direction. Shooting up and to the left, he disappeared up into the puff-tree's branches.

The soldiers, facing the wrong direction, saw none of it. But they could hear just fine; and as they spun back around they could see the shower of leaves drifting down from the springy tree. 'Sir!' one of them snapped.

'He's gone!' someone else barked. 'What the—?'

'Over there,' the first soldier said, pointing toward the springy tree with his gun. 'Barkin, Schmidt—check it out. Watch for more booby traps. Tomasaki, keep your eyes open. It might be a diversion.'

Two of the soldiers ran toward the springy tree, alternately peering up into the branches and watching the ground where they were walking. The other two crouched low where they were, facing opposite directions with their guns held ready.

Keeping to the cover of the underbrush, Draycos crept out of the sentry cage and made a wide circle back toward the pufF-top tree. The patrol soldiers knew their business, all right. They'd quickly guessed the style of snare trap he'd just sprung on their commander.

The only trouble was, they were looking for him in the wrong tree.

He reached the pufF-top tree about the same time they arrived at their own destination. Putting the trunk between him and the two guards, he started up. If either of the soldiers at the springy tree happened to turn around, he knew, they would spot him easily. But with their attention elsewhere, he wasn't expecting either to do so.

And they didn't. He made it to the safety of the branches while they were still staring uselessly skyward.

The commander was hanging limply out of sight among the leaves, bobbing a little as the springy tree branch across the way waved gently in the breeze. Draycos got him up and lying securely across the branches, then cut the cable.

He climbed a little higher into the tree, coiling the cable as he went. He wasn't really expecting the soldiers to go so far as to climb the springy tree in their search for their missing commander. Still, it was a possibility; and if they did, he didn't want them tracing the cable back here. Moving out onto one of the branches, he lobbed the coil across into the upper part of the Argus tree.

'He's not here,' one of the soldiers at the springy tree reported.

'That's impossible,' the first soldier insisted. 'Check it again.'

'I did,' the other said. 'Twice, visual and IR both. He's not up there.'

The first soldier swore. 'A diversion, all right. Okay, spread out. Let's find him.'

'Right. Better call it in.'

'No kidding,' the first said sarcastically. 'Base, this is Hernandez. We've got a problem.'

Listening to the conversation with half an ear, Draycos climbed back down to the unconscious commander. The human was wearing two separate comm clips, he discovered. Even with them turned off, they might be traceable.

Easily dealt with. K'da forelegs were too short for him to throw anything that light very far, but there were other ways. Making sure the comm clips were turned off, he placed them together and wrapped them in the tip of his tail. A quick flip, sling-fashion, and they sailed off into the night.

Using the short length of cable still looped under the commander's arms, Draycos tied the human's wrists and ankles. One of his pockets yielded a headband, while another contained a handkerchief. The handkerchief made an adequate gag; the headband was quite suitable for securing the man's hood down over his eyes.

And now all that was left was to wait for the search to burn itself out and move to another area. Crawling onto the underside of the branches, he found himself some convenient claw-grips directly beneath the commander.

After all, the searchers might eventually think to look up into this tree. And as Jack had pointed out, a K'da heat profile did not look anything like a human's.

An hour, he estimated, and he and Jack would be free to move again. Stretching his muscles once, he settled down to wait.

Chapter 23

The commander was awake by the time Jack let go of Draycos's tail and got himself seated more or less securely on the branches facing him. 'You sure there isn't anyone else around?' he muttered as Draycos climbed around behind the prisoner.

The dragon shook his head, but remained silent. Jack understood; he didn't want the prisoner to hear his voice. 'Okay,' he said briskly. 'Let's get this over with.' Grabbing hold of the cable tying the man's wrists together, he started to pull him up into a sitting position.

The other responded by trying to grab Jack's hand. 'Hey, hey, take it easy,' Jack warned, yanking his hand back out of reach. 'Don't struggle or try anything stupid. You're fifty feet off the ground in a very leaky tree.'

The man seemed to see the logic in that. He grunted behind his gag and subsided. 'All we want is a little chat,' Jack went on, pulling him upright again. This time the other didn't struggle. 'A quiet little chat,' he added. 'You try shouting for help and we'll have to shut you up. A fair chance we'll lose your balance in the process. Understand?'

The man grunted again. Jack glanced at Draycos, making sure the dragon was standing ready but out of the prisoner's sight. Then, reaching over, he pulled off the gag.

'Montana?' the other rumbled, his voice the croak of a man with too dry a mouth. He worked his lips a moment and tried again. 'It's Montana, isn't it?' he demanded.

Jack started. He knew that voice. 'Colonel Elkor?' he asked, pulling off the headband and lifting the man's hood.

It was Colonel Elkor, all right, glaring at Jack like he was trying to push him out of the tree by sheer willpower. 'Well, well,' Jack said, filling in time as he tried to get his brain rebooted. He'd expected Sergeant Grisko or maybe Lieutenant Basht to be leading this charge. To have a full colonel show up meant this was bigger than he'd thought.

'You're a pretty big fish to be flopping around in this size pond,' he went on. 'I guess I never saw you as the great outdoors type.'

'I wondered about you,' Elkor growled. 'So is Kayna working for you? Or is it the other way around?'

He started to turn. Draycos batted him warningly against the side of the head and he seemed to think better of the idea. 'I'll bet it's Kayna who's calling the shots,' he decided. 'Who are you working for? The Shamshir, or someone else?'

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