Authors: Jay Allan
The two sat long in silence, each of their minds treading down dark roads.
“ALL RIGHT, LUCAS, GET US THE HELL OUT OF HERE.”
“Way ahead of you, Skip.” The
Claw
's pilot was working his board like a virtuoso, increasing power at just the right speed, and charting the best route through the thick Castillan atmosphere.
Blackhawk knew Lucas was on it, so he dropped hard into his command chair, reaching around and clipping his harness in place. The tight strap hurt as it pressed against his midsection. He'd caught a round in the side during the final escape from the Grand Palais. He'd been a warrior for thirty-five years, and he'd known immediately it was nothing serious, just a flesh wound. But that didn't change the fact that it still hurt like hell.
The snugness of the strap tugged at it, ripping open the hasty dressing he'd applied.
Just another scar to add to the collection.
Shira bounded up the ladder and ran across the bridge toward Ace's station. She sat down hard and leaned over the scope.
“How is he?” Blackhawk asked. Ace had been hit too, twice, and one of the wounds was serious. Doc was down in the
Claw'
s tiny sick bay, still working on him.
“He's in rough shape, Ark.” Shira was usually as cool as they come, but Blackhawk could tell from her voice she was worried. “He's lost a lot of blood. If we were on Celtiboria, he'd be fine. But as good as he is at patching us back together, Doc's not a real surgeon, and the
Claw'
s infirmary isn't a hospital.”
Blackhawk just nodded. He turned away for a few seconds, closing his eyes. He wanted to be down there, standing behind Doc, waiting at Ace's side. But his place was here, making sure they all got out. It wasn't going to help Ace if the
Claw
got blasted out of the sky by the Castillan defense forces.
“I've got bogies on the scope, Captain.” Her voice was calm once more. Blackhawk allowed himself a quick smile.
Nothing fazes her.
“Lucas?” Blackhawk shot his eyes over toward the pilot's station.
“I'm pushing as hard as I dare, Skip. This atmosphere is too damned thick.” Castilla's air was heavier than Celtiboria's, with an atmospheric pressure 30 percent higher. It made lifting off quickly a hazardous proposition at best. The
Claw
was a solid vessel, but she was still subject to the laws of physics. Friction causes heat. If the hull temperature got hot enough, even the iridium-alloy armor would melt.
We've been in tough scrapes before, and if it hasn't melted yet . . .
“Well, push it harder. I'd rather bet on the
Claw
's hull holding out than fight the entire Castillan Defense Force.” He leaped out of his chair abruptly, grabbing onto one of the support columns as he moved toward Ace's station. “Get down to the turrets, Shira. Just in case. I'll man the scope.”
“Yes, sir.” She jumped up and moved quickly toward the ladder, her step never once faltering. A planetary takeoff was a rough affair, but she raced across the wildly pitching floor with the grace of a dancer and hopped onto the ladder.
“And take one of the Twins with you,” he called out to her. “Tarq.” The Twins were alike in so many ways it wasn't hard to think of them as anything but two copies of the same person. But despite their similarities in appearance, voice, temperament, and personality, Tarq was inexplicably a better shot than his brother.
“Got it, Captain.” She vanished below the floor.
Blackhawk staggered the rest of the way across the bridge, grabbing hold of Ace's chair and pulling himself around. He sat and bent over the scope immediately. “We've got twenty-plus enemy craft launching, Lucas. And that's only from this hemisphere.”
“I'm punching it hard, Skip, but I'm a big fan of having a hull between us and the atmosphere.”
You and me both. But I'm not a fan of catching a missile in the nonmelted hull.
Blackhawk could feel the ship bucking as the thrusters pushed it faster into the Castillan sky. He knew Lucas was taking it right to the limit. The
Claw
would be fine once she cleared the atmosphere. The big question was
if
she would clear it. The
Castillans didn't have anything that could catch her in space, at least not in a straight-out chase. Blackhawk sighed, watching the enemy ships moving slowly on the scope. At least the thick air was a factor that limited them both equally. That gave the
Claw
a chance to escape.
I hope.
“Plot us the best course to avoid enemy contacts. Let's see if we can get out of here without a battle. It'd be nice to have someplace we could come back to for a change.” He didn't have any real desire to return to Castilla, but the list of places where the
Claw
and its crew had worn out their welcome was getting long.
“Already working on it, Skip. Give me thirty seconds.”
Blackhawk dialed up Shira's turret. “You in place yet?”
“Yeah, Cap. Just strapping in and powering up the guns.” He could hear her scrambling into position and slamming the hatch behind her. The turrets were tight spaces, and nobody really fit in them, at least not well. He had no idea how Tarq managed to squeeze his massive frame in there, but somehow he did, and never once complained.
Ace, on the other hand, complained every. Single. Time.
I wish I had him complaining right now.
Blackhawk flipped the comm unit, bringing the second turret on the line. He knew Tarq would still be working his way through the narrow hatch. He could hear the giant's uncomfortable grunts through the comm. “Listen to me, both of you: I want you ready, but don't fire unless I give the order. No matter what. Understood?”
They both answered yes.
“We're going to try to get out of here without committing an act of war.” He paused for a few seconds, pondering how
the Castillans would view kidnapping one of their oligarchs. “Another one, I mean.”
The ship shook again, almost knocking Doc off his feet. He was standing over Ace, staring down at his hands, both of which were deep inside the unconscious man's chest, working feverishly. The first shot was a flesh wound, but the second one was bad. Really bad. It had clipped the heart, tearing several holes in the muscle and causing a massive amount of bleeding.
The
Claw'
s sick bay had a decent supply of artificial blood, an expensive luxury that few adventurers' vessels could afford. That had kept Ace alive so far, but Doc still had to repair the damage to save his patient. And regardless of the nickname the crew had given him, Rolf Sandor wasn't a surgeon. At least not one with proper credentials. Medicine had been a hobby for him before he'd hooked up with Blackhawk, just another area of interest for the brilliant scholar, one of many. He'd studied the field, and he had a tremendous storehouse of knowledge. But he'd never practiced medicine, not before the day he'd saved a wounded Blackhawk and found a new home. But an amateur doctor was all Ace Graythorn had, and Sandor wasn't about to give up on his patient. At least the
Claw
had a medical AI. That was a help.
Think, think
. . .
don
'
t just cut
. He'd fused two holes in Ace's heart, but the pool of blood substitute still filling the chest cavity proved there was another leak. He felt around with his fingers, trying to find the remaining wound. There was another bullet in there, and at least one more perforation.
His own heart was pounding in his ears, and he knew he didn't have much time. If he didn't finish up and plug the last hole, and soon, Ace was going to die.
The ship shook again, harder this time, and he reached out with a blood-covered hand and grabbed the edge of the table to stabilize himself. “Fuck,” he muttered, as he staggered toward the decon unit to resterilize his hand.
Come on, Ark,
he thought.
Keep this thing steadier than that, or I
'
m going to lose him
.
“Administer another two units.”
The
Claw
's medical AI was a fairly rudimentary unit, but Sandor was glad to have it. The system was scanning Ace's vitals in real time, and it reported instantly when there were any changes.
“Administering. The supply of artificial blood is nearly depleted. Four additional units remain.” The AI had an androgynous human-sounding voice. Doc mentally flipped a coin and decided it was female.
“Keep two additional units on standby.” He was running out of time.
Focus. You can do this.
Doc tried to concentrate on Ace, but he couldn't suppress a passing thought about the odd path his life had taken, from brilliant university professor to exiled loser of a political struggle to rogue mercenary. The part that surprised him the most was how much he preferred his life on the
Claw
to his days in academia. For all the danger and hardshipâor maybe because of itâRolf Sandor couldn't imagine going back to his classroom and his lab.
He probed around, moving his finger slowly, probing for any damage. He felt the frustration rising as he continued without success. The AI was projecting a 3-D image of Ace's chest. Doc knew where the bullet was, but he couldn't find the damaged area of the heart wall. It was somewhere under the pool of blood filling Ace's chest cavity.
Finally, his fingertip felt something. The bullet. He reached
out with his other hand, grabbing the extractor. He moved the long, slender tool slowly, carefully, toward the projectile, grabbing it and slowly pulling.
An instant later he dropped the small chunk of metal onto a tray.
Good,
he thought. “Administer two more units.”
Now I just have to stop the bleeding and get him patched up before I run out of blood substitute.
Katarina sat on the edge of her cot, staring silently at the wall, replaying the last moments of their escape from the Grand Palais. She was troubled, and a strange expression had taken hold of her face.
They had barely gotten away. Another minute and they would all have been killed or captured. But Lucas had managed to bring the
Claw
down over the large roof deck just in time, somehow wedging the ship into the tight confines next to the hotel's massive tower. He popped the lower hatch and dropped a bunch of lines to the ground, and they had frantically scrambled aboard.
Her agile mind focused hard on every aspect of the operation: the final fight with the guards, the race to climb up before enemy reinforcements arrived, the effort of getting a wounded Blackhawk and unconscious Aragona aboard.
Then Ace went down in hail of enemy fire.
He'd been the last one, the rearguard, standing under the shadow of the
Claw,
guns in both hands. His assault rifles spewed death and held the enemy back while his friends climbed to safety.
Katarina had been staring right at him when he was hit. The first shot took him in the shoulder. He staggered back, but he stayed on his feet and kept on firing without so much as a
pause. It was no more than a few seconds, a fleeting instant, before he was hit again. The shot took him full on in the chest, and he dropped instantly, his guns falling to the ground next to him. He lay motionless on the rooftop.
Blackhawk saw it too, and he lunged across the deck, now slick with his own blood. He was reaching for one of the lines, determined to go back down and rescue Ace, ignoring his own wound. But Tarnan grabbed him hard, his massive arms holding the captain like a vise while Tarq slid down the cable toward Ace's still form.
Katarina felt an urge to follow, but she stayed frozen in place, unsure if it was discipline or panic holding her back. She was as cold-blooded and fearless in battle as Blackhawk, but something about seeing Ace sprawled out on the concrete below hit her hard, stripping her of her normal decisiveness.
She stood stone still and watched as Tarq dropped to the roof, certain the big man would never make it back up with Ace through the heavy enemy fire. She was about to rush to one of the cables when a blinding flash ripped through the air, and the shattered remnants of the hotel wall erupted into flame and debris.
Another flash followed, and she stared down where the enemy guards had been a few seconds before. The macabre scene was lit by half a dozen fires. There was nothing visible through the clouds of billowing smoke except wreckage and charred bodies.
She understood right away. It had been Shira. Through all the confusion and chaos of the final escape, Shira Tarkus had kept her wits. She'd run to the needle gun controls and blasted the enemy guards to bits, clearing the way for Tarq to rescue Ace.
Katarina was silent now, her mind confused and uncertain
as she stared at the wall of her cabin. Discipline was second nature to her, almost a religion. She'd been trained in the ways of the Sebastiani Assassins' Guild since childhood. Its tenets and commandments had governed her life as long as she could rememberâthey made her the person she was. She had earned the gold belt, over a hundred confirmed kills. She'd taken out heads of state and leaders of criminal organizations, and she'd survived mission after mission. She had excelled because of her discipline. But it had failed her during the escape, and she had hesitated when she should have acted.
She knew what it was, at least in part, and it was something she hadn't wanted to face. Sebastiani assassins worked alone. Solitude was part of the life, hand in hand with discipline. Emotions, loyalties, even vendettasâthey all interfered with the cold, rational judgment expected of graduates of the Sebastiani school. She had lived her life devoted to these principles, but now she found herself facing growing doubts. She knew she had been on
Wolf's Claw
for too long. She had clearly lost her edge. She'd found friends, a family . . .
And that was a luxury an assassin couldn't afford.
She'd fooled herself with mind games, petty frauds she perpetrated to drive away her doubts. She paid for her passage, insisting she wasn't really one of the crew. But her lies were empty, and only she had been fooled.