ran toward the kitchen. Lissa straightened to face Kham again. 'You've got a run then.'

'Most likely. Got another meet tonight.'

She folded her arms. 'This better not be another story, Kham. We need the money.'

'We'll get it.'

'And I don't need the grief.' Taking a step forward, she tugged Tully from his arms. Setting him down, she said, 'Get along, Tully. Teresa needs your help in the kitchen.'

'Aw, Mom.'

'Go!'

Tully sulked off.

'We were playing,' Kham said.

'He's got work, even if no one else around here does. You think this hall runs itself?'

Kham knew from experience that she didn't really want an answer to that question. In fact, she went on to answer it herself in an all-too-familiar tirade. He shouldn't have been gone so long. He shouldn't get in the way around the hall. He should've brought home some money. He shouldn't keep the kids from doing their chores. And on and on and on. He nodded in the right places and shook his head in the other right places. He lost his appetite as his stomach went sour. Why did it have to be this way?

For all her harping, he still loved her. He wanted to tell her that. He reached out a hand to gather her to him, realizing too late that he had reached out with his right. She flinched away from him, a flash of horror reflected in the chrome of his hand. Then she stood her ground and let him gather her in his arms.

'I love ya,' he said.

She said nothing.

'It's gonna be all right.'

'How can you say that, Kham? Everything's different now.''

Her voice was shaky. He knew she was worried, scared for the kids mostly. That was what made her shrill so often now. He caressed her hair with his right hand and she shivered, so he stopped. 'Nuttin's changed.'

'It has,' she said softly.

He knew her words for truth. Ever since he'd gotten his cybernetic replacements, Lissa had been different,

cold and distant. She shuddered when he touched her with the replacement hand. It was easier sometimes not to touch her at all.

'Dere's lotsa guys wid enhancements on da streets. Orks, too. Their chicas don't got problems wit dem.' 'It's not real.'

'But I ain't no vat-grown corp monster. I'm still me. Kham, yer husband. An artificial hand and syn-tetic muscles in my leg don't change dat.' 'I haven't left you, have I?' 'No.'

'I've been a good wife, haven't I? I take care of the kids. I feed this crew and run herd on this brawl you call a hall. You can't say I don't.'

'No, I can't.' They both knew that the street was not a nice place, and there were damned few shelters that didn't want a SIN before they did anything for you. It was all part of the system, which didn't work for orks like them.

'If it wasn't fer da implants, I'd be a crip. I wouldn't be able ta take care of ya and da kids.' 'I know that.' 'I still love ya and da kids.' 'I know that.'

But Lissa didn't sound like she really believed it. 'I didn't abandon ya, like John Parker did his woman when he took up shadowrunning. And yer not a widow, like Teresa, Asa, or Komiko. What if I'da died on dose runs last year fer Sam Verner? What if I'da died aboard dat damned, drowned sub like Teresa and Komiko's men? What woulda happened ta ya and da kids den?'

'I don't know.'* 'An honest answer at least.' He held her tight, careful to keep his replacement hand from touching her flesh. 'But I did survive dose runs even dough da first cost me my hand and part 'a my leg. Drek! I survived da run and was back up in time ta go on annoder inta dat damned bug-filled submarine fer da dogboy. It takes a tough guy ta get back up dat fast, and I'm tough. I'm a survivor, babe. I'm a rough, tough ork like I gotta be.'

'Not every ork is as tough as you,' she said, breaking free of his embrace.

'Don't I know it.'

'Well, you don't know everything!' She ran away, crying.

Kham just stood there, confused and frustrated. He never seemed able to find the words Lissa wanted to hear. He thought about going after her, but what good would it do? After the meet, when he had some money, things would be better.

As he stood there lost in his thoughts, Jord and the rest of the hunters came into the hall, prancing and shouting. 'Hey, dad! Look what I caught,' Jord yelled, swinging his prize by the tail. A cat.

Kham looked at it with distaste. 'Take it inta da kitchen, boy.'

'Sure.' The victorious hunters continued their parade toward the back of the hall. Jord looked over his shoulder. 'You coming, Dad?'

'Ya go ahead, Jord. Dad's gotta do some biz.'

Facing Lissa over the table would be bad enough. But cat, too? He strapped on his weapon belt and ripped his jacket from the peg and slung it over his shoulder. He stomped up the stairs to the room his family used for a bedroom. From the locked case in the bottom of the closet he took a skeletal-stocked assault rifle, an AK-74 special. Working with sure hands, he broke it down and concealed the parts in pockets sewn to the lining of his jacket. He had a meet tonight at ten and he might need a little extra insurance. There wouldn't be time to come back here if he was to make a stop before the meet. He stomped back down the stairs and out into the street.

The third pay phone he tried was working. He slipped in his credstick and punched in the telecom code. The line opened and a recorded voice started speaking. He waited a moment, then tapped in a code that Sally Tsung gave to only a few people. The code patched him through to another line. The voice that answered this time was live, female, but not Sally herself.

'Hello.'

'Dis is Kham. Sally in?'

'She's not here right now. May I take a message?' '' Gotta talk wit her.' JB 'Business?' l^ 'Looks like it.'

A moment's pause, and then, 'She'll be at Penum-,bra tonight. Around eleven.'

'Club's okay but da time's no good. Need ta see her 'fore dat.' 'When?' 'Nine.'

'I'll tell her when she checks in,' the voice said, then the connection broke.

Kham slammed the receiver down. Drek! There was no way to know whether Sally would get the message in time to meet with him. There was nothing to do but go to the club and hope she showed.

***

It was quarter past nine when Sally Tsung walked into Club Penumbra. She strolled in like she owned the place, a common enough attitude for top-rank shad-owrunners. Her armor-lined coat was of real leather, stitched with arcane symbols and fringed along the arms and lower edges. Billowing out behind her, the coat opened to reveal what she wore underneath, which wasn't much: a halter top, cut-off jeans, and knee-high boots. Crossed weapon belts rode low on her hips, a pistol holster on one and a scabbarded magesword on the other. She nodded to Jim at the bar, her shock of blonde hair bobbing over her forehead. The rest of her hair was bound back into a rat-tail braid that snaked around from behind her neck and slithered down between her breasts to lie over the constraining strings of her leather halter. She was a street mage, as lean, hard, and dangerous as they came. And she was every bit as beautiful as the day she had first recruited Kham, and more unreachable than ever. Still, he couldn't help grinning at her as she slouched into the seat across the table from him.

'Hello, Kham. How's my favorite hunk of ork flesh tonight?'

'Hello, Sally. Doing okay. You?' 'Living the life, doing the scene.' She shrugged her shoulders with casual negligence. 'Hear you got a party starting.'

As he'd suspected from seeing her in her working clothes, she was in a business frame of mind and not interested in social chat. So, he complied. 'Looks dat way. Got a meet fer da job here at ten, muscle only on da

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