for the floor as Bothari’s suddenly feral face leaned into his. “What happened?”

“One of Vordarian’s squads picked up that fellow. Looks like he led them back to his partner, too.” The ’keep’s voice wavered between anger and fear. “They’ve got them both, and I’ve got nothing!”

“Got them?” Cordelia repeated sickly.

“Picking ’em off right now, damn it.”

There might still be a chance, Cordelia realized. Command decision or tactical compulsion, it hardly mattered now. She grabbed a stunner out of the satchel; Bothari stepped back and she buzzed the ’keep where he stood openmouthed. Bothari shoved his inert form behind the desk. “We have to try for them. Drou, break out the rest of the weapons. Sergeant, lead us there. Go!”

And so she found herself running down the street toward a scene any right-minded Barrayaran would run the other way to avoid, a night-arrest by security forces. Drou kept up with Bothari; Koudelka, burdened with the satchel, lagged behind. Cordelia wished the mist were thicker.

The Vorpatrils’ bolt-hole turned out to be two blocks down and one over, in a shabby narrow building much like the one they’d spent the day in. Bothari held up a hand, and they peered cautiously around the corner, then drew back. Two Security groundcars were parked out front of the little hostel, covering the entrance. But for themselves, the area was strangely deserted. Koudelka came panting up behind.

“Droushnakovi,” said Bothari, “circle around. Get a cross-fire position covering the other side of those groundcars. Watch out, they’re sure to have men at the back door.”

Yes, street tactics were clearly Bothari’s call. Drou nodded, checked her weapons’ charges, and walked as if casually across the corner, not even turning her head. Once out of the enemy’s line of sight, she flowed into a silent run.

“We got to get a better position,” Bothari muttered, risking his head once more around the corner. “Can’t bloody see.”

“A man and a woman walk down the street,” Cordelia visualized desperately. “They stop to talk in a doorway. They goggle curiously at the security men, who are engrossed in their arrest—would we pass?”

“Not for long,” said Bothari, “once they spot our energy weapons on their area scanners. But we’d last longer than two men. It’s going to move fast, when it moves. Might pass just long enough. Lieutenant, cover us from here. Have the plasma arc ready, it’s all we’ve got to stop a vehicle.”

Bothari shoved his nerve disruptor out of sight under his jacket. Cordelia tucked her stunner in the waistband of her skirt, and lightly took Bothari’s arm. They strolled around the corner.

This was a really stupid idea, Cordelia decided, matching steps to Bothari’s booted stride. They should have set up hours ago, if they’d been going to try an ambush like this. Or they should have hooked Padma and Alys out hours ago. And yet—how long ago had Padma been spotted? Might they have fallen into some long-laid trap, and gone down together? No might-have-beens. Pay attention to the now.

Bothari’s steps slowed, as they approached a deep shadowed doorway. He swung her in, and leaned with his arm on the wall, close to her. They were near enough now to the arrest scene to catch voices. Snatches of crackle from the comm links carried clearly in the damp air.

Just in time. Despite the shabby shirt and trousers, Cordelia readily recognized the dark-haired man pinned against the groundcar by one guard as Captain Vorpatril. His face was marred with a grated, bleeding contusion and swollen lips, pulled back in a stereotypical fast-penta-induced smile. The smile slipped to anguish, and back again, and his giggles choked on moans.

Black-clad security men were bundling a woman out the hostel door and into the street. The security team’s attention was drawn to her; Cordelia’s and Bothari’s, too.

Alys Vorpatril wore only a nightgown and robe, with her feet jammed bare into flat shoes. Her dark hair was loose, flowing down wildly around her white face; she looked a fair madwoman. She was indeed conspicuously pregnant, black robe falling open around her white-gowned belly. The guard manhandling her had her arms locked behind her; her legs splayed for balance against his backward pull.

The guard commander, a full colonel, checked a report panel. “That’s it, then. The lord and the heir.” His eye locked to Alys Vorpatril’s abdomen; he shook his head as if to clear it, and spoke into his comm link. “Pull back, boys, we’re done here.”

“What the hell are we supposed to do about this, Colonel?” asked his lieutenant uneasily. His voice blended fascination with dismay as he walked over to Lady Vorpatril and lifted her gown high. She had gained weight, these last two months; her chin and breasts were rounded, thighs thickened, belly padded out. He poked a curious finger deep into that soft white flesh. She stood silent, trembling, face on fire with rage at his liberty and eyes glistening dark with tears of fear. “Our orders are to kill the lord and the heir. It doesn’t say her. Are we supposed to sit around and wait? Squeeze? Cut her open? Or,” his voice went persuasive, “maybe just take her back to HQ?”

The guard holding her from behind grinned and ground his hips into her buttocks, mock—thrusts of unmistakable meaning. “We don’t have to take her straight back, do we? I mean, this is Vor meat. What a chance.”

The colonel stared at him, and spat disgust. “Corporal, you’re perverted.”

Cordelia realized with a shock that Bothari’s riveted attention to the scene before them was no longer tactical. He was deeply aroused. His eyes seemed to glaze as she watched; his lips parted.

The guard colonel pocketed his comm link, and drew his nerve disruptor. “No.” He shook his head. “We make this quick and clean. Step aside, Corporal.”

Strange mercies …

The guard expertly popped Alys’s knees and shoved her down, stepping back. Her hands flung out to the pavement, too late to save her swollen belly from a hard smack. Padma Vorpatril moaned through his fast-penta haze. The guard colonel raised his nerve disruptor and hesitated, as if uncertain whether to aim it at her head or torso.

“Kill them,” Cordelia hissed in Bothari’s ear, jerked out her stunner, and fired.

Bothari snapped not only awake, but over into some berserker mode; his nerve disruptor bolt hit the guard colonel at the same moment as Cordelias stunner beam did, though she had drawn first. Then he was moving, a dark blur leaping behind a parked vehicle. He snapped off shots, blue crackles that electrified the air; two more guards fell as the rest took cover behind their groundcars.

Alys Vorpatril, still on the pavement, curled up in a tight ball, trying to cover her abdomen with her arms and legs. Padma Vorpatril, penta-drunk, staggered bewilderedly toward her, arms out, apparently with some similar idea in mind. The guard lieutenant, rolling on the pavement toward cover, aimed his nerve disruptor at the distraught man.

The guard lieutenant’s pause for accuracy was fatal; Droushnakovi’s nerve disruptor cross-fire and Cordelias stunner beam intersected upon his body—a millisecond too late. His nerve disruptor bolt took Padma Vorpatril squarely in the back of his head. Blue sparks danced, dark hair sparked orange, and Padma’s body arced in a violent convulsion and fell twitching. Alys Vorpatril wailed, a short sharp cry cut off by a gasp. On her hands and knees, she seemed momentarily frozen between trying to crawl toward him, or away.

Droushnakovi’s cross-fire vantage was perfect. The last guard was killed while still trying to raise the canopy of the armored groundcar. A driver, shielded inside the second vehicle, prudently chose to try and speed away. Koudelka’s plasma arc bolt, set on high power, blasted into the groundcar as it accelerated past the corner. It skidded wildly, dragging an edge and trailing sparks, and crashed into the side of a brick building.

Yes, and didn’t my whole strategy for this mission turn on our staying invisible? Cordelia thought dizzily, and ran forward. She and Droushnakovi reached Alys Vorpatril at the same moment; together they hoisted the shuddering woman to her feet.

“We have to get out of here,” said Bothari, rising from his firing-crouch and coming toward them.

“No shit,” agreed Koudelka, limping up and staring around at the sudden and spectacular carnage. The street was amazingly quiet. Not for long, Cordelia suspected.

“This way.” Bothari pointed up an alley, narrow and dark. “Run.”

“Shouldn’t we try to take that car?” Cordelia gestured to the body-draped vehicle.

“No. Traceable. And it can’t fit where we’re going.”

Cordelia was not sure if the wild-faced, weeping Alys was able to run anywhere, but she stuck her stunner back in her waistband and took one of the pregnant woman’s arms. Drou took the other, and together they guided her in the sergeant’s wake. At least Koudelka was no longer the slowest of the party.

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