Company Wars 01 – Downbelow Station

he headed out, started running, heard running footfalls behind him and looked

back.

“Get back,” he wished Josh, “get back in there”

He had no time to argue with him. He ran, down the hall… had to be in green

sector; it had to be nine in this direction… all the signs were gone. He saw

riot ahead of him, people running scattered through the halls; and some had

lengths of pipe and there was a body in the hall… he dodged it and kept going.

The rioters he saw did not look like Pell… unshaven, unkempt… he knew suddenly

what they were, and flung everything into his running, pelted down the hall and

up a turn, headed as close to the docks as he could get without going into the

main corridor. He had to break into it finally, dodged a runner among other

runners.

There were more bodies on the floor, and looters ran rampant. He shouldered past

men who clutched pipes and knives and, some of them, guns…

The entry to the dock was closed, sealed. He saw that, staggered aside as a

looter came swinging a pipe at him, for no reason more than that he was in the

way.

The attacker kept going, a half-circle that pulled him about and ended against

the wall, with Josh, who slammed his head into the wall and came up with the

pipe in his hand.

Damon whirled and ran, for the sealed doors… reached for his pocket, for the

card, to override the lock.

“Konstantin!” someone shouted behind him.

He turned, stared at a man, at a gun leveled at him. A length of pipe hurtled

out of nowhere and hit the man, and looters scrabbled for the gun, a surging

mob. In panic he whirled, thrust the card for the slot; the door whipped back,

with the vast dockside beyond, and other looters. He ran, sucking in the cold

air, down the dock toward white sector, where he saw other great seals in place,

the dock seals, two levels tall and airtight. He stumbled from exhaustion and

caught himself, pelted up the curve toward them, hearing someone close behind

him and hoping it was Josh. The stitch that had started in his side unnoticed

grew to a lancing pain… Past looted shops with dark, open doors, he reached the

wall beside the huge seals, fetched up against the closed door of the small

personnel lock, thrust his card into the slot.

It was dead. No response. He pushed it harder, thinking it might have failed

contact, inserted it a second time. It was cut off. It should at least have

lighted the buttons, given him a chance to put through a priority code, or

flashed the hazard signal.

“Damon!” Josh reached the door beside him, caught at his shoulder, pulled him

around. There were people moving behind them, thirty, half a hundred, from all

across the docks… from green nine, in greater and greater number.

“They know you got a door open,” Josh said. “They know you’ve got that kind of

access.”

He stared at them. Snatched his card from the slot. Useless, blanked; control

had blanked his card.

“Damon.”

He grabbed at Josh and ran, and the crowd started forward with a howl. He raced

for the open doors, for the shops… into the dark doorway of the nearest. He

whirled inside, pushed the button to seal the door. That at least worked.

The first of the mob hit the door, hammered at it. Panicked faces pressed close

to the plastic, lengths of pipe hammered at it, scarring it: it was a security

seal, like all the dock-front stores… pressure-tight, windowless, but for that

double-thick circle.

“It’s going to hold,” Josh said.

“I don’t think,” he said, “that we can get out again. I don’t think we can get

out of here until they come to get us.”

Josh looked at him across the space of the window, from the other side of the

door, pale in the light that came through it.

“They blanked my card,” Damon said. “It stopped working. Whoever’s in station

central just cut off my card use.” He looked toward the plastic, on which the

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