They streamed around one building, under the cover of a second’s portico, then past a third, the half-squads leap-frogging and covering each other. It was all too easy. The complex reminded Miles of those carnivorous flowers with the nectar-coated spines that all faced inwards. Slipping in was simple, for little bugs like him. It was the attempt to get out that would exhaust and kill… .

It was therefore almost a relief when the first sonic grenade went off. The Bharaputrans weren’t saving it all for dessert. The explosion was a couple of buildings away, and rocked and reverberated strangely around the walkways. Not Dendarii issue, its deafening timbre was a tad off. He keyed his command helmet to follow the fire fight, half-subliminally, as Orange Squad rooted out a nest of Bharaputran security. It wasn’t the Bharaputrans his people could smoke out that worried him. It was the ones they overlooked… . He wondered if the enemy had brought in more mass-projectile weapons in addition to sonic grenades, and was coldly conscious of the missing element in his borrowed half-armor. Quinn had tried to make him take her torso-armor, but he’d convinced her its oversized loose sliding around as he moved would just make him crazy. Crazier, he’d thought he’d heard her mutter, but he hadn’t asked for an amplification. He wasn’t planning on leading any cavalry charges this trip, that was certain.

He blinked away the distracting ghostly data flow as they rounded a final corner, scared off three or four lurking Bharaputrans, and approached the clone-creche. Big blocky building, it looked like a hotel. Shattered glass doors led into a foyer where shadowy gray-camouflaged defenders moved among hastily-raised shielding, metal doors torn from hinges and propped up. A quick exchange of countersigns, and they were in. Half of Blue Squad scattered instantly to reinforce the building’s weary Green Squad defenders; the other half guarded him.

The medic warped the float pallet containing the portable cryo-chamber through the doors, and was hurriedly directed down a hallway by his comrades. Intelligently, they were prepping Phillipi in a side room, out of sight of their clone hostages. Step One was to remove as much as possible of the patient’s own blood; under these hasty combat conditions, without any attempt to recover and store it. Rough, ready, and extremely messy; it was not a sight for the faint-hearted, nor the unprepared mind.

“Admiral,” said a quiet alto voice.

He wheeled to find himself face to face with Bel Thorne. The hermaphrodite’s features were almost as gray as the shield-net hood that framed them, an oval of lined and puffy fatigue. Plus another look, one he hated seeing there despite his anger. Defeat. Bel looked beaten, looked like it had lost it all. And so it has. They did not exchange a single word of blame or defense. They didn’t need to; it was all plain in Bel’s face and, he suspected, his own. He nodded in acknowledgment, of Bel, of it all.

Beside Bel stood another soldier, the top of his helmet— my helmet—not quite level with the top of Bel’s shoulder. He had half-forgotten how startling Mark was. Do I really look like that?

“You—” Miles’s voice cracked, and he found he had to stop and swallow. “Later, you and I are going to have a long talk. There’s a lot you don’t seem to understand.”

Mark’s chin came up, defiantly. Surely my face is not that round. It must be an illusion, from the hood. “What about these kids?” said Mark. “These clones.”

“What about them?” A couple of young men in brown silk tunics and shorts appeared to be actually helping the Dendarii defenders, scared and excited rather than surly. Another group, boys and girls mixed, sat in a plain-scared bunch on the floor under the watchful eye of a stunner-armed trooper. Crap, they really are just kids.

“We’ve—you’ve got to take them along. Or I’m not going.” Mark’s teeth were set, but Miles saw him swallow.

“Don’t tempt me,” snarled Miles. “Of course we’re taking them along, how the hell else would we get out of here alive?”

Mark’s face lit, torn between hope and hatred. “And then what?” he demanded suspiciously.

“Oh,” Miles carolled sarcastically, “we’re just going to waltz right over to Bharaputra Station and drop them off, and thank Vasa Luigi kindly for the loan. Idiot! What d’you think? We load up and run like hell. The only place to put them would be out the airlock, and I guarantee you’d go first!”

Mark flinched, but took a deep breath and nodded. “All right, then.”

“It is not. All. Right,” Miles bit out. “It is merely … merely …” he could not come up with a word to describe what it merely was, aside from the most screwed-up mess he’d ever encountered. “If you were going to try and pull a stupid stunt like this, you might at least have consulted the expert in the family!”

“You? Come to you for help? D’you think I’m crazy?” demanded Mark furiously.

“Yes—” They were interrupted by a staring blond clone boy, who’d walked up to them open-mouthed.

“You really are clones,” he said in wonderment.

“No, we’re twins born six years apart,” snapped Miles. “Yes, we’re just as much clones as you are, that’s right, go back and sit down and obey orders, dammit.”

The boy retreated hastily, whispering, “It’s true!”

“Dammit,” Mark howled under his breath, if that squeezed sotto vioce could be so described, “how come they believe you and not me? It’s not fair!”

Quinn’s voice, through his helmet, derailed the family reunion. “If you and Don Quixote Junior are done greeting each other, Medic Norwood has Phillipi prepped and loaded, and the wounded ready to transport.”

“Form up, let’s get the first batch out the door, then,” he responded. He called up Blue Squad’s sergeant. “Framingham, take the first convoy. You ready to roll?”

“Ready. Sergeant Taura has marshalled them for me.”

“Go. And don’t look back.”

Half a dozen Dendarii, about three times that many bewildered and exhausted clones, and the two wounded troopers on float pallets assembled in the foyer and filed out the ruined doors. Framingham did not look too happy to be using a couple of young girls as a projectile-weapon shield; his chocolate-dark face was grim. But any Bharaputran snipers were going to have to take aim very, very carefully. The Dendarii forced the kids forward, if not at a run, then at least at a steady jog. A second group followed the first within a minute. Miles ran both non-coms’ helmet transmissions down either side of his peripheral vision, while his ears strained for the deadly whine of small-arms fire.

Were they going to bring this off? Sergeant Taura shepherded the final gaggle of clones into the foyer. She greeted him with a demi-salute, without even pausing to puzzle between himself and Mark. “Glad to see you, sir,” she rumbled.

“You too, Sergeant,” he replied, heart-felt. If Mark had managed to get Taura killed, he didn’t know how it could ever have been made right between them. At some more convenient moment he urgently wanted to find out how Mark had managed to fool her, and how intimately. Later.

Taura moved closer, and lowered her voice. “We lost four kids, escaped back to the Bharaputrans. Makes me kinda sick. Any chance … ?

Regretfully, he shook his head. “No way. No miracles this time. We’ve got to take what we can get and go, or we’ll lose it all.”

She nodded, understanding the tactical situation perfectly well. Understanding didn’t cure the gut-churning nausea of regret, unfortunately. He offered her a brief I’m sorry smile, and her long lips twisted up on one side in wry response.

The Blue Squad medic brought in the big float pallet containing the cryo-chamber, a blanket tossed over the transparent part of the gleaming cylinder to shield his comrade-and-patient’s naked and cooling body from uncomprehending or horrified outsiders’ eyes. Taura urged the clones to their feet.


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: