WITH THE LIGHTNINGS BY DAVID DRAKE

The truck moved on. Barnes pulled forward. The sailors tried to look relaxed, with more success than Adele would have expected.

Adele had no particular feeling. She’d found if she viewed her present activities as information searches—which in a manner of speaking they were, data in the form of five Cinnabar naval officers—she could maintain the detached skill which was the best hope for success. If she thought of herself as responsible for the lives of these sailors and the officers they came to rescue, she wouldn’t know how to behave.

The gardens were brightly illuminated from ten-meter pylons among the trampled plantings. The prisoner pen had been dismantled, but the wire lay in untidy bales along the north wall.

“What’re you guys doing here?” asked the head of the guard detail to Barnes in the cab.

Adele leaned forward from the troop compartment and said, “The password is Nike. Countersign?”

The Alliance guards carried stocked impellers. An air cushion vehicle squatted behind a stone planter, covering the entrance with an automatic impeller in a small turret. The soldier watching from the turret hatch looked bored, but his weapon tracked the APC as it slid forward.

The detail commander walked back to face Adele directly. The compartment’s deck gave her a height advantage.

“I said what’re you guys doing here?” the guard said in a rising voice. “This is our operation now.”

Woetjans spit onto the ground. She missed the guard’s foot by several inches.

“All you have to say to me, soldier . . .” Adele said. She looked at the guard as though she wanted to wipe him off the sole of her boot. “Is the countersign. And if you don’t give it, you’ll see just who’s in charge.”

The guard scowled. The other troops in the detail stood by the gatekeeper’s kiosk. Two of them hitched up their equipment belts and walked closer to the APC. So far as Adele could see, there were no Kostromans present.

“Vinceremos!” the detail commander snapped. He stepped away from the vehicle. “Have you noticed,” he called loudly in the direction of his personnel, “how commando pukes wear helmets smarter’n they are?”

“Drive on,” Adele ordered.

Woetjans pumped her middle finger in the direction of the Alliance soldiers as the APC waddled forward. The vehicle was sluggish because Barnes was keeping the speed down. The gardens were full of parked vehicles, and the detachment couldn’t afford a collision.

Though Barnes crawled up the drive, Adele had the uneasy feeling that she had stepped onto a patch of glare ice. The APC’s bow swung very slowly toward the left. They continued forward but the vehicle’s axis no longer aligned with its direction of movement.

“He’s pretty good,” Hogg muttered critically. “He’s driven boats as big as this bitch before, so he knows where the back and sides are. But he’s not allowing for how much the armor weighs. He needs to correct quicker and not use so much fucking yoke when he does.”

Woetjans looked worriedly from Adele to the cab. Ahead, a luxurious aircar stuck out a foot from the line of parked vehicles. The APC’s rear fender would rip the car’s side off in the next moment.

Barnes dropped his right skid to the pavement. It shrieked in a shower of sparks, then lifted again. The contact had braked their drift and straightened the course.

“He’ll do,” Adele said. She hadn’t been going to let Woetjans shout at the driver anyway. Trying to directly control the work of somebody who’s already over his head couldn’t possibly have a good result.

“Pull in here,” Woetjans called to the driver. “Onto the hedge. We’ve got the weight and it won’t scratch our finish.”

The petty officer looked at Adele. “If that’s all right, sir?”

“Yes,” said Adele. She hadn’t thought of herself as being in real command of the undertaking, but that was how the sailors viewed her. She had to keep reminding herself to make decisions with crisp authority.

The hedged squares where Adele had met Markos were battered, but civilian vehicles weren’t massive enough to drive through the remains of the bushes. As Woetjans had noted, the APC was. Perhaps it was a good omen that the detachment was able to park close to where they’d be escaping from the subsurface levels.

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