Soldier of Fortune: A Gideon Quinn Adventure (Fortune Chronicles Book 1) (9 page)

BOOK: Soldier of Fortune: A Gideon Quinn Adventure (Fortune Chronicles Book 1)
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C
HAPTER
F
IFTEEN

 

THE SUNS WERE
finally setting over the Nasa escarpment.

The 12th Company was settled into the apiary, the watch set and Gideon, walking the perimeter of the camp, was on edge — and not just because he was walking on the verge of a cliff.

"Who goes there?" Fehr's voice called softly.

"Quinn, Colonel of the 12
th
,” Gideon responded to Fehr's query.

"Advance and be recognized. Have a care, sir," Fehr added as he unfolded from his cover in a clump of abal bushes. "That last step is very final."

Gideon stepped closer, carefully, and peered over the side of the cliff. It was, indeed, quite a drop. The suns setting behind them rendered the river valley below into a sea of shadows, with only faint golden flickers from the river catching Tyche's last rays as she followed her sister, Nemesis, to sleep beneath the horizon.

"It is a beautiful place," Fehr observed as Gideon retreated to a safer viewing distance. "Temperate, fertile, plenty of room for wind farms and water from the river," he nodded down to where the Ares ran quickly along the base of the escarpment. "I wonder how it is none of the Coalition states have settled here, yet?"

Gideon shrugged. "No crystal, I guess."

Fehr looked at him. "There is more to Fortune than crystal."

"Pretty sure there was more to Earth than oil," Gideon said, then paused, tilted his head. "Do you hear that?"

"Hear — ah," Fehr said as it became clear.

The telltale thrum of an airship.

 

* * *

 

"She's one of ours," Gideon said, lowering his telescope which, with its night vision activated, clearly revealed the oncoming 'ship's name. "The Kodiak, Destroyer Class."

He handed the telescope to Lt. Fehr then looked down to where Corpsman Carver was crouched before her equipment. “Radio?"

"No contact from the Kodiak, sir," Carver replied, holding the headset close as she monitored the receiver for any incoming signals. "If they know we're here, they're not reaching out."

"She is a fine 'ship," Fehr observed, edging closer to the precipice to view the incoming vessel.

"Careful," Gideon echoed the lieutenant's earlier warning, though he understood the fascination. Because of the depth of the valley, the airship was approaching their location at the same elevation as the escarpment itself.

Fehr lowered the 'scope and took a step back before raising the eyepiece again. "Who commands her?"

"Captain Pitte."

"I have heard of him," Fehr nodded. “They say he is a good man. A Fordian, is he not?"

Gideon grunted in acknowledgment. “He and the Kodiak provided air cover on one of our ops a few months before you joined up. He was solid, maintained support under heavy ground to air fire. Still, I can't help but wonder what he's doing here with his very fine airship." He paused, considering his options. They were ostensibly on a top-secret mission so waving a big flag at the first airship to pass seemed contraindicated. Logically they should sit quiet and wait for the Kodiak to either make contact or fly on.

"Her cannon are moving into fire position," Fehr, still looking through the telescope, reported. "Should I call the company to arms?"

"We are not going to fire on one of our own ‘ships." Though if one of their own ‘ships believed enemy forces were lurking in this grove, it'd be a bad day all around. He made up his mind. "Radio, hail the Kodiak with my compliments and ask why they're hovering over our super-secret rendezvous."

At that moment, the radio squawked for attention.

"Or not," Gideon said as Carver leaned close over the machine, adjusting the signal. "I'm guessing that's for us?"

"Sir, yes, sir. Colonel," she looked up, pulling the headphones off, "Kodiak requests our identification and purpose in this location."

"Give me that," Gideon held out a hand for the headset and held it to his ear, the mic curving close enough to speak. “CAS Kodiak, this is Colonel Gideon Quinn, 12
th
Company, 63
rd
Regiment, currently engaged in a classified mission."

There was the usual static-filled pause, then,
"Kodiak to Colonel Quinn please specify the nature of your mission and provide your Ident number for verification, over."

"Seriously?" Gideon looked from his tense officers to the rapidly approaching airship, now ominously close.

Mulowa had just joined the little tea clatch. "Any reason her cannon are live, sir?" she asked Fehr.

"Technically we close to enemy territory," Fehr pointed out.

"Technically, so are they," Gideon said.

"Kodiak to Colonel Quinn, please respond, over."

"Right," he hefted the mic. "Colonel Quinn, here, ident number Echo-seven-niner-four-delta-zero-zero-four, requesting you a) look up the term 'classified' and b') put Captain Pitte on the line, over."

He waited, the radio sizzled. "Quinn to Kodiak, do you read? Over."

"They are taking aim," Fehr said.

"At what?" Gideon asked though he knew, somehow, he knew.

The lieutenant let the telescope drop to his side and looked back at his superior. "At us."

Gideon was already calling for the company to take cover when the first shot struck the escarpment, just below where Fehr stood. The lieutenant's expression never changed as the precipice gave way beneath him.

That was what Gideon remembered most about the young lieutenant's death — that he hadn't had the time to look surprised.

 

* * *

 

In the bathroom of a diner in Nike, nearly seven years after the Kodiak fired on the ridge at Nasa, Gideon's hands were wrapped around the sides of the sink, knuckles white as the memory of that day, and those deaths, washed over him.

Because Fehr had been only the first. Carver, Siska, Duvagne, Mulowa and Walsingham — half of the company — had also died that day.

And so it was that every night spent in Morton, as he collapsed in his bunk, Gideon would close his eyes on the names of those six soldiers, painstakingly scratched into the wall at his side.

Those years in Morton, those were on Rand, and Gideon meant to see about that.

But the names on the wall — the six dead soldiers — those were on Pitte.

 

 

C
HAPTER
S
IXTEEN

 

AS GIDEON STALKED
off to the bathroom, Jinna turned to Mia. “Where,” she said, “did you dig that one up?”

Mia turned her gaze from Gideon’s retreating back to her friend’s disapproving face. “He was supposed to be a mark,” she admitted, “but things got twisty.”

“He
was a mark?” Disapproval gave way to amazement. “And how much of your fagin’s booze did you down when you marked him?”

Which seemed to Mia to be an overreaction. “It was the fagin’s call,” she said. “And I know Gideon don’t look like much…”

“I’ll tell you what he looks like,” Jinna said darkly, “he looks like trouble.”

“He’s a bit ragged, yeah, but—“

“I could give a comb for his looks, he’s trouble because he’s a convict.”

“Shocking! Specially as I’m such an upright Citizen,” Mia said with a grin, then looked in the direction Gideon had gone.  “Anyway, how d’you know he’s been in the nick?”

“I know because I have eyes. Didn’t you see the back of his hand? The right one?”

“His hand?” Mia squinted her eyes as she tried to picture either of Gideon’s hands, but all she could picture were the map of scars over his torso, the scary shade of blue his lips had been before she and Elvis got him breathing again, and the way his eyes could sometimes seem hollow — as if only a part of a person were still living in that battered body. His hand, not so much. “What about it?”


Keepers
, Mia — he’s got the Morton Barrens  ident tattooed on the back of it,” Jinna let out an exasperated huff. “I don’t know how you could have missed the thing.”

Well, first the man was drowning, and then he was attacked by some female with a gun and then we were running so maybe I missed a wee detail,
Mia thought. “It’s complicated,” she said.

Jinna’s eyebrows rose. “It’d have to be.”

“Still, comin’ out of Morton, he must be more badass than he looks,” Mia surmised, impressed.

“That would be how you’d see it,” Jinna sighed and, seeming to remember the teapot in her hand, started to pour out. “He’s lucky he was with you. If that man had come in here on his own, I’d have been greeting him with the toasting fork.”

Mia started to laugh but Jinna seemed to be serious. “Does being pregnant make a person into an arse kicker?” she asked.

“It makes a person careful,” Jinna said and, though her eyes remained serious, there was a softening to her expression that Mia found interesting. “Speaking of careful,” she looked towards the back but, as there was no sign of Gideon returning, she sat down opposite Mia, “has your fagin been giving you any more trouble?“

“No more’n usual,” Mia said.

“The usual is bad enough,” Jinna said, nodding towards the bruising on Mia’s cheek. “It’s not right, the way he treats his dodgers.”

“Is it right for Liam’s dad to be after you and your babe?” Mia countered, and then immediately  regretted it, as the baby’s father had been killed in action not four months past. “Sorry. I’m sorry for that.”

“You don’t have anything to be sorry for,” her friend assured her. “And it isn’t right for Killian Del to be after my baby. Even if Liam and I had planned this, it wouldn’t be right.” One hand came to rest on the swell of her child. “But we didn’t plan anything, obviously.”

Mia, who’d yet to understand why any two sensible people would get up to what she knew they got up to, tried to look sympathetic. “Have you told his dad that?”

“Only every other day,” Jinna shrugged. “But you know how it is with the ristos. He’s rich and powerful and deaf to whatever he doesn’t want to hear, so I suppose I’ll be telling him up to the point this little one is in university.”

“I just don’t think it’s right, him hounding you.”

“And I don’t think it’s right for you to stick with a fagin who’ll give you the back of his hand whenever he’s in a mood,” Jinna brought the argument back round to her original point.

“It’s not the mood that does the striking,” Mia muttered, addressing the teacup which, at least, didn’t argue back.

Unlike Jinna, who was just getting warmed up. “You’re almost of age,” she was saying. “Old enough if you wanted to opt out of your shares and leave the hive, I could maybe get Sol to hire you on here with me. And my flat has room for—” she paused at the sound of something scraping the diner’s glass door. “What was that?”

Mia looked outside and saw that it had started to rain again. “I bet it’s Elvis,” she said, sliding from the booth. “Must be getting lonely out there.”

“Elvis?” Jinna followed Mia to the front door. “Like the king from Earth?” 

“Not exactly,” Mia opened the door, letting in a rush of rainy wind and one exceptionally grumpy draco.

“Then who, exacl-
eee
!” Jinna gave a delighted squeal, spinning to watch as Elvis flapped his way into the diner, coming to rest on the counter where he flapped the water from his wings and chittered angrily at Mia.

“Jinna, this is Elvis, Gideon’s draco,” Mia said.

“Of course he is,” Jinna said, still staring.

“He don’t like rain,” Mia added.

As if to prove it, Elvis gave a vigorous shake and then looked around, circling himself like a cat as his eyes skimmed the diner before coming back around to face Mia, to whom he gave a questioning chirp.

“If you’re looking for Gideon, he’s gone to the loo,” Mia told him, pointing to the rear of the diner. “That way.”

The draco apparently understood because, with a last flutter to dry his wings, he jumped up, flapped in the direction she’d pointed, and swooped around the corner.

“Cor, that’s a smart reptile,” Mia murmured.

“Maybe he needs the loo, too,” Jinna quipped, then sighed. “All right, take this,” she handed Mia the teapot she’d been holding all this time. “Let me close the place up and then we’ll put together some dinner for your surly convict and his friend,” she waved in the direction Elvis had flown.

Mia took the teapot and headed towards the counter pass-through while Jinna flipped over the window sign to the ‘closed’ side.

The door slammed open, again. 

“I’m sorry,” Mia heard Jinna say, “but we’ve closed for — for the night
.

The hesitation in her friend’s voice had Mia turning to see who’d entered and found Jinna faced by three men and a woman. Two of the men and the woman were tall, blonde, broad-shouldered, and known to Mia as Rolf, Ulf and Freya Ohmdahl.

The Ohmdahls, fraternal triplets, were veterans from the Stolichnayan army who’d emigrated to Nike with their mother about half a year back. Now the three made their living by hiring out to anyone with enough of the ready keep the family in vodka and Mama Ohmdahl’s kissel.

This meant they traveled in much the same circles as Mia. The difference being where Mia’s jobs required a certain level of finesse, the Ohmdahls’ collective size and freedom from an overage of higher thinking got them hired for situations which benefitted from the sheer force of their presence.

No one who saw the wall of Ohmdahls coming their way was inclined to quibble over — well, anything, really.

Which likely meant they’d come to make certain Jinna didn’t quibble over whatever the third man — an older fellow with stooped shoulders, silvered hair and oddly hungry eyes — wanted.

“I’m sorry, as well,” this third man told Jinna with a tone that Mia’s teeth on edge. “Sorry to hear you’ve refused, again, my offer of a comfortable home for my grandchild.”

So this was Liam’s father. Looking at the man, Mia couldn’t fault Jinna for wanting nothing to do with him.

“So sorry that you’ve brought help to convince me?” Jinna was asking, her voice arctic with disdain.

“I believe,” Del replied, “we are far past persuading.” He gestured to the three Ohmdahls and Ulf and Rolf took the cue to spread out into the diner while Freya remained at the door.

Mia looked up, and further up as Rolf planted himself near her. “Hallo Rolf,” she said. “How’s your mum?”

“Mia,” he nodded to the dodger in recognition. “Mother is being good.” He glanced at his employer of the moment, then at Mia. “But maybe you should be going now?”

“Yes, you should indeed be going,” Del said, his dark, almost black, eyes fixing on Mia. “This is a private matter.”

“No, it isn’t,” Jinna said. “Anything you have to say to me you can say in front of witnesses, and then those witnesses,” she jerked her chin up at Ulf, who’d settled into full ‘looming’ posture at her side, “can mark me telling you, as I have told you nearly every swarming day for the past four months, you are not taking my child.”

“Which is why,” Del said with a smile Mia found genuinely disturbing (which, given her years with Ellison, was saying something), “I’m simply going to take
you
. No need to fear,” he said as Jinna visibly paled, “you will be well cared for, as would any guest of my family. So well, in fact, that I am confident that by the time you reach full term, you will also have come to accept what’s best for the child.”

Now he nodded to Ulf and Ulf reached for Jinna who, to his surprise, he missed because Jinna had already moved, ducking under his arms and darting into the main dining area.

Ulf froze, momentarily confused.

“Move, you idiots,” Del said.

They moved, Ulf following Jinna into the seating area and Rolf lumbering past Mia, clearly meaning to cut Jinna off at the far end of the diner.

Which was when Mia remembered that she was holding the teapot.

She remembered she was holding the teapot because, quite suddenly, it was flying through the air in the general direction of Rolf Ohmdahl’s head. “
Sorry,
” she said as the pot collided with Rolf’s skull before shattering to the floor. The apology was as automatic as the attack. “Really,
really
sorry,” she added as Rolf, shedding tea and pottery, turned in her direction. 

“That was not so nice,” he said to Mia.

Further down the room, Jinna was leading Ulf a merry chase through the tables, tossing cutlery, napkin dispensers and once a deadly squirt of mustard right into Ulf’s eye.

“It was instinct,” Mia said, backing into a stool while on the other side of the room, Ulf gurgled in pain. She was distantly aware of a shadow overhead, and Freya’s bellow of surprise.

“I don’t know what is instinct,” Rolf said, “I only know job, and you are being in the way of job.” 

Then the shadow descended on Rolf in a flurry of wings and talons and Freya’s surprise turned to fury. Across the diner, Ulf thudded backwards like a poleaxed aurochs to reveal a man in an infantry long-coat standing in front of Jinna and holding the broken remains of a chair.


That
,” Gideon said as he stepped over the groaning Ulf, half a chair in his hand. “Is instinct.”

 

 

 

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