frenchy. Ah, — what risks do we run if I warm the 'cycle engine up inside the elevator?'

The elevator door ghosted aside and in the now-illumined space they finished positioning the 'cycle.

Chabrier flicked studs, watched the door close. 'If it is not terribly loud, go ahead.'

Quantrill waved his companion against the far wall, seated his handgun, primed the engine and kick-started its muffled engine after several tries while the elevator slid upward. He jerked a thumb overhead: 'You're sure we won't meet some goons up there?'

'I shall cut the lights beforehand, to be certain. The perimeter guards make their rounds at various times, but they know me. In any case, the fools drive about with lights blazing. Bear in mind that I am as anxious as you, M'sieur.'

'Do you mean to tell me there are no guards at all inside this lab?'

'None. Boren Mills has — ways — to ensure a kind of loyalty, and the desert itself is a barrier. Plus guards who shoot to kill if one is caught outside, and of course the particle-beam towers.'

Quantrill tested the diesel's supercharger; folded back the fore and aft covers from the munitions pods that lay against the forward fan skirts. The beam-seeking munitions were rocket-propelled 30 mm.

Canadian Homingbirds, fitted with carbon shields over their sensors. With its internal vanes, a Homingbird could jitter in flight in a preprogram that could defeat most beam weapons — unless the beam struck precisely, the first time. Its range was under a kilometer, but if fired in volleys the little rockets simply overwhelmed a laser, maser, or P-beam weapon's ability to readjust its aim.

Best of all, the dilating rocket nozzle permitted the little rounds to loiter in flight for several seconds, tempting enemy fire. When that fire came, the surviving Homingbirds went swarming in on full boost with shaped charges. Canada still lacked the solid-state technology of Streamlined America, but she knew how to make weapons dumb enough to sacrifice and smart enough to win.

'I am cutting the lights,' Chabrier warned, and Quantrill saw tears coursing down the man's blue-whiskered cheeks.

Not one but two sides of the cargo elevator slid back; Quantrill ducked low, blinking in a darkness that brightened as his eyes adjusted. The moon helped a little. The breeze was summer-soft, and from their prominence atop the lab berm they spied moving lights two klicks distant and moving away. 'The patrol,'

Chabrier sniffled, and cleared his throat. 'They could return in less than an hour.'

'Oh, I think we can count on that,' Quantrill chuckled, revving up the fans. 'Get on behind my seat, man, what the hell are you waiting for?'

Chabrier's hands squeezed and grappled at one another. 'Go to a safe distance and wait for me,' he pleaded. 'Please, I beg you; I am not a murderer! I cannot just let my fellows die like vermin.' He waited for an answer; got none. 'I shall not tell them that you exist; only that Boren Mills has arranged our deaths as we all knew he would.' Voice rising to a tortured baying: 'At least give them a chance! They are prisoners, you dirty boche! Slaves! All they can do is run!'

'Tell 'em to scatter in different directions, not to travel in daylight, and especially not to be found by black search aircraft,' Quantrill said in anger and resignation. 'Truth is, Chabrier, they have about ten minutes.' He thought it might really be nearer twenty.

He listened to Chabrier chatter into his control module, the Frenchman standing on one foot and then the other as if the elevator floor were hot lava. Slow-moving, emotional, untrained with the weapons of single combat: Chabrier was all of these, but his courage in behalf of alien slaves filled Quantrill with a bitter envy. The good Samaritan, it seemed, had his counterpart among the minions of Boren Mills.

The elevator's panel speaker erupted in jabbers that Quantrill did not understand. He understood one thing: the staff was staging their own Chinese fire-drill somewhere below. Chabrier spoke their tongue in staccato bursts, repeated one phrase, then leaped from the platform as the doors began to close. He ran the few steps to the hovercycle, scrambled aboard; cried, 'Avance; vorwarts; GO, for God's sake!'

Quantrill went.

As the vehicle gained headway, Chabrier leaned forward and called over the whoosh of fans, 'The perimeter fence is high and very near. If we cannot go over it, how will you get through?'

'Now you tell me,' Quantrill snarled, throttling back, letting go of one handlebar to rummage blindly in the toolbox near his feet. Chabrier pointed to a dim moonlit tracery of rectangular mesh ahead, fully five meters high with steel pipe bracing at intervals. He shut off the machine, let it settle, swung his chemlamp to study the barrier.

'Be assured that if we cut it, we will alert the guards,' said Chabrier quickly.

Quantrill saw that they were still too near the lab for safety. 'Where are the nearest guards and how soon can they get here?'

'Halfway to the North gate. The patrol is probably halfway there now and they may need ten minutes to return from there.'

'In other words, if we wait five minutes we'll have the longest head start.'

'Do we dare?'

'Relax; we dare. I promise, the detonators won't pop for another ten minutes. At least that's what I was promised. Who the fuck knows?'

Quantrill unrolled a coil of tubing the thickness of a finger and ten meters long; gave another to Chabrier, demonstrating how to string the tubing in a great 'U' against the steel fence. As always, Quantrill readied two escape holes in case one, for whatever reason, failed. Pressure-sensitive tape crossing the tube gave it the appearance of barbed wire, but was only an aid in holding the tubing against tree trunk, fence, or door facing.

To Chabrier's query the younger man said, 'Plastiquord — an improvement you French made on Primacord. When you pull the pin at the end you get ten seconds before it blows, and it'll sever two-centimeter steel bars. Just make sure it's snug against the fencewire, and let me pull the pin.'

'That honor is all yours,' Chabrier muttered, peering at his handiwork, readjusting a corner curl of the tube as if neatness counted. Quantrill checked the work; saw nothing to criticize. Near the midpoint at the crossbar of each 'U' he tied a monofilament cord to the fence and let it trail back on the ground.

The hovercycle was running again when a muffled thump from above the earthen berm made them glance back to the lab. The cargo elevator again stood in the open, a square of blackness against the night sky.

'Uh-oh,' said Quantrill, who leaped to pull the delay pins; proved that he could duck trot as he dodged behind the 'cycle. '… Eight, nine, ten, elev—' he said as the first report ripped the calm. The second blast came a second later.

Quantrill burst from his cover to grapple with the monofilament cord, hauling backward with all his strength. Chabrier knew the fence was not electrified enough to deliver a shock — but the little saboteur hadn't asked him. Chabrier helped fold the severed mesh back by sheer force. Tied back by the cord, the mesh yawned open and, seeing several dim figures hurtling down the berm toward them, Quantrill vaulted onto his seat.

'Those guys are on their own now,' he called, floating his vehicle through the hole. 'Get aboard, Chabrier, before they swamp us!'

Moments later the two men hummed away without lights, building up to a speed so great that Chabrier was sure they could not avoid an obstacle if one did loom ahead. Quantrill squinted at a small box riveted on his instrument panel; twisted a vernier knob until an orange light glowed; readjusted so that the light barely flickered. With Chabrier's extra weight, the 'cycle's engine worked harder to keep its distance from the hardpan, and their speed seldom exceeded highway norms across the desert expanse. They were not yet ten klicks from the lab when a flash at their backs lit the terrain. Quantrill glanced back, thrust a fist aloft in triumph; far behind them, in splendid silence, a massive roil of crimson and yellow arose from the desert floor in a fireball that darkened as they watched.

Quantrill, over the engine noise: 'Looked like an oil storage dump. Ammonium nitrate doesn't go up like that.'

'Monomers and diesel fuel tanks buried outside in the berm, mon ami; it would appear that you are damnably thorough.'

Turning again to the west, Quantrill laughed outright. 'You should be cheering, frenchy; weren't you a prisoner too?'

'All that work, all that experimental data — one hates to see it lost.'

'Mills's enemies don't hate to see it lost — and that means most of Streamlined America.'

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