'Damned strange. I would have expected him to have told me.'
Pigna shrugged. 'He did say that this was a test of readiness, so perhaps that's why you were not informed.'
'Maybe. I hope no blood is spilled by mistake because people were not informed.'
'Oh, I understand that he or someone will be speaking tomorrow morning. It should be all right.'
Lourdes never noticed that her knees were covered in McNamara's blood. Perhaps she avoided looking down instinctively. Instead, she paced frantically about the room she shared with Patricio. She heard her children and Arti's crying in the room next door. She went to the adjoining door and opened it, only to be met by a grim faced guard who pointed her back to her own room. Behind that guard, two others were laying Artemisia down on one of the children's single beds.
She picked up the phone.
Quarters 39, Fort Williams, Balboa
So far as he was aware, Colonel Munoz-Infantes didn't have a single reason to worry about much of anything. Oh, yes, that skinny frog, Janier, had it in for him, but no more than he, the Castilian, had it in for the frog and the Tauran Union. Yes, he was passing information to the other side, but that was an old Tauran tradition, and something the bureaucrats who ran the place would be loathe to curtail. Besides, he
'I can't see that happening, though,' the colonel told Victor Chapayev. 'We're Taurans; we all hate each other, deep down. I mean . . . maybe if we had an outside enemy threatening us. Maybe.'
Maria, the colonel's daughter, hadn't yet stalked off as she usually did. Instead she sat quietly on a chair opposite her father and Victor. Her father had had a very long and not particularly pleasant chat with her on the subjects of rudeness, honor, and the duties owed to one's father and one's guests. She still thought that the work Victor was engaged in was vile, even if he seemed nice enough.
'On the other hand,' the colonel continued, 'we've got an inside enemy—the bureaucrats of the TU—and that hasn't brought us together.'
'The Tauran Union is
'So say the schools that propagandized you since you were a girl,' her father answered, calmly. 'Personally, I think it was a combination of Federated States occupation troops and the external threat of the Red Tsar that kept us from each others' throats and that the TU was a beneficiary of that but had absolutely nothing to do with causation.'
'And then there's the corruption that permeates . . .'
'I'll get it, father,' Maria said, rising to answer a knock at the door.
'No, never mind,' Munoz-Infantes insisted, likewise rising. 'I'll get it. It's probably business anyway.'
He walked to the door and undid the latch. As soon as he had, the door swung open
'Colonel Munoz-Infantes,' said one of the
At that, Maria fainted.
* * *
The colonel was being dragged down the walkway when Maria came to. Chapayev made sure she was all right, then reached under his uniform tunic to take his service pistol in hand.
'What are you doing?' she asked.
'Didn't you notice that those men were in your country's uniform but had the local accent? That was no legitimate arrest.'
'Bu . . . but
'That I don't know, but I do know your father's been a good friend to me and I'm not going to see him dragged