like an assassination team,' he observed.

Murka drew himself up, looking wonderfully offended. 'We aren't!'

The guard sergeant turned over a stunner. 'AWOL, are you?'

'Not if we make it back before midnight.' Murka's tone went wheedling. 'Look, m' CO's a right bastard. Suppose there's any way you could see your way clear that he doesn't find out about this?' One of Murka's hands drifted suggestively past his wallet pocket.

The guard sergeant looked him up and down, smirking. 'Maybe.'

Miles listened with open-mouthed delight. Murka, if this works I'm promoting you. . . .

Murka paused. 'Any chance of seeing inside first? Not the girls even, just the place? So I could say that I'd seen it.'

'This isn't a whorehouse, soldier boy!' snapped the guard sergeant.

Murka looked stunned. 'What?'

'This is the biologicals facility.'

'Oh,' said Murka.

'You idiot, 'one of the troopers put in on cue. Miles sprinkled silent blessings down upon his head. None of the three so much as flicked an eyeball upward.

'But the man in town told me—' began Murka.

'What man?' said the guard sergeant.

'The man who took m'money,' said Murka.

A couple of red-tunic'd guards were beginning to grin. The guard sergeant prodded Murka with his nerve disrupter. 'Get going, soldier boy. Back that way. This is your lucky day.'

'You mean we get to see inside?' said Murka hopefully.

'No,' said the guard sergeant, 'I mean we aren't going to break both your legs before we throw you out on your ass.' He paused and added more kindly, 'There's a whorehouse back in town.' He slipped Murka's wallet out of his pocket, checked the name on the credit card and put it back, and removed all the loose currency. The guards did the same to the outraged-looking troopers, dividing the assorted cash up among them. 'They take credit cards, and you've still got till midnight. Now move!'

And so Miles's squad was chivvied, ignominiously but intact, down the tunnel. Miles waited till the whole mob was well out of earshot before keying his wrist comm. 'Bel?'

'Yes,' came back the instant reply.

'Trouble. Murka and the troops were just picked up by Ryoval's security. I believe the boy genius has just managed to bullshit them into throwing them out the back door, instead of rendering them down for parts. I'll follow as soon as I can, we'll rendezvous and regroup for another try.' Miles paused. This was a total bust, they were now worse off than when they'd started. Ryoval's security would be stirred up for the rest of the long Jacksonian night. He added to the comm, 'I'm going to see if I can't at least find out the location of the critter before I withdraw. Should improve our chances of success next round.'

Bel swore in a heartfelt tone. 'Be careful.'

'You bet. Watch for Murka and the boys. Naismith out.'

Once he'd identified the right cables it was the work of a moment to make the door slide open. He then had an interesting dangle by his fingertips while coaxing the ceiling panel to fall back into place before he dropped from maximum downward extension, fearful for his bones. Nothing broke. He slipped across the portal to the main building and took to the ducts as soon as possible, the corridors having been proved dangerous. He lay on his back in the narrow tube and balanced the blueprint holocube on his belly, picking out a new and safer route not necessarily passable to a couple of husky troopers. And where did one look for a monster? A closet?

It was at about the third turn, inching his way through the system dragging the weapon pack, that he became aware that the territory no longer matched the map. Hell and damnation. Were these changes in the system since its construction, or a subtly sabotaged map? Well, no matter, he wasn't really lost, he could still retrace his route.

He crawled along for about thirty minutes, discovering and disarming two alarm sensors before they discovered him. The time factor was getting seriously pressing. Soon he would have to—ah, there! He peered through a vent grille into a dim room filled with holovid and communications equipment. Small Repairs, the map cube named it. It didn't look like a repairs shop. Another change since Ryoval had moved in? But a man sat alone with his back to Miles's wall. Perfect, too good to pass up.

Breathing silently, moving slowly, Miles eased his dart-gun out of the pack and made sure he loaded it with the right cartridge, fast-penta spiked with a paralyzer, a lovely cocktail blended for the purpose by the Ariel's medtech. He sighted through the grille, aimed the needle-nose of the dart gun with tense precision, and fired. Bulls-eye. The man slapped the back of his neck once and sat still, hand falling nervelessly to his side. Miles grinned briefly, cut his way through the grille, and lowered himself to the floor.

The man was well-dressed in civilian-type clothes—one of the scientists, perhaps? He lolled in his chair, a little smile playing around his lips, and stared with unalarmed interest at Miles. He started to fall over.

Miles caught him and propped him back upright. 'Sit up now, that's right, you can't talk with your face in the carpet now, can you?'

'Nooo . . .' The man bobbled his head and smiled agreeably.

'Do you know anything about a genetic construct, a monstrous creature, just recently bought from House Bharaputra and brought to this facility?'

The man blinked and smiled. 'Yes.'

Fast-penta subjects did tend to be literal, Miles reminded himself. 'Where is it being kept?'

'Downstairs.'

'Where exactly downstairs?'

'In the sub-basement. The crawl-space around the foundations.'

We were hoping it would catch some of the rats, you see.' The man giggled. 'Do cats eat rats? Do rats eat cats . . . ?'

Miles checked his map-cube. Yes. That looked good, in terms of the penetration team getting in and out, though it was still a large search area, broken up into a maze by structural elements running down into the bedrock, and specially-set low-vibration support columns running up into the laboratories. At the lower edge, where the mountainside sloped away, the space ran high-ceilinged and very near the surface, a possible break-out point. The space thinned to head-cracking narrowness and then to bedrock at the back where the building wedged into the slope. All right. Miles opened his dart case to find something that would lay his victim out cold and nonquestionable for the rest of the night. The man pawed at him and his sleeve slipped back to reveal a wrist-comm almost as thick and complex as Miles's own. A light blinked on it. Miles looked at the device, suddenly uneasy. This room . . . 'By the way, who are you?'

'Moglia, Chief of Security, Ryoval Biologicals,' the man recited happily. 'At your service, sir.'

'Oh, indeed you are.' Miles's suddenly-thick fingers scrabbled faster in his dart case. Damn, damn, damn.

The door burst open. 'Freeze, mister!'

Miles hit the tight-beam alarm/self-destruct on his own wrist comm and flung his hands up, and the wrist comm off, in one swift motion. Not by chance, Moglia sat between Miles and the door, inhibiting the trigger reflexes of the entering guards. The comm melted as it arced through the air—no chance of Ryoval security tracing the outside squad through it now, and Bel would at least know something had gone wrong.

The security chief chuckled to himself, temporarily fascinated by the task of counting his own fingers. The red-clad guard sergeant, backed by his squad, thundered into what was now screamingly obvious to Miles as the Security Operations Room, to jerk Miles around, slam him face-first into the wall, and begin frisking him with vicious efficiency. Within moments he had separated Miles from a clanking pile of incriminating equipment, his jacket, boots, and belt. Miles clutched the wall and shivered with the pain of several expertly-applied nerve jabs and the swift reversal of his fortune.

The security chief, when un-penta'd at last, was not at all pleased with the guard sergeant's confession about the three uniformed men he had let go with a fine earlier in the evening. He put the whole guard shift on full alert, and sent an armed squad out to try and trace the escaped Dendarii. Then, with an apprehensive expression

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