Pilgrimage to Hell By JACK ADRIAN

don’t panic. We’ll fix it. I take it there’s more on the stairs?”

“You take it correct.”

Charlie’s tiny mouth opened and closed.

“You’re a real hothead, Ryan.” She added, “What if they came in a vehicle?”

“He said he saw them in the street. Across the street.”

“Oh, right. Good memory.”

Ryan watched as half the bar patrons began dragging bodies toward the far end of

the room. J.B. sucked on his cheroot, blew smoke out in a thin plume. He said,

“Listen. They used gas on the train. Why didn’t they use it on the Old Man?”

“That’s a rhetorical question, J.B. You know the answer.”

“Hmm. They mortared gas canisters in.” He clicked his tongue irritably.

“Something we didn’t make allowances for. Gas gets in through cracks and tiny

holes. So all our people are dead. Nothing we can do there. Say it’s a

short-term agent. After dispersal they now have to open up all those land wags

and trucks and the two war wags. But they can’t, because they know that every

damned vehicle owned by us is packed with boobies. Everybody knows that. And if

they start smashing out window glass or blowing in doors, the whole caboodle

could go up and they lose everything. So they’re stuck.” A dark smile of

satisfaction fled across the thin man’s sallow features. “They’re well and truly

stuck.”

“So they have to parley with the Old Man,” said Ryan. “So they have to take him

alive.”

“Nontoxic agent.”

“Nothing else’d do.”

“Yeah.”

“So that means,” continued Ryan, “the Old Man’s out. But he’d have made sure all

the vehicles were tight. So that means Teague’s goons have got more vehicles on

their hands they can’t touch, move or do any thing at all with.”

“Yeah.”

J.B. blew a smoke ring. It sailed up toward the ceiling, shimmying, expanding,

drifting out from the center, breaking up.

“And that means,” said Ryan, “we’re the only free agents in town.”

“Yeah.”

“But they don’t know what we know. No one knows that.”

J.B. murmured, “That little extra.” He glanced at Ryan. “How long we got?” Ryan

checked his watch. “Rough timing, I’d say about four hours.”

“Gotta work fast. What’s your plan, war chief?” The room was now clear of

stiffs. Incredibly those who remained in the bar were drinking and talking as

though nothing had happened at all in the past ten minutes or so. He caught Ole

One-Eye’s single orb, pink rimmed, the eyelid fluttering in a macabre and

sardonic wink. He stared at Sam, Rintoul, finally at J.B. He thought of those on

the main train, maybe a couple of hundred souls all told. All loyal comrades;

some, indeed, close friends who’d shared with him a thousand experiences, a

thousand dangers, a thousand joys and carousals. He thought of the flame-haired

girl, Krysty, with the deep, the luminous green eyes. Extinguished. Snuffed out.

Rage was like a sudden eruption of fierce white flame that licked through his

entire system.

He said, his voice taut, “We take the war to the enemy. We pay a visit to Jordan

Teague.”

Chapter Eight

DESPITE ORDERS, you kept to the shadows. The deep shadows. The deeper the

better.

You kept to the shadows despite orders, despite doomy warnings from your unit

leaders, despite hideously snarled threats of disembowelment or being flayed

alive or having your hands nailed to the wall. Despite all these and more, you

kept to the shadows because you were beginning to get… cautious.

A sec man’s life in the old days used to be different. It used to be fun, used

to be a laff riot. It meant you were top of the pile, king of the ville. Meant

you could do what you wanted, when you wanted, for as long as you wanted, and

free. Mocsin was open city for the sec men, and you could tool along its streets

and whatever you saw was yours. Not for the asking—you didn’t need to ask for

anything. It was all yours for the taking. Yours by right of conquest. Didn’t

matter what it was, you had an open license on it. Food, booze, men, women.

Whatever was your fancy, it was yours.

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