“I’m sure they do, but that shouldn’t stop them from following legal process.”

“Legal process?” Michael rolled his eyes. “Oh, Francois, give me a break,” he said. “This is the fucking Hammers we are talking about. Like they give a damn about due legal process. Come on! They’re just trying to slow things down, that’s all.”

“Eh? Why would they do that?”

“So they can kidnap me and take me back to Commitment for a show trial, that’s why. Though why they’d bother, I don’t know. They’re going to kill me anyway.”

“Not sure I’d agree with that.” Hammel sounded skeptical.

“Ever been to the Hammer Worlds, Francois?”

A look of horror crossed the lawyer’s face. “Hell, no!”

“Ever met a Hammer?”

“No.”

“Heard of Doctrinal Security?”

“Of course. Who hasn’t?”

“Well, I’ve been to the Hammer Worlds.” Michael’s voice sharpened as anger took over. “I’ve met lots of Hammers, I’ve been a prisoner, I’ve been tortured by DocSec, and I still carry the scars to prove it. So you should believe me when I tell you that those bastards will come after me, and it won’t be to read me bedtime stories.”

“All right, all right,” Hammel said, his hands up, “I believe you. But what can your embassy do?”

“Maybe nothing, but it’s worth asking them to lean on the Jamudans to beef up security around here. From what I’ve seen, a Hammer hit team would have no trouble getting into this place.”

“Fine,” Hammel said with a sigh. “I’ll contact the embassy. You want to talk to them direct?”

“I think that would be best.”

“It won’t be easy, but leave it to me.”

The cell door swung open, and a guard stuck his head in. “Let’s go, Helfort. You have a visitor.”

“About bloody time,” Michael muttered. He got to his feet and followed the man out of the cell and down the corridor to the interview room, a cramped space cut in half by a floor-to-ceiling plasglass divider.

A woman was waiting for him; she looked unhappy. “I’m Colonel K’zekaa,” she said once Michael had sat down. “You asked to see me?”

“I did, sir. Thanks for coming.”

“Not my decision, Helfort,” K’zekaa said, her voice tight, controlled.

“I’m still glad to see you,” Michael said. He wondered just who had leaned on K’zekaa; the woman’s body language screamed her protest. “Did my lawyer give you the background?”

“He did, and I am not convinced that you are at any risk from the Hammers … or anyone else, come to that. Jamuda is a neutral system, Helfort, and I am sure the Hammers will respect that. They’re not complete animals, you know,” K’zekaa added with a condescending curl of the lip.

Michael stared wide-eyed at the woman. “Not complete animals?” he snarled. “You are fucking joking.”

“I am not in the habit of saying things I do not mean, Helfort. And watch your language.”

You are such a pompous asshole, Michael thought, all his good intentions flying out the window. If the woman wanted a fight, he’d give her a fight. “You’re a colonel in planetary defense, am I right?” he asked.

K’zekaa frowned, clearly puzzled by Michael’s sudden change of tack. “Yes, I am. But I don’t see what that’s-”

“I’ll tell you what it’s got to do with things … sir,” he said, using the pause to make certain K’zekaa did not miss the calculated insult.

K’zekaa didn’t; her face flushed with anger.

“So far as I know,” Michael continued, “planetary defense has not seen much combat against the Hammers, so I’m guessing that means you haven’t either.”

“I don’t like your tone, Helfort.”

“Like I give a shit, Colonel. You are yet another rear-echelon motherfucker, so don’t talk to me about the Hammers. I know them, I’ve fought them, I’ve been wounded by them, I’ve been tortured by them, so you can trust me when I tell you that you are wrong. They are animals, and they will come for me. So you can either get off your ass and do something to help keep me alive or piss off and leave me to take my chances. Your call. Which is it to be?”

K’zekaa sat staring at Michael, her mouth working as his angry tirade washed over her. It was a while before she could speak.

“I will ignore all that. You are in enough trouble as it is, so I will put it down to the stress you must be under …”

“Thank you so much,” Michael muttered, his voice all acid.

“… but it does not change my view. The chances of the Hammers coming for you are remote, so you have nothing to worry about. And that’s not just my opinion. It’s the embassy’s opinion as well. But I will do one thing, Helfort: I will pass your concerns on to the people responsible for security around here. Provided they are not insulted by your lack of faith in their ability to protect you-and I wouldn’t blame them if they were-maybe they will take steps to address those concerns, however ill considered they might be.” K’zekaa stood and pushed her chair back. “And don’t talk to me about what I have and have not done, Helfort, because I have always done my duty … which is more than I can say for you.”

With that, K’zekaa turned, banged on the door to be let out, and was gone the instant the door opened.

I do like it when things go well, Michael thought, the anger-pumped adrenaline in his system ebbing fast. Now what would he do? The Hammers would come-of that he was certain-and he did not want to find himself alone and cornered in his cell like a rat when they did.

But just how he could avoid that fate, he had no idea.

Friday, May 24, 2402, UD

Kovak Remand Center

Michael cringed as he stepped into the sunshine to cross to the slab-sided mobibot waiting to take him to court.

He could not help himself. To the north, the remand center was overlooked by a park that rose to a ridge and by commercial buildings to the west and south. A hit team in any of those places would see him. They’d have to be blind not to; the fluorescent orange jumpsuit he was forced to wear as a dangerous, high-flight-risk Category 1 remand prisoner would make sure of that.

And the bad guys would know what time he would be returning after his hearing: the minute the mobibot left Kovak’s courts complex. The Hammer hit team would plenty of time to set up.

Michael stepped up into the mobibot’s coolness. He allowed the guard to push him into his wire-mesh cage. As usual, the man used more force than he had to. Michael did not complain; not only was it pointless, it provoked the guards. Today he was the last one in, the cages around him full of prisoners headed for their day in court, his arrival greeted as always with a mix of abuse and welcome. Michael ignored it. It was the same old bullshit, and it took a while for him to realize that the prisoner next to him-like Michael, a Cat 1 prisoner in orange-was trying to get his attention, the man’s face hard up against the micromesh between their cages.

“Helfort,” he whispered. “For fuck’s sake, talk to me.”

“What do you want? Who are you?”

“I’m Max Hardy. I’ve got a message for you. I-”

“Who from?”

“Don’t know; doesn’t matter, so listen up. There’s to be an attack on the bot-” Michael’s heart began to pound; he wondered how he’d survive handcuffed inside a cage. “-just before we get to the court, as we approach Shanghai Boulevard.”

“Thanks for the heads-up, but what am I supposed to do?” Michael demanded. “I’m not going anywhere.” He rattled his wrist and ankle chains to reinforce the point.

“Pull your chains apart. Pull hard.”

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