through an ash tree.
And crashed facefirst into the bole.
The impact sent him sprawling backwards. He tasted blood, but not the copper tingle of the Gotterelektron. All he could feel was the searing pain of an exposed nerve in his jaw. He'd cracked a tooth in half.
He rolled over to check his battery gauge. It was dead. It had lost nearly three-quarters of its charge in an instant. Head pounding, he climbed to his feet and switched over to his second battery. This one was low, too, but usable.
Klaus turned to run after the man who had fled. He stopped short, and almost fell for a second time, because Gretel had come up behind him.
“Careful, brother.”
“Gretel? What are you doing out here? It's not safe.”
“Kammler needs your help. Go, quickly now.”
As Klaus set off to cut through the battery stores, he said over his shoulder, “Go back inside the farmhouse, Gretel. It's safe there.”
She might have responded with her accursed little half smile, but it was too dark to see for certain.
The pixie emitted a burst of violet light when it exploded. The spotlights died in the same instant. The combination left Will blinking furiously, trying to banish the spots behind his eyes.
The tree stump behind which he and Marsh huddled hadn't disintegrated yet. Nor had any of the adjacent underbrush.
Next, he noticed the smells: ozone, sharp enough to sting, and entrails. Poor Lorimer.
“T-t-t-t—”
“SCHEISSE!”
Will peeked over the stump. The yellow glow from the farmhouse windows silhouetted their assailants. The pixies, he knew, were tailored to knock out the batteries. The farmhouse appeared unaffected. The spotlights had been much closer, and had taken the brunt of the EMP.
The leash-holder cursed in a constant stream of German while he fidgeted with something on the belt of the collared man. His battery, presumably. He was having trouble because the collared man wouldn't stand still. He ambled back and forth, stuttering.
Marsh took a shooting position. He rested his rifle on the stump and sighted along the barrel. He hardly seemed to breathe.
Will had seen men die to night, and more men than that had died by his own hand these past months. Always at a distance, of course. But Marsh didn't flinch from killing. It showed Will a side of the man he'd never known. The same sense of focus was there, but now it was alloyed with something dispassionate, too.
No. Not dispassionate. A deceptively quiet rage. The man carried thoughts of his daughter. The look on his face made that much clear. It was a look that Will hoped Marsh would never direct at him.
Marsh fired. The side of the leash-holder's head erupted in a fine mist. He fell to the snow, unmoving.
“Damn it! Damn it, damn it,” Marsh muttered as he worked the bolt.
The collared man stuttered more loudly. It was a mournful, distraught kind of sound.
“B-b-b-b-b—”
Marsh prepared another shot. While he aimed, another figure emerged through the wall of a long, low building and dashed across the field. “Kammler!” He leapt and grabbed the stutterer just as Marsh fired. A window behind the pair shattered.
The insubstantial man did something to the stutterer's belt. The stutterer—his name was Kammler, apparently—knelt next to the body of his companion. “Bu-buh-g-g-g-”. It sounded like he was crying. He seemed to have lost his interest in fighting.
The insubstantial man turned and headed for Will and Marsh's position. Somebody behind and to the right of them fired—the squad had been whittled down three or four people by now—but it had no effect.
Will looked around for the second pixie. It was nowhere to be seen. It had been caught up in the destruction of the woods.
Marsh recognized the man advancing on his position. The very same bastard had rescued Gretel, and in the process led Marsh on a wide-ranging chase through the Admiralty.
Marsh scanned through the mental list of things he'd learned from that experience.
Why didn't the pixie knock out his battery as it had with the stutterer? It seemed they were carrying spares. The man Marsh had shot—
With luck, the pixie had taken a toll on the spare, too, although Lorimer and the science boffins had designed the pixies assuming the batteries would be in use when the pulse hit them. They'd have to drain it the hard way.
“Everybody, fire!” Gunfire echoed from two positions in the wood behind him. Marsh lobbed a Mills bomb at the advancing fellow, but of course it had no effect other than to force him to stay incorporeal.
“Maybe, Pip,” said Will, “this would be a good time to leave.”
Will was huddled behind the stump, watching the man coming closer and closer. One hand held the cleft stone to his chest; the other held his revolver. Both hands shook.
If Will died, there'd be no going home for anybody.
“Stay down,” said Marsh. “Don't let them see you. And for God's sake, don't lose that bloody stone.”
Marsh stood.
Will said, “Are you daft? What are you doing?”
“If you die, we all do. Now stay down and shut up.”
Marsh took off at a dead run along the edge of the wood. He hoped the Jerry bastard would recognize him, and that he had a taste for irony. He did. On both counts.
Marsh ran east, drawing his pursuer away from Will. His best hope—a feeble, fleeing hope—was to lose himself in the shadows between the buildings. With luck, he might find the battery store house before they caught him.
Once around the corner and out of sight, he took a phosphorus grenade from his belt and lobbed it toward the outer wall of the closest building. Toward where, if
The grenade hissed out hot, dense white smoke that glistened like a pea-soup fog in the moonlight. Moments later a human figure emerged through the wall. The cloud eddied around him.
Marsh heard a gasp, a violent cough, and then his pursuer leapt back inside.
A Mills could have finished the bastard off for certain, but it might have turned out to be a waste of good explosives. Marsh wanted to save what little he had left in case he could find the battery stores.
He set off to do that. And tripped over something very warm that crumbled under his weight. Marsh had to stare for a moment before recognizing it as a human body, charcoal-black and curled tightly in the fetal position. It smelled like charred pork. Bodies like this littered the field.
Somewhere, back toward where he'd first arrived, where he'd left Will, a roar shook the earth. The cacophony of gunfire and explosions started anew.
He considered going for the dead squad's pixies, but the ground had been seared into ash for fifty feet in all directions. No doubt their pixies had burned, too. But where was the man who had done this? He thought back to the Tarragona filmstrip, and a man with pale, pale eyes.
Marsh crept through a cluster of darkened buildings, looking for anything that might have suggested a