Pilgrimage to Hell By JACK ADRIAN

few kills, but there were guys out there that they hadn’t needed to ice, they

were so doped up. In one of the houses every sec man they could see was higher

than a bird on happyweed. So high, in fact, that the girls who were also there

were utterly redundant, were playing cards and drinking to while away the time.

Decay, thought Ryan moodily, his silenced SIG-Sauer now grip-held in his right

hand. The decay of empire. Look back through history and there it was, clearly

to be seen. Yet no one seemed to see it. It happened time and time again. Yet

nobody ever seemed to learn the lesson. And the chilling thought was that it

could happen even to the Trader and his empire, such as it was. All that had to

happen was to say the hell with it once in a while, ease up. That was all it

needed,

Hunaker muttered in his ear, “Why don’t we just take out the light system

altogether? Be easier for us.”

“Too risky.”

“Hell, Ryan, no one’d ever know. It’s shot to hell already. Way those damned

arcs’re blinking on and off…”

“Too risky.”

“You’re the boss.”

Ryan checked his watch. Roughly three hours forty minutes to go. It seemed a lot

but wasn’t. Not if they got caught up in something, met stiff opposition and had

to shoot their way out. It wasn’t very long at all.

There was one barrier to success. It was known—it must be known by now—that

their little group was outside the net. The guys on the barriers at the edge of

town would surely have reported back to Teague or Strasser—probably the

latter—that Ryan’s buggy had entered Mocsin, unless communications were very

sloppy and the guy hadn’t bothered to report in. But no, thought Ryan, he must

discount that, work on the assumption that right now the alarm was out and

Strasser’s goons were searching for them. Speed was therefore of the essence.

And not only for him but for Strasser, too.

Strasser would need time to think, to plan. A couple of miles outside Mocsin he

had a dozen vehicles in a circle— two war wags and land wags, trucks, container

rigs—full of stiffs, full of hardware and weaponry and food and all kinds of

trade goods, and he couldn’t touch them. He had them in his hand, they were his,

but they might just as well be on the moon. The only way he was going to be able

to get inside them was if someone gave him the key, someone told him how to

bypass the boobies and render them harmless. Without the key, the poor fucker

was basically up the creek.

Except that he also had the Trader. That was a powerful card. Everyone knew that

the Trader’s men were fiercely loyal to the Old Man. Strasser’s idea would be

either to break him or torture him so that someone else would break to save the

Trader. What Strasser didn’t know was that the intense loyalty of those who

worked with the Trader extended into virtually a vow of silence if anything ever

went badly wrong. It was impressed into every man and woman never to blab, about

anything. Sure, there were probably weak links in the chain—in any large

organization there were bound to be—but Ryan, running through those who were now

spark-out in the miniconvoy, couldn’t think of any.

And the Trader himself wouldn’t talk. He was one tough old buzzard. The Trader

wouldn’t talk even if devils from Hell were peeling his skin off inch by inch,

layer by layer. As he’d always said, “If they get me, forget me.” That applied

to any situation.

Strasser didn’t know any of that, of course, and even if he did he would never

credit it, would never be able to understand it.

Bastard was in for a shock.

Bastard was gonna pay for so casually destroying so many lives, exterminating

without a thought so many good men and women.

And as he thought that, his face bleak, his mouth a thin, tight line, Ryan saw

images of the girl, Krysty, in his mind and bared his teeth in a soundless

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