James P Hogan. Giant’s Star. Giant Series #3

The cabbie wound down his window and leaned out to yell in the direction of the front end of the truck. “Hey, asshole! Who taught ya ta drive dat thing? How the hell am I supposed ta get outa here?” Two repairmen had jumped out of the passenger-side door of the truck, and another was emerging from the rear. The truck’s engine came to life again in a series of laboring electric whines, then shuddered and died.

“I’ve got problems,” a voice shouted through the open driver’s window of the truck. “The same thing happened just now when we left the office.”

“Well, do something with the goddam thing, wfflya. I’ve got a living ta make.”

‘Tickers had released Lyn’s arm and was growling profanities beneath his breath. With what was going on in the driveway, neither he nor the maid noticed her backing quietly away across the hall.

“Back up for Chrissakes. What’s the matter? Don’t you know how to reverse a cab?”

“How can I back up? Don’t those look like flowers behind me to you? You need lenses or sump’n?”

Another technician was coming out of the back of the truck. There were already more of them than would have been sent on a simple domestic repair job, but Vickers and the maid were too preoccupied with the argument to register the fact for a few vital seconds. Also they failed to notice the sound of air engines growing steadily louder from beyond the treetops flanking the driveway.

When Lyn reappeared in the corner room Sverenssen was on the far side at one of the windows, peering out and upward as sound deluged the house suddenly, seemingly from all directions. All in the same moment, two Army assault landers dropped into sight from above and came down on the terrace by the pool with khaki-clad figures already bursting from their doors, explosions and the sounds of shattering glass came from the upper part of the house, and there was a brief glimpse of Vickers and the maid being bowled over by more figures pouring into the front hall before additional concussions followed by clouds of smoke blotted Out the view along the corridor.

Lyn snatched the respirator from her bag, clamped it over her face and eyes, and snapped its retaining band into position behind her head just as the barrage of stun grenades and gas bombs crashed in through the ground-floor windows of the house. Detonations and smoke were everywhere, punctuated by shouting, splintering glass, the thuds of doors being smashed down, and a few scattered shots. One of the domestics appeared in the archway that led through to the main stairs, gesticulating frantically upward and behind him. “They’re on the roof! There’s soldiers coming in off the roof! They’re-” The rest was drowned by more explosions, and he was engulfed by a cloud of smoke and gas erupting behind him.

Sverenssen had recoiled from the window, and Lyn could see him clawing at his eyes in the middle of the room as he tried to get

his bearings. Whatever happened, he couldn’t be allowed to get to the communications room now. She began picking her way cautiously around the wall to get between him and the passageway leading to the office wing. He saw the movement through the smoke and came nearer. “You!” His face twisted into a mask of fury as he recognized her, made even more grotesque by the watery streaks cutting through the smoke grime on his cheeks. Lyn’s heart did a backflip in her chest. She backed away, but kept moving toward the passageway. Sverenssen’s shape came looming through the smoke, straight at her.

Then barked military commands sounded inside the house, seemingly from not far away in the direction of the guest annex. Sverenssen threw a glance back over his shoulder and hesitated. Shadowy figures were struggling in the corridor outside the kitchen, and there was more movement on the side of the house facing the pool. He changed direction and made a bolt toward the office wing. Without realizing what she was doing, Lyn scooped up a wicker chair and hurled it across the floor at his legs. Sverenssen went down heavily and struck his head on the wall as he sprawled full-length on the floor.

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