drive.
That
had been touch and go!
He cut the steering back in. The boat swerved through an arc that howled like a wolf. A tiny landing field carved from volcanic rock appeared in the viewports. He came down in a shattering blast of displaced air. Dust vomited skyward.
The jacks touched ground. He slapped the drive to Idle and threw off his harness. ‘Take over, Dave,’ he said, and pounded for the main airlock.
His score of men arrived with him, everyone space-suited. Their weapons gleamed in the overhead illumination. He cursed the safety seal that made the lock open with such sadistic slowness. Afternoon light slanted through. He led the way, jumped off the ramp before it had finished extruding, and crouched in the settling dust.
There were three buildings across the field, as Coquelin had said: a fifteen-man barracks, a vehicle shed, and an environmental dome. The four sentries outside the latter held their guns in a stupefied fashion, only approximately pointed at him. The two men on a mobile GTA missile carrier gaped. Georgetown HQ had naturally phoned them not to shoot if they detected a spacecraft. The rest of the guard were pouring from quarters.
Heim counted. Some weren’t in sight yet…. He lumbered toward them. ‘Emergency landing,’ he called. ‘I saw your field—’
The young man with Peace Control lieutenant’s insignia, who must be in charge, looked dismayed. ‘But—’ He stopped and fumbled at his collar.
Heim came near. ‘What’s wrong?’ he asked. ‘Why shouldn’t I have used your field?’
That was a wicked question, he knew. Officially PCA didn’t admit this place existed.
The Aleriona overlords who comprised the delegation could not be housed together. They never lived thus at home; to offer them less than total privacy would have been an insult, and perhaps risky of all their lives. So they must be scattered around Earth. Ascension was a good choice. Little was here nowadays except a small World Sea Police base. Comings and goings were thus discreet.
‘Orders,’ the lieutenant said vaguely. He squinted at the argent spear of the yacht. ‘I say, you don’t look damaged.’
You could fake a name and registry for
Connie Girl
, but notunsoundness. The last couple of men emerged from barracks. Heim raised his arm and pointed. ‘On her other side,’ he said. He chopped his hand down and clashed his faceplate shut.
Two men in the airlock stepped back. The gas cannon they had hidden poked its nose out. Under fifty atmospheres of pressure, the anesthetic aerosol boiled forth.
A sentry opened fire. Heim dove for dirt. A bullet splintered rock before his eyes. The yellow stream gushed overhead, rumbling. And now his crew were on their way, with stunners asnicker. No lethal weapons; he’d hang before he killed humans doing their duty. But this was an attack by men who had seen combat against men whose only job had been to prevent it. Death wasn’t needed.
The short, savage fight ended. Heim rose and made for the dome. Zucconi and Lupowitz came behind, a ram slung between them on a gravity carrier. Around the field,
Connie Girl’s
medical team started to check the fallen Peacemen and give what first aid was indicated.
‘Here,’ said Heim into his suit radio. Zucconi and Lupowitz set down the ram and started the motor. Five hundred kilos of tool steel bashed the dome wall at sixty cycles. The narcotic fog clamored with that noise. The wall smashed open. Heim leaped through, into the red sun’s light.
A dozen followed him. ‘He’s somewhere in this mess,’ Heim said. ‘Scatter. We’ve got maybe three minutes before the cops arrive.’
He burst into the jungle at random. Branches snapped, vines shrank away, flowers were crushed underfoot. A shadow flitted – Cynbe! Heim plunged.
A laser flame sizzled. Heim felt the heat, saw his combat breastplate vaporizing in coruscant fire. Then he was upon the Aleriona. He wrenched the gun loose.
Mustn’t close in
–
he’d
get