wanted, or you could stay. Either way I’ll help you to help us.”

“How can you help me?” she asked.

“By giving you lots of money, for one thing.”

“But I’d have the monitors hunting for me,” she said. “What’s to keep me from going to Hansen and baring all in order to get back into his good graces?”

“Well…” Marten said, trying to think of something.

“If we get caught,” Omi said, “we’ll talk and bring everyone down with us. The Highborn hate dream dust. Your only hope is that we don’t get caught.”

“Or that the monitors kill you,” she said.

Marten grinned. “That won’t be so easy for them.”

“No,” she said, “I suppose not.” She thought about it while chewing her lower lip. “There is the possibility that Dalt and Methlen were dragging me to that corridor to have me killed, right?”

“Who?” asked Marten.

“Dalt and Methlen,” she said. “The monitors you two took out.”

“I’d say without a doubt they were going to kill you,” Omi said.

She heaved a mournful sigh. “Either way it’s dangerous. But…” She eyed Marten. He smiled. She smiled back, before frowning and looking away. “I don’t really trust Hansen. I keep getting the feeling they plan on covering their tracks soon.”

“You’ll help us?” Marten asked.

“At least to hit this place,” she said.

“We’d better hurry,” Omi said.

“One thing,” Marten said.

“What?”

“Do they have any vacc suits there?”

She shrugged. “Two or three are usually lying around. Why?”

“I’ll tell you after we’re done,” Marten said.

9.

Nadia was nervous. Stay calm, stay calm, she told herself. Fortunately, she remembered the code-knock. She wore her cap low so they wouldn’t see the fear in her eyes or that her face was pale. The door opened and Omi and Marten followed her in.

Their projacs hissed. Men and women standing at tables chopping and packaging dust fell. One monitor to the side wore body-armor. Omi shot him in the face. Marten bounded across the room, diving as a man popped up over a heavy box.

“Hey!” shouted Omi.

The monitor swiveled a las-rifle at the Korean shock trooper. Marten rolled around the box and pumped shots into the man’s side.

Then silence filled the large room, what was a former engineer tool shed. Marten and Omi checked every corner, then every person and that they were out. The man Omi shot in the face was dead.

“You switched clips,” Nadia whispered, staring at the corpse.

“No,” Omi said, kneeling beside him. “A sliver went through his eye and must have lodged in his brain.”

Marten overturned boxes. Then he shouted and showed Omi a vacc suit.

“Is it good?” asked Omi.

Marten checked it. “It’s good.” He laughed and turned to Nadia. “Help us stuff dust into these suits.”

She continued to stare at the dead man, a monitor, wondering what that meant for her future.

“Help us,” Omi said, who already grabbed baggies and shoved them down a vacc suit.

They worked in silence, until two suits were full. They lifted the suits and put them in a box marked as sealant. Marten rolled out a trolley and hefted the box onto it. “Let’s go,” he said.

“I don’t get it,” she said, bewildered at their speed and professionalism. “If you’re not going to sell the dream dust, why take it? Why not burn it?”

“I want them to think we hit for the dust,” Marten said. “Now do you notice this box?”

She nodded.

“You’re going to make sure it ends up at Dock 10, Bay EE. Think you can do that?”

“What if someone opens it?” she asked.

“That’s my worry.”

“What if I take the dust?” she said.

“Then Omi comes hunting for you.”

Nadia studied the muscle-bound Korean, and told Marten, “He would never be able to find me.”

“Hansen could,” Marten said.

“He can anyway,” she said.

“Maybe not,” Marten said. “I know of a few hideaways I bet no one else does. You could go there.”

“Then I lose my job,” she said.

Marten went to a table and scooped up handfuls of plastic credits, shoving them into a sack. He brought her the sack. “Do you think you can last on those awhile?”

“Why don’t you come with me?” she said, hefting the sack, liking its weight.

“Not yet,” Marten said.

“These won’t last me forever,” she said.

“But for several weeks it should.”

“You can get us out of the Sun Works Factory in several weeks?”

“Are you a gambler?” he asked.

She stared at him. “I listened to Hansen’s recruitment speech. So I guess I am.”

“I can get us out of here in several weeks,” Marten said. “At least now I can, and with your help.”

She peered at the box on the trolley. Finally, she thought she understood. “You want the vacc suits. None of this is about dream dust.” She squinted. Could she trust him? He looked trustworthy. But what did that mean? She reexamined the dead monitor, and all those lying in drugged sleep. In a fight, she’d never seen anything like these two. “I’ll give you the three weeks,” she whispered. “But if you’re wrong…”

“I’m not wrong,” Marten said. He pushed the trolley toward the door and Omi followed.

10.

They left Nadia and reentered the Pleasure Palace, Level 49.

“Our luck can’t hold,” Omi said.

“We’re not using luck,” Marten said. “Speed and surprise, and savagery, those are our tools. The only luck we had was running into Hansen. Everything else we’ve taken.”

Marten studied the crowds, the costumes, and the gaiety, the drunkenness and drugged hyperactivity. Women laughed as men pawed them. Musicians danced as they piped a merry tune or strummed guitars. Comedians with senso-masks acted out plays and scenes on various corners. Jugglers juggled holocubes imaged to look like naked women or flickering suns or black holes that swirled with ultimate destruction. Over it, festive lights sparkled with colors.

It was strange walking in the Pleasure Palace, knowing that around them were thousands of miles of empty corridors, holding bays and ore bins. For a moment, Marten felt surreal. With an effort of will, he shook off the feeling.

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