The Better Part of Valor (32 page)

BOOK: The Better Part of Valor
4.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Aye, aye, Captain.”

“Communications, punch through to the staff sergeant’s implant, but don’t let the general know you did it. Or that you can do it.”

“Aye, aye, Captain.”

*   *   *

*
Due respect, General
…* The sound of weapons’ fire nearly drowned out her next words. *
…but we already knew that.
*

*   *   *

“Listen up, people; the good news is, we won that round. The bad news is, we’re running low on ammo.”

“Staff? I volunteer to go to the
Berganitan
and get more.”

Torin moved a little ahead so she could see Tsui’s face as she walked. “And you’d just be completely screwed if I had a way to send you, wouldn’t you?”

He let his head fall back down onto the stretcher. “Wouldn’t have volunteered if you had a way to send me,” he pointed out faintly. “But I could use a beer.”

“Couldn’t we all.”

They’d run into the bugs again on their way to Nivry’s “weird engine room shit.” The lights were low enough that the Marines had helmet scanners in place, the passage had begun to look like a mechanical access route, and the front of the march was halfway across a T-junction when the sudden smell of furniture polish had let them know they weren’t alone.

The bugs had been the more startled. Torin suspected it was because Big Yellow was also screwing around with their maps, moving corridors, shortening passageways, joining two sections that hadn’t been joined before. They’d probably thought they were on a direct route to the air lock with no chance of running into the enemy.

There’d been a fast flurry of shots exchanged, and the bugs had retreated.

No casualties.

As fights went, it was one of the better ones.

“How’s your arm?”

In moving up beside Tsui, Torin’d also moved up by Ryder who carried the foot of his stretcher. She slowed until he caught up, then matched his stride. “It’s all right.”

“Really? It didn’t look
all right.

The gleam of the field sealant showed through the hole in her sleeve—the burn had been deep enough that had it been on either the front or the back of her arm instead of the side, it would have taken out a muscle group. “It aches, but I can use it.”

“You were very brave.”

Eyebrow raised, Torin turned to face him. It could have been a condescending remark, but after spending the last few hours in his company, she didn’t think it was. “You’re not used to seeing people get shot, are you?” she asked dryly.

“No, I’m not.” One corner of his mouth lifted into a wry smile. “You know, most people aren’t.”

She considered that for a moment, then nodded. “Good.”

A decompression hatch at the end of the passage opened into the upper wall of a well-lit, two-level chamber. Six-by-six grates covered the ceiling, allowing glimpses of a maze of pipes and wires through their mesh. Metal stairs led down to a textured deck. Four large tanks sat along one fifteen-meter wall in black cradles, digital readouts of pressure, temperature, and volume flashing on each. Large pieces of gray machinery that no one could actually identify squatted in rows down the center of the deck.

“Area’s clear,”
Werst announced from an identical platform on the other side of the room.

“You heard him, Marines. Let’s move. Air lock’s twenty meters on the other side of Private Werst.”

The deck vibrated as they crossed it, as though they were near the combustion chamber. A faint smell of ozone hung over the whole space.

Torin kept her people moving as quickly as possible; the last thing she wanted was prolonged exposure to what appeared to be four hydrogen tanks. She had no doubt this was just another scenario created for them—the system appeared far too primitive to be an actual working part of the ship—but,
because of its availability, hydrogen
was
the default fuel and should anything happen, should the bugs reappear, the last thing she wanted was a stray shot damaging one of those tanks. Big Yellow had proved willing to blow part of itself up before.

They were three quarters of the way across when Werst yelled, “Enemy above!”

Above?
It’s a fukking drop ceiling. Those things aren’t weight bearing!

Sliding along on a piece of armor, only arms and head visible around its edges, the bug was a moving shadow behind the grates.

“Take cover!”

Marines and civilians dove under and behind the big gray machines. They didn’t look likely to explode, but then, neither had that original section of wall.

The MDCs were defused by the grate. Anything that got through hit the armor.

“Stop firing! You’re just wasting your fukking ammo!” Who was tallest and closest to the stairs? “Huilin, Frii; get to Werst and boost him high enough to get through the grate!” She could hear the two di’Taykan moving.

The bugs had fired energy bursts in the hydroponics.
They can’t be stupid enough to fire that weapon in here.

A short burst dropped everyone to the deck.

Okay. They can.

When Torin looked up again, a metallic blue cylinder, small and familiar, was falling through a smoking hole in the grate.

The grenade hit one of the gray machines and bounced.

Torin spun around in time to see it roll past Guimond and the three civilians and disappear under a tank.

Time slowed to a crawl as Dursinski dropped to her stomach and batted it out with the muzzle of her benny. She grabbed for it with her free hand but it skittered away, taking an odd bounce on the textured deck, spinning around and almost disappearing again into the thick fur of the reporter flank’s. Presit reluctantly shuffled her leg aside and picked up the grenade, holding it in both hands, her eyes squinted nearly shut as she tried to see what she had.

Guimond had his pack off and combat vest undone.

Standard operating procedure for a grenade in a sensitive area.
If you can’t throw it back at the bastards, wrap it in your vest then get some distance. The vest will contain most of the explosion.

Cinnamon.

Presit sneezed.

Guimond grabbed the grenade from her hands and threw himself down to the deck on top of it.

The explosion lifted his body, shaking it like a small animal in a predator’s jaws.

On Torin’s slate, his med-alert went off, then settled down to the steady beep of the locator. She keyed in the code that would turn it off. She knew where the body was.

Time sped up again.

“NO!”

Somebody had to yell it; the only question had ever been who.

The rage in Werst’s voice spun all heads around. From the handrail around the platform, he leaped out onto the grate. Gripping with fingers and toes, he raced toward the bug.

Torin didn’t waste breath calling him back. He wouldn’t have listened.
Rage, but no denial
, she thought as he crawled across the ceiling.
He expected this, or something like it.

Werst reached the hole the bug had blown through the grate and shoved his benny into it, pulling the trigger again and again.

Another energy burst went off.

“If that bug’s got more than one grenade…!” Dursinski yelled.

“She’d have dropped it already.” Torin’s voice filled all the spaces in the room, leaving no place for panic. If the bug had more than one grenade, she’d have tossed them down in a pattern, one right after the other, and they’d
all
be dead.

The grate Werst clung to peeled away from the ceiling, screaming a protest. Hanging upside down, he reached around the jagged edge and fired one more time. The bug made much the same sound as the grate and pitched forward through the hole, all four arms flailing wildly.

One caught Werst across the small of the back.

She missed the machines and hit the deck with a wet crunch.

Hanging from his feet, Werst swung, once, twice, his helmet flying off his head to clatter against a tank. The grip of his toes alone wasn’t enough to support his weight. He twisted in the air, hit the top of a machine on all fours, and slid off to the deck.

“Harrop, the bug! Nivry, Guimond!”

Torin was at Werst’s side a heartbeat later but, even so, he was already on his hands and knees crawling toward the remains of the bug, pushing his weapon ahead of him, his finger still hooked around the trigger. “She’s dead, Werst. You got her. Let it go.”

He snarled a Krai profanity and kept crawling.

“Werst!” When he jerked to a stop, she wrapped her hand around his right wrist, pinning his weapon to the floor. When he tried to roll out of her grip, when his left fist jabbed out toward her face, she was ready for him. “That’s. Enough.”

And it was because she said it was. She used the words to fill him as she used them to fill a room, leaving no space for questions or doubt.

His facial ridges flared once and with a sound halfway between a growl and a whimper, he collapsed into the circle of her arms.

A heartbeat later, when Torin felt muscles begin to tense, she let him push away. He had his own places to store grief, just as she did. Just as they all did.

“Wasn’t enough he had the
nice guy
fukking target painted on him,” Werst growled, glaring at nothing over Torin’s shoulder, “he had to go like a fukking hero.”

“Guimond saved a lot of lives.”

“And that makes it better?”

Torin snorted. “Only time makes it better and there never seems to be enough of it.”

She wasn’t telling him anything he didn’t know, but the snort drew his focus to her face. He stared into her eyes for a moment, then he nodded and looked away. “You’re a big
serley
comfort, you know that, Staff Sergeant Kerr?”

“Just doing my job.” His meaning had been clear on his face, the words used were irrelevant. “When you’re ready to talk about it…”

He nodded.

“And otherwise; are you all right?”

“Yeah, I’m…” As he moved a leg, his ridges clamped shut and the mottling on his skull suddenly stood out in bold relief. “I broke a
serley
toe!”

“You’re lucky you only broke one,” Torin told him, standing. Huilin had been carrying one of the med kits, but he was still on the far platform. He—or he and Frii—had cut a section free near the hatch and, standing on the handrail, he was tall enough to make sure any other bugs trying that route would find an unpleasant welcome. The other kit…“Dursinski!”

“Right here, Staff.”

“Werst’s broken a toe.”

“That’s what he gets for not landing on his head.” But she was on her knees with the med kit out before she’d finished talking.

“If there’s one broken…”

“Yeah, yeah, I’ll check the others.”

The bug was next. Harrop poked it with a boot as she approached. “Not that I’m an expert on these things, Staff, but I’m pretty sure it…”

“She.”

“What?”

When you forget the enemy is a person, you react to their weapons not them. That’s dangerous. The little we know suggests the bugs are female.
Not the time for a lecture, so Torin merely repeated, “She.”

“Okay. I’m pretty sure
she
was dead before
she
hit the deck. Werst did a lot of MDC damage on the lower thorax. That windmilling as she fell was a last hurrah. She could have finished us if she’d dropped three or four grenades.” He pushed back his helmet and glanced toward Guimond’s body. “Why do you figure she only dropped one?”

“Maybe they thought the ship would endure one grenade but not two. Maybe, it’s a bug honor thing, strip off your armor…”

“She was on a piece of armor.”

“Yeah, but she wasn’t in it. Maybe you win points by stripping down and dropping a grenade on the enemy—this
is
the second time they’ve tried it.”

“Seems to be a bit of a suicide mission.”

“That might be the point.” Torin shrugged, suddenly not so
much tired as weary. “Maybe they’ve had budget cuts back home and they can only afford one grenade each.”

“Fukking budget cuts,” Harrop grunted. “So what do we do with her?”

“Leave her. If her people want the body, they know where it is. Take her weapon, though. R&D’ll want it.”

“Give me a break, Staff, it’s covered in bug guts!”

“Welcome to another glorious day in the Corps, Corporal Harrop.”

And, finally, Guimond.

Welcome to another glorious day in the Corps.

She pushed past the wailing Katrien and dropped to one knee through the cloud of shed fur. Fortunately for them, they expressed their grief at a lower decibel level than regular conversation. Nivry had turned Guimond over, still had one hand on his shoulder. His combats had contained the explosion although the force of it had collapsed his chest and forced blood from every visible pore. The blue of his eyes was strangely untouched amidst all the red.
And isn’t that a fukking cliché.

“If he’d had his vest done up…” Nivry murmured.

Torin shook her head. “It wouldn’t have mattered.”

Small fingers dug into her shoulders. “You are not going to him immediately! You are letting him die!”

“He was dead the moment he grabbed the grenade from your hands,” Torin told the reporter bluntly as someone, she neither knew nor cared who, pulled her away.

The ring of Marines split to let Werst limp in to Guimond’s side.

“The
serley
bastard’s still smiling,” he grunted.

Which seemed like as good an epitaph as any. Torin brushed Guimond’s eyes closed, rocked back, and slid her hand into an inner pocket in his vest. The body bags were a smarter fabric than the stretchers and, unfolded, held what amounted to one massive MDC. Even given Guimond’s weight, it took only moments to get the body into the bag. Torin wiped the blood off her thumb and ran it down the seal.
We’re just too fukking good at this.

She sighed deeply and stood.

“We will not forget. We will not fail you.”

“Fraishin sha aren. Valynk sha haren.”

Although Heer was the ranking Krai, no one was surprised
when Werst spoke.
“Kal danic dir kadir.”
Leaning on Heer’s shoulder, he bit a small piece from the back of his forearm.
“Kri ta chrikdan.”

Other books

Straying From the Path by Carrie Vaughn
Her Impossible Boss by Cathy Williams
LZR-1143: Within by Bryan James
Three Dark Crowns by Kendare Blake
The Place I Belong by Nancy Herkness