noise was enough to rattle the corrugated roof. All eyes flicked upward as they drowned conversation. 'Come on, Colin, you're not going to pull the bullshit need-to- know routine on me, are you? Who the hell can warn the poor bastards we're invading them? They're twenty-three light-years away. Everybody on the base knows where we're going—most of Cairns, too.'

'Okay, okay. What do you want?'

'A posting to the Memu Bay task force.'

'Never heard of it.'

'Not surprised. Crappy little marine and bioindustry zone, about four and a half thousand kilometers from the capital. I was stationed there last time.'

'Ah.' Colin relaxed his grip on the beer tin as he started to work out angles. 'What's there?'

'Z-B will take the biochemicals and engineering products; that's all that's on the asset list. Anything else... well, it leaves scope for some private realization. If you're an enterprising kind of guy.'

'Shit, Lawrence, I thought you were a straighter arrow than me. What happened to getting a big enough stake to qualify for starship officer?'

'Nearly twenty years, and I've made sergeant. I got that because Ntoko never made it back from Santa Chico.'

'Christ, Santa fucking Chico. I forgot you were on that one.' Colin shook his head at the memory. Modern historians were comparing Santa Chico to Napoleon's invasion of Russia. 'Okay, I get you posted to Memu Bay. What do I see?'

'Ten percent.'

'A good figure. Of what?'

'Of whatever's there.'

'Don't tell me you've found the final episode of Fleas on the Horizon?'

'That's Flight: Horizon. But no; no such luck.' Lawrence's face remained impassive.

'I got to trust you, huh?'

'You got to trust me.'

'I think I can manage that.'

'There's more. I need you at Durrell, the capital, in the Logistics Division. You'll have to arrange secure transport for us afterward, probably a medevac—but I'll leave that to you. Find a pilot who won't ask questions about lifting our cargo into orbit.'

'Find one who would.' Colin grinned. 'Bent bastards.'

'He has to be on the level with me. I will not be ripped off. Understand? Not with this.'

Colin's humor faded as he saw how much dark anger there was in his old friend's expression. 'Sure, Lawrence, you can rely on me. What sort of mass are we talking about?'

'I don't know for certain. But if I'm right, about a backpack per man. It'll be enough to buy a management stake for each of us.'

'Hot damn! Easy meat.'

They touched the rims of their tins and drank to that. Lawrence saw three of the locals nod in agreement, and stand up.

'You got a car?' he asked Colin.

'Sure: you said not to use the train.'

'Get to it. Get clear. I'll take care of this.'

Colin looked at the approaching men, making the calculation. He wasn't frontline, hadn't been for years. 'See you on Thallspring.' He jammed on his stupid hat and took the three steps to the back door.

Lawrence stood up and faced the men, sighing heavily. It was the wrong day for them to go around pissing on trees to mark their territory. This bar had been carefully chosen so the meeting would go unnoticed by anyone at Z-B. And Thallspring was going to be the last shot he'd ever get at any kind of a decent future. That didn't leave him with a lot of choice.

The one at the front, the biggest, naturally, had the tight smile of a man who knew he was about to score the winning goal. His two compadres were sidling up behind, one barely out of his teens, swigging from a tin, the other in a slim denim waistcoat that showed off glowmote tattoos distorted by old knife scars. An invincible trio.

It would start with one of them making some comment: Thought you company people were too good to drink with us. Not that it mattered what was actually said. The act of speaking was a way of ego pumping until one of them was hot enough to throw the first punch. Same dumb-ass ritual in every low-life bar on every human planet.

'Don't,' Lawrence said flatly, before they got started. 'Just shut up and go sit down. I'm leaving, okay.'

The big fella gave his friends a knowing I-told-you-he-was-chickenshit grin and snorted contempt for Lawrence's bravado. 'You ain't going nowhere, company boy.' He drew his huge fist back.

Lawrence tilted from the waist, automatic and fast. His leg kicked out, boot heel smashing into the big fella's knee. The one in the denim waistcoat picked up a chair and swung it at Lawrence's head. Lawrence's thick right arm came up to block the unwieldy club. One leg of the chair hit full on, just above his elbow, and stopped dead. Its impact didn't even make Lawrence blink, let alone grunt in pain. The man staggered back as his balance was slung all to hell. It was like he'd hit solid stone. He stared at Lawrence's arm, eyes widening as realization hammered through the drink.

All around the bar, men were pushing back chairs and rising. Coming to help their mates.

'No!' the man in the waistcoat shouted. 'He's in Skin!'

It made no difference. The youngster was going for the big bowie knife in his belt scabbard, and nobody was paying any attention to warnings as they closed in.

Lawrence raised his right arm high, punching the air. He could feel a gentle rippling against his wrists as peristaltic muscles brought the darts forward out of their magazine sacs into launch tubules. A ring of small dry slits peeled open above his carpals, black nozzles poking out. The dart swarm erupted.

As he left the bar, Lawrence turned the cardboard sign on the door so it said closed and shut it behind him. He made sure his hat was on square, a fussy action, covering his anger. God damn the Armory Division. Those bastards never erred on the side of caution, always on the side of overkill. He'd seen two of the men lying on

Вы читаете Fallen Fragon
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×