WITH THE LIGHTNINGS BY DAVID DRAKE

Daniel held the Alliance officer between him and the APC. He had both his wrists, now. The Alliance officer twisted with a grace suggesting he was expert in unarmed combat, but the Cinnabar lieutenant was stronger and very angry.

“The men you squirted over on the other island, master?” Daniel said in a hard, precise voice.

The Alliance officer tried to bite him; Daniel had the leverage and kept the teeth away from his shoulder as his hand continued to grind together the bones of the officer’s gun-wrist. “They were really warm stones wrapped in blankets to give the right heat signatures. I had two of my ratings tending the fire there, though, and I hope—”

The commando’s wrist failed with a sound like that of stones rubbing. His eyes rolled up and he fainted in Daniel’s arms.

“I really hope they heard you coming in time to cover up in their dugouts,” Daniel concluded, his voice softer. He straightened—he’d spread his legs to brace himself during the struggle—and surveyed the situation, still using the Alliance officer’s body as a shield.

“It seems to have worked,” Adele said. She stood with her pistol at her left side. Two submachine guns still protruded from gunports, but their muzzles were tilted up. Their owners had dropped the weapons as they tried to fight off an enemy more insidious than poison gas.

A gun fired inside the vehicle. Sparks, pellets or metal spalled from the inner face of the armor, spun through the hatch.

A commando finally managed to release the latch that dropped the whole side of the troop compartment. Soldiers tumbled out, twisting and moaning. One commando shambled blindly into the undergrowth, clawing the air with her hands. The sailors let her go.

The soap bubble fungus had ruptured into fluffy tendrils on the compartment’s deck. A single insect the size of Adele’s thumb glittered in the lights, then settled on the neck of a commando.

Daniel took the submachine gun from the officer he held, then laid him on the ground and stepped back. There’d been sixteen troops aboard the APC. None of them were upright now. Some thrashed, but Adele could see at least half a dozen others were as still as death.

“I think we’d better get back a little farther,” Daniel said in a voice wheezy with recent exertion. “They’re not supposed to fly farther than a couple meters from the nest, but I don’t want to be the one to prove that was as wrong as the data on how big sweeps get.”

Adele put her pistol in her pocket. Together they walked slowly toward the sailors now appearing from the jungle. Hogg joined them.

“The beetles aren’t supposed to live longer than ten minutes from when they leave the fungus, either,” Daniel added. “But we’re going to stay on the safe side there, too.”

Behind them, tough Alliance soldiers moaned in mindless pain.

* * *

“Couldn’t we come by boat?” Adele complained. She was acting for the benefit of the prisoner the two sailors were dragging through the jungle behind her and Daniel, but the peevish tone wasn’t entirely put on. Feet had worn the trail to a narrow creek with muddy banks.

“Our Alliance friend might try to escape,” Daniel explained. His voice was breathy with exertion. “Or drown himself, anyway, especially if he figures out what’s waiting for him. Besides, it was your idea to get the information this way.”

It actually had been Adele’s idea, offered diffidently when Daniel wondered aloud how best to interrogate the prisoners about the Aglaia and her crew. Daniel and Hogg were enthusiastically sure that the plan would work, at least after they’d refined it. Adele found that hard to imagine; but her knowledge of what went on in other people’s minds was not, she knew, to be trusted.

“I don’t know anything,” the commando said muzzily. “And if I did, I wouldn’t tell you fuckers.”

The Alliance prisoners had been stripped—Daniel wanted their uniforms, but Adele knew the psychological effect would be useful as well—tied, and held separately in nooks in the jungle. Any of them who tried to speak had been gagged as well. The interrogation had to wait till daybreak.

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