A door-sized rectangle of the roof dropped into the building interior. Marines in battle suits, their armor protecting them against the glassy needles of polyborate, shrieking and spinning from the blast, criss-crossed the opened room with fire from their automatic rifles. Their helmet sensors gave them targets, or their nervousness squeezed the triggers without targets, and either way it gave the Weasels more to think about.
Similar bursts crackled from the other end of the roof, hidden by the Bonnie Parker and attenuated by the howl of her lift engines.
“Alpha ready!” on the command channel, First Platoon reporting. Kowacs could see the Marines poised to enter the hole they’d just blown in the roof.
“Beta ready!” The two squads of Second Platoon under their lieutenant, detailed to rappel down the sides of the windowless building and secure the exits so that the Weasels couldn’t get out among the helpless slaves in a last orgy of destruction.
“Kappa ready!” Third Platoon, whose strip charges had blown them an entrance like the one Kowacs could see First clustered around.
“Delta ready!” Heavy Weapons, now with a tripod-mounted plasma gun on each side of the roof. One of the weapons was crashing out bolts to support the units securing the perimeter.
“Gamma ready!” said Sergeant Bradley with a skull-faced grin at Kowacs from the stairhead where he waited with Sienkiewicz and the two remaining squads of Second Platoon.
“All units, go!” Kowacs ordered as he jogged toward the stairhead and Bradley blew its door with the strip charges placed but not detonated until this moment.
Three of Second’s assault squad hosed the opening. Return fire or a ricochet blasted sparks from the center Marine’s ceramic armor. He staggered but didn’t go down, and his two fellows lurched in sequence down the stairs their bulky gear filled.
“Ditch that!” Kowacs snarled to Sienkiewicz as she slung the plasma gun and cocked her automatic rifle.
“It’s my back,” she said with a nonchalance that was no way to refuse a direct order—
But which would do for now, because Kowacs was already hunching through the doorway, and she was right behind him. The air was bitter with residues of the explosive, but that was only spice for the stench of musk and human filth within.
You could make a case for the company commander staying on the roof instead of ducking into a building where he’d lose contact with supporting units and the high command in orbit.
Rank hath its privileges. For twelve years, the only privilege Kowacs had asked for was the chance to be where he had the most opportunity to kill Weasels.
The stairs were almost ladder-steep and the treads were set for the Khalia’s short legs. One of the clumsily armored Marines ahead of Kowacs sprawled onto all fours in the corridor, but there were no living Weasels in sight to take advantage of the situation.
Half a dozen of them were dead, ripped by the rifle fire that caught them with no cover and no hope. One furry body still squirmed. Reflex or intent caused the creature to clash its teeth vainly against the boot of the leading Marine as he crushed its skull in passing.
The area at the bottom of the short staircase was broken into a corridor with a wire-mesh cage to either side. The cage material was nothing fancier than hog fencing—these were very short-term facilities. The one on the left was empty.
The cage on the right had room for forty humans and held maybe half a dozen, all of them squeezed into a puling mass in one corner from fear of gunfire and the immediate future.
The prisoners were naked except for a coating of filth so thick that their sexes were uncertain even after they crawled apart to greet the Marines. There was a drain in one corner of the cage, but many of the human slaves received here in past years had been too terrified to use it. The Weasels didn’t care.
Neither did Kowacs just now.
“Find the stairs down—” he was shouting when something plucked his arm and he spun, his rifle-stock lifting to smash the Weasel away before worrying about how he’d kill it, they were death if you let ‘em touch you—
And it wasn’t a Khalian but a woman with auburn hair.
She’d reached through the fencing that saved her life when it absorbed the reflexive buttstroke that would have crushed her sternum.
“Bitch!” Kowacs snarled, more jarred by his mistake than by the shock through his weapon that made his hands tingle.
“Please,” the woman insisted with a throaty determination that overrode all the levels of fear that she must be feeling. “My brother, Alton Dinneen—don’t trust him. On your lives, don’t trust him!”
“Weasel bunkroom!” called one of the armored Marines who’d clumped down the corridor to the doorways beyond the cages. “Empty, though.”
“Watch for—” Kowacs said as he jogged toward them.
Bradley and Sienkiewicz were to either side and a half step behind him.
The Khalian that leaped from the ‘empty’ room was exactly what he’d meant to watch for.
A Marine screamed instinctively. There were four of them, all members of the assault squad burdened by their armor. The Weasel had no gun, just a pair of knives in his forepaws. Their edges sparkled against the ceramic armor—and bit through the joints.
Two of the Marines were down in seconds that blurred into eternity before Sergeant Bradley settled matters with a blast from his shotgun. The Marines’ armor glittered like starlit snow under the impact of Bradley’s airfoil charge. The Khalian, his knives lifted to scissor through a third victim, collapsed instead as a rug of blood-matted fur.
Cursing because it was his fault, he shouldn’t have let Marines manacled by twenty kilos of armor lead after the initial entry, Kowacs ran to the room in which the Weasel had hidden.
It was a typical Khalian nest. There was a false ceiling to lower the dimensions to Weasel comfort and a heap of bedding which his sensors, like those of the first Marine, indicated were still warm with the body heat of the Khalia who’d rushed into the corridor to be cut down in the first exchange of fire.
Except that one of the cunning little bastards had hidden under the bedding and waited …
You couldn’t trust your sensors, and you couldn’t trust your eyes—but you could usually trust a long burst of fire like the one with which Sienkiewicz now hosed the bedding. Fluff and wood chips fountained away from the bullets.
“Hey!” cried one of the assault squad who was still standing. Kowacs spun.
An elevator door was opening across the hall.
The startled figure in the elevator car was bare-chested but wore a red sleeve that covered his right arm wrist to shoulder. The Khalian machine-pistol he pointed might not penetrate assault-squad armor, but it would have stitched through Kowacs’ chest with lethal certainty if the captain hadn’t fired first. Kowacs’ bullets flung his target backward into the bloody elevator.
“Sir!” cried the Marine who hadn’t fired. “That was a friendly! A man!”
“Nobody’s friendly when they point a gun at you!”
Kowacs said. “Demo team! Blow me a hole in this fucking floor! “
Two Marines sprinted over, holding out the partial spools of strip-charge that remained after they blew down the door.
“How big—” one started to ask, but Kowacs was already anticipating the question with, “One by two—no, two by two!”
Kowacs needed a hole that wasn’t a suicidally small choke point when he and his troops jumped through it, but the floor here had been cast in the same operation as the roof and exterior walls. He was uneasily aware that the battering which gunfire and explosives were giving the structure would eventually disturb its integrity to the point that the whole thing collapsed.
Still, he needed a hole in the floor, because the only way down from here seemed to be the elevator which—
“Should I take the elevator, sir?” asked an armo
red Marine, anonymous behind his airfoil-scarred face shield.
“No, dammit!” Kowacs said, half inclined to let the damn fool get killed making a diversion for the rest of them. But the kid was his damn fool, and—
“Only young once,” muttered Sergeant Bradley in a mixture of wonder and disdain.
“Fire in the hole!” cried one of the Demolition Team. Kowacs squeezed back from the doorway to give the demo team room to jump clear, but the pair were too blase about their duties to bother. They twisted around and knelt with their hands over their ears before the strips blew and four square meters of flooring shuddered, tilted down—
And stuck. The area below was divided into rooms off-set from those of the upper floor. The thick slab of poly borate caught at a skewed angle, half in place and half in the room beneath.
An automatic weapon in that room fired two short bursts. A bullet ricocheted harmlessly up between the slab and the floor from which it had been blasted.
“Watch it!” said Sienkiewicz, unlimbering the plasma gun again. She aimed toward the narrow wedge that was all the opening there was into the lower room.
It was damned dangerous. If she missed, the bolt would liberate all its energy in the nest room, and the interior walls might not be refractory enough to protect Gamma.
But Sienkiewicz was good; and among other things, this would be a real fast way to silence the guns beneath before the Marines followed the plasma bolt.
The demo team sprinted into the corridor; Kowacs flattened himself against the wall he hoped would hold for the next microsecond; and the big weapon crashed a dazzling line through the hole and into the building’s lower story.
Air fluoresced at the point of impact and lifted the slab before dropping it as a load of rubble. Kowacs and Bradley shouldered one another in their mutual haste to be first through the opening. Sienkiewicz used their collision to lead them both by a half step, the plasma gun for the moment cradled in her capable arms.
It wasn’t the weapon for a point-blank firefight; but nothing close to where the bolt struck was going to be alive, much less dangerous.
Kowacs dropped through the haze and hit in a crouch on something that squashed under his boots. The atmosphere was so foul in the bolt’s aftermath that the helmet filters slapped across his mouth and nose in a hard wedge.
The Marines were in a good-sized—human-scale—room with a cavity in the floor. There was nothing beneath the cavity except earth glazed by the plasma bolt that had excavated it.
This was a briefing room or something of the sort; but it was a recreation room as well, for the chairs had been stacked along the walls before the blast disarrayed them, and two humans were being tortured on a vertical grid. The victims had been naked before the gush of sun-hot ions scoured the room, flensing to heat-cracked bones the side of their bodies turned toward the blast.
But the plasma gun hadn’t killed them. The victims’ skulls had been shattered by bullets, the bursts the Marines had heard the moment before Sienkiewicz blew them entry.
Several of the chairs were burning. They were wooden, handmade, and intended for humans. On the wall behind the grid was a name list on polished wood, protected from the plasma flux by the torture victims and a cover sheet of now bubbled glassine. The list was headed DUTY ROSTER.
In English, not the tooth-mark wedges of Khalian script. Each of the six other bodies the blast had caught wore a red right sleeve—or traces of red fabric where it had been shielded from the plasma. They had all been humans, including the female Kowacs was standing on. She still held the Khalian machine-pistol she had used to silence the torture victims.
“Renegades,” Sergeant Bradley snarled. He would have spat on a body, but his filters were in place.
“Trustees,” Kowacs said in something approaching calm.
“The Weasels don’t run the interior of the compound. They pick slaves of the right sort to do it. Let’s—”
He was looking at the door and about to point to it. More Marines were tumbling through the hole in the ceiling, searching for targets. The air had cleared enough now that Kowacs noticed details of the body flung into the doorway by the blast. Its arms and legs had been charred to stumps, and its neck was seared through to the point that its head flopped loose.
But the face was unmarked, and the features were recognizable in their family relationship to those of the woman caged upstairs.
Nobody had to worry about treachery by Alton Dinneen anymore.
“—go, Marines!” Kowacs completed. Because he’d hesitated momentarily, Bradley and Sienkiewicz were already ahead of him.
They were in a long hallway whose opposite wall was broken with doorways at short intervals. Somebody ducked out of one, saw the Marines, and ducked back in.
Bradley and Sienkiewicz flanked the panel in a practiced maneuver while Kowacs aimed down the corridor in case another target appeared. He hoped their backs were being covered by the Second Platoon Marines who’d been able to follow him. The survivors of the assault squad couldn’t jump through the ceiling unless they stripped off their battle suits first.
“Go!”
Sienkiewicz fired her rifle through the door panel and kicked the latch plate. As the door bounced open, Bradley tossed in a grenade with his left hand.
The man inside jumped out screaming an instant before the grenade exploded; Bradley’s shotgun disembowelled him.
They’d all seen the flash of a red sleeve when the target first appeared.
The trustee’s room had space for a chair, a desk, and a bed whose mattress had ignited into smoldering fire when the explosion lifted it.
He’d also had a collection of sorts hanging from cords above the bed. Human skin is hard to flay neatly, especially when it’s already been stretched by the weight of mammary glands, so the grenade fragments had only finished what ineptitude had begun.
Short bursts of rifle fire and the thump of grenades echoed up the corridor from where it kinked toward Third Platoon’s end of the building. Nobody’d had to draw those Marines a picture either.
First and Third would work in from the ends, but Kowacs didn’t have enough men under his direct command to clear many of the small individual rooms. He’d expected Weasel nests ...
But there were only two more doors, spaced wide apart, beside the briefing room in the visible portion of the hall.
“Cover us!” Kowacs ordered the squad leader from Second Platoon. “Both ways, and don’t shoot any Marines.”
In another setting, he’d have said “friendlies.” Here it might have been misconstrued.
His non-coms had already figured this one, flattening themselves to either side of the next door down from the briefing room. Kowacs’ fire and Sienkiewicz’ criss-crossed, stitching bright yellow splinters from the soft wood of the panel. Bradley kicked, and all three of them tossed grenades as the door swung.
There was no latch. The panel’s sprung hinges let the explosions bounce it open into the corridor with its inner face scarred by the shrapnel.
Kowacs and his team fanned through the door, looking for targets. Nothing was moving except smoke and platters jouncing to the floor from the pegs on which they’d been hanging. In the center of the floor was a range. There were ovens and cold-lockers along three of the walls.
Well, there’d had to be a kitchen, now that Kowacs thought about it.
The man hidden there picked the right time to wave his hand from behind the range that sheltered him—a moment after the Marines swung in, ready to blast anything that moved, but before a quick search found him and made him a certain enemy.
“Up!” Kowacs ordered. “Now!”
He was plump and terrified and hairless except for a wispy white brush of a moustache that he stroked with both hands despite obvious attempts to control the gesture.
“The rest of ‘em, damn you!” roared Bradley, aim
ing his shotgun at the corner of the range from which he expected fresh targets to creep.
“It’s only me!” the bald man blubbered through his hands.
“I swear to God, only me, only Charlie the Cook.”
Sienkiewicz stepped—she didn’t have to jump—to the range top. Her rifle was pointed down and the plasma gun, its barrel still quivering with heat, jounced against her belt gear.
“Clear!” she reported crisply. Charlie relaxed visibly, until he saw that Kowacs was reaching for the handle of the nearest cold-locker.
“Not me!” the civilian cried. “Charlie only does what he’s told, I swear to God, not—”
Sienkiewicz saw what was in the locker and saved Charlie’s life by kicking him in the teeth an instant before Bradley’s shotgun would have dealt with the matter in a more permanent way.
Heads, arms, and lower legs had been removed in the course of butchering, but there was no doubt that the hanging carcasses were human.
Kowacs stepped over to the sprawling prisoner and cradled his rifle muzzle at the base of the man’s throat. “Tell me you cooked for the Weasels,” he said quietly. “Just say the fucking words.”
“No-no-no,” Charlie said, crying and trying to spit up fragments of his broken mouth before he choked on them. “Not the Masters, never the Masters—they don’t need cooks. And never for me, never for Charlie, Charlie just—”
“Cap’n?” Bradley said with the hint of a frown now that he’d had time to think through his impulse of a moment before. Shooting a clearly unarmed captive ... “The, ah—”
He tapped the side of his helmet, where the recorder was taking down everything he said or did for after-action review by the brass.
Kowacs grabbed the prisoner by the throat and lifted him to his feet. Charlie was gagging, but the Marine’s blunt fingers weren’t stranglingly tight. Kowacs shoved the man hard, back into the open locker.
“We’ll be back for you!” he said as he slammed the door.
Someday, maybe.
Kowacs was shuddering as he ejected the partially fired magazine from his rifle and slammed in a fresh one. “Told a guy yesterday I’d seen everything the Weasels could do to human beings,” he muttered to his companions. “Guess I was wrong.”
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