Quinn paid no attention, scarcely seeming to care about the results of her order. She knelt by Miles’s side, her shaking hands outspread, hesitating. Then they dove and pulled off Miles’s command helmet. She flung her own squad leader’s helmet to the floor and replaced it on her smooth gray hood with Miles’s. Her lips moved, establishing contact, checking channels. The helmet was undamaged, apparently. She yelled orders to perimeter-people, queries to the drop shuttle, and one other. “Norwood, get back here, get back here. Yes, bring it, bring it now. On the double, Norwood!” Her head swivelled away from Miles only long enough to shout, “Taura, get this building secured!” From above, the sergeant in turn bellowed orders to her scurrying troopers.
Quinn pulled a vibra-knife from her belt sheath and began cutting away Miles’s fatigues, ripping through belts and the nerve-disruptor shield-suit, tossing the bloody fragments aside. Mark looked up, following her glance, to see the medic with the float-pallet returning, hauling his burden across the concrete. The float-pallet counteracted gravity, but not mass; the inertia of the heavy cryo-chamber fought his attempts to run, and fought him again as he braked and lowered the pallet to the floor near his dead commander. Half a dozen confused clones followed the medic like baby ducks, clustering together and staring around in horror at the ghastly aftermath of the brief sharp firefight.
The medic looked back and forth from Miles’s body to the loaded cryo-chamber. “Captain Quinn, it’s no good. It won’t hold two.”
“The hell it’s not.” Quinn staggered to her feet, her voice grating like gravel. She seemed unaware of the tears running down her face, tracking pinkly through the spatter. “The hell it’s not.” She stared bleakly at the gleaming cryo-chamber. “Dump her.”
“Quinn, I can’t!”
“On my order. On my hands.”
“Quinn …” The medic’s voice was anguished. “Would he have ordered this?”
“He just lost his damn vote. All right.” She took a deep breath. “I’ll do it. You start prepping him.”
Teeth clenched, the medic moved to obey. He flipped open a door at the end of the chamber and removed a tray of equipment. It was all in disarray, having been used once already and hastily re-packed. He rolled out some big insulated bottles, keyed open the chamber. Its lid popped, breaking the seal, I rose. She reached within, unfastening things that Mark could not :. Did not wish to see. She hissed, as instantly-frozen skin tore from r hands, but reached again. With a grunt, she heaved a woman’s greenish, empurpled nude body from the chamber and laid it on the floor. It was the smashed-up bike-trooper, Phillipi. Thorne’s patrol, ring Bharaputran fire, had finally found her near her downed floater some two buildings away from her lost helmet. Broken back, broken limbs; she’d taken hours to die, against all the Green Squad medic’s heroic efforts to save her. Quinn looked up and saw Mark ring at her. Her face was ravaged.
“You, you useless … wrap her.” She pointed to Phillipi, then hurried around the cryo-chamber to where the Blue Squad medic now sit beside Miles.
Mark broke his paralysis at last, to scuttle around and find a thin foil heat wrap among the medical supplies. Frightened of the body, but too terrified by Quinn to disobey, he laid out the silver wrap and led the cold dead woman up in it. She was stiff and heavy, under his cringing touch.
He rose to hear the medic muttering, with his ungloved hands plunged deep into the gory mess that had been Miles Vorkosigan’s chest, “I can’t find an end. Where the hell’s an end? At least the damned aorta, something …”
’It’s been over four minutes,” snarled Quinn, pulled out her vibra-blade again, and cut Miles’s corpse’s throat, two neat slashes bracketing but not touching the windpipe. Her fingers scrabbled in the cut. The medic glanced up only to say, “Be sure you get the carotid and not the jugular.”
I’m trying. They’re not color-coded.” She found something pale and rubbery. She pulled tubing from the top of one of the insulated lines, and jammed its plastic end-nozzle into the presumed artery. She switched the power on; the tiny pump hummed, pushing translucent green-cryo-fluid through the transparent tubing. She pulled out a second piece of tubing from the jug and inserted it on the other side of Miles’s neck. Blood began to flow from the slashed exit veins, over her hands, over everything; not spurting as from a heartbeat, but in steady, inhuman, mechanical fashion. It spread on the floor in a shimmering pool, then began to flow away across some subtle drain-slope, a little carmine creek. An impossible quantity of blood. The clustered clones were weeping. Mark’s own head throbbed, pain so great it darkened his vision.
Quinn kept the pumps going till what came out ran greenish-clear.
The medic meanwhile had apparently found the ends he was looking and attached two more tubes. More blood, mixed with cryo-fluid, welled up and spilled from the wound. The creek became a river.
The medic pulled Miles’s boots and socks off, and ran sensors over his paling feet. “Almost there … damn, we’re nearly dry.” He hastened to his jug, which had switched itself off and was blinking a red indicator light.
“I used all I had,” said Quinn.
“It’s probably enough. They were both small people. Clamp those ends—” He tossed her something glittering, which she snatched out of the air. They bent over the little body. “Into the chamber, then,” said the medic. Quinn cradled the head, the medic took the torso and hips. The arms and legs dangled down. “He’s light …” They swung their stripped burden hastily into the cryo-chamber, leaving the blood-soaked uniform on the floor in a sodden heap. Quinn left the medic to make the last connections and turned away blind-eyed, talking to her helmet. She did not look down at the long silver package at her feet.
Thorne appeared, crossing the chamber at a jog. Where had it been? Thorne caught Quinn’s eye, and with a jerk of its head at the dead Bharaputrans reported, “They came up through the tunnels, all right. I have the exits secured, for now.” Thorne glowered bleakly at the cryo-chamber. The hermaphrodite looked suddenly … middle-aged. Old.
Quinn acknowledge this with a nod. “Key to Channel 9-C. We got trouble outside.”
A kind of dreary curiosity winkled through Mark’s numb shock. He turned his own headset back on. He’d had it helplessly and hopelessly turned off for hours, ever since Thorne had snatched back its command. He followed the captains’ transmissions.
The Blue and Orange Squad perimeter teams were under heavy pressure from beefed-up Bharaputran security forces. Quinn’s delay in this building was drawing Bharaputrans like flies to carrion, with a buzzing excitement. With over two-thirds of the clones now packed aboard the shuttle, the enemy had stopped directing heavy fire toward it, but airborne reinforcements were gathering fast, hovering like vultures. Quinn and company were in imminent danger of being surrounded and cut off.
“Got to be another way,” muttered Quinn. She switched channels. “Lieutenant Kimura, how’s it going with you? Resistance still soft?”
“It’s hardened up beautifully. I kinda got my hands full right now, Quinnie.” Kimura’s thin, weirdly cheerful voice came back cut by a wash of static indicating plasma fire and the activation of his plasma mirror field. “We’ve achieved our objective and are pulling out now. Trying to. Chat later, huh?” More static.
“Which objective? Take care of your damn shuttle, y’hear, boy? You may yet have to come for us. Report to me the second you’re back in the air.”
“Right.” A slight pause. “Why isn’t the Admiral on this channel, Quinnie?”
Quinn’s eyes squeezed shut in pain. “He’s … temporarily out of contact. Move it, Kimura!”