp.

  McCade took one last look around, verified that no one was in sight, and got a nod from Phil. The variant had checked, and outside of the cyborg and Pong, they had the ship to themselves.

  McCade stepped into the control compartment and cleared his throat. Pong turned, clearly startled. McCade pointed his gun at the pirate’s chest and smiled.“Remember me? Surprise!”

  Twenty-Six

  Molly squirmed her way to the top of a low rise and peered through low-lying vegetation. A small valley was spread out in front of her, the same one she’d seen before, but from the opposite side. Although the light was dim Molly could see the gathering of boulders where the black thing lived, the hill where the strange-looking trees grew, and a small discontinuity that could be the lock. Molly was too far away to be absolutely sure.

 

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