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®

Soni
cBoom
oks®
al
l um Bo
adi
© P

Adam Chi
ls
on
Journey to an Earth that has been destroyed and reshaped into
an alien world where magic is real, aliens walk the face of the
planet, dimensional Rifts lead to countless other worlds, and hu-
mankind struggles to survive.
A world where magic and technology collide. A place where
the human and the inhuman clash in war and games of life and
death.
Rifts Earth is the setting – at the threshold of an infinite Mega-
verse®, yet locked in chaos. Follow the story of a handful of Co-
alition warriors in their own struggles to do more than survive.
Adam Chilson’s first of three novels in his trilogy is epic in
scope. The cliffhanger ending leaves one begging for more.

Sonic Boom™ is the first book in a trilogy,


based on the Rifts® Role-Playing Game series.

1
Warning!
Violence and the Supernatural
The fictional Worlds of Rifts® are violent, deadly and filled
with supernatural monsters. Other dimensional beings often
referred to as “demons,” torment, stalk, and prey on humans.
Other alien life forms, monsters, gods and demigods, as well as
magic, insanity, and war are all elements in this book.
Some parents may find the violence, magic and supernatural
elements of the novels and games inappropriate for young read-
ers/players. We suggest parental discretion.
Please note that none of us at Palladium Books® condone or
encourage the occult, the practice of magic, the use of drugs, or
violence.
Please Note: Strong Language and Violence
may be inappropriate for readers under the age of 17.

Other Palladium Products


Download the Palladium Books catalog of role-playing game
books, T-shirts, and other items by visiting our website:
www.palladiumbooks.com

2
Rifts Sonic Boom® ™

The First in a Trilogy

Adam Chilson

Copy Editing: Rex Barkdoll


Proofreading: Alex Marciniszyn

Rifts® Trilogy:
Book One: Sonic Boom™
Book Two: Deception’s Web™
Book Three: Treacherous Awakenings™

Based on the worlds, characters, text, game rules, concepts and Mega-
verse® of the Rifts® Role-Playing Game series created by Kevin Siembieda.

Palladium Books® Inc.


www.palladiumbooks.com

3
Published by:
Palladium Books® Inc.
39074 Webb Ct
Westland, MI 48185

The cover is by John Zeleznik and depicts a


Coalition soldier locked in combat.

PDF Edition – January 2020

Copyright © 1999 by Palladium Books Inc. & Kevin Siembieda.


All rights reserved, worldwide, under the Universal Copyright Convention.
No part of this book may be reproduced in part or whole, in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any
information storage retrieval system, without permission from the publisher, ex-
cept for brief quotes for use in reviews and where permitted by law. All incidents,
situations, institutions, governments, and people are fictional and any similarity,
without satiric intent, of characters or persons living or dead, is strictly coinci-
dental.
Palladium Books®, Rifts®, The Rifter®, Chaos Earth®, Coalition Wars®,
After the Bomb®, Dead Reign®, The Mechanoids®, The Mechanoid Invasion®,
Megaverse®, Nightbane®, Palladium Fantasy Role-Playing Game®, Phase
World®, Powers Unlimited®, RECON®, and Splicers® are registered trade-
marks owned and licensed by Kevin Siembieda and Palladium Books Inc.
Triax & The NGR, New West, Psyscape, Federation of Magic, Coalition
States, Chi-Town, Erin Tarn, Emperor Prosek, Skelebots, SAMAS, Dog Boys,
Dog Pack, Techno-Wizard, Ley Line Walker, Shifter, Cyber-Knight, Psi-Stalk-
er, Mind Melter, Burster, Zapper, Juicer, Crazy, Cyber-Doc, Body Doc, ‘Borg,
‘Bot, D-Bee, Spider Skull Walker, Sky Cycle, UAR-1, Northern Gun, New West,
and other names, titles, character names and character likenesses are trademarks
owned by Kevin Siembieda and Palladium Books Inc.
If you purchased this book without a cover, it is stolen property. It was report-
ed “unsold and destroyed” and neither the author nor the publisher has received
any payment for this “stripped book.”

Printed in the United States of America.


ISBN 1-57457-026-9
Palladium Cat. No. 301

4
For my buds
Jonathan Arter and Darby Green
Thanks for the fast-food pep talk

Special thanks to
Lisa Arter for your brutally honest editing and opinion
George Gill for answering my endless military questions
Nathan Byrd, and yes, it did say chapstick
My friends at the North Gate for your unique perspectives
My wife, Dawn, for putting up with such eccentric behavior
And to all of you whose good advice I probably didn’t listen to.

– Adam Chilson, 1999

5
Introduction
You hold in your hands the first in a trilogy of novels based on the popular
Rifts® Role-Playing Game.
Author, Adam Chilson, weaves an adventure of epic scope, multiple sub-
plots, twists, surprises, treachery, and deception. There are literally dozens
of characters, numerous plot threads, and strong villains. To get the entire
picture, one will have to read all three books. Ah, but what a ride. We trust
the ravenous Rifts® readers who have been clamoring for novels won’t be
daunted by this in the least.
For years, Palladium Books® has been bombarded by Rifts® fans beg-
ging us to publish novels based on the popular RPG series, so we are de-
lighted to be able to do so.
As the original creator of Rifts®, it is always a bit difficult for me to al-
low others to run with my brainchild. It is a bit like seeing your child grow
up and move out on his or her own. You know you have given them a strong
foundation, and their future looks bright, but you just don’t know how things
will develop. You hope they turn out well, and while you try to lend a helping
hand, things are outside your control. So it is with freelance writers who take
my original work as a springboard to launch their own ideas and to take my
vision in new, bold (and sometimes different) directions.
On the other hand, it’s really cool and exciting. Rifts® and the Palladium
Books corporation have taken on lives of their own. It is a rush to see how
they have influenced millions of others and have developed into a sprawling
adventure in and of themselves. I love to see how other creative people tweak
and change my ideas into something new and equally dynamic. It actually
inspires me and gives me new ideas and a fire to write even more. It is a
wonderful symbiotic relationship where we all contribute to an expansive
Megaverse® limited only by our imaginations.
That being the case, we hope to introduce many new talented artists and
writers into the Palladium family to help carry our wild imaginings to new
heights. We’re glad you, the reader, and players of our games, are along for
the ride.
While many of the readers will be long-time fans of Palladium Books’
role-playing games, many others will be discovering us for the first time. Pal-
ladium Books Inc. started as a tiny back room operation in 1981 and has since
grown to be one of the top role-playing game manufacturers in the world.
What is role-playing? There really isn’t anything quite like it, and because
of that, it is a bit difficult to describe. In many ways, it is a group of ordinary
people getting together to create a story. But it’s also more.
As a “game,” it harkens back to when you were a small child and used to
play “let’s pretend” – cowboys and indians, superheroes, or any game where
the child assumes an imaginary identity and plays a make-believe character
with his siblings and the kids down the street. The difference with most role-
6
playing games is you don’t dress up and run around the neighborhood shout-
ing, laughing and playing dead when shot. Instead, you sit around a table or
in the comfort of your living room rolling dice to determine combat and skill
performance, shouting, laughing, making incredible memories no one can
currently partake in (mutant animal space adventures, anyone?), and having
a great time with friends and strangers alike.
I often compare “role-playing games” to improvisational theater, because
like improvisation, the players don’t really need costumes or props and the
imagination fills in the blanks. Like improvisational theater, each participant
in the game assumes the identity of a fictional character with only the bar-
est outline of that character’s abilities, background, and probable purpose or
goals. There can be as few as two or three players to 20 or more, although
4-8 is typical.
A key member of the game is the “Game Master.” This person is essen-
tially a combination of the director and plot developer of an act or scene. He
or she presents the basic elements to get the story going. This can be some-
thing as simple as: “You see a fair maiden in distress or someone stole the
town statue.”
It is now up to the “players” to make their characters respond, and in so
doing, a story – an adventure – is begun.
To keep the story moving, changing, and building, the Game Master in-
troduces characters, villains, and dangers. It is the Game Master who also
plays the various villains and non-player characters (the snitch, the barkeep,
the fair maiden in distress, etc.) to move the story along and to interject plot
twists (for example, that fair maiden may be a bandit or member of a Coali-
tion squad setting a trap for our heroes).
The players must make choices for their characters, solve problems, find
clues, unravel mysteries, battle evil, make sacrifices, and fight the good fight.
All the elements we love about books, heroic myths, comic books, theater
and film (i.e. storytelling), are part of the role-playing experience.
When the game session ends (it can last 2-3 hours or long into the night,
and come to an end or be continued like serialized TV shows and comic
books), the memory of the “game” is very much like that of having read a
good book or seeing a movie. The big difference is the gamer/player was
part of the action and the story. His or her character was part of the events,
rescued (fictional) lives, and contributed to the course of the story. Just like
improvisation, it is the interaction of the characters that makes and builds the
story (one can see snippets of this process on the TV show, Whose Line is it
Anyway).
That’s role-playing games in a nutshell. If you haven’t tried playing, you
might want to take a look at one and give it a try.
Don’t be intimidated by the size of many of these game books and the
strange terms; it is easier to master than you might think. Besides, only the

7
Game Master (the poor schmoe) has to know all the ins and outs of the game.
But that’s why there’s a big ol’ game book to use as a rules reference and
guide. Heck, I’ve been creating and writing role-playing games for almost 20
years now, and I’m constantly checking the rule book and sourcebooks, and
I’m the guy who wrote them!
One last thing, role-playing isn’t for everybody, so you might not care for
it. Unlike traditional board games, it requires a serious time commitment.
I have found it to be ideal for people who love to read and have an active
imagination. It is also best suited for folks 12 and older (the majority of RPG
players fall between the ages of 12-28). Games like Rifts®, The Palladium
Fantasy Role-Playing Game®, and Dead Reign® are probably easier to learn
if you are a beginner. You need at least 3 people to play and you’ll have to
track down a comic shop, bookstore or hobby store that sells the variety of
different dice used in the game.
Enjoy this book. Give role-playing games a try if they sound like fun, and
keep those imaginations burning.
– Kevin Siembieda, Publisher & RPG Designer, 1999

Prelude
Searing waves of incendiary destruction rolled away from the point of det-
onation as the mushroom cloud rose into the sky. Multiple warheads mirrored
the first, their glowing domes rising like budding flowers in spring. Millions
of cries were silenced in an instant by the spreading infernos that sprang up
all over the planet. The earth shuddered beneath the melting city towers and
nature moved to finish what man inadvertently sought to accomplish.
Complete and utter genocide.
Shifting tectonic plates razed cities to the ground and shook lakes from
their beds. Displaced water left its ocean home to besiege the coasts of all
continents and floods erupted from the broken land to wash away humanity’s
footprints. Thrust up by incalculable force, magma burst its fragile bonds and
set fire to what humanity’s bombs had failed to ignite. Clouds of ash blocked
out the sun from the fires in the towns and countryside below.
But the holocaust had just begun.
The rivers of unseen magical energy that had been dormant for thousands
of years, known as ley lines, surged forth with a power that hadn’t been seen
since before the dawn of man. Men and women who were deeply connected
with the Earth had spoken of them for millennia but were not believed until
billions of people gave up their life force energy at the moment of death and
all of that energy collected like rain on a mountain, washing down into the
ley lines which then flowed over like a river without a dam. Incomprehen-
sible powers of nature charged out of control, waves of energy colliding with
violent turbulence.

8
At the point of intersection between ley lines, a nexus forms. There, the
most destructive phenomenon ever seen on the planet took place in a million
locations around the globe. The very fabric of time and space was torn apart
at the seams, creating doorways into realms and dimensions that were never
intended to meet. Mankind’s citadels of concrete and steel were nothing more
than a house of cards before the devastating onslaught of energy. Humanity
on Earth was plunged into a dark age illuminated only by the eerie blue glow
of the ley lines. Once again, nature took over the planet.
For two hundred years, mankind teetered precariously close to extinction
while the world settled from its violent upset and healed its wounds. Di-
mensional Beings, nicknamed D-Bees, from alien worlds and far off places
had come as new contenders for the land. Some had come by unwilling cir-
cumstance, others by choice. Both natives and immigrants alike viewed the
strange world with its surging lines of power as either a wonderful new place
to explore and study or a hellish landscape filled with danger. Among both
populations were extraordinary beings with plans of conquest and acquisi-
tion. Not all were willing to share the land with their neighbors. Even as man-
kind clawed its way from the abyss, a new struggle was about to begin.
Decades passed without notice for those constructing their lives from the
apocalyptic ashes of their world. Feudalistic societies grew up in the wilder-
ness, carving out their existence by what means they could obtain. Some
derived their might based on the technology of centuries past, while others
adapted to the changing world and harnessed the incredible powers of the
magical energy. Still others found allegiance with strange new races who
were forging their own lives from the wastelands while still others perished
at the hands of supernatural invaders from the Rifts.
As the dawn of a new age sheds its first rays of light, it reveals that the
age of man alone on Earth has vanished into the past. In a world where only
the strong survive, the challenge to rise up is set forth and battles are waged
by forces gathered together around strong figures and stronger ideas. While
many small despots reign over small territories because they possess a modi-
cum of power, the dark ages after the Great Cataclysm have begun to produce
actors who will affect the global stage.
The Coalition States are one such force, a nation of human-only fanatics
who have adopted white and black armor bearing a human skeletal motif
as their calling card. Born from the humans of North America who fled the
apocalypse toward the Great Lakes region, their capital of Chi-Town stands
tall as a symbol of what human ingenuity can accomplish, casting its shadow
over the plains of what was once Illinois and Indiana. They reject magic and
all things alien, keeping their population uneducated and heavily indoctri-
nated against anything that might weaken their resolve. Their mission is to
eliminate all non-native life on the planet, restoring Earth to the golden age
of humanity it once knew.

9
To the southeast, the Federation of Magic is a loosely-connected group of
tribes, towns, and cities with common goals. The Federation embraces magic
and all forms of life, both native and foreign to the planet. However, unlike
peaceful civilizations such as Lazlo and Tolkeen who stand as hopeful bea-
cons of what a balanced world could be, the Federation’s mages have made
many “deals with the devil” in order to gain unholy power. The Federation
of Magic and Coalition States battled nearly 80 years ago around 12 P.A. and
have both been on equally mistrustful footing ever since.
Meanwhile, around the globe, similar forces rise and fall with each pass-
ing year. Who will arise victorious is a mystery, but for those struggling for
survival, each day is a fight toward a better life.
These are their tales...

10
Chapter 1
Now that’s what I call a whoopin’
Breaking glass gave away the rebel’s position. The Enforcer’s audio am-
plifiers registered rapid speech and glass crunching underfoot. There were no
windows in the ruins of old Chicago.
“Lisa, thermo-scan three o’clock,” the robot’s pilot, Dave instructed his
co-pilot/communications officer.
“Scanning... Two heat signatures, third floor, approximately twenty me-
ters. Too much heat for body armor. These two aren’t ours.”
“Call it in,” Dave instructed her and switched the Enforcer’s targeting
system over to thermo-imaging. Two targets. Probably not much of a threat
to the heavily armored war machine he piloted, but this area was restricted
and they shouldn’t be here anyway, he rationalized.
Bringing the shoulder-mounted rail gun around, Dave locked the sights
on the closest target and flipped the selector to single round discharge. There
was no need for overkill.
“All clear,” Lisa stated, almost cheerfully. “The Lieutenant says it’s a
clean shoot. Sharp spotted rebels in sector seven, about two dozen. Cowboy
and a fire squad are checking it out. The Lieutenant wants us to go back him
up after we’re done here.”
“Affirmative. Tell him we’re on the way.” Dave pushed the fire button
and a cold spot appeared in the center of the target’s torso. The second target
was running now. Where did he think he could go? Hydraulics whined as
the robot’s torso rotated, its rail gun following the rebel’s frantic course. The
high-speed kinetic slug hadn’t slowed a bit, tearing clear through the fleeing
rebel’s body and continuing its course past the next dozen walls.
“Probably a D-Bee anyway,” Dave muttered, switching targeting back to
visual. Patrolling these ruins wasn’t his idea of a well-spent afternoon, but
HQ thought some rebel stragglers were holed up here and assigned his unit to
seek and destroy. So far this had been too easy.
The Enforcer prowled around a dilapidated brick building – as quietly as
an eighteen-ton robot could move – and headed for sector seven. Dave hoped
he would have a better story to tell than two dead rebels before his patrol was
over.
____________________

“How many times ’av I gotta tell you bone heads! Keep it on setting
three!” Cowboy yelled to be heard above the roar of another four-story build-
ing collapsing in a fiery heap. Bullets screamed and ricocheted like a swarm
of angry hornets around the five-man fire squad, the crack of automatic weap-
on fire almost deafening.

11
“But they’re shooting at us!” Bill yelled back over the roar. Fifteen rebels
had set up the perfect ambush, and the Coalition soldiers had walked right
into it. Now they poured lead down on the soldiers standing in the street
below. So far, they had messed the hell out of the paint job on the soldiers’
composite body armor but hadn’t been able to do much more.
“Jist take ’em out one at a time. On setting three!” Cowboy pointed at the
selector switch on his own C-12 laser assault rifle for emphasis. “And don’t
ever let the Sergeant catch you doing that!” He pointed to the burning rubble.
Cowboy shouldered his weapon and opened-up on the rebels in the old toy
store down the street. A rebel screamed, several smoldering craters burned
into his chest. His companions fled as the five-man fire squad sprayed them
with laser blasts.
“Rex! Nim! Go finish off the ones you didn’t kill!” Cowboy ordered. Sev-
eral rebels howled in agony inside smoldering buildings. War was tough, but
even these rebels didn’t need to suffer. Compassion was a quick end to one’s
enemy. Cowboy turned to fire on a fleeing rebel when a mini-missile struck
the soldier behind him. Nim’s arm shattered and his ribs cracked inside his
armor; the squad was flattened by the blast. Hurled eight meters by the explo-
sion, Nim sailed headfirst through a wall and slammed into a steel support
beam.
Temporarily deafened and feeling numb from the shock of the impact,
Cowboy spied his C-12 another five meters beyond him. Thank the Coalition
for full environmental body armor, he thought, and jumped up without feel-
ing his legs beneath him. Snatching up the assault rifle, Cowboy turned to see
his squad running for cover as a second rocket cratered the earth, sending Rex
into the side of a burned-out Chevy van.
To hell with orders, Cowboy thought, and flipped the selector switch to
level one. Time to kick some ass. Leaping up, he saw smoke rising from the
four-story savings and loan down the block.
“Bye bye, losers!” Cowboy let out a battle cry and held down the trigger.
Bricks exploded and girders slagged away as blast after blast burned through
the structure. It groaned and creaked, then disappeared in a rising cloud of
dust and smoke. Cowboy thought for an instant he might have gotten the
wrong building when a bright flash and accompanying shock wave knocked
him off his feet. The explosion of the rebel’s magazine reigned down brick
fragments and metal shards for blocks.
____________________

Perched atop a venerable skyscraper, Sharp watched the cloud of smoke


and dust. Cowboy, he thought, it had to be.
“What the hell just happened, Sharp?” Lieutenant Merrick’s voice cracked
over Sharp’s helmet radio. “I can’t raise Cowboy, you got anything?”

12
“Pretty much the usual, Lieutenant. Looks like Cowboy just blew up a city
block, again.”
“I’m sending in the Enforcer. Keep an eye on it. Merrick out.”
“Yes, sir. Sharp out.” The spotter moved to another corner, putting the
multi-optics weapon sight to his eye. Something was moving down there.
Increasing magnification, Sharp had a clear view of the airborne exoskeleton
maneuvering down alleys and side streets. It looked like a flying power armor
made by Titan. Quick, deadly, and headed toward the Lieutenant’s hover
rover.
“Sharp to Lieutenant Merrick, over,” Sharp spoke calmly.
“Merrick.”
“You got a Titan-make exo sniffing you out. Looks like they’re armed
with a rifle and wing mounted mini-missiles. Someone’s calling in your posi-
tion to it.”
“Affirmative. Take out the spotter if you can, but let the SAM deal with
the exo. Copy?”
“Yes, sir. Sharp over and out.” Sharp began scanning rooftops for the en-
emy spotter. He hoped he would spy them before they saw him.
____________________

Cruising two meters above ruined streets, Darren was having a blast. Two
hundred miles per hour and not even flat out, the SAMAS power armor, or
SAM, as it was often referred to, roared past block after block of long-aban-
doned city dwellings. He was itching for some action.
“Merrick to SAM 15. Where the heck are you, Darren?”
“Just cruising Main street for some babes, sir,” Darren quipped.
“Well get your ass over to sector three, and quick. We have a Titan exo
snooping around down here. Sharp thinks we got a spotter, so watch it.”
“Yes-sir. Out,” Darren remarked absent-mindedly. He didn’t go in much
for all that rank stuff. He told himself he could make Lieutenant if he really
wanted to, he just didn’t really want it.
Gripping his C-40 electromagnetic rail gun, Darren banked hard and hit
the two rear thrusters, one wing tip clipping asphalt. Acceleration was a rush
and Darren shoved the SAM to the max. Dust and debris flew up behind the
power armor as it sped to intercept.
“SAM 15, this is Sharp. Keep that up and they won’t even need a spotter.”
“Yeah, yeah. I wish the slimy D-Bee lovin’ scum would crawl out of their
holes. Teach them a lesson in high-speed metal slugs,” replied Darren.
“Don’t worry about your student being tardy. You got about five seconds
before class time. Titan exo just pulled out on your six! Watch your back-
side.”
“Alright you sneaky S.O.B.,” Darren breathed, Titan flying power armor
closing in behind him. “You may be faster, but you ain’t got the firepower.”
13
The SAM’s computer screamed a weapon lock tone. Darren banked right,
snapping off a telephone pole with the right wing. Two mini-missiles shot
past and cratered the asphalt. Darren pulled back left, kicking a mailbox with
the armored feet. Inches above the street, he slowed and turned down an al-
ley. Flying higher, the Titan exoskeleton followed above the rooftops.
The Titan appeared overhead. Darren sighted it and fired a burst of forty
high-density kinetic slugs from the rail gun. Metal ripped across the front
armor plating of the exoskeleton but stopped short of killing its pilot. Climb-
ing still higher, the Titan banked, coming back around toward him. Before
the exoskeleton could fire the hand-held particle beam rifle, forty more slugs
struck its faceplate and took the pilot’s brains out the back. Flipping over
backward, the Titan collided with a building, then slammed into a wrecked
bus, exploding.
Darren bounced off the street and hit the thrusters as white-hot burning
metal splattered the street below.
Cowboy lay face down. He couldn’t feel anything. He couldn’t hear any-
thing. Maybe he was dead. No, he was moving. Wait, he was being moved.
He struggled against whatever force was making the world spin and fell face
first. Now he could feel again, although he wished he couldn’t. Someone
rolled him over. Someone in armor with an NCO’s helmet was yelling at him,
but he couldn’t hear what was being said. A strange sense of relief washed
over him. Heck, this was just another one of his dreams! The kind he awoke
from the next morning in the brig with a hangover. Cowboy began to laugh.
The Sergeant was not amused.
“You lousy piece of D-Bee crap! What the hell do you think is so damned
funny, Cowboy? Shut the hell up or I’m gonna kick your ass all the way back
to the brig! You can’t obey one simple order? And where the hell is Nim?
You got crap in yer ears? Cut the cackling or so help me ... You ...”
“Sarge! We found Nim! He’s hurt real bad!”
Sergeant Jerry Winters dropped Cowboy into a hysterical heap and fol-
lowed the soldier to where Nim lay. Brian, the unit’s technical officer, was
kneeling over Nim’s crumpled figure. The Sergeant’s voice was surprisingly
gentle.
“How bad? Think he’ll live?”
“The armor’s what saved him, but he’s going to lose the arm and probably
a lung,” Brian stated. “I’m not a doctor, but he needs one soon. I might be
able to keep him alive until a med team gets here though.”
“Use RMK and IRMSS kits if you need to. Check the others, and call it
in.” Brian nodded. “Trenton, Charlie, Bill, you’re with me.” The Sergeant set
off at a brisk jog, soldiers trailing behind.
Brian carried the rank of Corporal, though he had minimal combat experi-
ence. From an early age, he received special training from the Coalition and

14
was privileged to learn literacy, mathematics, and jealously guarded techni-
cal knowledge. First aid was not his specialty.
Brian reached into his standard issue first aid pack and removed a Robot
Medical Kit (RMK) and Internal Robot Medical Surgeon System (IRMSS).
Miracles of nano-technology, the kits would release many tiny robots to treat
injuries. He set the RMK on Nim’s shattered arm just below the shoulder, and
a stream of barely visible robots scurried to the open wounds to begin their
work. Taking the IRMSS in hand, Brian injected dozens of other microscopic
robots into Nim’s side. He hoped they would be able to stop the internal
bleeding and stabilize Nim until the medics arrived. There was little Brian
could do to save his arm.
“Trenton! Get your ass over here now!” Sergeant Winters barked over
the comm radio. Trenton ran to catch up. This sucked, he thought. The Sarge
was carrying twice as much equipment and he still couldn’t keep up. Trenton
rounded the next corner.
“Get the hell down Trenton! You’re gonna get your butt blown off and
I ain’t carrying it back!” The Sergeant yelled as Trenton came panting up.
Trenton joined the other two soldiers who were crouched behind a partially
collapsed wall near the Sergeant.
“Sorry Sarge, but this C-14 is heavy and –”
“Cut the cry-baby crap. I want you to give me three seconds then put a
few grenades in the building across the street. The rest of you cover me and
be ready to duck when it hits the fan. Ready, now!” The Sergeant vaulted the
broken wall, C-27 plasma cannon in one hand, and sprinted for a crater in the
center of the street. Weapons fire roared from the opposing building. Chunks
of burning asphalt flew into the air as several high-power laser blasts sliced
past him. The Sergeant flung himself into the open crater.
Trenton was scared. Someone across the street had some heavy firepower,
the kind of firepower his armor might not stop. A laser blast shattered a sec-
tion of wall only feet away. He could smell the scorched stone and burning
asphalt.
“Now! Trenton, now!” The Sergeant’s voice snapped him back to task.
Hoisting his C-14 “Firebreather” Trenton began hosing down the opposing
structure with high-explosive grenades. The relatively heavy weapon was an
over/under laser assault rifle and pump-action grenade launcher. He sprayed
the building with laser fire for good measure.
Conventional 7.62mm rifle rounds bounced harmlessly off his composite
body armor in return. The grenade concussion shook the ground, and Trenton
ducked back behind the wall. He could hear the screams of dying men in the
collapsing building. A wave of flame seared over the wall then vanished. On
either side of him, Charlie and Bill were shaking almost as bad as he was.
The discharge from the Sergeant’s C-27 plasma cannon was followed by
an inhuman scream of pain. Trenton peered over the blackened wall to see

15
Winters put three more bolts of plasma into some large creature climbing out
of the wreckage. As he did, its horned head exploded from the last plasma
bolt, bits of flesh and bone splattering the smoking rubble. Whatever it was,
it had survived his grenade attack. The three looked at each other, then clam-
ored over the wall to join the Sarge.
“You got it!” Trenton exclaimed in disbelief.
“No thanks to you. Pull another –”
The rubble shifted upward a few meters away. A strained, low moan es-
caped from beneath the tons of wreckage.
“There’s something still alive under there! Back off, back off! Don’t get
too close. Set to level two. I don’t care what it is, just shoot it when I give
the word.”
All weapons trained on the movement, barely visible through the smoke
and settling dust. A clawed hand thrust upward, flailing for something to grip.
“Sarge, what the hell is that?” Trenton asked softly.
“Looks like a Brodkil. Mean SOB. Heard they can turn invisible if they
want. A whole bunch of ’em slaughtered a village in Kingsdale,” the Sergeant
voiced in a whisper. It was almost free now. He watched through the scope.
As soon as the head was visible, he’d give the order to fire. Something else
was making noise, something big. Crunching concrete and scraping metal,
the Enforcer stepped around a building.
“Damn it, Dave! You ’bout got a plasma bolt up your ass!”
“Sorry, Sarge. Thought you might be rebels. Sharp spotted some activity
in sector seven. The Lieut–”
“Sarge! It’s getting out!” Trenton’s panic strained voice broke in.
The Brodkil demon was nearly clear of the rubble, and it knew this was a
bad spot to be in. Self-preservation was its strongest instinct; kill or be killed.
For the first time in its existence, the Brodkil knew the meaning of fear.
“Now! Fire!” ordered Winters. The Brodkil went down in a hail of plas-
ma bolts, laser blasts, and rail gun fire. Even so, it didn’t die right away. It
twitched. The hail of fire began again and didn’t end until its smoking pieces
lay scattered about the rubble.
“Hmmf,” shrugged Winters, nonchalantly slotting a new energy canister
in the plasma cannon. “Only good D-Bee’s a dead D-Bee.” He strode toward
the Enforcer.
He hadn’t gotten three meters when a laser blast struck him in the chest.
Reacting before thinking, he dropped and rolled behind the Enforcer’s leg.
The armor had taken the blast, but he still had a nasty burn, his chest on fire
with pain. Another blast struck the CR-6 medium-range missile launcher on
the Enforcer’s left shoulder.
“Sniper!” the Sergeant yelled through the voice amplifier in his faceplate.
“Cover, now!”

16
Trenton took a running dive over the wall, kicking Charlie in the head
with his knee. Another blast burned into the CR-6 armor.
“Crap,” Dave muttered. “Couple more of those and we’re acid rain.” He
reached over and hit the smoke release. Dense black smoke covered the ro-
bot. He was still a big target, but there was less chance of directed attacks
against vulnerable spots. The Sergeant spanned the open ground with long
strides to join Trenton behind the wall.
“Give me your C-14,” Winters ordered. Trenton obeyed. Cycling in an-
other grenade from the twelve-round drum, the Sergeant grinned beneath the
face plate of his death mask armor.
The sniper fired again from another angle. He wasn’t sure where exactly
the Enforcer was, but it would be difficult to miss a twenty-foot-tall target,
and he might get lucky. Definitely a hit. Running, he leaped to the next sto-
ry up an open elevator shaft. Never fire from the same place twice; Assas-
sin’s rule #5. He crept silently to the glassless window. This was better than
expected. From this angle, he could make out the sensor turret through the
smoke screen. A blind Enforcer was a turkey shoot. Taking careful aim, he
pulled the trigger.
“Crap!” Dave seethed. “Now he’s going after the sensor turret! Haven’t
you found ’em yet?”
“Not badly damaged. Dosimeter out, communications on the fritz, full op-
tical available.” Lisa ignored Dave, watching the damage readout. She knew
it would take a lot more than a few laser blasts to bring down an Urban As-
sault Robot.
“Gotcha now, sucka,” breathed Winters. The last shot revealed the laser
trajectory through the smoke screen. Only about one hundred meters away on
the fifth story. Squeezing the trigger down, he pumped the slide repeatedly.
The barrel jerked and kicked the gun back with each grenade, making it hard
to keep it directly on target, but this wasn’t a precision weapon. It didn’t need
to be.
Entire sections of ceilings, walls, and floors exploded outward, raining
down onto the deserted streets. And there was the sniper, leaping from the
seventh story window as the floor collapsed beneath him. He sailed toward
the street.
The sniper hit the ground at a run.
“Sonnava–” Winters roared, tossing the C-14 back to Trenton. “Damn
Juicer!” He pointed his C-27 at the distinctive plate armor sprinting down
the street.
A plasma bolt sent molten burning metal of a wrecked car fifteen meters
into the air, but the Juicer sniper dodged the globs of blazing metal and con-
tinued sprinting down the street.
“You’re mine, juice boy!” The Sergeant growled angrily, sprinting
through the smoke and haze after the augmented sniper. He couldn’t have

17
kept up with the chemically enhanced opponent even on his best day. Juicers
wear a drug injection harness under their plate armor, which heightens their
reflexes and strength beyond that of non-augmented humans. Live fast, die
young; that was the motto of the augmented warrior. While the blast from an
enemy’s weapon wasn’t likely to end the Juicer’s life, what the chemicals
did to their bodies surely would. Most never lived more than five years after
augmentation.
“Trenton, Bill, Charlie! Move it!” Winters yelled on the run. “Dave, get
the hell up and go after ’im!”
“Yes, Sergeant! Lisa, where is he?”
“Last I had him was heading down the street toward sector eight.” Lisa ran
a playback visual. “Went around a corner and headed south-west, about two
hundred meters down.”
“Hang on. Strap in.” Dave locked the clamps across his legs and broke
into a run. The UAR-1 Enforcer followed his motion. Leaping over a crater,
the Enforcer continued down the street past the running soldiers, kicking up
bits of road surface with its metal feet. Dave slowed to a jog and made the
corner. A weapons’ lock warning shrilled.
“Oh, crap,” was all Dave had time to breathe.
Aiming at them from down the street was a Glitter Boy.
____________________

Trenton couldn’t hear a thing. He wasn’t even sure what happened. He


watched in silence as the Sergeant dove for the ground. The Enforcer stag-
gered backward, a leg buckled beneath it, and fell over into a storefront.
Struggling to a sitting position, the Enforcer began to rise. Trenton felt a
second shock wave hit his body. The Enforcer’s head flew apart into tiny bits
of shrapnel, and it crashed back through the storefront. Charlie ran past him
and around the corner, and without thinking, Trenton cycled a grenade and
followed.
Charlie blew apart; fragments of bone and armor in a red mist. Trenton’s
left leg was gone. The pain and the wave of shock-trauma both hit the same
time. Trenton blacked out.
____________________

Dave fought the feeling of claustrophobia. Sensors and visual weren’t


working. He brought the Enforcer to a sitting position. Lisa was switching
optical to a weapons sight.
“It’s not much, but at least we can see,” she said as a dirty image of wires
and yellowed drywall appeared on the screen. Dave brought the Enforcer
to its feet, bringing down a section of building around its damaged leg. He
wouldn’t have been able to move fast enough anyway. Then, another BOOM

18
as two hundred kinetic slugs struck the torso section traveling many times the
speed of sound, almost vaporizing holes straight through the robotic armor.
Sparks spewed forth from the electrical power couplings, filling the pilot’s
compartment with smoke. The environmental systems in his armor activated,
filtering and cycling the air, preventing inhalation of toxic fumes. The En-
forcer staggered, then collapsed amid the descending structure. As they hit
the ground, everything went quiet, the robot completely without power.
“Switching to backups!” Lisa shouted, groping for the switch in the
smoke. The automatic fire extinguisher ended the shower of sparks. Backups
operational, the purge system cleared the pilot’s compartment. Strapped in
lying on their backs, Dave and Lisa looked at the damaged control panels and
wondered how long until the next hit would finish them off.
Lieutenant Greg Merrick heard the sonic booms from his position in sec-
tor two. Unslinging his C-14 from his back, he ran, weapon in hand, back to
the hover rover.
“Sir, the Sarge is calling for backup.” The soldier manning the radio trans-
lated the rapid, obscenity prolific stream of high-volume static emanating
from the radio. He handed Lt. Merrick the transmitter.
“Jerry, this is Greg. That sounded like a G-10. What’s going on?”
“Damn Glitter Boy just trashed your Enforcer and wasted Charlie! Tren-
ton’s still breathing, but I can’t get to him. Bill’s with me, but he can’t hear
cuz he ain’t got sound filters. Get yer SAM flyboy over to sector eight. This
is a bad one!”
“Roger. Keep your head down. No heroics, Winters, I mean it. The 33rd
Airborne’s sending in some Sky Cycles and a medivac unit, but I’m callin’
for mechanized as well. Sit tight.”
“You got that damn right!”
“Merrick to Sharp, over. Sharp, do you read me?” Greg was puzzled. No
response – that wasn’t like Sharp. He didn’t have time to guess. His unit was
in big trouble.
“SAM 15, this is Lieutenant Merrick, copy?”
“Roger, this is 15.”
“Big problem in sector eight. Glitter Boy chewed up the Enforcer and has
Sergeant Winters pinned down. Trenton’s been hit, and he’s stuck in the line
of fire. We’ve got backup on the way, but it won’t be soon enough. I need
you to keep the Glitter Boy busy long enough for Winters and Bill to grab
Trenton and haul ass.
“Are you kiddin’ me, sir? The only way I can keep a Glitter Boy busy is
by gittin’ my butt shot off! One hit from that Boom Gun an’ I’m having tea
with Joe Prosek in the afterlife!”
“That’s an order, Darren! Just keep circling around behind him. He has to
stop and drill in before firing, so try to stay behind him and keep him turning.
And don’t forget to keep an eye open for cover fire. Merrick out.”

19
“On my way, sir.”
____________________

Sharp breathed very slowly. His radio was turned off. Didn’t dare make
a sound now. He stepped carefully between old, broken wooden chairs and
carefully put weight on his foot. The spotter was only three meters away now.
The blood pounded in his ears and his heart felt like it would burst from
his chest. The spotter was wearing a Falcon 300 jet pack attached to a plate
composite Triax body armor. One hit wouldn’t be enough. Sharp lifted his
foot and took another step. If he could just get close enough to slap an explo-
sive charge on the spotter’s head, then leap through the window and engage
his own jet thruster pack.
Another step. The floor creaked slightly, but the spotter didn’t appear to
have heard it. A rifle leaned against the wall within arm’s reach of the rebel. A
pre-Rifts JA-11 assassin’s rifle with a multi-optics sight like Sharp had never
seen. He was about to holster his C-18 sidearm when the spotter glanced over
his shoulder and saw Sharp’s shadow on the wall.
In a flash, the spotter yanked a projectile pistol from its holster and pulled
the trigger. Nothing happened. Frantically, the spotter cycled a round into
the chamber. Sharp swallowed hard, then lowered his shoulder for a tackle
and engaged his jet pack. They both flew out the corner office of the building
some twenty stories above the city. Sharp straightened out and let the rebel
spotter slip off his shoulder. Flames erupted from the Falcon 300 and Sharp
was narrowly missed by the airborne rebel. Flipping over in midair, Sharp
gave the thrusters a quick boost and gently glided back into the skyscraper.
Snatching the spotter’s weapon and flipping the safety, he fired from the
hip. A beam of charged ions connected with the armor’s faceplate as the
rebel flew at Sharp. Screaming in agony as burning shards of composite fiber
etched into his face, the spotter cracked headlong into the side of the tower,
then plummeted with thrusters still flaming out behind. Sharp recovered his
sidearm and carefully inched his head over the edge. The jet pack blazed
away atop a car roof, far below. Sharp doubted the rebel had even survived
the impact with the building.
____________________

Tiny bolts of energy cascaded off SAMAS 15 as it skimmed along the


edge of a ley line. Darren thought the blue light and crackling energy looked
kinda cool, but it always made him uneasy. Nobody really knew why the
surging veins of energy appeared, or when, just that what they produced was
dangerous and unpredictable.
He turned and gazed at the nexus point surrounded by the remnants of
many ancient buildings. When the ley lines intersected, the energies mixed

20
and flowed with sometimes violent turbulence around the nexus and then
openings appeared; tearing the fabric of space and time, unleashing hor-
rors from their bounds in beyond dimensions. Creatures from other worlds
stepped through the Rifts to escape, explore, and sometimes conquer the
mysterious planet that had become so rich in the powerful magic energies.
Not all these dimensional beings, or D-Bees, were violent predators bent on
human genocide, but none of them belong here, nor did the humans that aided
and consorted with them. This was the humans’ world alone, and someday
the Coalition States that Darren served would reclaim the planet devastated
by these outsiders.
Darren accelerated and hoped a Rift wouldn’t open while his unit was
in the ruins. Sector eight was fast approaching. He prepared himself for the
battle ahead.
____________________

“There, that ought to do it,” Lisa pronounced from her position wedged
under the Enforcer’s main control panel. It looked to Dave like she was caus-
ing as much damage as the Glitter Boy had. Wires and optical cable hung
about the pilot’s compartment and the occasional fireworks display would
erupt from a circuit board, followed by a few choice words from Lisa. Sure
enough, the radio crackled and flooded the compartment with comm chatter.
Lisa switched to a direct scrambled channel.
“Enforcer 126 to Lieutenant Merrick. Request assistance sector eight. Ex-
treme caution advised. Glitter Boy present in sector eight. Over.”
“Merrick here. Enforcer 126, you guys okay?”
“Yes, for now. Dave’s trying to get the Enforcer out from under several
tons of rubble, but it’s full of more holes than a Xiticix hive. I think we can
move it as soon as we’re clear through. Wait, I hear the Boom Gun again.”
She paused for the impact that never came. “It’s not shooting at us.”
“Did you have a clear view of Sergeant Winters and the others before you
lost visual?”
“Not really sir, but it looked like we had two men down. Communications
were damaged so I didn’t catch who it was. Boom Gun just fired again. Who
are they shooting at?”
“33rd Airborne’s probably flying escort for a medivac unit, but I doubt
they’ve gotten that far. Just a sec. Okay, you got Darren out there keeping
him busy. Sounds like he’s havin’ a tough time of it.”
“You sent a SAM up against a Glitter Boy? We’re dead for sure.”
“He might just be able to buy you enough time to pull out, maybe send a
few missiles at the Glitter Boy before you hightail it. Ditch the Enforcer if
you have to, I don’t want to lose anyone else. Merrick out.”
“Enforcer 126 out.”

21
Dave smiled as another sonic boom sounded off. If anyone could give the
Glitter Boy a run for its money, it was Darren.
____________________

“Crap!” Darren hurtled out of the way of falling debris as the Boom Gun
struck a support and threw a wall down in his path. “I can’t even get a shot
off!”
He slowed and cranked the hover jets down, flinging the SAMAS high
above the rooftops. He needed to get behind the Glitter Boy; the Boom Gun
kicked so hard a special recoil suppression system of thrusters and pylons
made the Glitter Boy an easy target from the rear when it was drilled in to
fire.
The Glitter Boy’s pilot stood in the pilot compartment tracking the SA-
MAS by the heat of its thrusters. He didn’t need to wait for a clear shot; there
wasn’t much that could stop two hundred kinetic slugs from reaching their
desired destination.
Standing only a foot taller than a SAMAS power armor unit, the Glitter
Boy had more than three times the armor and firepower. Molecularly bond-
ed chrome alloy gave the giant power armor its name. The entire surface
appeared to be made of highly polished mirrors. A walking tank, it carried
only one weapon, a high-powered electromagnetic rail cannon that fired two
hundred flechette-style rounds at speeds exceeding several times the speed
of sound. Unlike conventional rail guns that rapidly fed single high-density
ferrous slugs into an electromagnetic acceleration chamber, the G-10’s rail
cannon used fall-away cartridges that were accelerated down the barrel. Two
hundred one-inch slugs in one deadly 12-pound cluster, equivalent to a semi-
truck slamming into a target at a point less than 200mm in diameter. The
“Boom Gun,” as it was dubbed, created a localized sonic boom every time it
fired. The recoil was so tremendous, the giant power armor had a system that
engaged to compensate the instant the pilot pulled the trigger. Toe hooks and
laser drilled pylons slammed into the earth, and synchronized thrusters on the
power armor’s back engaged every time the weapon spit projectiles.
The SAMAS came into view, the Glitter Boy swung its weapon high. The
pilot only needed one strike.
Sergeant Winters took a deep breath and slung his C-27 behind his back.
Sprinting towards Trenton’s crumpled form he didn’t even glance around to
see where the Glitter Boy was at. Hardly feeling the weight, he hefted Tren-
ton over his shoulder and ran with an unbalanced gait for all he was worth.
Not stopping for cover, Winters ran for as much distance as he could get.
“Sergeant Winters to Medivac! I need medical assistance immediately!”
“This is Medivac 111. What’s your 20?”
“Hauling ass, moron! Where the hell are you?”

22
“We’re currently administering aid to injured soldiers in sector seven.
How serious is your injury?”
“How’s missing a leg?! Does that rank serious enough for you to get your
pansy ass over to sector eight? I need someone to pull my man out, now!”
“Stand by.”
“Just stay where you’re at! I’ll be drinking coffee and eating donuts back
at Chi-Town before you get that damn thermometer out of your ass!” The
Sergeant cursed, covering the distance to the Medivac unit. Thirty yards back
and still losing ground, Bill did his best to keep up.
____________________

The weapon lock didn’t register. Darren twisted sideways but not fast
enough. A rending roar mixed with the sonic report as flechettes sliced
through the SAM’s upper leg and tore into the rear thruster jets.
Darren winced, red hot bits of metal burned past his uniform and stuck
into his thigh. The SAM wrenched sideways following Darren’s vain attempt
to keep the shrapnel out of his body. The left rear jet exploded. Completely
severed, the other jet collided with his right wing and spun Darren downward.
Fighting the blackness overtaking him, Darren pulled up and hit the maneu-
vering thrusters, barely clipping tile off a rooftop. Trailing smoke and flame,
the SAMAS came down hard several blocks away and skidded through a
park bench and into the chassis of an old Mercedes.
His head pounded unmercifully from the concussion of the exploding
thruster. He felt sick to his stomach and knew the cold, clammy feeling
spreading across his skin would be followed shortly by unconsciousness.
He couldn’t let that happen. Once the thrusters were disengaged, the flames
ceased, leaving patches of white-hot metal glowing, even in daylight. Darren
made himself concentrate on something other than pain. He turned off the
damage display and shut down the multiple warning tones emitting from the
SAM’s onboard computer. He didn’t need a computer to tell him the unit was
damaged.
“Hey, you alright, man?” A voice on his comm brought him back from
the haze. Darren looked up to see a Sky Cycle hovering a few feet away. He
hadn’t even heard it come up, realizing he could be dead now if that were the
enemy. He heard someone speaking and realized it was himself.
“Sure! Just a scratch really. You should see the other guy!”
The other RPA laughed. There was a camaraderie among the members
of the Robot Power Armor elite. They lived on adrenaline and the thrill of
combat.
“Take a breather, man. 33rd’s gonna rip this Glitter Boy a spare one.
Watch a pro at work!”
The Sky Cycle lifted up to join three others. Compact units, the Coalition
Sky Cycle was a hybrid hovercycle, speeder, and aircraft; the ultimate in
23
urban air power. The Sky Cycle could turn on a dime and maneuver through
streets and around buildings better than ground craft or any helicopter. Armed
with a pair of mini-missile launchers and a forward laser turret, the cycle was
a tough little bastard in a fight, too.
The assault unit from the 33rd airborne sped off to confront the enemy.
Darren drifted into unconsciousness, then awoke with a jerk as a sonic boom
echoed in the ruins, followed by multiple explosions. Turning back he saw
smoke rising from the battle scene he’d just left. A Sky Cycle dove, launch-
ing a pair of mini-missiles. From where he was, Darren couldn’t tell if they
connected, but watched the forward windscreen shatter as the cycle’s pilot
splattered the rear fins and thrusters. The cycle disappeared below a building,
but smashed its way out the other side, spinning wildly.
Now he was mad. Checking the rail gun feed belt for damage, Darren ran
back toward the battle. Another cycle blew apart in midair; thrusters, fins and
armor fragments spread out over the streets. The pilot continued on without
the Sky Cycle, arching toward the ground and out of sight.
Darren slammed the SAMAS through an interior wall, finding a position
to fire from inside an adjacent building. Another sonic boom shook rotten
plaster from the walls and ceiling, but no follow up explosion could be heard.
Darren flipped on the HUD and raised the left forearm to match the lock. A
pair of armor-piercing mini-missiles trailed away from him and through an
open section in the wall. Drilled and secured in place to the Glitter Boy’s leg.
It couldn’t budge as the shaped charges struck the reflective armor plating of
its left leg and detonated. It didn’t even move.
Darren switched to telescopic and cursed. Two tiny blast holes marked
the chrome alloy armor. A laser blast bounced off the Glitter Boy’s head and
threw up chunks of asphalt from a crater several meters away. The Boom
Gun swung around and the rear thrusters fired. The sonic boom and the ex-
plosion occurred almost simultaneously. Darren trained the targeting laser
dot on the Glitter Boy’s head. Lasers were nearly useless against the dense
reflective armor, but a burst of kinetic slugs would inflict at least minimal
damage every time. Unexpectedly, the Glitter Boy turned toward him and
began to run, rail gun ported.
“Crap!” Darren yanked the trigger, and the C-40 feed belt jerked. Metal
slugs shot from the barrel as fast as the feed belt could drop them into the
magnetic acceleration rails. Forty kinetic slugs ricocheted off the chest ar-
mor plating. Never breaking stride, the Glitter Boy smashed through an inner
wall, bringing down the ceiling with the tip of its rail gun.
Mass to mass, the SAMAS was outweighed better than six to one. The
larger power armor slammed the SAMAS with a running body block. Darren
was breathless from the impact as his SAMAS flew backwards; wings, arms,
legs, and rail gun snapping inner supports of the building and drowning the
unit in collapsed walls and ceilings. His head swam. Flailing about, Darren

24
cleared off his power armor and angrily yanked his C-40 out from underneath
a pile of junk. The belt feed was still intact. Darren glanced around a full 360
degrees, but the Glitter Boy wasn’t there. Creeping out of the structure, Dar-
ren viewed its gruesome calling card. Burning bits of Sky Cycles amid fallen
buildings and cratered asphalt, the marks of the battle surrounded him.
“SAM 15 to all units, anyone have eyes on the enemy?”
Scattered replies from across the unit all returned negative. Just as with
their previous attacks, the Army of the New Order was able to escape, leaving
only destruction behind them.
Darren remembered the Enforcer, “SAM 15 to Enforcer 126, you still with
us, Dave?”
In answer to his question, a pile of rubble shifted and fell away. Giant
spiked hands hefted tons of material.
“Roger,” Dave muttered. Working damaged controls, he did the best he
could to bring the partially functional robot back to its feet once again. “Hell
of a day, Darren. Didn’t even get a shot at the bastard.”
It seemed he would have some stories to tell after all.

25
Chapter 2
Show me those fighting teeth
This wasn’t supposed to be happening. Colonel Lyboc paced his office
furiously. None of this should have happened, but orders had to be obeyed.
“Damn it!” he seethed. If that holier-than-thou, high-and-mighty General
Ross Underhill hadn’t gotten a righteous calling to eliminate the Army of the
New Order, none of this would have happened. That fiasco in old Chicago
could be turned to his benefit though. The fiasco was all the supporters of the
new Skelebot automatons would need to convince Emperor Prosek to start
production. But everything else wasn’t going so well. The rebel army had
been eliminated, but its leaders had escaped with valuable and very damag-
ing intelligence.
“That damn project wasn’t my idea in the first place!” he defended himself
in his empty office. “Underhill is bringing the iron hand of the Coalition right
down on his own head and the fool doesn’t even know it!”
If the rebels accessed the intelligence disk and used what was on it, there
could be some serious fallout. Nobody in the Coalition would believe some
no-name rebels, but too many others would and his head would be the first
to roll. The operation had its risks, but there was no better way to do what
needed to be done. Colonel Thadius Lyboc was never one to play it safe and
had acquired his position as head of Chi-Town intelligence by taking a lot of
chances. This time, though, he had to cover his tracks, and quickly. A plan
began to coalesce. He would set up some fool to either recapture the disc and
return it to him or take the fall if they failed, eliminating the fallout for any in-
formation that might implicate the upper echelon. In the meantime, the Army
of the New Order had to be destroyed. Lyboc smiled and sat down before his
computer. Perhaps he could kill two birds with one stone.
____________________

“I just want to hear you say it again!” Greg rose to his full 6 feet, 4 inches
and glared down at his C.O. “An entire heavy mechanized assault team with
the help of the 33rd Airborne couldn’t find half a dozen rebels and a Glitter
Boy?”
“Relax, Lieutenant. You didn’t do so hot either. You yourself lost a man
and several others were injured. You did some damage before you pulled out,
but you probably just scared them off before the heavier units could move in
to attack.”
“Doesn’t it seem just a tiny bit odd to you, that with all the resistance we
encountered, not a single rebel sighting is reported fifteen minutes later?”
Greg’s gray eyes flashed angrily as he leaned over the Captain’s desk.
“As you were, Lieutenant!” Greg straightened up again. “You botched
this one. But I can’t say it was all your fault. This is the first I’ve been told
26
of a Glitter Boy in connection with the Army of the New Order and believe
me, I’m sympathetic. You didn’t really have a chance, not under the circum-
stances. Fact is, you’re getting another opportunity. I’m sending you back
after that Glitter Boy to do the job right.”
“I have injured men and my mechanized units are going to be down at
least five days.”
“I’m authorizing whatever equipment you think is necessary and assign-
ing a new platoon to your S&D ops unit. Have Sergeant Winters see me as
soon as he’s got a minute, I want him to take over the last training exercises
of the new platoon.”
“You’re giving me recruits?” Greg was horrified.
“There’s nothing wrong with recruits if they’re under the right kind of
leadership. I’m sorry, Lieutenant, but all the experienced veterans are ac-
tively engaged in other operations. Not to mention, with the losses we’ve
been facing lately, you’re just going to have to make do with what I’m giving
you.”
“Come on sir, there must be something you can do.”
“Greg,” the Captain said, taking off his glasses. “I just lost three of my
friends in the last year. Each of their units went up against overwhelming
odds and were decimated. I don’t know whether we’re just underestimating
the enemies we face or someone above us is royally screwing up, but the
Army is working with fresh faces at almost every level right now. I’m giv-
ing you what I can and I’m giving you time we don’t have for your soldiers
to recover before we send them back into the field to hunt down these ANO
scum. I can’t get you more veterans, the best I can do is get you recruits. But
I’ll give you some extra latitude on equipment.”
“Thank you, sir. I understand.” Greg had calmed down a bit when the Cap-
tain described the larger picture. His own friends had been in some of those
units. “What’s my departure date?”
“From what I understand, some of your men received at least moderate
injuries?”
“One very serious, one fairly bad, but most just minor burns and bruises.”
“Intelligence will track the rebels until you can give pursuit. You leave in
one week.”
“Why not send another S&D unit before the rebels clear Coalition bor-
ders? Lieutenant Cordova’s S&D ops unit could get to them before we can.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant, you’re dismissed. And get a haircut, you’re set-
ting a bad example for your men.”
“Yes sir,” Greg preferred his hair a little on the longer side, but wasn’t
going to argue with his Captain. He turned to leave.
“Oh. One more thing. Espionage Division is assigning a military specialist
to lead the mission.” The Captain braced for Greg’s response.

27
“Espionage? What the hell does Espionage have to do with a Glitter Boy
and some rebel nut cases shooting up my unit?”
“I can’t answer that. You’ll have to ask the military specialist, a Lieuten-
ant Sorenson. If you have any questions, ask him. You are dismissed,” the
C.O. snapped and promptly focused his attention to a blank computer screen
on his desk. Greg started to speak, temper flaring again.
“I said you are dismissed, Lieutenant!”
Greg clenched and unclenched his fists, then strode out the office door.
Sergeant Winters knew something was wrong when he saw Greg coming.
“Did you deck him one for me?”
“No, but you’re getting a chance yourself.” Greg stopped before the hefty
Sergeant. Greg was a foot taller, but Winters looked bigger. “Cap’n wants to
talk to you. You’ve got your work cut out for you. A platoon of raw recruits.”
“Wonderful. Damned thoughtful of him.”
“That’s not all. Some hotshot military specialist from Espionage is run-
ning the show now. I’ll let the Cap’n tell you the rest, I’m too pissed off. I’d
love to see the C.O. when you’re finished.”
“Gawdamn, there goes my retirement.”
An attractive secretary passed by, disrupting the conversation. The two
men watched her enter the C.O. s office. Jerry whistled through his teeth.
“Hey, you’re married, remember.” Greg looked disapproving.
“Just taking inventory, my friend, just taking inventory. Suppose I oughta
go in and speak to the Cap’n now.” Winters edged toward the door. Greg
smiled, shaking his head.
“Not a chance. I don’t think she goes for loud-mouthed Sergeant types.”
“No?”
Greg laughed. He wasn’t getting into another argument with Jerry.
“Good luck. Oh, before I forget. Do you want to make the vid to Charlie’s
family, or should I?”
“No family, just a sister. You’re better with words anyway, I can’t hardly
say what needs to be said, neither.”
“Yes, but you knew him, he was under your command longer. Besides,”
Greg had a distant look in his eyes, “I’ve sent too many already.”
“Hey, don’t worry about it. I’ll handle it. Go get some sleep, you look
even more like garbage than usual.” Jerry grinned and threw open the door
of the Captain’s office.
____________________

Brian ran his hands through his unruly red hair. Cowboy was starting to
piss him off.
“C’mon Brian. Look, you can hardly tell it’s damaged. You’re a tech,
aren’t you? You can fix it.”

28
“I’ve already gone over this with you three times now! Look!” Brian
grabbed Cowboy’s suit of CA-1 heavy body armor and ran it under the scan-
ner. Nobody else gave him this much trouble, and he already had his work cut
out for him repairing the damaged SAMAS and Enforcer.
“See all those stress fractures? This suit has had it. Finished! You run into
a bumblebee too fast and Kablam!” Brian waved his arms, animating his ora-
tion. “All these fractures split and you’re standing there going ‘wait, stop!
My armor fell off!’”
“But this is my best armor!” Cowboy whined. Towering above Brian,
he looked like a big, six-foot-eight baby whose favorite toy had been taken
away.
“I know, you told me. I’ll modify another set to fit you, okay?”
“Why can’t you just fix that one? It saved my life.” Cowboy ran his hand
fondly over the pitted surface of his body armor.
“That’s just what it was supposed to do. It’s not indestructible, it doesn’t
make you invincible, it technically shouldn’t even be hit by a direct blast.
All your armor’s supposed to do is protect you from fire, radiation, and the
environment. It will probably save your life from one hit, two if you’re really,
really lucky. That’s all!” Brian reached over and thumped Cowboy’s back.
“Oww!”
“That hurt?”
“No, not really.” Cowboy ignored the bruises.
“You were lucky the armor stopped most of the blast impact. That’s what
it’s supposed to do. Your armor saved your life, but I can’t fix it! Get a new
one!”
Cowboy’s shoulders slumped, and he sulked out of the repair center. Brian
watched him go, then spun, kicking the armor off the scanner. Some people
really got on his nerves.
“Please go easier on my armor, if you don’t mind.” Sharp placed his suit
on the scanner and stepped back.
“Oh, uh, hi Sharp.” Brian smiled self-consciously at his friend. He hadn’t
thought anyone else was there. “Woah, where’d you get that?” He spied the
JA-11 and oddly shaped multi-optics scope.
“Took it from the spotter. Can you believe he was only four floors below
me in the same building? Kept picking up comm static, too close for any of
you. Heard some scraping sounds and muffled speech. Sure enough, four
floors below I found him.”
“You get hit?”
“No, but I slammed into him pretty hard. Thought one of the clamps might
have broken. I don’t want to take any chances.”
“No, no, it doesn’t look damaged. They don’t even look stressed,” Brian
spoke into the display monitor.
“Could you check the rifle and scope for me?”

29
“You tell the Lieutenant you have this?” Brian asked warily.
“Yep. He told me I could keep it and use it in the field if I had it I.D.’d for
personal use. Guess he trusts me not to try and sell it.”
“Well let’s have a look at it.” Brian took the three-hundred-year-old pre-
Rifts weapon and multi-optics scope over to a workbench.
“Rifle looks pretty clean. Canister’s empty, but the clip is still partially
charged. I’ll drain it and start clean with a new charge. This gun was well
taken care of. Somebody restored it well. I can get a couple of extra clips for
it from impound.”
“What about the scope? I checked the power cell, doesn’t look like any-
thing we make anymore.”
“Doesn’t look like anything we made, ever.” Brian held the small com-
posite-encased power cell. “Oh, no wonder – here, see this emblem stamped
into the cell, and the side of the casing? This is a pre-Rifts AQ-3 targeting
system. Pretty rare. Heck, maybe worth more as a collector’s piece. Never
seen this particular make of weapon or device before, but I read about them
in a class on pre-Rifts weaponry. Some of the better-made equipment is still
operational now. A lot of mercenaries swear by these old-timers. I’ll check
it out and calibrate the sights for you later. All in all, looks pretty decent.”
“Corporal Adams to robotics repair station seven,” the loudspeaker blared.
“Must be bringing the Enforcer in. Got some serious work ahead of you
pal.”
“Forget the machine, did you meet the new communications officer?
Beautiful blue eyes, blond hair, big, ya know. I gotta ask her out!”
“I thought you already tried that.”
“Bad timing I guess,” Brian shrugged. “I’m gonna go ask her out before
she leaves. Coming?”
“Wouldn’t miss it for the world.”
____________________

Dave and Lisa watched the UAR-1 being lowered to the metal grid floor.
It could have gone much worse, Dave thought looking at the blast marks. He
was still alive.
“Oh, fine. Not again,” Lisa growled and turned her back to the approach-
ing Sharp and Brian. “Brian’s asked me out three times this week. I really
hope he’s getting the message.”
“Hi, Lisa! Hi, Dave!” Brian called out cheerfully.
“Hey,” Dave nodded to him. “Sorry ‘bout the Enforcer.”
“No prob. I’ve fixed worse. Say, Lisa, you alright?”
“Uh-huh,” Lisa clipped without looking at him. “Thanks, though.”
“I’m finished with the armor checks, and the Enforcer can wait till tomor-
row. How about I take you to dinner tonight?”
Lisa rolled her eyes and turned on a smile.
30
“That would be great, Brian. But you see, I have to pull all the recorded
data from the Enforcer before it gets blanked out. I couldn’t possibly finish in
time to be ready for dinner. Sorry, maybe some other time.”
“No problem. I can do it for you, so you have time to get ready. Won’t
take that long.”
“Perfect!” Lisa beamed. “I hope you don’t mind, but I promised one of my
friends I would meet her tonight. You don’t mind if she meets us someplace,
do you?”
“That would be great! We can make it a double date, Sharp’s free tonight.”
Sharp’s head snapped up. Just what he needed. Brian setting him up on a
blind date.
“Well, how about you call me when you finish here, and then we’ll meet
you someplace,” Lisa said cheerily. At the least, she’d get Brian to finish her
work.
“Okay, sounds great! I’ll call you around six or seven. Who’s your friend?”
“Her name’s Cara, and she’s really gorgeous,” Lisa winked at Sharp. “I’ll
see you two later!” she called flirtatiously, skipping out of the repair section.
The three men watched her go. Dave’s elbow hit Sharp in the ribs.
“Hey, pal, not bad, eh?” Brian cracked his knuckles. “See, just have to be
persistent.” Brian opened the Enforcer’s hatch and blinked.
“There go our dates,” Sharp said, staring at the mess of wires and cables
inside the pilot’s compartment. Brian breathed in deeply and climbed in, a
determined look on his face.
“Give me a hand, will ya?”
“That’s your job. I can’t even pilot one of those things.”
“Cara, remember?”
Sharp plunged in after him.
____________________

Sounds of voices very far away filtered down into Trenton’s dim con-
sciousness. He felt no pain, his senses limited to partial hearing. He concen-
trated on the voices. Two voices, one very nasal sounding. He recognized
neither.
“I’m just saying there’s no need for partial conversion,” the nasal voice
spoke.
“Partial conversion it is. Don’t worry about the cost. I want those implants
put in and if you value your career and your family, you’ll do the work,” the
other voice spoke with authority. They were silent for a moment, but when
the voices returned, they were closer.
“What you’re asking me to put in isn’t standard. If this is found, somebody
has to explain how it got there. I don’t like it.”
“You’re not getting paid to like it. You want that file turned over to secu-
rity? You know, level seven, section-”
31
“No, no, but I –”
“And don’t screw up this time. Let me know when you’re finished.”
Footsteps receded. Trenton strained to make out more, but his drug
numbed mind wouldn’t respond. The conversation would only be a dream
that aimlessly wandered in his subconscious mind.
____________________

“You’re kidding, right?” Darren couldn’t believe his ears. Sitting partially
clothed on a bed in the medical section, he was receiving orders he couldn’t
obey.
“I’m not kidding. No running, jumping, or strenuous activity. That su-
ture should heal up in a few days, but you really shouldn’t even be walking
around.”
“What about sex?” Darren asked. The nurse stared at him blankly.
“What about sex?”
“What about sex? You know, man and woman meet, go to dinner, go back
to her place for coffee, get undressed, go into the bedroom-”
“I KNOW, about sex. You mean –” she paused, face growing red. “Yes,
that would be okay. Well, if you take precautions.”
“Oh! You want me to wear a condom?” Darren spoke loudly. Several
heads turned, the nurse becoming more embarrassed.
“Well, yes, but that’s not what I meant.”
“What did you mean?” Darren was enjoying this, green eyes sparkling.
“I meant,” she glanced around to see who was listening, then spoke softly.
“I meant positions.”
“Ohhh! Then it’s okay if I’m on top?” He raised his voice again. More
heads turned. The nurse’s face was bright red now.
“No!” She spoke loudly. A few unseen snickers passed around. “No, look,
just take it easy. Come back tomorrow and have this checked.” She pointed
to the bandage on his wounded leg. “And spend some time in your quarters
resting. You have a mild concussion as well, but a little sleep should take
care of that.”
“I love it when you talk to me like that.” Darren got up and limped for the
exit, flexing his well-muscled body while he walked.
“Darren! Put your clothes on!” She spoke with clenched teeth.
“Oh, silly me. Force of habit I guess. I thought I was getting up to raid the
fridge.” He grinned and winked at her.
“Repeat performance tomorrow, right? Same time, same place, same
thing?” Quite a few spectators awaited the response.
“Yes!” She hissed, teeth clenched.
“I count the minutes while we’re apart. So long, honey muffin.”
The nurse rolled her eyes. Tomorrow was one day she might call in sick.
____________________
32
Lisa snatched a towel and hurriedly wrapped it around her body as the
door chime rang. Darting from the shower, she hit the monitor button.
“Who’s there?”
“Cara.”
Lisa opened the door to admit her friend. Cara, dressed in black leather
and adorned with spikes and chains, drew a few stares from passing tech
officers. She smiled when she thought of the guard scanning her twice and
not finding the ceramic knife in her leather boot. She tossed her head back to
clear a mane of black hair from the side of her face. Coalition officers didn’t
usually associate with downsiders like herself, but Lisa was an exception.
“Cara, long time no see.” Lisa gave her a short hug and closed the door
behind her. “I’ll be right back. Let me put some clothes on and do my hair.”
She ran back into the bathroom. Cara looked around the small apartment.
Officers like Lisa were privileged with a private, fully furnished apartment
free of rent.
“Righteous pad. Could use some decor changes, but not bad.”
“You still have the same place on level six?” Lisa asked from the bath-
room.
“Nah, hadda ditch it. Got a better deal on level eight. Rent’s a pain, but
the hood’s a lot better. Dog Boys stay clear cuz it’s Night Crawler territory.
Protection’s good, ya know?” Cara laid on the bed staring at seminude males
covering the posters tacked on the ceiling.
“Still hangin’ with the Night Crawlers? I heard they were warring with
the Stone Heads.”
“Kicked their asses. Couple of them got ice’d trying to break through the
net, but our Cyber-boys chased ‘em back. Tore ’em up on their own turf, too.
You been missin’ all the excitement.”
“There’s plenty of that in the military, trust me. I’m still high on adrena-
line from today.”
“What, some D-Bee wrench the comm tower off your ‘Bot?” Cara
stretched out, placed her hands behind her head and fixed her dark eyes for-
ward.
“Just about got taken out by a Glitter Boy in old Chicago, but I’m not sup-
posed to tell you that. Messed up the mech pretty good. When I signed on for
seek and destroy duty, I didn’t think that meant me!”
“Hope you’re ready for some more action. A couple of new bands are
playing down at The Ball & Chain. The pit’s gonna be wild.”
“Don’t worry about me,” Lisa spoke over the hair drier. “Remember –”
The vidphone rang. Lisa went on talking of old times.
“Yer vids chimin’. Lisa?” Cara tried to get Lisa’s attention. Rolling off the
bed, she hit the receiver button.
“Lisa’s room.”
Brian’s face appeared on the screen.

33
“Hi! You must be Cara, right?”
“Yeah,” Cara said warily. “Who are you?”
“I’m Brian, Lisa’s date tonight.”
“Really?” Cara glanced back to see if Lisa was watching
“Yeah. I think you’re gonna like Sharp. He’s kinda quiet, but he’s a nice
guy. Is Lisa there?”
Cara glanced at the bathroom. Lisa was talking, but the hairdryer drowned
out what she was saying. A small smile formed on Cara’s lips. She brushed
her hair back and faced the monitor.
“No, Lisa isn’t here right now, but she should be back in a sec. So, you’re
Brian, huh?”
“Yep. What, she been talking about me?”
“I’m sure she covered all the juicy parts. So, tell me about Lisa.”
“Uh, we had some tech classes together, but I never really met her until a
few days ago, then –” the hairdryer stopped.
“Who are you talking to Cara?”
“Wow! I never imagined Lisa would ever do something like that! She
must really like you if she would go that far. I can’t wait to meet you!” Cara
said, dramatically.
“What?” Brian appeared confused. Lisa stepped over to see him on the
monitor. Horrified, she shoved Cara aside.
“Can’t wait to talk to your lover boy, huh?” Cara spoke loudly.
“Brian! I’ll call you back!” Lisa slammed the receiver off, while Cara
laughed.
“I can’t believe you said that! What else did you say while I was gone?”
“Just that you wanted to bear his children,” Cara grinned.
“Ahhh! I’m trying to get rid of this guy and now you’ve endeared me to
him?”
“He said he was your date tonight. What gives?”
“Okay, this guy’s a tech, right? He’s in my unit and won’t stop asking me
out. Finally, today I say yes ‘cause I don’t think he’ll finish work on time. He
must have pulled something off to get done early. Now he expects me to go
out to dinner with him or something.”
“He didn’t look too bad. Not your usual type. He said something about a
guy named, Sharp?”
“That’s this friend of his. Everyone calls him that, but I don’t know what
his name is. Okay, I’m trying to get out of going on a date with Brian, so I
told him you were coming along. Next thing you know he turns it into some
kind of double date.”
“Is he cute?”
“Cara! Yeah, I guess, I didn’t really look. See what you did? Now I have
to come up with another excuse to get out of this.”
“Why can’t they go to the Ball & Chain with us?”

34
“That’s not their kind of hangout. I don’t think either of them has ever
been to level six, much less a place like that.”
“Cool. Virgins!” Cara grinned, an evil glint in her eyes.
“They probably won’t even go.”
“What are you complaining about then? I thought you didn’t want them
hangin’ with us anyway.”
“Cara, you’re a genius.” Lisa hit the directory listing, then punched the
number. The screen lit up before it finished ringing.
“Hi! Brian here.”
“Hi, Brian. Cara and I are running a little late,” Lisa paused, realizing she
was still wrapped in a towel. “We were planning to go to a place called the
Ball & Chain, on level six. You’re welcome to meet us there if you want. You
know how to get there?
“The Ball & Chain? No, but I’m sure I can find it with the directory.”
“It’s not in the directory. It’s just past power station #39 near the old ware-
house district.”
“How about Sharp and I grab a vehicle from the pool and pick you up?”
“Really bad idea, Brian. Wouldn’t last ten minutes down there. Do you
have cycles?”
“Uh, no. I’m sure we could borrow some from the motor pool.” Brian
fought to keep the date. What the hell was he doing? He didn’t even know
how to ride a motorcycle.
“Hmmm, I don’t know what to tell you, Brian.” Lisa tried to look disap-
pointed. Cara stuck her face in front of the monitor.
“Hi, Brian. I got an idea. Lisa and I will pick you two up in an hour at
the tech quarters’ rear entrance. Don’t keep us waiting,” she smiled, then
blanked the screen before Brian could respond. Lisa stared in disbelief at
Cara’s smirking face. Cara rattled her bike keys.
“Entertainment.”
____________________

Ninety minutes later, Brian and Sharp still waited. Brian wore a thick gold
shirt with a forest-green vest and long felt overcoat, loose-fitting forest-green
pants and felt covered shoes. The style was the peak of fashion in some of
the upper-level dance clubs. Sharp looked very dignified, even for an upper-
level club. Brown hair combed to perfection and mustache neatly trimmed,
he was clad in neatly pressed gray pants, white shirt, and gray waistcoat, he
had left the tie at Brian’s insistence; it would look ridiculously out of place
where they were going.
“Where is this place again?” Sharp sounded hesitant.
“Someplace on level six. Ball & Chain? Ever been there?”
“No. I don’t think we should be going to level six. Last thing we need is to
get caught in some downside hangout and thrown in the brig.”
35
“Relax my friend. Lisa and Cara go there all the time, and nothing ever
happens to them. Besides, Cara’s expecting you. You’re not just chickening
out because of her, are you?”
Sharp shrugged, shaking his head. Cycle engines whined and rubber
squealed as Cara and Lisa slid to a stop before them.
“You boys lookin’ for some excitement?” Lisa cooed. Brian hardly recog-
nized her. A laced-up leather top forced ample cleavage into view and knee-
high studded leather boots accentuated her long legs. Brian’s jaw dropped,
his heart leaping to fill the space.
“Uh, you look different. I almost didn’t recognize you with your hair down
like that,” Brian choked out, eyes everywhere but Lisa’s hair. He wondered
how she could ride a souped-up street bike in her tight leather mini skirt.
“So you’re the one Brian’s been telling me about.” Cara looked Sharp
over like a cat sizing up its prey. Chains clinked off the metal studs of her
boots as she slowly slid off her cycle.
“Yep.”
Cara walked around him, eyeing every aspect carefully. Sharp felt hot.
What had Brian gotten him into? Cara sauntered back to her modified pre-
Rifts bike. Mounting the cycle, Cara let her hair fall partly across her face as
she stared directly into Sharp’s apprehensive eyes.
“Get on.”
Sharp was more afraid of this than an enemy ready to rip him apart. He
forced his legs into motion and slipped on behind Cara.
“Well?” Lisa raised her eyebrows in question. Brian snapped out of his
fixed gaze.
“Yeah!” Brian threw his leg over the seat and tentatively reached around
her slim waist. Sharp followed suit, but much slower. Cara guided his hands
higher, just below the sternum.
“If you start to slip, just pull in closer and hold on tight.”
Cara and Lisa exchanged looks. Lisa’s electric WR-2000 hummed softly
in contrast to Cara’s pre-Rifts Apache American V-Twin. Rubber screeched
loudly, but Sharp barely heard it. Feeling his butt slipping from the seat he
clung to Cara in terror. Brian was going to pay for this one.
____________________

A breeze rustled tall grass near the sentry’s position. Used to the sound,
he barely registered it. He could tell a storm was approaching. Dark clouds
blotted out the moon and stars. The tension before the clouds broke loose
in fury always made him jumpy, especially tonight. The ley line half a mile
from his outpost by the lake had been unusually active all day. Now, its blue
light shown brightly in the distance, anticipating the storm.
He scanned the field with the passive night vision scope on his rifle. Noth-
ing, as expected, but he didn’t take chances this far from the base. His outpost
36
was located near Cedar Lake, Indiana and was not outfitted for full-scale
combat. He jumped slightly as the wind stirred the grass a little harder. Rain
should come any moment now.
What came instead was a high-powered laser blast. Striking the left eye-
piece of his faceplate, the beam vaporized the top portion of his skull and
stopped short of burning through the back of the helmet. Seconds later, fiery
missile trails struck the communications tower of the outpost, and many ar-
mored figures rose from the grass to slay the unsuspecting defenders. Rain
poured down on the sentry’s body where it lay.
____________________

Brian was having fun. Arms wrapped around Lisa’s torso, he tried to lean
into every turn in spite of her hair stinging his face. He hadn’t known it was
possible to traverse the levels of Chi-Town without ever stopping at a check-
point. The last marker he glimpsed was for level five but hardly legible and
covered with graffiti. The two bikes sped down a service corridor surrounded
by leaking water pipes and power cables. Brian hoped Lisa knew where she
was going.
Cara could see Brian’s coat flapping out behind him through her night
vision goggles. Sharp hadn’t made a sound since they started and was grip-
ping her too tightly for comfort. Still, she could feel his tightly muscled arms
pressing his chest against her back. Perhaps the night wouldn’t be a total
waste.
Lisa aimed the front tire at a foot-wide metal plate attached to the stairs
going up to level six. She’d never done the landings with an extra rider be-
fore. The plate clanked loudly, shifting slightly from the weight of her bike
speeding up it. Brian saw the landing approaching from above and braced for
collision. The rear tire left rubber on a set of black crescents already in place
on the concrete. Wrenching the throttle, she guided the bike up the long flight
of stairs. Brian let out a holler as the bike caught several feet of air before
touching down on level six.
Reaching the landing, Cara spun the back tire and leaned far to one side.
Not anticipating the turn, Sharp hung too far toward the wall. Missing the
metal plate by ten inches, the bike’s front end popped up. When the rear
wheel finally caught the stairs, the cycle was already vertical in front of its
riders, both having recently been left behind in the air. Tread caught concrete
and ripped the cycle out in front of the two riders. Cara clawed for the wall
but came down, full weight on Sharp’s leg, tripping him behind her. Sparks
accompanied the screech of metal striking concrete. The cycle bounced off
the wall and fell backward toward the pair. Cara and Sharp rolled simultane-
ously, the cycle smashing upside down where both had been. It tipped to-
ward them, wheels still spinning. Defensive reflex brought Cara’s thick-soled
leather boot against the cycle’s engine, stopping it short of hitting them.
37
“Shut it off!” She yelled at Sharp, still beneath her. Sharp reached and
pulled out the keys. The wheels hadn’t completely stopped when Cara kicked
the cycle over.
“Damnit! Pay attention!” She snarled, bouncing to her feet with the grace
of a gymnast. “Give me a hand here!”
“I think I tore my suit,” Sharp said, examining a tear at the knees of his
gray slacks. Cara ignored him, struggling to turn the bike’s wheels to the
ground. Gripping the seat, Sharp pushed the bike back to the ramp. Cara
grabbed the handlebars and guided it to the metal plate. They heaved the
street bike the rest of the way in silence. Echoes of screeching tires told Cara
that Lisa was far ahead of them.
“Damn it! Now we gotta go faster to catch up!” She jumped on and
snatched the keys from Sharp. “You walking?”
“Streets are for riding, stairs are for walking. Any more of those?” He
pointed back down the stairway.
“Don’t be a wuss. Get on.” She slapped the seat.
Sharp shook his head and took his place behind her.
____________________

The Ball & Chain took few precautions to conceal its whereabouts. The
outer courtyard was filled with City Rats, downsiders and dreggies. A per-
manent odor of smoke mingled with drugs and bike exhaust created an unap-
petizing atmosphere. A drawbridge across a moat of fiery gas jets allowed
access into the parking stalls of the inner courtyard. The guard wielding a
Neural Mace accepted Lisa’s payment, and they drove between two giant
maces and chains forming the archway, the spiked skull-like balls hanging
dangerously low. Brian could hear the beat coming from inside the castle-
like club. Lisa locked the bike in a stall, and they both watched the clanking
drawbridge lift to block them inside. Lisa grabbed the Coalition credit card
from Brian’s fingers and shot him a hard look.
“Are you stupid?” She shouted above the roar of motorcycle engines.
“This is a Coalition credit card! You want to get your skull cracked? You
can pay me back later. Meantime,” she slipped the card into the pocket of his
vest, “keep that hidden!”
They got in line behind a group of City Rats wearing brightly-colored
patches of a wolf’s head sewn to the back of their leather jackets.
“Stop staring! They’re part of the Wolf Pack gang. Run on level five. This
is supposed to be neutral turf, but don’t push it, okay?”
Several gang members glanced back and did a double take, then a triple
to drool over Lisa. Brian felt suddenly out of place and self-conscious in his
forest-green felt coat and golden shirt. He tried to look tough, more stares fac-
ing him every minute. A Wolf Pack member stepped up to him. In the uneven

38
light of the torches, Brian could tell his right eye was a cybernetic implant.
The gang member reached out and stroked the felt coat.
“I’ll bet some nice carpet had to die so you could wear it,” the other gang
members snickered. Brian looked up at the scar running from the top of his
oily forehead to the tip of his right jawbone. The groove ran across where the
original eye had been. Brian reminded himself to stay cool. Sewn across the
leather jacket above the pocket in red thread was the word Reaver.
“Yeah, Reaver. And Emperor Prosek still hasn’t figured out what hap-
pened to his bedroom drapes, either.”
It took a few seconds to sink in. The wolf pack burst into laughter.
“C’mon, Reaver, leave ’em alone” one of the gang members called out
and Reaver returned to his group. Brian breathed a sigh of relief. He glanced
over to see if Lisa had been looking. She was watching the descending draw-
bridge. At five-foot-eight, most people were taller than he was, including
Lisa. Cara locked her V-Twin in a stall and joined them. Sharp was staring
intently at the graffiti-covered walls and steel plated floor.
“Old bike give you problems?” Lisa asked
“No. Ace here dumped me on the stairs,” Cara jerked her thumb at Sharp.
Brian laughed.
“You didn’t get hurt, did you?”
“Nah,” Cara shrugged. “I’ve taken worse slides without getting ripped
badly. This was a baby.”
The line moved forward, admitting the wolf pack.
“Are you carrying any weapons?” Lisa asked as the door opened, music
drowning out her voice.
“What?”
“Are you carrying a weapon?”
Brian wasn’t sure what the right answer was. No, he wasn’t, but should
he say that here?
“Why?”
“Cuz you can’t take it inside!” Cara yelled at him. A bouncer with a metal
arm and hand stepped before them.
“Cards.”
“We’re paying for these two,” Lisa chimed. The bouncer pointed to Brian
with his bionic arm. Brian could see servos move in the finger mechanism.
“You two bozos get lost someplace?”
“Hey, you heard the women. We’re with them,” Brian retorted, trying to
be macho. With a grunt, the bouncer took the two ladies’ cards, slotting them
in a deck on his arm. He handed them back and opened the door to an inner
room. The wooden door with metal bindings swung shut behind them. They
stepped from the scanning room, Cara’s ceramic knife still undetected.
High volume cacophony assaulted their ears upon entering the inner sanc-
tum of the Ball & Chain. Much larger than it appeared from the front, one

39
couldn’t see from one end of the structure to the other in the dim light and
smoke. Lights danced wildly above the pit and flashed across the walls re-
vealing the decor of ancient weapons. Swords, axes, spears, and clubs lined
the walls and ceiling, each with appropriate stains. On stage, a group called
Pancake Puppy and the Roadkills was finishing its last number, “Run Me
Over Again.” Cara squirmed her way to a booth and tossed the drugged oc-
cupant out onto the floor. The others crammed into the booth with her. Brian
was keenly aware of Lisa’s body pressed tightly against his. On the other side
of a small, dirty table, Cara faced him. Sharp looked forlorn.
“Wow! This place is pretty cool. You come here a lot?” Brian asked Cara.
“Nah, only once in a while. They have fights here sometimes, but mostly
on Saturday nights.”
“Who’s playing next?”
“Some thrasher band from level four. I think they’re called “Shaft Of Ter-
ror” or something. Never listened to ‘em before.”
“Me either.”
They sat. Nobody spoke. The band started their opening number, “Subway
Joy Ride.” A giant screen behind the stage showed scenes of an obscenely
shaped subway train “crawling” from the tunnels to ravage a terror-stricken
city. The lead singer screamed incoherently to the throbbing pit. Neither Bri-
an nor Sharp had the faintest hint what the lyrics were but reasoned that they
didn’t really want to know.
____________________

Flutes added their airy trill to the gradual crescendo of a Mozart sonata.
Lieutenant Michael Sorenson absorbed the music in his soul; eyes closed and
aware of nothing else. He remained motionless for fifteen seconds after the
last note drifted through the lavish dining hall. Opening his eyes, he noticed
his fiancée surveying him keenly, chin resting on interwoven fingers. Karren
smiled, crystal blue eyes sparkling.
“Welcome back,” she reached across the table and took his hand. “You
didn’t bring me down to level twenty-six for this, did you?”
“Hey, that was Mozart. Culture from long before ley lines, Rifts, D-Bees,
monsters, and the cataclysm. I thought you’d enjoy an escape from your
classes. Away from business, a night of music, fine food, and dancing.”
“I was just kidding. Actually, what I could use more than all this is a hot
bath and a massage,” she said teasingly. Mike raised his eyebrows.
“I suppose we could add that to the agenda, along with a few other things.”
“Are you trying to take advantage of me?”
“Absolutely,” Mike grinned and kissed her hand. Karren looked exquisite.
A gold clasp held the platinum blond hair that flowed down her back. The
tight red evening gown showed off a voluptuous figure. Unlike most city
dwellers, Karren’s skin was deeply tanned and toned from the aerobic classes
40
she taught. Although her father was a Major in the Coalition military, Karren
had struck out on her own and started a health and athletic club on Level 28.
Very successful for a woman of twenty-three, she lived in an upper district of
Level 30. Mike always felt like she was out of his league, yet she had agreed
to his proposal of marriage
“How come I’m so lucky?” He thought out loud. Karren cocked her head
in question. “How come I’m so lucky to have you?”
“You won’t say that when we’re married. I’ll wager! It will be, ‘How
come I always have to take the trash out?’ or ‘How come the ol’ lady always
wants to know where I’ve been.’ And I’ll nag you about leaving your socks
on the floor, and keep you up, asking what took you so long to get home. And
we’ll live happily ever after,” she squeezed his hand. Mike mentally kicked
himself in the rear for not telling her about the mission before. She wasn’t
going to like it. Better get it over with now.
“Karren,” Mike hesitated, background violin music suddenly becoming
loud. Karren gazed at him with attentive eyes. “Karren, I just received new
orders before I picked you up.” He couldn’t rid himself of the knot in his
throat. She knew, he could see it in her eyes. “I’m leaving next week on a
top-secret maneuver. Must be pretty important, Colonel Lyboc assigned me
in person. I’m really sorry about the wedding date. We can postpone it a few
days until I return, if that’s alright.” Karren pulled her hand away from his,
her cheeks flushed.
“And what if it’s not? Mike, this is the second time now. What happens
if you come back, and then get sent out again? I worry about you. I wonder
every time if you’re coming back to me. Every time the phone rings, I wonder
if it’s a call saying you’re presumed dead on some top-secret mission. No!
It’s not alright!”
An older couple at the nearest table glanced in their direction, hearing Kar-
ren’s tone of voice. Other patrons’ attention diverted as well. Mike reached
for her hand, but Karren pulled back farther.
“Listen, sweetheart. I know you expected me to make captain a long time
ago. We talked about my new position here in Chi-Town that came along
with the promotion. I’m certain that when I get back things will work out.
And we still have time to call the people we invited and –”
“I don’t care about wedding invitations! Mike, I don’t even care about
your promotion. There’s no reason you shouldn’t have gotten that months
ago. That doesn’t matter to me. What I care about is you and me and being
together.” Mike thought Karren was going to cry, but she continued. “I know
you think my father doesn’t like you, but that isn’t true. I wouldn’t care if you
never made it past Lieutenant, or if you got busted all the way back to private!
What it matters is that we can be together. And it’s not working out!”
Mike didn’t dare open his mind to her emotions. Sometimes his unusual
psionic abilities were to his advantage, and sometimes not. They branded

41
him as dangerous in the eyes of the Coalition and were a liability in this rela-
tionship. The prejudice against psychics had slowed his advancement in the
military, though he had seventeen successful missions behind him. He tried
not to expose himself to the turmoil she was experiencing.
“Karren, please hear me out, okay?”
A tuxedo-clad waiter approached the table and asked for their orders,
oblivious to what he interrupted.
“We’re not ordering, thank you.” Mike stood and took Karren’s arm.
“We’re leaving. Please bring our coats.”
Karren offered no resistance, but held her head high, eyes brimming with
tears. Mike guided her to his borrowed car, opening the door for her and ne-
glecting to tip the valet as he sped off. They drove in silence until reaching
the parking structure below Karren’s spacious flat. Mike shut off the engine
and turned toward her. She burst into tears. His heart wrenched for her, and
Mike pulled her close, tears soaking the shoulder of his well-worn suit. She
sobbed for several minutes before raising tear-stained eyes to meet his. He
kissed her lightly.
“Karren, I’m going to promise you something. When I get back, one way
or another we’re going to get married. I don’t care if I have to resign, but we
will be together. I won’t leave you again, I promise.”
Karren looked into his eyes for a long time, then nodded. He gently pulled
her to him, holding her long. Her sniffles finally subsided. Karren pushed
away from him slightly and smiled.
“You still want to give me a hot bath and massage?” Mike said as he
kissed her on the forehead and opened the car door.
“Lead the way.”
____________________

The last grating sounds of “Hot Dog” reverberated throughout the Ball
& Chain. Brian and the others sat nursing cold beers. Cara puffed away on a
cigarette, but nobody spoke. Brian finally broke the ice.
“So, Cara. I noticed your bike was authentic pre-Rifts. V-Twin, modified.
You do all that work yourself?”
“Uh-uh,” she shook her head, “This guy I used to date did most’a the
work. Hadda make a new body for it. Guess the original was made of some
crappy composite fiber or something. Nah, that mechanic stuff isn’t for me.
Cyberspace, that’s where it’s at.”
“So, you like working with computers? What kind of deck do you run?”
“Data core RM-345XS back-surge protected with an ICE countermeasure
and multi-net access.”
“Universal head jack?”
“Yeah, with transmitter and remote. You run the grid?”
“No, but a couple of my buds run security on technical access.”
42
“Really? Your tech ICE is pretty slick, most cyberspace junkies won’t
even try to crack into military programs. Took a gaze down a chute, pretty
thick with link mines and loop webs. I’ll bet your own jockeys couldn’t break
in with an AJ67-icescrew program.”
“No such thing. Never been run.”
“That’s cuz it’s traceless, came from pre-Rifts decks uncovered in Colora-
do or something. Since all our existing systems are based on pre-Rifts design,
it’s a cinch to bust through, and they don’t even know you’re there. Mirrors
the ICE and creates a feedback loop on the security grid.”
Lisa looked bored. She’d had enough technical talk.
“Cara, I’m going into the pit to dance. Want to come?”
“Sure. Sharp, let me out. You coming, Brian?”
“Yeah, why not.” Brian followed Lisa through the mass of struggling bod-
ies. Cara looked at Sharp, deciding for herself he wasn’t going. She launched
herself into the crowd.
It took about three seconds for Brian to lose track of Lisa in the pit. Flash-
ing strobes and swirling lights messed with his equilibrium. Up and down
became relative, bouncing from body to body. How did one get out of this
mayhem? Seeing what looked like an opening, Brian lunged forward and
struck the side of the stage hard enough to cause pain. He felt himself be-
ing carried along with the mass toward a staircase at the side of the stage. A
steady stream of partially clothed thrashers were hurling their bodies from the
stage onto the tightly packed throbbing pit. Next thing he knew, someone was
shoving him up the stairs, cheers came from behind him.
“Oh crap!” Brian couldn’t back down now. “Here goes!” Brian followed
the bald City Rat in front of him and threw his body out over the mob. What
felt like thousands of light punches roughly carried him to the edge of the
pit and dumped him on a pile of drunken stage divers. Scrambling to his feet
he dodged the newest addition, ducking under a beer mug and worming his
way through the crowd in semi-darkness. Eventually, he found a way back to
their booth, where Sharp sat facing an intoxicated City Rat with a wolf’s head
sewn across his back. The newcomer had consumed what was left of his and
Lisa’s beer and was making slurred threats to Sharp.
“Wrong booth pal. Go find another one to pass out in.” Brian’s hand came
down on the gang member’s shoulder.
“Get lost, pisssss head,” he snarled, slapping Brian’s hand away.
“I said, wrong booth, pal!” Brian gripped the man’s arm and dragged him
out. The infuriated City Rat flailed about and connected a glancing blow to
Brian’s cheek. Brian popped him one in the jaw, not too hard, but it knocked
the inebriated gang member to the floor.
“Lassst misstake you’llll everr mmake!” He leapt up at Brian. Brian tossed
a beer mug, shattering on top of the City Rat’s skull. Nimbly stepping side-
ways, the semiconscious punk fell against several annoyed patrons. A strong

43
hand gripped Brian’s shoulder. Without thinking he brought his arm back,
slamming his elbow into the solar plexus behind him. Spinning to face his
new opponent, he looked up at an angry face with a cybernetic eye. Lisa
and Cara emerged from the crowd. The gang member wound up for a hay-
maker, and a steel hand grabbed his arm, holding him fast. The bouncer from
the front door stepped around to deal with the anti-civil behavior of the two
guests.
“Oh, shoulda figured it was you, pretty boy.”
“He started it!” Brian realized he sounded infantile.
“You little piece of crap! I’m gonna rip your head off and-”
“Shut up! What’ll it be, the ring or the boot?” The bouncer asked. A cres-
cent-shaped crowd formed. Cara and Lisa waited to see what Brian would do.
“Hey, I don’t need a fight. Just tell wolf breath here to mind ...”
“I said, what’ll it be? I give you the boot or you take this in the ring. Two
very simple choices.”
“I’ll cut your throat from ear to ear! C’mon man, You and me outside,
right now! You’re dead, man, dead!”
“Look, I told you I’m not interested in a fight.”
“Okay, one more time, goldenrod. I kick both your asses out in the court-
yard, or you settle this in the ring. Comprende, fuzzy feet? Startin’ to make
sense now?”
Cara slipped next to Brian and whispered in his ear.
“If you get kicked out, you fight the whole pack. You can fight him here
in the ring, and you got a chance of winning.” Cara stared him in the eyes.
“This is for real.”
“Fine!” Brian whipped off his coat. “I’ll kick his ass!” He threw the vest
on the table. “You wanna fight, you got one!” Brian pulled off his golden
shirt and tossed it on top of the vest and coat. “Let’s go.”
Neither the bouncer nor gathering audience were sure what to make of the
spectacle. Someone shouted “Fight!” and soon the club was resounding with
the chant. Bright lights bore down on the ring, and even the band stopped
their song to watch the event. Brian was swept to the ring and found himself
face to chest with the bouncer.
“Simple rules, fur foot. No weapons, no interference. Everything else
goes. Can you handle that?”
“Fine, no problem. I’ll kick his ass.”
“Wait here.”
The two women could hear side bets taking place. The gang member had
all the odds going for him.
“Fifty credits says Brian’s going to get creamed.” Lisa had her money on
the gang member as well. What chance did a tech have against an experi-
enced street fighter?

44
“I’ll take that,” Cara replied. Anyone brave enough to jump into the pit
and do a stage dive had guts in her book.
“You’re not serious!”
“Take it or leave it.”
“I can’t believe you’re throwing money away on Brian. He hasn’t got a
chance!”
“I think my chances just got better.” Cara’s eyes went to the brightly lit
ring. Brian was stretching out, muscles highlighted by the spotlights
“He must work out or something. Wow, I didn’t know he was cut like
that.” Lisa was surprised.
“Do we have a bet or not?”
“Sure, but you’re wasting your money!”
“We’ll see about that, the bouncer’s about to start.”
“The Ball & Chain presents – Ring Justice! In one corner, Reaver. A vet-
eran of the ring and one mean muther. In the other corner, we have fuzzy-foot
Brian, and boy does he look tough!”
The crowd burst into laughter. Brian did the splits, ripping his forest green
pants loudly. The uproar grew louder.
“Any time you’re ready, pee-wee,” the bouncer spoke to Brian.
“C’mon! Let’s go!”
“Let ring justice begin!”
Reaver circled Brian warily, his keen eye displaying malice Brian could
feel at a distance. About a foot taller, Reaver had a beer gut and a great deal
of mass, but there was plenty of muscle to make him dangerous.
Brian went into his Tae Kwan Do stance; feet at shoulders’ width and fists
at the ready. His training wasn’t extensive, but it was effective. His opponent
feinted, yelling obscenities. Turning his back on Brian, he strode casually
to the rail and waved to the crowd. Turning, he sauntered slowly toward
Brian. Suddenly he slammed Brian in the jaw with a left hook. Brian tasted
blood in his mouth. Striking at Reaver’s neck, his blow was deflected by a
strong arm. Reaver swung hard with his right. It took both hands to block
the blow. Brian jumped back, taking several steps to put distance between
them. Reaver continued in his slow, unaggressive manner, never making eye
contact. Anticipating the attack, Brian parried the left hook to the side and
kicked his opponent’s knee. Failing to break the leg, Brian was at least grate-
ful to see Reaver hit the mat. Back on his feet, Reaver changed tactics. Furi-
ously feinting and jabbing, he stayed just out of range, but close enough not
to be ignored. Brian’s roundhouse kick was blocked by a meaty arm. Brian
was forced to back off from the multiple punches flying about. He struck
with a snap kick but connected with a flailing arm. Reaver charged, arms
outstretched. Brian allowed him to pass unimpeded, then spun and kicked the
gang member in the lower back. A cheer went up from the audience. Reaver
whirled, rage burning in his eyes.

45
“Now yer gonna pay!”
Brian threw a punch. Reaver knocked it aside and swung his right fist
western-style, in a wide arc across his body. Ducking underneath, Brian
struck with a knife-hand punch, missing the solar plexus but hitting hard
enough to make Reaver gasp. Thrusting a fist at Brian which was deftly de-
flected, left Reaver wide open. Striking two-fisted style, Brian’s blows sunk
into the fleshy part of Reaver’s torso.
Forced to take a step back, Reaver’s knee kick was ineffective. Instinc-
tively, Reaver moved his waist to avoid Brian’s groin kick. Enraged at the
attack, he gripped Brian’s forearm and held him for a quick knee to the ribs.
Brian’s right fist smashed the bridge of Reaver’s nose. Tears blinded his eyes
involuntarily, and Reaver was unable to defend against the snap kick to his
chest. He staggered against the rail, hands clutching his broken nose. Brian
took his time and connected a crescent kick to the side of Reaver’s head.
Instead of going down with the blow, he lunged, arms flailing. Caught
off guard, the weight of his opponent threw Brian to the mat. Reaver groped
for his throat. Brian tried to roll the gang member off him but couldn’t. Not
taking careful aim where his fists were landing, Reaver swung madly. Brian
swung, but his arm was gripped and pinned to the floor. Blood flowed from
Reaver’s broken nose and dripped on Brian’s less than pristine face. He tried
to break free again but couldn’t get the leverage. The audience cheered at the
pummeling in the ring. Reaver lifted his right arm and brought the fist down
on Brian’s face, knocking out a pair of teeth. Reaver wound up for another
full weight punch.
Brian’s training saw the open neck as Reaver raised his arm. Putting every
bit of force he could muster into the blow, Brian struck Reaver’s jugular with
a knife hand punch. Reaver’s eye went blank, and he made a strange gurgling
sound. His body shuddered, then collapsed. Taking the opportunity to roll his
opponent off him, Brian pulled himself to his feet using the rail. He waited
for his opponent to jump up and come after him. A hush spread, finally bro-
ken by the bouncer rolling Reaver’s lifeless body face up. In his dazed, punch
drunk state, Brian’s mind didn’t register what he’d done.
“The winner, Fuzzy Foot Brian! Ring justice is served!” Mixed boos and
cheers faded out to silence. The bouncer looked to the stage. Taking their cue,
Shaft of Terror broke into one of their most popular songs, “One-Eyed Trou-
ser Snake.” Lights dimmed and went out above the ring. The crowd migrated
back toward the pit and bar. Behind the band, a giant zipper appeared on the
screen, releasing a holographic image of the song’s title.
Cara slipped under the rail and headed for one of the wolf pack. Two
members had vaulted the rail and intended to finish what Reaver had started.
Clenching her fist, she activated four cybernetic spikes in her right knuckles.
Piercing the glove, retractable spikes extended one inch past her fist.

46
The first unsuspecting gang member she took with a leg sweep. The sec-
ond barely had time to gasp. Four knuckle spikes thrust upward, piercing his
genitals. The first attacker tackled her from behind. Pinned by the weight of
her opponent, Cara reached to her boot and slipped the small ceramic knife
from its concealed sheath. Seeing the long-haired gang member about to
smash an elbow down on Cara’s neck, Brian bounded across the ring un-
steadily. Kicking low to the ribs, the gang member was more surprised than
hurt. The assault shifted his weight enough for Cara to twist her body around
facing him. Ceramic knife met flesh below the lowest left rib. Letting out a
horrible scream, the gang member clutched the open wound. Cara wrenched
it across his lower abdomen, then pulled the blade free. Warm blood gushed
from the disemboweled gang member, covering her hand and soaking her
leather top. A metal hand tossed the wailing wolf pack member off her.
Cara knelt by the moaning gang member who lay in a fetal position and
wiped the blood from the blade and glove down the sleeve of his leather
jacket.
“Pleasant dreams,” she said sweetly. A bionic hand fell lightly on her
shoulder.
“You best take off before these guys get their friends. Stick around too
long and all their buddies’ll be waitin’ for ya when ya clear the bridge.”
“What about the eye?” Cara pointed to Reaver’s dead body. The bouncer
bent to examine the cybernetic eye. Brian started to realize what he’d done.
A mixture of fear, elation, and horror hit him at once. Head swimming, he
sat in the ring.
“Two grand?” The bouncer asked.
“Fair. Do it quick” Cara handed him her card. Slotted into a section of the
arm, the bouncer transferred two thousand credits to Cara’s card. Quickly
replacing the blade, she took back her card and then knelt before Brian.
“Brian” he looked up at her. “Brian, we gotta go. C’mon, we gotta bail.
Can you ride?”
“Uh-huh.” Brian spat blood from his swollen mouth. She helped him from
the ring back to the booth where Lisa and Sharp sat looking worried.
“Hey bud, you alright?” Sharp asked, concerned.
“What does it look like to you?” Brian glared out of his good eye, the other
swelling shut.
“We gotta bail. Hadda mess a couple of the pack to get Brian out. You and
Sharp take off. I’m runnin’ Brian over to a Body Fixer on seventh.” Cara took
Lisa aside to the wall near the booth. Brian clumsily reclothed while sitting
in the cramped booth.
“I might take Brian back to my pad afterward. You two aren’t, well like
even thinkin’ of gettin’ together, right?” Cara asked cautiously.
“Cara!” Lisa feigned shock. “I’m surprised at you!” Cara smiled broadly.
“Go ahead, please! Maybe it’ll keep him off me for a while.”

47
Lisa looked over at the dimly lit ring. The two wolf pack members were
crawling out. Reaver was nowhere in sight.
“Guess I owe you fifty credits.”
“Wicked, wasn’t it?” Cara seemed to have enjoyed the fight. Lisa was
still a bit stunned at the outcome. Surrounded by killing all the time in battle,
death on the street was nothing new for Lisa, either. She knew it wasn’t the
same for Brian.
“Ready to leave, Sharp?” She held out her hand. Sharp was standing be-
fore she finished speaking.
____________________

Jerry Winters forced his eyes to focus on the view screen in front of him.
He’d waited until his children were in bed before he recorded the vid to Char-
lie’s sister. Padding softly, his wife joined him across the table.
“Kids sleepin’?”
“Yes,” she whispered. “Your dress uniform is laid out on the bed for when
you’re ready.”
“I’m almost finished here.”
Jerry hated recording “In the line of duty” vids. It was hard enough show-
ing his deepest regret in losing a man to begin with, much less expressing
what needed to be said with his limited vocabulary. Never having been edu-
cated to read and write, everything he had learned came from what Greg
secretly taught him, and Greg was by no means an expert. Very few Coalition
citizens were educated, and even fewer soldiers. Both he and Greg enlisted at
the age of sixteen; a fairly common practice among the lower middle class.
The military provided a good life for him and his family. The world outside
the Coalition states was a harsh one. Jerry counted himself very fortunate.
The door to his four-year-old daughter’s room creaked slightly.
“Clarissa, what’s wrong, baby?”
His daughter ran to him, tears in her eyes.
“What’s wrong?”
“Daddy,” Clarissa climbed into his lap and looked up at him tearfully.
“There’s a D-Bee under my bed.”
“A D-Bee? What’s it look like?”
“I don’t know. I think it had big teeth, and... and it made noises.”
“Want daddy to scare it away?” Clarissa nodded. Jerry set his daughter
on the couch. He crept silently to the door in mock caution. Suddenly, he
stormed the room and Clarissa was sure her daddy was involved in a horrible
battle with a large horned monster with long teeth. Grunts, roars and clawing
sounds told her a fierce struggle was taking place beneath her bed. Finally, he
emerged triumphantly from her room.
“All safe now.” Jerry watched his daughter’s face light up. He carried her
to the bed and tucked her in, mother watching from the doorway.
48
“Daddy, are you going to be here tomorrow?” She looked up at him.
“Yes, and after that too.”
“Good. I miss you when you’re gone,” she smiled.
“Sometimes daddy has to be gone for a while to keep my baby safe.”
“Are you going to kill more bad D-Bees?”
“I’m not going to let any D-Bees hurt my baby,” he kissed her forehead.
“Go to sleep.”
“Night daddy.”
Jerry reached for the light switch on the way out.
“Can you leave the light on?”
“Sure baby. Go to sleep.”
Shutting the door softly, his wife’s arm encircled him. Jerry drew her
close.
“I think there’s a D-Bee under my bed too.” She slipped her hand between
the folds of his bathrobe.
The vid could wait until tomorrow.
____________________

“You’re early. Most of my patients come in much later.” The Body Fixer
sat in a large, dirty easy chair in the makeshift lobby. Most of the furniture
was covered with plastic, and the floor was a nasty green plaid patterned
linoleum. Mismatched wood paneling covered the walls, and the entire room
smelled strongly of disinfectant. The smell wasn’t strong enough to cover the
alcoholic odor permeating the doctor’s breath and clothing. Several empty
cans of ZOOM beer lay strewn behind the easy chair. The pudgy doctor wore
a threadbare lab coat over his partially buttoned blue shirt and of all things, a
Scottish kilt. Brian stared from his good eye at the fixer’s fluffy bunny slip-
pers, but said nothing, thinking of his own felt-covered shoes.
“Pair of teeth. How much?” Cara asked.
“Depends on what you’re offering. Prices range from one hundred cred-
its a tooth to free, darlin’.” He smacked his thick lips and ran a hand over a
greasy, unshaven face. Eyes groped her lithe figure.
“Up yours, ya fat pig,” Cara retorted, disgusted. Few Body Fixers could be
trusted not to report to Coalition security and the ones that didn’t were illegal
operators running underground shops like this one. They served the downsid-
ers, black market, and anyone who could pay to keep attention at a minimum.
Cara didn’t have to put up with that kind of harassment, though.
“Just fix him up. We’ll pay.”
“Your loss, but money’s money,” he grinned broadly and shuffled into the
back room. Cara noticed the .45 strapped to his side. Not all of his customers
must be paying ones, she thought. She gently pushed Brian into the makeshift
medical lab. Surprisingly clean and orderly, it might have been mistaken for a
real hospital room. The fixer put on a rubber mask and gloves.
49
“Pay first, then I work,” he spoke through the surgical mask. Brian handed
him a card with the military emblem etched into the surface. “What the hell
is this? I can’t slot that here!” The doctor drew his Glock .45, aiming it at
Brian’s forehead. “Who are you?”
“Chill, fatso.” Cara leaned casually against the door frame. “He don’t
know any better. Here.” Cara handed him her own card. The doctor examined
it without taking the gun from Brian’s forehead. At least his hand was steady,
thought Brian. His head throbbed too much to be afraid.
“If it doesn’t clear I’ll waste you both,” he snarled, backing to the credit
card slot. Inserting it gingerly, he appeared to be satisfied when a green light
blinked from the console. “Three hundred credits.”
“Two hundred credits.”
“Price just went up. This ain’t no sewer rat I’m fixin’.” He pulled the card
and handed both back to Cara, carefully re-holstering his weapon. “Lay on
the table and close your eyes.”
Brian felt cold metal against his back. Looking up he discovered what a
kilowatt bulb looked like when turned on.
“Told you.”
A sharp sting on his neck quickly faded the pain. The needle inserted in his
jaw was nothing more than a tingling sensation.
“Open your mouth.”
The doctor stuck his finger in the gap where two upper incisors should
have been. Peering closely with a low-intensity scanner, the doctor was sat-
isfied no serious jaw damage was present. This was a fast and simple task.
Pulling open a drawer full of synthetic teeth neatly sorted in trays, he selected
two and set them in a coloring device to match them to the near white of
Brian’s other teeth. He compared the tooth next to Brian’s natural ones before
inserting it with an L shaped stainless steel instrument. It took about twenty
seconds to insert both replacements.
“Alright, that’s it. The anesthetic will wear off in about six hours, and
don’t be walking around when it does.”
Brian rubbed his numb tongue over the new teeth. They would take some
time to get used to. He reminded himself of the situation and figured it was
better than going to a military doctor and explaining his appearance.
“Come back any time!” The doctor cheerfully admonished the parting pair
from his easy chair. He popped the tab off another can of ZOOM.
____________________

Now he was even more uncomfortable than before. Sharp rode behind
Lisa thinking there was no way for this double date to get worse. Now he had
his arms around Brian’s date, while Brian was off someplace with Cara. He
knew the death of Reaver had been an accident, but it still gnawed at him.
Would they be caught? Would Brian get thrown in the brig? Should he report
50
it to the Lieutenant? No, he didn’t want to get them all busted over an unfor-
tunate accident. Lisa slowed the bike for a light. The streets were mostly clear
but unfamiliar to Sharp.
“You hungry?” She turned her head partly toward his.
“Yeah, I guess.”
“Know any good spots still open?”
“There’s a diner open twenty-four-seven next to Sunset Park on level ten.
Little expensive, but we can go there,” Sharp suggested. Sunset Park was
his favorite place to take a date, not that he had many. Every two hours the
holographic projection system would display a new sky and environment,
slowly darkening with the setting sun. Each was different; sometimes a blaze
of orange and red disappearing behind wooded hills, and two hours later a
cloud-filled sky displaying dark blues, whites and melting orange and yellow
of the sun sinking below a horizon of peaceful ocean waters. Lisa had been
there many times and smiled recounting her own favorite episodes.
“You’re paying.” The light turned green and the bike sped to the open
elevator. The sky was nearly dark when they arrived. Finding a table near the
window, they ordered food and watched in silent reverie.
The park was arranged in several levels of sidewalks and balconies. The
diner was perched near the ceiling of level ten, with holographic projections
giving the illusion of open sky above them. Eating in silence, both looked
into the horizon, unaware of the storm dumping rain on the enclosed fortress
city.
Many of the inhabitants had never seen real sunlight, living their entire
lives under the protection of the Coalition arcology. Chi-Town was the capi-
tal city of the Coalition states. Its fortified walls were larger than any other
city in Coalition territory; walls over a thousand feet tall and many miles
wide and long. Those fortunate to live within the shelter provided by these
walls were the envy of thousands living in squalor surrounding the city. The
“‘Burbs,” as they were called, attracted the desperate and the predators that
lived off them. Humans, D-Bees, and occasionally monsters and practitioners
of magic inhabited the ‘Burbs where law meant nothing, and justice came by
way of violence. Even the dangers of everyday life in the ‘Burbs didn’t com-
pare to the threats waiting beyond Coalition borders. Monsters, wild animals,
D-Bees, and barbaric humans roamed the untamed land. Feudalistic societies
carved out kingdoms and forged their lives out of the wastelands. Those with
might rose to power, and those without yielded to whatever rule their despot
kings chose. Magic users were known for tapping the power of ley lines to
work their trade and for all manner of evil creatures they associated with.
Coalition citizens saw the horrors magic wrought every day on their tele-
visions, and the valiant military forces fighting to protect them from those
horrors. Magic was forbidden under penalty of death within the confines of
Coalition cities. Its powers were unpredictable and aligned with evil forces

51
out of control. Anyone who dabbled with these dangerous realms was brand-
ed a traitor to society and promptly slain to protect the innocent. Outlying
villages and towns not allied with the Coalition often suffered at the hands of
powerful mages and demons. Monsters destroyed property and killed inhabit-
ants, sometimes devouring them on the spot. Dimensional Beings – D-Bees
– were the scourge of the land and had to be destroyed in order for mankind
to survive. Anything or anybody who stepped through the Rifts in time and
space to set foot on Earth was alien and didn’t belong. They had no right to
exist in the humans’ world.
Emperor Prosek commanded the mighty Coalition military and had estab-
lished the freedom the Coalition states now enjoyed. Life for most citizens
was free of hardship and adversity. Most would die to protect the life Emper-
or Prosek had created for them and didn’t take for granted the lives already
lost to keep it. Glories of the military were extolled, creating a hero’s image
for the younger generations.
Fitting the grim task placed on its shoulders, a skull-like motif was as-
signed to the implements of war used by the military forces; from the death
mask of a soldier’s body armor to the giant Death Head transports flying
overhead. A terrifying visage of death greeted any enemy of the Coalition.
Sharp slowly chewed another bite of hamburger. People were leaving the
park now, mostly in pairs. A new sky had interrupted their activities, a bright-
er sun beginning its gradual descent.
“Where did Brian learn to fight like that?” Lisa’s voice startled him. Gulp-
ing the half-chewed food down his dry throat, he swallowed hard. Obviously,
her thoughts were not caught up in the sunset’s beauty.
“At the academy. He still practices every now and then.”
“I thought they didn’t teach stuff like that to techs.”
“They don’t, usually. Me and Brian got some special training because we
were in the youth program. Brian was always getting into fights with other
kids and lost most of the time. One day I guess he really got pissed off and
tried to join the martial arts classes. They wouldn’t sign him on cuz they said
he had too many tech classes to concentrate on practice. Brian’s pretty per-
sistent, you probably already figured that out, and kept showing up at class
anyway. Hangin’ around, bugging the instructors and stuff, ya know. Finally,
they let him join the class.”
“How come you didn’t become a tech?”
“Just don’t have the knack for it. Took a couple minor marksmanship tour-
naments, so I got special sniper training.” Sharp’s hazel brown eyes refused
to make contact with Lisa’s inquisitive gaze.
“I thought you guys were from the upper levels or something from the way
you two dressed.”
“Us, upper levels?” Sharp laughed, beginning to relax some. “Brian’s par-
ents got killed in the ‘Burbs when he was a little kid. I don’t even remember

52
my parents. We lived with the other little urchins, I guess. Brian and I kinda
stuck together even then. Anyway, we got picked up by the authorities when
I was six and Brian was five. They stuck us in the youth program and took
care of us. We pretty much owe the Coalition everything for where we are
now, so we joined the military three years ago.” Sharp took another bite of
hamburger. “So what about you? You don’t look like someone who would
grow up to be a tech.”
“Well, I’ve always been smart, but I didn’t have the kind of advantages
you and Brian had. You know, I scored the highest on all my tests at the
Academy, but people still think I’m stupid cause of the way I look. Then,
of course, my grades really sucked, so that may have been part of it. Still,
it makes me mad when I get judged a certain way because of appearances.
Know what I mean?”
Sharp didn’t, but Lisa went on before he had a chance to say so.
“Before the military, I was a City Rat just like Cara. Got into drugs and
started getting into trouble. I got busted doin’ a raid on a warehouse, but my
parents – real jerks, live on level twenty-five – pulled some strings and gave
me a choice. I could sit in juvenile detention or join the military academy.
Not much of a choice. Detox really sucked, but I’ve been clean ever since.
Scored real high on the aptitude and I.Q. Tests, so they put me in the upper
grades. Since I already knew some tech stuff from the streets, I went to ad-
vance training. Besides, you get higher pay, higher rank and you don’t have
to share a room.”
Staring at her figure and finely formed body, Sharp tried to imagine her the
type to ace written exams. His imagination wasn’t cooperating.
“I don’t hang out with my old friends much, except for Cara. She cleaned
up after her boyfriend O.D.’d on megaspeed.” Lisa leaned forward, and Sharp
forced his eyes to his food. “So what do you think of her?”
“She’s pretty cool.”
“You like her?”
Not really, he thought. Not his type at all. Why did this situation come up
with friends of his dates? Anything he said could and would be used against
him.
“Yeah, I ‘spose.” He filled his mouth with a large bite of hamburger.
“Like maybe enough to call her and ask her out?”
Sharp pointed to his overstuffed mouth and shrugged. Finishing the
mouthful, he took the offensive.
“What’s gonna happen if the M.P.’s find out Brian killed that guy?”
“They won’t. If they did, it was self-defense. Nothing’s going to happen.”
“I still can’t believe Brian killed him. I mean, he didn’t know, but still.
It was all over a couple mugs of beer and some drunken threats. It was so
pointless.”
Lisa looked at him intently as he spoke.

53
“It really surprises me to hear you talk like that. You’re a military grunt,
sorry, a soldier, a sniper no less. You’ve killed people before, today in fact.
Why does tonight’s incident bother you so much?”
“It’s different in combat. I don’t like killing, anyway.”
“You’re a sniper. It’s your job to kill people. Monsters and D-Bees most-
ly, but you kill humans, too. Why join the military if you hate killing?”
“I’m in the military because I want to make a real difference. To help pro-
tect innocent lives, and I guess a sense of loyalty to the Coalition. Cowboy
and Nim and most of the others like killing I think. D-Bees especially. They
kill out of hate. Sure, I get mad when I see all the stuff monsters and D-Bees
have done to helpless people, but it’s anger, not hate. Hate eats you up inside.
I guess I really worked hard to be a sniper because it’s sorta detached, ya
know? I don’t have to be right up close, right there when it happens. Those
vids we all watched on D-Bee crimes and atrocities didn’t really make me
sick. Up close and personal is a lot different. I think the Lieutenant knows I’m
not really cut out for combat duty, so he sends me out as a scout or spotter. I
don’t know why he requested me for his S&D unit.”
“The Lieutenant probably doesn’t put you on foot patrol because you’re
too valuable as a sniper. That’s what all the military manuals say, anyway.
I found out he picked everyone specifically, so he must have thought highly
of your abilities. What was your thousand-meter rifle score? I couldn’t even
see the target!”
“Pretty good. Above ninety percent at least. The main thing is focus. The
only thing is the one target in your sights, nothing else. I learned to block out
what’s going on around me and concentrate on making the one shot count. I
only miss up close.” He smiled.
“That’s really cool. So do you like her?”
____________________

Brian felt great. Sure, it was probably the “anesthetic” making him hyper
and talkative, but it still felt good. Cara sat, legs dangling over the edge of the
walkway, sipping a soda. Lighting wasn’t very good on level eight, but he
could make out the graffiti-covered walls across the street below.
“Brian, nobody really reads the graffiti down here.”
“Check this one out. ‘I was here, but now I’m not. I wrote this here to
prove a point, that life ain’t livin’ without a joint.’”
“Somebody needs to get a life,” Cara mumbled without looking up.
“The Enigma is watching.”
Cara’s head snapped up. She stared at the wall.
“Where? Where does it say that?”
“It’s right there in huge letters. Pretty cool the way it sorta sits in the back-
ground like that. The absence of graffiti.”
“I don’t see it.”
54
“Okay. See the one that says ‘I ran through the jungle–’”
“Yeah, and?”
“Notice how the letters fade out right down the middle? Follow that up,
and it forms the T for the first letter.”
“The Enigma is watching,” she read slowly.
“What, is that someone you know?”
“Yeah, right,” she said sarcastically. “Nobody knows who he is. Black
market wants him because he screws up their biz. Coalition wants him cuz
they say he runs the black market and messes with them. A couple of cyber-
space cowboys in the Night Creepers say he’s some kind of AI in the net,
but they found some info the Coalition had buried saying he’s some sort of
magic user or D-Bee. I think he’s just some screwball playing both sides of
the fence.”
Brian sat next to her.
“How come the doc had such a fit over my card?”
“You really don’t know, do you? Look, every time you slot that thing, it
logs into the central computer system exactly where you were, how much
you spent, and sometimes what you spent it on. Even if you transfer credits
card to card, it leaves the transaction record on your card and transfers one
to the other. Next time someone slots their card, wham. Coalition knows you
paid ‘em. Some of the new cards even transmit the data on a radio frequency
to the computer the second you spend a credit. You know they can tell how
much you have in your account and scan your entire record off that card you
got? Walk past a doorway of some checkpoint and they know you were there,
and everything about you. Coalition keeps tabs on all their personnel. You
can’t buy or sell a thing on that card without the system knowing. They got
you strung up so they can pull the strings like a puppet master.” Cara’s voice
betrayed hostility.
“How can I pay you back for the teeth without being traced?” Brian was
starting to catch on to the way things worked in the lower sections and be-
yond the walls. Not what he was used to.
“Don’t sweat it. I got it covered.” She didn’t mention the 1700 credits she
had left from Reaver’s cybernetic eye. If he didn’t know, why tell him? “You
really need to get yourself a clean universal card. Otherwise, the law’s gonna
snap you around whenever they want.”
“I’m not planning on breaking the law.” Anxiety over being caught hit
him in the stomach. The sobering reality of what happened at the Ball &
Chain sunk in. “I can’t believe I killed him.”
“Reaver? You did what you hadda do to stay alive. Don’t worry about it,
you didn’t know. It was an accident.” Cara leaned against his shoulder. “It
took courage to stand up to one of the Wolf pack in the first place.”
“That was my temper.”

55
“C’mon. Let’s go back to my pad. When that pain killer wears off you’re
gonna be laid down hard. I’ll mix some brew for ya.” Cara stood. Brian stared
at the wall.
“Still thinkin’ ’bout the Ball & Chain?”
“No.” Brian stood, and read a section of the wall. “Sticks and stones might
break my bones, but whips and chains excite me.”
“Sounds like fun.” Cara gave him her crooked grin, leading him back to
her cycle.

56
Chapter 3
Gotta get there first
Computers made him mad. Greg had been trying all morning to make the
machine call up records on the rebel organization known as the Army of the
New Order. Now it was already after 10:00 and he still had nothing. Kick-
ing the chair back from the console, he contemplated creative ways for his
computer to meet a painful death. The door chime interrupted his tank tread
vs. keyboard scenario.
“It’s open!” Spinning the chair around, he faced the door opposite him
across the living room of his small apartment. A tall figure with steel blue
eyes and Lieutenant’s bars stood courteously in the doorway. Across the
pocket of his uniform, the emblem of the espionage division gave away his
identity. Greg reminded himself to be civil. Not all espionage officers were
jerks.
“Lieutenant Merrick?” The officer’s voice had a friendly tone to it.
“Yes.” Greg rose to shake hands. “You must be Lieutenant Sorenson,
from Espionage.”
“Yes, Mike Sorenson. I hope I’m not disturbing your work.” His steel blue
eyes scanned the computer console.
“Actually, I was about to take the damn thing out and run it over with an
APC. I hope you know more about the opposition than I do. Can’t get a thing
out of records.” He shut off the screen.
“I’d planned to give you a full briefing in a few days, but some new devel-
opments came up last night. I thought you might want to know.”
“It better not involve my men getting roaring drunk, painting daisies on
their bodies then streaking through the mess hall.” Greg stepped into the
compact kitchen and stared into the refrigerator.
“No. Nurse’s quarters.”
Greg’s head swung around the door. “What?”
“Just kidding. I don’t care if your men do paint daisies on their bodies if it
helps them fight better in combat. Ever hear of the Celts?” Mike took a seat
at the small dining table.
“No. You want breakfast?”
“Thanks. I already ate.”
“What developments?” Greg finally grabbed a packaged breakfast from
the freezer and tossed it in the hydrator. He sat across the table from the
espionage officer.
“At 2300 hours last night, outpost two-nine-four at Cedar Lake was as-
saulted by a well-armed force of indeterminate number. This wasn’t some hit
and run rebel attack. Somebody had a good idea of what and where to strike.
All thirty-seven personnel are DOA and most didn’t look like they had much
of a chance to fight back. The outpost was on permanent code four, so it

57
wasn’t a complete slaughter, though. One of the RPAs made it to an Enforcer
and did some damage before going down. We think the rebels pulled the bod-
ies of their own dead to hide their numbers, but definite evidence of casualties
was found. Here’s where it ties in with the rebels you encountered yesterday.
The Enforcer was taken out with a G-10 rail cannon. Your Boom Gun.
Rain messed up most of the good tracks and prints, however, several Glit-
ter Boy drill marks were found near the wrecked Enforcer. The Enforcer’s
pilot & comm officer ejected but got cut down by another rail gun. One of
ours. Unfortunately, the rebels made off with six hover rovers and a hover
assault craft loaded with a smattering of weapons, armor, and explosives they
salvaged from the outpost. For the really bad news, we came to find out three
SAMAS are missing. We presume the rebels now have the units and found a
way to bypass the security measures. Psi-Stalkers and a couple of dog packs
are looking for leads, but my guess is they’re already beyond our borders and
headed for Ohio.”
“Why doesn’t another squad take ‘em out? By the time we’re set for ac-
tion, they could be holed up deep in the Magic Zone.”
“Already asked my C.O. Nothing doing. This is our baby, and they want
it quiet.”
“What do you know about this rebel group, “Army of the New Order?”
“Haven’t done much research yet. Officially, I’m not on duty until
Wednesday, but I’ll see what I can find out in the meantime. I’ll need to see
the combat recordings and video debriefings.”
“Here.” Greg went to the VCCD and popped out the disk. “I’ve already
seen it.” Mike took the disk and opened the door.
“Just so we’re clear. The unit is yours and the Sergeant’s concern is the
platoon, but the op is my command. Understood?”
“Understood.” Greg met Sorenson’s steel gaze unflinching. Technically
the same rank, he didn’t enjoy taking orders. Professionalism counted, but
he wasn’t going to be intimidated, rank or no rank. A tone emanated from
the kitchen.
“Your breakfast’s done.” Mike cracked a slim smile and closed the door
behind him.
____________________

A hideous noise clawed its way into Brian’s drug hungover brain. He
could hear the grass growing outside the city, and it was growing too loud.
Finding the bathroom, he looked in the mirror for the vice squeezing the sides
of his head. A pale, bruised, and swollen face stared back at him. It took a few
moments before it dawned on him who it was. He crawled back to his bed to
sleep it off. He never imagined a foam pillow could hit with that much force.
The bed flung itself at him, jarring all the bricks loose in his skull. Laying
face down, he tried to remember the night before. He’d had better dates.
58
A while later, all the RPAs in the lounge snickered loudly as Brian made
his way to the repair station.
“So, Brian, heard you had a date last night with Lisa. How’d it go?” An
RPA barely contained his laughter, others giggling in the background.
“You stud, you! All the girls kiss you like that?” Another broke in.
“Yeah, yeah. Laugh it up. Nothing happened, alright?”
“Maybe you could give us all some tips?” The others laughed even harder.
Darren just clenched his jaw and ambled on. He was right in the center of
it all, leg still bandaged, trying to keep a straight face.
“Nothing? So how’d you get the killer hickies on your face?”
“They’re not hickies. We didn’t do anything.”
As if on cue, Lisa walked through the doors. Brian’s ears turned as red as
his hair.
“Brian, baby, you were wonderful!” She blew him a kiss and sauntered
past, hips swaying. Brian looked sheepishly at the crowd of RPAs.
Darren started out serious but was laughing hysterically with the others
before he finished.
“You know, Brian. A woman expresses herself in many strange, and won-
derful ways.” Giggles broke his thoughtful composure. “Boy, I’ll bet ya the
sex was great!”
Shaking his head in disgust, Brian left the lounge to find Sharp waiting
for him by SAM 15. Sharp’s pair of .50 caliber Desert Eagles lay on a cloth
disassembled.
“Hi, Brian. How’d it go after we split up last night?” Sharp asked, rubbing
an oiled cloth through the barrel of a sidearm.
“I got these replaced.” He smiled wide, then held his jaw in pain. “We
went back over to her place for a while. Basically, it sucked.”
“Did you and Cara, like make out and stuff?” Sharp started reassembling
the weapon without looking up at Brian.
“Yeah, sorta. We laid on her bed for a while talking, then she starts kiss-
ing me and stuff,” Brian paused, looking over at the Enforcer in its stall some
thirty meters away. Lisa was detaching the sensor turret and began replacing
damaged parts.
“And then?”
“And then I said something stupid, like I really like Lisa and wanted to
date her so I couldn’t do anything with her because it wouldn’t feel right.” He
suddenly curled his torso inward and clenched his fists. “GAHHH! Stupid! I
still can’t believe I said that! Anyway, she brings me back over to my apart-
ment and takes off. I was feeling pretty bad with the medicine wearing off, so
I wouldn’t have done much anyway, I suppose.”
“What did you think of her, Cara that is?”
“I don’t know. She’s cool, but kinda scary too. You should have seen her
place!”

59
“Looks like your pal Darren’s coming over here. I could hear them laugh-
ing out there when you came in.” Sharp finished replacing the slide and wiped
the entire firearm with an oily rag. Darren limped over to them.
“Hey, Brian. Listen man, don’t take it so seriously. I mean c’mon, you go
on one date with a fine girl like Lisa and come back looking like that. Man,
you’ve gotta admit it’s funny.”
Brian smiled faintly. It was, if reality didn’t figure in.
“Yeah, I guess. But we really didn’t do anything. Not that I would have
minded or anything,” he added earnestly.
“You gotta be a master of the situation is all. You want a relationship, or
just wham-bam, thank you, ma’am?”
“I’m not just after sex, Darren. If that’s all I wanted, I’d just go up to the
Gentleman Loser on level ten with a few credits. Besides, she’d see right
through the carnal approach.”
“Nah, just have to do it right. Women want the same thing guys do, they
just pretend they don’t.”
“What, you think she’d go for some jerk askin’ to jump her bones?” Brian
retorted sarcastically.
“See, that’s just it. You don’t actually say what you’re after. You just
pretend to be interested in something else. Talk to them about themselves
and pretend to be interested in what they say. I got it down to a science, man.
Trust me. You just need a little more trial and error.” Darren’s manner was
starting to irritate Brian.
“If you think you can do better with the ‘get on the bed’ approach, then go
right ahead.” Brian set the challenge and pointed to the Enforcer.
“Hey, nothin’ to lose, eh?” He hobbled over, admiring Lisa’s form bent
over the sensor turret. “Morning!”
Lisa straightened up, turning to see the source of the cheerful greeting.
“Morning!” She smiled warmly at the RPA standing in front of her. She’d
seen him in briefing meetings but never met him face to face. His green eyes
were friendly, and the dishelved black hair gave him a roguish look. His leg
was in a brace and bandaged. She’d seen the damaged SAMAS and won-
dered why the RPA was walking around on his wounded leg.
“You’re the new tech officer, Lisa Andrews, right?”
“Yep, that’s me. And you are?”
“Oh, I’m Darren. SAM 15.” They shook hands, longer than needed, eyes
meeting.
“Your birthday’s this month. What day?” Darren asked, releasing her
hand.
“Uh, it’s in two days. May twenty-two. How did you know?”
“Your ring. It’s emerald, isn’t it? How old you gunna be?”
“Twenty.”
“Wow, that’s really young for a tech. Did you skip over some levels?”

60
“Well, sort of. I knew the basics before I went in. Aren’t you the one who
forced the Glitter Boy to retreat?” Darren laughed.
“I wouldn’t exactly say “forced” is the right way to describe it. I got hit
pretty hard as it was.” He flexed his leg and winced.
“That hurt? I saw the SAMAS leg, getting shot like that musta really hurt,”
Lisa said sympathetically.
“Yes, but not nearly as bad as sitting around all day with nothing to keep
my mind off it. I think I’m going nuts for something to keep me busy.”
“You want to go see a movie or something?” Lisa asked. “I know a couple
of places we might get in on a pre-Rifts film or two.”
“Righteous! Hey, I got a better idea. How ‘bout I take you to dinner and a
movie for your birthday. You can pick the place.”
“I would love that!”
“We’re set for the 22nd then. 1800 hours? I’ll pick you up.”
“Great!”
“Oh, by the way,” Darren leaned a bit closer. “You didn’t like toss Brian
around the bedroom or anything, right?”
“No,” Lisa laughed. “I had nothing to do with that.”
“Good, just making sure.” His grin took a smirking twist. “I gotta cruise
over to the med pad. Maybe I’ll see you later?”
“Anytime!” Lisa spoke loudly for Brian’s benefit and looked seductive.
Darren limped past Brian, pausing with a shrug.
“Hey, sorry man,” he continued on.
“How’d he do that?” Sharp wanted to know.
“What I’d like to know is, how an arrogant, obnoxious jerk like that just
scored a date in under a minute.”
“I got it.” Sharp’s expression never changed. “It’s the bandage thing. Bri-
an, all you need to do is wrap your leg with a bigger bandage than his and
she’s yours. I’ll go get some gauze.”
“Get out of here!” Brian cracked a smile and then looked for his welding
tool.
____________________

Crowded into Darren’s dormitory-style room, a dozen off-duty RPAs


watched the final run from “The Road Warrior.” For some reason, the entire
‘Road Warrior Series’ vids as the RPAs called them, were banned by the
Coalition. Darren had obtained a pirated copy, and his friends were now en-
thralled by his favorite movie.
“I’m gettin’ a copy of some other action vids pretty soon. If you like this
one, you’re gonna love those.”
“Shhh! This is the best part!” Dave hushed the crew up. As Darren’s room-
mate, he’d seen the trilogy before. Somebody banged loudly on the door.

61
“Officer in the hall!” The harsh, loud whisper spoke through the door.
Searching frantically for the remote, Darren finally leaped for the power but-
ton and killed the screen seconds before Lieutenant Sorenson entered the
room. A dozen guilty looking RPAs stood about fidgeting nervously.
“Having a party?” Mike asked innocently.
“Uh, yeah. You know, just sitting around telling war stories, sir,” Darren
replied smoothly.
“I need to speak to Darren and Dave. Are they here?”
“Yeah, that’s me, and Dave’s right here. What’s up, sir?” Darren spied the
remote on the refrigerator.
“Just wanted to ask you some questions about the Glitter Boy.” Mike ca-
sually reached over and picked up the remote. “Did either of you notice any
emblems?” He pointed to Darren with the remote. “Any special markings
or letters?” He waved it while he talked. “You actually got a good look at it
right, Darren?” The remote was used as a pointer again.
“Not really, but I’m pretty sure it wasn’t one of Free Quebec’s. I didn’t see
any of their markings. This one was pretty blank.”
“Hmm. What about you?” He pointed to Dave.
“I didn’t see much of anything. Most of the time I was trying to stay alive,
not determining who made the unit trying to do me in. Did you examine the
recordings, sir?”
“I’ve already reviewed them, yes. There are blank areas where no record
was made of actual combat. You two are the only ones who exchanged fire
with it and are still alive.”
“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call it exchanging fire. That involves a process
of giving and receiving, and it was a lot more generous than we were... Sir.”
Darren added the ‘sir’ as an afterthought. Mike paced, remote still in hand.
The vid player continued to run.
“You did manage to deliver some strikes though, right?”
“I put a pair of armor piercers into its leg, but that did nothing, so I shot it
in the chest with the C-40, but that didn’t work either. I think one of the 33rd
flyboys might have done some damage, but it didn’t really look like it. Sir, I
said all of this in my debriefing vid.”
“Yes, I know. You also made several references to the great Joseph
Prosek’s ghost and you claimed to have seen Elvis emerging from a Rift.
Both of which could land you in the brig by the way.”
“You saw Elvis too?!” If he was going to the brig, it may as well be with
style.
“Of course. I also know who Mel Gibson is.” He pointed the remote at the
vid screen and pressed the power button. As the Road Warrior stood in front
of a wrecked tanker truck, sand streaming from ruptures in the fuel trailer.
The RPAs hung their heads, resigning themselves to a probable dishonorable
discharge.

62
“How’d you find out?” Darren asked. Why not find out, they were already
caught.
“Too loud.” Mike tossed him the remote, then pointed to his right ear.
“Cybernetic amplified hearing.” He bent over the small kitchen sink, then
flipped the switch next to the faucet, harsh gurgling motor sounds came from
the garbage disposal. Walking back to the room’s center, he turned his nor-
mal looking right ear to the screen. Nodding with satisfaction at the motor’s
interference blocking a clear eavesdrop, Mike stepped partly out of the room.
“And tell your lookout not to run in the halls.”
After he left, the RPAs looked at each other in relief and bewilderment.
Darren pointed to the garbage disposal.
“Why didn’t we think of that?”
____________________

Two levels above, in the Troop Housing Complex, Sharp was cleaning his
three roommates out in a game of poker while a modern war drama unfolded
on the vid screen.
“Jeez, Sharp! Think you could win a little more?”
“We’re just playing for chips. If you’d like to play for real...”
“No thanks.”
“Think he’s cheating?”
Sharp’s hands shuffled the cards through impossible patterns and came up
with four aces.
“He’s cheating.”
A knock on the door saved the three from losing the next game. Cowboy
stuck his head in, blonde buzz-cut in a tiny spiked fauxhawk.
“Hey, Sharp, buddy, can I talk to you a sec?”
“Sure.” Sharp flipped a card edgewise, striking the hand of his roommate
reaching for a handful of chips. “No touch.”
Outside in the hall, Cowboy looked around suspiciously, and moved away
from a poster of Emperor Prosek, as if their leader might actually see them
planning a crime.
“Hey Sharp, you like westerns, right?”
“Yeah,” Sharp responded cautiously.
“You wanna go see one?”
“Depends. What western?”
“Ever hear of Pale Rider?”
“Eastwood?”
“Yeah, the guy from those “Dirty Harry” movies.”
“Pale Rider? I don’t think that’s an approved movie.”
“Yeah, but it’s not on the ban list either. C’mon Sharp, nobody’s gonna
catch us.”

63
Sharp loved westerns. He wasn’t fond of hanging out with Cowboy, but he
figured they at least had one thing in common. A fan of pre-Rifts westerns,
Sharp had watched all the John Wayne movies he could find and now prac-
ticed his quick draw almost daily. Not accustomed to breaking the law, Sharp
balked at the idea of getting caught watching an illegal film. Some films on
the ban list could mean death to lawbreakers. He guessed it had to be pretty
decent if it had Clint Eastwood in it, and he wanted to go very much.
“Where is it?”
“The ‘Burbs.”
“The ‘Burbs?!”
“Shh! Listen, I got the whole thing worked out. Me and you get day leaves
and you borrow a vehicle from the pool.”
“Why me?!”
“Cuz the Lieutenant likes you, and he doesn’t trust me. We take it and
park it in the patrolled zone, and then we take a taxi to the place. You got
civilian duds, right?”
“Yeah, but...”
“We leave here in three hours, and we’ll be back tonight before midnight.
Trust me, I’ve done this before.”
“I don’t know.”
“You got a universal card?”
“Naw. Never needed one”
“No problem. You can transfer credits over to me. All right, I’ll meet you
outside the pool at 14:30. This’ll be cool!” Cowboy straightened to his full
height. Slapping Sharp on the back like a big brother, he swaggered down
the hall.
Two days in a row, breaking the law two days in a row. Sharp sighed and
went back in to see if the platoon in the movie series ever found the D-Bees
that had raped the women. His roommates had abandoned the poker game to
watch the climactic battle.
____________________

Foreign scents greeted Lieutenant Merrick as he entered the repair facility


to check the progress on his unit’s mechs. Grease, ozone, the smell of fusion
torches, and the odor of overheated insulation assaulted his senses. SAMAS
15 was unattended.
“I’ll be damned. Pretty good for three days work. Even refinished the sur-
face.” The SAMAS power armor stood 2.4 meters tall and only 1.1 wide with
the wings down. Greg couldn’t have distinguished this one from a brand-new
model off the production line. The one Greg had reserved for personal use in
the upcoming mission was only a few months old, but the unit in front of him
was older than some men under his command. Light glinted off the polished
gloss-black finish and blood-red eyes. It was fearsome at rest, and even more
64
so in action. He pitied the unfortunate enemy viewing those eyes behind the
barrel of its C-40 rail gun. Powered by a tiny nuclear generator, the unit
had an average life-span of around twenty years’ constant field use. SAMAS
15 was nearing the end of its operational life. Attached to the forearm, the
CM-2 rocket launcher held a pair of tiny anti-armor mini-missiles. At ninety-
two pounds, this rail gun was the lightest electromagnetic mass driver in the
known world. Tapping into the SAMAS’ nuclear power pack and fed high-
density slugs from the ammo drum located above the two fan-jet thrusters,
the weapon was relatively inexpensive to fire and carried a deadly payload of
fifty bursts before requiring reloading.
Enforcer 126 was in much worse shape. Hearing curses in obscene com-
binations never before conceived, louder than the high-volume heavy metal
music from the boom box on the robot’s chest, Greg reasoned that Brian must
be on the other side of the prone robot vehicle.
A tool missed Greg’s head by a few centimeters, skidding to a stop a few
meters away.
Brian’s semi-muffled voice betrayed more than just slight annoyance.
Greg started to ask about the repair project, but the expletive tirade flowing
from the frustrated tech convinced him otherwise.
Darren followed another Operator who pushed a large modern cycle past
him as Greg exited. Whoever brought it in had to bring it up several pedes-
trian walkways to get it here. The nerve of some people...
“Darren! What the hell is this?”
“Pretty sweet, huh? You’re looking at a BFC-6000 super-charged street
bike with XTX steering, computer-controlled suspension, and shock thrust-
ers. Way cool, huh Lieutenant?”
“But what is it doing here?”
“Oh, the computer wasn’t compensating fast enough for ten-meter vertical
so Brain’s gonna modify it for me when he’s got a sec.”
“Yes, but how did you get it in here?”
“Hey, no sweat, Lieutenant. I stayed off the elevator and used the stairs.
And these tires won’t leave marks on any of the carpets, either, so it’s cool.
Brian here?”
“Yes, he’s working on 126, but you might not want to disturb him right
now. And when you leave, use the vehicle exit.”
“No sweat. Catch ya later, Lieutenant!”
When the Lieutenant was out of sight, Darren brought the bike to life. Be-
ing as responsible as possible, he kept the speed below 30 mph the entire dis-
tance to Enforcer 126. Brian hit his head, startled by the savage, high-pitched
engine sounds accosting his ears at less than a meter away.
“Hi, Brian! Hey, bud, did you lose this?” Darren handed him a tool from
the floor, dismounted and killed the engine. “I ran over it on the walkway.”

65
“Yes, I see that.” Brian tossed the bent tool back in the box. Only a few
minor split marks on his lip and above the eye betrayed the fight that had
caused them, but he still wondered if the M.P.s would find out.
“This is the bike I told you about. Beauty, ain’t it? I’m having trouble with
the shock thrusters and suspension, and I was wondering if you could fix it.”
“I don’t know much about bikes, but I might be able to help. What kind
of trouble?”
“See these scrapes in the paint all along the underside plate? Bottomed out
on me off an overpass in the ‘Burbs, ‘bout threw me off.”
“You took this off an overpass? I don’t think it was meant for that.” Brian
skillfully removed a side plate to examine the internal hydrogen combustion
turbine engine. “What’s it run on?”
“Jet fuel. Pretty decent mileage, I get about 50 miles per tank, if I don’t
pull air, that is.”
“Fifty miles! This thing must eat fuel!”
“Actually, what I really wanted was for you to modify the computer to
compensate for a twenty-meter drop. I like to be on the safe side.”
“Anybody who takes a bike off a twenty-meter drop deserves to eat it
hard. What do you need that kind of support for?”
“Doin’ a showdown with the RPA’s from East District. We’re runnin’
some tough spread this afternoon, so I gotta be ready.”
“I don’t have time. Not before this afternoon, anyway.”
“Hey, C’mon, buddy! If I got all busted up on account of my bike, I
wouldn’t be able to protect you on the op, and you wouldn’t want that, would
ya?”
“No.”
“Listen, pal, I’d even do ya a big favor.”
“Like what?”
“You still wanna date Lisa?”
“Fine. I’ll do it. Your word?”
“My word of honor!”
Brian shot him a skeptical look.
“Really!”
“Okay, but you better come through.” Brian looked doubtful.
“Ah, my friend – you’re a gentleman, and a scholar, and a fine judge of
scantily-clad women. You can count on it!”
Brian replaced the side panel and found the computer analysis jack. His
diagnostic screen lit up with information.
“So, did you... you know... last night?” Brian asked suspiciously.
“Who, Lisa?”
“Yeah, Lisa. Did you, like, go back to her place afterwards?”
“Would I do that to my good tech buddy? Not in your life! ‘Course, I did
meet one of her friends. Says she knows you.”

66
“Great. Cara, right?”
“Yeah! Says you and her, like, got it on at her place, you stud you.”
“Sure, I’m sure she said that.”
“Okay, okay, not really. Told me Sharp dumped her bike on a staircase.
“yeah, she was pretty pissed about the scratches on it, so I had to go home
with her to console her.”
“What a humanitarian.”
“That’s me! Mm-mmm! Goin’ back over tonight after the run. Sharp re-
ally blew it, eh?”
“I don’t know, Darren. Sometimes I wonder about you RPA’s.”
“Hey, if you don’t live life on the edge, you’re not livin’ life!”
____________________

There were over two dozen of them gathered under the Old Highway in
the southern section of the ‘Burbs. A permanent haze of smoke and fog clung
stubbornly above and around them. The homeless and transients backed into
their shabby dwellings, reluctant to discover the reason a group of off-duty
RPAs had invaded their living area. Rubber squealed, engines screamed, and
shouts of greeting and taunts echoed from the concrete walls of pre-Rifts
constructs. Darren and the East District boy’s ringleader met for the custom-
ary pre-run pow-wow.
“Hey, I see you got a new hard suit. Your other one get ripped in a slide?”
The short, slender Korean greeted them with a broad smile.
“Hey, Sid! Wow, you’ve gotten a lot taller since the last time I saw you!
Pretty soon, you’ll be almost as tall as my sister!” Darren returned the broad
smile.
“Oh, yes, your sister. I got to know her really well. I mean, know her!”
“I was wondering who she was laughing about the other day.” Both sides
joined in the laughter. The two shook hands.
“Same rules as last time?”
“Same rules. But it looks like you brought some new track fodder, Sid.
They know the run?”
“No better than your Street Sliders over there with the soft suits. Hey!
You morons want to die? This isn’t like riding a tricycle across your mama’s
kitchen!”
“Okay, listen up, everyone! For those of you who have never made the
run, just try and keep up with me and Sid. We’re taking Road Rash Boulevard
to the Steeple, then the full distance on the Razor. Anybody who can make it
to the Razor has at least proved that they have guts.”
“Those of you who can’t make it to the Steeple, well, you suck. Hop on
your bikes and leave; that way.” Darren pointed in the opposite direction.
“And you might as well know, completing the Razor could be hazardous to
your health.”
67
“What, you afraid, Darren?” One of the East-Siders piped in; the others
laughed.
“Afraid? Fear, my friends, is looking down the barrel of a Glitter Boy’s
Boom Gun. Luck... luck is when he misses.”
“And boy, let me tell you, Darren here is the luckiest person you’ll ever
meet!” Sid broke in. The RPA’s enjoyed the humor.
“Who here has never done the Razor?” Several hands raised in answer to
Darren’s question.
“My advice,” Sid said seriously, “is don’t try and race it. It’s tough enough
when you’ve run it before, but even more if you’re new. Every year, some
rookie tries and dies. Take it slow and learn it good, so next year, Darren and
I can whip you all over the place.”
“Those of you not racing are on clean-up detail. There’s always a few
who bite it hard, so have yer med kits ready,” Darren instructed a group in a
hover rover.
“What about the prize?” an RPA from the Chi-Town division called out.
“Prize? I don’t know, Sid. What do you think?”
“I’d say anyone who doesn’t complete the run in under ten minutes has to
help buy dinner for the others.”
“As for the winner? Losing side has to pitch in and buy the winner a new
pair of tires – his or her choice.”
“That could be really expensive!” a tall RPA objected.
“Guess you’ll have some incentive to win then,” Sid shot back.
“All right, suit up. You in the soft suits, it was nice knowing you!” Darren
strapped on his helmet and checked the latches on his hard suit. Not meant
for stopping knives or bullets, the special suits they wore would protect the
riders from crash impact and abrasion. Some falls were too severe even for
the hard suits.
“Are we ready?” Sid called out through his helmet. The Korean RPA had
won the race three times, and Darren only twice. He wasn’t about to let Dar-
ren match his record.
“I’ll be waitin’ for ya at the end! Yee-haw!”
Screaming tires added to the song of supercharged engines and booster
rockets. Seizing the lead, Sid was quickly paced by Darren only a few meters
behind. On flat, open ground, Sid’s border bike would have faded Darren
into the horizon. A micro-fusion power source and a plasma-fed engine could
sustain a thruster assisted speed over 280 mph almost indefinitely. Top speed
was irrelevant – skill was what counted here.
For the first fourteen miles, known as “Road Rash Boulevard,” speeds
over 180 mph could be reached with ease but could end quickly with a patch
of cratered road or slab of fallen concrete from the upper deck of the pre-Rifts
highway. Earthquakes, wars, and the ravages of time created obstacles in

68
the pathway. The road’s dangers were often hidden until too late. Not all 26
would make it to the Steeple.
Darren and Sid had grown up in the ‘Burbs and were many-time veter-
ans of the run, but even they had taken their share of falls. Heart pounding,
adrenaline surging, Darren crammed the throttle and slipped past Sid on a
smooth patch of highway. A rookie rider on an electric-powered speed cycle
careened past both and was ejected from the bike by a support shoved up from
the highway’s surface. His body sailed in a graceful arc while the remains of
his bike went their separate ways. Darren’s metal frame chipped concrete
fragments up behind him while banking to avoid the rookie’s tumbling body.
Sid pulled ahead again, by ripping a burned-out Hyundai in two with his
armored bike. Behind him, a metal strip bounced up from the vehicle and re-
moved another rider from his cycle. The cartwheeling cycle nearly caught up
with Darren before it exploded. The rider landed rear-end first, then skidded
on his back into the Hyundai’s rear section.
Thrusters flared, and flames spread out behind Darren’s BFC-6000. Sid
ducked instinctively as Darren’s cycle passed overhead from the broken
slab of highway he’d caught his air from. Shock thrusters fired and the cycle
touched down flawlessly. Ahead, a huge section of highway blocked the path,
leaving a two-meter opening to one side between concrete walls. Slowing just
enough to angle the bike correctly, Darren throttled the grip and watched the
walls blur past into open ground again. The sound of bikes passing through
the opening was followed by the rending sound of impact. Glancing in the
mirror, he saw smoke rising above the fallen highway section. Sid was gain-
ing on him.
Side by side, the two watched a crater speed towards them. This was new,
Darren thought. Neither one slowed the pace at the approaching hazard, in-
stead, engaging booster jets and shock thrusters, Sid cleared the crater several
meters ahead of Darren.
Her view obstructed by another rider, a veteran saw the crater an instant
too late. Shock thrusters blew bits of concrete dust from beneath the descend-
ing cycle, but the rear wheel caught the lip and threw her spinning in mid-air.
The bike almost hit her when it came down but bounced over her sliding body
before grinding to a stop. She had been one of the lucky ones.
The two leading competitors swerved around a bus-sized concrete slab,
then between a pair of six-meter-deep blast craters. Darren passed again by
forcing Sid into a rough patch of road surface. Fist-sized chunks of concrete
shattered off the armored cycle’s body. Overcompensating to avoid hitting
the scattering road chunks, an East-Sider lost control and laid his bike over.
Hard suit horribly disfigured, the determined rider righted his damaged cycle
to continue in last place.
Now only one other competitor matched Sid and Darren’s pace. Another
rookie rider in a soft crash suit flew by, narrowly missing some upward bent

69
rebar and coming centimeters from losing his head to an angled slab of road-
way.
“Geez, Paul! Get crazy, why don’t you!” Darren yelled to the soft-suited
rider from his team. He’s gonna be dead real soon if he keeps that up, Darren
mused.
Far behind, one of the Chi-Town boys lost his bike to a pile of loose elec-
trical cable wrapping itself around the rear wheel. The bike came to a sudden
stop. The rider, however, continued on by himself at 100 mph.
The road ended abruptly up ahead of the three and a six-meter drop led the
way to a large sewer pipe opening. Sid and Darren skidded along, brakes ful-
ly engaged, fighting for a correct alignment position. Paul, traveling too fast,
misjudged the opening’s location. Realizing in mid-air he had missed the
pipe’s entrance, he bailed off the bike, sliding harshly before colliding with
the concrete wall. The bike’s front wheel struck the back thruster on Darren’s
cycle, tipping him slightly off course. Deftly compensating, he missed the
concrete edge by two centimeters, following Sid into the sewer tunnel. Spot-
lights flared up from the front of the bikes, brightly illuminating the 2.5-meter
diameter passage. Small, furry creatures desperately sought safety from the
loud, blinding monsters invading their homes.
Water from Sid’s rooster tail drenched Darren’s hard suit and impaired
his vision through the faceplate. In order to see the tunnel ahead, Darren was
forced to drop back farther. Breaking sharply into radiant sunlight, he fol-
lowed Sid past several warning markers onto the Steeple’s base.
Two more high-speed contenders connected with the concrete wall next to
the tunnel. Most slowed to a crawl in the tunnel; a pile-up inside would have
a domino effect.
The Steeple was located against the West Side of Chi-Town’s fortified
walls. The half-pyramid extending from the wall was much too steep to climb
on wheels except for a tiny, meter-wide strip at the farthest point. Leading up
at a fifty-two-degree angle, the surface was interrupted by five-meter-wide
access roads, running horizontally the distance from point to wall. The inter-
vals, evenly spaced every twenty vertical meters, led up into a point where
the Steeple met the Fortress wall some 100 meters above the ground. Losing
momentum could mean sliding back to an access road, and perhaps ending
the run for the rider.
Darren could see heat waves in the exhaust from Sid’s booster jets. They
had both practiced clearing the access roads many times, and Sid performed
almost flawlessly. Darren spun his wheels too soon on the last access road
and the bike slipped backward. Thrusters at maximum, the wheels finally
caught, bringing him to the top just fifteen meters behind Sid. Rear wheels
arced in crescent turns and both were perched on a three-meter-wide road
running alongside the fortress wall. The first cycles were emerging from the
tunnel when Sid and Darren reached the Razor.

70
____________________

Conveniently patrolling another section of the wall, the two riders were
unmolested by a standard patrol of eight SAMAS. With the aid of an En-
forcer’s recording system and a series of transmitters, the last part of the run
was being watched by both sides. A shout went up from the East-Siders when
Sid’s cycle appeared in the lead. The bar was an RPA hangout and was tightly
packed for the event showing on the large projector screen.
“No way Darren can catch up now, not on the Razor!” an East-Sider yelled
amid cheers. “Nobody ever passes, can’t be done!”
“Just cuz’ it hasn’t been done doesn’t mean it can’t!” Dave spoke up for
Darren. “You ready to put your money where your mouth is?”
“If you’re Crazy enough to bet on him, I’m a taker. One hundred credits
says Darren never catches him.”
“Never say never. You’re on.”
All eyes watched the screen.
____________________

More unnerving than dangerous, the Razor could strike fear into even
hardened RPA’s. Those from the Robot Power Armor forces didn’t frighten
easily but riding in excess of 100 mph on a meter-wide strip with a ten-meter
drop on one side and 100-meter drop on the other, had a way of proving that
fear still existed. Part of the reason was psychological; no rider would have
fallen off a sidewalk, even at high speed. Breaks in the surface made up the
other part. The “Razor” came about as a result of an ill-fated water channel
project. The channel stretched the entire length of Chi-Town’s Fortress Wall
but had never contained water. Four meters wide and ten deep, the channel
would have made for excellent riding, except for broken slabs of concrete,
collapsed sections, and razor wire.
Trying to break Sid’s lead, Darren pushed the bike faster than ever. He
liked to travel on the Razor. If he went off the wall’s outer edge, there was a
possibility he could land on the five-meter-wide access road twenty meters
below. On the other hand, it would be very easy to miss.
Beautiful to watch, Sid glided smoothly through the air above a three-
meter break in the Razor’s surface and landed perfectly. Darren decided to
take a chance. Turning the wheel slightly, he dropped the bike flawlessly in
the channel. Hopping a section of protruding concrete and ducking a strip
of razor wire, Darren launched the bike forward, dust blowing up the chan-
nel walls from the booster jets. Half a mile ahead lay a section of extremely
treacherous surface on the Razor, which required the rider to switch paths to
the channel for a short distance, before riding up a slanted concrete slab to the
Razor top again. Sid couldn’t see that Darren had passed him in the channel.
Landing a bit rougher than expected, Sid almost lost control of his bike upon
71
seeing a dust cloud thirty meters ahead of him. Vision-impaired by Darren’s
booster jets throwing up dust, Sid slowed even further to prevent a collision.
By the time Sid was atop the Razor again, he knew the race was lost; Darren
would reach the finish long before he did.
“Lucky son of a gun,” Sid smiled.

72
Chapter 4
5th Columnists
Searching the computer files for information on the Army of the New Or-
der had netted very little. Mike leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes.
So far, most of the information he’d been able to gather in the past five days
had come from arm-twisting contacts and quasi-legal espionage. The lack of
official files was puzzling, but the pieces were beginning to fall into place.
Lieutenant Merrick was in the weight room when Mike finally found him.
With only two days remaining before they departed, he felt it necessary to
inform the unit commander of his findings.
“Need a hand with that?” Mike asked Greg who was straining to raise the
bar to its holder.
“NO!” Greg clipped, pressing the weight harder. Muscles bulged and
the 300 lb weight rose steadily to the holder. Here’s somebody I wouldn’t
want to get hit by, thought Mike. Sweat covered Greg’s muscle-bound chest
and arms. It was evident he’d been working out for some time. His wavy
brown hair was held back with an elastic cloth. Mike knew Greg had come up
through the ranks and eventually transferred to the officer corps. His obses-
sion with fitness was probably a carryover from his enlisted days. Academy-
trained officers typically didn’t spend that much time in the gym.
“Not many people can do that,” remarked Mike.
“I had to work up to it. I still practice gymnastics and running to keep bal-
anced, though. Strength isn’t everything.” Greg wiped his face with a towel
and stood, then went down into the splits, rocking back and forth to stretch
his muscles. “So, what’s going on? I haven’t got much more than I had when
we met.”
“Ran into a few stumbling blocks myself, but I think I’ve learned a bit
more than you.” His steel gaze scanned the room. “Perhaps it would be better
if we went someplace else to discuss it.” Greg rolled backward and to his feet.
“We can walk back to my apartment.” Draping the towel over his neck,
Greg started for the stairway. “Always use the stairs, even if it’s twelve
floors.”
Mike followed him two steps at a time to the officer’s level and back to
Greg’s apartment without a word. Concentrating for a moment, Mike felt
the presence of two others within twenty feet, but they moved away down
the hall. Mike had learned to use his psionic abilities, although the Coali-
tion frowned strongly on their use. Sitting at the table as they had before, he
pulled the information from his mind as though it had only been a few mo-
ments since he read it.
“It seems there was an information blackout regarding the Army of the
New Order and I believe I have discovered why. For the past year and a half,
the Army of the New Order has been involved in twenty-three attacks on out-

73
lying villages and towns, mostly along the Border. They’re credited with the
Forsyth and Champaign massacres, as well as many other eyewitness atroci-
ties. Each attack on an outpost or town sees their forces bolstered with new
supplies and equipment. The rebel leader is a man of Asian ancestry named
Zenjori Suka, who often goes by the alias Suka San. He’s a cunning man
with little regard for life and uses a natural charisma to convince others he’s
actually a champion of justice and freedom. No known psionics or magic,
but he is a renowned martial artist in some of the Northern territories. As far
as we know, he has a right-hand man who, by all accounts, is a Mind Melter
of incredible power. Several attempts to destroy them have failed, with the
rebels taking substantial losses. Actual armament and numbers are unknown,
as is the main leadership.
General Ross Underhill mounted three attempts to rout the rebels, all of
which failed to destroy rebel commanders, who seemed to know the assaults
were coming. According to the forces conducting the assaults, the level of
resistance was token at best. Instead of retreating to Tolkeen, where they
certainly would find protection, the rebel army attacked a military outpost at
Dubuque, where an indeterminate number of weapons and equipment were
stolen and then slipped southward. I’ll come back to this later.”
“How could an army attacking Coalition-controlled territory get away
with over twenty raids and not get pinned down once?”
“I have a few ideas, but nothing probable. Generally, a Coalition force
arrived shortly after the rebels would attack a town or village and drive them
out. Exactly why they weren’t pursued is unclear, but I suppose setting up the
defense of the village took priority or the commander may have assumed that
all the rebels were destroyed. My guess is they had access to inside informa-
tion somewhere. It gets worse, though.”
“On January 17, 101 P.A., a mechanized squad from General Underhill’s
division was assaulted while patrolling the Mississippi River. The unpro-
voked attack resulted in the destruction of two UAR-2 Abolishers and four
SAMAS units. Total casualties, including foot troops, amounted to fourteen
dead and nine wounded. The main attacking forces were said to be a Titan-
made Combat Robot, two Titan flying power armor units, several ‘Borgs, one
Triax X-10 Predator, and you can probably guess what’s next.”
“A Glitter Boy.”
“Amazing coincidence. I traced the markings on the Glitter Boy to a
unit in storage up in Dubuque. When I had it checked, amazingly enough, it
wasn’t there. Originally, the Glitter Boy was captured from a dealer October
4th, 100 PA, and supposedly locked in a storage facility here in Chi-Town.
Somewhere along the line, a shipping order got misread, intentionally or un-
intentionally, and the unit was sent to Dubuque, and subsequently stolen in
the raid. February 8th, 101 PA, General Ross Underhill himself led a surprise
attack on a rebel force twenty miles northeast of Burlington. This attack was

74
labeled a victory, and General Underhill proclaimed a victory, although my
inside sources say the Emperor wasn’t pleased that the General left his post
here at Chi-Town to destroy a relatively unimportant rebel group. A few flee-
ing rebels managed to make it to the ruins of Carthage, where they remained
hidden until an S & D unit could be dispatched. There was no mention of the
mechanized units in Underhill’s assault and somewhere along the line, they
were completely missed by sensors, patrols, and defensive measures. The
Seek and Destroy unit encountered heavy resistance and was forced to retreat
after an incident with a Glitter Boy power armor. Nice to know your mission
received a lot of praise.”
“Why wasn’t I informed beforehand about the possibility of running
across heavy mechanized units? I was told all the rebels had were a couple
of damaged exoskeletons and a whole bunch of fanatics with machine-guns
hiding out in derelict buildings.” Greg paced his room in anger. Lack of in-
formation had cost him a man and made him retreat in failure. “I’ve told my
C.O. a thousand times. We should just raze that whole place to the ground,
that way there won’t be a pile of rubble tall enough to hide a person behind,
much less a Glitter Boy.”
“I doubt your C.O. had any prior knowledge. You didn’t discover any data
on heavy mecha in your research, did you?”
“No. But somebody knew.”
“Yes. And I decided to check with those who did, personally. That’s
where I ran into some problems. First, I obtained a list of all command per-
sonnel at Dubuque. But when I called up all their files, I got tagged by C.I.S.
and dragged in for questioning. Turns out every single commander at the base
was executed two weeks ago for treason. The base was supplying the rebels
with information and weapons, and supposedly a 5th Column member was
helping rogue scientists and scholars escape to Tolkeen. C.I.S. thought I was
trying to reestablish contact with ‘my’ traitorous companions. Once my C.O.
explained it off as part of an investigation, they let me go, but I know for a
fact that I’m being watched.”
“Fifth Column?”
“You haven’t heard the term? It means somebody who’s working from
within to undermine the larger group.”
“Oh, got it. So, if the commanders at Dubuque were actually 5th Colum-
nists helping the Army of the New Order, why would they be attacked by
their own allies?” Greg leaned forward intently.
“Doesn’t make much sense to me either. After General Underhill wiped
out the main rebel army, General Cabot had him take charge of Chi-Town’s
defense. Underhill may or may not know about your little skirmish but would
probably be really P.O.’d to find out that his assault didn’t complete the job.
That’s probably why we’re a secret operation and why your team is being

75
given access to anything we have to spare in order to take out the rebels
quietly.”
“I know. Half of my unit has armed themselves with more explosives than
they can carry, and the other half is bugging me for more. Hell, I even let
Cowboy have a C-27 plasma cannon. They seem to think it’s going to be a
constant battle for every inch past the border.”
“Enthusiasm is good for morale. I’m happy to say they’ll be disappointed
about the constant fighting. On patrols I’ve made past Coalition borders, I
was surprised to find very few continual threats. We may run into a few D-
Bees or monsters, but I doubt very seriously that it will be continuous. Most
D-Bee villages aren’t a threat, so it might be wise to advise your men not to
start firing at the first non-human they see. No need to start something that
could get real ugly on the way back.”
“Already have, numerous times. They’re just excited because they’ve
never been out of Coalition territory. Stories get bigger by the time my men
hear them, although there might be a very substantial threat if we have to go
deep into the Federation of Magic’s territory. When Joseph Prosek drove the
Federation out after they invaded, he probably never realized his son would
still be fighting the same enemy years later. Last thing I want is to chase the
rebels right into Federation territory.”
“I’ve arranged a Sky Lifter Death’s Head Transport to drop us off past
the border on old route 30; that should gain us some ground. Now what I’m
about to tell you is top secret, and it wasn’t easy to come by. This must not
be passed on, even to Sergeant Winters, understood?” The steely gaze was
back again.
“Understood.”
“Our mission’s primary purpose is to eliminate the remaining forces and
leadership of the Army of the New Order – every grunt in your unit knows
that. What they don’t know is highly restricted information: When the reb-
els raided Dubuque, they stole some sensitive information on the hard disk.
What’s on the disk is a list of all the suspected 5th Columnist commanders
and operations within the Coalition – which could have made the raid a con-
struct in order to cover up for the traitors, but unlikely. Recovery of this in-
formation is the highest priority. What else is on the stolen hard disk, I don’t
know for sure, but Espionage division wants it back, bad. There’s a number
of fishy things going on, and I’m beginning to wonder if your own unit may
have been compromised by a mole.”
“I seriously doubt any of my people could be working to undermine the
Coalition. I picked each of them very carefully and while I allow room for
personality and expression, I believe results speak for themselves. They’re
not likely to go as far as betraying each other or me. The new platoon, pos-
sible, but the grunts are mostly new recruits, not special agents. I think you’re

76
getting paranoid. What are they going to tell? More importantly, who are they
going to tell it to?”
“A 5th Columnist, C.I.S., maybe a rebel contact,” Sorenson listed off so
quickly Greg knew he’d been thinking about this for a while.
“Maybe an espionage contact.” Greg knew his tone sounded accusato-
ry and watched the Espionage officer’s face harden, eyes narrow, and jaw
clench. Smiling inwardly, he knew a chord had been hit. There was more here
than Mike was telling him. After this little meeting, he’d head over to the of-
ficer’s bar and get the lowdown on this espionage agent. Making friends with
clerks in various departments had its distinct advantages. Greg met his stare
for what seemed like minutes before Mike’s face softened.
“Maybe an espionage contact. That hasn’t been ruled out,” Mike acqui-
esced. Lieutenant Merrick didn’t strike him as a genius, but definitely intel-
ligent and quite a bit sharper than he let on. “Regardless, I suggest you take a
look at the members of the new platoon and review the men in your own unit.
Can’t rule anything out, correct?”
“Possible, but not probable. I’ll check into it though, I have friends in
command of boot camp operations. They’ll be able to tell me whether the
new recruits check out and can tell me if there is more to them than revealed
on their computer bio’s. Regardless, I’m not conducting a mage hunt. You do
your job, I’ll do mine. Technically, I’m a commissioned officer, but I haven’t
forgotten what it’s like to be an NCO. Don’t breach the chain of command.
Remember our little talk about responsibility?” Greg waited for an acknowl-
edgment.
“Of course. I think you’re mistaking my suggestions as orders, Greg.
There’s no reason to get defensive, I’m not questioning your abilities to com-
mand.” Mike displayed a sickening level of diplomacy. “As for responsibil-
ity, I’ve done my job. Very thoroughly.”
Mike fought annoyance at losing the latest power play. Spending time in
the field himself, he had learned the value of good with the NCOs. It made
things run incredibly better, and you didn’t have to worry about a stray laser
blast hitting you in the back in the heat of battle. Friendship and loyalty were
crucial when things got hot and heavy. This man wasn’t even the least bit
intimidated by him, a good sign in some ways, but it could make for trouble
later. “I might add I checked you out thoroughly as well.”
“And?”
“Your friend Colonel McFarland had nothing but good things to say about
you, and most of your peers respect you very much. Personally, I believe you
a capable officer and a trustworthy comrade.” Mike laid it on thick. “What
you need to keep in mind is not everyone has your excellence of character.
Remember that when you check your men.” Mike stood and walked to the
door.

77
“Sorenson,” Greg let a half smile make its way out. “Anything special I
should know about you before the mission?”
Mike thought about it for a bit. “I snore really loud,” he said, then closed
the door behind him.
____________________

Training exercises would keep Darren busy for another few hours, and
Lisa used the opportunity to do some errands before he came over that eve-
ning. Food was expensive, especially prepared food. One of these days she’d
learn how to cook; that’s what she’d been telling herself for years. Until then,
trips to the stores on upper levels would have to suffice if she wanted some-
thing other than rehydrated dinners.
Thinking of the evening to come, Lisa missed the elevator she wanted and
made a detour down an alley to turn around. She was still cursing herself for
knowing better when the grappling hook caught in the spokes of her front
tire. Chain wrapped around the wheel and Lisa flew over the bike’s wind-
screen in spite of the low speed she was traveling. Tucking her head to protect
it from injury, she rolled gracefully out of the fall to face six dark figures from
one side and five from the other. Not good odds and talking didn’t seem to be
an option. Her stun gun was still in its holster attached to her bike over three
meters away. There was no way she could get there fast enough.
“Hey, lithle girl.” The voice had a strange high-pitched lisp to it. “You
wanth thum candy?” A white-haired gang member was partially lit by a win-
dow two stories up. He was over six feet tall and obviously the leader from
the way he stood. She wondered if the lisp was from the two fang implants or
his mechanical lower jaw.
“Up yours,” was all she could come up with in response. Two figures
came closer. Clenching her fist, she extended the knuckle spikes from her
hand and slipped her .25 ACP into her left hand. Nobody saw the weapon in
semi-darkness.
“We can do this the hard way... or the harder way,” one of the thugs
growled. She spat in his face. Angered, he lunged with a metal bar. Knocking
the point aside with the metal spikes, she brought her left knee up between
the legs of her attacker. She couldn’t see the expression on his face, but when
the bar clattered to the street at the same time he slumped, she knew her tar-
get had been hit. Feeling a movement behind her, Lisa ducked as a concrete
object missed her head and bounced off the wall. Swinging backward with
the claws, she failed to connect. Feet were moving on cement. A shape came
into her peripheral vision. Rolling forward and to her feet, she whirled and
planted a fore knuckle/spike punch into the chest of the figure. One of her
past boyfriends had taught her boxing techniques; something that often came
in handy on Chi-Town’s lower levels. Instead of clutching his chest in pain,
the figure’s arm swung wide and knocked her into the wall with a vicious
78
punch to her jaw. Slightly dazed, Lisa switched the pistol to her right hand.
The foot missed her chest by centimeters, she managed to squirm out of the
way just in time. Two forms blocked her path of retreat, and others slowly
circled her. Bringing the .25 up to chest level, Lisa pulled the trigger. Even
the small caliber discharge was enough to make ears ring in the enclosed
space of the alley. She barely heard the bullet ricochet off her target.
“Body armor!” Lisa cursed and aimed higher, discharging two more
rounds. The first one hit the figure somewhere the armor wasn’t. Gurgling,
gasping breath came from the bullet wound in his neck. The attacker was
saved from the second bullet by falling face first to the street, dying. Not
turning fast enough, Lisa was slammed from behind by someone much larger
and heavier than she. As the weapon flew from her hand, she tried to catch
her breath down on bruised knees and skinned palms. The ceramic knife was
in her hand before the gang member could follow up with a kick to her ribs.
She rolled out of the way, colliding with another pair of legs. Lisa slashed
wildly and by the feel of the blade, knew flesh had been sliced. A cry of pain
followed seconds later. She was on her feet, back to the wall, waiting for
the next attack. The white-haired gang-member stood two meters away. She
could see his extended fangs gleaming white.
“Duth thith thing really work?” the man held Lisa’s stun gun.
It wasn’t pain; every muscle in her body contracted instantaneously, and
the feeling of wind rushing in her ears and bright lights in her eyes lasted a
mere three seconds. The world spun and the street moved beneath her. Lisa
didn’t even feel the impact of her stunned body striking the concrete. A lisp-
ing chuckle came from someplace out of sight.
“I gueth it duth!”
“Good,” Lisa thought, “at least I won’t feel what they’re about to do.” Her
clothes were being ripped off, and the hands on her body felt strangely like
running fingers over a jaw-full-of-Novocain feeling.
Soft split-toe boots treaded silently over the dead thug’s body – the figure
above her never let out a sound before being lowered to the street. The next
three barely had time to utter gasps of surprise mingled with pain; as the
unmistakable sound of flesh and bone being severed by sharp steel hung in
the alleyway.
Lisa wasn’t sure why the man lying on her body wasn’t moving, but could
barely make out a repeated hissing sound, followed by dying sighs.
The man with the fangs looked around in confusion; he was the only one
still standing. Looking down at one of his gang he noticed a pointed metal ob-
ject protruding from the other man’s forehead, a look of surprise still etched
on the ashen face.
Now he panicked. Pointing the stun gun down the dark alley, the fanged
thug wildly shot bolts of electricity at the dark. When the energy clip was
empty, he turned to flee for his life. Silhouetted by the light from the main

79
street was a black hooded figure. Screaming in terror, Fang ran into the dark-
ness of the alley. The first shuriken lodged below the right shoulder blade,
making him run faster. The second sunk deep into the fleshy part of his left
side. The third and fourth penetrated deep between vertebrae, severing the
spinal column. Fang wanted to scream but he couldn’t, jaw open, air hissing,
eyes wide, his whole body seemed to stop working, piece by piece. Nerve
toxins rode to his brain on the impulse of pain and then even that ceased.
Lisa knew she was being lifted but couldn’t see by whom or where they
were taking her. Propped in a sitting position against a wall, Lisa could barely
make out the dark form in front of her. A narrow strip across the eyes was his
only vestige of humanity. The eyes were looking at hers now.
“You will be alright. I will watch until you are safe.” The voice was
strangely accented, but strong.
“Are you the Enigma?”
The figure remained silent for several moments.
“No.” The figure glided away from her, fading into the absence of light.
“Who are you?” she asked the darkness.
Time passed, though Lisa didn’t know how long. Finally, making her-
self stand on wobbly legs, she gathered what she could of her clothes about
her. She found her cycle standing against the wall, grappling hook and chain
hanging from the handlebars, stun gun resting on the seat. Glancing around
her, she noticed the unmoving forms of her attackers. Still groggy from the
blows and the stun.
She walked over to one of the smaller gang members who had a shirt tied
around his waist and a vest that would work for her until she got home. Tak-
ing the clothes off the dead man, she put the shirt and then the vest on. Then
searched the bodies for credits before going back to her bike.
Lisa tossed the chains from the cycle, holstered the stun gun, and walked
the bike to the alley entrance. She stopped and looked back. Somewhere out
of sight was her protector, watching to see her depart safely.
“Thank you!” she called. “Whoever you are.”
____________________

The running track seemed small to Trenton. Two years ago, he would have
been wheezing after the second lap. Now, 23 miles later, he felt great. The en-
dorphin injection system helped lessen pain from the operations, but it would
be years before a complete melding of man and machine. Speed indicators
displayed in his right multi-optic cybernetic eye clocked him at 20 mph. Still
a bit unaccustomed to having weapons as part of his body, Trenton had spent
hours trying to familiarize himself with the new augmentations. He wanted
payback for what cost him a piece of his humanity.
“Hey! Trenton!” His amplified hearing picked up the shout, from the op-
posite side of the quarter-mile track. Enhancing the image with telescopic vi-
80
sion, Trenton made out Cowboy and some of the others from his unit. Sprint-
ing to his top speed of 56 kilometers per hour, the distance closed quickly.
“Hot dang! That was really fast!” Cowboy gawked.
“Hey, at least now I can even outrun the Sergeant!” Trenton seemed to be
in good spirits. He’d been a good-natured person to begin with, something his
injury hadn’t robbed him of completely.
“How much can you lift?” Bill wanted to know.
“Over 360 kilos. Almost enough to throw a Glitter Boy off balance!”
“Oh, yeah?” Cowboy interrupted, “Lieutenant says you can go on the S
& D op only if the lab coats approve it. You gonna be ready for tomorrow?”
“You bet, but fat chance the Cyber-Doc’s gonna let me out. You know
it takes over two months before most new coversions make it out into the
field?”
“They let me out,” Nim taunted. Nim’s replacement arm was covered
with a thick, rubbery skin, and almost looked real. Full bio-system prosthet-
ics were more prone to normal damage but looked and felt completely real.
Nim’s arm and lung were more industrial-grade replacements for wounded
soldiers; functional but not pretty.
“Yeah, but you didn’t have to undergo partial reconstruction. Doc said
my internal organs were damaged and my bones fractured all the way up my
spine; impact from the Boom Gun or something. Had to replace both legs,
feet, hands, and arms. They had to reinforce lots of other bones and internal
stuff.”
“Is that a gun on your arm?” Rex asked.
“Particle beam. See, clip fits in this slot here on the side, but they won’t
give me one yet. And check this out.” Trenton closed his metal fist, and three
eighteen-inch blades extended from his left forearm.
“Whoa!” was the general response. A slight humming sound came from
the blades, and a visible aura of energy surrounded each, making them hard
to look at as they vibrated the very air into agitation.
“Are those what I think they are?” Cowboy pointed to the humming blades.
“Uh-huh. High-frequency retractable Vibro-Blades. They’ll slice right
through a human body like it wasn’t there. I’m supposed to get some other
weapons built in later. A mini-missile launcher on my left arm, and some
other stuff I’m not supposed to talk about.”
“Come on, Trenton, we’re your pals!” Nim pressed him eagerly.
“No, I really can’t talk about it. ‘Sides, I outrank you anyway now.”
“I heard you snagged Corporal. So I guess all I have to do is get both my
legs shot off and I’m a Sergeant,” Cowboy joked insensitively.
Trenton laughed with the others, but anger lit inside him. As much as he
appreciated the new body parts, they lacked the sensations and appearance of
normal body parts. Cyborgs, while accepted in Coalition society, still faced a
fair amount of stigma. Especially when trying to get dates.

81
____________________

Above the track in a viewing balcony, Colonel Lyboc observed Trenton’s


progress. The Cyber-Doc at his side handed the Colonel a microchip.
“Here’s what you requested. Works just like the others,” the doctor’s nasal
voice spoke.
“Thank you, doctor. Is Trenton ready for combat?”
“Are you asking me or telling me?”
Lyboc, slightly perturbed by the Cyber-Doc’s resistance, wondered if it
was time to replace his unenthusiastic pawn.
“Doctor, is Trenton ready for a combat mission?” he repeated.
“No, but that isn’t going to stop you, is it? He needs at least two more
months to be fully acclimated to the augmentation.”
“Can you finish the work tonight? A bonus for overtime, naturally.”
“I suppose, but some of the parts will be missed.”
“Really, Louie, after all this time, you don’t think I’ve covered that?”
Lyboc’s voice was condescending and dangerously patronizing. “I’ll leave
the replacement parts and a bonus for you at your establishment, on Level 7.
I’m going to have a little talk with Corporal Trenton as soon as his friends
leave. When I’m finished, you will begin working. I expect him to be fully
functional by 0930 tomorrow morning.”
The doctor hung his head. This business relationship wasn’t worth the
sleep he’d lost thinking about lives ruined. He’d finish this last job and leave
tonight for the kingdom of Kingsdale in the south. A Cyber-Doc could make
a good living there, and he could choose his clients himself.
“Okay, 9:30 AM tomorrow. Your man-and-machine will be ready.”
“Good. That’s what I like to hear, Louie.” Colonel Lyboc slapped him on
the back good-naturedly. “Call him in for me.”
Trenton returned to his temporary quarters to find a short, dark-haired man
with a small mustache and penetrating dark eyes. The Colonel’s uniform and
insignia brought Trenton to full attention.
“As you were, corporal. Come in, I’ve been waiting for you...”
____________________

It was well past 2:00 AM when Dr. Louie Gutierrez finished Trenton’s
modifications and left for home. Riding public transit, Louie peered at every
face, wary of being followed. He didn’t want to take the chance with his own
vehicle – he knew what Lyboc was capable of. He was reasonably certain
Lyboc didn’t even suspect he was leaving, but he couldn’t afford to take
that chance. No, he wouldn’t even go to his illegally run Body Chop-Shop
to retrieve his cybernetic equipment or the extra payment from Lyboc; that
would be stupid.

82
His apartment on level 26 was large and nicely furnished but cheap for
the kind of money he made. Retrieving a small, black lock box from the
refrigerator, Louie smiled, thinking of the dozen universal credit cards it con-
tained. Even Lyboc didn’t know how much the Chop-Shop had brought in.
His savings would make up for what he left behind by far. Three and a half
years and over three million credits to show for it. He could do even better in
Kingsdale without paying off Lyboc, not to mention security patrols and the
Black Market.
Placing a laser rod in the pocket of an overcoat, Louie set the coat and box
on his kitchen table and went to his study. He began to type furiously at his
computer console.
____________________

Two fingers pressed a section on an artificial hand’s wrist, and a tiny con-
cealed compartment opened. A finger-sized ring was revealed.
____________________

A bead of sweat rolled down Louie’s forehead while he typed out the code
to erase all the data in his computer. The process was taking too long, and the
pressure was building. He needed to leave soon.
____________________

A finger slipped into the ring and drew a long, thin length of wire from
the wrist compartment. Feet treading softly, the wire approached its victim.
____________________

“Finally!” Louie spoke to himself. He pushed the final key. All records of
illegal transactions and associations vanished from existence.
____________________

The wire bit deeply, soft skin offering little resistance as Louie’s windpipe
was severed. Harsh rasping sounds came quickly but ended shortly. The Cy-
ber-Doc’s body slumped in the chair, its bowels relaxed, and liquid dripped
from the chair to the floor. The wire retracted to the compartment, and the
two fingers closed the flap, concealing the instrument of death. The assassin
paused for a moment beside the living room table, before leisurely striding
out the front door with his new acquisitions; a laser rod in one pocket of an
overcoat and a small black box.
____________________

83
Deep beneath Chi-Town’s edifice of concrete and steel, Colonel Lyboc
completed downloading files from the disks he’d obtained earlier. Yawning
loudly in the silence of his office, Lyboc realized that it had been nearly 24
hours since he’d last slept. Activating the implant in his jaw, a signal was
transmitted to his ear cybernetics. The pleasant, feminine voice was heard
only by him.
“The time is 05:38 and 27 seconds.”
“Bedtime.” He yawned again. Flipping off the screen, he was about to
leave the darkened office when the printer turned on and ran off a single line
of print.
“That’s strange,” he thought out loud. He looked around instinctively be-
fore turning the lights back on and crossing the room to the printer. Colonel
Thaddeus Lyboc’s heart froze. He blinked and read the printout again to be
sure it wasn’t just weariness playing tricks with his eyes. A sinking feeling in
his stomach accompanied fear of being found out. He read the printout aloud.
“The Enigma is watching.”

84
Chapter 5
Chickens and Monsters
Contagious excitement traveled on stories of soon-to-be monster slay-
ings and hard-fought battles with demons from the Rifts. Trenton and Brian
played quartermasters to the gathered troops, soon leaving for dangers in the
wilderness beyond Coalition territory.
“What do you need six grenades for, Rex? Four is more than enough,”
Trenton explained patiently. Brian was already past patience and even an-
noyance.
“The ones I have are fragmentation grenades. I want a couple plasma.”
“You know they get heavy after a while.”
“That’s why we’re all riding in Hover Rovers. C’mon, Trenton, I really
need them,” Rex pleaded with his friend.
“Hey, I’m not helping you carry them if we have to walk.”
“NO! Dammit! You do NOT need eight energy canisters for that over-
grown cannon!” Brian shouted, “That’s why I installed a charger in the En-
forcer, so we can recharge clips and canisters. You can’t even fit eight can-
isters on your belt! Where the heck are you gonna put them, Cowboy?!”
Brian’s voice had increased with each soldier’s unreasonable request, but
Cowboy’s always provided a high-volume response.
“If I hang the other three on this chest strap and move the Fusion Blocks
to another belt above my other belt, it’ll work!”
Brian stared in disbelief. “You’re serious. I can’t believe you’re serious!”
“Yeah, see? Just give me the extra canisters and I’ll show you.”
“NO! NO, NO! Look, I’ll toss an extra canister in the Enforcer for you,
but you do not need to carry eight canisters for that C-27! Now, who’s next?”
Cowboy looked defeated but moved to join the others.
“I’d like a hamburger, fries, and a coke to go, please,” Sharp joked.
“Funny, Sharp. Real funny.” Brian cooled down a bit.
“You calibrate the sights on the JA-11?” Sharp leaned over the table
and eyed his weapon. Like the unconventional rifle, Sharp’s armor hardly
matched that of the other soldiers. Instead of stark, black-adorned spikes, it
was a stripped-down camo suit specially fitted with a low profile jet pack and
short-wave radio.
“Yes, but it was actually harder than I expected. I don’t know what this
multi-optics sight came off of, but I’d love to get one. This is like the mother
of all weapon sights. It’s got all sorts of functions I don’t even know how to
turn on, so I just rigged it for basic targeting. It was used by some pre-Rifts
independent military power that was supposed to stop wars from breaking out
but dropped the ball, and now, here we are. But man, would I love to get my
hands on the rifle this was made for. That assassin’s rifle hasn’t got the power

85
to match the range on the scope. It’s like pulling a rifle sight off a C-12 and
cramming it on one of those .50 caliber handguns you carry.”
“So that’s good, right? I can use it for spotting targets long before they get
in range, right?”
“Right, only a couple of problems. This thing eats power, and you only
have one power cell. The infrared spotlight uses the most, so don’t turn it on
unless you have to. You can probably get about 12-16 hours out of it if you
don’t run it constantly; less than ten if you’re running on infrared. Let me
know when the power indicator gets lower than 25%.”
“Gotcha. By the way, where’s the eyepiece?”
“No eyepiece. There’s this nifty little pop-up HUD, but I couldn’t make
it work.”
“So how do I use the sight?”
“Two ways. Remote link to your helmet’s HUD, which took me hours to
modify, by the way, or hard link cable to the jack. It’s cool. You can access
most of the AQ-3 targeting and optical functions without ever touching it,
plus, assuming you had the right kind of mount, could control weapon func-
tions and fire by audio command alone. There’s also this power link thing
that’s supposed to draw energy from a weapon E-cell, but that JA-11 doesn’t
have the right kind of mount for that, either.”
“This thing works, right?” Sharp looked overwhelmed.
“Listen up!” Sergeant Winters’ voice boomed. “I want to know whose
C-12 this is! Some moron left it leaning against a chair and walked away
from it. This, we do not do! Any claimers?”
A red-faced soldier shuffled up to reclaim the weapon. The Sergeant felt
a little stupid himself.
“Sorry, sir,” he apologized.
“Well, don’t ever leave your weapon out of arm’s reach, Private.” The
Sergeant’s voice sounded almost understanding, but his stern glare showed
his disapproval.
“You loud-mouth yap-heads shut up for a second! Transport leaves at
09:30 from bay sixteen. Everybody else is already there, so let’s hurry it up!
If I have to come back up here and drag one of you to it, you’re gonna be
wearing grenade pins for earrings!”
“I better get going. See ya at the transport!” Sharp left Brian to deal with
the rocket launcher team, then got in step with the red-faced Private.
____________________

Hangar Bay 16 housed two Sky Lifter Death’s Head Transports. Over
twenty meters tall and seventy meters long, the giant, flying troop carrier
was perhaps one of the most fearsome sights an enemy could see descending
upon them. The transport was capable of holding as many as 40 Enforcers,

86
40 Spider Skull Walkers, or even 640 Troops. There was plenty of room for
the whole unit and their vehicles.
Sitting in the cockpit area, Mike waited for the last of the troops to board
while Greg oversaw their entry from the cargo bay.
“Listen, if you want, I can drop you off farther out than the flight plan calls
for,” the transport pilot offered. “Any distance you don’t have to travel on the
ground is better.”
“Actually, if it wouldn’t be a problem...” Mike accepted.
“No problem. You’re the crazy ones, chasing some Glitter Boy right into
the Federation of Magic.”
“How did you know about the Glitter Boy?”, Greg asked, suspicious.
“Everyone knows. That’s no secret to the 33rd Airborne. We lost five men
to your one. Guess we owe it more than you.”
“Sir, all equipment and personnel aboard,” the transport’s communication
officer reported. The pilot pulled a mic up to give a pre-flight announcement.
“Welcome aboard Transport 78. Please remain strapped in your seats for
the entire length of the flight, and don’t even think about jumping out until
the transport has come to a full and complete stop. Thank you.”
Hangar doors half a meter thick swung slowly open. The landing plat-
form rolled toward the fog outside, slowly exposing the transport to the sky.
Throbbing engines below in the saucer section lifted the multi-ton craft clear
of the platform. Three rear jets propelled the transport forward into the morn-
ing fog, slowly at first, then rapidly accelerated away from Chi-Town’s forti-
fied walls.
“Weather’s pretty bad,” Mike commented, noting the low visibility.
“This? This is incredibly good weather. Last year this time, it was snow-
ing. This year has been unbelievably mild. We’ll be flying on instruments,
mostly. Rides smooth for five hundred miles per hour, wouldn’t you say?”
The pilot cocked his head and listened to the thrum of the airborne transport.
“Not bad. What’s our ETA?”
“Originally, the drop point was ten miles north of old Fort Wayne, but I
can drop you off just past the old Indiana-Ohio border. That’s why I’m going
a tiny bit faster than standard cruising. They’re likely to either travel on 6 if
they wanted to stay out of Federation territory or Old Route 30 if they wanted
to get out of our reach. Scuttlebutt from recon in the ruins of Fort Wayne is
that they passed south, so we’re betting on Route 30.”
“How long will that take to get to the border?”
“About 20 minutes,” a technical crew member answered. “Give or take a
few minutes to find a good touch-down point.”
“Personally, I didn’t like the original plan anyway,” Greg added.
“I still think you’re nuts for volunteering for this mission,” the pilot opined.
Greg and Mike exchanged looks. “I seen what them Federation monsters can
do and it ain’t pretty. You’re asking for it by knocking on their door like this,

87
and nobody gonna come pull you out, neither. ‘Sides, that G.B. coulda made
it clear ‘cross Ohio by now, and you’ll never even see it.”
“Don’t think so. Sure, the Lieutenant here is a specialist on these things,
but I figure they’ll clear some distance, then stop and regroup. Last sight-
ing reported them along the old highway past Bourbon, only three days ago.
We’ll catch ‘em.” Greg sounded confident.
“Yes, I’m sure we will, Lieutenant.” Mike was perturbed at the talkative-
ness of his companion.
“You ever made runs over the St. Louis Gateway Area?” Greg asked the
pilot.
“No, but a couple of my friends have. One of ‘em even launched a couple
of multi-warheads through the Rift to see what would happen. Didn’t hurt the
arch a bit and the Rift changed places while he watched. Pretty trippy, huh?”
“Still, it took guts for you to volunteer for this mission just the same,”
Greg praised the pilot, as Mike started to catch on.
“Volunteer, heck. We didn’t volunteer, we’re just following orders.”
“Your C.O. didn’t give you a choice?” Mike had figured out what Greg
was driving at.
“Yeah, right! If my C.O. tells me I’m droppin’ off some volunteer S &
D unit at this area and this time, then trust me, I do it. If I were you, I’d
be catchin’ a couple minutes of shut-eye, ‘cuz you ain’t gettin’ none where
you’re going. I’ll run about 30,000 feet, so we’ll be alright without you for
a while.”
Greg and Mike leaned back and pretended to rest but were listening intent-
ly to the cockpit chatter. The flight crew hadn’t volunteered for the mission,
they were given orders. Something was different this time. Feeling the craft
dropping seven minutes later, Mike sat up and called up radar on his console.
The recurring blip the copilot had been referring to was getting closer as they
descended.
“It’s flying very irregularly. I don’t think it’s an aircraft. Too slow. It’s
changed course, heading in our direction,” the copilot reported.
“Visual?” the pilot asked.
“Still pretty far. This is what I got.” The screen displayed a view of open
fields far below.
“Dragon,” the pilot stated. Everyone stared at the screen.
“How can you tell?” Mike couldn’t tell from the tiny moving speck.
“Too long, no tail fins; there, did you see it flap?”
“Yes, I think so.”
“Lock and load, boys. This one’s comin’ for us.”
Gunners manned their stations and the pilot took the controls.
“Range?” the gunner asked the communications officer.
“Nine kilometers.”

88
“Tough shot with the rail gun and too far for the laser turrets. I’m using
missiles.”
“Go for it,” the pilot gave the order.
Two panels slipped open in the forward section of the transport, exposing
medium-range missile launch tubes. Coalition medium-range missiles could
easily strike a target up to 80 miles away and frequently carried the most de-
structive warheads possible without causing radiation damage.
“That’s a small one. I’ve seen bigger,” boasted the pilot.
“It’s getting bigger and bigger every second,” the copilot commented.
“Firing four, high-explosive warhead missiles.”
Four missiles streaked across the sky, locked onto the target below.
____________________

Gliding lazily in the early morning haze, Kro-Mar watched the tiny people
moving about in the fields below. He was about to swoop down and torch
a strip near the farmers – all in fun, of course, when an unfamiliar sound
reached his keen ears. Craning his neck around to see the source of the sound,
Kro-Mar spotted a large flying object descending toward him from several
miles away. Straining his sharp eyes, the features of a Death’s Head Trans-
port came into focus in his vision. Having never seen one in real life before,
much less up close, Kro-Mar took wing to investigate the curious contrap-
tion. Quite young for a Great Horned Dragon, Kro-Mar was intensely curi-
ous about everything. Considering he had nothing better to do that day (or
that year, for that matter), the prospect of exploring a human flying machine
seemed irresistible. He might even find some fabulous treasure to take back
to his lair.
Four lines of smoke hissed toward him. Kro-Mar laughed.
“They’re shooting at me and I haven’t even begun to scare them yet!”
Frightening humans was fun. They got the most hilarious expressions on
their faces when he walked into town metamorphosized as a human and sud-
denly reverted to his natural form in the center of a town square. In all his
thirty-six years, he’d only encountered one human magic-user that actually
posed a threat to him.
Four high-explosive warheads detonated against the scales of this body.
Knocked silly by the concussion, wings shredded from the missile blast ra-
dius, Kro-Mar plunged into the earthen fields.
Dirt was in his nose and mouth; Kro-Mar sneezed and spat.
“That HURT!” he roared, unable to pursue the flying transport. He was
more upset over the loss of a bag of jewels he carried with him than the
burnt scales and broken bones. Those would heal quickly on the magic-rich
ley-lines that crossed nearby. That flying thing in the sky made him angry,
and Kro-Mar seethed at being defeated. Now, he had something to occupy
the boring months between naps. Whatever those things were that hit him, he
89
wanted some. They would make a fine addition to the collection of trinkets in
his lair, and he would do whatever it took to obtain them.
____________________

“Got ‘im!” shouted the gunner triumphantly. The charred and mangled
dragon dropped like a rock.
“Nice shooting,” Greg complimented the beaming gunner.
“Unfortunately, all dragons don’t fly into a missile barrage, but it would
be nice if they did,” Mike added. “I’m going below and taking Darren out for
a patrol of the landing site.”
“We’ll be there in about two minutes, Lieutenant. Drop ya off on the old
highway just northwest of Galion soon as ya clear the site.” The pilot brought
the transport 1,000 feet above the earth and aligned it with the pre-Rifts high-
way below.
“My first dragon!” the gunner was ecstatic.
“Please don’t wish for more until we’re safely back in Chi-Town if you
don’t mind.” Greg shook his hand. “Thanks for the lift, I gotta go keep my
unit from jumping out the hatch while we’re still airborne.”
“Take care!” Greg exclaimed, he then shook the crew’s hands and crawled
down the access tube.
“I wanna be able to come pick you guys up in one piece after it’s over,
Lieutenant. Don’t get killed!” the pilot bid farewell cheerfully.
Wind howled through the open hatch. Darren and Mike, clad in power
armor, leaped through the opening, falling several meters below the transport
before flying away on extended wings and flaming thrusters. Greg closed the
hatch so Cowboy wouldn’t fall out accidentally.
“Hey! Why aren’t you strapped in?!”
“Oh, Lieutenant, I was just seeing how long until we got to the ground.
Sarge didn’t stop me,” Cowboy made a puny attempt to justify disobeying
orders.
“You knew Sergeant Winters wasn’t watching.”
“Yeah, but if he can’t stand flying and keeps his eyes closed the whole
trip, how would he find out?”
“Cowboy, I’d throw you in the brig if I had one. Strap in or I will person-
ally toss you out from up here.”
“Yes, sir.” Cowboy returned to the troop compartment above the cargo
bay. Greg climbed into the front section of the cargo bay, slowly moving
upward and back to clamp firmly in place. All systems registered as being in
excellent condition on the Heads-Up Display. Greg accessed the commlink.
“Trenton, Dave, and Lisa – assume your stations. Greg to SAM 179, do
you copy?”

90
“Sorenson here. Looks pretty clear so far. There’s a farm about ten miles
away, nothing worth bothering. Darren’s checking out a collapsed overpass
half a mile up, but I’d say we’re clear for landing.”
“Overpass clear, dude.”
“Lieutenant Sorenson to DH-78, you’re clear for touchdown.”
“You ready back there, Lieutenant Merrick?” The pilot knew better than
to land without checking with personnel in the cargo bay.
“No, thirty seconds. Hurry up, Dave, and don’t detach the holding clamps
on the Enforcer until after the transport stops moving. Trenton, secure the
hatch but don’t let anyone out until the hover rovers are loaded and ready to
fly. Jerry, how are you doing up there?”
“Havin’ a merry damn time – what did you expect?”
“As soon as you’re done puking, please try and arrange the platoon so all
the heavy people aren’t on the same hover rover,” Greg joked to relieve some
tension.
“Real funny. Sooner I’m off this thing, the sooner I’ll smack you privates
around for laughing, and don’t think I don’t know who you are!”
Restrained, clamped-mouth laughter could be heard over the big jets of the
saucer section. Even the men who had served with Sergeant Winters before
couldn’t help snickering at a man who knew no fear of demon or monster but
was terrified of heights.
“Touching down, 10...9...8...7...6...5...4...3...2...1, and you’re clear! I’d be
happy not to stay grounded too long.”
Chunks of concrete, dust, and dirt flew up in a cloud around the transport,
hovering four feet from the ruined highway surface. Three hundred years
of exposure to rapidly-changing elements hadn’t treated pre-Rifts roadways
well. What little remained was totally unfit for travel by conventional ve-
hicles, with the possible exception of modified 4X4 trucks and off-road mo-
torcycles. Hovercraft and all-terrain robot vehicles were required to traverse
the wastelands at any appreciable speed. Conventional air travel had suffered
greatly, with VTOL craft replacing the runway-dependent aircraft. Small
runways and airfields were operated in the wastelands, but they were few and
limited to fragile pre-Rifts aircraft and too easily damaged.
Rushing, gritty wind whipped into the cargo bay from the open hatch. The
soldiers hastily found their places on hover rovers, while Sergeant Winters
hollered orders through the voice amplifier in his helmet.
“Dave! Take point. Brian, you take rover 1 and stick close. Rovers 2 and
3, keep yourself staggered. I want the two of you on hovercycles to keep back
until we’ve set up a perimeter. Trenton, you bring up the rear. On my mark.
Go!”
Clamps snapped open, releasing the Enforcer from the bay wall. Metal
feet striking armored floors resounded loudly within the cargo bay. The En-
forcer leaped through the opening, emerging from the dust cloud at a run.

91
Brian thought he would be more apprehensive, but now that he was thrust
into action, his mind forgot the perilous situation they were all entering.
Keeping the hovercraft low, Brian maneuvered it through the open hatch,
nearly losing control from the thruster’s jet wash. Cowboy let out a “yip-
piekaiyay” as they cleared the hatch. “Of all the people to be forced to put up
with!” Brian seethed. On the other hand, it would be nice having the added
firepower in his hover rover. For that, he could live with a little aggravation.
Two more rovers appeared behind him, followed by a heavily armored cy-
borg, and a SAMAS.
“All clear, Lieutenant?” the pilot asked as he watched them go. The SA-
MAS turned toward the cockpit and waved.
“All clear. See you back here in a few days!” Greg bid farewell.
“We’ll be glad to give you a lift! So long!”
Greg watched the transport’s hatch slowly close, and the thruster’s flame
brighten, lifting the transport into the clouds. Resting on the saucer section,
three rear jets drove the transport out of sight. All eyes watched it go until the
last visible trace vanished. Then the feeling of isolation set in.
The realization was mixed with a thrill of excitement and fear; there was
no room for mistakes when on your own, surrounded by the enemy. A voice
shattered the lonesome reverie.
“Oh, for cryin’ out loud! Darren! Leave the rabbits alone!”
Ninety meters out in a field, Darren buzzed a cluster of terrified rabbits.
Mike couldn’t believe the antics of this RPA. Up until the Glitter Boy inci-
dent, Darren had never been hit by enemy fire, but had six exo-skeletons and
four monsters to his record; and now he was chasing rabbits.
“What the hell’s the matter with you?!” Mike Sorenson was more bewil-
dered than angry. “We’re in a potentially hazardous zone! Why aren’t you
checking out the overpass?”
“Already did, sir. Nothin’ there, ‘cept more rabbits. Make a good spot for
a temporary base, sir, until you pick up the rebels’ trail, anyway. Only cover
for miles, ‘less you wanna hide underground with these fuzz balls!”
Mike wanted to hurt him. Any method would suffice, just so it hurt. Dar-
ren was really beginning to unnerve him, and that in itself made him mad.
Why Greg allowed that kind of behavior was confusing, but a talk with the
Lieutenant was certainly warranted for the future.
“Darren, I want you to run a ten-mile perimeter and report everything
you see out of the ordinary. Lieutenant Merrick, take your unit ahead half a
mile and secure cover at the collapsed overpass. I’m flying back to check on
something, and I’ll be back in twenty minutes. Sorenson out.”
“Affirmative, Merrick out,” Greg said and took the lead, with the unit fol-
lowing close behind. He and Mike needed a private discussion about orders,
and who gave them. Until then it wouldn’t look good to challenge orders in
front of his men.

92
____________________

It was just as he anticipated; the dragon was gone. Mike approached the
depression carefully, but all signs of the mangled remains were missing. Cir-
cling downward in a tightening spiral, he touched down in the trench the
dragon had made. Somehow, it had managed to fly away. Concentrating a
moment, he “felt” the area around him with his mind, but he was alone. He
opened the SAMAS, climbed out and felt the flattened earth with his hand.
Still slightly warmer than the cool temperature of a late morning in Febru-
ary, and patches of blood confirmed that the beast was wounded. Retrieving
a pouch from a secret compartment on his SAMAS, Mike glanced around to
make sure he was alone, then sat cross-legged on the earth. He carefully re-
moved a cylindrical object; the remains of a Boom Gun shell casing retrieved
from the Cedar Lake attack. Closing his left hand around the casing, Mike
focused his thoughts on the playback from the Enforcer’s log and opened his
mind to the object clasped in his hand. Images blurred in his mind, and new
ones appeared.
It was raining hard. Flashes of light and flame came from somewhere un-
seen. Lightning etched an image on his mind. An Enforcer’s rail gun spit
metal slugs, a figure in battered body armor split in two. Rage and hatred
turned his vision red. Another flash from the lightning reflected off the tip of
a Glitter Boy’s Boom Gun but from the pilot’s point of view. What followed
wasn’t thunder – it was louder.
Sparks exploded in a radiant starburst from the Enforcer’s torso mini-
missile launcher. Brilliant hues of blazing metal expanded and split into a
thousand streams of light. The twisted, burning hulk landed seconds later,
rain doing nothing to lessen its tortured, burning agony.
The image in his mind began to fade. Mike struggled to maintain his psy-
chic reading, concentrating on seeing what could be seen by the object’s for-
mer owner. A distant horizon took shape, rising out of the plain. Visible
in the hazy sunshine, an enormous blue wall of crackling energy crossed
the broken road, extending as far as could be seen in one direction and to a
circular stone structure far off in the distance in the other direction. Rising
out of the plain stood a stone castle, encompassed with flowing fields and
fertile soil. An X-10 Predator power armor passed through the ley line and
advanced past the castle. A full conversion ‘Borg ran alongside a Coalition
hover rover, followed by a Glitter Boy entering the surging energy of the ley
line. His vision faded to white, he couldn’t focus through the haze, losing the
images in his mind.
Mike sat several minutes more, reflecting on the images gleaned from his
psychic readings. Mind clear with purpose, he rose and returned the object
to its hidden compartment. What he’d just done could not be known to the
others; even minor psionic abilities were considered an aberration, and the

93
extent of his would be looked upon as an unnatural mutation. To even think
about using these unstable and inexplicable psionic abilities was considered
a crime by the Coalition. While those with specially-approved authority were
permitted to exercise their latent talents; Mike had no such authority. Now
he had to contrive a convincing story to support the new information he’d
gleaned from his psychic powers.
____________________

If there were inhabitants behind the grey stone walls, the enigmatic castle
had yet to produce them. Kreg Rencroft was half-tempted to test the Glit-
ter Boy’s rail cannon on one of the corner towers, but the thought of what
unpleasant things might crawl out in response restrained him. Ever since his
rebel group had crossed into the pre-Rifts state of Ohio, the Army of the New
Order had found no one to fight. The fact was, they had seen almost no con-
centrated groups of life at all, with the exception of a mercenary organization
that had claimed the Lima oil wells as their own. Kreg was still amazed at
the charisma of their leader when he talked several mercenaries into joining
their fight against the Coalition. He didn’t particularly like the hired guns,
but most “Headhunters” were worth the price to hire them. Kreg still smiled
to himself. If the Headhunters knew what he did, no price would ever have
been high enough. That stupid Coalition officer that set him free from prison
and arranged passage to the Army of the New Order couldn’t have known
what the consequences would be. Now he piloted one of the most powerful
armored robot vehicles on earth and had been part of a plot responsible for
the downfall of many Coalition military officers and personnel. The informa-
tion they carried with them would shake the entire command structure; all the
way to the top. How they had gotten this far was a mystery, but he knew the
Coalition wouldn’t stop at any length to eliminate him and the leaders of the
New Order.
“New Order...” he scoffed.
Sometimes, he even believed the lies himself. Zenjori Suka had a way of
sounding believable even when Kreg knew he was contriving. The idiot re-
cruits had slowed down their progress, but Zenjori reminded him of the use-
fulness in distracting the enemy. Poor fools, Kreg mused, watching the un-
armored rebel recruits packed into hover rovers fly past castle walls. Zenjori
even had them believing their puny conventional weapons could penetrate
the chinks in Coalition battle armor. It still amused him to watch hundreds of
men, women, and D-Bees assault a squad of Coalition soldiers. Sometimes
almost all of them would die before they realized their futility and tried to
flee. Without exception, the Coalition would chase them right down the bar-
rel of his Boom Gun.
When the full potential of the stolen data had become apparent, Zenjori
had wisely chosen to sever ties with their operative in the Coalition Espio-
94
nage Division and make a run for the Coalition States’ most dreaded enemy:
The Federation of Magic. The reasoning of Notec Depi, Zenjori’s closest
advisor and powerful psychic, had been to make a deal with the Federation;
protection in payment for the information they could provide. So far, they
had been unable to contact the elusive Federation. One hundred and forty
miles ago they supposedly crossed into Federation territory on the plains and
had come up with nothing, but then the Coalition hadn’t been able to find
them yet, either.
“I want you to hold the rear position until everyone is past the castle.
Drake is looking for a good place to cross the river about five miles up. We’re
taking the northern highway instead of the southern one, just thought I’d let
you know.”
A voice played from the communication system.
“We decided to try Akron after all, then?”
“We aren’t getting any response from the castle, so we’ll go northeast
through the hills. Akron must have a Federation establishment.”
“I’d take a wager they already know we’re here. Seen enough sacrificial
monuments, and that D-Bee clan a few miles back was terrified of the Fed-
eration.”
“Yes, but Notec said none of the temples had been used recently. Akron
is our next destination. There’s a small lake to the east of Akron. We’ll stop
there for the night. Food supplies are getting low, so it may be time to stop
for a while. Hold there until we’ve reached the hills, but stay concealed in
that grove of trees past the road. Let me know if so much as a pebble moves
on the citadel, okay Kreg?”
“Sure thing.”
Moving to a clump of buckeye trees, Kreg positioned the Glitter Boy so
that it was partly hidden by a cluster of shrubs. That castle was creepy, and he
could feel eyes watching him from its walls. This close proximity to a giant
nexus point of ley lines didn’t help his edginess. It would be noon before long,
and he’d seen many Rifts tear open at midday and midnight. Stone pillars sur-
rounded the nexus, doubtlessly placed there by the castle’s inhabitants. For
the first time, Kreg noticed the absence of wild animals, birds, and rodents.
Throughout the journey, there had been wild pigs, herds of once-domesticat-
ed livestock and flocks of birds living in clumps of buckeye trees. There were
none here. “The animals must know something I don’t,” he thought.
“Hurry up!” cursed the full conversion ‘Borg on recon. “Find a spot so I
can get away from here.”
____________________

Cross-hairs scanned the fields for targets to converge on. Set up in a defen-
sive position in the depression of a collapsed overpass, the Coalition soldiers

95
waited for the hordes of slobbering monsters to spring from hiding and as-
sault them.
“There! See it? That black dot moving towards us!” Cowboy’s finger
fought to pull the trigger.
Sharp switched to telescopic on his AQ-3.
“That’s Darren! Dangit! Easy with the trigger finger, Cowboy.”
“I know they’re out there, just waitin’ for us,” Cowboy said. He seemed
to have a lot of supporters.
“Mount up!” Greg ordered loudly. Several startled recruits discharged
their weapons accidentally.
“Hey, I didn’t hear anyone tell you to fire your weapons!” Winters kicked
a recruit. “Did you hear anyone tell you to start shooting?!” Several soldiers
tried to flip safeties back on without being noticed.
“Dave, you take point, no more than 25 mph. Trenton, cover the rear.
Sharp, go wide five miles but report in every ten minutes. Same orders on the
Hovercraft. Darren, keep running perimeter,” commanded Greg.
“But Lieutenant Sorenson ordered me to run rear about ten miles, sir.”
Greg breathed deeply. He was beginning to dislike the command arrange-
ment even more.
“Darren, run perimeter,” Greg ordered.
“Yes, sir.” Darren knew something was up, but figured Greg wouldn’t
intentionally mess him over. He wasn’t sure about the espionage officer.
“Sergeant Winters, keep the squad moving. Lieutenant Sorenson and I are
moving ahead for a recon.”
“Move out! Private Peterson, do not point your weapon at the rover in
front of you!” Winters bawled reprimands as the S&D unit left cover for
open ground.
“Merrick to Sorenson, come in,” Greg used a direct communications link.
“Sorenson here. Go ahead.”
“You and I need to recon ahead. I’m interested in hearing how you picked
up the rebel trail so quickly, and what became of our fire-breathing friend.”
“Dragon’s gone, no sign. Found several Titan combat robot tracks along
with the Glitter Boy prints a few miles back. They already passed through
here toward the east. I’m perfectly capable of handling a reconnaissance
alone, but I appreciate your offer. As long as you’re keeping Darren on pe-
rimeter, then I assume you intend to take his place on rear patrol? I don’t want
a dragon attacking us from behind, do you?”
“I don’t think a dragon would be restricted to a rear attack, Lieutenant.
Just the same, we need to talk.”
“No, we don’t. We didn’t come out here to screw around, Lieutenant. I
want this done and to be gone. I need a rear and perimeter patrol; you can
decide if that’s you or Darren. I’m flying ahead to confirm the rebel location.
Keep radio chatter to a minimum. I don’t want to take the chance the rebels

96
are eavesdropping. They do have stolen radios. I want you to pick up the
speed to 35 mph and maintain it as evenly as possible. Sorenson out.”
“Listen up!” Greg’s voice betrayed anger over the comm. “Increase the
pace to 35 mph. Weapons on setting 3, and do not fire until the order is given.
Maintain radio silence except in combat situations where it is required.”
Sitting in the pilot’s compartment, Dave detached the Enforcer’s leg
clamps from his armor and leaned back. The robot could handle the relatively
even ground without the added stability afforded by direct control. Certainly
not as smooth a ride compared to a hover rover, but Dave could deal with a
bumpy ride in exchange for the protection of the Enforcer’s armor. Being the
slowest member of the unit, the Enforcer set the pace. Normally capable of
running up to 60mph, Dave had seldom pushed the Enforcer that hard. Fall-
ing at these speeds was extremely unpleasant, even strapped inside the pilot’s
compartment. Lisa monitored communications, scanning for signals foreign
to the unit’s transmitters. Faint, garbled messages could be picked up from
the direction they traveled, but it was difficult to estimate distance or decode
their signals.
Alert eyes and combat postures gradually deteriorated into complacency.
With exception to a wooden shrine discovered by Sharp and a pair of rivers,
the past hour had been uneventfully boring.
“Lieutenant, I thought you should know we have an incoming airborne
on radar. Not a SAMAS.” Lisa directed her information to Greg’s SAMAS,
flying rear guard.
“Merrick here. Distance?”
“Six miles, very low to the ground; that’s why I didn’t register it earlier.
Computer identification coming up...NG-A70. It’s a Sky King, sir.”
“Full stop. Jerry, deploy for an air defense. Dave, send a hail. If it gets
within one mile, take it down fast. Darren, what’s your 20?”
“I was about to go shoot down that Sky King headed toward the convoy
unless you have something else for me to do. I’m ridin’ about a mile and a
half north-east of 126’s position. Want me to rip it a new one?”
“No, I want you to advance about ten miles and check for ground troops.
Lisa’s picked up some signals from up ahead – and don’t fire until fired upon,
understood?”
“Yes, sir!” Finally, some action, Darren thought.
“Sky King, you are approaching a Coalition convoy, do you wish to en-
gage?” Lisa made the Coalition’s position clear. A well-armed Sky King
fighter could present a serious threat if allowed to come within the range of
its twin rail guns and mini-missile launchers. A forward laser cannon added
its firepower to the quick VTOL jet fighter. But with an open cockpit and
limited defensive armor, no pilot in his right mind would attack a military
force the size of the Coalition’s S&D unit.

97
“He’s breaking off, sir,” Lisa responded. The Sky King slowed, turned,
and flew back the way it came.
“Darren, do not chase the Sky King.”
“Wasn’t even thinking about it, sir. ‘Sides, I couldn’t catch it anyway. Oh,
boy, think we might want to change course sometime soon. A ton of activity
about seven miles from your 20. Looks like city ruins and some oil rigs, most
of ‘em ain’t runnin’, but some of ‘em are. Sky King’s cuttin’ wind to some
kinda fort.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Can’t tell too good from here, but looks like they got some ‘Bots and
heavy machinery running. Your pal Sorenson say anything about this?”
“No. Don’t do anything threatening, Darren. Just keep observing. Might
be a chance our Glitter Boy is holed up in another ruin, and Lieutenant So-
renson’s running silent.”
“Might be he got wasted,” Darren suggested happily.
“Doubt it. Lisa, call up SAM 179’s medical readout.”
“Just a sec. Nothing, Lieutenant. Either it’s past the thirty-mile transmis-
sion range or the SAMAS is completely disabled.”
“You getting all of this, Jerry?”
“Loud and clear. Must be over the rise, all I see is haze from here. You
may want to come up from rear guard and have a look yourself.”
“Stay in a defensive posture. Lisa, keep trying to decipher their transmis-
sions. I’ll be there shortly. Merrick out.”
Lisa narrowed the code-breaking parameters to frequency shifts com-
monly used on Northern Gun manufactured radio equipment. Seconds later a
match declared itself loudly, ear-shattering radio chatter filling the Enforcer’s
pilot compartment.
“Sorry, Dave.” Lisa switched the receiver to her helmet. Eight miles away,
a heavily armed group was preparing to defend itself against an all-out Coali-
tion onslaught. Talk of sieges and invasions amid arguments for and against
abandoning the oil wells. None of the conversations disclosed any mention of
the Glitter Boy or the rebel forces they pursued.
“Enforcer 126 to Lieutenant Merrick, over.”
“Merrick here. Go ahead, Lisa.”
“I’ve broken their transmissions, sir. Sounds like they’re gearing up to
defend against a full-scale invasion. By us, no less. I haven’t heard anything
regarding our targets, but they could be hiding out in the ruins. If they are,
we’re probably gonna have to fight our way through some pretty tough resis-
tance just to get to them.” Lisa explained her interpretation of the transmis-
sions she was eavesdropping on.
“Okay, contact Lieutenant Sorenson if you can, and apprise him of the
situation.”

98
“Sorry sir, but unless I know where Lieutenant Sorenson is at, I’ll be
broadcasting to anyone who happens to be in the same general direction.”
Greg landed twenty meters down the road from the Enforcer. He couldn’t
see Darren, and that worried him.
“Merrick to SAM 15, do you read me?”
“What’s up, Lieutenant?”
“What are you doing?”
“Watching a bunch of chickens run around with their heads cut off.”
“You did what!?”
“No, no, not literally. Did we do something to these guys? They don’t
look like they’re planning to welcome us with flowers and home. I’ve seen
a Northern Gun Hunter ‘Bot, couple Sky Kings, and like a dozen Samson
power armor units, but I could’ve counted the same ones over again.”
“Any sign of our target?”
“Nothing so far.
“What now?!”
“Never seen one in real life, but I’d bet that’s an Ulti-Max they’ve got
down there. Can we go home now?”
“Sharp to Merrick, over.”
“Go ahead.”
“Confirmation on X-1000 Ulti-Max. Also, a pair of NG-V10 robot ve-
hicles moving debris to block roadways. It’s hard to make out exact numbers,
but at least forty armored troops. Protrusions on the fort walls, possibly mis-
sile launch systems. Do you want me to move in closer?”
“Negative. Keep your distance, Sharp. Any sign of our targets?”
“None. Glitter Boy or no Glitter Boy, it doesn’t take a military specialist
to figure out we’re outgunned here. I’ll see if I can spot anything in the ruins.
Sharp out.”
“Lisa, try and make contact with the fort,” Greg ordered.
“Sir?”
“These aren’t members of the Federation of Magic, it’s probably an oil
retrieval expedition of some kind. Try and make contact, then patch me in
to them.”
Lisa could have transmitted to the fort commander directly and by name
but didn’t want to give up the advantage of listening to their transmissions.
“Unidentified fortress, this is a Coalition convoy to your west. Are you
receiving our transmission? Respond on U.F.-12.”
The pirated transmissions went Crazy. No question they were being re-
ceived, but the response was long in coming.
“This is Fort Lima, Coalition convoy. Do not approach us or our equip-
ment. We will defend ourselves. Repeat, do not approach us or our equip-
ment!” A strong voice with a northern accent warned them off.

99
“Fort Lima, this is Lieutenant Merrick of the Coalition State Chi-Town.
We have no intention of destroying your base or equipment unless you are
harboring...”
“They’re not here, Merrick” the voice sneered. “You’ll never catch them
now, they’re probably already booking it for New Lazlo. Don’t think you can
intimidate us, we’re not afraid of you!”
“They’re intimidated,” Winters breathed to Brian. “First time somebody
tells you they’re not intimidated, you know they’re crappin’ their britches.”
The unit listened to the conversation on the comm. None of them thought it
would be other humans they would be encountering in the wastelands.
“How long ago did they pass through? The Glitter Boy and the others, that
is,” Greg baited the question.
“About a week ago, at least a week,” Lima’s spokesman replied.
“Went north!” Somebody in the background was offering suggestions.
“We don’t care what you do to them. They stole some petrol, and raped our
women, and broke our equipment. Go away and attack them, not us.”
Greg pondered the situation. In one thruster-assisted leap, he was along-
side Sergeant Winters.
“What do you think, Jerry?” Greg wanted his friend’s opinion.
“We could take ‘em. We’d lose some men, take some damage, use most
of our armament, but we could take ‘em. If you’re askin’ should we?” Jerry
shook his head. “No, not unless we know for sure our targets are down there.”
“All right. We can’t risk moving on without making sure we’re not run-
ning past them. They could still be hiding in the city ruins. I could leave
Sharp here and move the unit around the fortress, but we still don’t know
which way the rebels went.”
“South, judgin’ by Mr. ‘I’m not intimidated’ down there.”
“Okay. Set up a defensive position. I’m sending Darren north to look for
any sign of the rebels. Meanwhile, I want a look at Fort Lima.”
____________________

Time stretched longer than reality for Mike. Crouched in a thicket over-
looking the rebel encampment, a Titan flying power armor had kept him
pinned down for over an hour, but it seemed longer. Next time the exoskel-
eton circled down past the lake, he’d make a break for his SAMAS he’d
stashed in a copse of trees across an open field behind where he’d lay down.
They didn’t know he was there, and he wanted it to stay that way. He needed
some equipment stashed inside the Enforcer, and that night he’d light up the
rebel camp with missile detonations.
Keeping low, He moved quickly to put a rise between himself and the ar-
mored exoskeleton, then broke into a full run. Not many people could match
his speed and endurance on the track, and even fewer over uneven terrain;
four minutes later he found his SAMAS where he’d left it.
100
Donning the armored suit, he sent a direct scrambled transmission to
where, most likely, the unit was located.
“Enforcer 126, this is SAM 179. Do you read me?” He paused, waiting
for the reply.
“This is Enforcer 126, loud and clear, Lieutenant.” Lisa’s voice sounded
cheerful. “We tried to raise you earlier, but you didn’t respond.”
“Keep communications to a minimum. You’re near the oil wells, correct?”
“Yes.”
“Tell Lieutenant Merrick to move the unit around the oil wells and con-
tinue along the highway on the other side. I’ll meet up with the unit shortly.
Sorenson out.”
“126 out.”
Mike was cautious not to reveal his presence. There was still the possibil-
ity the rebels could crack the scramble – if they had received it at all – and
they’d run for sure if Mike had mentioned his discovery of their campsite.
Recalling from memory the aerial photos he’d pored over before the mis-
sion, Mike planned a route that would bring the Seek & Destroy unit within
striking distance by nightfall. With any luck, it would all be over by morning.
Mike avoided places that might harbor life but stayed low to avoid radar
detection. The rebels had a Titan-make combat robot with a thirty-mile radar
system. The Titan robot represented the second most dangerous threat, with
ten medium-range missiles and similar armament to the Enforcer. Toe-to-toe
the Titan stood ten feet taller than the Enforcer, but a good RPA could even
the match and bring down the larger combat robot. It would be preferable
to capture the robot and return it for examination; the Coalition hadn’t yet
discovered where the Titan series of robots and power armor were being
manufactured. Capture wasn’t always an alternative, however.
The S&D unit hadn’t covered as much ground as he’d expected. Stopped
beside a foul-smelling river, the Enforcer scanned the surrounding area to
discover the reason for the bloated carcasses of cattle and a score of smaller
animals rotting at its banks. Partially submerged in mud was a new farm trac-
tor, its driver slumped over the steering wheel, dead.
“Sorenson to Lieutenant Merrick, over.”
“Greg. What’s your 20?”
“Near the collapsed bridge. Why did you stop?” Mike was perturbed at
losing time.
“Before I sent the Enforcer into the river, I wanted to find out what’s kill-
ing off everything along the bank. Why didn’t you check in?”
“Sorry, Greg. I would have, but it wasn’t possible. I found the rebel en-
campment about seventy miles from here.”
“Already? That was quick.” Greg was suspicious. Entire units of mecha
couldn’t locate the rebels in several days, but the espionage officer had found
them in a matter of hours. He didn’t like it.

101
“They didn’t cover their tracks very well.”
“Must not have. Lisa, this is Greg. What have you got?”
“High levels of radiation in the river. Something upstream is polluting the
water.”
“Will the Enforcer be alright to cross?” Sorenson cut in.
“Yes, sir. Radiation shielding in the robot will prevent any serious dam-
age. Body armor should be alright, too.”
“Excuse me, sir.” Brian had been listening, “but it’s not that easy. Radia-
tion is going to cling to the Enforcer with residual contamination from mud
and water. It might be better to cross upriver, past whatever is causing the
radiation,” he suggested.
“We don’t have time for that, but thank you, Corporal.” Sorenson wanted
to move on.
“Lieutenant Merrick to SAM 15.”
“Yeah, go ahead.” Darren’s distracted response was ignored for the mo-
ment.
“Lisa says the river is contaminated with radiation. Have you found any-
thing upriver that might be a source?”
“Yeah, maybe. Could be this hacked-up Northern Gun ‘Bot I passed half
a mile back. ‘Spose the power supply’s been busted?”
“Good chance of it. What kind of robot?”
“Hunter. At least, I think it used to be. Pretty messed up, claw marks all
over it. Wouldn’t wanna run into whatever tried to eat it for breakfast.”
“Lisa, could the breached power supply have caused this?” Greg asked the
more knowledgeable tech officer.
“I think so, sir. If we crossed upriver the radiation wouldn’t be as bad.
Brian’s right, we’d be hot just from crossing, and it would take longer to
decontaminate than it would to go upriver. We’re being exposed just waiting
here.”
“Then you have your orders. Meet Darren upriver and find a safer ford.
Jerry, I want you to take the unit up there with the Enforcer, no separation,
understand?”
“Roger.” Jerry leaped to his hover rover. “Don’t wanna meet whatever
downed the Hunter by myself.”
“Lieutenant Sorenson, you and I need to discuss battle tactics. I’ll meet
you up the road a couple miles.” Greg moved in for a showdown.
“You go ahead. I need to check on a few things. Sorenson out.”
Mike was annoyed at having his wishes not followed, but in this case,
Greg had been correct, though he hated to admit it. Leaping nimbly onto
the half-submerged tractor, he looked the construction over carefully. New
paint, very little wear and tear, and yet pre-Rifts manufacturing techniques
appeared to have been used. Somewhere, a three-hundred-year-old facility
had been restored and put back into operation. No visible markings indicated

102
its origin, but more than likely it was somewhere within the state; that meant
an industrial-oriented town existed in the vicinity. The military specialist had
a pretty good notion as to where.
The disfigured remains of what was once a thirty-two-foot-tall heavy
labor/combat robot lay partly covered in sand on the river bank, one arm
stretched out, fingers grasping an uprooted tree. Several meters away on the
bank was the turret-style rail gun that used to be where the robot’s head should
have been. Meter-long gouge marks showed the battle was hard fought. Long
gashes in the armor showed where clawed nails had done their work. Mike
pried open the access panel on the forearm mini-missile launcher; it was
empty. Either the robot had been ill-equipped, or its mini-missile payload had
been spent. The lack of blast marks in the surrounding area indicated the fight
may have been fought mostly hand-to-hand. Mike didn’t recognize the claw
marks, but estimated the monster was at least several meters taller than the
giant robot it dismembered. Doubtless, its occupants were a long time dead.
“Merrick to Lieutenant Sorenson, do you copy?” He asked in an angry
tone.
“Sorenson here. Just finishing my examination of the NG Hunter. Has the
unit reached your location yet?”
“Yes. It would be nice to know where we’re going.”
“Follow the road, I’ll be there shortly. Have Trenton ride in a hover rover,
and pick up the speed to 50 mph. I want you to send Sharp forward no more
than thirty miles; low profile reconnaissance, staying ten to twenty miles
ahead along the roadway. Same travel formation. Sorenson out.” He circled
the broken Hunter one more time, then flew to join the rest of the unit.
____________________

Towering nearly eighteen meters, the misshapen, winged monstrosity


filled Sharp’s weapon sight.
“Sharp to Lieutenant Merrick. I think I just found what ripped up the NG-
V7.”
“Merrick here,” he answered before Mike could respond. “Location?”
“About two miles from where I’m at. It can’t see me for now. I’m on a
bluff overlooking the road. Far as I can tell, it just flew over to the roadway
for no reason, and it’s waiting for something. I’m about twelve miles east of
you, three miles beyond a city ruins’ nexus. Over.”
“Waiting? What does it look like?”
“I’d say over fifty feet tall, big wings, scaly skin, stands on its hind legs.
Heck if I know what it is. Over.”
“Sorenson here. Does it have horns running from the head down its neck?”
He was afraid this might be the little dragon’s big brother.
“No. Real ugly, though, slobbers a lot. Kinda grey-black color, with white
patches. It can’t hear you that far off, can it?”
103
“Not likely,” Mike answered, “but not impossible. Don’t attack it, Sharp.
Wait for some heavy support. If we’re lucky, it will fly off before we arrive.”
“Bad news, Lieutenant. Now it’s flying towards you.”
“Keep your distance, Sharp,” Greg advised. “It’s probably hungry. Mer-
rick out.”
“Sure thing, Lieutenant. I’m not going to be an appetizer. Sharp over and
out.”
“Hold up!” Greg ordered. “Jerry, set up for an attack. It might not be
alone. Trenton, start down the road. We’ll need some ground fire. You, and
you on the hovercycle,” Greg pointed to a pair of veterans, one with a jet pack
and the other riding a hovercycle, “go with Trenton. Dave, I want you to go
ahead, but whatever you do, don’t let it get too close – use missiles if neces-
sary. SAM 15, you reading this?”
“Headhunter.”
“You’re going to intercept with Lieutenant Sorenson. I don’t want this
monster to get close enough to step on my hover rovers, understand?”
“No sweat, Lieutenant.”
“Lieutenant Merrick, we could use your assistance,” Mike requested, a
warning in his voice. “The more firepower the better.”
“I’m remaining with the platoon for heavy support. The rest of you should
be sufficient to slow it down and kill it.”
“But a third would help a great deal. I suggest you assist.” Mike was test-
ing him. Greg had come up from the ranks as an NCO, but his actions were
overly cautious. Mike wondered if they arose from sincere caution or cow-
ardice.
“Lieutenant Sorenson, I’ll not leave my men unprotected from an unan-
ticipated assault.” Greg’s tone was severe, so Mike decided to accept it, for
the time being. Without dispute, there were terrors hiding all around, waiting
for a sign of weakness.
Darren and Mike flew ten meters apart at 200 mph, differences forgotten
at the approach of danger. To the south, a ley line rippled in broad daylight,
stretching into the ruins of a pre-Rifts city.
“Darren, don’t get in close. As soon as you’re in range start firing, but
keep about 2000 feet between you and the monster. Be very careful here; I
don’t need to be caught in a crossfire, and neither do you. Make sure every
shot is clear before you pull the trigger.”
“No sweat, dude.”
Mike let it go. Etiquette could slip at times like this. Ahead, a large shape
with extended wings made its way toward them.
“Five thousand feet and closing,” Mike stated. “Slow down, let it get to
about 3500 feet.” Using maximum magnification, he centered the targeting
dot on the center of the monster’s mass. Kinetic slugs crossed the open space,
striking it in the chest as it flew; the projectiles only aggravated the predator.

104
He fired twice more, both apparently doing little damage to the enormous
monster, seeming only to make it madder.
Dropping to its feet, the ugly head searched for the source of the stinging
pain, as two tiny specks sped toward it. Darren lost hold of his weapon, spray-
ing an open field with forty rail gun rounds. Fumbling, he caught hold of it,
training the dot on the creature’s head. It must have heard or seen the attack
coming because it moved enough that forty slugs just nicked its ear, and the
next burst narrowly missed it’s bobbing neck.
“It’s anticipating our attacks!” Mike shouted over the comm. “Split wide.
It can’t keep track of both of us.”
The two SAMAS circled the beast, crossing within 1000 feet. Its head
followed Mike’s SAMAS, green eyes assessing prey. Firing repeatedly, both
connected time after time with rail gun bursts, each attack penetrating the
scaly skin and drawing black blood from superficial wounds.
Approaching on a hovercycle, the veteran grunt set his C-12 to the auto-
matic five-round burst. Bracing the barrel on the windscreen, he threw bursts
of laser blasts wildly at the giant creature. As one burst scored holes in the
scaly legs, the monster threw its head up in rage and leapt high, wings ex-
tended. Coming down in the cycle’s path, it swung ferociously and connected
with the craft, teeth bared in a snarl.
Thrown clear of his cycle, the soldier sailed over twenty-five meters,
bouncing once before sliding into a grassy ditch. The hovercycle ricocheted
off the grassy surface, flying ten meters skyward before cartwheeling to a
stop several dozen meters away.
The creature ignored the rail gun blasts tearing its hide from behind. Mike
hovered some sixty meters away, throwing kinetic slugs into its flesh with-
out ceasing. With one flap and a leap, it came down just meters from the
soldier’s stunned body, clawed feet sinking into the soft earth. Giant sharp
claws reached downward, mouth open in anticipation of the crunchy morsel.
Ignoring Mike’s orders to keep his distance, Darren dropped into the ditch
and ran toward his fallen comrade, left arm coming up to shield his head
as two plasma warhead mini-missiles streaked into the monster’s wounded
chest. Burning bits of scales and smoking chunks of flesh burst from the gap-
ing wound. Reeling more from surprise than impact, it took a step back, rais-
ing its clawed hand to its bleeding wound. Darren snatched the soldier under
his left arm, his mini-missile tubes still smoking. A terrifying shriek from the
monster was followed by a surprisingly quick slash, but Darren hopped back,
and the claw missed by centimeters, tearing into the soil. Distracted for an
instant by laser blasts burning its shoulder, the beast turned on the jet pack-
borne soldier, giving Darren his chance to fly the wounded hovercycle rider,
Brian, to safety.
Mike resumed his rail gun barrage. Three more bursts brought the creature
to its knees; it turned toward him with rage in its inky eyes, black blood spill-

105
ing from its veins. Mike ported the rail gun, preparing it for a more accurate
shot in case he needed the accuracy, while still hovering in mid-air.
“Sayonara!” He let loose a pair of plasma mini-missiles from the left
forearm launcher. Entering the chest cavity between two shattered ribs, the
plasma warheads detonated. Flesh and tendon peeled from bone, bursting
outward, sending organs and partially congealed flesh outward from both
sides of its body. With a gaping orifice where its chest had been, the giant
creature fell lifeless to the blood-slick ground.
____________________

The intakes were clogged with dirt and a maneuvering rod was snapped
on the hovercycle. All in all, it had fared very well. Brian removed the ma-
neuvering rod connected to a hover thruster and began welding it back to-
gether beside the road. The driver had been extremely fortunate. While Brian
couldn’t repair the fractures in his own armor with simple field tools, at least
rain-softened earth had broken a great deal of his fall. Bruised and dazed,
he’d ride in the hover rover a while; a new recruit allowed the privilege of
riding his damaged hovercycle. Moderately armored, Coalition hovercycles
could survive a decent amount of punishment and continue to operate. Most
of the grunts walked around gawking at the monster’s corpse while Brian
made repairs.
“Almost done?” Lisa’s cheerful voice startled him so badly, he almost
burned his fingers. She stood a few feet away, her blond hair a sharp contrast
to black armor.
“Oh, hi, Lisa. I thought you weren’t supposed to leave the Enforcer?”
“I’m not, but it wasn’t fair that you had to do all the work. Actually, Lieu-
tenant Sorenson suggested I help speed things up. He’s pretty cute, don’t you
think?”
“I don’t make it a habit to assess other men’s looks,” Brian said, forcing
the rod back in place. “If you know what I mean.”
“I suppose.” Lisa started pulling clumps of grass from the air intake. “So,
you think I have a chance with him?”
“Who?” Brian pretended not to know.
“The Lieutenant, Mike Sorenson.”
“He’s a military specialist, Espionage Division. I don’t trust him.”
“But do you think I have a chance with him?”
“I don’t think I like him, either.” Brian looked over to where Mike was
recording the monster with a camera. “He’s a fool.”
“What makes you say that, Brian?” Lisa was praying for jealousy. Maybe
Brian would give up if the competition was stiff enough.
“The way he just assumes everyone’s under him. I don’t usually mind
taking orders, but he makes sure that you know you’re the lesser person in
his eyes.”
106
“Well, I don’t feel that way. He seems to respect me pretty well,” Lisa
said, letting enthusiasm show in her voice. Brian’s face darkened, then fo-
cused on his work.
Finishing in silence, Lisa replaced her helmet.
“Lieutenant Sorenson, this is Lisa. Cycle’s fixed now.”
“Thank you, Lisa. Return to your post, please,” was the cool reply.
“Enough rubbernecking! It’s just another dead D-Bee! You’re gonna see a
lot more of ‘em. Git yer butts back to the rovers!” The Sergeant’s voice sent
recruits and veterans scurrying for the grounded vehicles. “Could anybody
tell me whose this is?” He held up a C-12 assault rifle. “Private Brenner, this
better not be yours!”
“No, Sergeant! Mine is right here, sir!” Her voice shouted triumphantly
from the rover. A shame-faced recruit loped back to retrieve the rifle he left
in the excitement.
“Sorry, Sarge.” He took the rifle and turned to get a metal boot to his
armored rear.
“Next time I’m gonna glue that gun to your hands!”
____________________

Lisa lowered herself into the Enforcer’s pilot compartment. Dave was
messing with her controls, the scratchy reception fading in and out.
“Hi Lisa.” Dave took his hands away from the controls. “I think Sharp is
trying to contact us.” Lisa strapped herself in.
“This is Enforcer 126, do you copy?” A garbled message was the reply.
Lisa reset the controls and repeated the message, listening for a cleaner re-
sponse.
“Thi...arp...ere...,...u...opy?”
“Sounded like Sharp. Can’t you boost the signal?” Dave asked.
“Not from this end. Sharp’s carrying a short-wave transmitter. If he’s too
far out of range or there’s too many hills in the way, I can’t do much. Where’s
Darren?”
“Forward patrol, about seven miles.
“Enforcer 126 to SAM 15, come in please.”
“Hey, babe, what’s up?”
“I need you to switch your receiver to channel 19.”
“That’s scrambled.”
“Yes, I know. Sharp’s trying to reach us, but he’s out of range. See if you
can make out what he’s saying. Over.”
“Roger.” Dave and Lisa waited for the relayed message.
“You still there, Lisa?”
“Yes. Go ahead.”
“Sharp’s comin’ in real bad, but understandable. Says he’s like thirty-five,
forty miles away, near this stone castle. Pretty creepy place, he says. Any-
107
way, he found some Glitter Boy prints in this group of trees he’s hiding in.
Says it looks pretty clear up to this point, but he’s gonna watch this castle and
make sure nothin’ comes out to attack us.”
“I’ll pass the message on. Keep monitoring him until the Enforcer gets in
range, Private,” she said, playfully.
“Yeah, yeah, SAM out.”
Dave leaned back, resting his feet on a control console. He’d missed out
on the winged creature, and now it would be at least another boring hour be-
fore they reached this stone castle. Maybe he’d be able to take on some evil
magic-user or slay a giant demon. Anything would be better than attacking
a Glitter Boy.
____________________

A single, barrel-sized eye floated a meter above the stone wall, invisible
to normal human vision. What it saw, those in the castle fortress saw as well,
recreated by means of magic into a three-dimensional view of the approach-
ing Coalition convoy. They had watched a power armor unit circle wide
around the castle and nexus compound, also noting the soldier hidden in the
hedge for over an hour. A slender man in his late fifties observed the events
with keen interest. Neatly trimmed silver hair was cut into a heart throb style
and had been run back over his head to a loose and dashing effect. The black
suit and grey turtleneck gave him a relaxed, but distinguished appearance.
He might have been mistaken for a scholar or diplomat rather than one of the
most powerful mages in the Federation of Magic. Sitting around the circular
stone table, his apprentices waited for him to speak. The group was made up
of both D-Bees and humans. These were his most ambitious and fortunate
pupils, privileged to sit at the stone table with its mystic symbols and inlays.
Privileged to learn the ways of magic, the subtleties of inflection and verse,
that unlocked gates to other dimensions. Privileged to acquire precious spell
knowledge, carefully kept secret from the undeserving. Each one presently
observing the intrusion was fully capable of destroying the convoy without
aid from the others. They waited for the gesture of approval that would send
the Coalition invaders to their graves – or worse.
“Curious,” the master spoke at last. “Do they not know the vast danger
they’ve exposed themselves to?” His voice was smooth and hypnotizing, a
man who could be a great orator.
“Perhaps they are spies, sent to find what there is to conquer,” a young,
dark-haired youth with pointed ears suggested.
“Ah, but their spies fly high in the skies above. They would see what there
is to conquer from the eye of a predatory bird. These soldiers tread upon the
soil like ants and cannot escape should they encounter defenders who wish to
crush them underfoot.”

108
“Master Valdor, if they have come this far, it would indicate great courage
or great stupidity. They may not know the true danger they are in.” A pale
woman in soft, black robes spoke from across the table. She appeared to be in
her late twenties, but her hair was white with age.
“Courage and stupidity are a hair’s breadth apart, Chalra. If they knew
what awaited them, how could it be anything but blatant stupidity? However,
if a large army invades our land behind them, then it is courage.”
“I should like to test their courage.” A strong female voice echoed off
the stone walls. A woman of extraordinary physique strode fearlessly into
the chamber. Normally an intrusion such as this could mean death for those
not in Master Valdor’s favor, but he smiled, welcoming the tall warrior. A
rust-colored mohawk fell to one side of her head and extended in a pony-tail
all the way down to her waist. Her sun-bronzed skin displayed many vividly
colored tattoos. She wore minimal clothing; a loose cloth left little to be re-
vealed. She carried no weapons, nor did she ever. Her magic derived from
the multiple tattoos across her body. Dark brown eyes met any opponent
fearlessly.
“Sahara. Come, tell us your explanation for this trespass.”
Valdor waved his arm graciously to an open chair normally reserved for
powerful apprentices. The Master’s hands were quite youthful, having never
been needed for manual labors. Sahara gracefully slid onto the cold stone
chair and faced the pupils at the table. None dared called themselves her
enemy.
“They’re here because they were ordered to be. Pawns, sacrificed to test
the strength of the enemy. I myself am interested in testing the abilities of
the mighty Coalition military forces. Master Valdor, I request permission to
do battle with them.” She addressed him with respect, though not one of his
pupils. Nobody acted without his permission.
“No, Sahara. They’ve piqued my curiosity. If I wanted to destroy them it
would be a trifling matter; engage them with a horrible apparition, and when
they’ve moved to where I desire, a simple command to my Earth Elemental
and they will be devoured by a river of lava beneath their feet.”
“But master,” a winged reptilian apprentice spoke up, “if they are allowed
to return, they will tell of weak borders and few defenders.”
“Ah, they have met with some resistance. If we were to destroy them now,
and they were an advance group for a large army, would we not single our-
selves out for destruction?”
“I say let them come, Master,” an apprentice with pale blue eyes and
dark hair suggested with confidence. “Let them come. If they destroy our
castle walls, we will build new ones from their bones. Let the sound of their
bleached bones crunching underfoot lead us all the way to the fortress city
they hide in.”

109
“Reed, you speak with the voices of many Federation Council Members.
Who hasn’t dreamt of one day marching over the blood-soaked earth to the
Great Fortress City? The thought of calling hellfire to melt down their edifice
of concrete and steel, to drink the life force of ten thousand souls consumed
within its blackened towers is one that many of us share. However, destruc-
tion for destruction’s sake and pain for pain’s sake is but shallow satisfaction.
Once I tortured a farmer’s wife to taste her pain and drink her life force as
she perished. But the delightful sensation was gone the next day, leaving me
with only a memory. To slay an opponent for the acquisition of his posses-
sions will grant you the use of his belongings, but his death is a wasted one.
Avenging life for life, or life for a thousand lives is a relentless pursuit. The
supreme pleasures cannot be obtained by mere mortal pain and suffering, nor
by mental and emotional anguish alone. The primitive cults that appear in our
land cannot grasp the concepts of death for pleasure and ultimate gain. I play
Angel’s Advocate here to let you impress upon yourselves the complete ful-
fillment of death, not in wasted mortality. Your gratification cannot be gotten
by simple impulse; death, pain, and anguish today will do nothing to placate
the impelling urges of tomorrow.
“The sentence pronounced is death, but not for all. The pain of existence
is far greater than the pain of death. We will all enjoy the pleasures of voy-
eurism. The grievances of our enemies will suffice today, tomorrow, and for
years to come.”
Reflecting on the words of their master, the apprentice mages sat in si-
lence; the projection of their enemies coming nearer.
“They are nearly here. When are we going to act?” Sahara’s voice startled
some of the mages.
“Soon, Sahara. Would it please you to fight them yourself?”
“Yes, that would please me.”
“You may have your opportunity, but only if they return this way again.
You may fight them when they once again pass my castle walls. For now,
their own actions will dictate how long that will be. I wish to discover if their
thirst for blood is more powerful than their hunger for survival.”
“What do you wish us to do, Master?” the pale woman at the table asked
softly.
“Send the Minor Earth Elemental you command to the grove of trees their
scout is concealed in. Let it inhabit the large hickory and wait upon your
command.”
“As you wish, Master.”
“Sorrel and Jargo, you will summon forth Tectonic Entities to construct
their bodies from the ancient roadway on which our enemies travel.”
“Yes, Master!” The reptilian apprentice and the young Elven pupil de-
parted to fulfill their orders.
“And what are you going to do?” Sahara asked.

110
“I shall summon forth another demon akin to the one they slew. I will
order it to stand in full view outside the castle walls and see if the bravery of
our enemies turns to stupidity. Gather your forces, Sahara. If they wish to do
battle here on our soil, you will bury them in it.”
“Thank you, Master!” Sahara’s eyes gleamed in anticipation. She longed
to test the strength of her foes.
“This afternoon should be most entertaining.” Master Valdor rose with a
fluid movement. “If we are fortunate, so will many mornings and afternoons
to come.”
____________________

Not so far away in the Federation of Magic, other eyes watched and
schemed to see weakness in Valdor’s actions. The slightest misstep on his
part could mean opportunity for another.

111
Chapter 6
Skirmish at Chippewa Lake
The armored vehicles drew near the forbidding castle. Cowboy searched
the castle walls for a target.
“That C-27 better be on safety,” Brian warned.
“I’m just lookin’ through the telescopic sight.”
“Then take your finger off the trigger. That castle is making me edgy
enough without you fondling that cannon.”
“Nothin’ wrong with the castle a couple a’ Fusion Blocks couldn’t fix.”
“Don’t be stupid. Would you go down to Level 5 with a pistol and start
shooting at gang members?”
“Hell no! What, and get my head blown off?”
“Exactly!”
“This is Lieutenant Merrick. Nobody is to fire upon the castle or anything
near the castle without my direct orders. Should we come under attack, limit
the use of weapons to energy types only; no explosives. We’re too close to
the rebels’ location to risk being heard.”
“This is Lieutenant Sorenson. We will be changing course in a few mo-
ments. Drop your speed to 10 mph and stay alert. Follow my lead.”
“Sharp to Lieutenant Sorenson, over?”
“Go ahead.”
“Do you want me to scout ahead?”
“No. I need you to make sure we’re not followed. Remain in your present
location until you receive additional orders.”
“Roger, Sharp over and out.”
Tensions were high, Sharp could tell just by listening to the commander’s
tone. The convoy was about a quarter mile from his hiding place, off the
crumbling road. For over an hour he’d patiently waited for a potential threat
to appear on the grey castle walls, but none had. He settled in, preparing to
remain even longer.
A tree branch creaked loudly. Sharp glanced around. The stillness hadn’t
disturbed a leaf on the bushes he was concealed in. The crackling sound grew
louder and continued. Sharp did a double take. With groans and pops, a gi-
ant hickory tree was leaning back, a demonic face appearing on the shifting
trunk. Grass rose in trails around the base, and dirt fell away from the rising
roots. Snapping hundreds of tiny roots, the tree lifted itself out of the ground
on a set of long, tendril-like legs formed by its main roots. A lower branch
bent towards the base, twigs and small limbs forming a clawed hand. With a
crackling pop, a vicious maw appeared in the trunk, below two knotted eyes.
“Uh, Lieutenant, we have a problem,” Sharp spoke calmly, unsure exactly
how to explain what the problem was.
“What’s going on, Sharp?” Greg’s voice sounded concerned.

112
“I think a tree would like to eat me.”
“Come again?!”
“The tree, sir. It’s looking at me, and it’s not happy.”
“What are you talking about, Sharp?” Greg wondered if Sharp had lost
his marbles.
The bushes Sharp was concealed in quivered, then came alive, wrap-
ping branches around his SAMAS’ legs, arms, and body. Entangled, Sharp
watched the tree roots intertwine, creating a more obvious pair of humanoid
legs. Towering above him, the tree gave him a disdainful look, then trudged
through the grove and broke into a run towards the convoy.
Sharp started the jet pack thrusters. Leaves and small twigs burned away
from behind him. Still partially wrapped in clinging branches, he flew sky-
ward, trailing part of the hedge, roots and all.
Chunks of the road surface and stones bounced along as though drawn
by a powerful magnet to a growing pile. Two more piles formed behind the
first. Dave stopped the Enforcer, not sure what to make of the strange phe-
nomenon. Greg stood next to Brian’s hover rover, watching the three piles of
debris some fifty feet away.
“Lieutenant! By the castle, look!” Trenton recognized the eighteen-meter
tall monster guarding the stone walls. It was still too far away to cause them
damage, but it wouldn’t take long to close the distance.
“Heads up, Lieutenant! You’ve got a really big weed growing in your di-
rection!” Sharp yelled over the comm. He was still in the midst of untangling
his weapon, while the deformed hickory tree rapidly closed in on the halted
convoy. Suddenly, three of the stone piles took humanoid form, each over ten
feet tall, and leapt forward. Stones and pebbles lifted from the roadway to pelt
the armored soldiers.
Seeing one of the debris piles coming directly for him, Dave fired a pair of
small anti-personnel lasers atop the Enforcer’s shoulders. Twin beams con-
verged, burning a meter-sized hole through the humanoid form. Not fazed
by the gaping hole, it proceeded to approach beneath the arc of the shoulder
lasers.
Plasma from Cowboy’s C-27 dematerialized the entire torso section of
one asphalt and stone creature, but it kept coming. Forty kinetic slugs from
the Lieutenant’s rail gun tore clear through the third creature, hardly causing
any visible damage. Mike flew overhead to fight the running hickory tree.
“Destroy these magic creatures and go north! Do not attack the castle!” he
shouted. “SAM 15, get back here on the double!”
Swinging the Enforcer’s leg, Dave connected with a vicious shin kick,
three protruding spikes penetrating deep into the asphalt and stone body.
Forced to remove itself from the spikes, the Tectonic Entity possessing the
debris-fabricated body lost its chance to hurt the robot. The Enforcer’s great
armored fist pounded the vaguely-shaped head flat. Stray laser beams scored

113
grooves in the roadway on either side; recruits and veterans alike vaporizing
any remains of the other two monstrosities.
Apparently unaffected by its smashed head and gaping torso, the entity
launched itself at the Enforcer’s leg. The kick and collision nearly made Dave
lose the robot’s balance, but the creature fell several meters away, only to
leap up and resume attacking. Almost singeing the Enforcer’s left leg, a laser
blast from Brian’s C-12 dismembered the asphalt monster’s leg. It continued
to crawl with single-minded purpose to maim the robot before its destruction.
Dave stomped its form repeatedly with the Enforcer’s foot, like squashing a
stubborn bug that refuses to die. Finally, its flattened form lay still, indented
into the road’s surface.
“Back in the rovers. Quickly!” Lieutenant Merrick shouted. “Get away
from the ley line, follow me! We must get as far from it as possible. Their
magic is stronger here. Quickly!”
“Travel north! I’ll catch up with you!” Mike’s voice ordered. For once,
the two agreed fully.
Normally a single slug from his rail gun would have punched through sev-
eral tree trunks larger than this one, but six bursts and two-hundred and forty
slugs later, Mike had only chipped bark off its surface. The horrific monster
that was once a normal hickory tree howled at the flying menace beyond the
reach of its branches. Then two of the of Mike’s mini-missiles assaulted it,
and it was powerless to defend against them. Splinters flew from a severed
limb, multiple wounds leaked sap, and gashes cut into the wooden trunk.
A word from its master freed it from the bonds that held it to this alien
place, and the elemental slipped back to its dimension of origin in an instant.
Limbs straightened, trunk sealed the wounds, and roots sunk back into the
earth. Darren arrived in time to see Mike deliver the killing blow.
C-40 kicked, laser dot trained on the hickory’s central trunk. The burst
snapped the tree in two, splinters of wood embedding themselves into the
soil. Leaves, twigs, and branches cracked and popped as the mighty hickory
crashed downward.
“Anybody want some kindling? Lieutenant Sorenson just killed a tree.
Excellent shooting, Lieutenant!” Darren’s words were baited; he wanted to
see what the military specialist would do.
“Did you see anything around the castle?” Mike ignored the remarks.
“No, sir, except another winged monster like the one we already killed.
It’s still where I saw it last, up on the wall. It’ll probably follow us later to-
night.”
“Leave it alone. Come on, I want to put some distance between the castle
and ourselves before nightfall.”
“What if there’s more of those things?”

114
“Then we’ll deal with them as they pose a threat. Stay away close, Dar-
ren, the rebels are probably heading toward Akron. You and I need to have a
discussion about you getting an attitude readjustment.”
“Merrick to Sorenson. How far do you intend to travel northeast before
telling us where the hell we’re going?” Greg had just about had enough se-
crecy. Mike had information his unit needed, and it was past time to share it.
“Sorenson here. Sharp and Darren, rejoin the others. Stay tight. Lieutenant
Merrick, I will give you a full briefing shortly. I’ve set a location for our base
camp, but I’m flying up there to clear it first. Continue your present course
and approximate speed. Sorenson out.”
Mike gazed at the stone castle, and the monstrous guardian holding its
distance. Whoever attacked them had allowed them to escape. That worried
him more than if it had been a battle fought tooth-and-nail to the bloody fin-
ish. He was being toyed with, but it wasn’t the time or place to discover why.
By midday tomorrow, he hoped to be riding a transport back to Chi-Town.
____________________

Crackling energy rippled across Kro-Mar’s strongly muscled wings. Fly-


ing along a ley line, the magic energy surged through his body, having ac-
celerated his natural regenerative powers and long-since healed his wounds.
Across the wide expanse of the untilled fields, towers that once housed thou-
sands of humans stretched their crumbling fingers to the sky. He could feel
the energy growing steadily as he approached the ruins. Surely a nexus must
exist there. So far there had been no sign of the armored thing that attacked
him, but Kro-Mar had time to search.
Something was coming to meet him. A human flying device. This kind
he’d seen before, but not up close. It would make a fine addition to his collec-
tion of human artifacts in his lair. In time, he might even figure out how to use
them all. Over the rise appeared several more human fighting machines and
beyond them a fortification. Fun exploration, and perhaps some nice gadgets,
too, he thought. A stinging pain drew blood from his scale-covered belly. The
flying thing was still far away, but it was making noise. Two smoke trails
sped toward him. Kro-Mar learned his lesson the first time, flapping once and
letting the mini-missiles fly below him. If the human wouldn’t come closer,
he’d just have to get closer himself. He banked slightly, stinging darts from
the human machine ripping a hole through his right wing.
Concentrating on a spot several meters above the Northern Gun Sky
King, Kro-Mar thought of himself as being there. Instead of teleporting like
planned, another pair of rail-gun bursts ripped a two-meter gash across his
chest. Two mini-missile trails left the speeding Sky King. Smaller than the
four objects that hit him earlier that day, Kro-Mar was curious to see if they
were activated by impact.

115
Speaking the words he’d memorized from a stolen spellbook, Kro-Mar
focused the energy surging through his veins, erecting a shimmering blue
wall ten meters away, between himself and the projectiles. His magical en-
ergy field collapsed under the mini-missile onslaught, but both detonated
warheads fell short of reaching him. His theory proven, Kro-Mar was content
knowing his magic could stop the man-made weapons. From another angle,
high-power laser beams cut into his back. The pain from the wounds was
starting to make him angry. Practically spitting the words from his mouth,
Kro-Mar surrounded his body with an aura invisible to the naked eye. A
laser blast from the second Sky King struck his neck just behind the base of
the skull, but Kro-Mar felt nothing as the amplified light dissipated over the
protective aura. Black spines on his head and neck bristled, his green scales
shimmering in the sunlight. Now he was ready to show these mortals the true
fury of a dragon.
Laughing haughtily at the Sky King pelting him with laser blasts, Kro-
Mar envisioned himself two meters above the flying craft. Still a baby as
far as dragons were concerned, his mastery of teleportation was far from re-
fined, but he managed to appear only a meter from his intended position. The
first Sky King fired twin rail cannons at the hovering dragon, sixty kinetic
slugs passing unaffected through the energy protection aura, and sinking into
the soft flesh of his side. This was intolerable! What defense did he possess
against the attacks that struck from thousands of feet and flew faster than he?
Striking him where the wings met his body, a pair of armor-piercing mini-
missiles from the second Sky King sent Kro-Mar flailing helplessly to the
ground below.
What was happening to him? Shot down twice in the same day. This just
didn’t happen to dragons. Kro-Mar ignored the pain and concentrated his
thoughts on the powerful ley line nexus two miles away.
When the giant form of the Great Horned Dragon appeared in their midst,
the Ratling cult members were certain their god had sent the horrible beast to
help them purge the land of human existence.
Kro-Mar looked around dizzily, feeling fortunate his teleport had been a
success. Rat-like humanoids were abasing themselves all around him on the
nexus. One of the Ratlings, adorned with bones from his fallen foes, came
shakily forward, offering Kro-Mar a bowl of blood.
“Thank you, Oh great and mighty Apepi! Your wish is our command!”
The Ratling lay prostrate before him, holding the bowl in outstretched hands.
Humans impaled on stakes surrounded the nexus, and insects swarmed over
the rotting remains of the dead. Several humans hung by the entrails from
twisted metal girders, scenes of torture and death decorating the Ratlings’
temple.
“Go away,” Kro-Mar rumbled. He was in a foul mood already; he didn’t
want to be bothered by some crazed death-cult fanatics.

116
“You have come to slay our enemies. None are braver than the Immortal
Apepi!”
“Go away.”
“It is the greatest honor to die serving the Eternal Apepi!”
“Go away!”
Four Ratlings dragged a broken and bleeding human to an altar, sticky
with thick, congealed blood. Kro-Mar was getting irate. He didn’t like any
of this.
“Go away, or I will tear every one of you limb from limb!”
“Please accept our gratitude, oh, Mighty and Invincible One. The life of
this sacrifice is yours! May none speak of Apepi without shivering in terror!”
Kro-Mar ate the Ratling.
____________________

Stretched out on the ground, and leaning against the trees, the soldiers got
what little rest they could. It would be nightfall in a few hours and time for
action. Cowboy, Rex, Nim, and Bill sat playing cards in one of the rovers.
Sharp and Private Brenner leaned against a fallen log, talking intensely. Brian
attached the spare ammo drum to the SAMAS, hefting the partially empty
one into the storage compartment of his rover. Winters slept peacefully under
a tree, C-27 held across his chest.
Lieutenant Sorenson and Lisa were inside the Enforcer feeding informa-
tion into the robot’s computer. Birds sang in the branches, a light breeze
gently rustled leaves. Greg took in the beauty of the clouds and sky and
looked over the peaceful encampment. Some of them wouldn’t live to see the
dawn. The thought saddened him. Mike had been quite cooperative once they
reached the campsite. According to his earlier reconnaissance, the number of
armed rebels now outnumbered them. The element of surprise would even
the odds, but casualties were inevitable. A daylight assault was his prefer-
ence, but Sorensen believed a night attack would be more effective. It was
possible, Greg told himself. Each weapon his soldiers carried was fitted with
a passive nightvision or infrared scope, giving them a substantial advantage
over an enemy shooting blindly in the dark. If events went his way, most of
the rebels could be downed before they’d have a chance to return fire.
Data from the day was being processed by the Enforcer’s computer. Maps,
directions, coordinates, and enemy assessment. Lisa sat resting against a con-
sole, taking in the Espionage specialist’s handsome form and physique. He
was just right, Lisa decided. Not over-muscled like Cowboy, but filled out
more than Brian’s wiry form. His confidence and intelligence were major
benefits too.
“I was wondering, Lieutenant, why you refused bionic augmentation?”
“What do you mean?” Mike hadn’t expected this question.

117
“Well, most specialists I’ve seen have at least a leg or arm replaced with a
bionic one, so they can put gadgets in it, but you don’t. Why?” She watched
his steel blue eyes.
Mike gave her a long look. This was out of the ordinary. Was she the spy
he suspected, or just curious? The real reason he hadn’t undergone augmenta-
tion was the detrimental effect it would have on his psychic abilities, but that
wasn’t the answer he was about to give.
“I guess you could say I’m a purist. I like to feel and move and act com-
pletely human, not part machine. Why do you ask?” He carefully probed
her mind telepathically, while asking the question. The response was equally
unexpected, but almost caused him to lose composure. A smile formed at the
edges of his mouth when Lisa spoke.
“I don’t know, just curious, I guess. I thought about training as a military
specialist for a while but never followed through. How long does it take?”
Her thoughts were vividly graphic and her emotions strongly erotic. Mike
reminded himself of his engagement, catching himself before he spoke of it
out loud.
“You must meet certain criteria before you’re even considered, then two
to four years, depending on your previous training.”
“What kind of criteria?”
“You take many tests, and undergo evaluation. How you handle pressure,
if you think on your feet well, how well you take orders. Many factors are
considered. If they don’t like your qualifications, you don’t get the training.
Someone like Darren could probably pass with flying colors, but would likely
be refused because he doesn’t pay attention to orders and disregards author-
ity.”
“So you have to be good at everything, more or less.”
“More or less, yes. But that doesn’t mean you will necessarily be accept-
ed.”
“Wow, sounds like you have to have a lot of commitment.” Lisa smiled
wide.
“That’s important, but you’re not a machine dedicated to duty, either. Not
every military specialist sits around studying intelligence reports and plan-
ning missions. Actually, you spend a lot of your time waiting for assignments,
which is nice, now and then. It gives me time to spend with my fiance.”
Her smile dropped slightly, but she continued her dialogue unaffected.
“Ohh, you’re engaged! When’s the wedding?”
“As soon as this mission is over. It was supposed to be sooner, but things
came up to delay it.”
“Is she really beautiful?”
“Yes, her name is Karren, and she’s very beautiful and quite charming.
She owns a fitness club on Level 28. Very successful for a twenty-three-
year-old.” Mike’s defenses snapped him around. Why was he telling all of

118
this to someone he didn’t even know? Focus on the mission, he told himself,
complete the mission or you won’t get back to Karren.
“Is the computer done accessing the data disk?” He asked.
“Oh, yes, it is,” Lisa responded, caught a little off guard by the change of
subject.
“And this contains all the targeting data I’ll need for tonight?”
“And then some.”
“Good, go ahead and program all six CMA-111-B missiles with full topo-
graphical coordinate information. After they reach the target site, their sen-
sors will need to read the exact strike points I paint with the laser.”
“If everything runs like it should, we could knock out the Glitter Boy from
forty miles away,” Lisa said as she began programming the smart missiles.
“Yes, but I don’t think six warheads will be sufficient. Furthermore, there
are several other targets to eliminate and that will require close-proximity
combat. That’s why you’re moving to a closer location before the missile
attack.”
“You must be very brave to risk the targeting laser beam being spotted and
to be so close without armor.” Lisa continued kissing up to the Lieutenant.
“It’s only dangerous if you’re discovered. Theoretically, I’ll be far enough
away by the time they figure out what’s happening. Besides, I’ll have an
Enforcer and a platoon of armored troops to keep them busy while I retrieve
my power armor.”
“Still, not many people would have the guts for that,” she punctuated her
compliment with a glance.
“Well, it’s nearly dusk. I better get moving. Sometimes it takes several
hours to get into position undetected. You have the wrist comm?”
“Yes. This will reach about five miles, three if you want a good transmis-
sion.” She handed him a bracelet-sized band. “Here is the earjack input, so
your reception can’t be overheard. I’ve got it set up to relay from your SA-
MAS directly to the Enforcer. It’s not scrambled, but I doubt anybody will be
listening to this frequency.”
“Thank you, Lisa.” He started climbing out the hatch. “Oh, almost forgot.
Do you keep an IRMSS kit in here?”
“Yes, why?”
“I don’t think I’ll need it, but I should grab it just to be on the safe side.”
“Here.” Lisa removed the medical kit from a protected compartment. “Just
make sure you bring it back. She gave him a big smile and handed it to him.
“Thank you. You’ll get it back tomorrow morning.”
Mike climbed down from the Enforcer, the setting sun casting long shad-
ows from the armored robot. He shivered, remembering past nightfall’s filled
with dread, and evil things waiting for the cover of darkness. This was a safe
mission, compared to some he’d completed.
Cowboy was fondling his C-27 for the thirtieth time that day.

119
“Cowboy, may I speak to you a moment?”
“Yes, sir, Lieutenant.” He jumped from the rover to and stood next to
Mike. Eight inches taller, and a great deal larger, Cowboy looked like a giant
next to the tightly-muscled military specialist.
“Sergeant Winters has you leading a fire squad, correct?
“Usually, sir.”
“I have a special task for you and your fire squad. I want a prisoner, pref-
erably not one of the idiots with automatic weapons, but one that seems to
know what’s going on. Can you handle that?”
“Yes, sir! How alive do you want him, sir?”
“Alive enough to be taken back to Chi-Town for interrogation.”
“That’ll be tough, but I can handle it, sir.”
“Good. I’m counting on you.” Mike strode toward his empty SAMAS.
“Sharp. Positions,” he ordered. Sharp said his good-byes to Private
Brenner and collected his gear.
Pretending to be asleep, Winters listened to the chain of command being
broken. Up until now, Sorenson hadn’t stepped on his toes, but what he’d just
ordered Cowboy to do walked him well over the line.
Now, Winters didn’t plan on being gentle about stomping back.
____________________

Metal piping and broken pumping equipment littered the remains of the
pre-Rifts structure. Kreg had startled the family of wild pigs living within,
and now they roasted on the fires partway around the lake from him. Why the
old ruined pumping station was so far from the water’s edge was puzzling,
but many changes on the surface of the planet had occurred since The Great
Cataclysm brought mankind to the brink of extinction. Stars reflected off the
mirror-like surface of his Glitter Boy several meters from him. Kreg watched
the campsite almost a mile away, wishing JJ, the Juicer, would hurry up and
bring over his meal. The life of a Glitter Boy pilot was a lonely one. Any
friends he had were long-distance.
Zenjori Suka usually placed him a distance away, generally in the direc-
tion they would need to go to escape. It was surprising how many pursuers
neglected to chase their quarry under fire from a Glitter Boy.
“Eve’nin, mate.” JJ’s cheerful voice made Kreg drop the sidearm resting
across his knees. “Sorry, didn’t mean to jump ya. Jus’ bringin’ yer dinner.”
“You never mean to startle anyone. That’s why you sneak up behind and
then speak extra loud.” Kreg smiled. The Juicer sometimes got on his nerves
but was basically a pleasant sort. Hired on for the Dubuque job along the
Mississippi River, he’d remained with the rebels for the excellent salary they
paid. Everyone thought he was a D-Bee from a “dimension” called Australia
and he’d given up trying to explain “down under” didn’t mean a subterranean
world.
120
“You best finish your supper and catch a snooze. I’ll cover for ya, same
as usual.”
“Thanks, JJ. Do you ever sleep?” Kreg couldn’t remember the Juicer ever
catching more than twenty-minute cat naps every now and then.
“Get a full three hours every day. Gotta have my beauty sleep, ya know.”
“Damn, it’s cold out. I’ll be blue by morning for sure,” Kreg complained.
“I’ll be glad when we find someplace with a bed. This sleeping on the ground
is making me sore.”
“Suka-san says there might be a town at Akron. I don’t know how much
better you’ll make out there, though. All this magic nonsense makes me ner-
vous.”
“Right now, I’d sell my soul to the demons of hell to be out of the mess
we’re in now.”
“At least you’d be warm then, eh mate?”
____________________

Damn! The Glitter Boy had been there earlier that day, but now it was
gone. Mike lay flat in a clump of weeds nearly a mile from the rebel encamp-
ment. A tripod-mounted infrared laser waited next to him for its chance to
paint a target with its invisible mark of death. He had hoped by the time his
forces were in place, the Glitter Boy would reappear, but it was almost time
to begin.
“Sharp to Lieutenant Sorenson, over,” Sharp’s whispered voice sounded
loud in the ear-jacked radio receiver. Mike spoke softly into the bracelet.
“Sorenson. Go ahead.”
“They’ve got a sentry posted on our track. He’s got his helmet off and is
eating something. I can drop him now with a 7.62.”
“Take him. Winters will be there any moment. Silent, there’s a Titan exo
unaccounted for below. Sorenson out.”
“Sharp over and out.” Carefully removing a long black cylinder from his
belt pouch, Sharp screwed the ten-inch silencer onto his JA-11 sniper rifle.
The weapon was designed with assassinations in mind and had three sepa-
rate functions. A 7.62 mm conventional rifle for unarmored targets, a high-
powered precision laser, and a short-range but destructive charged ion blaster
if confronted with more than one target at close range. A soft-tipped, high-
velocity round chambered, he flipped the scope to its infrared tight beam
setting, and lowered the targeting dot to meet with the sentry’s skull. The
range-finder blinked 2,427.6 feet. This would be a tough shot, even with su-
perior optical enhancement.
Sharp closed his mind to the environment. He kept his minor psychic tal-
ents a secret but used his abilities to block out external influences to concen-
trate focus only on the target. Gradually, his finger depressed the trigger, and

121
it almost took Sharp by surprise when the weapon kicked. The sentry’s head
snapped violently and the body crumpled, roasted bird still in hand.
“Sharp to Sergeant Winters. Trail clear.”
“126 to Sorenson. In position.” Lisa’s voice sounded pleasant. Mike won-
dered how much actual close-up combat she’d ever seen.
It was now or never and the Glitter Boy was still unaccounted for. Mike
listened; crickets, small mammals, many unfamiliar sounds, but nothing hu-
man-like registered on his cybernetic hearing implants. An infrared dot ap-
peared on the back of the Titan Combat Robot. It stood close to the water’s
edge, apparently unoccupied. It was well-maintained, armor and workings
had little visible damage. It might survive a missile volley, but would be too
badly damaged to make it through any prolonged combat.
“Sorenson to 126. Switch to the secondary target. Use only four missiles.
Fire.”
Missile trails lit the Enforcer, fiery trails streamed into the night. Mike
heard the missiles the same time they converged on the combat robot below.
His passive night goggles cut out to prevent frying of the sensitive optics.
He tore them from his head. He could see just fine in the light of four si-
multaneous plasma warhead detonations. Gracefully, the Titan combat robot
dove headfirst into the lake. Plasma fires burning brightly in the molecularly
bonded armor exploded on contact with water, the very molecules of H2O
breaking apart and providing concentrated fuel for the blazing alloys. Sev-
eral unarmored rebels were vaporized instantly from the missile blast radius,
the concussion knocked unoccupied power armor units over and sent rebels
and equipment hurtling from the detonation zone. After the initial flash, fires
burned all around the rebel camp, illuminating it well for scopes.
“Move in!” Mike shouted into the wrist comm, affixing the goggles tightly
back to his head. A Titan exoskeleton was headed his way. He left the target-
ing beam on and sprinted for his SAMAS, half a mile away. Glancing over
his shoulder, he saw the exoskeleton circling above the infrared laser, look-
ing for him. Leaping a fallen log, Mike rounded the upturned stump and ran
directly into a rebel, as surprised as he was. The unarmored rebel strained to
see what had knocked him off his feet in the dark. Mike snatched the shotgun
from the rebel’s hands and slammed him in the face with the barrel. Blinded
by blood and darkness, the unshaven rebel reached for a revolver. Loaded
with birdshot, the shotgun would be ineffective over several meters, armor or
not. However, at one foot, it ripped the rebel’s torso almost in half.
He was running again, SAMAS in sight. Jet pack thrusters told him the
exo was right behind him, but he was hearing in stereo. Roaring flames swept
past him and a sickening collision sounded behind him. Not daring to stop,
Mike closed the distance to his SAMAS and threw the goggles and shotgun
aside as he activated the closing mechanism. A fierce dogfight in the sky be-
tween a SAM and a Titan told him where the collision had come from.

122
The rebel encampment was in chaos. The Headhunters calmly suited up in
armor and retrieved their weapons, while confused rebel troops fired wildly
into the forest, exchanging fire with each other. Suka ignored the dying, send-
ing his experienced warriors to salvage what they could and flee around the
lake. A rebel ran for a stolen SAMAS, but blood spurted from his chest as a
7.62 mm rifle round kept the SAMAS grounded. Sharp wasn’t fast enough
to stop the X-10 Predator from lifting off but dropped a Headhunter making
for a hovercycle, helmet still resting on the handlebars. Someone had donned
the SAMAS power armor, and now all three flew from the chaotic firefight
below.
As of yet, not one Coalition soldier had moved into position, but over two
dozen rebels lay dead from “friendly” bullets. Stray mini-missiles from the
dogfight above sent a ball of flame billowing skyward across the lake. Darren
had only connected one rail gun burst with the maneuverable flying exoskel-
eton. He fired at the diving power armor, but his burst went high. At night,
the heat from the magnetic current through metal slugs showed the burst-like
tracers on his thermo-imaging optics. Four hot spots sped toward him, Darren
moved out of their way, mini-missiles lighting the valley with explosions on
the hill below.
“You only got six left, loser!” Darren shouted at the exoskeleton on his
tail. A Titan flying power armor generally had six mini-missiles attached to
the underside of each wing. Opting for its light-duty wing lasers, Darren’s
pursuer shot a laser beam on either side of the SAMAS. Trying to shake his
tail, Darren executed a drop toward the lake and then slowed to let the fast-
er power armor pass overhead. A weapons lock shrilled instead. Hover jets
sprayed water out behind the SAMAS as two high-explosive mini-missiles
detonated on the lake’s surface. A plume of water misted down from the con-
cussion; shock waves circled away like an enormous stone had been thrown
into the lake. Two steam pillars rose violently just in front of Darren from
the exoskeleton’s wing lasers. A concrete wall rose ten meters from the lake.
Darren left a rooster-tail heading for it.
“Damn! He’s not using a lock!” Darren cursed as laser beams inflicted
minor damage to one of his thrusters. “Time for a game of chicken.”
Aiming directly for the wall, Darren waited for the last possible second,
then whirled, sending water high as he came to a stop. Barely clearing the
top of the wall, the Titan erred, banking long on the outside. Darren had a
perfect shot, the Titan’s thrusters providing him with a brilliant spot to target.
Had the Titan been higher than ten meters, the pilot may have been able to
compensate, but when forty kinetic projectiles severely damaged the left jet
thruster, the difference between outputs propelled the power armor directly
into the lake. Traveling at a mere 80 mph, the left wing caught water, spin-
ning the Titan end for end, wing for wing, until the still flaming thrusters

123
submerged it. Intakes rammed water into the jet thrusters, terminating the
jet-assisted dive.
Darren didn’t have time to wait for it to resurface, as the other Titan exo-
skeleton skimmed across the lake toward him.
“What the hell? Is this some kind of tag team?” The answer came in a pair
of armor-piercing mini-missiles. Darren elevated the SAMAS a few meters,
leaving a ten-foot wide hole punched through three feet of concrete and steel
behind him. Pulling the trigger without bothering to sight, Darren split the
water where the exoskeleton had been. Registering pure white on his thermal
view, a plasma frisbee burned the finish off one of his wings as it passed by
him.
This exoskeleton carried a large hand-held rifle. Flying head-on, Darren
and the Titan fired simultaneously, both striking each other in the chest as
they passed, just inches from colliding. Climbing from the lake, the warning
tone screamed another weapons lock.
“Crap! That was quick!” Darren banked and dove back at the lake; four
missile trails went skyward. Pulling up a few feet above the surface, a plas-
ma frisbee creating a water dome which dissipated into steam behind him.
Enough open combat, Darren thought. Giving the SAMAS’s jet thrusters full
power, he sped toward the opposite shore, leaving a churning wake behind
him. Just before reaching the tree-lined shore, Darren pulled up, a plasma
frisbee passing below. The white-hot energy projectile struck the opposite
shore; a pine tree leapt eight meters into the air from its rapidly expanding
base.
Using the descending mass of splintered, flaming wood as cover, Darren
pulled a tight circle and came up behind the low-flying exoskeleton. The first
burst missed, splintering treetops. Taking time to center the weapon on the
target, Darren squeezed off another burst from the rail gun. Forty slugs went
up the right jet thruster and ripped clear through the intake. Flames spewed
wildly over and behind the damaged Titan, but the pilot kept the unit aloft.
Darren fired again at the white-hot flame trail in front of him. Sparks and bits
of armor flew up as the right wing spun crazily away from the exoskeleton.
Lacking the control needed to land the crippled power armor, the pilot over-
compensated, cutting a one hundred and fifty-foot-long swath through the
shoreline trees.
Darren came back around, targeting the heat signature through the trees.
Before he fired, the Titan stood, ejecting the useless left wing. To Darren’s
astonishment, his rail gun burst tore a path into smoking earth but missed
the exoskeleton. It ran through the trees, jet thrusters still burning. Hover-
ing above, Darren followed. His target was defenseless, having lost its NG-
E4 plasma ejector in the crash. The C-40 feed belt jerked as it poured ki-
netic slugs into the electromagnetic accelerator. Tree trunks splintered in a
line from the barrel to the back of the running exoskeleton. Stumbling from

124
the impact, the rebel pilot continued to flee. Darren’s next burst went wild,
completely missing the erratically-moving Titan. Another burst sent the exo
sprawling. The pilot was stunned from the force, but molecularly bonded
armor plating stopped the projectiles. Staggering to his feet, the pilot didn’t
even see the plasma mini-missile coming. A flame ball grew away from the
blast point, vaporizing vegetation and throwing the stunned exo through a
small elm tree. Landing amidst the flaming wreckage of limbs and branches,
Darren made sure the Titan would never attack again, rending the mangled
power armor in two with a pair of bursts from his C-40.
____________________

The first wave of defenders never returned fire. Four Headhunters and a
dozen unarmored rebels blew apart in a hail of high-powered laser blasts.
Sergeant Winters emerged like an apocalyptic demon through the smoke and
fire, leading a platoon of death-masked soldiers. Rebels piled onto a 4WD
truck, tires spinning soil out behind. Switching the C-27 to his left hand,
he unholstered his sidearm with the right. Bringing the weapon up, he non-
chalantly discharged a single blast at the fleeing vehicle. Metal slagged and
exploded, turning the pre-Rifts truck into a twisted, burning mass, still tum-
bling over the remains of its occupants. Fallen trees and rebels smoldered all
around as the troops stormed into the rebel encampment. Most never had the
opportunity to aim a weapon, so quick was the slaughter. Dismembered bod-
ies flew left and right before the advancing troops.
A Headhunter clad in Crusader-style body armor sat up behind a fallen
tree and caught a Coalition soldier full in the chest with an explosive round
from his Northern Gun-make projectile rifle. Knocked off his feet, the soldier
cleared the way for multiple laser blasts to vaporize the upper half of the
mercenary’s body before he finished cycling another round into the pump-
style weapon.
In the smoke-filled clearing, a Northern Gun Samson power armor stood
its ground. Most of the Headhunters and rebels having fled around the lake,
it waited to destroy the enemy that had slain its friends. The first trooper took
a direct hit from the Samson’s rail gun, tearing the armor and soldier apart as
one. The second to emerge through the smoke dove behind the body of his
fallen comrade, sixty kinetic slugs buzzing past his head. The eleven-foot
tall, infantry-style power armor hefted its giant NG-202 rail gun with one
powerful arm and sent a pair of high explosive mini-missiles into a group of
running soldiers. No direct hits, the missiles detonated several meters away,
flattening the armor-clad troops from the concussion.
The rocket team prepared to fire from their position a quarter of a mile
away, the large power armor the only target.
____________________

125
A rapid burst of laser fire scored across the power armor’s chest and arm,
the prone soldier twenty feet away spraying wildly. Seeing the rail gun swing
his way, the soldier rolled to his feet and ran for better cover, his compan-
ion’s body being shredded further behind him. High-speed slugs traveled
through his armored backpack and cut a line across his shoulders, breaking
both shoulder blades.
Dropping from the smoke-filled skies came Greg’s black SAMAS. The
NG-202 barrel slammed into the ground, the SAM’s armored foot landing
on the rebel power armor’s right arm. Knee spikes cracked into the eyepiece
of the Samson’s helmet as Greg brought his right knee forward as he landed.
Leaping back off the larger power armor, he stopped six feet in front, the
Samson swinging its left arm to strike where he’d just been. In one fluid mo-
tion, Greg brought the C-40’s barrel just inches from the earth-bound armor’s
head and pulled the trigger. Reeling from the impact and pain, the pilot stag-
gered back, optics damaged, his right eye pierced by tiny shards of metal. By
accident or intent, his right arm tilted Greg’s weapon downward, tearing a
gash in the heavy shoulder plating. Self-preservation took over, the Samson
letting the rail gun go and firing the last two high-explosive mini-missiles
from its right forearm launcher. Still sighting on the unit’s head, Greg caught
both at point-blank range, the Samson taking collateral damage from its prox-
imity. Fortunately, they were lower grade missiles and the damage was only a
scratch to the heavily armored SAMAS. The Samson took several steps back,
then lifted its dragging NG-202.
Armor plating flew apart from its damaged shoulder, the CR-1 rocket
launch team scoring a direct hit with an armor-piercing mini-missile. The
stubborn power armor refused to go down, instead, bringing up its weapon,
planting its feet solidly and firing random wild bursts at Greg’s leaping SA-
MAS. A leg stabilizing fin snapped off from kinetic impact, but his trajec-
tory was unaffected. His leap kick struck the damaged helmet, forcing the
faceplate farther into the pilot’s face. Lurching back to the water’s edge, by
force of will, the power armor still refused to fall. Greg aimed to finish his
opponent, training the targeting dot on the mauled helmet. With a resounding
crack from his rail gun, the Samson’s head split down the middle, slaying the
pilot instantly. As if the power of the pilot’s will still remained, the Samson
shuddered, took a step back, and after what felt like a full minute of stubborn
resistance, finally fell back with a splash.
Rising out of the lake as though the death of the Samson had wrought its
resurrection, the giant Titan combat robot emerged to fight again. Metal fires
still burning in its body, and without sensor turret or rail gun drum, it came at
Greg with a purpose. Thrusters blackened the earth beneath and troops scat-
tered; mini-missile launchers on each leg of the combat robot spat fragmen-
tation missiles in relentless streams, concussion overlapping concussion on
cratered earth wherever they landed. The pilot’s bruised face was maniacal

126
behind the controls. Sleeping when the missile attack hit, he had been hurled
about the pilot compartment and knocked unconscious. Now he was back
with a vengeance.
Striding through descending soil and swirling smoke came a new chal-
lenger: the Enforcer. Lisa converged the shoulder lasers, destroying what
remained of the Titan’s forward laser turret. As Dave prepared for hand-to-
hand combat, a sonic boom echoed in the distance.
High-frequency blades extended from each of the Titan’s three clawed
fingers. Targeting was impossible without the sensor turret, so he moved to
tear his opponent to shreds without the aid of weapons. Towering ten feet
above the Enforcer, the Titan lunged, grasping for the Enforcer’s head. Dave
brought up the left arm as the Titan sunk high-frequency Vibro-Blades into
the Enforcer’s armor. Still holding off the Titan’s right arm, Dave wound
up and delivered a powerful punch to the robot’s seriously weakened frame.
Sitting in the pilot’s compartment, the rebel felt his robot’s entire structure
shudder from an apparently small impact. Computers were down, the exten-
sive damage was unknown to him. He grabbed hold of the Enforcer’s right
arm and dug the blades in. Though smaller, the Enforcer was stronger. Us-
ing this to his advantage, Dave forced the Titan’s arms wide. With the chest
wide open, Lisa obliterated the few remaining systems in the Titan’s torso
with repeated laser blasts from the shoulder turrets. Dave wrenched his arms
free and shoved the useless robot over backward. Coalition soldiers rushed
forward, multiple assault weapons trained on the smoldering remains. They
finished off the pilot, burning several dozen holes into his unmoving body.
Mike had little chance to rest. An X-10 Predator skimmed the treetops in
his direction. Comparatively slow and heavy, the power armor had superior
armor and was a match for a SAMAS any day. Roughly the same height as a
Coalition PA-06A, the Predator weighed almost three times as much.
The pilot, however, was either naive or stupid. The Predator’s chest spot-
light searched for a target below but provided Mike with an excellent target.
Being offered a free potshot, he couldn’t refuse. He fired, without powering
up his thrusters to give away a return address for the kinetic slugs he delivered
to the Predator’s torso. Instead of turning off the spotlight, the pilot swung the
unit in the direction he’d been struck from, searching for the source.
“You’re making this too easy, pal.” Mike pulled the trigger again, ac-
cidentally shattering the spotlight and damaging the chest armor. Now the
Predator spotted its prey and closed in. Powering up the thrusters, Mike kept
it busy with another burst. Overconfidence had cost him a section of chest
armor plating when the X-10 fired a rapid series of laser pulses from the right
arm cannon. Mike didn’t even feel it, the chest being the most well-protected
section of his unit. Slightly agitated at being hit, he returned slugs for laser
pulses, then lifted off to meet his opponent. A poorly-aimed rail gun burst
struck the X-10’s left leg but must have pained the pilot for the mid-air twist

127
he performed. Mike almost took the opportunity to use his pair of plasma
mini-missiles Brian had reloaded into his forearm launcher but remembered
he would need them for the Glitter Boy. Easily dodging the rapid-fire laser
pulses, he tagged a rear jet on passing, sparks flying from the side of the
X-10’s right thruster.
“Big clod. Can’t even move out of the way,” he said, disdainfully, then
almost ate his words as two mini-missiles smoked past him from the X-10’s
shoulder launch tubes followed by four laser pulses that cut through a shoul-
der intake next to his head.
“Alright, that’s it. Now you’re mine.” Rising into another attack run, he
fired. The X-10 dodged clear, letting Mike waste another forty slugs on air,
causing Mike to take his opponent more seriously.
Feinting left, he let the slower power armor change course, then whipped
around behind it some forty meters away. Reacting to the weapons lock,
the X-10 wasn’t quite fast enough to keep his right jet thruster from being
damaged, his power armor spit flames where a smooth jet from its thrusters
should have been.
Now he changed course, with Mike in pursuit from above and behind.
Weaving erratically saved the X-10 further damage from another burst by
the C-40. Servos and gears ground painfully after its left leg was hit again
from behind. Cutting velocity, the X-10 pilot gave the appearance of losing
control and dropped toward the ground. Mike circled around and narrowly
missed being hit by multiple laser pulses. The X-10 jammed on the throttle
and came roaring up at him. Mike, hovering stationary, trained his weapon on
the rounded head and with a well-placed shot, knocked the pilot unconscious,
kinetic slugs impacting off the heavily-armored helmet, snapping the pilot’s
head back and forth. This time the X-10 didn’t fake its fall.
Mike scanned the valley of combat and saw several hover rovers with a
SAMAS as escort speeding away from the burning encampment. Telescopics
revealed the stolen registration numbers etched on the wings. He accelerated
toward the rebels, closing within 3000 feet and targeting the SAMAS escort.
Missing, he watched as a felled tree nearly landed on a hover rover, kinetic
slugs shattering its trunk. Climbing away from the convoy, the escort swung
around to confront him. The rebel SAMAS fired first, with poor aim.
Mike began a game of chicken with the other pilot, both circling above
the convoy traveling through the woods. Each pilot seemed intent on boost-
ing and braking just enough to keep the other from gaining an advantage or
making a direct hit. Finally, after stopping just short of a hail of fire from the
other SAMAS, Mike scored a halo of direct hits on the stolen SAMAS’ chest
before, once again braking hard and flipping around to change direction.
Enraged and seeing a moment of advantage, the pilot ended their dance
around their aerial arena by charging right for Mike. With only a second to
decide what to do, he squared up his SAMAS and hit the thrusters too. Now

128
both combatants would see who was the chicken and who would be the vic-
tor.
A resounding crack of metal and the crunch of body armor cut through the
night air and the events unfolding on the ground. At the very moment before
impact, the enemy pilot had forced his SAMAS up and slammed Mike into
his raised knee. Mike’s death-mask helmet lost most of its left side while
metal shards from his destroyed helmet and the stolen SAMAS’ legs tore up
the side of Mike’s head.
Mike broke off, falling below the rebel to buzz the treetops. Trying to
block out the pain and suffering a mild concussion from the impact, he con-
centrated on bringing himself back to focus while letting the suit’s auto-lev-
eling feature keep him out of the trees.
“Warning, left thruster damaged,” his computer said in a detached voice
as rounds from the rebel convoy below ripped into his rear jet thrusters.
“Warning, right thruster damaged.” The control of his unit was getting
sticky. Another weapons lock shrilled. Through his good eye, Mike saw tree-
tops speeding beneath him and, in a clearing several hundred feet in front
of him, the Glitter Boy stood with its Boom Gun pointed right at his chest.
Adding his own 100 mph velocity to the opposing supersonic speed of two
hundred high-density slugs, Mike felt like he’d been hit with a hover truck in
the gut before the supersonic boom washed over him, his ribs collapsed in-
ward with the fractured exoskeleton of the SAMAS as it was almost instantly
halted in mid-air.
Kreg watched from the Glitter Boy as the SAMAS hung silently in the
night sky for a moment, seeming to want to stay there through its own rebel-
lious will. Then it fell toward the ground, its jet propulsion system and wings
breaking off, destroyed from the sudden assault on its exoskeleton. Just be-
fore it was lost in the trees, Kreg swore it flipped him off with both hands.
Mike never felt the mangled SAMAS rip its way through the trees and slam
into the hillside below.
____________________

Far from being in position when the first explosions lit the valley, Cowboy
and his fire squad had seen the retreating hovercraft loaded with well-armed
rebels. Moving into a ditch for cover, the five troops waited for the next wave
to retreat.
“Remember, we need a prisoner, so don’t kill everyone!” Cowboy whis-
pered harshly. Headlights from an overloaded four-person ATV and two mo-
torcycles sped toward them on the treeless lane that once was a road beside
a still-flowing creek. Cowboy and Rex readied plasma grenades, while Nim
and Bill prepared to hurl fragmentation ones a few moments after. The two
plasma grenades landed in front of the three vehicles before the drivers could
react. The explosion catapulted the ATV into the air, while both motorcycles
129
veered too late to avoid the flames and were slagged as they pitched wheels
over handlebars, sending their lightly armored riders in opposite directions.
A wheel from the ATV stuck in the bank next to the Coalition squad, partially
melted. One of the cycle riders bounced off a tree and slid into the stream
several meters away. Staggering to his feet, the rebel’s plate-and-chain armor
still smoked. Cowboy struck him with a plasma bolt, creating a cavernous
space clear to the rebel’s spine; partially vaporized and cauterized flesh was
all that remained of his torso. Rex mirrored the effect with his C-27 on the
other cycle rider. Four Headhunters climbed out from the burning wreckage
of their ATV. The unarmored rebels riding on the outside were charred and
dazed. Two fragmentation grenades at close proximity did nothing to help the
mercenaries’ headaches.
A 4WD truck approached, automatic weapons blazing in every direction,
nowhere near striking the armored soldiers.
“Nim, Rex, and Bill, you take the truck, but get prisoners.” The three
obeyed Cowboy’s orders. One of the Headhunters aimed an energy rifle at
the Coalition squad, but it would not fire. Damage from the grenade attack
rendered his weapon useless.
Running for the group, another Headhunter extended two large, softly
humming blades from his forearms. Two plasma bolts from Rex sent his
disassociated limbs in multiple directions. Private Peterson, standing next to
Cowboy, was hit by a light laser blast from an artificial finger of a mercenary
in heavy Gladiator-style body armor. Another soldier of fortune slapped a
panel on his bionic leg, retrieving a cylindrical laser rod concealed within.
The third detached a segment of his little finger and threw it toward the sol-
diers before diving for cover.
“Damn,” Cowboy thought, “never seen this before.” With no cover close
enough, he kicked his leg at the finger to deflect it. Headhunters made their
living by the trade of combat, and most who’ve managed to survive have
made very good livings by knowing how not to get killed easily. Tonight
though, luck was on Cowboy’s side as he sent the finger back in the direction
it had come.
Private Peterson fired his C-12 on burst setting 5, nearly vaporizing every
vestige of the Headhunter that shot at him. Then the finger joint exploded two
feet away from its owner, throwing the Headhunter back against the bank
unconscious.
The explosion had rocked the hollow they were fighting in, Cowboy was
deaf again but saw the Headhunter with the laser rod in a crouched position
six meters away. The mercenary, with his bionic legs, leapt high into the air,
Cowboy’s plasma bolt igniting the frame of the twisted ATV with a new
explosion as he tried to follow the mercenary’s arc through the air too slowly.
The Headhunter landed feet-first on Cowboy’s shoulders, crumbling both
into the shallow water of the creek. The merc aimed a laser rod directly at

130
Cowboy’s face, but he shoved the arm aside, a laser discharge boiled water
and churned soil as the Headhunter in old-style plate armor grimaced in frus-
tration. Both struggled to gain the upper hand, turning the water to mud. A
lucky blast from the rod burned into Cowboy’s upper arm. Having lost his
C-27 somewhere in the water, Cowboy drew his C-18 sidearm. The laser rod
scored another blow on his chest. Pressing the barrel of his laser pistol to the
Headhunter’s belly, he pulled the trigger as fast as possible. Feeling white-
hot plates burning his skin, the Headhunter grasped Cowboy’s arm to remove
the weapon while Cowboy held the laser rod away from his body. Vaporized
flesh and bone burst outward, covering the empty C-18 with cellular material.
Bill and Nim were making short work of the poorly-prepared rebels in
the 4WD truck. Looking back to see where the last explosion came from,
Peterson saw the mercenary behind the burning ATV throw something. Not
wanting to be on the receiving end of another finger grenade, he jumped back
into the ditch the squad had hidden in before the exploding finger put him
there without his say-so.
Rex put three rapid-fire plasma bolts through the burning wreckage, the
third missing the partially whole mercenary and lifting a tree skyward in a
spectacular display.
Retrieving his mud-covered C-27, Cowboy checked to make sure the re-
cruit was okay and jogged over to the 4WD truck. Several rebels moaned
or screamed from gaping wounds. Cowboy unsheathed his high-frequency
Vibro-Saber and began finishing them off. Bill had bound a rebel, bleeding
from a weapon butt to the face, but who was otherwise unhurt. Missing a
section of its engine, the 4WD was useless. Cowboy went around to the other
side to investigate the blood-curdling screams he heard.
Nim knelt, spiked knee embedded in a D-bee’s chest. A strange alien with
webbed toes and fingers. Nim was separating them with a knife.
“Here, let me make you more human.” The knife sliced the flesh between
fingers, and the D-Bee screamed again.
“Knock it off, Nim! That’s enough!”
“He’s just a D-Bee! You already got your prisoner, I’m just havin’ fun.
Leave me alone.” Holding the D-Bee’s arm locked, Nim shattered it with a
kick. Cowboy shoved him away. “I said cut it out! Compassion is a quick end
to one’s enemy!”
“To hell with compassion! I’m gonna make it bleed!” He started back to-
ward the tortured rebel, but Cowboy sliced its head off clean with the saber,
ending its misery. Nim was furious.
“You’re just a damn D-Bee lover! Just a little D-Bee lover! I’ll bet you’d
wanna be friends. What’s the matter with you? This thing killed women and
children, slaughtered them when they slept! Ain’t nothin’ I can do to it that’s
any worse than what its already done! You make me sick!”

131
“Cool off, Nim! We have our orders, and we haven’t got time to screw
around. Just cool off!”
“Yeah! Well, I’m gonna go find some more!” Nim started down the road.
Cowboy grabbed his arm and swung him back.
“You’re gonna follow orders or I’ll smack you up right here and now!
Get a hold of yourself! Our responsibility is bringin’ in the prisoner. Now get
yourself together and act as point!”
Nim glared with hateful eyes behind his death mask. Cowboy had robbed
him of his revenge, but he wouldn’t always be around to stop him.

132
Chapter 7
Still in Command
In the now widened clearing, Coalition forces regrouped. The Glitter
Boy’s Boom Gun had been heard only once, and the location was unknown.
According to Mike’s assessment of the opposition, not even one-quarter of
the heavily armed rebels were accounted for. Sharp had reported shooting
down six rebels before they suited up and watched the rebels’ hasty retreat.
The military specialist had yet to report in.
“Casualties?” Greg met Sergeant Winters amid the carnage.
“One dead, two pretty bad off, and a ton of collateral from frags. Cow-
boy’s bringin’ in a prisoner. Says he’s got a few burns but is basically just
ticked off. Brian pulled the two injured to the rear.”
“This can’t be all of them. How did they manage to escape so fast?”
“Damn M.S. jumped the gun. Didn’t even check with me to see if we’d
gotten placed. We hadda double time it a quarter mile after he called down
the attack. Didn’t even get the damn Glitter Boy! Serious screw-up, that’s
why we got twenty here instead of eighty.”
“126 to Lieutenant Merrick,” Lisa called from meters away in the En-
forcer.
“Merrick, go ahead.”
“Sharp’s reporting seeing some lights leaving east. Says he thinks he spot-
ted the Glitter Boy providing cover. Several miles away, but not moving
incredibly fast. Are we pursuing?”
“Negative. That’s unscouted territory we know nothing about.”
“This might be our best chance, Merrick,” Winters added.
“Not at night. Not without knowing what’s hiding in these hills. I’m not
keen on stumbling across a magic cult in the middle of the night, or a rebel
ambush for that matter. We’ll pick them up tomorrow morning. They can’t
be moving very quickly in the darkness, especially with a Glitter Boy. Jerry,
start cleanup, you know the drill.”
“The Lieutenant isn’t gonna like it.” Jerry didn’t hide his dislike for the
espionage officer.
“Too bad. I might need you to back me up should it be necessary to shuffle
the chain of command. Comprehend?”
“I’d give him hell if all he wanted me to do was to repark a damn rover.
You got my support, Greg, just keep it clean. Hell, if all you do is tick ‘im
off, I’ll back you.”
The platoon began throwing dead bodies in a single pile, Winters doing
his share of the dirty work in addition to constantly barking orders.
“Lieutenant Merrick to SAM 15, what’s your 20?”
“I’m sitting on a concrete wall in the middle of the lake,” Darren said.
“Why?”

133
“I’m waiting for a Titan power armor to come out of the water.”
“I need you to recon the shoreline for stray rebels. No screwing around,
understand?”
“Why, is there anything, in particular, you don’t want me to do, sir?”
“Yes. Don’t get yourself shot.”
“That’s cool with me sir. SAM 15 out.”
“Lisa, have you been able to contact Lieutenant Sorenson?”
“No, sir. He’s not responding on the comm or radio. I checked with Sharp
and he saw the Lieutenant’s SAMAS chasing down an X-10, but he couldn’t
tell which one went down.”
“Is there any way for us to use that medical readout thing to track him?”
Greg thought of the added features his hand had. One was a medical readout
that sent the pilot’s life signs to a remote monitor. Should the need arise, a
built-in IRMSS injection system would automatically insert the life-saving
nano-robots if the pilot was too badly injured to administer the injection him-
self.
“I won’t be able to pinpoint exactly where he’s at, but I might be able to
get a general direction. Do you want me to access his unit’s medical read-
out?”
“Yes.” Greg watched the pile of corpses grow while waiting for Lisa to
interpret the monitor.
“Sir? The transmission is fuzzy, but I think he’s hurt very badly. I’m
showing injuries to his torso, chest, and head. The Auto IRMSS has activated
and injected two doses to compensate. The readout’s got a lot of information
I don’t really understand, but I’m pretty sure he’s near comatose.”
“Can you fix the location?”
“Just a sec. Pretty close actually. Somewhere on the east side of the lake.”
“Merrick to SAM 15, over.”
“What’s up?” Greg ignored the flippant behavior.
“Sorenson went down somewhere on the east side of the lake. He’s injured
and needs help. I need you to find him.”
“I thought you didn’t want me screwing around.”
“Just find him and call in the location. I’ll send Brian with a hover rover to
pick him up.” Sergeant Winters’ charm was starting to rub off on him. Cow-
boy and his fireteam were “interrogating” the prisoner. Winter’s made sure
they knew what would happen if the rebel accidentally died.
Bodies and stray limbs made a grisly picture, and some recruits lost their
dinner at the sight. Jerry tossed an incendiary grenade atop the twisted pile
and casually walked away from the hissing, burning mass.
It took Brian forty minutes to find the fallen military specialist. Darren had
managed to remove him from the wreckage and lay him out carefully. Dar-
ren had no medical training but knew a badly-injured man when he saw one.
He’d torn a strip off Mike’s uniform and tied it around the specialist’s head

134
and ear. The convoy’s headlights washed over the swath and found their way
to Mike’s body. On Lieutenant Merrick’s insistence, Cowboy and his fire
squad accompanied Brian, although he would have preferred others. With a
grunt, Cowboy heaved what was left of the SAMAS onto the open-backed
Hover Rover and tossed the C-40 in after it. Brian could easily diagnose bro-
ken ribs and a shredded ear, but other injuries weren’t as apparent. Mike was
breathing unevenly, blood caked on his lips.
“He’s got internal injuries. The IRMSS should take care of some of it, but
as for the ribs?” He shook his head.
“So he’s gonna die?” Darren asked.
“In Chi-Town, no, but here, maybe. I’m going to try to reset his ribs as
best I can before he regains consciousness.”
Even Cowboy felt disgusted at seeing Brian’s hands moving the bones in
Mike’s chest. The distinct shapes of crushed ribs under his skin explained the
Lieutenant’s rasping breath.
Moving him back to their base camp as gently as possible, a crowd formed,
surrounding the hover rover to see the wounded officer.
“Ahh, that’s awful. I can hardly bear to watch,” Winters sincerely com-
mented.
“Sir?” Brian was confused.
“What a horrible thing to do to a nice piece of machinery. That SAM is
lookin’ awful!”
“It’s nice to know you cared, Sergeant.” Mike’s wheezing voice took all of
them by surprise. He hadn’t moved or opened his eyes but was aware enough
to speak.
“Sir. You better not try to speak.” Brian wondered how long the pain killer
injection would last.
“I’m not dead yet, and I’m not going to die if I have my way,” he wheezed
out. “Did you get the Glitter Boy?”
“No, sir,” Brian responded.
“Who’s going after it?”
“We’re waiting until dawn, sir. Lieutenant Merrick’s orders.”
“Fine.” Mike coughed, pain finding its way to his brain in spite of the in-
jection. He thought of Karren and saw her clearly in his mind. No, he would
not die, he couldn’t; he’d made a promise he had to keep.
____________________

Clouds inked out the stars, slowly spreading over the distant lights. Sharp
watched Lisa and Brian placing the microwave fence generators around the
campsite. It surprised him how much light the stars provided his passive
nightscope. The temperature had dropped low, forcing him to use the full
environmental capacity of his armor. There were still several hours till dawn,

135
and he felt weary from the full day’s activity. Settling in to post watch for the
night, he heard a SAMAS land several meters away.
“Yo, Sharp. You here, buddy?” Darren whispered loudly.
“Over here, in the rocks near the oak tree.”
“Where?” Darren was standing about ten feet away now, black and grey
uniform blending with the night, leaving a floating face barely visible by the
few last stars. Sharp moved from the shadows.
“Aren’t you supposed to be down there resting?” Sharp asked.
“I can never sleep after a fight. Keeps runnin’ round in my head. Still keep
feeling the SAMAS moving and all. Usually takes twelve hours before I can
get to sleep. Unless I’m really, really tired. You got stuck with sentry duty
again, huh?”
“Keep your voice down. If the enemy knows where you’re at, you don’t
make a very good guard.”
“Mind if I kick it with you a while?” Darren asked. “If I hear one more
of Cowboy’s D-Bee jokes I’m gonna shave my head and become a monk on
some remote mountain top.”
“Sure, but you’re going to freeze your butt off out here without armor.”
“Then I’ll hop back in my SAM and warm up. Anything’s better than sit-
ting down there with Merrick’s snoring.”
They sat on the rocks in silence, Sharp being careful not to silhouette him-
self. A few soft lights from the campsite showed not everybody was sleeping.
“In a few minutes, you won’t be able to see your hand in front of your
face. Clouds are pretty thick, all we need is for another rainstorm to hit.”
Sharp paused, letting his mind wander in and out. “Recruits seem to be han-
dling it decently though.”
“Not really. I was down there a while ago and they’re pretty shook up.
Sure, we all seen the vids of war casualties and dead people, but it’s different
the first time you’re actually out here,” Darren replied.
“You’re a decorated RPA, an ace several times over. How come you’re
still a private? You’ve seen a lot more combat than most of the vets on this
mission. Ever think about training for special forces?”
“I’ve only been through half-a-dozen operations. It’s not like I couldn’t
train to be an officer or work my way up the ranks, but I really don’t care.
You get authority, then you’re stuck with a ton of responsibility. Maybe
when I’m older or something.”
“What, in another ten years when you’re in your thirties and married with
children? Too late then.”
“Hey, I’m only twenty-two, and I’m not getting married, and absolutely
no kids. That’s the worst kind of responsibility! What about you? I noticed
you’ve taken an interest in a certain young vixen sleeping below. You ani-
mal! First Cara, now Private Brenner. Pretty impressive, if you ask me.”
“Her name’s Reesa, and I only met her today.”

136
“Like I said, pretty impressive. Just the right size. A few inches shorter
than you, got some mixed heritage to give her an exotic flair. Not bad look-
ing. I mean, you could go off with some knockout, dead-gorgeous babe with
no brains, but you prefer a woman of character and charm, right?”
“Right.” Sharp wasn’t sure if he was being made fun of or complimented.
“Listen, why don’t you go to sleep and I’ll keep watch? You’re not gonna
get any rest tomorrow, that’s for certain. You really need to be alert more
than the rest of us, ya know, flying way the heck ahead in enemy territory. I
wouldn’t do it, not without a SAMAS or a ‘Bot. I’ll take over your watch.”
“You sure?”
“I’m not getting sleep anyway – still wired on adrenaline. Besides, Reesa
looked like she needed a shoulder to lean on, maybe more if you don’t knock
her off a hover rover tomorrow.”
“Cara told you, didn’t she?”
“What, about dumping her Apache American V-Twin on a staircase? No.
Get lost, go sleep. I’ll be alright.”
“Thanks, Darren.”
“Remember the microwave net. I think Cowboy is still camp sentry and
he has a C-27.”
“Great. He’ll probably have some stupid password or countersign made
up to confuse the enemy. See you in the morning.”
“Hasta la bye-bye, amigo.” Shivering, Darren climbed into his SAMAS
to wait out the night.
____________________

Crammed into the pilot’s compartment, Lisa and Dave tried to stretch out
comfortably. Lisa’s feet rested on the extended energy clip charger, but her
head and neck were bent too far forward by Dave’s shoulder. Dave’s butt hurt
from the trip and his nearly doubled over position wasn’t helping.
“I hate high-risk standby,” Dave muttered.
“I wish we could just sleep outside like everyone else.” Lisa tried to stretch
but kicked an energy clip out of its charge port. She sat up and replaced it.
“Two o’clock check.”
“Finally. It seems like time goes slower on watch.”
“Looks like Sharp’s back from sentry duty.” Lisa rotated the sensor turret,
switching optics on every revolution in case she missed something. “Where’s
Darren?”
“Probably chasing rabbits.”
“What’s up with him? Doesn’t he take anything seriously?”
“Look, Darren’s my friend. We’re RPAs. I don’t want to talk about him
behind his back,” said Dave, his sense of loyalty showing itself.

137
“I know, I wasn’t being negative or downing him. He’s got so much going
for him; good looks, charm, an incredible bod, he’s a good pilot, and he’s
fearless. Why doesn’t he make something out of it?”
“Darren’s smarter than he acts and he’s not just a good pilot, he’s one of
the best. During a training exercise, we were engaged in mock combat, and
six others ganged up on him to get him out of the way first. First thing Darren
does is aim for this narrow corridor on level 9 and eject the wings just before
he goes in. Two of them crashed trying to follow, and the third got hit by Dar-
ren before he could enter the opening. Darren, in his SAMAS, took an eleva-
tor to an upper level and shot the other two from above. Of course he passed,
only one other trainee scored two kills, and Darren had six, but they marked
him off because he ejected the wings. And because he told the drillmaster
to ‘kiss off and die a long and hairy death,’” Dave paused, then with a sigh
added, “every time he accomplishes something, he finds a way to blow it.”
“So, you two are old friends?”
“Sorta. Darren doesn’t really have many friends. I’m his roommate, so I
suppose I spend more time around him than others, but even then, we’re not
like best buds or anything.”
“Is anybody close to him?”
“Only person I’ve heard him talk about is a sister in the ‘Burbs. She’s
married and runs a hotel or something from what he’s told me. He’s always
running around with some new woman every other week, but never dates
them for long.”
“I got that impression when I went out with him, for just one night.
Wouldn’t talk about anything personal or even mildly serious. At first, I
thought he was an airhead, but he might have just been keeping his distance.”
“You know, he doesn’t seem to get unhinged or even upset when we lose
someone. All the blood and gore never gets to him. I don’t know, maybe he’s
got the right idea; stay detached, distanced.”
“Ya know, Dave, I never thought of you as the analytical type.” Lisa set
a rolled-up uniform on a control panel and tried to stretch out with her legs
on Dave’s lap. Dave had struck her as a fairly ordinary person, perhaps a bit
above average, but nothing special. About six feet tall, with sandy brown
hair and brown eyes, his freckled face made him look more like a kid than a
nineteen-year-old. While he came across as a jerk sometimes, Dave seemed
trustworthy and dependable. Somehow his appearance didn’t fit his reputa-
tion as a party animal.
“I’m not the analytical type. I just say things as I see them. Good night.”
He closed his eyes but couldn’t sleep. Trying not to check the clock display,
he settled in, hoping the time would move more quickly with his eyes shut.
____________________

138
Light painkillers went down with cold rations and water. Sore muscles
and bruises faded from mind, the Seek and Destroy unit become more alert
as dawn began to reach over the horizon. A cold wind blew in gusts and the
cloud-covered sky blocked the sun’s warmth. Sharp and Reesa sat together,
companionship being nourishment for the soul. It looked as though it could
start raining at any moment, so equipment and provisions were kept in se-
cured compartments on the rovers. Brian was patiently transferring ammuni-
tion from Mike’s wrecked SAMAS to Darren’s.
“Can you fix it?” Greg asked.
“What, the SAM? No way, not even if I had the equipment. This P.A. is
history. The only thing it’s good for now is spare parts and scrap metal.”
“Did you finish repairing the damaged weapons?”
“Look, sir.” Brian was irritable and tired. His curly red hair, even more
wild than normal, formed an asymmetrical frame for his unshaven face. Bags
under his eyes betrayed his lack of sleep. “I was up until three fixing weap-
ons. One I had to scrap completely and two are still inoperative.”
“Finish what you’re doing here, then work on the weapons. I’ll assign Lisa
and Trenton to retrieve the microwave net.”
“Yes, sir.”
A rasping cough from the rover indicated Mike was awake. Wrapped in
blankets and wedged so he couldn’t move, he lay staring at the clouded sky.
Every breath was misery, and his head felt hot. Will gave way to wisdom and
he remained motionless, dependent on the care of others.
“Greg. Lieutenant Merrick. I need to speak with you,” he wheezed out.
“Glad to see you’re still with us. We weren’t sure you would last the night.
Feeling better?”
“That’s relative to what could be worse. Have you sent out a scout?”
“I’m sending Darren out to track the rebels in a few minutes. The prisoner
tells us they’re headed for Akron and could already be there if they traveled
during the night.”
“Prisoner? Who interrogated the prisoner?”
“Sergeant Winters. Under the circumstances, actions will be taken without
your approval. But you understand that, of course.”
“I’m still in command, Merrick,” Mike rasped. “But under the circum-
stances...”
“Hey, Lieutenant. Rise and shine!” Darren’s cheerful greeting annoyed
Mike even more. “My, aren’t we looking chipper this morning!”
“Did you engage the Glitter Boy?”
“No, I’m afraid not. I was too busy saving your ass. Oh, I’m sorry. I won’t
bring that up again because I wouldn’t want to mar your macho image. I’ll
bet that was a beauty of a crash, though.” Darren smiled wide, while other
soldiers gathered behind him.
“As I recall, you got shot down yourself, hotshot.”

139
“No, I had my aerial movement restricted. I still planted a couple of hits
before it got away from me. I’m just better than you, that’s all.”
Dave shook his head and crawled back into the Enforcer. Darren was do-
ing it again.
“What lesson have we learned here, Lieutenant?” Darren said, patronizing
the wounded officer. “Please repeat after me: I will not fly down the barrel of
a G-10 rail gun. I will not fly down the barrel of a G-10 rail gun. I will not ...”
“Shut up, Darren!” Mike gasped out. He wanted to strangle the cocky
soldier, but couldn’t move, wrapped tightly in all the blankets.
“Sorry, Mike. I didn’t mean to rib like that. I know, that was an unfair jab.
If you ask me, I ...”
“Darren, go suit up.” Greg saved Mike further torture. “And don’t forget
a radio check with the Enforcer. We’ve already been over your pattern twice
so get moving.”
“Sure thing, sir.” Darren left the military specialist in peace.
“You’ll be okay in here. We’re transferring the wounded and extra equip-
ment to this rover.” Greg looked up at the sky. “I’ll make sure someone puts
the tarp over before we leave. Oh, you’ll be happy to hear this – I didn’t hear
you snore once all night.”
Akron lay twenty miles away through dangerous lands. Having lost the
highway twice during the night, Zenjori Suka ordered the rebels to make
camp after traveling only two hours. Now that dawn approached, he began
assessing the army’s strength, and he wasn’t pleased. Most of his original
troops were still with him, but he’d lost more Headhunters and lightly armed
recruits than expected; he had no more cannon fodder to feed the Coalition
force pursuing him. Losing the Titan Combat Robot was a serious blow, and
he couldn’t afford many more losses.
“Suka San. If we want to reach Akron soon, we should leave quickly.”
Notec Depi, his closest advisor, sat on the log beside him. A large, nine-foot
‘Borg approached and sat on his other side.
“We should counter-attack, Suka San,” the four-armed ‘Borg demanded.
“The last thing they’d expect is for us to attack them first.”
Zenjori Suka wrapped the cloak tighter around himself, though it would
do no good over his armor. He looked small compared to Notec and smaller
still to the ‘Borg. Chinese heritage of the truest line and centuries of selective
marriages made him one of the aristocracy long forgotten. The time distor-
tion experiment had worked after all he had done to stop it and the irony was
he himself had been transported. Zenjori Suka was a dimensional being of
sorts, lost in time. The scientists he’d been hired to kill three hundred and
forty-seven years ago were dead – not by his own hand, but by age. It still
amused him that it was he that survived the cataclysm, not them. Whatever
secrets they uncovered by their time distortion experiments were lost. He had
found himself in an alien environment, full of strange beings and technology.

140
Shocking news just kept coming; the year was 97 Post-Apocalypse, and the
world as he knew it was gone. Natural charisma and ancient martial art tech-
niques had earned him the position of leader to a small group of mercenaries.
When opportunity arose, he snatched it and rose to command an army of over
900 strong. Now it numbered less than five dozen. Of his first Headhunter
party, only Notec and Drake remained.
Notec had chosen to embrace the guise of the clergy, dressing in robes
and creating a facade of goodness and honesty. His deception was amaz-
ingly credible and reinforced by his clairvoyant abilities. He possessed psion-
ic powers far exceeding even the rare abilities occasionally present among
normal humans. Notec Depi wasn’t entirely human. By mixed racial heri-
tage or genetic mutation, powerful psychics such as he were extremely rare
and feared. Mind Melters, as the Coalition called them, were endowed with
psionics like no other and were often hunted down and slain by over-zealous
citizens protecting themselves from the mind-altering powers. Notec had
earned their fear many times over. His only true friend was Zenjori Suka and
the two worked very well together.
“Tell me, Drake. Who would lead this attack?” Notec asked the giant
‘Borg.
“I would. I know how they will react. They will retreat to a defensive posi-
tion and await a second assault. By then we can safely make our escape.” The
giant ‘Borg clenched a fist nearly as large as Zenjori’s head. Once a member
of the Coalition elite military, the price on Drake’s head had nearly tripled
since he went rogue and fought alongside the Coalition’s enemies.
“We will not attack them,” Zenjori spoke evenly. “The master that in-
structed me in the ways of Tien Hsueh was a very wise man. He often told
me, ‘Do not insert your hand in an angry dog’s mouth.’” He let the meaning
sink in. Drake’s metal brows came together in a sinister contortion of intense
thought.
“Your master must have had many wise sayings.” Notec smiled.
“I’m sure, but I don’t remember them all. I do remember him also saying,
‘Wisdom is like an invisible wasp stinging your ass,’ but I wasn’t attentive
enough to decipher that one.”
The three rebel leaders laughed. Zenjori stopping to listen as a report came
over the radio.
“JJ found a village about four miles ahead. Everyone’s dead, including
children. Several dead monsters and tracks leading away look like prisoners
were taken.”
“Any sign of the perpetrators?”
“No. We should be able to pass without coming under attack.”
“Then attend to your duties.”
“Yes, Suka San.”

141
The racial discrepancy in his title was intentional. He looked nothing like
a person of Japanese heritage, but very few would know the difference – es-
pecially these days. Others may have come through the device and he didn’t
want to be traced.
“Kruno. I have some special tasks for you.”
“Yes, San,” the partial conversion cyborg in charge of the Headhunters
responded. Brimming with weapons, Kruno was an arsenal all by himself.
The bald head and coonskin cap might have looked silly on anyone else. No-
body laughed at someone packing that many guns. “There’s a village ahead
that has been slaughtered by an unknown force, most likely magic users and
monsters. The Coalition will want to investigate it, and if they were to believe
it was the work of foul Shifters and Line Walkers, they might have reason to
assault the next group they spy.”
“If they have any sense, they won’t attack. It’s not personal.”
“That’s why I want you to booby-trap the village.”
____________________

Hidden low in a fern-covered ravine, Sharp couldn’t shake the impression


that he was being watched. For fifteen minutes he’d observed the vacant vil-
lage a mile away, but no sign of life presented itself. A thin line of smoke
trailed from a burnt hut, but that was it. Dead bodies strewn in and around the
village testified to the hand of death traversing it. Gurgling water from the
creek next to him kept a constant pace, its quiet noise masking the movement
around Sharp’s semi-concealed body. He turned the sensitivity switch to its
lowest setting and flipped to thermo-imaging. Turning in a circle, he stopped
at the warm figure and crouched fifteen feet away. Sharp couldn’t see the man
with his naked eye until he stood, blending seamlessly with the background
of ferns and moss-covered boulders like a chameleon.
“Do not fear me,” the human voice said. “If I wished to kill you, I could
have done so while your back was turned to me.”
“What are you?”
“My name is Glen Stone, and you should not be here.” The figure became
more distinct in contrast to the surroundings. Sharp saw the tall, dark Native
American had no weapons except a compound bow and quiver of arrows. He
wore a single plate of armor over his chest, fashioned from the exoskeleton
of a Fury Beetle, and was clothed in buckskin and tanned hide.
“You’re a magic-user!” Sharp knew he should shoot first, before the man’s
magic clouded his mind and stole his life.
“The earth is my power. From it, I gain my strength. The spirit of the land
speaks to me, and I with it. It says you will soon reach a dangerous place and
you must avoid it or die.” He spoke calmly. “Many in my tribe have foreseen
your disaster.”

142
“I’ve seen no tribe. Did you slaughter that village with your magic?”
Sharp knew he should have killed the Native American before now, but so
far, no apparent threat had been made. The repeated trainings rang in his head
from years of schooling to confront the evil sorcerers that plagued the land.
“No, and you would not find my tribe. We live with the earth; breathe its
life, sleep on its soil, and return to it when we die. Now go, tell your friends
it is not safe here.”
“You’re trying to cloud my mind! I won’t listen to your magic!” Sharp’s
finger went to the trigger, but he didn’t fire. The lessons taught him to slay the
mage before it was too late. Words of his teachers pounded in his head. “Do
not give pause in your beliefs. Unnatural invaders and users of magic have
the power, both psychic and magic, to cloud your mind. To listen to their
words is to open oneself to attack by them. Their words are subtle; do not ex-
pose yourself to that evil. Stay clean. Stay pure. Kill them without hesitation
or remorse, knowing that your actions save the human race.”
The Indian gazed into his eyes completely fearless, but sad.
“If you must fulfill your duty, do not fight the land. Do not fight all that
wish to harm you, striking only in defense of your life. You cannot force the
land to conform to the path you wish to take.”
“I don’t know what you’re trying to say.” Sharp closed his mind to attack
but listened to the words in spite of his training. Still, his finger twitched over
the trigger, ready to vaporize the strange magic-user.
“The brook flows today is it did yesterday and will tomorrow. If I hurl a
boulder into the stream, I alter its course and disturb its flow.” The Indian
warlock broke a dead twig from a bush and tossed it into the creek. “But
observe the wood floating on the water. It flows with the brook and does not
hinder the movement of the water. It does not draw attention, nor disturb the
brook and who can say tomorrow that it was even here.”
“You’re speaking in riddles.”
“And a very large stone has dropped into the creek.” The Indian pointed
over Sharp’s shoulder. Hesitantly, he looked and saw Darren descending into
the barren village. When Sharp turned back to the Indian, he was gone. Re-
solving to conceal his encounter, Sharp carefully made his way toward the
village. If his commanders knew of his reluctance to slay the magic-user, he
would be subject to days of re-indoctrination. The words of the warlock had
given him much to think about.

143
Chapter 8
The Battle of Akron East
A light drizzle misted down from the clouds, covering Darren’s hover-
ing SAMAS. His thrusters knocked over a damaged hut as his metal feet
sank into the soft soil. Darren looked at the mutilated bodies of men and
women and children. Not even livestock had been spared. Steam rose from
the hot thrusters as the drizzle thickened. In various stages of dismember-
ment, corpses filled the open space created by Darren’s thrusters; the hut was
filled with bodies.
Large three-toed tracks led between the dwellings, and a headless monster
with wings lay on its back, thickening the air further with its stench.
Accustomed to the horrors spawned by war, Darren managed to keep the
sickening feelings under control, but he still wanted to puke. Insects swarmed
over the decaying bodies, maggots breaking them down into tiny pieces and
returning them to the earth.
“Sharp to SAM 15. NG Sky King approaching from the north. it should
reach your 20 in less than sixty seconds.”
“Thanks for the warning, Sharp. Must be flyin’ low, cuz I don’t pick him
up on radar. Any other hostiles?”
“Not that I can see. Remember what Lieutenant Merrick told us.”
“Yeah, yeah. No unnecessary or unprovoked assaults. If I find out who did
this, it’s gonna be necessary.”
“Sky King has landed, east of you about 1/4 mile.”
“I know, I could hear it. What’s the pilot doing?”
“I can’t see, too many structures in the way.”
“I’ll check it out.”
“Sharp over and out.”
Readying his rail gun, Darren carefully moved through the asymmetric
placement of huts and log buildings until he saw the top fin of the Sky King
ahead. Must be expecting to take off in a hurry, Darren thought. Normally,
both the top and bottom fins folded back before landing. The pilot had left the
unit powered up and only retracted the underside fin.
Leaning over the still form of a child was the pilot. A strange sight in Ex-
plorer body armor, or at least, it used to be. Strange contraptions and modifi-
cations were bonded to the composite plates, and the helmet bore a small pair
of bronze eagle-wings. Both eyepieces extended further than normal and the
sides were covered with complex circuitry. Somehow the Sky King didn’t
look normal styled in red paint either.
“Don’t move, whoever the heck you are!” Darren spoke through the voice
amplifier. The pilot looked over at him, standing straight. His only visible
weapon was a TX-5 projectile pistol stuck in his belt. Darren figured it didn’t
offer much threat to his SAMAS.

144
“What are you doing here? Where are you from?” Darren barked through
his amplifier.
“I was about to ask you the same thing. You’re farther from home than
I am,” the strange-looking man responded. Removing his helmet, the pilot
acted in trust. Young, in his early twenties, and with a good-natured smirk,
the pilot slowly walked toward the Coalition power armor unit.
“Do you know who did this?” Darren asked.
“No, but I have a good idea. It wasn’t you or I, so that leaves a few lo-
cal cults to claim responsibility. Most of the wounds are caused by bladed
weapons. Someone fought back, there’s two dead Harpies on the north side.”
“Keep your distance.” Darren brandished his rail gun. “Who are you?”
“Sinclair Van de Graf, but you can call me Van. Relax, what can I possibly
do to you? You’re a long way out for a patrol, aren’t you?” The pilot walked
a bit closer.
“I’m looking for a group traveling with a Glitter Boy. Have you seen
them?” Darren didn’t trust the strange character.
“Yes, as a matter of fact. Looked like they were headed east toward Ak-
ron. Askin’ for trouble, if you ask me.”
“How far?”
“Ten, fifteen miles or so. I kept my distance in case the Glitter Boy de-
cided to take a potshot. Jeez, it smells!” Van replaced his helmet, engaging
his invisible air purifier.
“You’d probably better clear out before my unit gets here.”
“Jeez, are you nuts? Yer going in the wrong way! Akron’s that way, Chi-
Town’s that way!” Van pointed to emphasize his point. “I don’t even like
stayin’ ‘round the nexus up there. You’re Crazy if you think you can even
get near it.”
“Wait a minute,” Darren remembered some encounters he’d had as a kid.
Growing up in the ‘Burbs, he’d seen many strange D-Bees and humans. He
remembered a regular show on the vid that had a villain who controlled mon-
sters by modifying technology with magic. “You’re one of those nutballs that
takes perfectly good machines and screws ‘em up with magic! You’ve been
cool so far, but now you really better make like a tree and leaf.”
Sharp moved up behind the Sky King, covering the Techno-Wizard from
the other side.
“If it’s all the same to you, I’m gonna track down whatever did this and
waste ‘em.” Van casually returned to the Sky King. Sharp backed away, still
training the JA-11 on the magic user.
“He’s a magic user, Darren! He’s messing with your mind! He probably
did this himself!”
“Sorry to destroy your view of the world, but not every magic user is an
evil diabolical fiend determined to slay children in their cradles, just like ev-
ery Coalition soldier isn’t bent on killing every non-human they see. Chill.”

145
Sharp moved back away, edging toward a hut. Van de Graf began climb-
ing into his craft, then stopped, and jumped off.
“Wait! Don’t move! Look around you! Something’s not right!”
“Darren! Don’t listen! It’s a trick!” Sharp shouted, but quickly glanced
around for another threat. He almost edged a bit closer to the log wall when
he saw a thin wire at his feet. Stretched between the dwellings was a trip line.
Years of training in the use and disposal of explosives told him this was a
booby-trap. Somehow the magic user had known.
“Don’t move, mage! How many more of these did you place?” Sharp
asked. He knew the magic user had been hiding something.
“What? What are you talking about?”
“The booby-trap! The trip line is right here.” He pointed with his toe, still
aiming the JA-11 at his enemy.
“Jeez, I knew there was danger, but I didn’t know it was a booby-trap. Be
careful, there could be more.”
“Like you don’t know.”
“C’mon, Sharp,” Darren interceded. “If he knew about it, why would he
tell you to stop?”
“Just to be tricky, I guess. Don’t trust him, or you’re betraying everything
you believe in. Don’t let him corrupt your mind.”
“Chill, Sharp. He’s leaving, anyway. Aren’t you?”
“And I thought Erin Tarn’s books were too prejudiced. Looks like she
was right about the Coalition,” Van said sadly as he slowly boarded the Sky
King, lifting straight up. He flew low to the ground, following the trail left
by the raiders.
“Did he mess with your mind or something? You were standing there hav-
ing a conversation like he was a normal human being. He admitted to reading
Erin Tarn’s books! We should have killed him for that!”
“What the hell’s the matter with you Sharp? Chill out! Something’s eating
you, buddy – what is it?”
“Ah, I don’t know. This village has me on edge. Look at all this carnage.
Geez Darren, I still can’t believe you were on his side.”
“I wasn’t. It just didn’t make sense for him to set a booby trap and then
warn you about it.”
“Then how did he know?”
“I don’t know. Maybe magic. Besides, that might not even be a real booby
trap. Did you check?”
“No.” Sharp followed one end to a small stick protruding from the hand of
a woman’s arm. Carefully examining the wire, he reached between the arm
and body and pulled out a grenade, depressing the lever with his hand. No
pin was present.
“It’s live.” Sharp rolled the body, trying to ignore the open wound down
the woman’s chest. Sure enough, the pin was underneath.

146
“That’s a Coalition grenade,” Darren pointed out.
“And a tactic we learned at the academy.” Sharp shoved the pin back in.
“You better call that in. Merrick’s gonna be thrilled to find out Coalition
ordnance is floating around in magic users’ hands.
____________________

Flat on his back in the rover, Mike was surprised how smooth the ride was.
There was a constant motion from the hover jets compensating for the terrain,
but no sharp, jerky movements jarred him or the other wounded men.
The convoy slowed to a stop, and Mike could hear Jerry barking orders to
a hand-picked fire squad. It hadn’t been an order to investigate the presence
of Coalition ordnance in the massacred village, but if Greg hadn’t done it, he
would have.
Hands cuffed behind him to a roll bar, the prisoner sat hunched over with
bruised face and body. A second treatment had begun to repair most of the
internal damage to Mike’s body, but even the nano-robots didn’t lessen the
pain when he forced himself to sit up. He sat next to the prisoner and leaned
against the rain cover.
“Did they beat you up like this?” Mike’s weak voice asked. The prisoner
nodded. “That wasn’t what I wanted. Which one did this? The one with the
scar over his eye?” Another negative. “What’s your name?” Mike wheezed
the question.
“Levin.”
“Are you hungry, Levin?” He’d planned on playing good officer/bad of-
ficer with Jerry anyway. Levin looked up with swollen eyes and nodded.
“I’m starved.” Mike opened a compartment and removed two sealed ra-
tion packets. “You want one?”
Levin looked hungrily at the food, but suspiciously at Mike.
“Oh, sorry.” Key in hand, Mike uncuffed the prisoner and handed over a
ration packet. Levin looked at the rear flap of the rover.
“If you run, I won’t shoot you, but somebody will. Eat your food before
somebody finds out I gave it to you.”
Levin tore open the packet and devoured the concentrated meal in several
loud gulps. Internal wounds restricted Mike to infusions, but he opened his
own packet and waited until Levin was finished before bringing the food to
his blood-caked lips. Coughing, he doubled over, then faced the prisoner.
“You might as well have mine too. Too messed up inside. Can’t eat.
Here.” The open packet went to the prisoner’s hands. “At least you can still
enjoy a meal.”
The second ration was inhaled by the malnourished prisoner. Mike waited
until he finished before asking questions. Every question asked, he probed the
prisoner’s mind telepathically for the first answer that would involuntarily
surface.
147
“Levin. That’s a southern name, isn’t it?”
“No. I come from Minnesota.” Levin was feeling a lot better with nourish-
ment.
“You’re a long way from home. What did you do before deciding to be-
come a revolutionary?” Images of a shop and family came to mind.
“Made saddles, worked with leather. I had a good business outside Tol-
keen.” Anger rose in the prisoner, hatred of the Coalition and the hardships
he perceived was their cause. Mike tried to read emotions in conjunction with
thoughts.
“You have any kids?”
Two half breed sons, his wife was a D-Bee.
“Yes, two.” Images of family times and happier days gone by flooded
Levin’s mind. Sickening aloneness and longing tortured his soul and called
him to return. Homesick for wife and family, Levin wanted to cry but fought
the urge to reveal weakness. All blame rested on the Coalition, for tearing
him from home and destroying his life.
“Why did you join the Army of the New Order?” Mixed emotions re-
sponded in Levin’s mind. Something pulled hard to abandon his family and
make war with the Coalition but didn’t come from the heart. Levin did sin-
cerely hate the Coalition, but that wasn’t enough.
“To protect my family! Everybody knows you’re going to invade them
and slaughter every D-Bee man, woman, and child! We all know what you do
to anyone who isn’t human, Notec told us! He showed us what would happen
if we allowed you to control and manipulate us. I don’t want my family to
die!” Levin was worked up in emotional turmoil. Mike struggled to maintain
his composure and not get caught up in the swirling turbulence of Levin’s
mind.
“Why join the Army of the New Order? Why not the Tolkeen military?”
Levin blinked. He knew all the answers, but the question gave pause to the
concise line of thought.
“I should join the Army of the New Order.”
“What?”
“I should join the Army of the New Order.” Levin’s own words confused
himself. He knew he should join the Army of the New Order and even why.
They represented equality to all races of D-Bee and human alike. Freedom to
believe what you wanted, practice magic, associate with anyone you chose,
and in his case, intermarry with other races. No oppression or control of soci-
ety. The Army of the New Order stood for right and freedom.
But something nagged him with these thoughts. None of those reasons
made him join the rebels. The Tolkeen military would have allowed him
to remain with his family and protect the town in which he lived. Why had
he chosen to follow the Army of the New Order into battle on Coalition
territory? Even the pleading of his wife and children hadn’t weakened his

148
conviction to join the rebel army. It seemed foolish when presented with the
alternative.
“Who asked you to join?”
“Notec Depi. He showed us what would-” Levin stopped. Fear of being
caught betraying the good and wise priest came strong. He shouldn’t be tell-
ing this Coalition officer any of this. He was being tricked and confused,
manipulated by a skillful interrogator.
“Don’t torture me, please. I can’t tell you more,” Levin pleaded.
“Listen to me, Levin. Yes, it’s true you could never become a Coalition
citizen. But that doesn’t mean you or your wife would be treated any dif-
ferent than you were already. Your life would go on, just under a different
flag. I served at an outpost north of Tolkeen, far away from the Coalition. I
lived with D-Bees, ate with D-Bees, and fought beside D-Bees. I associated
with magic users and psychics every day. Many of them felt the same way
you do until they got to know me as a man, not as a soldier of the Coalition.
I think you would discover in time that most of the men you hate could be
your friends under other circumstances. There’s good and bad everywhere,
on both sides, Levin.”
Two injured soldiers listened in. This was traitorous blasphemy coming
from the mission commander. Surely it was a ploy to get the prisoner to spill
his guts.
“I wish I could let you go back to your family. You’re not my enemy,
Levin. However, your leaders who asked you to leave your home and family,
are my enemies. What good are you doing your wife and kids by fleeing hun-
dreds of miles AWAY from the home you’re trying to protect? I’m not going
to force you to tell me anything and I can give you my word nobody else will
either as long as you give me a reason to protect you. When this is over, and
the sooner the better, you’ll be returning with me to Chi-Town. If you help
me by telling what you know, I can keep you from going to prison so you can
be free to find your family again. If not, then there’s nothing I can do to help
you and you might never see your wife and kids again.
“Think it over Levin. You and I don’t have to be friends, but we don’t
need to be enemies.”
____________________

Drizzle made the transition into rain, turning the bare soil of the village
to mud. On foot and moving warily through the village, Jerry led a ten-man
team to search for clues. Discovering the origin of Coalition explosives de-
manded a minimal investigation at the least. Waiting a mile away on the
highway, the rest of the unit listened for explosions.
“Don’t touch a damn thing! Walk close to single file, and don’t wander
off!” Jerry ordered. They hadn’t found a booby trap yet, but their chances
increased with every step.
149
Reesa Brenner gagged but kept from puking. Just the sights around her
were enough to make her sick.
“Halt!” The harsh bark stopped the squad mid-step. Jerry followed the
wire at his feet back to the hut. Strapped to a supporting log was another
grenade, wire attached to the pin. Simple but effective. Just to be on the safe
side, he checked the other end of the line and found an identical setup.
“Nobody even think of treading over this!” He ordered in a forced whisper
and changed course. All he needed was a clumsy recruit to accidentally step
on the thin line.
Crossing an irrigation ditch, the squad slowly crossed a trampled field of
corn in the center of the village. Reesa noticed the soldier behind her lag back
and walk over to a farmer laying face down.
“Joe. You better hurry up. The Sarge doesn’t want us to fall behind.”
“Just a sec. This guy’s got a cool knife on his belt.”
Reesa turned to catch up with the squad when something hit her from be-
hind. The shock wave shook the ground for a few hundred meters, but Reesa
was too stunned to feel it. The farmer’s body was completely obliterated and
Joe thrashed and screamed a few meters away. Jerry rushed over, but Joe
shuddered and lay still before Jerry reached him. The squad lay flat in the
corn stalks, looking for an attacker. One look at the shattered chest plate and
missing arm told Jerry the soldier was dead. Protruding from his chest was
the partially-melted spike-end of a mattock axe.
“Dammit!”
“Merrick to Winters. What just happened?”
“Damn Fusion Block wrapped in spikes had Private French’s name on it.
Probably picked ‘em up from the toolshed we saw by the other buildings.”
“Anybody else hurt?”
“Private Brenner got thrown down, but she doesn’t look bad. I’m gonna
nail the guy that did this.”
“Clean up and rendezvous stat. Darren’s spotted the rebels and we can
catch ‘em if we move quick. Merrick out.”
Jerry yanked the smoldering spike from French’s chest and threw it out in
the field with all his might.
“Roger.” He helped Reesa up, her armor looking surprisingly unscathed.
“Are you alright?” He spoke slow and loud. To Reesa, it seemed every syl-
lable was punctuated by a crash of cymbals in her head. She nodded very
gently as everything swam around her.
“Rex, you know the drill. The rest of you, follow me, and don’t make the
same mistake French did.”
Reesa checked to make sure all her equipment was still attached to her
belt. Rex noted the fragments of Joe’s rifle and took a pair of salvageable
clips from the soldier’s belt.

150
“Sorry man.” Rex took a step back and shocked Reesa by vaporizing Joe’s
body with a bolt from his C-27. Drawing his C-18 from the chest holster, he
finished by destroying the soldier’s head with a laser blast.
“Don’t get too far behind.” He acknowledged Reesa with a nod and jogged
after the Sergeant. Traumatized by the events of the last few days, Reesa
stared at the empty armor fragments for a few moments before returning to
her squad.
____________________

“Are you absolutely certain they’re responsible for the massacred vil-
lage?” asked the Headhunter.
“If summer was hot, would you want a cold beer?” Kruno responded.
Zenjori could have imagined a more succinct analogy. He turned to Notec,
who nodded in approval.
“Send someone to warn them of a Coalition incursion. Tell them the Co-
alition force is about to attack them and anyone who gets in their way.”
“Yes, Suka San,” Notec laughed as he went to fill his task.
“Kruno, you and Drake find a place along a ley line before it reaches the
nexus. Keep your distance from the cult, but we want to be close enough to
trick the Coalition into advancing on the nexus.”
“Suka San. There are several cults and magic users clustered around the
nexus. How do we know they won’t attack us?” Kruno’s concern was valid.
“Don’t be threatening. Just the same, keep everyone ready to move in-
stantly. We won’t be staying long. Just long enough for the Coalition to catch
up with us, then we slip out of the way and let them assault the cult that raided
the village. It won’t take long before every magic user, D-Bee, and death cult
comes to the aid of their comrades.”
“We still need someone to bait the Coalition in.”
“Yes, we do. Your men are too valuable, and we have too few new recruits
to entice them with useless weapons fire. I’m afraid I’ll have to sacrifice my
X-10 to produce a successful ploy. It’s fairly useless to us now, anyway.
Don’t worry, Notec will convince the pilot we’ll come to his aid. He’s very
convincing when he needs to be.”
____________________

Lying in the covered rover, Lieutenant Sorenson gave orders as though he


could still enforce them.
“Sergeant Winters, you will lead a fire squad in on foot. Ten men moving
quickly should be able to cover two miles in fifteen minutes.”
“Like hell. On a track in some nice cozy little gym, but not here. Twenty-
five minutes.”
“I want you to cover it in twenty.”

151
“Go to hell, sir. You want to run a squad in on foot, just get yer butt out
there and do it yourself. Twenty-five minutes.” Jerry didn’t take much to
unreasonable orders. Mike could hardly believe he was hearing such blatant
insubordination from an NCO. Then again, he had read Jerry’s file.
“Why fifteen, Sergeant?”
“Probly ‘cuz he doesn’t want to run down the barrel of a G-10 rail gun!”
Darren answered for the Sergeant. Jerry glared at the outspoken RPA.
“With all due respect, sir, you botched last night. I told you I’d be in posi-
tion at 2100 hours, and when did you call in the strike? Five minutes before
anybody was ready. It’s yer gawdamn fault we’re still out here, Mr. Mili-
tary Specialist, sir. You couldn’t connect a baseball to a bat even if someone
nailed it to the gawdamn end! Respectfully, sir, order my men to take actions
without advising me first again, an’ you and I are gonna have a little fist to
face conversation, got me? Sir?” Everyone stood with jaws open, not believ-
ing the tirade Winters was assaulting the mission commander with. Mike
started laughing, a raspy, wheezing laugh. This was one person he could
scratch off his infiltrator list.
“You ever wonder why you’re still a Staff Sergeant and not a Captain by
now?” Mike coughed blood, still laughing. “Twenty-five minutes. Get mov-
ing.”
“Yes, sir.” Jerry chose his squad and started down the ley line to the reb-
el’s position.
____________________

Sharp didn’t like the close proximity to the crackling energy of the ley line
or the nexus just three miles away. He could see lines of white smoke rising
from campfires. The rain was coming more steadily now. Near the nexus,
where scores of ley lines intersected, were hundreds of D-Bees, magic users,
and even monsters. The trail from the massacred village lead to this area.
Sharp extended the hood and continued watching.
“Sharp to 126. Over.”
“Enforcer 126 here. Go ahead,” Lisa responded, distracted by the prepar-
ing troops around the giant robot.
“You might want to mention to Lieutenant Sorenson that you’ve got a
ghost coming your way. X-10 Predator, damaged, but airborne.”
“Roger. Thanks, Sharp.”
“Sharp over and out.”
“Lieutenant Merrick, this is Lisa. Sharp says the X-10 from last night is
flying our way.”
“I thought you told us it was a goner, Sorenson.”
“It can’t be in too good shape for combat. Send Darren up, but don’t let
him move into combat range with the rebels until the ground units are in
position.”
152
“Darren.” Greg nodded to Darren.
“On my way.” He practically leapt into the SAMAS. Speaking the eight-
digit access code, the power armor closed about him.
“Lieutenant Merrick. You and two jet pack personnel will take air cover
positions and eliminate hot spots from above,” Sorenson ordered.
“I’m moving in with my men,” Greg told him like he hadn’t heard the
previous order, “but I’ll leave Trenton and a few men for rear guard.”
“You’re going to need Trenton on the line. He can keep up with Brian’s
rover on foot.”
“Trenton stays with the other two rovers and covers our retreat if the need
arises.”
The two Lieutenants locked gazes, forces of will grappling for control.
Mike was beginning to believe the other officer was a coward.
“I very much dislike your non-committal attitude, Lieutenant. We’re in
this to the finish, as hard as it may be,” Mike coughed, blood caking his lips.
“I don’t care what methods you decide are best, just so we finish this before
nightfall. Understood?” the injured Lieutenant stared down his counterpart.
Greg worked his jaw.
“You know, I don’t give a damn what you like and dislike.” Greg walked
away from the rover to face his expectant forces. “You and you, airborne.
Wait for my signal to attack.” Two soldiers wearing jet thruster packs lifted
off. “Brian, stay behind the Enforcer, but keep your rover staggered. I don’t
want a stray shot hitting you or the rover. I’ll cover sides and rear until we
reach our target. It’s going be rough in a few minutes, but we all know the
risk we’re taking represents mankind’s best hope for our dreams and free-
dom. Stick close and be responsible for each other. Let’s finish it and go
home.”
____________________

The Heads-Up Display ranged the X-10 Predator at 2.864 miles. Almost
in optimal range of the deadly rail gun. Telescopic viewing showed the X-10
in poor shape, but still a definite threat. The computer tone sounded when
Darren’s weapon lined up with its target.
“And the Predator becomes the prey.” He squeezed the trigger lightly. Ki-
netic slugs bounced off his opponent’s armor. The X-10s right arm came up,
weapons lock tone chiming warning. Darren rose another ten feet, narrowly
escaping the multiple laser blasts. Returning fire, he watched another forty
slugs carve notches in the Predator’s shoulder plating.
“Dang that mother’s tough!” Darren swung his legs to the side and angled
out of the way of another series of beams. The X-10 was closing the distance.
Darren struck the heavier unit dead center chest with another burst, but the
X-10 took it and kept coming.

153
Swinging again to avoid a laser volley, Darren noted another blip register-
ing on the short-range radar.
“What’s this? Return of the living dead?”
A Titan flying power armor with Darren’s rail gun marks flew low over
treetops. Two on one didn’t suit him, so Darren expended his pair of plas-
ma warhead mini-missiles and dispatched the speeding Titan. Both missiles
detonated a foot from the pilot’s head on either wing. Plates of armor and
spinning wings flew out of the fiery explosion. Split seconds later, the wing
mounted mini-missiles exploded in rapid series.
Attempting to bait Darren into approaching the nexus point, the X-10
erred by turning his back to him. Slowly hovering twenty meters above the
treetops, Darren took his time sighting in. Aiming at the wing joint just be-
hind the Predator’s head, he steadily squeezed the trigger.
Spinning in a haphazard spiral, the wings took much longer to reach the
ground than did the headless power armor.
____________________

An alien-looking bird flew over the forests to the southeast of Akron. Far
below, the actions of men could be seen. A figure in black armor flew above
the trees, destroying two others who seemed to be defending the territory to
the east. Beyond the man in black, more soldiers advanced from the west.
Their vehicles and a large robot following behind.
Far below, under the Akron Nexus, a 10-foot-tall winged demon gri-
maced. Built with the physique of a well-disciplined gladiator and the head of
a wolf-like alligator, he presented a fearsome figure to most species. Known
as a Gromek, his race came from a world ravaged by severe weather and tall
mountains over which they ruled with might. Since becoming stranded on
earth, it had become his mission to conquer this world by any means avail-
able.
Outraged by the audacity of the Coalition invaders, Torrak forgot the rit-
ual he was performing and donned his armor for battle. Rage flowed through
his veins as he watched the troops make their way toward his shrine. Seeing
what his familiar saw, Torrak ordered his trusted followers to slay the ap-
proaching enemy. Humans were of little value to his race and Torrak cher-
ished the chance to destroy the troops in black who had already tried to kill
him once before.
Ignoring the human female chained to the sacrificial altar, Torrak took
wing. Stopping the Coalition before they destroyed the altar he had carved at
the nexus was his first concern. He could always torture and kill his prisoners
later.
“Foolish humans! Attacking me on a ley line where my magic is power-
ful. Many will die by my hand!” He wielded a large, black, spiked mace and
desired nothing more at that moment than to dash the brains from his en-
154
emies. Normally members of his race were dedicated warriors, but he made
an exception to the might of the sword and chose to study the ways of magic.
Learned in the arts of a Shifter, he was a master of manipulating the energies
that flowed through a nexus. Creating a Rift to another dimension was one of
Torrak’s greatest pleasures and drawing forth beings to serve him enhanced
that pleasure. He’d spent many years acquiring coveted spell knowledge.
Greed and lust for power pressed him into linking his body and soul to a
powerful entity which now he served. In payment for the acts he committed,
his magic increased in strength and he was allowed incantations beyond his
mortal grasp to cast. Believing in the balance of might and magic, Torrak also
trained as a warrior. Now he was as deadly with the rune mace he wielded as
the tongue that articulated his magic.
Powerful sorcerers and practitioners of magic flocked to strong nexus
points such as the one at Akron; only the strongest remained there to carve
a piece out for themselves where others wished to be. Where ley lines inter-
sected the energy available on tap was intense and enabled mages to conduct
great rituals of magic which were otherwise impossible. Some used the nexus
to rip open the fabric of time and space to worlds unlike Earth and not every
world was as pleasant.
Torrak had gradually used his spot on the nexus to bring others of his kind
to this alien world to begin conquest. It had been easy to enlist the aid of other
ambitious beings seeking power and glory. While pitifully small in number,
his power base was established, and his army was growing. Soon he would
catch the eye of the Federation and be allowed the chance to join, giving him
access to even greater resources to bring his vision to fruition. Destroying this
Coalition invasion might be just the deed to win him the respect he deserved.
Barely visible in daylight, tiny bolts of mystic energy crackled around
him, drawn like a magnet. Clouds darkened and the rain increased its in-
tensity. A beautiful day to slay one’s foes, he thought. Missile detonations
echoed off hills and rolled throughout valleys. Dropping back below the tree
line, Torrak and his faithful familiar waited to slaughter the unsuspecting
Coalition troops.
____________________

Leaping over an irrigation ditch, the Glitter Boy crunched remnants of a


sidewalk and kept running. Kreg was disturbed by the rapidness with which
the Coalition SAMAS had dispatched two power armor units. Possible com-
plications could result from premature halting of the Coalition advance. If
it were discovered that the rebels were no longer near Akron’s nexus, then
a real battle would take place. The brief skirmishes so far had been petty
squabbles compared to a toe-to-toe, guns blazing, showdown.
Zenjori had called it a “Russian run.” They kept one step ahead of their
pursuer, slowly wearing them down with each attack and letting the environ-
155
ment take its toll until they became too few in number to continue pursuit. So
far, the rebels had fared far worse than their opponents in the “Russian run.”
Kreg was certain that wasn’t how it was supposed to work.
Leaving his physical body, Notec had projected his essence in astral form,
but without entering the astral plane. Kreg thought it useless talk until the
Mind Melter discovered a reasonably large town near the pre-Rifts city of
Youngstown. An estimated fifty miles over broken terrain lay between them
and the possible haven.
Disregarding convention, Kreg ran relentlessly to distance himself from
the mayhem about to begin.
____________________

For once, Reesa had reason to be proud. In a mile’s worth of running, she
found herself the only one still tight on Sergeant Winters’ heels. All recruits
endured rigorous training during boot camp, but the field was much different.
Reesa had enjoyed running before the military required it. Jerry slowed to
allow less-fit personnel the opportunity to catch up.
Stopping to check the time on his wrist computer, Jerry noticed most of
his squad pointing over his shoulder, speechless. Limbs cracked in the forest
from the direction they had been traveling. Whirling, C-27 at the ready, he
saw the source of his squad’s terror.
“Gawd dammit,” he spoke aloud, sounding more annoyed at being dis-
turbed than facing a serious threat to his life. Less than ten meters away
the three-headed beast worked its way through the trees. Well over thirty
feet tall, the large bi-pedal monster had three serpentine necks, each with a
different head. One, the head of a lion, roared a challenge. Another bore a
resemblance to an antelope, and the third was the head of a serpent. Its long
serpentine tail thrashed back and forth like a cat stalking prey. Shades of
green, from light to dark, covered most of the Beast Dragon’s body. Tearing a
tree from its roots with its clawed hands, the monster’s three heads bellowed
contemptuously. Then it attacked.
Before Jerry could react, the beast leapt forward into the middle of the
squad. The antelope head swung low, catching the Sergeant with its pair of
horns and hurling him into a tree trunk three meters away. Snaking down-
ward, the lion’s vicious teeth sank into Reesa’s body armor and lifted her
off her feet. Shaking vigorously several times, the head tossed Reesa into a
clump of shrubs several meters away. A terror-stricken soldier raised his rifle
to fire, but a three-fingered claw caught him underneath the arm and brushed
him away without effort. Four recruits panicked and fled, but one stood his
ground, pointing his C-12 in the monster’s general direction with the trigger
depressed.
Stepping away from the poorly aimed assault, the beast allowed the for-
est to be shredded instead. The serpent’s head shot forward, clamping over
156
the soldier’s upper torso. Shaking vigorously, the serpent spat the crunchy
morsel from its mouth and exhaled a noxious green gas from its nostrils. Air
filters protected the stunned soldier from the cloud of deadly gas.
Jerry fumbled with his plasma cannon as the lion’s head glared with mur-
derous intent. Lunging for him, the razor-sharp teeth closed over his arms and
weapon, just short of his body. Nose pressing his chest, the two looked eye-
to-eye for an instant; Jerry pulled the trigger and covered himself in strips of
dematerialized lion-flesh. The bloody stump reared back, the other two filling
the wooded area with its scream.
Reesa felt no pain, only fear. Her weapon lay at the monster’s feet. Rows
of tooth marks scored her armor but hadn’t punctured through the composite.
Eyes wide with fright, she ripped her C-18 from its holster and pulled the
trigger repeatedly. Laser blasts burned tiny craters in its thick hide and earned
Reesa the antelope’s attention. Wicked eyes gleaming, and mouth gaping
wide, flame gushed from its open jaws, engulfing Reesa and the forest behind
her in fire. As her weapon melted into useless junk, Reesa scrambled back
away from the flames. Fortunate as she was, her lungs still felt seared and the
flesh beneath her armor mildly burned.
Snapping the shackles of fear that rendered them paralyzed, a pair of
recruits backed away, weapons spraying in furious repetition. Tree trunks
popped and shattered from misplaced beams, the repugnant odor of burnt
monster flesh permeated the air. Blackened scorch marks appeared across the
beast’s body. Writhing in pain, the monster snatched the nearest soldier by
the legs and clubbed the other recruit with the flailing body.
Covered in greenish ooze, the serpent-bit soldier rose unsteadily to his
feet. Again, the serpent head swung around, fangs flashing in the bluish light
of the ley line before they sank into armor. It whipped the body back and
forth to still its movement. Bravery sent another recruit into a tree trunk from
the antelope’s horns. Reeling back, it chucked the hand-held soldier over
twenty meters through low limbs and foliage.
Aiming low on the serpent’s thrashing neck, Jerry discharged a plasma
bolt. Gurgling blood and ooze, the serpent head spit the stunned soldier from
its maw and reached around to attack the recurring threat. Voices screamed
on the comm for everyone to get down, and Jerry threw himself far from the
monster. Both heads snaked towards his prone body.
Smoke traced the mini-missile trail back to the CR-1 rocket launcher
team. Its hide severely wounded by constant laser bombardment, the shaped
charge penetrated deep into the monster’s abdomen. Wobbling legs gave way
as its body seemed to swell and glow from within for a moment as the ex-
plosion rocked its insides. The Beast Dragon seemed to deflate and lost its
footing from the explosion and impact. Heartened by the collapse, soldiers
converged to finish off the monstrosity. Entrails spilled on the earth, but the
monster wasn’t harmless yet. Rising to confront multiple enemies, the ante-

157
lope’s eyes burned with hatred. Jerry scrambled away as overzealous recruits
splattered its remnants with unending weapons fire.
A pause came in the battle, steam, and smoke intermingled above rain-
doused fires. White energy bolts cascaded off the beast’s smoking remains.
A visible blue aura lifted off the monster’s body as its life force was absorbed
into the ley line.
Blood-curdling war cries pierced the silence. Bursting from fallen foliage
came a figure clad in Bushman body armor and wielding a high-frequency
Vibro-Blade. Swinging the sword, the attacker’s forceful swing sliced it deep
into a soldier’s armored shoulder. Cutting through armor plating, the blade
penetrated flesh but slowed before cleaving bone. Tripping over a smoking
neck, the soldier cried out as he fell back onto the dead beast, clutching his
bloody shoulder. Bits of armor still containing their occupant blew apart as
several soldiers cut down the cult member.
Another figure wearing plate and chain-style armor rushed Sgt. Winters,
the cultist’s Vibro-Blade raised to strike. Jerry fired from the hip, pulling the
trigger rapidly. A stray blast brought down a limb in the path of another at-
tacker. The saber-wielding cult member fell in three parts; two legs and one
upper body.
“What the hell?” Jerry was confused. None of these attackers appeared to
be part of the rebel army they sought. A laser beam burned a small crater in
the armor of a soldier aiding Reesa to her feet. Jerry spied a pistol protruding
from the fallen foliage several meters away.
“Everybody, pull in! Snipers!”
Not bothering to aim carefully, Jerry discharged the weapon in rapid suc-
cession, vaporizing armor, sniper, and forest. Triple laser blasts struck home,
a cry of pain was conclusive proof. Laser beams leveled vegetation in a ra-
dius from the Coalition troops. One sniper was slain completely by accident.
Triple beams from the rifle-equipped sniper burned the pack and radio off a
grunt’s back but did little harm to the armor. Jerry popped off the last charge
in his plasma canister. Thrashing in pain, the sniper was easily spotted and
dispatched.
Slotting a new canister, Jerry crawled over ooze and strips of flesh to re-
move the helmet of a beheaded attacker. Large canine teeth protruded from
an oversized jaw, yellowish skin covering the thick bone structure beneath.
An Orc.
“Damn D-Bees.”
____________________

Hugging the ground whenever possible, Sinclair Van De Graf followed


the trail left by the raiders. While they hadn’t tried to conceal their route, Van
knew little of tracking. Through special optics in his helmet, however, the
trail became highly visible and relatively simple to follow. Large, three-toed
158
tracks conjured an image of a three-headed monster with clawed hands and
a long tail. He was proud of his innovative creation though. Not completely
perfected, the goggles took up more space than he’d planned originally but
worked wonderfully.
Van was one of an unconventional group of wizards. Fascinated with
the ancient arts of magic and marvels of modern technology, an increasing
number of magic practitioners had begun combining both. Just as a machine
required power to operate, a mage required psychic energy to empower his
magic. The Techno-Wizard made what seemed the next logical step and
powered technological devices with a living magic battery – himself.
Drawing upon the magic-rich environment of Earth, they channeled this
energy into their creations. Combined magic and technology could produce
effects that defied the limits of one without the other. Capable of casting spell
magic without the aid of technology ranked the Techno-Wizard an able prac-
titioner, but their magic was never as strong or focused by itself.
Precious gems and metals intertwined with the normal workings of Van
De Graf’s multi-optics goggles. Channeling mystic energy into its bizarre
network of circuitry, he could view reality through the eyes of a wolf.
Several explosions sounded in the distance. Raising the Sky King above
the tree line, Van noted the low-flying blips on radar; the Coalition had
moved in faster than he’d guessed they would. From what he’d seen of the
Akron nexus in passing, Van De Graf discerned a momentous battle was
about to commence.
____________________

Two hotspots filled Sharp’s targeting feed HUD. Observing the advance
of the two jet pack troops, he prepared to move in closer to the target desti-
nation himself. Suddenly, four monstrous birds with ugly humanoid heads
winged their way into his sights. Recognizing them as identical in form to
the dead and decaying ones at the massacred village, Sharp didn’t bother to
call in for approval. Their flights went erratic from Sharp’s laser burning into
one Harpy’s side. The second beam sent its screaming bloodied corpse into
the woods. Reacting to save their lives, the two jet pack troopers took evasive
action while firing on the clawing monsters. Wild automatic laser fire kept the
remaining three at bay, but only singed dirty feathers.
Trying to steady his aim on the erratic movements of the Harpies, Sharp
didn’t see the humanoid shadow fall over him. The hairs raised on the back
of his neck, leaves rustled behind him, and he noticed that the sun no lon-
ger shone on his back. He rolled, weapon coming up ready to vaporize the
stealthy rebel. Sharp felt foolish momentarily at being so badly startled by a
stupid animal. Blood chilled in his veins though as he took it in; the elegant
winged deer had cast the shadow of a man but was distinctly not from Earth.

159
Ears laid back and teeth bared, the creature jumped skyward, kicking
Sharp in the chest with its foreleg as it gained altitude. Staggering back,
Sharp switched the selector to Ion beam and fired rapidly from the hip at
the flying demon-deer. Charged ions burned fur and flesh along its flank, but
the creature came at him again even angrier than before. Ducking the fast-
moving deer, he wasted several charges into the sky before it squared up to
him again. White teeth gleamed, ears flattened against its head, the monstrous
thing attacked once more.
Bruising his chest further, Sharp roughly flung himself over a large boul-
der. The weapon readout displayed an empty energy clip and twenty-eight
shots left on the JA-11’s internal cell. Sharp took a moment to slot another
clip while the demon deer found a better altitude to dive from. Multiple ion
beams burned the deer’s neck and chest before its horns slammed Sharp
against the boulder. The JA-11 flew from his grasp.
Lightning reflexes and too many John Wayne movies did their work.
Attempting to quick-draw his pair of C-18 sidearms, Sharp discovered he
couldn’t even reach them with his arms entangled in the deer’s horns. Think-
ing fast, he escaped by engaging his jet pack. Both stone and antlers scored
grooves in the armor’s paint. Quickly moving to the side prevented Sharp’s
legs from being struck by up-thrust antlers. Airborne, the monster pursued
him with a vengeance.
It flapped hard, ears back as it strained with anger to reach him. Then,
blood and internal organs sprayed from its side, a high-pitched scream grat-
ing the air as it lost focus and began its fall back to the earth.
Traveling over two hundred miles per hour, Van switched from rail gun
to foreword laser and finished off the flying fiend. Sharp landed, retrieved
his rifle, and walked over to make sure the smoking carcass was actually
dead. Van De Graf hovered meters way, his Sky King’s thrusters bending
tree branches around him.
“You okay?” He shouted.
“Sure. I get cracked ribs every time I fight one of these things!” Sharp
shouted back. He wasn’t comfortable with the magic user this close, but he
had aided his fight. “By the way, What the hell is this thing anyway?”
“I haven’t got a clue!” Van yelled from his red Sky King. Sharp looked
back at the splayed body of the demon-deer.
“Well, it sure as hell wasn’t Bambi!”
____________________

“Sir! Darren says it’s a trap!” Lisa relayed to Lieutenant Merrick. “The
rebels aren’t there! He spotted the Glitter Boy running through the next ley
line over five miles away. Due east, on the highway.”
“Merrick to Winters! What’s your twenty?”

160
“Pickin’ up the pace. Damn D-Bees hit my squad good! We have a load
of injuries, but nothin’ that’s gonna keep us from makin’ it on time for our
little party.”
“Abort! Repeat, Abort! Darren’s done a flyby and the rebels aren’t in Ak-
ron. Get back to the rovers and regroup. Repeat, the rebels cleared out and
routed around the nexus before we moved in. They haven’t gotten very far,
and we can still catch them. Have Trenton gear up for a pursuit, then catch
up with us on the double. Lisa will radio you exact coordinates by the time
you’re ready. Merrick out.”
“Winters, clear!” He said as he confirmed the change in plans.
“Merrick to SAM 15.”
“15 here. Do you want me to pursue?”
“Affirmative. Don’t engage unless directly confronted. If you’re outnum-
bered, back off, but keep track of their movements.”
“You got it, dude!”
“SIR!”
“That too. 15 over and out.”
“Dave! Brian! Course change due east and watch for interference. We’re
not stopping for anything! Dave, if something gets in your way, step on it,
but keep moving!”
____________________

The unit changed its course to cross the ley line and moved directly
through it instead of paralleling it toward the nexus. Weaving between trees
and piles of rubble, Brian fought the urge to pass the slower UAR-1 Robot
ahead of him. Wet grass and sod continued to strike the hover rover, kicked
up by the giant robot’s metal feet. They passed a campfire set under a make-
shift shelter, its owner out of sight. Brian felt the hair on his neck tingle when
they started crossing the eerie blue haze of the ley line.
Unexpectedly, the Enforcer lurched to a dead standstill, Brian ramming
through a small tree trunk to avoid a collision. Dave fought the UAR-1’s
controls. No matter what he did, the robot’s legs refused to move.
“What’s going on here Lisa?”
“All systems functional. Can’t you pilot this thing? Why did you stop like
that?”
“I can’t make the legs move!”
“Hey! Watch it, Dave!” Brian shouted on the comm, “Warn me before
you do that!”
A dense black cloud spread over the Enforcer, but it came from above,
not the leg mounted smoke release. Brian stopped the hover rover and looked
back.
“Brian to Merrick. We just ran into some kind of a problem here.”
“I’ll be there in a moment. Don’t stop unless you have to.”
161
Torrak sprung the ambush.
Flying creatures beat their wings over the hover rovers and the troops
surrounding them, their stench wafting down to the troops in the uncovered
craft.
“Ahhgg!” Brian gagged before the air filter saved him from breathing the
putrefied air. Rex and others retched into their helmets, so powerful was the
odor of decay and defecation. Winged humanoids with spiked, horned heads
descended from above the flapping Harpies. Armored cult members raced
from behind rubble piles to assault the Coalition troops.
Abandoning the controls, Brian snatched his rifle and switched the selec-
tor to level one, multiple discharge setting five. Pointing upward he pulled the
gun against his trigger finger and splattered one of the horrid things’ body all
over the troops below it. Regaining control of his unrestful stomach, Cowboy
holed the last Harpy clear through with a plasma bolt.
Greg’s emerged through the rain only to be caught in a net that sudden-
ly appeared out of thin air. The power armor unit lost control as stabilizers
and wings entangled, and Greg bounced several times before stopping in a
crumpled heap. Fighting in vain to free himself, Greg blocked on the pain of
multiple bruises, but soon realized he was hopelessly stuck.
“Disperse and engage!” He ordered, “SAM 15! Break off pursuit and re-
turn to aid 126! Be advised we have encountered magic users!”
Nim dispatched a hoard of Goblins with a pair of fragmentation grenades.
Leaping from the rover, Cowboy cut a running Orc in half by getting close
enough to use his Vibro-Blade. Most of the attackers wore light, padded ar-
mor, if anything at all, and had little protection against Coalition firepower.
Two more lightly armored Orcs were dropped before they could fire their
relatively harmless laser pistols.
Dispersing to clear the horde of D-Bees away from the Enforcer, a soldier
received a painful burn to the leg from a low-intensity laser beam. Brian sent
the rifle and cult member through a brick wall with a plasma grenade, the
bright flashes of metal burning into the stunned occupant’s armor. Enemy
troops dropped like flies in bug spray. The Coalition forces released wither-
ing laser-fire.
A veteran hover cycle pilot flew past the glowing crater left by Brian’s gre-
nade and sprayed down the stunned Orc before it could flee. Plasma frisbees
destroyed the cycle’s front thruster and catapulted the pilot meters through
the underbrush. The cycle tumbled, metal fires eating their way across the
outer surface. Brian took aim at the open face of the Gromek warrior wielding
the plasma ejector. Striking directly between the warrior’s eyes, the soldier’s
high-power laser beam blew the head and helmet into tiny scorched pieces.
Without the slightest indication of its source, an intense burning flame
engulfed the Enforcer, spreading in a radius twenty feet from the smoke cov-
ered robot. Vegetation and fallen warriors were burned to ash instantaneously

162
and several grunts were caught in the unexpected blaze. Armor that normally
could withstand temperatures up to 300 degrees Centigrade burned away in
layers. Flexible joints torched up in seconds while ammo belts, backpacks,
and weapons were turned to useless melted objects. All but one of the four
soldiers escaped the deadly flames. Running on a wounded leg, the laser-hit
soldier fell to his knees. A plasma grenade on his belt detonated, its heat lost
in the inferno to all but the unfortunate man.
Brian was thankful Cowboy and his pals were nowhere near the pillar of
flame; with all the ordinance they carried, it could all be over for everyone in
a matter of seconds.
“Oh my god.” Lisa read the damage displays. Dave stared in horror at the
flames on the remaining view screens. The entire outer layer of armor on the
Enforcer was being heated by the second. Dave knew they would be spared
dying in the flames that engulfed his robot – the UAR-1’s missile payload
would ensure that.
“Dave! Punch the manual override on your panel!” Lisa shouted, “If we
don’t jettison the mini-missile magazine we’re gonna be dead in five sec-
onds!”
“Got it!” Dave slammed his fist down on a large button. Lisa typed in the
command on her menu and the torso section mini-missile launcher blew out-
wards away from the robot. Clearing the pillar of fire, the self-contained unit
bounced several times before coming to rest in some underbrush.
Protected by a Gromek warrior, the psychic Burster maintained the gruel-
ing concentration required to produce a hellfire of such magnitude. It was
possible to extend the radius further, but he didn’t dare hurt Torrak or his
troops. Not a practitioner of magic, the Burster’s pyrokinetic powers were
psionic in origin. It pleased him immensely to observe his work magnified by
the ley line’s proximity to the nexus. The giggling Burster moved a bit closer
for a better view.
Stepping unharmed from the towering flames, a robed and armored
Gromek approached the hovering rover. Cowboy emptied his second can-
ister, plasma bolts dissipating harmlessly over the Gromek’s body. Lasers
repeatedly struck home but were apparently ineffectual on the magic user.
The Gromek carried a jeweled hilt that suddenly grew a blade of fire.
“Now you die!” The D-Bee shouted to the Coalition troops.
“Go to hell!” Drawing his saber, Cowboy charged with the Vibro-Blade.
The Gromek uttered a strange phrase even as Cowboy’s blade sliced across
the magic user’s chest. It left no mark. The sorcerer’s hand flew open and a
net leapt from it. Cowboy struggled against the magic glowing bonds, sever-
ing the strands one by one with the humming blade.
Nim’s grenade launcher barked, fragmenting another pair of Gromek be-
fore they even touched the earth. Approaching still unharmed by the volleys

163
of laser beams striking his body, the Gromek sorcerer began another incanta-
tion.
Engulfed in searing flame, the Enforcer’s systems began to burn. Metal
fires dotted the melting outer plates.
A mismatched trio spotted the forty-foot pillar of flame at a distance.
Sharp flew between SAM 15 and Van’s red Sky King. Differences forgotten
for the moment, the three charged to the rescue. Lisa’s repeated calls for as-
sistance ended when the Enforcer’s communications tower melted away, but
chatter on the comm made the outlook sound extremely bleak.
Visible from the air, the Gromek warrior was sent headlong into the in-
ferno by Darren’s C-40 rail gun. Looking for the source of his protector’s
accelerated death, the Burster spied his assailants. A high-power laser blast
from the Sky King burned the rear plate of the Burster’s armor. Losing con-
centration from fury and pain, the Burster’s hell disappeared as quickly as
it had begun. Fire bolts flew from his fingertips but dissipated long before
reaching the red Sky King. Sharp’s laser burned into the chest plate an instant
before a second nose laser blast from the Sky King cut through and cratered
the glowing earth behind the dead Burster.
Torrak had held back, letting his troops do the fighting until this point.
Now he leapt into the fray to ensure his victory. Casting a combination of
protection spells, he watched his protégé exchange blows with the rover’s
driver. Saber to flaming sword, the soldier had held his own long enough.
Recalling the words to a Time Slip spell, Torrak stopped the world from his
point of view. Covering most of the space between himself and the troops, he
was content to arrive twelve meters from his victims when the spell elapsed.
Appearing out of thin air to the Coalition troops, Torrak was greeted by
rapid laser fire. Nim drained his second energy clip. Some of the others were
already down to their last ones.
“Yes!” Brian shouted in triumph. His saber’s tip sunk deep into the
Gromek’s chest plate. His enemy jerked back away from the blade, speaking
rapidly. Brian slashed again, the edge cutting a deep gash in his opponent’s
helm. One more hit would finish it. Thrusting, Brian aimed the tip at the open
face of the sorcerer. It never reached its target. The spell caster renewed his
magical barrier.
____________________

Ignoring the futile attacks, Torrak chanted a long, complex verse. The
incantation required his every thought on concentration for the result to be
effective.
“Get away from the humans!” He shouted in his own guttural tongue at
the end of his chant. His spell was beginning to take form, and he wanted his
students away from its effects.

164
Darren’s C-40 knocked the retreating mage off his feet. Forty kinetic slugs
deflected off the barrier to create a bizarre pattern in the surrounding soil.
Nim rushed Torrak, Fusion Block explosive in hand. If he couldn’t shoot the
damned monster he’d blow it up.
Torrak’s rune weapon spoke to his thoughts. “Slay the mortal. Drink its
soul. Thus sayeth Mind Crusher.”
“As you wish.” Torrak swung the mace with force. Nim brought up his
free arm to block the blunt weapon. Armor shattered and split the forearm
plates apart. A three-inch-long spike protruded from Nim’s forearm, luckily
it was Nim’s artificial arm.
Mind Crusher couldn’t vent its fury. The soul of one to be “drunk” had
to be ripped from a living body. Its life stealing powers were useless on the
construct it pierced.
“Pain!” Torrak looked directly at Nim with his glowing, yellow eyes.
Nim’s was body wracked in agony. Wrenching the mace from the artificial
arm, Torrak used the power of the rune weapon to manipulate Nim’s body,
causing horrible pain. Raising the rune mace, Torrak prepared to strike the
killing blow to the writhing soldier.
Hit from the side by the tip of Darren’s rail gun, Torrak slid several feet
in the dirt. Point blank – one meter from the Gromek Shifter, Darren pulled
the trigger again. The red form-fitting aura surrounding Torrak absorbed the
kinetic impact. He swung the mace, sparks flying from the SAMAS’s leg.
“Paralysis!”
Darren’s arms and legs felt funny. He tried to pull the trigger at the
Gromek rising to his feet, but he couldn’t move a finger. His legs gave way
and he collapsed, SAMAS with him.
Sharp landed atop a pile of rubble, horrified at the rain hissing in clouds of
steam above the red-hot glowing crater surrounding the smoldering Enforcer.
Van landed behind the pile, not wanting an overzealous grunt mistaking him
for the enemy. Sharp emptied a clip into the Gromek sorcerer, but it had no
effect.
Brian and most of the troops had retreated to the hover rover when the
ground beneath them shuddered and split wide open. Diving for a weapon,
Brian rolled and watched in terror as a rust-colored demon rose from the
crevice. Fire breathed from its mouth, its eyes glowed white-hot, and blood
red fangs lined its maw. Over ten meters tall, it stepped from its bounds and
stared down at Brian.
“Don’t shoot the Techno-Wizard!” Sharp shouted over the comm, but no-
body listened. Fighting for their lives, one odd-looking set of Explorer body
armor running around wouldn’t be noticed.
Van and Sharp rushed the battle. Torrak swung the mace and sunk a spike
into the back of a partially burned soldier.
“Soul Drink!”

165
Bone-chilling screams filled the air, energy bolts sizzled over the scorched
armor, tearing every fiber of humanity from the dying man. In a spectacular
flash of blue lightning, his soul was ripped from his body. The broken bits of
composite collapsed in a hollow husk.
“Danger comes to greet you.” Mind Crusher felt the presence of one who
could slay his master, appeased by the soul it devoured, the rune mace warned
its wielder. It wasn’t Sharp to which Mind Crusher referred, but it was Tor-
rak’s protégé, who stepped forward to do battle with the Techno-Wizard first.
“Blind!”
Less susceptible to psionic attacks, Sharp felt his vision fading and men-
tally shoved the mind attack away. His psychic abilities were minor, but he
knew some mental assaults could be repelled.
“Use your blade!” Van shouted, “Use your saber!”
Sharp unsheathed his high-frequency saber and set the rifle aside. A quick
look back at the dying soldiers by the rover and Torrak was ready to enjoy
killing this one hand to hand. Quicker than the mace, Sharp’s saber weakened
his visible armor. Torrak was in little fear of the minuscule battering he was
receiving. One swing with the mace and Sharp’s saber shattered. Left with a
vibrating hilt, Sharp went for the explosive charge he carried.
As though it were a stroll through a pleasant park, Van was oblivious to
the surrounding mayhem. Calmly drawing a Triax projectile pistol from his
ammo belt, he popped off a round at the approaching Shifter. The detona-
tion dispersed by the time it reached the Gromek’s chest plate. The invisible
armor was gone.
Van De Graf quickly cycled another round. Pulling a seldom-used side-
arm, the Shifter blasted Van with a charged ion blast. Van let the Shifter
empty the clip uselessly on his magic enhanced armor, then cratered the chest
plate with another explosive round. Bits of metal cut deep into the beast’s
chest. Screaming in rage and pain, it began reciting the time slip spell taught
to him by his master, Torrak. Van blew its head off its shoulders with the next
exploding round.
Impervious to flame, heat, and most forms of energy, Van’s modified ar-
mor could only be vaporized by energy weapons when the spell duration
elapsed. Normal practitioners of magic required time to speak words, chan-
nel psychic energy and occasionally conduct elaborate rituals to affect their
spells. The spell magic was already worked into Van’s technological con-
struct; all that remained was to focus psychic energy into the device and the
magic took effect.
Free from the bonds that held them, Cowboy and Greg rejoined the fray
the instant of the Shifter’s death. Sharp didn’t get the chance to activate the
explosive charge.
“Stun!”

166
His body felt like it had been hit everywhere at once. He could see and
hear, but nothing made sense. Disoriented, he forgot the Fusion Block and
concentrated on what strange things were happening.
Now Torrak could face the one who slew his student. A stray laser blast
from the furious battle glanced off Van’s armor. Torrak stepped out of the
way of an exploding round, as a two-foot crater blew out behind him. Van
pumped the slide to chamber the last round. Torrak chanted incoherently.
Van opted to activate an invisible barrier surrounding his armor. Psychic
energy charged the crystal matrix and ran along the mystic circuitry inside his
armor. Torrak’s fist flew open. Glowing tendrils shot from his palm forming a
magic net. Completely entangled, the tall Techno-Wizard tripped and rolled.
Haughty, guttural laughter from Torrak displayed his disdain.
“I will drink your soul and absorb your life force to avenge the death of my
apprentice. Then I will torture and slay the people you wish to save.” Torrak
stood over him laughing.
“Yes, I was told you were coming. Did you think you would be any threat
to a powerful Gromek Shifter?”
Torrak’s arrogance and overconfidence were sickening. Now Van knew
for certain who had committed the atrocities he’d seen. Scenes of broken,
mutilated bodies played back in his mind. Anger enhanced determination.
“Payback time!”
Torrak was astonished. Van’s left hand lifted the strands aside and he
slipped from the magic net. Another proud invention of his, the escape spell
worked into the left hand of his armor had come in handy numerous times
before. However, this was the first time he’d ever been forced to use it this
way. Torrak paid little attention to Van’s right hand. The one firing the gun.
Knocked off balance by the blast, Torrak felt his barrier waver further.
Van’s weapon was now empty. Air sang as the mace arced and struck. Fum-
bling with the speed loader, Van’s magic enhanced armor absorbed the blow.
“Mute!” Torrak shouted. Van fought the mental assault.
“Shut up!” He shouted back, just to make sure he could still speak. Forced
to knock Sharp out of the way with a push, Van sent the soldier sprawling
before resuming the dual with the Shifter.
A TX-5 pump projectile pistol looked frighteningly large less than a foot
away from the Gromek’s face. Torrak ducked, rubble flying from the detona-
tion point sixty feet away. The black mace bounced off Van’s magic barrier
the same moment another round exploded against Torrak’s. Both staggered
back, Van was angrier now than before. Renewing his force field, he got
down and dirty. Left hand open, palm circuitry glowing, Van channeled mys-
tic energy into the complex telekinetic device he’d built into the gauntlet.
Torrak ran through a complex mantra, having restored his own magic barriers
to full.

167
Nim’s Fusion Block flew to Van’s outstretched left hand. Clueless of its
operation, Van’s psychic affinity with technological devices quickly read the
schematic layout of the detonator. Within seconds an operational knowledge
of the device temporarily entered his mind. Without touching the keypad,
Van overrode the auto-delay and reset it to manual coding. Any trained sol-
dier could program the detonator, but Van had no such training, relying on
psychic abilities instead. Quickly punching in a 10-second delay, Van’s fin-
ger hovered above the start button.
“– Secar Fro Mar Cal Vessacarr!” Torrak shouted out the finish to a pow-
erful invocation. Suddenly the world sped up for Van. Everybody but he
seemed to move three times faster. Torrak’s laugh sounded ridiculous when
sped up. He watched his finger slowly press the button, regardless of how
quickly he tried. Heart leaping to throat, Van saw the display practically skip
numbers on its way down. Torrak stood fifteen feet away, Rune mace de-
scending on Nim’s pain-racked body. Telekinetic force hurled the explosive
block against Torrak’s back. 3-2-1, the timer elapsed in one second for Van.
Concussion greater than ever he’d felt hit Torrak from behind. The ground
sped beneath him and a heap of rubble came at him like a rocket. The shock
wave from the explosion knocked anyone standing to the ground. Thank-
fully, Torrak’s form had provided a shield for Nim’s body. Stunned by the
impact, Torrak struggled groggily out of the rubble, barely feeling his broken
wings. Glowing faintly, his red aura of invulnerability faded out.
“Heal!” he commanded the weapon in his grasp. Viewing his handiwork
in effect, Torrak faced no challengers. Every one of his troops on this assault
had been slain, but his other minions sent to destroy the rest of the group
would surely be successful. He had many more. Using a spell he had little oc-
casion to invoke, Torrak flew on mystic wings back to finish the interrupted
ritual he had begun. It would only be a matter of time before his wings were
entirely healed of their injuries.
Small eagle wings on either side of Van’s helmet glowed. Wires hummed
in Van’s palm, and Sharp’s Fusion Block floated to his open hand. Deter-
mined not to let the Gromek Shifter escape, he activated his own version of
a flight spell and pursued much slower than his opponent. Behind him, the
battle of survival was being lost.

168
Chapter 9
The best laid schemes of Gromek and men...
A lone soldier fights for his life.
Brian slashed the demon’s claw again with his Vibro-Blade, nearly ex-
hausted from the fight. Rex’s bloody body lay across the rover’s windscreen,
thrown there after he’d left his Vibro-Knife under its eye. Bill had been
snapped in half by the great claws and several others were nothing more than
burnt charcoal figures from the fireballs it spat. No matter how much they
hurt the monster, it could not be stopped. Blast marks and oozing wounds
covered the creature, but it would not die.
Released from the mage’s net, Cowboy gave no thought to his life and
charged the monster that had torn his friends’ bodies limb from limb. Brian’s
humming saber sunk deep into its leg. Shrieking hideously, it backhanded
him off the rover and turned to deal with Cowboy.
“Why won’t you die?! You fur-faced, D-Bee-loving, no-good...” Cow-
boy’s insult tirade continued while he left the hilt of his saber protruding from
its right flank, stepped aside, and drew his pistol. He unloaded the entire clip
at the demon’s head to no avail. “...COMPLETE SACK OF SHI...” Wickedly
sharp teeth closed on Cowboy’s body and sliced through flesh and bone. It
spit the limp, bloodied body into the mud. Brian lay in the mud, unmoving,
left arm broken.
The rain had no effect on the fireball it spat at Greg’s oncoming SAMAS.
Immersed in blazing flame the moment it struck, he emerged from the in-
ferno, SAMAS glowing.
Somehow the demon knew exactly when to move to avoid Greg’s C-40
bursts. Time after time the C-40 fired high-speed metal but never struck home.
Avoiding another blazing ball of heat from the monster’s bloody fangs, Greg
made an act of desperation, he flew a kamikaze course right at the demon’s
head. Right into the expectant jaws.
Razor-edged teeth cut deep, mouth snapping closed on the SAMAS’s arm
and rail gun. Staring directly into a blazing white eye, Greg pulled the trigger.
The demon vanished from existence faster than it had come into being.
____________________

Darkening clouds formed a ceiling over the sacrificial altar. Ankles and
wrists chained and weighted, Anja lay in a trance upon the cold stone slab.
Her drenched, dark rust-colored hair surrounding her serene face was in sharp
contrast to the white gossamer fabric clinging about her shapely body. Under
Torrak’s spell, Anja was unaware of the cold, soaking rain.
Surrounding the sacrificial altar were many long, wooden poles driven
into the earth. Hands tied to the top of each pole belonged to prisoners in
far worse condition than the maiden atop the altar. Suffering from exposure
169
and starvation, these would be the first to die in the ritual ceremony. Goblins
amused themselves by torturing the prisoners. It didn’t matter how much they
screamed or how near death they were, as long as their lives were left to take
at the ceremony.
Orcs waited in line to enter a small rainproof hut provided them. They
boasted in their guttural tongue stories of foes vanquished and villages pil-
laged. Near death and in shock, the human women inside the hut could do
nothing to end the repeated torture they were subjected to.
Brick walls had been rebuilt, mixed with stones and mortar. Vacant of the
Gromek troops involved in the battle, the remaining unarmed troops huddled
out of the rain in the barely adequate shelters. A number of Orcs tormented
the prisoners down in a mud-filled pit. Tossing stones and feces at the nearly
submerged prisoners eliminated the boredom of waiting. Torrak and the oth-
ers would be returning shortly. Hopefully, there would be other prisoners to
join the pitiful few remaining in the makeshift dungeon.
Left in charge while Torrak was absent, a snake-like D-Bee roasted a child
over an open fire. Its forked tongue watered for the succulent morsel. Two
Gromek guards “interrogated” the wilderness scout captured while escort-
ing the Mystic now spread on the altar. His eyes were swollen shut and face
bleeding. The interrogators borrowed some glowing embers from the com-
mander’s fire to accompany their questions.
Inset chunks of stone and concrete covered the ground between structures.
Roughhewn beams and scavenged metal girders supported poorly built walls.
The compound was laid out around the altar of sacrifice and was dedicated to
a winged being with a hunched back and thin limbs. The cult had erected an
idol in its likeness behind the altar. Cupped hands on either side of the altar
waited to catch the blood flowing from the sacrifice.
“Torrak come! Torrak come!” A Goblin pointed across the rain-soaked
compound. Rushing to meet their master, the remaining cult members paid
no attention to the mud caking their feet and legs. Still hovering inches above
the ground, Torrak approached the altar.
Exhausted from his spell casting, the mage wearily trudged up to a pris-
oner bound to a wooden pole. Clawed fingers dug into the soft flesh of a
victim’s neck and crushed the windpipe. Yellow glowing eyes bore into the
crazed, terror-stricken face of the dying man. Torrak squeezed, claws cutting
deep. At the moment of death, a wafting blue aura was torn from the body
and traveled up Torrak’s arm. The aura vanished, absorbed into Torrak’s
body. He let the lifeless form go limp and strode much stronger to the next
pole to absorb the life force of another victim. Practitioners of magic could
draw upon the life force of those around them when conducting rituals and
ceremonies. Usually, the life energy drawn was minuscule and returned to
the person in a matter of hours. Impatient, Torrak wanted all. With every
murder, he felt himself regain the energy spent by his grueling spell magic.

170
Twelve lifeless prisoners were dragged away. Obeying orders, six Orcs lifted
the wooden lattice covering the pit and pulled live prisoners out to take the
other’s places. Admiring the razor-sharp edge of his ceremonial dagger, Tor-
rak wasted no time beginning the ritual.
____________________

Good judgment kept Van from following too close behind Torrak. Not-
ing the location he landed, Van knew he’d need every advantage to take on
Torrak’s camp. He flew for the edge of the ley line to top off his reserves of
magical energy. When he got there, he set about rechecking all of his equip-
ment. Ley lines were a wizard’s battlefield and the battle was just beginning.
Wings glowing with prepared spells on both sides of his helmet, the Tech-
no-Wizard resumed flight a few minutes later, heading back to the encamp-
ment.
Throwing subtlety to the wind, Van dropped with the rain into the center
of the compound. Torrak had just begun to chant and his troops stood in their
appointed places to witness the act. The complex ritual involved the mutila-
tion of the sacrificial victim before the killing blow was struck. A separate
mantra for each of the twelve deaths was required when Torrak murdered a
prisoner bound to a pole. Then it was on to the final sacrifice and invocation.
Each death provided Torrak with the vital force needed to perform the power-
ful summoning magic. If interrupted, he would have to begin again.
“Danger is here,” Mind Crusher warned Torrak.
“Force field,” Torrak told the weapon with his mind. Rain stopped fall-
ing on the altar and prisoners bound to poles. Van watched the bubble form
over the altar, rain deflected over its surface and realized it would protect the
Shifter and his intended victims. Cult members rushed Van en masse.
Right hand wielding the TX-5, Van pulled a small welding torch and mini
canister from a belt pouch. Powered by mystic energy, the torch had been
turned into a short range, hand-held flamethrower. Dependent not on fuel or
gas, the device “burned” magic energy stored in the small canister. Fueled
by the same psychic energy as the ley lines and amplified by the surging en-
ergy of the nexus, the portable Techno-Wizard flamethrower shot fire forty-
five feet from its nozzle in a meter-wide jet. Unarmored Orcs and Goblins
screamed and flailed from burning clothes and flesh. No rain could extinguish
the flames spewing forth from the hand-held device. Wet clothing saved a
few the agony of severe burns and those out of the flames’ range pounded
away with all manner of conventional firearms. Bullets bounced off Van’s
magic armor as harmlessly as the falling rain.
Multiple ion beams struck from two directions, dissipating before they
struck the actual composite surface of Van’s armor. It appeared only three
guards had any serious firepower left – two Gromeks in plate armor and a
snake-like creature with scale mail armor the same colors as its yellow and
171
green scaly skin. Van created a path to the force field bubble, wincing when
he saw the third victim’s life force absorbed by the evil mage. A telekinetic
force field, like any other protective barrier, could be eventually worn down.
Van hoped to use the guard’s own weapons to aid him. Scorched bodies
twisted in the mud, cold rain and water relieving some pain from burning
skin. Moving erratically next to the barrier, several ion blasts missed their
target and weakened Torrak’s force field.
The jet of fire shooting from the flame device kept cult members from
overpowering him by weight of numbers. Shoving the TX-5 back in his belt,
Van picked up a mud-covered revolver and emptied all six chambers into
a group of Orcs. Fair play wasn’t a concern of the Techno-Wizard. These
fiends had tortured and murdered hundreds of innocent people. More stray
blasts broke down the field further, but still not enough. Victim seven died,
giving up his life energy to the Gromek Shifter.
Van tossed the revolver back in the mud, drawing his favorite weapon;
manufactured by the Manstique Imperium and converted to magic power,
the NG-57 had served him many times. The charged ion beam no longer
ran on energy clips, instead, a bizarre crystal matrix surrounded a ruby gem.
Wires and microcircuits charged the firing chamber. The weapon could be
recharged instantly by a Techno-Wizard channeling energy into its crystal
power source. While its capacity was limited to ten ion discharges, Van could
re-power the NG-57 in the time it took to change a standard clip, but without
having to stop torching persistent cult members.
Charged ions crackled in the rain, the first beam missing and leveling a
poorly built stone structure. Van sidestepped a volley of ion beams and heard
a pause in the spell taking place behind him.
“Damn!” Van cursed. Somehow the Shifter had renewed the protective
barrier in the middle of a complex invocation and continued unabated to slay
the tenth victim. Something had to be done fast. Rapidly draining the clip to
one charge, Van cut through a Gromek’s armor to blow his chest wide open
with the ninth blast. Taking careful aim, he placed the last charge between the
second Gromek’s eyes. Its head expanded, blowing out the helmet and leav-
ing the body in the mud. Flames seemed to keep the snake D-Bee at bay but
didn’t appear to scorch its scaly skin. Van reholstered the NG-57 and glanced
back to see the twelfth victim die by Torrak’s hand. The Shifter stepped up
to the altar.
“Adden Nor, Drex Ven Quarmar Nor.” The blade hovered near Anja’s
fair-skinned face. Torrak prepared to make the first incision of forty. Ten
meters away, Van desperately sought a means to stop the mad Shifter from
slaying the woman.
The solution came an instant before the blade gouged out one of Anja’s
eyes. Speaking rapidly, Van cast his spell. Torrak screamed in rage, his blade
deflected by a shimmering blue and white dome protecting Anja’s defense-

172
less form. He thrust the knife blade harder to pierce the mystic’s eye, but
again the blade was deflected.
“Two can play at that game!” Van shouted. “What’s the matter?”
Torrak whirled to face him, eyes shining brighter with rage than ever
before. There was no way to penetrate the energy field without ending the
course of his ritual. Twice now his summoning spell had been stopped by in-
terruptions. Fury overtook the Gromek Shifter, and he wanted nothing more
than to crush the skull of this meddling Techno-Wizard.
Hit from behind, Van bounced off the Shifter’s force field and was pulled
down by the snake monster. Stronger, the D-Bee kept Van’s flamethrower
away from itself but couldn’t quite pin the slippery Techno-Wizard. Forced to
drop his flame device, Van managed to kick his opponent away long enough
to draw the TX-5. Hissing and spitting mud from its serpentine mouth, the
D-Bee came again. Scales flew from a six-inch-wide crater in its side. Black-
ened skin surrounded the impact zone of the exploding round. Blood poured
from the wound, but it was still able to knock Van flat on his back. The TX-5
skidded over mud and stones. The two writhed violently, Van desperately
trying to keep the coiled tail from pinning his arms. Torrak stepped forward,
determined to slay the Techno-Wizard in the worst way.
“Mind Crusher!” Torrak screamed. Spikes whistled in the air, mace de-
scending. Van wrenched a leg free and shoved back. The mace’s spiked head
cut through scale and bone. Convulsing wildly, the snake D-Bee encircling
Van with its body thrashed in agony. Popping bolts of energy cascaded off its
form and were drawn into the mace. In a flash of light, its body disappeared,
empty scale armor falling apart over Van’s body. The rune weapon had soul-
drunk the wrong victim.
Speech could not detail the fury that coursed through Torrak. Inhuman
screams of rage echoed off rough stone walls. Completely out of control,
Torrak swung madly at the frantically dodging Techno-Wizard. Each swing
cutting a swath through the rain with the foreboding terror of a patient, hun-
gry vampire stalking its victim. Torrak, the enraged brute, silhouetted against
the blue glow of the nearby nexus, swung again and again, nearly connecting
as Van managed to move just out of reach.
Van remembered his flying device was still powered and took off into the
sky. It took Torrak a few moments for his fury to subside enough that he real-
ized Van was no longer in front of him. Van touched ground long enough to
retrieve his muddied TX-5 and cycle the next round. Still empowered with
magic, he aimed the flamethrower at the few remaining cult members and
burned them to a crisp before they could snatch up their fallen comrades’ ion
rifles. Slipping the device back into its pouch, Van dedicated his attention on
the chanting Shifter.
A red glowing aura surrounded Torrak’s body. Careful aim put an explo-
sive round dead center of the Shifter’s chest. The protective barrier glowed

173
less brightly. Too involved in his spell, Torrak was flung to the ground. An-
other round cracked loudly, exploding against the magic aura. Without both-
ering to stand, Torrak resumed his incantation. The aura was weakened dan-
gerously by the third exploding round, Torrak pointed to the Techno-Wizard
and called down lightning with the invocation.
Brilliant light flooded the compound with its glare. Concussive thunder hit
with sonic impact as a bolt of lightning arced from the sky and engulfed the
hovering Techno-Wizard on its way to the ground. Cracks of steaming earth
spread away from the blackened crater beneath his feet, but Van emerged
completely unscathed. Be it synthetic or natural, energy could not harm him
as long as his spell and the laws of physics held up.
Van dropped the red protective aura with the last round from his pistol.
Partially dissipated, the force pitted Torrak’s chest plate.
“Snare him with a net. Give his soul to me,” Mind Crusher advised its
wielder. Torrak leapt to his feet, invoking another invisible barrier to protect
him wherever he walked. He began to recite the verses that produced the
magic net he found so useful.
Speed loader inserted, Van took aim at Torrak’s horned skull and knocked
the Shifter back into the mud. Van began to wonder if he had enough projec-
tiles to finish the job, his own body weary from repeated spell casting.
“Damn!” He seethed. “How many more of these is this gonna take?!” The
explosive round caused no harm to Torrak’s head. Neither did the next two,
detonating on an invisible barrier the Shifter had erected. Torrak’s bloody
hand flew open and the net sprang forth, snaring Van again. Held aloft by
means of magic, Van remained hopelessly entangled two meters above the
ground. Torrak rose, wary of any escape attempt.
“He’s weak. He cannot defend himself much longer,” Mind Crusher whis-
pered telepathically.
“You will never fly again.” Torrak worked a spell while Van slipped his
hand through the net fibers and freed himself from its grasp.
“Felz Craw Omeren Doss Groth!”
The glowing eagle wings on Van’s helmet grew dimmer but repelled the
negation assault. Torrak’s spell had little effect and the flying device recov-
ered in seconds.
Van took a gamble that Torrak’s current barrier wasn’t entirely energy
resistant. Rifles never appealed to him and he’d never become proficient with
one. The circumstances, however, demanded he give one a try. A quick flit
and he was atop a headless Gromek prying its TX-30 ion pulse rifle from its
grip. His own Northern Gun-manufactured weapon back in his belt, he hefted
the rifle. Balanced for two-handed use, the weapon utilized a front-loading
energy clip with a fifty charge capacity. The weapon was set to a discharge
setting of three, but Van would have switched to full auto if he’d know where

174
the selector switch was. Torrak ran at him, mace at the ready. Rapid triple
blasts wore down the invisible armor but still didn’t penetrate.
Jumping high and remaining there to avoid deadly blows, Van fired again.
The third ion blast grazed the Gromek’s wings and exploded the earth at his
feet. Hurled three meters, Torrak went face first into the mud, his magic bar-
rier preventing the clinging earth from sticking to him.
Had Van been a better shot, he could have ended it all then, but unfamil-
iarity with the rifle cost him the opportunity. Two of the next triple bursts
cratered the Gromek’s back plate, burning Torrak’s skin with intensely hot
metal.
Suddenly, wings flapped in Van’s face, and claws closed around the pulse
rifle. The vulture pecking at him with its curved beak offered no real threat
but prevented Van from aiming. He ripped the weapon from the bird’s claws,
pausing for an instant when he noticed the vulture’s eyes were as yellow as
Torrak’s. He clubbed it hard with the barrel.
Pain hit Torrak’s chest. Every blow his familiar took, he also felt. He
recalled it and the vulture returned to a cove out of the rain. Its master could
still defeat this minor mage without its help.
Protective shield renewed, Torrak was now more than ready to end the
dual once and for all. Something dropped in the mud at his feet.
“Get away!” Mind Crusher screamed to his brain. Van hid behind the al-
tar. Torrak looked down at the object. Roughly brick-sized and with a green
numeric display counting down from 03...02...
Sharp’s Fusion Block.
Diving away from the device only helped propel the winged Shifter a few
meters farther than the explosion alone. Rock walls cracked and crumbled
from the ground shock wave. Bits of stone and brick bounced off the blue
shield over the altar. Ceilings fell, beams collapsed, and cult members scat-
tered, as most were completely deafened. The chains binding the maiden to
the altar’s surface rattled, while the statue of Torrak’s patron god cracked
and toppled over the blue and white field protecting what should have been
its appeasement.
Covered under wooden beams, broken bricks, and stone, Torrak couldn’t
hear or feel a thing. He knew he was alive, but in what aspects he did not.
“Mind Crusher. Move these stones off my body.”
“Know this is the last I can do for you this day.”
Invisible telekinetic force moved the debris aside, setting the wounded
mage free. By the time his body could move unhindered, a spell of flight had
been invoked in preparation to flee. Thought was hard and slow. Torrak still
retained most of the life force from the lives he’d taken, but it would do him
no good if he could not recall invocations in his confused state. The Techno-
Wizard gave no quarter.

175
Rain settled the dust from collapsed buildings quickly. Steam rose in bil-
lowing clouds from a two-meter-deep crater where the Shifter had previously
been standing. Soot mixed with dust to coat Torrak’s body with grime.
A single ion blast discharged from the TX-30. Van pulled the trigger
again. Only a high-pitched tone emanated from the weapon. Empty of power,
the rifle’s last shot pockmarked Torrak’s chest plate and seared his flesh. Pain
clearing his numbed mind, he recalled a simple protection spell and recited
the words from memory. He could not hear himself speaking. Proof of the
word’s power, Van’s projectile exploded near the Gromek’s torso but caused
no pain.
“Die dammit, die!” Van emptied the last projectile from his weapon.
“Die!” Knocked on his butt by the second explosion, Torrak watched the
man in Explorer armor hand loading rounds into his weapon.
“He’s on the ground,” Torrak said aloud, realizing the potential. Focus-
ing as best he could, he chanted the spell he’d entrapped the Enforcer with.
Spreading under Van’s feet, the ground adhered to his feet and held him im-
mobile.
Realization of his predicament came after loading his remaining three
rounds and then finding he couldn’t move his feet. The Shifter could walk
over and finish him off, Van thought. He might be able to cast a few minor
spells, but it wouldn’t stop the Shifter from smashing his skull with the mace.
His energy field nearly expired, and his own magic barriers waning, Van got
ready to play the one card he had left.
Torrak stood unsteadily, blurred vision from rain and grit caused him to
trip and roll down into a mud puddle. Wobbling on his feet again, he stum-
bled onward. Nothing could break the will of a Gromek, he told himself. Not
even death.
Anja lay bare to the elements, the energy field disappearing as quickly as
it appeared. The Techno-Wizard was weaponless with his arms crossed at
the wrists, his TX-5 set on the altar next to the woman. Altering the adhesive
carpet only he could see, Torrak walked to his opponent on a path free of the
magic flypaper.
Where the weapon came from, Torrak hadn’t the faintest idea. One second
his enemy stood defenseless, and the next he brought down a wickedly sharp
flyssa sword across his shoulder. It was a short sword, elegant and lightly
weighted in design with its sharp edge taking on a bowing curve while it’s
back was a firm backbone to its body marked with regularly placed divots.
The sword’s tip narrowed to a sickening point while the carvings along its
flat sides held intricate symbols that made an artistic pattern and could hide
some deeper meaning.
The barrier’s defenses lessened but held. Recovering from the shock, Tor-
rak failed to see the switch of sword and gun. Aching limbs swung the spike-
headed mace, only to see it be stopped short by the keen-edged blade Van

176
wielded. Another swing by Torrak met the same response, only in return, he
found the barrel of a projectile pistol aimed only centimeters from his hand.
Feeling the disturbance on the ley lines and hearing the massive explo-
sion, spectators from surrounding sites cautiously peered over walls and from
behind trees. Bolder, more powerful beings stood in plain sight at the edges
of the compound. All anticipated the cataclysmic finish of a titanic wizards’
dual. What powerful beings could level buildings and split the sky with light-
ning?
Thrown head over heels, Torrak slid on his mangled wings in the mud.
Spectators were amazed to see the challenger not pursue the mage he was
battling.
Painfully rising to his feet, Torrak was again slammed down by an explo-
sive projectile. Dazed, he tried to see the world around him through mud-
smeared eyes. He was surrounded. No mystery the Techno-Wizard had been
so bold. All of his allies were coming to his aid.
Escape.
Escape was his only course for survival. Flying by means of magic, Torrak
fled from his destroyed cult and compound.
“Oh no you don’t!” Van couldn’t let the Gromek Shifter escape after all
he had gone through. Powerless to chase the wounded mage, Van made an
impossible shot with the projectile pistol. The last round detonated, sending
hot metal fragments deep into Torrak’s leg. Then the Gromek cleared the tree
line and was gone.
The silence from the audience was ominous. Van stared around him,
knowing he hadn’t a chance of fighting off a horde like the one at the edges
of the compound.
“You wanna mess? Huh!?” He bluffed. “You want some too? Who wants
to go next?! Anybody else want to go a few rounds with the great Archime-
des?!” He waved the blade and empty pistol around as if he could actually
harm them. D-Bees, monsters, humans, and remaining cult members slipped
away. A few took their time, surveying the remnants of Torrak’s compound.
Few dared venture there before, and fewer still wanted to annoy anyone who
could defeat Torrak and utterly destroy the legion he commanded.
Anja stirred slightly. Eyes fluttered open, turning not to see the horrible,
bat-like visage of Torrak staring down at her, but an armor-clad figure with
golden wings on his helm. Waves of uncontrollable shivering shook her
body. Blue eyes pleaded mercy, teeth chattering too violently for speech.
Anja’s heart pounded with fear.
“Just hold on a little longer,” the figure spoke.
Time elapsed slowly. Anja’s shivering grew worse. Van waited for Tor-
rak’s spell to elapse.
“Easy, easy. Not much longer,” Van tried to soothe her telepathically.
“Nobody’s going to hurt you. You’re safe now, okay?”

177
Rain poured unmercifully. The spell’s duration elapsed and Van moved
quickly from his stationary footing, slicing the four chains with little force.
Seeing nobody to offer any more threat, the blade vanished from his hands.
Weakened by the elements, Anja hardly had the strength to sit up. Shaking
from the onset of hypothermia, Anja allowed herself to be carried to a con-
crete slab partially sheltered by tin roofing. Pelting rain sounded loud against
the corrugated metal. Van carefully set her against a wall and pushed the
metal outward to enlarge the small enclosure.
Staring at her strange savior she felt no malice from him. She watched Van,
teeth chattering, take a small device from a belt pouch, then look for some-
thing with which to build a fire. Nothing dry, Van wedged the flamethrower
between two bricks and set the nozzle to a two-foot flame. Heat warmed
Anja’s hypothermic body and she clamored closer to the flame. Aqua eyes
went to thank Van, but he was gone. Fear of being left alone washed over her.
Too cold to speak coherently, her limited spell knowledge was unattainable.
Kneeling cold and barefoot next to the makeshift fire, Anja tried to choke
back sobs of misery.
Arms tired from lifting stones and rubble, Van wearily lifted another fe-
male survivor from debris and carried her back to the shelter. Cuts, abrasions,
and abuse had taken their toll; the woman was in shock. Forgetting her own
condition, Anja’s heart went out to someone in far worse shape than herself.
Cries from the pit reminded Van there were others to be freed. With a part-
ing gaze at Anja holding the woman’s head in her lap, the exhausted Techno-
Wizard trudged back into the rain to aid the remaining survivors.
____________________

Metamorphosized into a beautiful, raven-haired human woman, Kro Mar


used every wile he could conceive of to weasel spell knowledge from prac-
titioners of magic around the nexus. Other than acquiring a minor smoke
cloud spell, he had only been successful in degrading himself short of actu-
ally sleeping with other spellcasters. He was about to revert to the “Teach me
the spell and I won’t eat you” approach, when a thunderclap rolled across the
nexus. Soon he was migrating with others toward where the lightning bolt
had struck. Line Walkers, more attuned to shifts in magic currents than most,
claimed a large battle between wizards was taking place under the nexus.
Shape-shifting powers were innate to the dragon, and Kro Mar altered his
form to resemble a gorilla-like D-Bee he’d seen in his travels. After all, he
didn’t want to stick out in the crowd. For some reason, he drew more atten-
tion now than he had as a voluptuous maiden in a tight spandex swimsuit.
This was puzzling. Until he realized his constricted fur was compressed by
wet material. A seven-foot gorilla wearing a woman’s swimsuit wasn’t some-
thing you saw every day.

178
A quick teleport saved him from further embarrassment. Insistent on re-
maining incognito, Kro Mar returned to female form, but a much chubbier
one to fit the stretched spandex suit.
Shortly after a massive explosion shook the nexus, Kro Mar arrived to
see what powerful magic had produced such a shock wave. Gathered around
Torrak’s compound were all manner of D-Bee and magic users. Kro Mar
watched breathlessly to see if the wizard in Explorer armor could stand his
ground protecting the fair maiden. Vision attuned to all things magic in ori-
gin, the dragon could see energy surrounding the spiked mace the Gromek
wizard carried. Speaking a minor spell, he saw dark shades of red, grey, and
black surrounding the mace. Kro Mar recognized it to be a powerful magic
weapon. Kro Mar wanted the rune mace.
Defeated by the Techno-Wizard, the Gromek Shifter fled by means of
magic flight. Kro Mar shape-shifted into a bird to follow. Abandoning what
few belongings he carried, his eyes fixed on the mace like a dog spying a
larger bone in another dog’s mouth. This time he made sure he was rid of the
spandex bathing suit.
Traveling east down a ley line in the pouring rain, Kro Mar was proud of
himself for choosing such an appropriate form to suit the weather. Being a
duck certainly had its advantages. The Gromek Shifter landed two miles from
the nexus, and the mallard flapped harder to reach him.
Sure enough, sitting on a twisted car chassis was his prey. Patience wasn’t
one of Kro Mar’s strong suits, but he opted for a little more observation be-
fore attempting to take the rune weapon from its owner. Crashing into a tree
trunk, the mallard bounced branch to branch all the way to the ground with
a thump. Mental note, Kro Mar thought, webbed feet did not work well for
perching.
Righting himself, Kro Mar was subjected to further indignity when large
claws closed around him. Looking up, he saw a hungry vulture with yellow
eyes.
This was intolerable. He was a dragon, not some tasty tidbit to an over-
grown bird.
Suddenly, Torrak’s familiar found its prey growing rapidly. Gripping a
few green scales with its claws, the vulture was surprised to find the mallard’s
head replaced by that of a gigantic, black-horned dragon.
“Boo!” Kro Mar watched the vulture squawk madly away. The Gromek
was scrambling off the car, horrified at the dragon’s appearance. Smiling,
as only a dragon could, Kro Mar was pleased to see the fear his presence
invoked. He decided to be merciful.
“Give me the mace and I will spare your worthless life.”
“The mace is cursed. You don’t want it!”
“A curse is too weak to affect a powerful dragon like me. Give it to me
now, before I grow impatient!”

179
Long, complex verses of a spell invocation came from the Gromek Shift-
er. Kro Mar knew he should strike the mage down before he finished, but was
too curious to see what would happen. After all, what could the beaten and
wounded mage do to him?
Trembling earth thrust upward and split apart. Clawed, razor-sharp tal-
ons spread the crevasse farther. A fierce-looking, adult Fire Dragon tore its
way to the surface, towering over the smaller Kro Mar. The hatchling dragon
laughed.
“That’s a really good apparition. A real Fire Dragon might actually have
killed me, but didn’t you know dragons cannot be summoned? Now give me
the mace or I’ll eat you.”
Earth sealed back over, leaving no trace of what had appeared to take
place. The adult Fire Dragon vanished into thin air. Torrak backed away fur-
ther. Kro Mar decided to just take the mace himself and cast a Time Slip
spell. For a bit of flair, and to make himself appear more powerful, he never
moved, but telekinetically pulled the mace from Torrak’s immobile hand
thirty feet away. He chuckled when he thought how amazed the Shifter would
be. One instant the weapon in his grasp, the next wielded by the powerful
Great Horned Dragon Kro Mar. Holding the mace lightly between his thumb
and forefinger, he tried to look suave.
Then his hand started to burn. Watching the Shifter’s reaction when the
spell elapsed, he felt great pain from the claw holding the Rune Weapon.
“Oww!” He roared loudly and dropped the mace. Two burn marks in-
dented his thumb and forefinger. A telepathic voice reached his mind.
“You are not worthy to wield me. Thus sayeth Mind Crusher!”
Kro Mar wanted that weapon! Snatching it off the ground, he was burned
again, dropping the mace like a hot potato. This had to be the Shifter’s fault.
Now he really would eat the Gromek, or at least bite him. He’d never eaten
Gromek before. It might taste yucky.
How the Shifter covered ten yards in an instant could only have been the
work of magic.
“Soul drink!” The Shifter shouted, now wielding his mace again. Three-
inch-long spikes sunk into Kro Mar’s foot. Incredibly resistant to magic and
psionic attacks, the hatchling dragon fought the soul stealing powers of the
weapon. Terribly weakened by the attack, Kro Mar realized just how danger-
ous an opponent he faced. But he still wanted the mace. Even if he couldn’t
use it, he could add it to his collection. Angered by pain and frustration,
he covered the Shifter with a breath of flame. Stepping unscathed from the
flames surrounding him, Torrak struck again.
“Soul drink!”
“Oww!” That time really hurt, and it was harder to fight the soul-drinking
assault. He grabbed the Shifter and squeezed hard. Unharmed by the con-
stricting claws, Torrak’s mace stuck again.

180
“Soul drink!”
Kro Mar felt his life ebbing away and threw the Gromek head first into
the car chassis. Flames from his fire breath lit up vegetation but burned out
quickly in the rain. The dragon stepped over scorched, steaming earth intent
on smashing the Shifter to a pulp. Lightning struck his head with such force
he never heard the thunderclap. Eyelids fluttered and limbs twitched from
hundreds of millions of volts traveling down his spine to the ground. Flop-
ping on the ground in a daze, Kro Mar couldn’t quite make his body do what
his muddled mind told it to.
Into the sky flew the Shifter. Fury took hold and he threw judgment to the
wind. Kro Mar had to get revenge, even if he didn’t get the weapon. Flapping
rapidly, his numbed body followed the airborne Gromek.
A hundred and fifty feet up, lightning flashed from the clouds and spiked
through the dragon again. Every scale stood on end and every muscle con-
stricted in spasms.
Plummeting earthward, Kro Mar imagined this to be the second of the
worst two days in his life. Knocked out of the sky three times in 48 hours.
Could things get any worse?
Minutes passed, Kro Mar stared into the rain – embedded spread-eagle
in an old field. Finally regaining full use of his limbs, he climbed from the
sprawled indentation and metamorphosized back into the raven-haired beau-
ty.
It wasn’t until after he teleported back to the nexus that he realized the
spandex swimsuit was still back at the Shifter’s compound.
____________________

Splattered blood on the rover’s windscreen vanished. Armor mended itself,


and the soldier’s bodies healed themselves of all wounds. Brian’s arm was
no longer broken, in fact, it never had been. Gingerly removing Cowboy’s
helmet, Brian was overjoyed to find the giant soldier still alive. Unconscious,
but breathing evenly and apparently unharmed, most of the others were only
in shock from believing themselves killed by the demon apparition.
“Lieutenant! They’re alive! It wasn’t real!” Brian called out, tears unable
to be held back. The traumatic experience of watching his friends die and
nearly losing his own life impacted hard. Such a sense of relief overwhelmed
Brian that he didn’t care who saw his tears.
“Not everyone made it, Brian,” Greg admonished the tech officer solemn-
ly. The charred remains of one man still steamed in the rain and shattered bits
of armor were all that was left of another.
Brian looked at the Enforcer and then he really wanted to cry. Not a square
inch of its surface had been spared the deadly inferno. Almost unrecogniz-
able, the robot’s armor plating had suffered the worst. The sensor turret had
melted to slag and all sensitive optics were scorched and useless. Tiny specks
181
still burned across the Enforcer’s surface. Smoke and steam rose upward. The
robot had been engulfed for over fifteen seconds. Dave and Lisa were still
inside the pilot’s compartment!
“Lisa,” Brian breathed, “Lisa! Dave! Are you alright!?” he shouted over
the comm.
“We’re alive,” Lisa’s somber voice came back. She had been too occupied
with keeping the unit from blowing sky high to attempt communications. The
helmet radio seemed so basic compared to the Enforcer’s enhanced systems.
Grinding gears and painfully whining hydraulics protested Dave’s attempt
to step forward. Leaving two patches of unburned soil behind it, the Enforcer
stepped several paces forward before stopping. Dave piloted blind, with no
optics to guide his path. Lisa finally got the hatch to open. The searing heat
had nearly welded it to the surrounding armor plates.
“Lisa, how bad off is the UAR-1?” Greg asked from the ground, looking
up at her when she stuck her head out.
“Pretty bad. No communications or sensor systems. Computer and inter-
nal systems are functional, so we should be able to move it. Oh my god!” She
stared at the outside of the robot.
“Lisa, find a way to have it moving at least 25% of max speed.”
“Sir, I –”
“I know it looks bad, but we don’t have a choice. You’re in the biggest
asset we have out here for protecting ourselves, even without most of its
systems. I don’t care how, just do what you can. There are magic users and
monsters out there that could arrive any moment and we’re not in a position
to fight anyone. Find a way to get the unit out of here!” Greg ordered. “Brian,
we have wounded men. Carry them to the rover and attend to them. We may
need to leave very quickly. Sharp. Sharp!”
Sharp turned slowly to face the Lieutenant. In his bewildered state, he was
slow to comprehend even simple commands.
“What?”
“You okay, Sharp?”
“I don’t know. I don’t think so. No, I’m sure I don’t think so.”
“Put the men in the rover, Sharp. Can you do that?” Greg figured Sharp
was dazed by the massive explosion. Some confusion was understandable.
“Yep. Yep, I can do that.”
“Sharp! Help me up! I can’t move!” Darren felt ridiculously stupid laying
sprawled face-first on the ground.
Greg loaded Darren and his SAMAS into the hover rover, then flew up to
scan for attackers. Crossing open spaces and moving down the ley line came
dozens of D-Bees, monsters, and magic users. Hearing the Coalition had in-
vaded, they came to defend themselves from the enemy.
“Merrick to Brian, over.”
“Brian here.”

182
“I believe hostiles are approaching. You ready to retreat?”
“Almost, sir...”
“Now, Brian. We need to move out now! I’ll meet you back with the other
rovers.”
“What about you sir?”
“I’m going to try and buy you some time.”

183
Chapter 10
Who am I talking to?
Having recovered from the debilitating paralysis attack, Darren ran es-
cort for the rover and Enforcer. A jury-rigged periscope provided Dave with
minimal vision, and Lisa called out directions to him from the hatch. Cow-
boy and the others sat in silence for a change, grasping the reality that they
were still alive. They were greeted with shouts of welcome and dismay by
the regrouped convoy. Winters started counting heads to see how many had
come back.
“Darren, Brian, come here,” Sorenson demanded, sitting in the seat of a
rover. Brian jumped from his rover, and Darren, finally able to move,; exited
the SAMAS to converse with the mission commander.
“Where’s Lieutenant Merrick?”
“Covering our backs. He stayed behind to give us time to retreat,” Darren
said.
“What happened out there?”
“You don’t want to know”
“Darren, where did you last have the Glitter Boy when you were ordered
back?”
“Bout five, six miles east of us I’d say. Looked to me like it didn’t intend
to stop. Spotted the rovers and the others quite a bit farther on. They were
following the old highway east, too.”
“Damn. They’re headed for Youngstown,” Mike spat out.
“Yeah, that’s kinda the way I figured it, too,” Darren said along with it.
Mike looked annoyed. “So tell me, Darren. What do you think we’ll find if
they reach Youngstown?”
“Probably a bunch of D-Bees and magic users. What else? Somethin’ yer
not telling us about, Lieutenant?” Darren sounded accusatory.
“There’s a full-fledged town located near the Pre-Rifts city of Youngstown.
Industrial and agricultural exports to surrounding regions, and self-support-
ing. Have their own militia and very dubious ties to the Federation of Magic.
Anything you care to add?”
“Look, sir,” Brian cut in before Darren made more of a fool of himself. “If
you knew all the data on this region, you should have told us.”
“To be honest, I didn’t expect the rebels to get this far. I don’t make a habit
of discussing restricted information unless it’s absolutely necessary.”
“Now would be a good damn time, don’t you think?” Winters’ voice
boomed from a few feet away.
“Yes, Sergeant, I believe it would. Get your men into the rovers. We’re
going to try and catch them before they get there. I’ll tell you all what I have
on the way.”
“What about Lieutenant Merrick?” Brian asked.

184
“Let’s hope Lieutenant Merrick can take care of himself. If he needs help,
he’ll ask for it. Until then, we stick to mission priorities.”
“The Enforcer can only move through what it can see and Dave is basi-
cally using a periscope to drive now. You have a solution for that? Or can it
take care of itself, too?” Brian was accustomed to obeying orders, but Soren-
son was pushing his buttons.
“Let’s make a few things clear. I am still in command of this mission and
when we get back, as I assume all of you wish to do, reports will be made and
depositions taken. I don’t want to have to report the kind of behavior you’ve
been displaying. I’ve been quite tolerant, so far, of your insubordinate be-
havior, but that’s ending right now. We’re in hostile territory surrounded by
hostile forces. This is not a picnic, not a sightseeing tour, not a leisure patrol.
The longer we stay, the bolder our enemies will become. None of us wants to
die out here in the wastelands, so I suggest you shape up and focus on why
we’re out here. Our goal is to destroy the rebels and then leave. Nothing else
matters. Get to your positions. We are going after the rebels.”
Soldiers scurried to the rovers; Darren and Brian slowly backed down.
Sgt. Winters stepped closer and spoke in a low, threatening voice. “Respect-
fully, sir. If you endanger my men needlessly, I’ll waste you!”
____________________

Another accelerated burst of metal projectiles tore an unsuspecting D-Bee


to shreds. Continuing his erratic pattern of firing and retreating, Greg created
the illusion of many Coalition troops and SAMAS. Ammo drum over half
empty, and mini-missiles expended, he hoped there were fewer magic users
than he expected. Minor spellcasters were relatively easy to kill; their mas-
tery of the art not refined enough to provide them with much protection from
his weapons of war. But the more powerful mages were an entirely different
story. He’d wasted six bursts and a plasma mini-missile bringing down a tall
D-Bee spell caster. It was a good thing there weren’t too many others like
him bent on attacking.
Something buzzed past his head. Turning to see a tiny white globe hover
several meters away, Greg was afraid a magic user had managed to sneak up
on him. Little bolts of energy crackled and surrounded the floating ball. Con-
cealed nearby behind a pile of twisted metal pipes, the human Line Walker
moved his observation ball to assess the strength and weakness of his oppo-
nent. Unlike Shifters, who used their magic to open Rifts to other worlds and
dimensions and to summon forth creatures to do their bidding, Line Walkers
were the most proficient in the study of spell magic in its purer forms. At-
tuned to the ley line and its surging power, Line Walkers spent most of their
lives on or near the many surging lines that crisscrossed and intersected on
the planet. This Coalition power armor had chosen to do battle in almost the
worst place; a ley line. Only a nexus would have been worse, for the surg-
185
ing energies enhanced a spell caster’s magic and afforded him greater use of
his magic. Casting a simple invisibility spell, the Line Walker boldly strode
across open ground toward his victim. It was time for this intruder to die.
Without apparent cause, Greg suddenly felt himself growing weak, slug-
gish, and confused. Tiny wisps like blue fibers weaved around his SAMAS,
probing joints and crevices. Whatever magic effect he was being subjected
to, it didn’t seem to restrict his movement, and only made things seem bewil-
dering and incongruous.
From the air, a firebolt came at him, washing over his power armor and
lightly burning the armor plating. Somewhere in his numbed mind, a part
of his brain told him to get away while he could. There was no fighting an
opponent one couldn’t see. Carefully looking about him, Greg saw rain dis-
persing strangely in a small area. Bringing up thermo-imaging, he saw what
the naked eye could not: a warm humanoid form in contrast to the dark, cold
colors of the surrounding environment. Weapon trained on the form, Greg’s
sluggish reflexes were slow to pull the trigger. The warm humanoid form
simply stepped aside.
The warm figure was hurled into the mud, though what force caused it was
a mystery. Switching his optics back to visual, Greg saw a dull grey monster
tearing apart a body with its sharp talons and beak. A cross between eagle and
lion, the Gryphon made a fearsome predator. Through his fogged mind, Greg
still found it odd that the monster had no heat signature.
At the moment of the Line Walker’s death, the blue wisps surrounding
Greg disappeared and his clouded mind cleared. Lifting its bloody talons
from the kill, its wings flapped and the Gryphon flew toward the nexus and
the approaching forces. Turning south, Greg faced a tall, bronze-skinned
woman standing behind him. Rust color hair hung from her proud head,
soaked by the rain. Many vivid tattoos were visible, and her body was strong
and muscular, yet beautiful. Her brown eyes met Greg’s fearlessly grey ones.
Weaponless and wrapped in a single cloth scarf, the wasp-waisted warrior
appeared unaffected by the cold wind and severe elements. She spoke with a
strong resounding voice.
“I am Sahara. I will fight your battle today so that you may live to fight
tomorrow. When we meet in battle again, you will be the last to die. Prepare
yourself for that day.”
Seldom intimidated by man or monster, Greg found a tinge of fear stir in
his heart. Sahara pulled the wet scarf from her body and hung it up on a metal
pole protruding from a rubble pile. She touched a brightly colored tattoo of
a knight in full armor on her upper left arm, then a cloud wrapped in a chain
on her right breast. With fluid grace, she strode forward to come within three
feet of the taller power armor. Bright brown eyes penetrated the death mask
of the power armor’s helmet and deep into Greg’s mind. Raising her arms,
she crossed her wrists, each with a small tattoo. A pair of Chinese Full Moons

186
appeared in her hands, their circular blades razor sharp. One sported a pair
of white fangs protruding from the wire-wrapped handle, the other a pair of
curved, serrated blades.
“Prepare yourself,” she said, then glided noiselessly past him and toward
the battle with her magic Gryphon.
Greg watched her go, heart pounding. “What the hell was that?” he won-
dered. “And who’s going to believe this story if I ever tell it?” Lightning fell
from the sky repeatedly behind him. Through the trees, Greg could make
out parts of the battle beyond. Alien creatures and monsters screamed their
death howls and cried out in pain as their attacks against the woman and her
Gryphon failed.
After a moment, Greg snapped out of his trance. The haze that had made
it hard for him to function was gone and no new enemies were making it
through to him. It was time to regroup and see what had happened to his
soldiers.
____________________

Sod-covered homes and log-walled cabins marked the site of another


small farming community. Zenjori had seen four such villages since leaving
Akron; small, well-kept fields surrounding each. Pens for livestock and sheds
for farm implements were all surrounded by makeshift wood, concrete, and
earthen barricades to protect them from attack. Craters and potholes had been
filled in along the road they traveled. While still impassible by normal street
vehicles, the repairs allowed many other all-terrain vehicles to move much
more quickly. The rain had let up considerably, increasing visibility. Wooded
hills prevented the rebel army from seeing the town they sought, but it wasn’t
much farther. Zenjori rode in the crew compartment of the largest hover ve-
hicle with his most trusted men. Armed with stolen Coalition weapons and
clad in repainted Coalition armor, these men were the elite of the Army of
the New Order. Former Headhunters, these mercenaries had donned masks of
virtue and flew a flag of freedom and justice above their heads. None of them
really believed it, though.
“Suka San. Do you think the Federation protects this town?” a rebel with
a missing left eyepiece on his faceplate asked.
“Not from what I’ve been able to learn. Most likely they pay tribute, but
there aren’t many powerful mages present.”
“What about hotels, Suka San?”
“And bars, and women, and decent food?” the other battle-weary rebels
asked. It had been a long time since they’d seen any.
“Yes, I’m certain there is. Once we’ve established ourselves as the town’s
protectors, whatever you wish is yours.”

187
“Notec doing that mind controlling thing again, Suka San?” the rebel with
the single eyepiece asked, pointing to Notec’s still form strapped in a seat. He
appeared to be sleeping soundly.
“Yes, when we arrive, we will receive a warm welcome and be escorted to
whatever center of government they have. Remember to wear the headbands
so you don’t get hit. Find an officer to protect and stick by them, women and
children are fine, too. Just stay highly visible. Drake takes the hits on this
one.”
“Then we’re doing the same thing we did at Chuton?”
“Yes, almost exactly. This time we need to find out more quickly who
opposes the takeover though. I have a plan to deal with them. Hide any un-
modified Coalition armor and heavy weaponry you have. I’m concealing two
SAMAS in the cargo bay for future use. The one we repainted only comes
into play when we arrive.”
“What if Notec can’t find their military leader?” a skeptical rebel asked.
“Then he will find a civilian leader and pull what he knows from his brain,
then take possession of his mind and use him instead. Remember, once he’s
entrenched in the mind of one of the leaders, there’s no chance of being seen
by psychics or magic users.”
“Good thing Notec can do that out-of-body thing, huh Suka San?”
“Yes, it is.” Zenjori tried not to be annoyed by the ignorance of his men.
“Right now, he’s probably in control of a powerful leader and convincing
others we are to be accepted as friends. By the time we arrive in Youngstown,
the groundwork for our takeover will already be in place.”
Connected by a long, silver strand to his body several miles away in the
hovercraft, Notec Depi searched for the leader of the small military force pro-
tecting Youngstown. There was one close call when a child somehow saw his
astral form hovering outside the police station, but the child’s mother would
have none of his fantastic talk. For some reason, children were more apt
to see what adults could not. Perhaps years of cynicism closed their minds,
or perhaps something physically changed, making them blind to psychic
anomalies. Notec hurried his search, lest another child or psychic discover
his astral intrusion.
The Chief of Police also doubled as the town’s military leader. A tall wolf-
like D-Bee, much to Notec’s dismay. Sometimes it took weeks to rid himself
of alien thoughts and idiosyncrasies after possessing the mind of a foreign
body. Thankfully he didn’t do this type of thing often; too many exposures to
alien minds could drive a Mind Melter insane.
Passing through the brick walls and metal reinforcement of the police sta-
tion, Notec Depi reached out with both hands and touched the fur-covered
skull of his victim. There was surprisingly little resistance to his takeover,
the Wolfen, unable to repel an attack he didn’t know was coming until it was
too late. Cohabiting the mind of the Wolfen police chief, Notec severed his

188
astral tie to his own body and set to work breaking down the canine’s mental
barriers. Two other mercenary police officers were talking to him, and Notec
didn’t want to arouse much suspicion. Gritting his sharp canine teeth, Notec
slammed his consciousness deep into every recess of the Wolfen’s mind.
Memories, emotions, thoughts, knowledge, and personalities collided, inter-
mingling and joining. What Notec knew, so did the Wolfen, and vice versa,
but Notec controlled the body. Sifting through the confusing waves of clut-
tered thoughts, the Mind Melter shoved away useless volumes of information
and concentrated on names, places, and events that pertained to the Wolfen’s
task as police chief. Panting heavily, Notec remembered the names of the
men before him and focused on what they were talking about. Stolen memo-
ries would fade shortly, and Notec began memorizing vital information while
engaging the two officers in frivolous conversation.
A report came over the radio that a well-armed group of mercenaries was
approaching the center of town. His task was about to begin. With a thought,
Notec altered the aura around himself to closely resemble that of a normal
Wolfen. No sense in making a mistake this early in the game.
Built on the ruins of the Pre-Rifts city of Youngstown, most of the original
buildings had fallen into severe disrepair and had been replaced by newer
buildings constructed with recycled materials. Industry, commerce, agricul-
ture, and government were integrated parts of the new town, making it a
self-sufficient entity afloat in the wastelands. Incredible resources waited to
be reclaimed, but only what could be used was taken. Fewer than 3,000 in-
habitants populated this once thriving Pre-Rifts metropolis. Nearly half were
humanoid D-Bees living in peaceful coexistence with humans, making their
living and enjoying their lives alongside humans, while protecting the civili-
zation they had built.
Trade with surrounding kingdoms and villages kept the town well sup-
plied, and a treaty with the Federation of Magic allowed them autonomy from
the controlling mages. There were prices to be paid, but they were miniscule
compared to the wrath of a petty Federation Lord. Youngstown remained an
island amid a sea of turmoil.
Potholes disguised as puddles covered the large open area at the center of
old Youngstown. Rubble had been cleared away to make an open mall for
travelers and vagabonds passing through town. Zenjori Suka led his small
army to the mall and found a place to rest his weary group. Eyeing them
suspiciously from an old APC, a trio of policemen noted the presence of pow-
erful, highly dangerous weaponry. Weapons that could level a building in a
matter of seconds were not encouraged to be taken out in public and made
the mercenary police nervous. It was with some relief that they saw the Chief
riding toward them, accompanied by two others in a hover jeep. Their leader
stepped from the jeep to converse with the armed travelers.

189
“You observed the posted signs?” Notec spoke in a low, rumbling voice.
The Wolfen’s voice sounded very foreign to him.
“Yes, officer, we did,” Zenjori spoke smoothly, trying to assess if it was
Notec speaking for the Wolfen. “And I assure you, none of my men will vio-
late your city ordinances. Are we permitted small caliber sidearms or other
means of defense?”
“You can keep the bullet throwers with you, naturally. No high-power
energy weapons or explosives are allowed past the mall boundaries.”
“Perfectly understandable. I have some very important information to re-
lay. Are you the one I should speak with?”
“I am he,” Notec rumbled, making eye contact with the strange vision of
his host body. A quick nod from Zenjori and the ploy had begun.
“A very large and aggressive Coalition force is making its way toward
your town. We saw their advance scouts only miles outside your boundaries,
and quickly came to warn you.”
“Why?” Notec growled in suspicion.
“I’ll cut to the chase. We offer our services to augment your own fine
defenses in repelling the Coalition advance. For a price.”
“We’re capable of dealing with Coalition forces by ourselves. What have
you to offer that we can’t do ourselves?”
“Did I mention we have a Glitter Boy waiting on the outside of town?”
“A Glitter Boy?”
“Yes, a Glitter Boy. No doubt you would want to confirm their presence
before we’re hired, but I assure you we’re experienced in dealing with Coali-
tion tactics.”
“That’s not up to me. You need to speak with the mayor. Follow me and
leave your weapons here.”
Speaking to his own men, Zenjori said, “Leave the energy weapons. I
doubt the Coalition would be bold enough to attack in broad daylight.” He
handed his own rifle to a rebel and the others followed suit. Things were go-
ing well so far.
“What about the ‘Borg?” a police officer observed.
“My weapons are not removable. I can remove the energy clips if you
wish,” said Drake, pulling the small clip from its side-port in his arm and
handing the ammo belt to an overloaded rebel. “Satisfactory?”
“Yeah, I guess.”
Sun peeked from behind dark clouds, brightening the relatively well-
maintained streets. Existing drainage and waste reclamation systems had
been restored, leaving Youngstown with a more than adequate sewer system;
a rarity even in some larger towns.
Town hall doubled as the mayor’s residence. Obviously built within the
last ten to twenty years, the white building with Victorian styling had all
the modern amenities technology could provide. As a courtesy, the nine-foot

190
‘Borg remained outside so as not to stress the wood floors with his weight.
There was another reason as well.
“Mr. Tristan, this is Mr. Suka. He’s a Headhunter,” Notec unceremoni-
ously introduced the short Chinese man beside him. The police chief’s man-
ners weren’t supposed to be good.
“Yes, I see that, Cyril,” the mayor rose from his desk to greet them. “What
can I do for you, Mr. Suka?” An older man with hands gnarled from hard
manual work and tanned skin contrasting his graying hair, the mayor hadn’t
always been so courteous himself.
“Mayor Tristan, has Cyril informed you of the Coalition force about to
invade your fine town?” The mayor eyed the police chief.
“Is this true?”
“That’s what he says. I’ve got men confirming his story right now. I don’t
think it’s true.”
“I’m afraid it is true, Mr. Tristan,” Suka filled in. “I myself have seen their
advance forces. My men and I have encountered their troops many times and
have seen the atrocities they commit. I offer my assistance in repulsing the
attack.”
“Come now, Mr. Suka. They’re not so bold as to cross hundreds of miles
over Federation territory just to assault my town. There’s no reason in that.
Perhaps they just wish to pass through,” the mayor reasoned. Coalition troops
this far from Chi-Town seemed ludicrous.
“You know, there’s a treaty,” Notec growled.
“Yes, Cyril, I know the treaty. The Federation treaty states that we are not
to aid or harbor the Coalition in any way. That still allows them access to the
mall and free passage through our town. If they were to behave themselves
like everybody else, I see no reason to provoke an assault. Do you?”
“I sincerely hope you’re correct, Mr. Tristan.” Zenjori sounded sincere
enough. “What the Coalition does to their prisoners is too horrible to de-
scribe. Perhaps this is just an advance group of a larger force, perhaps not. I
must agree with your police chief. There’s no need to provoke an attack. Just
the same –”
Shrieks from outside closed the discussion instantly. Thrusters roared past
the window, rattling glass in the mayor’s office.
“What’s going on out there, Drake?” Suka called on his wrist comm.
“SAMAS, boss. Rippin’ up civies and shootin’ the hell out of everything
in sight. Two of the police officers are down. They didn’t have a chance.”
“Get out there and do something, Cyril!” the mayor demanded. Notec ran
from the mayor’s house to confront a Coalition SAMAS with the number 15
painted on its chest.
Zenjori cursed. “Your police chief took all our weapons, at least the ones
that could do anything to that power armor!” Rebels outside the town hall

191
fired away uselessly with small caliber sidearms. The mayor’s face grew red
as he grabbed a rifle off the wall, tossing it to Suka.
“Think they can come into my town and kill innocent people for fun? I’ll
show them!” He pulled a sleek laser pistol from his vest and headed for the
door. Suka bumped into him as he passed, index finger striking the mayor’s
chest hard enough to make him stop in pain. Suka smiled and covered his
neural attack with concern.
“You’re the mayor. You can’t sacrifice yourself. Let professionals take
care of it.”
“To hell with being mayor! I’ll do as I please!” He shoved past and out the
door. A quick glance around told Zenjori he was alone.
“This is point. Don’t shoot the man with the Wilk’s 320.”
Coalition #15 was wreaking havoc on the unprepared town. Now it fo-
cused on a Wolfen warrior that was an amazingly poor shot with the plas-
ma ejector he carried. It took two bursts from the C-40 Rail Gun to kill the
Wolfen police chief, his body torn into a mangled heap.
“Warning, left leg damaged,” said the computer. Some idiot without ar-
mor or protection stood in the street firing a high-power laser pistol. This part
wasn’t planned. Knocking the mayor down with jet wash, the SAMAS fired
on the tall ‘Borg near the town hall. Kinetic slugs struck heavy armor plates
and barely phased the nine-foot cyborg. Latch sprung, the concealed leg com-
partment opened and Drake pulled an ion rod from its charger. The SAMAS
pilot winced, allowing some charged ion blasts to burn the armor of his unit
before disengaging and flying away from the town.
Notec Depi’s body jerked violently in the hovercraft. “He’s back,” a rebel
shouted and injected the Mind Melter with adrenaline. Notec’s eyes flew
open, and he let out a cry of agony breathing hard. “Hey, man. You’re back,
you’re back. You’re alive man.”
“Okay, I’m okay,” the Mind Melter breathed out. Trauma from experienc-
ing death, even the death of someone else’s body, took its toll. Exhausted, he
allowed the adrenaline injection to wear off, then collapsed into a deep sleep.
Zenjori helped the singed mayor to his feet. “That was very brave and very
stupid, Mr. Tristan. Luckily, Drake here didn’t leave all his weapons behind.
Otherwise, all of us may have been killed. Looks as though you may be need-
ing our services after all.”
____________________

At last, the shivering ceased long enough for Anja to speak. Nearly passed
out from fatigue and healing freed prisoners, the gentle mystic tried to com-
fort the two dozen refugees packed tightly into the makeshift shelter. The
man in Explorer armor had propped up the edges of a metal roof with wooden
beams and rocks, but it was barely adequate, nonetheless. Flames flickered

192
and started dying out from the Techno-Wizard’s fire device. She looked to
the owner, just back from retrieving his red flying contraption.
“The flames,” she pointed. “Can you bring them back?”
Van De Graf went to the flamethrower and knelt beside Anja, finally re-
moving his helmet to look closer at his invention. “He’s just a kid,” Anja
thought. Barely twenty herself, the mysterious dark-haired Techno-Wizard
looked like a teenager. Well-defined, handsome features and dark, mysteri-
ous eyes met hers. He shook his head and sighed.
“I can’t, not now. The battle sapped my strength. In an hour perhaps, when
I’ve recovered some, but not now.”
“It is magic?” Her voice quivered from cold trembling lips, but Van could
detect an accent he was unfamiliar with. This beautiful mystic was not a lo-
cal.
“Yes, I made it.”
“You are a Techno-Wizard?”
“Yes.”
She gazed at him intently in the flickering light, then reached out her hand,
closed her eyes, and touched the device wedged between two bricks. Energy
flowed from her fingertips, charging the Techno-Wizard device. Warmth
flooded over the huddled refugees as the flames returned. Anja collapsed,
Van catching her before she fell too close to the fire.
“How did you do that?” he asked.
“My ways of magic are not like yours, but we draw our life force from
the same place.” She looked up at him and smiled. Van gently laid her down.
“Are you going to be alright?”
“I’m tired. So tired. I just want to sleep. But I can’t do that yet,” she
propped herself up. “Do you have any food and blankets?”
“Not enough. I don’t even know what I’m still doing here.” Van sounded
disgusted at himself for getting stuck with the responsibility of taking care
of a bunch of refugees. One look into Anja’s teal blue eyes pleading for his
help, and he cursed himself for being such a pushover. “I’ll get what I have.”
“Thank you.” What few provisions he possessed were gone in seconds,
and his two blankets hardly helped the shivering, malnourished bodies of the
refugees.
“That’s all I have. Sorry.”
“Thank you. You’ve done so much already. You saved our lives, and I
don’t even know your name.”
“Van, but –”
“I’m Anja.”
“Hey, I don’t want to ruin your knight-in-shining-armor fantasy or any-
thing, but I’m looking for something in particular. Maybe you’ve seen it. It’s
a big, insect-looking weapon with a bayonet on the end. I was supposed to
trade a mystically powered generator for it at the village these people came

193
from. Seen anything kinda like that around?” Anja’s face grew a bit sadder,
then brightened.
“You’re Sinclair, the Techno-Wizard we were supposed to meet at the
village! Mr. Kent and I were helping the village get electricity and sent for a
mystic generator in payment for an alien artifact we found. I think the dragon
beast took it to his lair.”
“Damn. One more delay. Where’s the lair?”
“Outside the compound, about half a mile I think, near the ley line to the
east by a big rock pile.”
“Thanks. Keep the flamethrower, I’ll make another one.” Van got up to
leave, donning his helmet before entering the lessening rain.
“Wait! You’re leaving?” Anja felt fear return. They were all so helpless
and alone. Some would die even with her help. How could Van leave them
for a stupid artifact?
“Hey, I helped you out cuz I wanted to, okay? I killed the cult that wrecked
the village cuz what they did really pissed me off, but I didn’t go out of my
way and chase some Gromek Shifter because of you or anyone else. I came
for the telekinetic weapon. I wish you the best of luck.”
“Please, I know I can’t offer you anything, but please don’t leave me.
Don’t leave us,” Anja pleaded. Van kept from looking at her eyes.
“Hey, I’m sorry. You’re on your own now.”
Thrusters whipped rain around the Sky King as it lifted off, fins extended
and locked in place. The lightning and thunder had ended several minutes
before, so who or whatever was causing it would probably be gone. Stop-
ping twice to investigate rock piles, Van finally discovered an opening lead-
ing into an old parking garage. Shoving thoughts of the people he left into
the back of his mind, Van checked the energy rifle he’d picked off a dead
Gromek and carefully entered the lair, ready to run back to the Sky King,
while drawing the beast out into the open. Darkness beyond the concrete
walls revealed a cave extending farther down past the main structure. Clum-
sily setting the energy rifle aside, Van pulled a flare from his belt and fired the
modified projectile into the orifice. Light burst from the flare and a fist-sized
globe glowed brightly, filling the cave with daylight. Something he’d picked
up from a Mexican Techno-Wizard, the flare used a simple spell to produce
a Globe of Daylight in place of the normal incendiary reaction. The globe
hovered near the cave ceiling, following its creator deep into the beast’s lair.
Expecting the three-headed monster to leap out at any moment and attack,
Van had the rifle ready. Broken bits of armor, half of a BMW, a Titan robot’s
head, and other trophies lay scattered about the last central chamber, but no
beast. Van hurried his search. The last thing he wanted was the monster to
come home and find him rummaging through its belongings. Slinging a sal-
vageable Northern Gun weapon over his back, Van finally found the alien
contraption he sought.

194
“Jeez, this thing’s heavy!” The weapon looked like an insect’s exoskel-
eton with a jagged bayonet lancing out from one end. A rifle-like design, with
the bayonet it was almost as tall as Van. Discontinuing the search, he hefted
the telekinetic weapon onto a shoulder and made for the entrance. Stories of
treasure troves hidden in dragon lairs ran rampant, but Van was in no shape
to do battle even with a weakling, wannabe dragon.
Finally finished strapping the device alongside a mounted rail gun, Van
shoved the rifles into a compartment behind the seat with the others he’d
taken from the cult members. In his spare time, he’d experiment with chang-
ing the power sources. A guilty twinge hit him, thinking of Anja’s liquid aqua
eyes, and the helpless refugees, but somebody else could take care of them.
He’d already done his part, he reasoned. Besides with the money they got
from selling his flamethrower device, they could all live the rest of their lives
free of work and happy. He had more than done his part. Strapping into the
Sky King, Van reminded himself over and over that he was free to do what
he wanted when he wanted to do it. Thrusters threw mud out from under the
airborne craft. Van headed for home.
____________________

Huddled together for warmth, the mud-covered refugees waited for the
rain to cease. Anja held a young D-Bee child on her lap, singing softly to her.
Bone ridges ran up to the child’s nose and forehead and continued down the
back at each vertebra. Each ridge had a milky edge that faded back into her
speckled, midnight blue skin. Somehow the child had survived a collapsing
jail cell and been spared the skewers above the fire pit. With both parents’
dead, the D-Bee child would probably grow up around humans, never seeing
one of her race again.
Eyes swollen and suffering from the Gromek’s gruesome torture, Mr.
Kent stumbled outside to see where the noises were coming from. Mr. Kent
had led Anja across a good part of the north eastern part of North America
for the better part of the last year. Though starting to get older, his experience
and keen eye had saved them from many a bad situation in their travels, right-
ing wrongs in community after community.
Anja set down the child and stood up to hug her traveling companion. His
wild, stark white beard and hair made the bruises and blood from the beating
he’d taken stand out all the more. His clothes were torn and caked in mud and
blood, but still held together. Beneath, his aging body still spoke of a lifetime
of lean living and many years of keeping himself in shape.
“You’re okay?” Anja asked, hugging him gently.
“Yeah, I’ve seen worse,” Mr. Kent’s gravelly voice gently answered back,
his arms half-heatedly returning the hug. “Just missing Buttercup and wor-
ried about you.” The wilderness scout’s horse had been torn to shreds by the
Gromek and Anja’s was devoured by Harpies.
195
Anja felt the old wilderness scout’s body tense and his hands pull her
away from the hug. Turning, Anja squinted through the rain. Nearly two
dozen horses, fur and manes soaked, breath steaming in the cold drizzle,
stood roped to each other in one compound. A figure in Explorer body armor
trudged across mud and stone toward her shelter.
“You came back!” Anja almost started crying.
“Yeah, well I saw this D-Bee rancher with horses, so I traded a few of
the Gromek’s rifles for eighteen horses and a couple mules. Oh, and some
blankets, too. What the hell, it didn’t cost me anything,” said Van, berating
himself for returning.
“Thank you, Van, thank you so much!”
“Well, I’m not sticking around, just so you know. I’m headed home to
Youngstown to meet a friend, and I’m already late.”
“Van?” Anja walked to the edge of the overhang on wobbly legs. “Van
you really have done more than anyone could ask. I really wish there was
something I could do to repay you. You have a noble heart.”
Staring at her soaked, barely covered body, it was easy for his mind to
jump into what he’d happily enjoy with her but following through on those
unintentional thoughts weren’t his style. As much as he wanted her, he only
wanted to be with someone who equally wanted to be with him – not some-
one who felt an obligation to share his bed. Besides, he wasn’t going to stay
here.
“Yeah, well, I’m going. If you ride along old highway 76 east, you’ll reach
Youngstown in a day or so. Maybe I’ll see you there or something.”
“Maybe.” She just smiled and looked into his eyes.
He looked back into her eyes, his mind seeming to wash into fantasy like a
river over a waterfall. Suddenly something clicked in his head and he pulled
himself back to reality with all his willpower. Cursing himself, he took in a
deep breath and avoided Anja’s gaze.
“Ehhh, I tell you what. My friend’s always late to everything, even days
sometimes. If you want, I can make sure you get at least most of the way to
Youngstown, but that’s it.”
“If you could, please? That would be so wonderful and unselfish of you,”
she said, placing her hand on his forearm.
“Yeah, cuz I was going that way anyway. It would be a good idea if we
left right away or as soon as possible.” Van’s arm felt like it was set on fire
with her touch. His hormones were sending him out of control and he knew
he’d drive himself crazy if he stayed this close to her. Trying to act natural, he
pulled his arm back out of her reach and gave her an awkward smile.
“I’ll get everyone ready to travel.” Anja turned back to the small group
huddled under the shelter and picked up the small child.
“Yeah, and we’re not stopping all the time to go potty either,” Van put in,
pointing to the child. Van noticed just how short the mystic was standing next

196
to him. Already tall at 6’2”, Van’s armor added two inches without the eagle
wings. Anja had to be at least a foot shorter. Her hair was matted and hung
about her face and down almost to her waist. She smiled warmly at him and
then started gently helping refugees to the horses, the child still in her arms.
Van watched her, wondering what happened. He was usually really good
at saying no and letting people fend for themselves but this time, he knew
damn well he was going to escort them all the way to Youngstown.
“Jeez, am I a sucker or what?” Van said to himself.
“Yeah kid,” Mr. Kent said with a laugh, turning back inside the hut. “With
that look on your face, you don’t have a chance.”
____________________

Aquatic vegetation and mud clung to the Enforcer as it stepped from the
water. Vine-like plants dangled from the metal sensor turret, one wrapped
around the immobile head unit. Piloting blind, Dave had unceremoniously
dumped the Enforcer into a deep section of the south to north flowing river
they were crossing between two large lakes to the west of Youngstown. Too
heavy to use the raft, the Enforcer had committed to the cold, swirling depths.
Most of the mud was quickly drying out and now caked every surface and
ground into every joint. Lisa’s periscope was back in place, but its range of
vision was severely limited in mobility.
“We should have just aborted the op and bailed. Even if we catch the
rebels, what are we gonna do to them? Accidentally step on them?” Dave
grumbled.
“Brian says he can put the mini-missile launcher back in if we stop long
enough. Lotta good they’ll do, though. None of the targeting systems work.”
“How did this water get in here?” Dave noticed an inch of water inside the
pilot’s compartment.
“I wonder?”
“I don’t want to get electrocuted.”
“You won’t get electrocuted. The unit’s watertight,” Lisa sighed.
“Then how did any water get in here?”
“’Cause you dropped us into an underwater channel! I’m gonna have
bruises from getting thrown around like that.”
“You shoulda been strapped in,” Dave argued.
“I didn’t dunk the Enforcer, who did that?”
“I don’t think Brian fully checked the hatch. How else could water get in
here?”
Lisa gave him a look; she was glad he couldn’t see beneath her face mask.
Winding their way on uneven roads made the ride even worse. Lisa was
grateful they would be going to a town shortly. They might be able to pick
up a substitute sensor turret and jury-rig it to the Enforcer. At least she could
get out and walk around.
197
____________________

A sonic boom echoed hill to hill, rolling through the valleys. “SAM 15 to
Lieutenant Merrick! I found the Glitter Boy!”
A second sonic boom shattered the stillness.
“I’m going home now. Bye Lieutenant!”
“SAM 15, this is Merrick. Are you hit?”
“If I was, you’d hear something like this.” A loud scream came across the
comm, causing Lisa to jump back in her seat. “Lieutenant, if I get any closer,
I’ll get roasted with missiles from at least one ‘Bot and that Glitter Boy.
Whole town’s come out to welcome us. One, two, five, twenty, a hundred.
Hell, I can’t get close enough to give you a good count, but one thing’s for
sure – they’re ready for us!”
“We’re three miles southeast of Youngstown on the western side of a deep
stream, near what looks like an old mill. Where are the hostiles located?”
“Across the river in Youngstown mostly. Looks like the rebels convinced
the town militia to let them in and help with defense. Some of them don’t
even have armor or weapons that’d scratch the paint on a SAM. Does Mr.
hotshot military specialist, have any brilliant ideas?”
“Darren, you’re coming dangerously close to insubordination even I won’t
tolerate.” Greg’s tone told Darren he was serious. “Do not provoke or even
look like you intend to provoke an attack. Maybe we can convince the town
forces to hand the rebels over. Hold position.”
“Yes, sir. 15, out.”
“Merrick, out. Lisa, you got your ears on?”
“Yes, sir,” Lisa spoke on the comm.
“We need a way to communicate with the Youngstown militia.”
“Can’t do it from the ‘Bot, sir. Comm antennas went down with our sensor
turret. I could do it from a rover set, maybe.”
“We’re stopping here, so we’re not in direct line of fire from Youngstown
other than some woods. It doesn’t look like there’s much between us and the
town beyond this. I want communications established within 30 minutes. We
only have a few hours of daylight left and I don’t want a night assault.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Merrick to Winters.”
“Winters.”
“Deploy and set perimeter here.”
“You got it.”
“Merrick, out.”
Greg felt a pit growing in his stomach. Not one to put much stock in
hunches or premonitions, Greg felt this time it was different. Something
didn’t feel right, but he didn’t know what yet. There was something very

198
wrong with the situation at Youngstown. Hopefully, within an hour he would
know what it was.
____________________

One more comment from Brian and Lisa swore she would punch him. It
would have been annoying enough just having anyone look over her shoul-
der, asking questions, and giving advice but it had to be Brian of all people.
Rushing to finish and get away from her overzealous suitor, Lisa had a con-
nection in ten minutes. Talk like, “...murdering Coalition cowards...” and “...
If I see that flying #15 I’m gonna blow it out of the sky!” came over the hover
rover’s radio. All were stunned to see Lieutenant Sorenson slowly walk to
Brian’s rover and take the transmitter. Cowboy and the others sat silently
watching, still contemplating their experiences that day.
“Youngstown Militia, this is Lieutenant Sorenson of the Coalition. You
are harboring dangerous fugitives. We intend no trespass to you. Do you read
me?”
“This is Zenjori Suka of the Youngstown Defenders. Your cowardice has
cost the lives of many good and innocent people. You will not deceive us
with your lies. If you come within two miles of this town, we will defend
ourselves. You will not massacre and enslave the people of this town like you
have so many others. You will pay for your heinous murders.”
“Lisa, call Headquarters,” Mike said calmly. “Tell them we’re going to be
gone a bit longer than planned.

199
Chapter 11
New friends?
Trenches were quickly dug with the aid of the Enforcer and troops set
about clearing fire lanes around their campsite. Fortunately, the deep stream
in front of them meant that finding a defensible position had been easy. The
troops dug in to prepare for a possible siege. Hard-domed enclosures were
being placed in the trenches with one shift of soldiers already catching some
much-needed rest. Not yet 48 hours since their arrival in hostile territory, the
strain of vigilance was wearing the men down. A standoff had been estab-
lished with Youngstown and could last longer than a few days.
Without the Enforcer’s missiles, the battle would be a short one. Out-
numbered better than five-to-one and not outfitted to take on multiple robots
and power armored troops, some other solution than a frontal assault had to
be found. Greg oversaw the defensive lines being set, then found Mike to
discuss battle plans. The military specialist was by himself studying a Boom
Gun casing.
“Where did you get that?”
“Sharp recovered it from our skirmish at the lake.” Mike’s voice was
sounding much better; the medical units had repaired most of the serious
damage. The military specialist was still far from being healed of his grievous
injuries. “Anything new?”
“Sharp discovered a mine site about 20 miles southeast of Youngstown
on his sweep of the area. It’s actively hauling stone to Youngstown for re-
finement. The road is small, but well maintained and looks like it’s not well
monitored. Brian had some crazy idea about us hiding in ore trucks and riding
into Youngstown, but we’re not interested in blowing up the town, just the
rebels,” Greg said.
“It might be a good idea if you took over some patrols. Sharp and Darren
have been at it too long and they’re going to start making mistakes. Why
don’t you run scout northeast and check for trouble spots?”
“I’m not leaving the unit without heavy support.” Greg knew that with
Mike’s SAMAS effectively turning into scrap and the Enforcer on its last
legs, the mobility and power of the three remaining SAMAS Power Armor
would be more essential to the mission’s success than ever.
“Trenton can handle that. I want you to run a scout patrol.” Mike was
testing. Lieutenant Merrick returned much too quickly from covering their
retreat and telling a story that didn’t feel genuine about a break in the attack-
ers allowing him to retreat and regroup. More than likely, Mike suspected
this unit commander had a streak of cowardice and he wanted to see how
long and deep it ran.

200
“The patrol can wait. It will be dark soon, anyway,” Greg said, focused on
the necessities of properly securing their base for the night and trying to think
of other contingencies he’d missed.
“I wonder, Lieutenant, how you ever earned your bars.” Mike’s steel gaze
betrayed more than simple doubt.
“I don’t think I like your inference, Lieutenant.” Greg’s attention snapped
into focus at Sorenson’s accusation. He met the steel blue eyes of his coun-
terpart, his almost temper boiling just below the surface.
“Let me tell you how I got these bars.” Greg fought to calm the rage in-
side. “I was Sergeant Major of a company dispatched to destroy a pack of
large, monstrous hounds that were raiding farms near the Missouri border.
We found the pack near the Mississippi and they kept running just ahead of
our heavy mechanized troops but stopped long enough for the Lieutenant
to order us out of the rovers. Finally, the pack, about thirty strong, plunged
across a tributary and took off out of reach. The Lieutenant ordered every
mechanized unit to pursue and he led the chase himself in a SAMAS.
“The creatures weren’t very smart, but they were smarter than us. The
pack led the mechanized units away from the troops on foot while another
group was waiting just below the banks of the tributary that the mechanized
forces had just crossed. Just as we got to the banks of the water, they sur-
rounded us and attacked. Half the men were dead before we knew what was
happening. Those of us that were fast enough started to fight our way out
from under the horde that descended on us. I managed to lead a platoon to a
bluff and we held out. By the time the Lieutenant got back, only seventeen
of us were still alive and I was the one holding everything together. If you
want to call me a coward, I think you’ll have a tough time proving it. These
bars were earned with the blood of seventy-nine men and women who died
because a trigger-happy Lieutenant that wanted to show off let a pack of wild
animals lead him on a wild goose chase.”
Greg paused for a moment. Letting his emphasis on the word, “Lieuten-
ant,” imply that he was calling the Espionage Specialist a moron as well.
“We’re not fighting a bunch of dumb animals here and I don’t give a damn
if you’re in charge of the mission or not. You could be a General for all I care!
The lives of my men are MY responsibility. I picked them, trained them, and
have commanded them since day one. You may see all of us as pawns in
some stupid toy soldier game you have going on to prove to command how
tough you are, but I will not endanger the lives of those I’ve sworn to pro-
tect,” Greg finished, realizing he’d said more than he’d intended.
Mike’s eyes had lost their edge. He regarded him thoughtfully for a good
two minutes. “The patrol can wait till morning. We may be here for several
days if things go poorly. Just so you understand my concern over placing too
much strain on two men for scout duty.”

201
“You’re absolutely right. Two men shouldn’t have to be responsible all
by themselves.” Greg was cooling down. “But no more than one SAMAS on
patrol at one time. Agreed?”
“Agreed.”
“Now we have to figure a way to conduct a battle without biting off more
than we can chew.”
____________________

Returning from clearing a fire lane, Reesa made a detour to stop beside
Brian and Lisa, who were busily repairing the Enforcer.
“Corporal Adams, Corporal Andrews, have you heard anything from
Sharp, yet?” she requested respectfully, black eyes awaiting a response.
“Uh, not since he checked in to report the mining prospects, Private,”
Brian responded hesitantly. Rank often slipped his mind, even his own rank.
“He should be returning any time now. We’ll let you know if we hear
anything, though,” Lisa said reassuringly.
“Yeah, his watch ends pretty soon anyway,” Brian added.
“Thank you, sir!” Reesa smiled and hurried to her post. The two tech of-
ficers watched her go.
“Sir? I almost looked around for the Lieutenant. We’re not commissioned
officers.”
“I know. It’s not like we don’t give orders sometimes, but it sounds fun-
ny,” Lisa agreed with Brian.
“Nice to see Sharp and Private Brenner getting along so well.”
“I think it’s cute. I can see Reesa and Sharp going out. Cara just didn’t
really mesh with him.”
“I can’t imagine Cara ‘meshing’ with anyone.”
“She does have trouble keeping guys, good ones anyhow. Hey, could you
hand me the head unit from Mike’s SAMAS?”
“Why?” Brian asked, confused as to what she’d need the head unit for
when she was working on the Enforcer.
“It has basically the same optics the sensor turret had, just smaller. I’m
going to tap in and stick it on the sensor turret in place of the melted ones.
Maybe I can even use the Enforcer’s larger power system to get both long-
and short-range radios working.”
“That’s brilliant!” exclaimed Brian. “I hadn’t even thought of that. We can
use the radio transmitter, too. Lisa, you’re a genius!” Brian handed over the
SAMAS’s head unit.
“Thanks. I think you actually mean that.” Lisa was flattered in spite of
how much she’d come to be frustrated by the other tech. “Boost me up.”
Expecting more weight, Brian easily hefted her up to the hatch. She stood
on the Enforcer’s shoulder, running diagnostic tests on the splayed wires pro-
truding.
202
“If the computer targeting program still works, we can tie it into the re-
placement radar unit and get short-range use of the missiles.”
“Need some help with that?” Brian offered.
“No. Thanks, though. I noticed both legs responding slower than normal,
there might be some grounding in the electrical relays.”
“I’m on it.”
Brian had to cut the rivets holding an armor plate in order to reach the
relays.
“Brian?”
“Yeah,” the muffled reply came back.
“What was it like? Fighting that magic illusion.”
“It was so real, it even felt real.” Brian stopped working for a moment.
“Funny thing was I didn’t get scared, at all. Maybe I was so desperate to stay
alive I never thought about it. It just made me madder because every time I
shot it, it just kept coming.”
“Cowboy said it actually felt like he was being pierced by its teeth before
he thought he died.”
“I think what really got to me was seeing everybody else die. It was so
real. I remember feeling like everything I was doing was futile and we were
all going to die. That really made me more determined not to die, I guess. At
least now I know how I’d handle a real life and death struggle.”
The two continued to work in silence. There was more depth to Brian than
Lisa had first thought, not that she wanted anything to do with him. If she
wasn’t forced to be around him, he might be an okay guy.
Daylight was dimming and the temperature was dropping with the setting
of the sun. Lisa didn’t want to spend another night crammed in the Enforcer.
Maybe she could convince Mike to let her sleep in a dome for the night. Just
so long as Brian slept in another one.
____________________

A kind-hearted farmer’s barn served as a shelter to the cold and weary


refugees. Some still cried for loved ones left behind, still hoping against hope
they weren’t really dead. Others stared blankly with dull eyes, not really
aware of the hell their lives had become. Constricted stomachs wouldn’t ac-
cept much of the food provided them and some couldn’t keep down what they
had eaten. Anja could hardly stand, thoroughly exhausted from caring for and
comforting the unfortunate.
Strong in spirit, her friend and companion of the past few months sat
wrapped in a blanket with an energy rifle across his knees. Mr. Kent had sur-
vived worse, or so he claimed. The wilderness scout never once complained
during the extent of their journeys and didn’t now that he had ample cause.
Disgusted by the pervasive odor of farm animals in the barn, Van crossed
the field to his Sky King, parked on a small ley line glowing brightly in the
203
night. He debated just hopping on the craft and leaving, but finally gave in
and pulled a sleeping bag from its cargo bin. Grumbling to himself about be-
ing soft, he removed two small tripods mounted with peculiar devices. Plac-
ing them ten feet apart, he threw down the sleeping bag between them and
laid his weapons and armor beside it.
“What the hell am I doing?” he asked his self-pride. “I’m sleeping on
the cold ground when I could be in a nice, soft, warm bed in my house at
Youngstown right now. I can’t believe I’m doing this.” Focusing a small
amount of energy into the two tripod mounted devices, a shimmering blue
and white dome appeared, protecting a ten-foot area. The Techno-Wizard
energy field generator was becoming popular among travelers that could em-
power its protective barrier. Once activated, as long as it remained on a ley
line, the surging energy would collect in the crystal receptacles and protect
those inside it from the elements. Van himself had sold several of the units to
magic users who spent a great deal of time near or on the powerful veins of
energy. In a bind, the energy field could serve as a safe haven to cast spells
from a distance. Many were simply used to provide safe places to sleep.
Cinching the mummy bag closed over his head, Van tried to get comfortable
in unfamiliar conditions.
“Van? Are you sleeping?” Anja’s soft voice asked quietly.
“No. Is something wrong?” Van didn’t move. He’d just gotten comfort-
able.
“Nothing is wrong. I just came out to thank you for talking to the farmer
and fixing his tractor to get food for everyone.”
“That was nothing. It was listening to his stupid jokes that you should
thank me for.” Van sat up and released the drawstring. “Why did the chicken
cross the road?”
Anja thought for a moment. “I’ve heard this one. . . . To get to the other
side?” she asked hopefully.
“No, cuz the grass is always greener on the other side.” He paused, but
Anja didn’t get the punch line. “You know, I don’t think he got one punch
line right and I had to laugh every time. Jeez, aren’t you cold?” Van noticed
she was still clothed in the gossamer fabric the Gromek had put on her. She
stood arms crossed, teeth chattering slightly in the blue light from the ley line.
“Yes,” she chattered. “Why don’t you come back inside, it’s warmer in
there.”
“Do you know why it’s warmer in there?” Van asked, thinking of the hor-
rid stench cows made.
Anja thought about it. “No, why?”
“Never mind.”
“Body heat?”
“Yeah, something like that.”

204
“That’s a big sleeping bag. Can two people fit in there?” she asked, teeth
chattering.
“Wouldn’t be the first time. Want in?” Van was never averse to sharing
his sleeping bag with a beautiful woman, even if only to stay warm. Anja
hesitated.
“Two people do stay warmer than one,” Van said, though his brain in-
stantly thought of other ways to create warmth.
“Okay.” She stumbled forward, field disappearing to let her in. If he want-
ed to take advantage of her, he could have done so before, she reassured
herself. Very sensitive to good and evil in people, Anja felt a good heart
motivated the somewhat self-serving Techno-Wizard. She slid into the sleep-
ing bag, only to discover it wasn’t as big as it looked. Pressed much tighter
together than was comfortable, Anja slipped farther down, Van’s chin resting
on her head. Shivering too much to care, Anja was thankful for the warmth.
Lulled by Van’s heartbeat, the mystic was soon sound asleep, Van’s breath
frosting her dark hair.
____________________

Searchlights periodically scanned the road and open areas surrounding the
outskirts of Youngstown. Patrols of militiamen searched abandoned struc-
tures in outlying areas, wary of Coalition troops hiding nearby. An emergen-
cy meeting of the town council had been called to discuss replacing the Police
Chief and Captain of the Guard. Zenjori Suka was being considered for the
position. The cost of his mercenaries was considerably lower if they decided
to make their residence there and meet certain civil obligations. However,
due process still had to be followed.
“Fact is, we owe it to Mr. Tilden. Six years serving our town and second
in command of the guard, he is legally the next one in the chain of command.
That doesn’t change.” The mayor was forced to side with most council mem-
bers. “The position of Chief of Police and Captain of the Guard is yours, Mr.
Tilden.”
“Thank you, sir. You won’t be disappointed,” the large, balding man re-
plied, grinning from ear to ear. He’d deserved the position all along, he told
himself, not some Headhunter that happened to know a lot about fighting the
Coalition. The mayor wasn’t finished.
“Mr. Suka, due to the circumstances, you will be second in command of
Youngstown defenses. Your experience will be most valuable in protecting
our citizens. When this is over, I hope you will remain here with us, lending
your support.”
“Most certainly, Mayor Tristan. I’m sure that in the capable hands of Mr.
Tilden, your town will be able to hold its own. We’re here just to ensure
that fewer lives are lost in the battles ahead. Now, if you gentlemen will
excuse me, I’d like to tour the defenses. Anytime you wish an update, just
205
call Drake or myself on the radio. Good evening.” Zenjori smiled assuredly
to the assembled leaders and left the meeting room with Notec followed by
Mr. Tilden’s glare.
“I’d better get back on the line,” the bald Police Chief was about to suggest
they call him if they wanted an update, but somehow everything he wanted to
say had been stolen from his tongue by the mercenary. Somewhat flustered,
he awkwardly left the room. Outside, Zenjori stopped and nodded to a group
of figures in a dark alley down the street.
“Stage two?” Notec asked.
“Stage two,” was Zenjori’s reply.
____________________

Sleep came in short segments for the soldiers laid out in their domed shel-
ters. Small, compact heating units kept the interior warm enough to eliminate
the need for blankets. Dozing lightly, Sharp leaned back and wrapped his
arms around Reesa. The closeness felt good, companionship filling needs
rest could not. Her short, black hair remained neatly trimmed and her brown
eyes shut, enjoying their closeness. African American heritage filtered down
through many generations gave her a beautiful figure and attractive facial
features. She never considered herself good looking, but there was nothing
to detract from her femininity. Things were moving faster than she was used
to, perhaps because of shared experiences in the presence of danger. Reesa
didn’t care. Sharp wouldn’t be the only man she’d dated. There was some-
thing honest and straightforward about him that banished all thoughts of de-
ception. For now, she was content to let things play themselves out as her
heart chose.
Emotional turmoil had forced its way into her soul from events over the
past two days, gnawing at her during moments of calm. Friends dying, atroci-
ties committed before her very eyes and the brutal gore of warfare all took
their toll. Nothing in her training fully prepared her for what really lay on the
“field of glory.”
“Sharp?” she said softly.
“Hmm?” his chest rumbled in response.
“Did I wake you?”
“Mmm-hmmm,” he responded, indicating that she had.
“Can I ask you something?”
“Sure,” Sharp slowly pulled himself up from dreamland to listen.
“After we killed all those rebels by the lake, the Sergeant had us put them
all in a pile,” she stopped, vivid imagery replaying in her mind. “Then the
Sergeant burned them.”
“They didn’t tell you about that in training?”

206
“No, they didn’t tell us about what Rex did to French’s body today, either.
He just vaporized it. We didn’t take him with us or even talk about it. Just
destroyed his body. Why?”
“That’s something you gotta do out here sometimes, Reesa. We’re too far
out to take people back and we can’t leave any bodies behind. During the war
with the Federation, magic users made dead bodies of our men get up and at-
tack us. Sometimes they even use parts of dead people to cast spells and make
zombies or other evil things. That’s why we can’t leave anyone behind.”
“Oh...” her mind continued to run through the day’s events. Eventually,
sleep won her over and she nuzzled back into Sharp’s arms and away from
the day’s troubles.
____________________

Muffled, long distance explosions reached the Coalition encampment,


ending the sleep of many. Taking his turn on watch, Winters observed short,
bright flashes marking explosion sites within the city.
“What the hell?” Long, fiery missile trails arced skyward and fell ran-
domly on the town, destroying buildings entirely upon detonation. Following
the explosions, a furious firefight broke out in the darkness, illuminating the
night sky with sizzling energy beams and more rocket trails. Near the out-
skirts of the town, two opposing forces blazed away at each other.
“Jerry, who are they shooting at?” Greg asked from his position one mile
north on the eastern side of the creek.
“The hell if I know.” The exchange of weapons fire died out in thirty sec-
onds, the last few shots coming from the outside force. Fires burned buildings
to the ground and smoke filled the sky.
“Damn.” Winters took off, keeping low over the trees while keeping the
slight ridge between himself and Youngstown. The entire line of defenses
on the western side of town lit up like day. Rockets, energy weapons, and
spotlights pointed in the general direction of the Coalition camp and tried
to kill their unseen foes. Aimed indiscriminately, the projectiles fell short of
their mark, creating random fires in the forest. Energy weapons burned veg-
etation to the ground in seconds. The entire hillside facing the town was left
with visible hot spots burning in semidarkness and fallen trees littering the
ground. When the rain of fire ceased, not a single soldier had moved in the
battle-ready Coalition encampment.
Unbeknownst to the Youngstown defenders, their retaliatory attack had
been an exercise in futility. The attack appeared to have no sound reason or
purpose. The camp remained on full alert the rest of the night.
____________________

207
“When you’re feeling better, I’m sure the men would love a visit from
you, Mr. Tristan. For now, rest. Notec will aid the relief efforts and I’m re-
organizing our defenses to ensure that there won’t be a repeat of last night’s
brutal attack,” Zenjori assured the mayor, prone in bed. A mysterious illness
had overtaken him in the night and by morning confined him to his bed. Even
the Psychic Healer couldn’t diagnose or cure the malady afflicting the town’s
leader. Zenjori observed the psychic healer’s attempts very closely. Nobody
had ever been able to cure a victim of his Dim Mak death curse before, but
there could always be a first time. Secret arts passed from master to master in
his family were entirely forgotten in the time in which he now lived. The neu-
ral strike had been the most feared of any death blow in its time. The victim
of a Dim Mak strike suffered slowly, hours, days, sometimes weeks, before
dying. Zenjori was certain the mayor would live no more than two days.
“Under the circumstances, I believe a state of martial law is warranted. A
curfew is ordered and strict regulations regarding who is where and when. I
don’t want any accidental deaths,” Zenjori recommended.
“Yes, Mayor Tristan,” Notec spoke hypnotically. “Martial law is defi-
nitely necessary to keep the peace. A curfew is needed, and martial law will
help protect lives.” The suggestion was implanted deep in the Mayor’s mind,
reinforced psionically. Already in control of the police and guard, Zenjori
needed tighter control to solidify his stance. Strategic elimination of oppos-
ing individuals and the timely slaying of the last two police chiefs paved the
way to greater power. A deal had already been struck with a political hopeful
of unscrupulous character, Zenjori’s troops lending him all the support he
needed to fill the Mayor’s shoes should he die. And the Mayor would surely
die, but not before his authority was used to Zenjori’s advantage.
“Yes, martial law will protect lives. A state of martial law is declared and
a curfew in effect. Thank you, Mr. Suka.” The mayor’s feeble voice con-
firmed Zenjori’s rise to power.
Outside, a tall, robed man with cropped brown hair and goatee listened
carefully to the inner discussion. Colnae had reported the Coalition presence
to his masters in the Federation the moment they arrived. A Line Walker
of considerable power, he served Youngstown as chief mage, defending the
inhabitants from other practitioners of magic and monsters from the Rifts.
Spying was, of course, a primary concern. The Federation rarely allowed
the level of autonomy Youngstown enjoyed. Colnae smiled, hearing the
words that anchored the band of mercenaries to the town. It was high time
for a change; the previous leaders were much too complacent to suit the Line
Walker. These mercenaries were resourceful and showed cunning traits Col-
nae sincerely admired. If they gained control of the town, his freedom could
be greatly enhanced. Allied to the insidious invaders, Colnae would be able
to shed the guise of nobility he wore and enjoy the pleasures denied him by

208
society. Plans formed in his devious mind, there was no going back, he com-
mitted himself to aid the newcomers’ ascension to power.
____________________

Beady black eyes took in every detail of the busy city street. Kro-Mar
ruffled his black feathers and hopped to another trash can lid. He didn’t like
being a crow, but the disguise worked very well. Too well. His favorite perch
atop a power line provided an excellent view of the scene of his next caper
but had been a bit too conspicuous. That stupid little boy just wouldn’t quit
shooting him with that stupid BB Gun. Those little metal balls stung.
Discovering the small town had been the highlight of the young dragon’s
day. Populated by humanoids, Youngstown screamed to be toyed with. Kro-
Mar couldn’t resist the urge to have some fun at the citizens’ expense. Choos-
ing a central spot in the town square, Kro-Mar winged to a fountain statue and
lit upon the head of a stone mermaid. Waiting until a substantial number of
people occupied the square, Kro-Mar could hardly contain his glee. Within
seconds of his slow metamorphosis, screams of terror filled the streets. Using
his natural metamorphic abilities to increase the dramatic effect, Kro-Mar
assumed his true form in the town square. Panic-stricken people fled while
Kro-Mar watched in gleeful amusement. Unable to contain his exuberance at
the enormous success of his prank, Kro-Mar giggled hysterically, sounding
comparable to a badly tuned Greyhound Bus.
Almost giddy, the hatchling dragon flapped his wings, bringing down a
street light in the process. Not wanting to miss out on the full effect his pres-
ence caused, Kro-Mar flew low over the city, randomly setting fire to parked
vehicles and tall trees. Laser blasts began to rise up at him as he neared the
edge of town. The mal-tuned giggle returned. Finding their energy weapons
useless against his magic, some of the defenders fled for their lives. This was
more fun than he had expected.
Three of the four mini-missiles detonated against his hide, painfully blis-
tering skin and burning flesh. Enough fun for today. These humans take
everything so seriously, Kro-Mar thought. Winging away from the town,
Kro-Mar didn’t see the missile launchers on the Northern Gun Multibot raise
upward, locking in a V shape behind the robot. Having spied a ley line in the
distance, Kro-Mar was too intently focused on his next goal to hear the two
medium-range missiles approach from the rear. Wings shredded and scales
blown from his body, Kro-Mar tried to slow his rapid descent toward the
forest below. A small, open area served him nicely and the dragon aimed his
plummeting body at the field below.
____________________

209
Horses nervously pawed the wood planks of the ferry, unaccustomed to
being carried over water. Refugees calmed their animals the best they could,
but many still had to be lashed tightly to prevent them from leaping into the
swollen river. Dark cumulus-nimbus clouds threatened to dump more rain on
the ravaged group of survivors, but so far hadn’t followed through with their
rumbling threats.
Sore from sleeping wrong all night than from his battle with Torrak, Van’s
efforts to eradicate the crick in his neck met with no relief. Utilizing the
available time waiting for the last refugees to reach his side of the river, Van
tinkered with a small device he had yet to perfect. Sporting Van’s leather
aviator jacket. Anja oversaw the crossing efforts, her waist-long hair blowing
in the breeze. When the last horse was safely across, she joined Van on the
small bluff overlooking the river.
“Everyone is eating better now,” she said cheerfully. “We can go on in a
few minutes. Right now, Mr. Kent is handing out rations.” She plopped down
in front of him on the grass.
“That’s nice.” Van was too absorbed in his work to look up.
“Whatcha making?” Anja looked the small device over closely.
“Van De Graf’s Medical Enhancement Device Mark Four!”
“It looks like a salt shaker.”
“It was a saltshaker,” said Van, somewhat mischievously.
“What’s it do?”
“Well, you hold it over an open wound and turn it on. When you wave it
back and forth, it heals the wound.” Van turned the V-Med on and swirling
lights accompanied by a swishing sound emanated from the hand-held object.
“Can it heal the cut on my foot?” Anja extended her legs, a puncture bled
on her left foot. “I stepped on a nail sticking up on the raft.”
Van gently took her foot and examined it. “If not, then it’s time for Mark
Five.” Charging the whirring device with magic energy, he waved it over the
small wound. Instantly, the puncture healed along with all scratches and abra-
sions, leaving no trace of scarring. Van examined the results.
“It worked! Jeez, I can make a killing selling these babies.”
“It doesn’t hurt anymore either. Could I use that?”
“If you can power up one Techno-Wizard device, you can probably power
up most of ‘em. They all work on the same principle of using living beings
as the battery. You just gotta know how to channel your energy. Can you cast
spell magic?”
“My magic is not the same as yours,” Anja explained while Van massaged
her foot. “We don’t work spells the same way even though we draw from the
same source. My abilities come from within me, not from a bunch of words
or incantations.”

210
“You mean it’s like an intuition of some sort? I saw you speak when you
started a fire last night. I know a lot of spells have various forms but are you
saying it’s your own form, not something you learned?”
“You’re an educated person, Van. I’m not. My spells are unique to me,
even though many spells may have similar results. I can sense things around
me I don’t think other people can. It’s not a spell I cast or power of the mind,
it’s just an awareness.”
“Like what?”
Anja thought about how to explain it. “Can you sense good and evil?”
“Yeah, check this out.” Van let go of Anja’s foot to pull out a hand-sized
box with a display and tiny lights attached to extended arms on both sides of
it. “Just turn the knob to the Sense Evil O’Meter and walla!” He pointed the
device at Anja. The arms folded back to their sides and the display went to its
lowest reading. Anja stared at him, a bit bewildered.
“What does that do?”
“Lots of things. Right now, it’s scanning you to see if you’re evil or not.
Nice to know you’re not. Never seen it dip so low before. You should see it
around a supernatural demon or monster. This thing goes nuts trying to strip
its own gears!”
“You see, Van, I don’t need a gadget. I can just feel when someone’s good
or evil. It’s just natural.”
“So, am I good or evil?” The smirk was back on his face again. Van stuck
the Sense Evil back in his bulging backpack and resumed the foot massage.
Anja surveyed him intently. Looking past the facade, Anja chanted a short
mantra to help her concentrate on the aura surrounding Van. Every living
creature and every object had an aura. She observed and had discovered
certain auras meant certain things. The intensity of Van’s aura was surpris-
ingly strong in almost every area, and there were strange auras from many
of the devices in his bags and on his body, especially emanating from things
attached to both of his wrists. She tried to block out the colors that didn’t
matter. The brownish-green shades, indicating his race as human were par-
ticularly strong, more than any she’d encountered. A brighter shade of green
pulsated around him, a sign Van was in excellent health. Ranges of blue and
white on the outer edges marked him as a psychic and magic user, still raw in
his command of the energy forces, but with greater potential than most. She
focused harder, opening herself to his thoughts and emotions. Trying to envi-
sion the tightest and most easily concealed ring of his aura, she discovered
a light grey glow covering his body. Those such as Torrak radiated an inky
blackness at the core and the purest of heart shown brilliant white. Shades in
between were harder to decipher, but there was much more good in the tall,
mysterious wizard than evil. His thoughts were primarily self-centered but
were influenced strongly by good intentions.
“Well?” he asked.

211
“You’re not a bad person, Van. You actually care about the people you
pretend not to.”
“Shh, don’t tell anyone,” he replied. “What else can you tell me?” He
smiled wide, dark eyes sparkling.
“You’re psychic, but I already knew that. You spoke to me telepathically,
I remember.” She thought back to seeing him for the first time.
“So how was that spell you used different from any other?”
“It wasn’t something I heard or that was taught to me. It came from in
here.” She held her hand over her heart. “It’s hard to explain, but it’s part of
me, the way I am. My mind and body are at peace, unified to make me what
I am.”
“And that’s how you work your magic?” Van wasn’t sure what she meant.
“My mind and body are conditioned to be a certain way and as long as my
mind and body are one and pure, then I can draw upon that oneness to work
magic. Understand?”
“Not really. What, you don’t do drugs or stuff like that? You meditate a
lot or something?”
“Yes, that’s part of maintaining pureness. I often meditate to become one
with the world around me. Feeling and sensing everything. I don’t defile my
mind or body with drugs or other harmful things. I’ve maintained my chas-
tity, to keep myself pure. I’ve –”
Van slowed his massage, realizing what she meant by “pure.” Without
trying to probe his thoughts, Anja’s awareness of emotions around her caught
a surge of disappointment from the man before her. Perhaps psychic contact
heightened her receptiveness to thoughts and feelings. For a moment they
were overwhelming. She regarded Van, caught up in the turmoil he felt.
“I’m sorry, Van. I didn’t know.”
“What?” he fought back disappointment, concealing feelings he didn’t
want to acknowledge.
“I should have told you to begin with. I’m sorry, I didn’t know you felt
that way.” She felt iron doors slam shut around his mind, blocking him from
her.
“Hey, that’s all right. I mean, there’s a lot of things you don’t know about
me either.” He shrugged it off, considering himself stupid for letting himself
feel for her in the first place.
“Van, that doesn’t mean we can’t be friends,” her eyes pleaded.
“I’ve heard that one before.”
“It doesn’t mean ...”
“Hey, Anja. Stay out of my mind from now on, okay?” He got up, feeling
like a heel for the hurt look on her face.
“I’m sorry,” she said meekly.
Jeez, thought Van, now she’s making me feel guilty again.

212
“It’s probably better this way, I should know better than to get involved
with someone like you in the first place. Like I said, there’s lots of things you
don’t know.” Van caught his tongue, nearly spilling something he wasn’t
sure she should know. It just made her look more forlorn.
“Look, give me a day to let everything settle out in this stupid skull of
mine and I’ll be ready to accept things the way they are.”
“You didn’t do anything wrong, it was me,” she said, still looking hurt.
“I’m sorry I felt that way about you.” Van’s subconscious mind told him
to shut up before he dug himself in any deeper. “Your scout friend is waving
to us, looks like everyone is ready to move on. If we pick up the pace a little,
we can be in Youngstown by nightfall. You’d better go mount up, that little
child can’t climb on a horse without you.” Van smiled wanly and hopped
back on his Sky King. He didn’t look back at her until the craft was airborne.
Wind blew her hair out behind her and she clutched his coat around her to
protect herself from the thruster wash.
“Jeez, why do I always wind up feeling like a jerk,” he spoke aloud. One
more day and his life would be back to normal, he consoled himself. Just one
more day.
____________________

Brains slid out the top of the farmer’s crushed skull. Sprawled out on the
floor, shotgun still gripped in his work-worn hands, the farmer lay where
Torrak had left him. Torrak could have chosen any farm to raid, but he had
good reason to pick this one. Devouring the store of provisions left to him
by the previous owner, Torrak quenched his thirst with homemade ale and
filled his belly with salted pork and freshly baked bread. Healed completely,
the Gromek Shifter was attending to his basic desires. When he was done
stuffing himself, he would enjoy abusing the woman in the next room. Then
he would torch the house and barn to the ground and absorb the life force of
the animals while they died.
“Mind Crusher, tell me what lies in the future for the wizard who stole my
sacrifice and slays my followers.”
“Seek you knowledge or vengeance?” came the telepathic reply.
“Vengeance.”
“I see a city, a town. A battle rages on its streets. Machines of war collide
and many die by violence. In the midst, I see the wizard you seek and the two
of you meeting to duel again.”
“The outcome?”
“Unclear, but I do not believe either of you will die. You will meet in
battle many times, but it is not his hand that will slay you.”
“Whose?”
The Mind Crusher did not respond immediately.
“I do not know.”
213
“When I am finished here, where will I find this town?”
“Follow the road east and this town you will find.”
Torrak wiped his mouth on the tablecloth and stuffed several pieces of
dried meat into a pouch. Selecting four kitchen knives to his liking, the Shift-
er set about to amuse himself.
____________________

Nine hours of intense work finally yielded success to very weary tech of-
ficers. The Enforcer was by no means repaired, but its sensors and communi-
cations were operational and all weapons, with the exception of the shoulder
lasers, were back on-line. Plopping down in Brian’s rover to enjoy a meal of
military rations, Brian and Lisa were tired but proud of their accomplishment.
“Think it will hold up in combat?” Brian asked, looking at the unchanged
appearance of the Robot. “Jury-rigged optics, communications and sensor
systems connected with jury-rigged controls and targeting?”
“It’s better than nothing, that’s all I have to say. I think it’s about time for
an upgraded unit, that one’s been put back together too many times.” She
chewed on a barely palatable portion of a “Nutrition Bar.”
“Tell me about it. How many different registry numbers did we find? Six-
teen?”
“Eighteen, one on the rail gun feed unit and another on the voice activa-
tion module.”
“I welded over all the major weak spots. But if Dave trips and falls again,
there’s going to be nothing left but the weld spots.”
“I can help you with the weapons and armor rundown if you want,” Lisa
offered. Normally the task of repairing personal armor suits and damaged
weapons fell to Brian’s expertise, but they’d been sharing workloads all day.
“Sure. You get to handle Cowboy.”
“Ahh, he’s not that bad.”
“He really ticks me off. Maybe it’s just me, I don’t know.”
“You have a real problem with your temper, don’t you?” It was a state-
ment as much as a question, but Brian answered.
“Yeah, maybe. You think I’m bad now, but you should have seen me be-
fore! When I was a kid, I used to get into fights almost every day. I’m pretty
sure I started most of them. Someone would make me mad and I’d just see
red. Trust me, I’ve mellowed out a lot.
“Now you’re just stubborn.” Lisa let tact take a hike.
“That’s what Sharp tells me, only he was nice enough to call it persistence.
Same diff. It makes me madder to quit than it does to keep doing something
that isn’t working.”
Lisa thought about his statement and how it related to her.
“Oh my god.”
“What?” Brian wasn’t sure how her comment fit in.
214
“Oh, nothing. Brian, sometimes it’s okay to quit.”
“Like when? You wanted to quit trying to fix the rail gun feed unit because
it kept jamming. Good thing we didn’t, right?”
“Yes, but Brian, you wanted to keep trying to fix the long-range radar unit,
even after I showed you how the transmitter was melted beyond repair.”
“I still think I can fix it,” Brian said, although he knew it was pretty much
hopeless without replacement parts.
“I’m not getting into that again. You saw the damage, you know it’s not
worth wasting your time on. What is it that makes you keep doing something
that isn’t going to go anywhere?” Lisa hoped Brian would catch her analogy.
He didn’t.
“I keep thinking, ‘What am I missing? What haven’t I tried? There’s al-
ways a way, I just need to find it.’”
“Sometimes there isn’t a way.”
“I don’t believe that. Okay,” Brian conceded. “I tell Cowboy that all the
time and sometimes the Lieutenant when he wants something right away. I’ll
admit, there are times when it’s not worthwhile to keep at something, but I
still hold to there being a way to do it.”
“Ever think you might assign your ‘worthwhile’ value to other things? So
you don’t waste your time?”
“I do. I ask myself, ‘Is what I’m doing worthwhile?’ Then I decide if I’m
going to set a goal aside or stick with it.”
“Good.” Lisa couldn’t think of any way to come across without being
totally blatant; that wasn’t her style. Of course, there was no way she would
ever seriously consider dating Brian, though his persistence could be con-
strued as flattering. She tried to imagine getting along with the short, red-
haired tech and that scared her more than dating him. There had to be some
way to convince the deluded fool to leave her alone.
“Lieutenants, I wanna talk to you two,” Cowboy cut in. Brian and Lisa
stuffed the rest of their food in their mouths, then joined the meeting already
in progress.
“Have a seat,” Greg admonished the latecomers to the covered rover. “En-
forcer ready for action?”
“Almost. A few things still need fine-tuning, but she’s up and running.”
Brian didn’t mention the total lack of targeting for the rail gun.
“We’re just brainstorming for a plan of action.” All were astonished by
Mike’s sudden willingness to be a team player. Brian opened his mouth. “And
we’re not riding into Youngstown buried in the back of some ore truck,”
Mike cut Brian off before he could begin. Brian closed his mouth.
“Let’s review, what’s the other side got?” Winters wanted to know.
“From what we’ve seen, four Samson Power Armor units, two X-10 Pred-
ators, a Northern Gun Multi-Bot, four or five NG-V10s, at least six Terrain

215
Hopper exoskeletons, one Titan Flying and over two hundred foot troops,”
Greg rattled off the list.
“That it?” Winters said sarcastically.
“And an imported Triax X-1000 Ulti-Max.”
“Damn.”
“And those are just the ones we’re not supposed to fight. Problem is, the
rebels are mixed in with the town’s defenses.”
“Couldn’t we run some kind of feint to get the Glitter Boy to show him-
self, then paint it with a dot and take it out with the Enforcer’s missiles?”
Brian suggested.
“Right now, that’s a possible scenario,” Mike agreed. “Sharp’s checked
out on the spotting unit and Darren can do a flyby to draw fire. Problem is,
that still leaves the leaders free.” He coughed, wincing in pain.
“What do we know about the leaders?” Lisa asked.
“From what the prisoner told us and what little info there is in the files, it’s
a pretty safe guess they’re not going to make targets of themselves. The pris-
oner told me of a similar situation where they worked with a town’s defenses
to protect against a “Coalition incursion,” as he called it. The rebel leader,
Zenjori Suka, obtained the position of town protector and arranged his troops
in rings, as levels around the town being defended. A smaller number were
stationed in the town itself to maintain order. Naturally, when our troops
finally moved in to rout the rebels, the central group managed to escape, leav-
ing the outer defenses as token resistance to cover their escape. The prisoner
stated that after they were forced from the town, the Coalition committed
horrible atrocities to the remaining townspeople and of course blamed it on
the Army of the New Order,” Mike finished his oration.
“That town’s too big to have a solid perimeter,” Winters observed. “A
smaller group could slip past the defensive lines and take up sniper positions.
When it hits the fan with the Glitter Boy, they’re gonna pop their heads up to
see what’s goin’ on and we blow their greasy skulls off.”
“That’s not something I would order anyone to do, Sergeant. Getting out
is going to be a lot messier than going in. We’re talking about 75% casualties
or more.” Mike’s concern for them was admirable but suspicious.
“Not if outer lines are gettin’ their backside wrung out. They won’t have
time to look behind them if they are shootin’ at multiple targets.”
“Spread out, make them think we’re an army, not a platoon.”
“Yeah.”
“They already think that. We listened to a few conversations on the comm
lines and they seem to believe several companies and at least a dozen mecha-
nized are waiting to move in and slaughter them. Whatever happened last
night is being blamed on us, though I’m sure it was this Zenjori’s doing.”
“What we need is inside information,” Greg commented. “We need a
town layout, with key defensive locations and who controls what and when.”

216
“Normally, I would infiltrate the city in the guise of a wilderness scout or
Headhunter looking for work, but I’m not exactly in a position to do that,”
Mike sighed ruefully.
“Some of us might be able to,” Brian said hopefully.
“I’m not –”
“Sir? Sorry to disturb you, Lieutenant Merrick.” Rex stuck his head into
the rover. “Some guy in Explorer body armor wants to talk to Darren or
Sharp. Asked for ‘em by name.”
Mike and Greg exchanged bewildered looks.
“Same one that fought with the magic users at Akron?” Greg asked.
“Maybe. Darren and Sharp are the only ones who really got a look at him.
Darren said he’s a... Techno-Wizard?”
“What’s he followin’ us for?” Jerry growled.
“I asked ‘im. Says he’s not followin’ us. He says he lives in Youngstown.
Cowboy’s got him covered outside the microwave fence.”
“Tell Cowboy NOT to shoot the Techno-Wizard. Where are Sharp and
Darren right now?” Mike was interested in talking to this magic user even if
he was on their side.
“Sharp’s on recon. Darren traded with Dave for tonight, so he should be
napping in the Enforcer,” Greg accounted for his men.
“He was there last we checked. Sleepin’ like a baby,” Lisa confirmed.
“Well go wake him up. I’d like to know how the hell he got on a first name
basis with a mage.” Winters didn’t like the implications.
Darren stared groggily at the two lieutenants. Awakened from the first
stretch of deep sleep he’d gotten in days, he mentally ran through a list of
things he might be in trouble for.
“Sorry to wake you Darren, but your presence is needed. A Techno-Wiz-
ard calling himself Van de Graf is sitting on a log outside the microwave
fence waiting to talk to you. Want to tell me why?” Mike sounded peeved as
well as curious.
“I dunno. Maybe I dated his sister,” Darren said groggily.
“No jokes,” growled Sgt. Winters, “He knows your name.”
“Well I didn’t tell him Sarge, he must have heard Sharp talking to me or
somethin’.”
“You stood around talking in front of a sorcerer?” Trenton, silent until
now, joined the interrogation.
“C’mon dude, it’s not like he was waving his hands summoning demons
from a Rift or anything. Besides, he helped us fight those magic users at Ak-
ron. Couldn’t hurt to find out what he wants. On top of that, Sir, he’s no friend
of mine. I just haven’t shot him yet.”
“I bet he’s a spy.” Winters’ mind, like all good Coalition soldiers, was set
against all wizards.

217
“Darren’s on the right track. You’re not in trouble, Darren.” Mike’s sup-
port caused Darren’s eyebrow to raise pretty far.
“Did I actually hear you say I’m not in trouble?”
“When traveling in foreign territory, it’s often wise to talk to the locals,
get a different perspective even if they’re on the other side. While in Minne-
sota fighting Xiticix, it was sometimes necessary to work with D-Bee tribes
we might otherwise have wiped out. They knew things we didn’t and the best
way to learn what we wanted was not at the point of a gun. This Techno-Wiz-
ard may be a spy, but not for the rebels. If for no other reason than informa-
tion, we need to act like some of us trust him.” Mike paused, coughing again.
“Go talk to him, Darren. Make it seem friendly, but don’t be too trusting. See
if he knows anything about Youngstown we can use.”
“Whatever, sir,” Darren yawned and trudged across camp borrowing a
rifle some recruit wasn’t watching.
“Sergeant Winters. Keep your eyes open. There may be others in the
area,” Mike said, his jaw set.
“Yes, sir.”
Reaching the microwave fence, Darren gently pushed aside Cowboy’s
C-27 and deactivated a section to sit next to Van on his fallen log.
“You look like you just woke up,” Van said looking into Darren’s sleepy
eyes. “Did they wake you?”
“Yeah, and I was havin’ a righteous dream with lots of hot women, too.
Guess that mace wielding bat-brain didn’t win, eh?” Darren wasn’t sure how
to begin asking questions.
“I think he’s still alive, but that’s not why I’m here.”
“Oh yeah? Then what’s got you waking me up... uh, Van, isn’t it?”
“Yeah, Van. Is this it? I mean, there’s not more of you guys hangin’ out
someplace? Jeez, to hear the town talk, there was a couple hundred of you
guys out here.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Those morons in charge of Youngstown’s Guard think a whole Coalition
army is breathing down their neck,” Van shook his head.
“You live in there?” Darren asked.
“Only in the spring. They got some new military leader in there the last
few days, some guy they call Suka San. First, they fire warning shots at me,
then, when they finally let me land, I get told my King’s being comman-
deered to help defend the town against a Coalition invasion. I wasn’t about to
tell them where I lived or hand over a million-credit craft, so I blasted outta
there.”
“Did you actually see this Suka San?” Darren asked.
“No, just some four-armed ‘Borg with a lot of weapons and heavy armor
...and there was a Mind Melter. Tried to paralyze my body or something like

218
that, but it didn’t work. Lots of small arms and low power weaponry, but
most of that is on the outside. Didn’t make sense.”
“Do you know the ones giving orders or calling the shots?”
“Nope. They weren’t here last year. I came here to talk to you cuz I wanna
know what you’re doin’ scarin’ the daylights out of my hometown. Can’t you
go scare people closer to Chi-Town?”
“We’re not here to invade your town,” Darren replied. “It looks like both
of us have a common problem once again. This Suka San dude.”
“What, is he a criminal?”
“Something like that. He’s a wanted man.”
“Only real problem I have with him is he won’t take refugees.”
“Refugees?”
“Remember that village, the one with all the dead people? I managed to
rescue some of the survivors who’d been taken by the monsters that killed
everyone, only then I got stuck escorting them out of Akron. Now I can’t get
rid of them cuz the morons in my town don’t want them. Something about the
refugees not having anything to contribute.”
“If we got this Suka San out of there, then we could go home and you
could ditch the baggage. It’s your town. Got any ideas?”
“A few. There’s a bunch of infrastructure running under the town. Pre-
Rifts mostly, but some are newer. My friends and I used to play down there
when I was a kid. The tunnels from the old days connect with the newer
sewer system in a couple places and there’s one that we dug out under the
Town Hall. So, we could eavesdrop on town gossip. It might still be there.”
“Is it big enough for a power armor unit?”
“No, and I don’t even want to try to get in that way unless there’s no alter-
native. I’m going to try a couple other things first, but I just wanted to know
what was happening with you first. You’re not gonna blow up my town or
anything, right?”
“No blowing up towns from this unit. Well, except maybe for him.” Dar-
ren pointed at Cowboy, still aiming the plasma cannon at Van. “I gotta talk to
my C.O., but I think he might be a little more trusting if he knew for sure you
were trying to help out a group of refugees. How many?”
“Twenty-four. Twenty-six actually, two sort-of refugees.”
“That’s it?”
“It was grisly, man. Worse than the village. That monster that was control-
ling the nexus in Akron was into some sadistic stuff. I know you Coalition
‘Dead Boys’ are tough and aren’t supposed to care about people outside of
your States, but you gotta have a heart for helpless people.” Van couldn’t
believe he was talking about having a heart.
“I’ll talk it over with my C.O. Where can I find you?”

219
“We’re camping to the north. Up by old i80. Just in case one side starts
going after the other. When it gets darker, you can probably see our campfire
from the air.”
“Can I ask you something, Van?” The two rose to depart.
“Yeah, sure.”
“If you’re a Federation spy, you’re doin’ a good job of it. Thing I want to
know is why a magic user would work with the Coalition. Federation and the
Coalition have been mortal enemies since the war. You can’t possibly trust
us.”
“I don’t trust you. Then again, I don’t really trust most people, not fully
anyway. I’m not with the Federation, trust me on that. In fact, most practi-
tioners this far north aren’t in the Federation. I live in Lazlo most of the time
if you really want to know. I was just born here. Up North, there’s a lot of
magic guilds, like the one I’m in, that want nothing to do with the Federa-
tion of Magic and recognize, like the Coalition does, that the morals of the
leadership down here aren’t so good. Everybody has the right to make their
own decisions about who they work with and who they don’t. Just because
your leaders war with us, doesn’t mean everybody else is that close-minded.
I’m an individualist. Everyone’s responsible for themselves, not the actions
of others. It’s my personal freedom to work with who I want and for whatever
reasons I choose. To hell with politics.”
“Either you’re a con man or an okay dude. I’m still not sure which.”
“Don’t be too sure I’m not both!” Van laughed and extended his hand.
Darren regarded the Techno-Wizard for some time, struggling with conflict-
ing values. Everything he’d been taught told him this man was a conniving,
deceitful and potentially dangerous foe, but nothing so far convinced him of
that. Grasping Van’s hand, Darren shook hands with a magic user for the first
time in his life.

220
Chapter 12
Time for some justice and imprisonment
Flames consumed the standing corpse entirely in an instant. Incoherent
curses of rage echoed throughout the tower that rose above the mountain
fortress, Lord Credo’s temper subsiding momentarily to express itself with
another fireball. Better that he vent his rage on one of his undead creations
than one of his apprentices.
If there was one commonality among the members of the Federation of
Magic, it was malevolent hatred for the Coalition. The only reason for Lord
Valdor to send a protector toward the repugnant invaders had to be solely to
provoke him. Credo seethed at the thought.
Credo was an Elf who had come through a Rift decades ago as the earth
was calming from its 300 years of torturous upheaval after the apocalypse. As
any Elf, he seemed slightly thin and frail compared to the annoyingly inferior
humans he found himself around. In his first five years, he’d gone from an
apprentice to a master of magic simply by fighting for the right to survive. He
found his way to the young city of Tolkeen and then, seeking power, traveled
to the Magic Zone where he began to study under some of the darkest and
most powerful summoners, sorcerers, and necromancers he’d ever encoun-
tered. All of them had been drawn to the magic-rich region in the central
south-east region of the continent known as North America.
He watched as the region rebuilt itself from the resounding loss its people
had suffered at the hands of the newly formed Coalition States and their Em-
peror. All the while, he studied and learned, biding his time and seeking out
ever more powerful teachers. Then Alistair Dunscon returned and he saw an
opportunity for power and respect. Killing his then mentor, a dark sorcerer
and necromancer who had carved out a large region of influence in the moun-
tains, Credo made the pilgrimage to the court and underwent the deadly trials
of lordship. He had not been ready, but his cunning and guile got him through
the tests and earned him the respect he craved.
Then, shortly after Credo had achieved his status and held off several at-
tempts to take his title and land from him, Valdor succeeded in his own trial.
Valdor had gained notoriety after the war for pushing the Coalition invasion
force back to the north. Lord Dunscon had told him that if he could pass
the trials of lordship, he could have whatever land he could hold along the
northern edge of the Magic Zone. Valdor seemed to breeze through the tests,
his magic geared not toward academic studies and testing the depths of his
magical abilities, but rather the fires and changing conditions of battle which
the tests had been designed for. Afterward, the hero would attend Dunscon’s
court and could charm and impress those assembled as only a politician could.
Their last meeting, a wizards’ gathering, remained a malignant and open
wound to Credo’s pride. Lord Valdor had seen an opportunity to put down a

221
rival and had publicly belittled and humiliated him with wit and wordplay.
Valdor had called him an unrefined, barbaric imbecile. Laughing haughtily
at Credo’s threats, Valdor calmly offered his acceptance to a dual, anytime
Credo felt that he was up to the task of challenging him to more than a yawn-
ing contest. Other wizards had laughed; powerful Line Walkers, Shifters,
Mystics and other practitioners of magic beyond his capacity to defeat. That
was twenty years ago when he had only just achieved his lordship in the
Federation of Magic and had no social capital to lean on with the other lords
and ladies of the court. In the years since, Credo had dedicated himself to the
mastery of powerful spells and subtle tricks should Valdor ever challenge
him again. Now, once again in front of the other lords, Valdor was reopening
the old wounds with his belittling tone.
“I’ve no idea why Sahara would slay two of your Shadow Beasts at Ak-
ron, Lord Credo,” Lord Valdor had answered his enemy’s query. “Perhaps
they misunderstood your request to find a comelier wench that would look
good at your side.”
The disparaging attack on his consort, Regina, only angered Credo fur-
ther. As if Valdor knew nothing of the actions his mistress-at-arms was in-
volved in. Aspiring to slay the Coalition invaders in the night, Credo had
summoned two Shadow Beasts from their twilight dimension, sending them
with intentions of murder toward the unsuspecting troops. Sahara had slain
both without the Coalition ever knowing they were there.
“That confounded witch!” Credo screamed, contemplating hurling anoth-
er fireball at the burning corpse wrapped in linen. The stone walls of his small
keep were blackened by many such outbursts.
He could slay the powerful tattooed warrior in a tremendous battle but
striking from the shadows suited him better. If Valdor’s favorite warrior were
slain by him, there would certainly be a challenge issued and a Federation en-
voy to witness. Credo hated to concede to the powerful wizard, but Sahara’s
true masters were beings of power that made Valdor appear like an insect.
Credo feared them far more than his nemesis, Valdor.
“Damn him to spend eternity swallowing his entrails in a pit of acid!”
Creative curses came like second nature to Lord Credo, “I’ve grown the reach
of the Federation farther than he, but it is Valdor who gains honor, riches,
and fame in the court simply because of his proximity to the Coalition. May
insects devour his eyes and gorge his mouth!”
A time would come when he was strong enough to topple the region Val-
dor claimed, but for now, his only course was subtlety and sabotage. The last
two years had been some of the most productive in his long, Elven life. The
Coalition dogs would die for their intrusion into Federation lands, but first,
he would concentrate his efforts on removing the warrior woman, Sahara,
from the picture. He had to be discreet, Valdor must never be certain whose
doing it was.

222
In combat, Sahara knew few equals. Credo dismissed the concept of sum-
moning a demon to engage her in battle.
“What weakness does Sahara possess?” He asked aloud, ignoring the
snow-skinned woman lounging on his bed. Ruby lips and flowing black hair
contrasted with her smooth, fair complexion. Credo paced and plotted.
“She fights with honor and abides by rules of fair play. Compassion for a
worthy opponent might leave her open for a stab in the back. But there must
be other weaknesses!”
“Men. If she finds a man desirable, then she has him,” Regina advised her
lover, an evil slant to her lavender eyes. She was the perfect mate to Credo’s
devious nature.
“Lust weakens the powerful Sahara?”
“Of course. Lust weakens a man and it weakens a woman as well. It lays
them bare to attack when they are least able to defend.” Meeting his eyes,
Credo considered her insight.
“I will see that you are given the finest food to enjoy, my dear Regina.
Make plans with your Queen Mania to have one of your brothers serve me
one task. I will see to it that Mania is well appeased for her assistance.”
____________________

Sahara’s black cloak was indistinguishable from the darkness of the night.
A portion of her face was the only portion of her body not shrouded in the
thick robe and hood. Grateful for the warmth they provided, she wore them
not to protect herself from nature, but to blend with it. The warmth was an
added advantage.
Not wanting to be discovered by the troops she defended, Sahara prac-
ticed stealth while watching over the soldiers she would, herself, slay in time.
Black cloth ruffled in a warm breeze and Sahara turned to see Valdor’s ap-
prentice, Chalra. The fair-skinned mage was one of the few at Valdor’s court
Sahara called a friend. Opposites in method, they shared direction. Chalra’s
face was that of a young woman but contrasted with her hair which was white
with age. Perhaps as powerful as Valdor, Chalra was a student of many arts.
Valdor was her better in his command at spell magic and for that, she was
his apprentice.
“Sahara, master Valdor is curious why you have not returned.”
“I return when the Coalition soldiers do. Then I do battle.”
“Credo’s wrath has been ignited over what you’ve done. Some in the Fed-
eration would call you traitor.”
“I’ve sworn no oath of loyalty to the Federation.”
“But you have to Master Valdor.”
“And I’ve kept my oath and my word. I have not attacked or harmed the
intruders, nor will I until they pass Valdor’s castle walls. I’ve obeyed master

223
Valdor’s commands. I did not swear I wouldn’t keep them alive until they
are mine to deal with.”
“You know Credo seeks opportunity to rise above Valdor and will seek
revenge on you for your actions against his Shadow Beasts.”
“Let him. Credo is a pitiful snake lying in the grass, waiting to be crushed
underfoot. He doesn’t have the courage to face me on the battlefield.
“In that you are correct but beware of the venomous serpent just the same.
I have cast an oracle and seen a possible future for you, my friend. I have
seen a man, tall, statuesque and of amazing physique. He calls to you and you
embrace. The shadow he casts on the wall is not that of a man, but a monster.
The wine beside your bed is blood. I cannot see the outcome, only the pos-
sibility of danger,” she said, pausing to listen to the nature around them.
I must go now; my portal closes shortly. Take care, Sahara.” Chalra
stepped back, soft-soled shoes meeting the stone of a chamber in Valdor’s
castle. Torches sputtered to life, illuminating the edges of her portal and then
she was gone, leaving only dark forest shadows.
____________________

Laid out on his death bed, Mayor Tristan bid farewell to his wife, four
children, and six grandchildren. His oldest grandson, Kent Tristan, was say-
ing his good-byes. Despite the constant vigil set by the psychic healers, the
best care they could provide was to lessen the pain the dying man was af-
flicted with.
It wasn’t without a certain pride that Zenjori Suka watched his curse run
its course. What made the whole scene delectable was the sobbing friends
and relatives. They actually associated his death with the arrival of the Coali-
tion “marauders.” It almost made him euphoric to see his plans falling into
place in near-precise form. A stroke of good luck eliminated the head of the
town council, although Zenjori Suka would have preferred to have been re-
sponsible for the bizarre electrical discharge from the power lines.
Consoling the victim’s relatives, Notec had established himself as a kind-
hearted priest of a good and caring deity. The irony of the entire situation
provided Zenjori with unending merriment. In a few hours, they would an-
nounce the tragic death of Mayor Tristan over Youngstown’s radio station
and swear in the new one hours after that. Promised support of the guard,
Kenneth Jarson would be more dictator than a mayor. Dissenters were al-
ready being singled out and quieted one way or another and most of the op-
position was already dead from Zenjori’s staged assault the night before. A
wealthy profiteer, Mr. Jarson – formally secretary of the treasury – stood to
gain much from cooperating with the new powers in control of the town.
Many of the guards were of loathsome character before Zenjori’s arrival, but
his rise to power liberated them of civil bounds and presented opportunities

224
they never had before. Those with the guns made the rules and the rules were
about to change for the worse.
In a gesture of his kindness and benevolence, Zenjori had temporarily
extended the curfew to 1:00 AM and ordered offenders let off with only a
warning. A number of Coalition sympathizers had already been rounded up
and held until the stand-off was over. Nobody wanted to be labeled a sym-
pathizer.
____________________

Spirits rose with voice, her sweet melodies sweeping away bitter disap-
pointment. After miles of “we’re almost there” to be stopped short of warm
beds and good meals robbed the refugees of the will to move on. Comforted
by her voice and song, the survivors felt hope returning. Their reluctant guide
and benefactor sat with his back to a tree outside the fire circle. Though they
respected and trusted the moody young Techno-Wizard, he kept himself dis-
tant from them. What they needed more than a protector now was someone to
lean on, someone close and personal. Anja had become a friend to them all.
Captivated by her voice and enthralled by her beauty, Van sat spellbound
in awe of Anja’s charm. Little had been said since the incident that morning,
but Van caught a mournful gaze on several occasions during the day. Now
her face radiated peace and happiness, though Van thought he glimpsed a
bit of sadness in Anja’s tone when her eyes passed over his distant figure.
A brief bath in the crisp water of a nearby creek washed the mud from her
hair and body and left her white outfit spotless. Van remembered being near
breathless at her beguiling form as she stepped back into the firelight. But the
strong attraction he felt went beyond carnal to genuine affection encircling
his throbbing heart and infecting his soul. He knew he must depart company
soon or become a victim to love. That was something that must not be.
“Groovy babe, man,” a voice next to him drawled out. Van was startled
so badly, he nearly found himself in the branches of the tree. Tripping over
his helmet, Van landed back on his rear, staring wide-eyed at the man sitting
cross-legged less than a foot from where he’d just been enjoying the music.
Just out of his peripheral vision, the oddly attired man could have been there
for minutes without Van knowing. Lighting a hand-rolled cigarette, the wild-
bearded man pulled a match from the brightly colored bandana tied around
his head and lit up.
“You wanna toke, man?” the stranger drawled out with a drugged-sound-
ing voice. Van noticed the flowers painted on his armor when the man ex-
tended his hand, offering the joint.
“Jeez! You scared the crap out of me!”
“Sorry, man. I like didn’t mean to break your oneness with the music.”
The man took a long draw. “Wow, this is good stuff. You wanna drag?” He

225
offered it again. Van just looked at it. “You could use some, man. Your vibes
are all out of whack. Try thinking more positive thoughts, man.”
“What,” Van lowered his voice. Anja still sung uninterrupted. “What are
you doing here?”
“Just relaxing, enjoying the music, getting in touch with –”
“No! What are you doing here?”
“Your friend is lookin’ for ya, man. He’s waitin’ back there by the creek.”
Van stuck his head around the trunk. A large, bulky form sat on a boulder
near the stream. “He didn’t wanna disrupt all the positive waves by scaring
these people. Your friend’s a righteous dude, man.”
Hesitating at the possibility of danger, Van finally dismissed the odd man
as harmless. Set against the tree beside the wild-haired man was a pastel-
painted shotgun. Usually warned of potential danger by a psychic sixth sense,
this man hadn’t triggered the automatic defenses in Van’s mind.
“Stay here.”
“No problem, man,” he drawled. Van donned his helmet and carefully
walked to the creek. There was always the possibility this was a trap.
“Targo?”
“Van!” a deep, gravelly voice chimed back.
“I’d recognize that rumbling voice anywhere!” Van strode forward and
got a gentle bear hug from his D-Bee friend. The twelve-foot-tall D-Bee
might indeed have frightened the people by the fire, even with the stupid grin
on his face.
“How ya been, old buddy?” Van asked, released from Targo’s friendly
greeting.
“Good. I am on time this year?”
“Sorry buddy, you’re two days late.” Targo had never grasped the human
concept of time. He just arrived whenever he got there, or so he reasoned.
“Oh. How come you not home?”
“I just got here tonight and the guard wouldn’t let the people I’m escort-
ing into Youngstown. Their village was destroyed and I’m helping them find
another home.” Van noticed there was an open Samson Power Armor next to
Targo’s giant robotic horse and a smaller one. Both horses still wore saddles.
“Who else came with you?”
“Oh, meet my buddy, David. I mean, Sir Renfield.”
A tall man stepped from the shadows, his features strongly set but without
malice. Van didn’t think David could have been much older than himself.
Van took an almost immediate disliking to the Cyber-Knight. He couldn’t
stand the self-righteous types, good intentions or not.
“Targo has told me much about you. It is very noble of you to assist those
less fortunate than yourself. It is an honor to meet you.”
“Uh, yeah, right. Heard a lot of good things about you Cyber-Knights, too.
You on a quest or something?”

226
“In a matter of speaking. I have been told of a great continent rising from
its watery tomb. I have heard stories of evil beings enslaving millions of
humans and of magic so strong, its tremors are felt through countless dimen-
sions. The land I seek is called Atlantis.”
Van’s face went ashen.
“Have you heard of it?”
“You could say that,” Van replied, obviously concerned.
“Then the stories are true?”
“More than you know.”
“My journey is not a hurried one. If you like, I will assist you in finding a
home for these refugees before continuing my journey,” Sir Renfield offered.
Seeing an opportunity to free himself of his burden, Van agreed a bit too
readily, “That sounds great. Why don’t I introduce you to the group? You
better let me tell them about Targo first.” Van jabbed his friend in the gut
plate with his elbow. “They might mistake him for someone dangerous.”
“I no want to scare your woman,” Targo boomed, following up his state-
ment with a hoarse and guttural chuckle.
“She’s not my woman. She’s just traveling with me.”
“Ohhh, huh huh,” this time his laughter increased to sound like a combus-
tion engine that hadn’t had any oil in about 10 years.
“It’s not like that. She’s just a traveling companion.”
“Huh huh.”
“Cut it out!” Van punched Targo in the gut plate.
“I too would like to meet this virtuous maiden,” Sir Renfield interrupted.
“Yeah, I’ll bet you would,” Van said without thinking, a tone of annoy-
ance in his voice. Where was the jealousy coming from? He didn’t want to
get involved with the mystic, especially after he knew she’d never want to
have a complete relationship with him.
Checking himself, Van flipped into his happy host mode to hide his true
feelings, “Hey, why am I being a party pooper? You guys want to meet ev-
erybody, let’s get to the introductions! I’m not sticking around for long any-
way, so you two might as well get acquainted.”
“We go make intro–, introdu–, tell them we here. Delwin have flute now,”
Targo pointed. The wild-haired man was putting a wooden flute to his lips.
Piercing, discordant tones shrilled from the instrument, stopping Anja’s piece
and turning heads.
“Who’s the fruitcake, Targo?” Van asked as they walked over.
“He good man. Odd man, yes, but good. His name Delwin Moonbeam.”
“I knew he was somehow related to lunacy. Is he a druggie?”
“No, M.O.M.”
“Jeeeeez.” Van slowed his walk. Mind Over Matter technology had ap-
parently been a novel invention at the end of the Golden Age of Humanity,
but it had never been perfected. It was supposed to allow the human body

227
to achieve its full potential in a number of areas and, while it did seem to
achieve that goal, the price that the owner paid in their steady loss of sanity
was a steep one.
“You go stop flute now?” Targo put his hands to his ears.
“Yes, I go stop flute now. Actually, maybe I’ll let him play.”
“Why? Music hurts.”
“Yeah, but there’s no way Sir Renfield can possibly get Anja to hear any-
thing with that shrieking. Maybe this Crazy ain’t so bad to have around after
all.”
____________________

Darren felt excitement building within him as Lieutenant Sorenson briefed


him on rebel data. There was little cause for the sudden private meeting un-
less a secret mission was on the agenda.
“And you want me to carry a TX-30 ion rifle rather than a C-12 while I’m
on patrol?”
“Yes, in case you’re spotted.”
“But I’m going to be wearing a spare suit of CA-1 Armor.”
“And a set of civilian clothing underneath, don’t forget. You may be able
to talk your way out of trouble, not that you should be getting close enough
to enemy lines that such a problem would arise, of course.” Mike nodded.
“Of course.”
“If you have to ditch the armor, that’s okay. Any information is valuable.”
“Let me see if I got this straight. You want me to go on foot patrol in a
generally southward direction and report back tomorrow morning?” Darren
figured the open-ended order allowed too much latitude to be straightfor-
ward. The kind of ordnance he’d been given was more along the lines of a
demolitions run rather than a foot patrol and the total lack of mission objec-
tive left action up to him alone. Darren was starting to like his task.
“Early morning is preferable, of course, but I would understand if the pa-
trol lasted longer than anticipated. Now get moving.”
“Yes, sir!”
Finding Van de Graf’s camp ended up being a great deal simpler than ex-
pected. Intermittent shrieks and whistles guided his course when he couldn’t
see the glow of the fire. A bearded man in psychedelic armor “entertained”
the group around the campfire. Sitting on either side of a voluptuous woman
was Van and another tall figure with a flowing blue cape and Crusader style
armor. Behind the trio was a giant D-Bee with thick, plate-like skin. Making
a substantial amount of noise before he stepped into the light, Darren tried to
prevent a trigger-happy jerk taking a shot at him.
“It’s all right, this is the Coalition soldier I told you about. Darren! Come
join us!” The refugees gazed at him suspiciously.
“By all means, continue with the concert.” Darren waved to Delwin.
228
“Please don’t,” Sir Renfield grumbled. “I’ve heard this rendition of three
blind mice at least two million times since we left Northern Gun. I think an
intermission is in order.”
“Oh, but he was getting so much better!” Van countered enthusiastically,
“just give him some time.”
“I’m sure he would sound marvelous after we’re all deaf. I suggest we
extend our hospitality to our guest by not continuing the recital for the time
being.”
“Always with the negative waves, man. Always with the negative waves.”
Delwin shook his head at Sir Renfield. “You would be much more happy if
you thought some positive ...”
“If you start with that positive/negative wave thing again, so help me, I’ll
get up and leave.” The Cyber-Knight looked exasperated. Van couldn’t help
thinking how trying a journey it must have been to make it this far with the
Crazy.
“Please, come join us, Darren,” Anja said, stopping the confrontation and
offering a spot by the fire. Raising an eyebrow at the large D-Bee, Darren
tried to look at ease in an uncomfortable situation. The excitement of new
experiences pumped adrenaline into his blood, unlike the rush he’d grown
accustomed to. When he got back to Chi-Town, he’d sign up for specialist
training. There was so much he was missing out on. No sooner had Darren
seated himself, when Sir Renfield and Delwin resumed their discussion.
“You need to learn to flow with the colors, move your body with nature,
like the flame.” Delwin faced the fire and tried to imitate it with his swaying
body. Darren found himself suppressing a laugh and a giggle from a D-Bee
child even caused Sir Renfield’s somber face to crinkle with a smile.
“Please, Delwin. You look ridiculous.”
Delwin didn’t stop.
“It’s like I keep telling you, man. You gotta break down those walls and
let your spirit free. All those bad vibes you send out are just a reflection of
your inner self struggling to be free.”
“Darren, we’re glad you came to share our fire. Why didn’t more of your
friends come with you? They are all welcome.” Anja tried to change the
subject but kept glancing at Delwin’s slowly writhing body and tried not to
laugh.
“They’re all pretty busy. I just came over to talk to Van.”
“I will now play for you, my friends, ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.’”
Delwin said and stopped his peculiar behavior to announce his next number.
Anja’s small hand stopped the flute from reaching his mouth. She gently
pried the wooden instrument from his fingers.
“May I play it?”
“Our spirits are one in love of music.”

229
The rainbow-colored basket case hopped the fire, did a somersault and
twist in midair and came to sit next to Darren in one graceful move. It was an
impressive feat of gymnastics. Delwin held the young D-Bee child in his lap
awaiting Anja’s performance on his flute. Darren glanced uncomfortably at
the D-Bee chid, not sure what to make of it.
Tentatively blowing into the instrument, Anja frowned at the sharp over-
tones. Readjusting the slide on the end while she blew a continuous note, the
sound became sweet and melodious.
“All this time and it wasn’t even tuned?” Sir Renfield shook his head.
At first, the tones came slow and hesitant, but soon the music from Del-
win’s flute became livelier and catchy. Anja played amazingly well on the
simple flute, although she would have preferred the one she had before her
capture. Forgotten were the petty squabbles and Sir Renfield was enthralled
with the adeptness Anja displayed in a simple melody. For a moment Darren,
too, became captivated, but suddenly, stories of monsters disguised as beauti-
ful women bewitching men with song and charm flooded his mind. Psychics,
mutants, and all manner of creatures could look human but were really mon-
sters underneath. It was an effort of will to keep himself from stopping the
evil music with a weapon blast. His heart pounded, mind running through
possibilities of what might happen to him when the music numbed his mind
and dulled his senses. When the music ended, he shoved his foot forward to
see if the magic had paralyzed his legs. It hadn’t, but he realized that the D-
Bee child had climbed from Delwin’s lap into his.
“Encore! Bravo! Groovin’ tunes, babe. You’re like one with the cosmos,”
applauded Delwin. “Some seriously righteous jivin’ waves, let me tell you.”
Sir Renfield didn’t move fast enough to keep Anja from handing the flute
back to Moonbeam. Darren still sat holding the child completely baffled as
to how she got there.
“Hi.” The little girl stared up at him.
“Hi.”
“Are you Van’s friend?”
“Uh, yeah. I’m Van’s friend.” Darren had seen D-Bee children before.
Just never held one, or even touched one for that matter.
“Good. Are you my friend?”
“Um, sure, I’m your friend, too.”
“I’m Winna and I’m four,” she said, holding up her six-fingered hand, all
fingers out. “How old are you?”
“Seventeen. I’m Darren.” Somehow it never occurred to him that D-Bees
might have names.
“You’re my friend, too, Darren.”
Van and Sir Renfield stood by the fire and watched the Coalition RPA and
the D-Bee child converse.

230
“That’s something I never thought I’d see,” Sir Renfield said in a low
voice.
“Most of them aren’t bad men, they just believe what they’re told.”
“When you talked to them, did you really expect one to come sit at the
same fire with you?” Sir Renfield had reasons to distrust the Coalition.
“I never really thought about it. I just treated them like I would anyone, I
guess.”
“It’s a good thing. If one Coalition soldier can set aside years of indoc-
trination and propaganda and sit a D-Bee child on his knee like he would a
human child, perhaps there are cracks in Emperor Prosek’s iron curtain of
prejudice after all.”
“Everyone has –” A high pitched shriek from Delwin’s flute made both
men wince.
“Darren, come on,” Van mouthed over the “Dying Sparrow” imitation
and pointed to his Sky King. Putting the child on a log, Darren followed the
two men, still giving a wary eye to the twelve-foot D-Bee tagging along. Van
punched a switch and the Sky King’s overhead light came on.
“Are we up for a caper?” Van smirked, dark eyes sparkling. More idling
car sounds came from Targo.
“I like capers. Yummy.”
“That isn’t what I meant. An adventure,” Van said.
“How ‘bout a reconnoiter?” Darren couldn’t imagine sneaking anywhere
with a twelve-foot D-Bee built like a freight train.
“Subterranean?”
“Works for me.” Darren pulled an optics band from his bulging pouch,
edging a step away from Targo.
“Someone needs to remain here and protect the women and children,” Sir
Renfield said, exhibiting the knight’s code of honor.
“That’s you and Targo.”
“I wanna go caper.” Targo didn’t want to be left out.
“Targo, remember the mines we used to explore when we were kids? You
won’t fit in all of them anymore.”
“I take armor off.”
“We used to pull you out of tight spots when you were just a baby giant.
Now you’re humongous! It will be like the tunnels got smaller. Too small.”
“Oh. Okay. I stay guard your friends,” he said with new understanding.
“Please, that would be appreciated.” Van sighed now that one very large
obstacle was cleared. He began selecting choice toys of his making and fi-
nally ended up taking most of them.
“You’re going to take ALL of those?” Darren imagined gadgets clanking
at the most inopportune moments.
“We might need them. You’re not exactly traveling light, either.”
“Necessities.”

231
“Got any of those sweet little explosive bricks?”
“Of course.” Darren pulled three color-coded Fusion Blocks from separate
hard cases. “We got three types. Light, Medium and Heavy.”
“What kind did your friend Sharp have?”
“Heavy.” Darren handed a type three Fusion Block to the Techno-Wizard.
“If we don’t use them I have to carry them back. Enjoy.” Darren was getting
into this espionage stuff. No wonder the military specialists tried to keep
everything for themselves. They wanted to have all the fun.
“Ready?” Van asked, strapping on his helmet.
Darren dropped his faceplate and spoke through the death mask.
“Rock ‘n Roll.”
Blessed with a partially clouded sky, the mismatched duo utilized the ab-
sence of stars to hasten their progress in the darkness. They reached their
destination without trouble.
“Now that’s a stroke of luck. Someone cleared the mine shaft of roots,
cobwebs, and everything,” Van said looking down the vertical shaft. “Looks
like someone dropped a thirty-ton ‘Bot down it.”
“First, how do we get down it? Second, what if the thing that did this is
still down there?” Darren asked.
“Attach this to that beam.” Van handed Darren a grappling hook and
tossed a thin line down the shaft. “Thousand-pound test line. Great stuff, use
it for everything.”
“Okay.” Darren wrapped the cord several times around the beam before
clipping the hook onto the thin line. “Who goes first?”
“I will, unless you want to.”
“Be my guest.” Darren gestured to the vertical shaft. Van wrapped the
cord over his shoulder, across his chest, and between his legs.
“You never, never do this without body armor. Geronimo!” Throwing
himself backward into the pit, Van plummeted a bit faster than planned, the
small cord providing less friction than expected. Judging by the short dura-
tion of his scream, Darren determined the shaft couldn’t be too deep.
“You alright!?”
“Yeah! Never speed drop with a body rappel!” Van’s advice came up the
shaft. Darren proceeded a great deal slower. Part way down he ran into an
unexpected predicament.
“Uh, Van? I just reached the end of your line.”
“And?”
“How come you used a fifteen-meter rope to rappel into a twenty-meter
mine shaft?”
“I didn’t notice. I just thought I lost my grip or something.”
“Never mind. I’ll climb down from here.” Darren caught hold of a snapped
support and lowered himself to a ledge before jumping to the mine floor.

232
Looking in either direction down the tunnel, it became evident his infrared
light would be in order.
“Turn your optics off. I’m using a flare,” Van instructed. A flash of light
temporarily blinded Darren who had become accustomed to the darkness.
Hovering a few feet above them was a tiny globe shining brightly.
“What the hell kind of flare is that?”
“Daylight flare. You Coalition types don’t use ‘em?” Van knew magic
would make the RPA nervous. No sense alarming him over a simple light
spell.
“Like hell that’s a flare. You magicked it there, didn’t you?!”
So much for pawning if off as technology, Van thought.
“Sort of. Jeez, check out this bin.” Van pointed to the flattened metal cart.
“Whatever mashed that didn’t climb back out. See, no claw marks or scratch-
es going back up.”
“And it didn’t fit down either tunnel, more than likely.” Darren unslung
the TX-30. “Which way?”
“Down here.” They began walking, globe hovering above them down the
tunnel. “That’s not standard Coalition issue is it?”
“No. I’d rather be using this inferior weapon than like have to explain a
C-12. You’re not even carrying a rifle dude, what’s up?”
“Don’t use ‘em most of the time.” They turned and stared up an upward
slanting shaft. “Trusty TX-5 and my NG-57 are all I ever needed. Course it’d
be nice if I actually had some ammunition for the projectile pistol.”
“It’s not even loaded?!” Darren said incredulously.
“Figured I’d pick some up in town.”
“You got a couple of screws loose, man. That reminds me. Who was the
wacko with the flute?”
“Just met him tonight. Delwin Moonbeam or something like that. He’s
been traveling with Targo and Sir Renfield.”
“Looks like he’s fried all but one or two of his brain cells.”
“Worse. M.O.M.”
“Damn.”
“I thought the Coalition used Mind Over Matter implant conversion in the
military.”
“What, and have a bunch of loonies running around with laser assault
rifles? Are you nuts? Supposedly the conversion is outlawed because of the
side-effects. Personally, I wouldn’t want a bunch of brain implants screwing
with my mind, even if they did make me quicker and more agile.”
“Not to mention being able to leap tall buildings in single bounds and stop
Titan combat robots with your bare hands.”
“I’ve seen some M.O.M. conversions turn a reasonably normal dude into
a nutball who thinks he gets his strength from eating spinach and holds long
conversations with his friend the mailbox. No amount of enhancement is

233
worth losing my sanity.” Darren remembered a friend in the ‘Burbs who got
a M.O.M. conversion. After a few years, the man was a raving lunatic. “You
got some weird friends, Van.”
“Trust me, those are not people I ordinarily bum around with. Up this pas-
sage.” They crawled between fallen timbers and continued on.
“Good thing Targo didn’t come along on the ‘caper.’ He’d never fit
through that.”
“As D-Bees go, Targo’s one of the most kind-hearted ones I’ve ever met.
Good thing, too. He used to bend rails like these with his bare hands just for
fun.” Van kicked the tracks at his feet. “It takes a lot to make him mad, for-
tunately. The only time I ever seen him completely lose his temper was when
we found a Line Walker killing a baby in some magic ritual. He snapped the
Line Walker in two and walked thirty miles to find the baby’s parents. They
shot him, thinking he stole it in the first place. That didn’t make him mad. He
just left the baby and ran away crying.”
“Maybe he didn’t become a bad monster because he grew up around hu-
mans,” Darren said after a pause.
“Probably. Sure is nice having him around sometimes, though. For some
reason, nobody wants to mess with you.”
“I wouldn’t.”
They walked in silence, footsteps echoing down the stone-walled passage.
“Yer light’s going out.” Darren pointed to the dwindling globe.
“I made extras.” Another globe shot from the hand-held flare. Darren was
surprised to find himself accepting magic as an alternative to his optics band.
They continued on, Darren looking up at the shining light.
“How does that work?”
“Um, how do I explain it... You know how a flare burns a chemical com-
pound to produce light?”
“Yeah.”
“Think of that as burning energy to produce light.” It wasn’t a perfect
analogy, but close enough. “It takes energy, say from a ley line and burns it to
make light, the energy dissipates into the air and is caught up in the ley lines
again. Clean, renewable power.”
“And dangerous and unpredictable.”
“Sometimes, but no more than conventional forms of energy. In fact, when
used to power technology, mystic energy is lots cleaner and less hazardous.
Like my NG-57 ion pistol. Normally, an energy clip is charged by a nuclear
generator or another high output power source. The internal workings draw
power from the clip and convert matter into charged ions and emit them from
the weapon.” Van tried to explain in laymen’s terms how magic and technol-
ogy could be interchangeable. “My weapon is modified to use the energy
found in every living thing and flowing in abundance through ley lines. The

234
weapon still emits a charged ion beam but uses psychic energy rather than
conventional energy. Only the power source is changed.”
“Yeah, but combining technology and magic is like rare, right? Most
magic users just make things happen with spells and waving their hands and
stuff.”
“The principles are the same though. You wish to fly, you put on a jet pack
or get into a SAMAS. A magic user wants to fly, he casts a flying spell. One
way uses conventional energy, the other psychic energy. Does the Coalition
have force field technology?”
“Yeah, but not in active duty.” Darren didn’t want to give away mili-
tary information. “Triax Industries does though. The X-1000 Ulti-Max has a
pretty awesome force field.”
“Okay and the X-1000 is nuclear powered like a SAMAS, right?”
“I guess.” Darren didn’t know what made the mecha he piloted work, he
just used them.
“What an X-1000 would do to produce a force field is draw energy from
its nuclear generator and convert it into a polarized protective energy barrier
surrounding itself. When a mage casts a protection spell, he converts psychic
energy, like from a ley line, into a polarized protective barrier with the same
effect as a tech force field. As a mage masters his art, the potency of his magic
increases. Likewise, as the level of mastery in technology increases, so does
the quality of equipment produced. Two very different ways to accomplish
similar goals.”
“But magic is corrupting. It makes people turn to evil.” The Techno-Wiz-
ard was making sense. Something had to be wrong.
“Power is corrupting, not magic. You’ve heard the saying, ‘Ultimate pow-
er ultimately corrupts?’ Take your Emperor. No, bad example. Uh, this Suka
San guy running Youngstown. He might pretend to work with society when
he doesn’t have power over society. Once he gains power, then he can do as
he pleases and his true nature comes out. Up in Lazlo, my teacher told me a
man doesn’t become evil by circumstance or opportunity. He just shows his
true nature. When restrictions of society are laid aside, the true nature of man
is revealed. Sometimes good, sometimes evil. Secret vices and desires take
form not because the person is changed by the presence of opportunity, but
because they were there all along and circumstance allows him to enact them.
Circumstance and power do not make someone what they are, they tear away
the shroud of deception from them and reveal what they really are. That’s
why it may be difficult to tell if a minor mage is good or evil, but a powerful
one will probably show his true colors – many times corrupt and evil.”
“You make it sound so black and white.”
“Trust me, it’s not. I truly believe there is good in everyone and unfortu-
nately, there is evil in everyone as well. The path of least resistance always
leads down and eventually turns to evil. Someone like Anja – the mystic who

235
played the flute tonight – is as far to one side as anyone I’ve ever met. It’s ac-
tually hard to imagine her even letting an evil thought enter her mind, but I’m
sure they do – she’s human. What the difference is, is that she doesn’t harbor
or entertain these thoughts, but maintains a level of purity beyond what most
could aspire to. On the flip side, there are those like the Shifter who mas-
sacred the village and attacked your party. Partly the result of acquiring the
power; he was a Gromek named Torrak. He gave into his basest desires and
followed the easiest path available – down. Thoughts you and I would never
let enter our minds, much less consider, are what Torrak immerses himself
in and puts to action. Acts so despicable, I shudder to consider them, are
committed every day by powerful, evil beings. Thankfully, there remains a
balance, but the cost to maintain it is great. I prefer not to get involved unless
it directly affects me but when it comes right down to it, I suppose I’d have
to side for good. There are as many shades of grey as there are people to as-
sign them to.”
Caught up in their own private thoughts, the two men walked toward
Youngstown’s underside in silence. Van was surprised at the oration he had
made. There were things he needed to unlock within himself and he’d just
given himself the keys.
“This is it,” Van spoke at last, pointing to a series of wooden boards nailed
across supports to form a mangled ladder. A small vertical shaft led upwards
and mounds of dirt obscured the tracks. “Jeez, the tunnel did shrink.”
“How did you cut through the rock? I thought you said you built this when
you were a kid.”
“A bunch of us found this air vent already here, but it was filled in when
they built some new buildings. We spent weeks hauling dirt out of our tunnels
in order to connect to the sewer system and extend it under the crawlspace of
some buildings. I still remember demolishing neighbors’ wood sheds and old
barns to get materials to support our tunnels. Nobody ever suspected because
we were always building forts to play Dead Boys and D-Bees.”
“You’ve got to be kidding.” Darren played the same game in the ‘Burbs
as a kid.
“No, really.”
“We played that in the ‘Burbs when I grew up. Nobody wanted to be the
D-Bees.”
“Opposite here, none of us wanted to be the Dead Boys. And the adults
never caught on that we were building tunnels under the town. We never fin-
ished most of ‘em, but we did complete the one under Town Hall.”
“Let’s hope your engineering skills are still good.” Darren looked up the
shaft. “Shouldn’t you kill that light thing?”
“It’ll be all right. We always kept several boards in place to prevent drafts
from blowing up the tunnel and giving us away.”
“And when was the last time you were down here?”

236
“Ten, twelve years ago. Don’t worry. I’ll go first. Wouldn’t want you go-
ing down a dead-end shaft.” Staying in the correct tunnel proved more dif-
ficult than even Van expected. Coming out on a ledge above a sewer canal, he
led the way to a smaller concrete tube and ducked inside. Other than cobwebs
and thick, sticky vine-like things, their progress was unhindered. “I’m pretty
sure this is the right one.”
“That’s what you said the last time.”
“Okay, maybe it’s not the right one. But –” Something large moved ahead
in the passage just beyond the light of Van’s daylight globe.
Suddenly Darren found himself in darkness, watching a wildly dancing
light follow Van back down the tunnel and around the corner. Now it was
pitch black and there was something else in there with him. Infrared light
flooded the smelly circular tunnel from Darren’s optics band. Two large
fangs and lots of hairy spines were directly in front of him. Darren and the
creature screamed simultaneously, Darren going one way, the thing going
the other. Cobwebs stuck to his armor and sticky strands slowed his progress.
Bursting from the opening into the light, Darren found Van waiting for him,
NG-57 aimed back down the tunnel.
“What the hell was that, Van?!”
“Cave spider, I think.”
“You think?!”
“Most of the time they’re more scared of you than you are of them.”
“I can’t believe you just ran away and took the light with you! How was
I supposed to see?”
“I thought you were right behind me. Besides, you got the optics band.”
“That’s beside the point. You bailed and left me back there to get eaten by
some spider the size of a house!”
“His fangs couldn’t even pierce your armor, probably.”
“Yeah, how come you ran?”
“I didn’t want to find out. C’mon, we better hurry up. I only have a few
flares left.”
“And what if we find more of ‘fang’s’ brothers and sisters?”
“Run.”
____________________

Problems had a way of cropping up when he least needed to deal with


them. Zenjori was thankful the call came in after his broadcast was finished.
Some Headhunters were being held outside a diner by a Burster and were
asking to blow the entire place up. This incident required his personal touch.
Walls of flame blocked exits and entries to the “Sleepy Eyes.” When Ze-
njori and Notec arrived on the scene, half a dozen Headhunters and several
policemen had their weapons on the small building.
“What’s the problem here?” Zenjori didn’t want high profile trouble.
237
“That little red-haired chick in there burned Maverick to a crisp!” A mer-
cenary with a multi-optics cyber-eye piped up.
“Is there anyone else in there?” Zenjori wasn’t about to have a massacre
on his hands. He feared the worst.
“Yeah, workers, most of ‘em. One or two patrons, too.”
Zenjori calmly waved to a window and spoke into the voice amplifier on
his Crusader body armor. “This is Police Chief Zenjori Suka. I’d like to come
in and talk to you. If your claim is legitimate self-defense, then I’m sure you
would be willing to act reasonably.” He waited and the pillar of fire vanished
at the front door revealing a burn mark on the cement. “Notec and you there,
come with me. The rest of you stay out here and behave yourselves.”
Catering to the needs of night shift workers from the metal refinery, the
“Sleepy Eyes Cafe” remained open during the curfew. Zenjori was taken
aback by the beauty glaring angrily at him from behind the counter. She had
flaming red hair and blazing emerald eyes and porcelain skin. He calmly
waved the weapons down and shut the door behind him. A scorched and
blackened body lay lifeless on the floor. Several patrons and employees
crouched in corners away from the line of fire. The stench of burnt flesh
wafted over frying burgers.
“He tried to grab me,” she spoke out, pointing to the smoldering body.
“That’s not what my men tell me. They say he might have gotten a bit
friendly, but certainly, nothing warranting murder.”
“He tore my dress and forced himself on me!” The shoulder strap of her
uniform was torn off, leaving one shoulder bare. She regarded the five men
contemptuously. An outbreak of violence with this many witnesses wouldn’t
help him. Training in martial arts had taught him discussion could often be
a superior alternative to fighting. Waves of calm emanated from his mind,
diffusing the Headhunters’ tempers and soothing angered patrons. Long for-
gotten techniques came back to Zenjori. The level of tension dropped imme-
diately. Anger subsided, for all but the Burster behind the counter.
He’s using the Mind Calm, thought Notec who simply shrugged off its
effects. It was time for him to aid Zenjori’s efforts.
“Cyndiara, isn’t it?” She nodded, her curly red hair bobbing all the way
to her waist. “Aren’t you on the reserve militia?” Notec asked, sincerely in-
terested.
“Yes.”
“Why are you here tending tables when you could be defending your town
from a Coalition invasion?” Notec added a soothing quality to his voice.
“It’s my choice to defend my town how I choose. Somebody has to defend
it from you!”
“Miss Cyndiara. I’m certain you acted to preserve life, but there are many
who would like to take the law into their own hands and to inflict harm for
what happened here.” Zenjori was amazed at how well she resisted his and

238
Notec’s efforts to calm her. “Until tomorrow morning when a judge can hear
your case, it might be best if you were taken into protective custody.”
“I can protect myself.” Emerald eyes flashed.
“Yes, I can see that.” He looked sadly at the burnt body and tried to ignore
the horrid stench of scorched flesh. “But what about those around you?” He
waved to the others in the room. “Some of them might get hurt or even killed
if someone tried to avenge this man’s death. You wouldn’t want that, would
you?”
“How do I know I’ll get a fair trial?”
“You have many witnesses here. Notec Depi will take their names and
have them appear on your behalf. Will that be satisfactory?”
“How do I know you will protect me?”
“Zenjori Suka is a very trustworthy man.” Notec concentrated on filling
her thoughts with feelings of trust. She fought off the mental attack.
“I will not be manipulated by you!”
“Miss Cyndiara, nobody wishes to manipulate you in any way. You may,
of course, have a lawyer present and the entire event shouldn’t take more
than an hour or two. You understand a man has been killed, a police officer
no less, and due process of law must be followed even if you are innocent.
I can ensure your safety until the time of your hearing. There’s no need to
escalate this to trial if it appears you did indeed act in self-defense. Will that
suit you?” She was breathing heavy, fighting the urge to flame them all.
“Yes. I need to stop by my apartment first.”
“We can swing by there on the way to the station. You’re not under arrest,
just protective custody, so there’s no reason you shouldn’t have access to
your personal belongings. This way, Miss Cyndiara.”
____________________

Aside from the occasional stray word, conversations in the rooms above
were unintelligible. The crawlspace allowed very restricted movement and
Darren discovered he couldn’t even crawl on his hands and knees between
floor and earth. Creaking wood made Darren cringe, Van’s arms and legs
shoved a trap door open into a broom closet in the Town Hall.
“Shhh! Be quiet!” Darren whispered harshly.
“I am being quiet,” Van nearly shouted back. “Someone nailed the trap
door shut.”
“Move.” Darren sliced a man-size hole in seconds then returned his high-
frequency knife to its ankle sheath.
“I gotta get me one of those. Jeez, they’re gonna notice that hole.”
“Like they wouldn’t notice a trap door pried open. Where to now?”
“There’s a crawlspace that runs beside the water pipes between the walls.
If we’re quiet, we can even make it to the attic.” Both men had shed their
armor and only carried minimal equipment. Silence took priority over fire-
239
power. Hand over hand with gentle steps, the two men went up higher to the
triangle shaped attic. Van pointed to a pipe running the length of the attic and
stepped quietly onto it. Fluorescent lighting provided light for the hallway
beneath them and enough beams leaked up into the attic to see reasonably
well. Each step had to be carefully placed, weight gradually applied slow and
even. Laughing voices below rose up to them.
“... and then he says he’s gonna tell everyone about us having two SA-
MAS in the repair shop. So I turn to Drake and he just grabs the owner and
impales him on a welding rod.” Several voices laughed. “And then I reach
over and clamp the other end on his face and turn the sucker on as high as it
will go. You shoulda heard him scream! It took him almost a minute to stop
kickin’!”
“Probably just the juice running through him!” Someone added.
“And then his assistant walks in and sees his boss getting melted and
Drake just looks at him and says in that metallic voice, ‘How shocking.’”
Roars and howls followed the story’s finale.
Van walked along a beam to a trap door in the ceiling. The edge lifted eas-
ily and Van set the trap door aside quietly. Holding supports on either side of
the opening, Van lowered himself to the sink in the upstairs sanitary closet.
Managing to avoid bumping a belt pouch against the wood supports, Darren
followed the Techno-Wizard’s example.
“You done with her yet?” A knock near them made Darren’s heart leap to
his chest. A door opened down the hall.
“She’s all yours. Better get what you can, she don’t look too pretty no
more.”
“Next one I get first dibs on.” A door closed and footsteps passed by, a
shadow traveling the length of light coming from the crack beneath the door
of the janitor’s closet. Clipped screams of pain came from the room to the
left. Darren didn’t want to envision the scene taking place inside. He handed
Van a mop and pail.
“What am I going to use this for?”
“Follow me.” Darren dumped a bottle of toilet cleaner into a spray bottle
and snatched a bottle of ammonia in the other. Smelling base liquids to deter-
mine what they were, he poured drops of each in the mop bucket to be sure
of the reaction.
“We’re set. Open the door.”
“We’re not actually going out there?” Van wasn’t about to risk his life.
“Why not?”
“Because they’ll kill us! That’s why not.”
“No they won’t, not if they think we’re one of them.”
“How do you plan to make them believe that, say we’re the janitors?”

240
“We’ll improvise. C’mon.” Darren held the spray bottle under his arm
and opened a door wide. Strolling nonchalantly down the hall, he stopped by
the room where the crying sounds were coming from and motioned for Van.
“Get over here!” he whispered harshly, then knocked lightly on the door.
“I’m not done yet,” came a voice from inside the room.
“Got a new one here, guess we’ll take her downstairs and have a go our-
selves.” Footsteps quickly approached the door. Darren readied the spray bot-
tle, fine misted sulfuric acid sprayed across the man’s face when he opened
the door. Blinded and screaming in pain, Darren clamped his hand over the
man’s mouth to silence him.
“Get over here!” Darren hissed at Van and dragged the man inside. Van
left the bucket and darted down the hall, closing the door behind them. Stuff-
ing a rag into the mercenary’s mouth, Darren turned and almost gagged at the
sight on the floor. Bound and bleeding, the woman had ceased screaming, a
knife hilt protruding from her chest. Anger so violent it made his vision red
overwhelmed him. The next thing he knew someone was calling his name
and holding his arm. Somebody else with his voice was letting loose a stream
of obscenities.
“Darren! Cut it out, man! That’s enough!”
“What?”
“Cut it out, Darren. You’re making too much noise. Keep it down!”
Darren looked at his fist covered in blood, then to the policeman laying
on the floor in a pool of it. Van met his eyes for a moment, then checked the
mercenary.
“Jeez, man. You killed him.”
Darren breathed slower, flaming rage internalized to a smoldering deter-
mination. Something must have snapped inside him, he never really got an-
gry even in the thick of battle. Darren forced himself to be calm, but a knock
on the door broke his concentration.
Van stood, hand on his weapon and watched Darren fling open the door
and drag a uniformed man in with a jerk. Never having seen a blend of mar-
tial arts and street techniques in action before, Van simply waited for the
unconscious rebel to hit the floor. The teenage girl Darren jerked in afterward
looked drugged. The RPA carefully deposited her in a chair. Then Darren
soaked the new policeman in ammonia, which served to awaken him in sec-
onds.
“What, what –” the man sputtered.
“Shut up!” Darren flat palmed the rebel in the forehead, slamming his
head to the floor.
“Jeez, I’d hate to see what you RPAs do in your spare time. Try not hitting
his head on the floor like that, remember there’s guys with guns downstairs.”
Van walked over and locked the door. “Jeez, that reeks!”

241
“Listen up. You tell me where Suka San is right now. Otherwise, I’m go-
ing to hurt you. Bad.” Darren wasn’t a mean person, but over the past few
days he’d finally broken the distance he placed between himself and reality.
Now it was personal.
“I, I don’t know.” The rebel’s eyes watered from the chemicals soaking
into his skin.
“Too bad. Gimme the spray bottle.”
Van handed over the toilet cleaner, the purple liquid sloshing in the spray
bottle.
“Where would you least like to hurt? Think about it, cause it’s gonna hap-
pen.”
“I, I don-” White vaporous steam rose from the rebel’s crotch where acid
and ammonia met. Intense heat found its way to sensitive skin and the rebel
screamed into the chair leg Darren shoved in his mouth.
“Could you repeat that last part? Darren mocked the rebel, waving the
spray bottle.
“He, he, he will kill me!”
Darren lowered the chair leg and sprayed several more times. More poi-
sonous vapors appeared.
“Hey, you better tell him, man. If you tell him the truth you might be able
to run for it and get away before anybody knows.” Van covered his mouth
with his sleeve. “Too much longer breathing those fumes and you’re dead
anyway.”
“The police station! He’s at the police station!”
“You know where that’s at?” Darren looked up at Van.
“Yeah. What about her?”
“We’ll take her with us.” Darren took the rebel’s weapon and aimed the
barrel between the eyes of the trembling man. “Ahh!” Darren couldn’t bring
himself to kill an unarmed man and knocked him out with the barrel.
“How do you propose we leave? Walk out the front door and say, ‘Have
a nice day?’”
“Heck, do some magic thing and get us out of here.”
“I don’t know a teleport spell.”
“What kind of magic user are you? Take her, I’ll go first.” Darren opened
the door. Voices down the hall sounded drunk, but their owners were out of
sight. With a .45 in one hand and the rebel’s laser rifle in the other, the Coali-
tion RPA walked fearlessly down the hall, casually clubbing the guard by the
stairs over the head with the rifle before descending.
“Remind me not to make you mad,” Van said, leading the drugged girl.
Several conversations were being held in the lobby area, preventing a clear
pathway to the front doors. A surge of adrenaline came when Darren spied
Van pulling the pin on a black grenade.
“Van! No! Not that way! Quiet!” The harsh whisper sounded urgent.

242
“I’m not going to – you think I’d throw a real grenade in there?! This is
a fear grenade, I made it myself. We walk in and I drop this in a trash can
near the front desk. Everyone freaks like mad, runs out, and we just do what
everyone else does.”
“Magic?”
“Uh-huh. Concentrate on not being afraid.”
“I’m not afraid.”
“Yeah, but when I drop the grenade, you’re gonna want to be. Fight it off.
Some magic you can resist, ya know.”
“Oh. But this will make everyone else run, right?”
“Trust me.” Van noticed Darren’s skeptical expression.
“Here goes nothin’.”
The ease with which they passed through the lobby was astonishing. Be-
sides a few uninterested looks, their progress was completely unimpaired.
Outside on the steps, a rebel almost stopped them but didn’t.
“See. If you look like you know what you’re doing, people just assume
you do.” Darren was proud of his bluff. “Used to get into all kinds of places
in the ‘Burbs this way.”
“What are you doing here?” A Headhunter with bionic arms stopped them
before they crossed the street.
“Taking her over to the police station. Why?” Darren asked innocently.
“What for?”
“What the hell do you think for?”
“Where’s your car?” the Headhunter asked suspiciously.
“Uh, what’s his name took it to go on patrol.” Darren snapped his fingers
trying to come up with a good name.
“She a sympathizer?”
“Uh, yeah, you know.” Darren winked. “A sympathizer.”
“You’re not one of my men. Who’s your commander?”
“Drake,” Darren said the first name he could think of.
“Oh. I’ll have someone give you a lift over there.”
“Righteous!” Darren noted the puzzlement on the Headhunter’s face. “Uh,
that would be nice. Thank you.” The mercenary turned his back and called
a jeep forward. Darren whispered from the corner of his mouth. “Put the pin
back in the grenade.”
“Oh, yeah.”
“What did you say?” the Headhunter growled
“Looks like you boys got it made in the shade.” Darren smiled at the suspi-
cious Headhunter. “Thanks for the lift!”
Facing a trio of heavily armed Headhunters on the way over to the police
station didn’t brighten Darren’s frame of mind. A chance to bring down the
rebel leader couldn’t be passed up, even if it was incredibly dangerous. So-
renson’s briefing included a vid of a town called Chuton after the Army of the

243
New Order had occupied it. This was one man who needed a Fusion Block
enema real bad, Darren thought.
Four Coalition hover rovers with the markings painted over were parked
in front of the station.
“Thanks, boys.” Darren started up the steps and waved goodbye to the
Headhunters. They got out and followed Van and the girl up the stairs.
“We’re going in, too,” one of them said.
“I got first dibs.” Darren pointed to the girl. Inside the police station were
a dozen Headhunter policemen, but nobody matching Zenjori Suka’s descrip-
tion. A partial conversion ‘Borg sat with his metal-shod feet gouging the
wooden tabletop. A long hall led past several conference rooms into another
large room with a staircase on one end and three holding cells along the
walls and the corner. A jailer deposited the drugged teenager into a holding
cell with fifteen other women and then returned to an office with a polarized
window facing the room. Sitting in a chair near the stairs was a rebel in heavy
Gladiator style armor with the A.N.O. emblem etched on the chest plate.
“Who are they?” the rebel asked with a gravelly voice.
“Some of Drake’s men.”
“I don’t think so.” He rose and limped to them. “Drake’s men are on the
line. What are you doing here?”
“Well, you know. We didn’t want to miss the excitement. Got any brews
here?” Darren said playing the fool.
“Where are you supposed to be?”
“Over near the water tower. Thought we’d grab a couple a’ cases of beer
and head back. Nothin’ wrong with that, right?” Van played along.
“‘Fraid there is. See, Drake’s men are defending the perimeter, not bring-
ing in dissenters. I think you better wait ‘till Suka San returns. Have a seat.
Bring the two gentlemen a couple a’ brewskies. You check out and we’ll send
ya back with a sixer.”
“Hey, no prob. We’re there.” Van accepted the beer and sat next to Dar-
ren. They could still get out of this without a fight, but the odds were getting
slimmer.
Twenty minutes in the police station and Van knew they weren’t getting
out. Not after what they’d seen already. There was still a chance they could
bluff, but an act of loyalty might be necessary to procure trust. No doubt it
would be grislier than Van was willing to participate in.
“Please have a seat, Miss Cyndiara. I will be with you in a few moments.”
A short, Asian man in Crusader armor escorted the red-haired woman to a
seat and looked at Darren and Van. A robed figure with long, wispy hair
waved to him, but the man ignored the gesture.
“I’m told you claim to be some of Drake’s men.”

244
“Yep, that’s right. Sorry about leavin’ our post an’ all. We just wanted a
couple brewskies.” Darren slurred his speech and held up a mostly full can
of Zoom.
“Yes, well I’ve had a discussion with Drake and he’s never heard of a Mel
Gibson or Christopher Colombus. You’re not really part of Drake’s group are
you?” Zenjori smiled and asked, maintaining a friendly attitude.
“Yeah, but we wanted to be,” Van chipped in. “We’re members of the
reserve militia and we wondered why you didn’t call us.”
“Strange, I don’t recall seeing a Mr. Gibson or Mr. Columbus on the list,
but I may have overlooked your names. Miss Cyndiara, you’re on the reserve
militia. Do you recall ever seeing these two gentlemen at any of your meet-
ings?” Both Van and Darren nodded to her, prompting a yes answer.
“No, I’m pretty sure I didn’t. He looks kinda familiar, but I’ve never seen
that one before in my life,” she said, pointing to Darren.
“Thank you, Miss Cyndiara. You’ve been a great help. Notec will escort
you to a private room for the night.”
“Thank you.” Both men watched her go downstairs with the robed man.
“Liberate these two of their belongings.” Seven Headhunters set their gun
belts and equipment on a counter near the tinted window. “I believe a better
choice of names would have been appropriate. Mr. Gibson, you look pretty
good for a man over four hundred years old and my, aren’t you looking well
for a man near one thousand, Mr. Columbus. Excuse me for a moment, I have
some loose ends to wrap up.” The Chinese man and the robed figure went into
the room with the tinted window.
“Suka San, these men are not who they seem,” Kruno stated, sitting at a
table across from the window. Two new additions to the table brought the
total number of eyes watching Darren and Van to eight.
“That much is self-evident, Kruno.” Zenjori rested his chin on his palms,
elbows to the table and eyed the cell full of women.
“Kruno, what are those women doing in my holding cell?”
“Dissenters. Heh heh.”
“Don’t you think it might seem a bit suspicious that we’ve rounded up
sixteen dissenters, all attractive women approximately ages 15-25 and locked
up in a prison cell?”
“I didn’t count.”
Zenjori twisted his head to look at the mercenary talking to him.
“Question a few and let them go. I don’t want a mob of angry husbands
demanding to see their wives. Get rid of the ones with families, I don’t want
them here. Too much hassle. Go arrest a few men for being sympathizers and
be discreet.”
“Yes, Suka San.”

245
“J.J.,” Zenjori spoke to the Juicer sitting on the soda machine, juggling
cans of Moon Juice. “Councilman Lou is still causing trouble. Did you warn
him as I asked?”
“You bet, mate. Wouldn’t let us, he said.”
“I want you to make the threat good. Tonight.”
J. J. stopped juggling.
“Ya know that’s not what yer payin’ me for, Suka San. I don’t off babies.”
“I’ll double the price.”
“Ten thousand credits are a lot for one baby, mate.” J.J. looked like he
was struggling with his own code of ethics and the money. The Juicer had to
remind himself of Assassins’ Rule #4: Always be professional. “Sorry, but
I’m gonna pass on this one.”
“Hell, for ten thousand credits I’ll waste both Councilman Lou’s kids.” A
drunk policeman stood and sauntered over.
“Very well. Just the one, his youngest. I want you to crush its skull.” Ze-
njori spoke as if he’d just ordered a hamburger and some fries, not the murder
of a defenseless child.
“I’ll run it over with a damned APC for that kind of dough.”
“A nightstick will suffice. Sober up first, I want no screwups.”
“You want me to work over the Burster for ya?” Kruno offered.
“Don’t be so crude. There are thousands of ways to inflict pain without
‘working someone over,’ as you put it. The Burster is mine and Notec’s. I
don’t want you touching the others we have down there, either. The women
you have left over when you clean up the jail cell you can do what you want
with, but not the others. I’m going to enjoy breaking the Burster myself.”
“What about those two morons?” Kruno pointed to Van and Darren.
“I think it’s time we dealt with them.”
Handcuffed to chairs didn’t suit Darren or Van very well, but what could
they do about it? Neither would make it out the front door alive even if they
could make a break for it. Darren was beginning to think this whole espio-
nage thing bites. The line of mercenaries blocking the path stood silently
training weapons on them. Squirming through the line was Zenjori Suka.
“Sorry to have kept you waiting, gentlemen. I’m sure you’ll be happy to
know I won’t be detaining you here much longer.”
“Great! And if there’s anything we –”
“I don’t think you understand your situation fully, Mr. Gibson. There is
somebody here you both know. Somebody that has traveled a great distance
to avenge the wrongs you have done him. I’m sure you both will die very
unpleasant deaths. Goodbye, gentlemen.”
When the line of mercenaries stepped aside, both men were struck by
waves of dread.
“Crap,” said Darren.
“Jeez,” said Van.

246
Glaring down at them with a wicked smile was Torrak.

247
Chapter 13
My god, it’s a Moonbeam!
A gag was stuffed in Van’s mouth before he could recite a spell. Merce-
naries cuffed his hands behind his back, then shoved Van and Darren back
down the hall and outside. Torrak just glowered at them with a sadistic smile.
“I was told you were coming. When I am finished torturing your bodies,
I will offer up your souls for eternal suffering and pain so unending you will
look upon the next few days as paradise.”
“This is negotiable, right?” Darren asked. Both were led down the steps to
a waiting hover rover and pushed into the back. Torrak faced them in the op-
posite seat and began going through their pouches as the rover began moving.
“Interesting little toy. I remember you using it on my servants.” Torrak
held up the mini-flamethrower. “No doubt I will need to test it on you to make
sure it works.”
“Where are you taking us?” Darren asked, watching carefully.
“Hell.”
“I think the driver musta got confused, Hell’s back there on 3rd street. You
really oughta choose better help,” Darren nervously joked with the Shifter.
Long fingers wrapped around Darren’s high-frequency blade, drawing it
slowly from the sheath.
“That thing doesn’t work, you know.”
The blade hummed.
“You’re lying. Stick your tongue out.” Torrak leaned forward with the
blade. Darren smiled and kicked the Gromek in the leg as hard as he could.
Bones snapped and the Shifter’s knee bent sideways. Kicking up, Van caught
him in the chest, sending him back against the canvas. Gymnastics flexibility
comes in very handy, thought Darren.
Slipping the handcuffs under his feet, Darren used the Vibro-Blade to
slice the handcuff chain in half. Torrak got back up, mace in hand. Darren
snap kicked Torrak’s lower chest and launched the unbalanced D-Bee out the
back of the moving rover. The stunned and breathless Gromek skidded across
cement, leaving flesh behind. Darren was temporarily deafened by a close-
range shot from the driver’s .45 caliber pistol. Shooting while steering the
rover, his aim was horrible, but Van and Darren dove for the floor to avoid
the rapid series of wild shots. Clip empty, the weapon’s slide halted, awaiting
more ammunition. Van stood making muffled screams through his gag for
Darren to untie the cloth around his face.
“What?” Darren couldn’t have heard with his ears ringing. He guessed
what Van was trying to say, “The fear grenade!”
Sudden acceleration sent Van out the back onto the street. Darren snatched
the Techno-Wizard’s belt pouch and threw it over his shoulder. Leaping to-
ward the front of the rover, he grabbed a fear grenade from the belt and pulled

248
the pin. Quick action on the driver’s part tossed Darren through the side of the
canvas and down the street. The rover spun out of control and slammed into
a parked car, nearly tipping over. Dizzily, the rover spun in his vision, and
Darren realized the fear grenade had been dropped before he was knocked
out of the rover. Struggling frantically, the driver was trying to get out the
side. Metal, glass, and bone billowed forth in a shrapnel explosion from the
destroyed rover. Darren felt something strike him in the shoulder as he cov-
ered his head with his arms.
Darren viewed the burning wreckage of the hover vehicle as he walked
around it. There was someone lying in the street that he should help, but he
didn’t know why. Darren reasoned it was too dangerous to lie in the street
– you could get run over that way – and dragged the body to an alley out of
harm’s way. Something fell onto the body when he was dragging it. A belt
with several pouches and a holster. Could have just landed from the explo-
sion, Darren thought. Something was pounding against his head – from the
inside. His heart. Pain registered every time he moved his right arm, and
whenever his cheek brushed an object. His arms reached up and bloody hands
closed around the shard’s shaft and pulled. Nearly blacking out from pain,
Darren yelled out when the metal shrapnel was pulled from the wound. The
body was stirring.
“Wmmft hmmfpennnd?” asked the Techno-Wizard. Blood showed
through many holes in his torn clothing. Darren sat down and pulled off the
gag.
“That wasn’t a fear grenade, Darren.”
“Oh yeah? It sure scared the crap out of me!”
“There’s a V-Med unit in my pouch. We need it.”
“Does it require pulling a pin?”
“No. It looks like... like a salt shaker.”
While Darren rummaged through the bags, a spell from Van released
the manacles binding his hands. Both wrists were cut deeply from the metal
cuffs, and Van was sure one was broken.
“This?”
“Yeah. Here.” Darren put the device in Van’s good hand. Circular, spin-
ning lights accompanied a whirring sound. Abrasions healed, leaving only
the broken wrist to fix. Wincing at the pain, Van pushed the protruding bone
back into place, muttering curses in the process. Better to do it now while his
body was still numb. Wait until later and he would be more sharply aware
of the pain. Another V-Med dose knit the bone and repaired most of the torn
flesh. Darren watched and clutched his left hand over his bleeding shoulder,
clammy, cold sweat pouring over his body.
“You’re bleeding bad,” Van observed. Darren nodded. “This is magic,
you know. I’m not gonna heal you against your will unless you’re an uncon-
scious drooling idiot and at that point, Torrak might get you.”

249
“What the hell.” Darren disregarded the oath he had taken as an RPA. It
wouldn’t be the first time he’d broken the rules. “Fix it.” Flesh congealed
and became whole as skin formed over the shrapnel wound. Van waved it
over Darren’s body again to heal other, less-life threatening wounds. He
was amazed at how quickly the grievous wound was completely healed. His
blood-soaked shirt and clothes would betray his injury when he returned.
He’d have to find other clothes before his unit saw him.
Shouts from the street forced the two men into a doorway. A large hover
vehicle landed near the burning wreckage and several armed rebels fanned
out to extinguish the blaze, leaving the large vehicle unguarded.
“Free Vehicle!” Darren spoke to the Techno-Wizard and crept along the
wall.
“Wrong way!” Van whispered. “Oh, hell,” he muttered, scrambling after
Darren.
Paying too much attention to the crowd of onlookers to properly watch the
hovercraft, the rebels were unaware of the two men slipping into the back of
the vehicle. A rebel donning armor looked up at them warily, not sure who
they were.
“That your helmet?” Darren pointed past him. The rebel looked. Van
shuddered, hearing bones snap from the palm strike to the rebel’s face. Head
wobbling, the rebel was completely harmless after Darren broke his neck.
Van pulled aside the equipment cover.
“Ooh, la la. Toys.”
“That’s Coalition equipment.” Darren looked on incredulously. A large
SAMAS Power Armor unit numbered 15 took up most of the cargo space.
Four suits of CA-1 Armor were neatly stored next to weapon racks full of
Coalition weapons. Darren pulled a C-14 Firebreather from a locker and
checked the clip and grenade canister.
“Here,” he tossed it to Van. “Just give it back when you’re done.”
“What’s a type 3 Fusion Block?” Van lifted a metal case from a storage
compartment.
“An awesome little explosion thing,’” Darren said, checking out the SA-
MAS.
“Cool.” Van opened a case and took six.
“Ammo drum’s full, weapon operational. Damn, wish I had the access
code.”
Van reached over and touched the SAM, communicating mind to ma-
chine.
“17196438. Voice rec’s been disabled.”
“How did you do that?”
“Tell ya later. Mind if I borrow this armor and jet pack?”
“Welcome to it.” Darren suited up in the SAMAS. “Anything we can’t
take gets a Fusion Block.”

250
“Oh, Man!” Van held up a type 3.
“Oh, man”
“How long? Five minutes?”
“Actually, I wonder if it would be better to expose all this to the people of
Youngstown. This SAMAS has the same number as mine, and all this equip-
ment is probably being used to make it look like there’s more troops than
there really are,” Darren said.
“And this Suka San is using the threat of invasion to secure control of the
town. If we could show everyone what’s really happening, they might hand
this guy over to you.”
“Can you drive this thing?”
“Naturally,” Van said, confidently.
“Get her moving. I’m gonna chuck some of this stuff out into the crowd
when we pass, then hightail it out of town. Hurry, I think someone’s coming.”
Van ducked into the pilot’s compartment, backing up and bending lower to
accommodate the jet pack. To his joy, the engines were still running.
“Ready?” Van called back.
“Rock-n-Roll.”
Concerned citizens were being told everything was under control when
a large hovercraft truck nearly knocked them over with its jet wash. Objects
fell to the street in their midst, but most didn’t bother to look until after the
vehicle turned and vanished from sight. Confused Headhunters and rebels
watched the craft depart without them and quickly realized the implications
of what had been thrown into the crowd of citizens. Two sets of armor and
empty explosives containers with C.S. emblems were now the center of at-
tention. People were questioning the presence of such equipment but were
far from reaching the truth when a rebel demanded that everyone stay where
they were. Fearful onlookers who came to see the explosion began sliding
away. After the first shot was fired, it was hard to distinguish dying screams
from fearful yells. Some Headhunters shouted for the massacre to end but
couldn’t be heard over the weapons fire. Forgotten was the Coalition equip-
ment dropped from the hover vehicle. Now the people of Youngstown had
legitimate cause for alarm; over two dozen citizens lay dead.
____________________

Thoroughly bored waiting for action, Kreg was wide awake in an instant,
hearing the report of the stolen hover vehicle. Stretching out quickly before
he piloted the Glitter Boy, Kreg made sure stiff muscles wouldn’t hinder him.
All he was supposed to shoot was the vehicle; whoever the cause of this trou-
ble was, they were to survive long enough to be captured and interrogated.
Kreg was ready for the rover when it came in range attempting to flee.
Pylons drilled in, and toe hooks gripped concrete. The Glitter Boy swung
the rail cannon to lock a tiny infrared dot on the hover craft’s rear section.
251
Flechette rounds were chambered in the accelerating tube. The Glitter Boy’s
hands closed on the trigger.
____________________

Piloting the speeding vehicle, Van thought for an instant someone had
rammed them from behind, then a sonic boom informed him exactly what the
power loss was caused by. Slammed to the ground by two hundred kinetic
slugs tearing the engine section out of the back, the vehicle bounced once,
then furrowed into a ditch.
“Van! Thirty seconds!” Darren used the SAMAS to tear out the side of the
vehicle after pressing a Fusion Block’s auto timer. Van peeled himself off the
dash and painfully climbed over the equipment that had shifted position to
join him in the pilot’s compartment.
“Van!”
“I’m coming!” he shouted back, climbing up the vehicle’s slanted floor.
“Van, c’mon!”
A new-found strength hit Van as something deep inside him screamed to
get out of the vehicle before his inevitable death. Superhuman strength over-
rode the battering of two crashes in one night as he finally climbed free and
engaged his Terrain Hopper jet pack. Darren was only just in front of him.
The first concussion sent shock waves over terrain severe enough to knock
defenders off their feet. The perfect mushroom halo was disfigured by a se-
ries of intense minor explosions and rippling concussions.
Defenders advanced to slay Coalition troops attacking their positions.
Van’s jet pack failed to match the SAM’s speed but kept way ahead of any
pursuers.
In the event of vehicle failure, the two men agreed on a contingency plan
of feinting east then swinging north back to Van’s camp so they wouldn’t be
mistaken for real Coalition troops. By the time Kreg received the go-ahead
for deadly force, his targets were far out of range of the rail cannon.
Knowing little other than basic radio operations, Darren judiciously chose
not to transmit on the SAM’s pre-programmed frequencies. He had arrived
before his partner of the night and patiently waited half a mile from the camp-
fire heat signatures. Most were sleeping.
“Oh, sweet tranquility,” a voice said next to him. Darren almost popped
off a burst from his rail gun, he started so badly. Delwin Moonbeam stood
less than a meter away, resting his shotgun on his shoulder.
“Dang it! What the hell are you doin’ up here?”
“Listen, man, listen. The night is, like, beautiful in its peacefulness, man.”
“I could have been from that town over there and you would be dead right
now!”

252
“No, man. Your colors are your birthmark. Nobody has the same colors as
everyone else, and your colors are special, man. No, I knew it was you when
you walked over here.”
“Don’t sneak up on people like that, especially people you know. What are
you going to do with the shotgun anyway, make loud noises?”
“Nah, man. I got it loaded with paint pellets. When I shoot someone it
makes all kinds of pretty colors.”
“Do you paint better than you play the flute?”
“Anja took my flute, so I can’t play you a song. Anja has really pretty
colors, ya know.”
“I noticed.”
“Yea, man, she’s a –”
“Chill, dude. Van’s back.”
Thrusters rudely awakened and alarmed the sleeping camp below. The
weary RPA found Van dumping his equipment into a compartment of his
Sky King. The massive explosions and concussions were hammers in the
Techno-Wizard’s battle-torn skull. Hopping from the power armor unit, Dar-
ren joined him.
“Yo, Van! Nice work, bud. And all before dawn. Guess we know exactly
what we’re up against from now on.”
“Wasn’t exactly low profile. Next time they’ll be better prepared. I was
listening to a channel the militia was using, and somehow everyone believes
what happened back there was the work of Coalition sympathizers conspir-
ing to smuggle troops inside the town. The restrictions are even harsher than
before and this Suka San guy is cracking down hard. All we did is stir up the
fire.”
“That just means we have to move fast and put it out.”
“Only way it’ll work is if you can get past the outer defenses and take the
battle right to its source.”
“What about that radio station? You could broadcast the truth over the
radio. Ya know, let the citizens know.” Darren’s idea had merit.
“That might work, but what are the people going to do about it? These are
just average people without combat experience or equipment. It would be
like you attacking that Glitter Boy, dressed like Delwin.”
“But at least they won’t attack us and maybe some of the militia will
desert. If nothin’ else, it will confuse the hell out of the police and probably
make ‘em converge on the situation. That way we can contain most of the
fighting to one area.”
“How come you’re a private, not a general?” asked Van.
“Probly cuz I’m from the wrong side of the tracks,” Darren replied.
“Your plan might work. My brain is dead. I’m gonna catch some shuteye
and think about this later.”

253
“I’ll tell my C.O. we can expect some help. Oh, and call on frequency UF-
12 before you come over again. Safer that way. See you tomorrow?”
“You bet.” The two shook hands, a strange camaraderie was forming.
When Darren was gone, Van slumped to the ground, leaning against the Sky
King. For some reason, he was in a depressed, despondent mood.
After a while, Sir Renfield and Targo walked over, “I can delay my quest
to aid in your battle,” the Cyber-Knight offered.
“Good, cuz we’re gonna need it,” Van replied.
“Anja take flute from Crazy man,” Targo said to cheer the sullen Techno-
Wizard up. “She play pretty music, make you feel better?”
“Sure.”
Targo lumbered off to retrieve Anja while Sir Renfield went to put away
his sleeping bag. Van realized what he had inadvertently requested.
“No, wait!”
Targo was already waking her.
Padding tenderly on the cold ground beneath her feet, the mystic came to
stand near Van. He looked up to see a shivering woman holding a wooden
flute, eyes nearly shut with sleep but a smile on her face.
“Targo said you wanted me to play for you. He said it would make you
feel better. Are you hurt?” She asked, noticing his ripped and bloody cloth-
ing.
“Not really, just very, very tired. Targo misunderstood, I didn’t want him
to wake you. Please, go back to sleep.”
She stared at him for a long time.
“What did you find out?” she asked.
Van thought for a while before answering.
“I have a feeling about tomorrow. Gallons of blood will drench the streets
of Youngstown, and the sky will reflect the flames of the burning city below.”
A vision of the future flooded the Mystic’s mind. Anja shuddered, then
collapsed.
____________________

“I see no other alternative but to have the defendant, Miss Cyndiara, for-
mally charged with manslaughter. Due to the nature of the crime, there will
be no bail set. You will be confined to Youngstown jail until the time of your
trial one week from today.”
In Cyndiara’s stunned condition, the entire hearing seemed unreal. Roused
from her numb consciousness by the rap of the judge’s mallet, Cyndiara
didn’t comprehend the implications of what had just taken place. How could
they not have seen a thing? Cyndiara was still dazed from hearing three of
her friends claim they hadn’t witnessed the dead man attempt to rape her. The
only witnesses were policemen and her lawyer was unable to keep the case

254
from going to trial. Why was she being incarcerated for defending herself?
What was going on?
Awakening in a private cell that morning, Cyndiara couldn’t remember
how she came to be dressed in her nightgown, or anything whatsoever up
until she first walked into the cell. She knew something had happened. Her
body ached and it seemed as though she’d gotten no sleep whatsoever. She
had looked for a teddy bear she’d had since childhood and kept near her for
comfort, but it was gone. Miserable and perplexed, she’d been led to the hear-
ing only to be all but proven guilty of a crime she didn’t commit. Another day
locked up as a prisoner by men she loathed would be unbearable. Reminding
herself she could always escape if she wanted to gave her some reassurance.
Newly installed video monitors displayed the four private cells and “Inter-
rogation” room. Beneath the police station was where Zenjori Suka had his
lair. A converted storage room served as his and Notec’s base of operations
and abode. The two rebel leaders were entertaining their newly acquired ally.
Impeccably dressed and groomed as always, the Line Walker sat watching
the monitor of a prison cell and listening to the rebel leader tell the story of
the red-haired woman he knew as Cyndiara.
“It was a simple achievement for Notec Depi to erase the event from the
witnesses’ minds. The others were simply confused so badly they couldn’t be
effective as defense witnesses. Fact is, there was no need to go through the
hearing at all.”
“Then why do it?” Colnae asked, switching the monitor to the interroga-
tion room.
“Psychological. Anyone can break someone by simple brute force and
pain, but it’s finesse that allows you to break someone and have them fall at
your feet and worship you as their savior. I’ve devised my own approach to
interrogation that I think your Federation of Magic would consider innova-
tive at best and I’m sure they have ways so insidious that it will make my
methods appear limited.”
“You only keep seven prisoners down here. Easier to concentrate on selec-
tive methods, I assume.”
“Of course. I see you have a working knowledge of interrogation. What I
use a great deal of is torture by association.”
“Association?”
“By associating pain with a sound, smell, or object, I can force my subject
to relive the pain they experienced without ever laying a hand on them. I’ll
show you when I resume my experiment on Cyndiara. I had Notec blank her
mind of last night’s torture session – temporarily of course. The memories
should return normally in a few days, but as I repeat the methods I used to
inflict pain last night, her mind will be flooded with flashbacks of events she
doesn’t quite remember. What it does is reinforce the impact psychologi-
cally. For instance, I took an item she drew security from, this teddy bear,

255
and used it like a puppet on my hand like this.” Zenjori stuck his hand in
Cyndiara’s teddy bear and manipulated the paws. On each one was a blood-
stained razor blade. “Even after just two sessions of her teddy creating such
pain that she passed out from it, and just the sight of a teddy bear makes her
cringe and she fears the pain in her mind. Of the fourteen separate methods
I used on her, heat was the least effective. Naturally, after both sessions last
night, Notec healed her body and returned her to the cell where he blanked
her memory for a few hours. Just long enough to begin again.”
“This other woman here?” Colnae pointed to a monitor of a sleeping
blonde woman. “What have you done with her?”
“Nothing yet. She’s one of the radio station personnel we arrested for dis-
sension. She is actually a dissenter, I believe. You’re welcome to entertain
yourself. There will be two new places in the interrogation room shortly.
Those two gentlemen you see on the monitor were reluctant to share their
wealth with us, so a small bit of persuasion was necessary. Right now, I’m
using them to determine acid dilution for another method. Neither will last
much longer.”
“And this?” Colnae held up a Coalition helmet and black robes.
“Another association you’ll see. Some of the people I bring down here
will be released in a few days. It took years of research to perfect, but I’ve
created what I call ‘human mines.’ I do all my experiments while wearing
this. Notec and I trade off being “The Interrogator” while the other plays a de-
manding, but sympathetic master. Naturally, after several sessions of intense
agony, the association between suffering, hatred, pain, and the Coalition is
set within their minds. When Notec or I finally relieve them of the suffering,
they endear themselves to us and willingly do anything we ask. When and if
the Coalition ever gets near us, these ‘human mines’ will go off so to speak
and they die, trying to protect us.”
“I like your idea. Human mines. My mentor in the Federation, Lord Val-
dor, has similar concepts. If I could show him one of these human mines, as
you call them, he might accept me as a pupil, not to mention providing pro-
tection for you. I’d like to see how it’s done.” Colnae was enthralled. Power
to control was more important to him than torture for self-gratification.
“Certainly, I’ll begin with Cyndiara.”
“Aren’t you going to put on the helmet?”
“No. I want myself to clearly be her master, but not the source of pain.
Two distinct associations. Notec will program the soundboard to induce vari-
ous effects. This is my insurance.” Zenjori held a heat detector strapped on
a Fusion Block. “The detonator has been removed of course, but she doesn’t
know that. If she uses any of her powers, she dies, at least in her mind.”
Sitting on the hard bed contemplating escape, Cyndiara was suddenly
filled with a dread she could hardly contain. A loud sound from behind the
door like a rattlesnake’s tail caused her heart to pound and flesh crawl. Locks

256
were being unbolted, and an intense fear ripped through her like a rocket.
Relief washed away some of the feelings of dread when Zenjori Suka opened
the cell door wide.
“Miss Cyndiara, you know who this is, don’t you?” He reached over and
led the drugged blonde woman from the radio station into view.
“Suzi? What happened to her? What did you do to her?”
“Nothing, Cyndiara, and I don’t want anything to happen to your friend
any more than you do.”
“What’s happening here?”
“Come with me, Cyndiara,” his voice commanded stronger than mere
words.
“I’m not going anywhere with you!”
“Yes you are, come with me, Cyndiara.” His brown eyes were mesmer-
izing.
“I will not!” For some reason, the urge to flame him was suppressed by a
fear of what might happen.
“Do you know what this is?” He held a heat detector attached to a brick-
sized device. Somehow it seemed familiar, though she couldn’t remember
where she’d seen it. Zenjori stuck it on Suzi’s belt. “Come with me.”
“No!”
“Miss Cyndiara. This is a heat detector wired to detonate this explosive
charge in the presence of flame. Your pyrokinetic abilities will kill your
friend, not to mention yourself and the other prisoners. I’m sure you don’t
want that, do you, Miss Cyndiara? If you cooperate, you will be set free.”
“I’m not going to do what you ask.” Green eyes full of enmity met, reach-
ing out with hatred Zenjori could feel. Her defiance angered him, but the
harder his subjects were to break, the more pleasurable the victory.
“That’s a shame, Miss Cyndiara. I really hoped you would be more coop-
erative. If you change your mind let me know. The Interrogator wants to see
you, and I’m truly sorry for you.”
The same rattlesnake sound jarred Cyndiara out of her contemptuous
stance. Involuntarily she shrank back from the ominous figure in black robes
and death mask. Blood pounded panic to her brain, and terror made the blood
run cold in her veins. More than apprehension, his presence made her body
react with tiny spasms of phantom pain.
“It is time for you to learn obedience. If you do not comply, your friend
will die, and you will watch her suffer. There is no virtue in resistance.”
“Miss Cyndiara, I will come to visit you in the Interrogation Room one
hour from now.” Zenjori bowed politely then left her with the Interrogator.
____________________

Suspicious eyes followed the bizarre envoy to the center of the Coalition
camp. Brian didn’t like the idea of magic users being nearby much less right
257
next to him. Oddly matched to begin with, the trio fit in even less amongst
armor-clad soldiers displaying skull-like death masks. The woman could
have dressed more modestly, he thought. Forcing himself to be repulsed by
her beauty was easy when he thought of her as an evil monster disguised as
a human to seduce men and tear their throats out. The Techno-Wizard he
regarded with contempt. Anyone who ruined the working of technology with
unstable, dangerous energy deserved to be outcast. Brian had no reason to
dislike the Cyber-Knight, in fact, the man commanded some respect. Courte-
ous and honest, the candor of the knight set him apart from others they had
encountered. Sir Renfield admitted freely his reticence to get involved in a
Coalition dispute. Somehow, Brian figured the knight wasn’t one to stab him
in the back.
The addition of another SAMAS Power Armor would give them some
added firepower. Unfortunately, the next best pilot wasn’t well enough to
fight. The injured military specialist seemed to get along well with the visi-
tors, and Darren’s friendly attitude disturbed the others more intensely than
it did Brian. Cowboy grumbled endlessly, getting on Brian’s nerves with
constant “If only’s,” graphically describing what he’d do if he was in charge.
“Sir Renfield had a talk with some of the defenders on the line,” Van
spoke for the young knight. “Guess none of ‘em wanted to get in a scrap with
a Cyber-Knight.”
“Most of them are just good family men defending their homes and fami-
lies,” Sir Renfield explained. “They’re afraid of the Coalition and believe you
will crush their babies underfoot and rape their wives. I know that is untrue,
but it’s what they believe.”
“I can hang with that. If some D-Bee out there was gonna violate my
woman and kill my baby, I’d fight, too,” Jerry interjected.
Mike blinked. Was the sarge comparing himself to the men and D-Bees
defending the town? Must be more of a soft spot the ornery platoon com-
mander had after all.
Renfield continued talking about what he’d found. “The Defenders have
also heard rumors about atrocities being committed in town. A number are
dissatisfied with the situation, but don’t know what to do about it. There is
a growing number of them debating over trying to retake control of their
own town. Early this morning a group of five Headhunters slipped out of
Youngstown and told a defense unit what was happening to the people. I talk-
ed to them before they returned to Lima. They confirmed that horrible things
were being done to the town inhabitants by the Army of the New Order, and
they wanted no part of it. Even soldiers of fortune draw the line someplace
and these men were of strong character to risk being killed as dissenters.”
“Where does all that leave us?” Greg wanted to know.
“If the truth were broadcast over the radio like Darren suggested, we might
be able to avoid clashing with civilian defenses. From what we’ve learned

258
so far, almost all of the town’s armored units have been confiscated by the
A.N.O. If we could knock out the heaviest resistance, I’m sure the town’s
defenses would move back in and finish the invaders off. Even if they don’t,
you’ll get your chance at capturing this Suka San, man.”
Mike smiled, reminding himself to commend Darren on the wanted crimi-
nal story. His head was still bandaged and pain continued to gnaw at him day
and night but he longed for part of the action badly.
“How do we get into the town?” Greg asked.
“I have a theory,” Van offered. “There are ore transports that come and
go on a regular basis. It could be possible to conceal your troops on one of
these transports.”
“Hah! I told you,” Brian piped up triumphantly. Everyone just stared at
him.
“I see you’ve considered this course of action yourselves,” Sir Renfield
chimed in.
“It’s come up, yes,” Mike conceded. “The good news is that one of our
sweeps early this morning saw that an ore hauler is parked not too far outside
of town to the southeast. If we strike at the right time, we might be able to
grab it with little resistance.”
“There will be heavy resistance to your power armor and robot units.
However, as you stated earlier, you have a detailed description of where cer-
tain defenders are located. A strategic strike could weaken a sector enough
to break through.”
“I could send Darren in to draw their fire and slip the Enforcer through the
gap,” Greg suggested. “Our hardest target is still going to be the Glitter Boy.”
“Standing order regarding the G.B., once located, do not engage until suf-
ficient units have converged to mount an effective assault,” Mike ordered.
“I, Sir Renfield, and another man will sneak into town and secure the radio
station. A friend of mine is already near the station and will cover us while
you move in to secure the tower from assault. We will need some support re-
ally quick after the broadcast is made,” Van requested.
“Sir, I can do that,” Trenton offered, feeling left out.
“I don’t know. I’ve been reluctant to send you into heavy combat before
you’re adjusted to the conversion.” Greg tried to be kind.
“Sir, I’m ready. Just tell me where to be and I’ll be there.”
“Very well.”
“Looks like you’re getting dirty, Sergeant,” Mike joked. Jerry just glared
at him.
“I told you the ore transport idea would work,” Brian beamed.
“Brian,” Lisa scolded, “we haven’t ever set foot in town or even fought
a single rebel and you’re already talking like it was some glorious victory.
Don’t be so over anxious.”

259
“You’re all talking about fighting a battle in the middle of a town full of
innocent people,” Anja broke in. “I’ve seen what will happen. The devasta-
tion this will cause. Don’t any of you care what happens to the people caught
in the middle of your war?”
“Perhaps a broadcast for noncombatant personnel to find cover would be
a good addition to the broadcast,” Sir Renfield offered.
“Anja, you didn’t see what they were doing to the people in the town
right now,” Van admonished. “If we don’t take action, they’re going to die
anyway, just slower.”
“But I told you, Van, it isn’t going to end here.” She was almost in tears.
“The coffin I saw you bury was empty.” She looked to Mike, her eyes brim-
ming. “I know you understand that some people can see the future. Please be-
lieve me when I tell you I’ve seen you grasping for what you seek but never
getting quite close enough to hold onto it. I knew you’d understand what I
mean, so please find another way,” she pleaded.
“Yer not gonna believe all that stuff about seein’ the future. Bunch of lies,
that’s all.” Winters found himself disliking the mystic even more.
“Your name is Anja, right?” Mike asked.
She nodded.
“You understand I can’t base my decisions solely on a vision. Your advice
is welcome and will be considered, but I will make my decisions based on the
facts I have at hand,” Mike lied and knew she could see through him.
“There’s much detailed planning to be done and we only have about five
hours of daylight left.” Greg looked at the sunny sky. “Let’s get started.”
____________________

Long, ugly red welts covered most of Cyndiara’s body. Suspended by the
wrists, the inquisitor had been careful not to strike her face or head. Zenjori
was mildly annoyed that he was into the third full session that day and she
still defied him, but he knew there would be some disappointment when he
finally broke her. If Notec was refused cooperation the next time he met the
stubborn Burster, it would be time for a drastic dose of pain. Tobacco smoke
filled the room and upbeat music played in the background, reinforcing the
many other beatings in Cyndiara’s mind. The robed figure in white stood
before her, looking up sympathetically into her eyes.
“Cyndiara, are you ready to let me keep the Interrogator from hurting you?
You know what you must do.”
“No,” she whispered on dry lips. The thought of her helpless position
made her angry and she took out her rage on the Inquisitor advancing with
electric probes. Swinging her legs up, she caught the base of his helmet’s
faceplate and sent it bouncing across the floor. Disappointment gave way to
thoughts of despair when she saw the one man who she thought could actu-
ally stop the torment.
260
Zenjori’s eyes blazed with rage at his ploy being discovered. He had to
catch himself from shoving the probes into her heart and leaving them there
fully powered. No, this would be a new challenge, to see if he could break her
and still have her the way he wanted. Someone pulled at his sleeve.
“What is it, Notec?”
“I didn’t want to interrupt your progress before, but there’s something
going on with the militia. A number of them are demanding to return home
to their families and some are accusing us of masquerading as the Coalition
to gain their trust.
“So have them killed. Use the other two SAMAS.”
“There’s more. Colnae cast an oracle and believes the Coalition will attack
us in the next day or so.”
“Hardly likely. They know what odds they face.”
“I, too, have seen the city on fire,” Notec advised.
Zenjori forced himself to think rationally. Notec was seldom wrong.
“Start pulling our men from the ranks and gather every armor unit we can
obtain. I want the X-1000 at all costs. Have Drake set up a secondary defense
within the town. Then prepare the army to retreat on a moment’s notice. Kreg
will be stationed to cover our retreat and choose a few dozen recruits to pro-
vide a distraction if the Coalition is smart enough to bypass the outer line.”
“Yes, Suka San.”
“And now, Miss Cyndiara, no more games.”
____________________

Exhaust gurgled loudly from the downshifting transport. Carrying too


much weight to rely on brakes alone, it was a common procedure to use lower
gears and high RPM’s to safely traverse declining roads. Two armor-clad
soldiers took advantage of the slow speeds to grab hold of the back and climb
on. Engine noises drowned out the sound of jet packs descending.
For the driver and guard in the pilot’s bubble on the front section, this was
just another ore run to the industrial sector of Youngstown. Crossing the ley
line on the way to and from the strip mines was usually the riskiest section of
road. Stealing a transport of raw material wasn’t on every thief’s agenda but
having a guard ride shotgun provided some protection from the occasional
encounter with monsters. In most cases, the transport merely ran the beast
over and kept going, the guards calling in support only if the thing they just
squashed underneath got up afterward.
Eight sets of giant wheels supported the vehicle weighing over 200 tons
empty, with enough reinforced metal to drive through a multilevel parking
structure and hardly feel it. One hundred and ten feet long with a twenty-
eight-foot wheelbase, it handled poorly on roads wide enough to accommo-
date it and was never intended to drive anywhere but between mines and
industrial refineries. The hijackers had other plans for it this night.
261
“What the heck is that scraping sound?” the driver asked. An unusual
sound of metal grinding alerted him to a possible problem.
“One of the plates on the platforms is probably loose again,” the guard
replied. Although looking anemic, he was perfectly healthy and surprisingly
strong.
“Well, could you go kick it back in place? It’s drivin’ me nuts.”
“Turn the radio up, we’re close enough for good reception.” Blaring Pre-
Rifts’ 70’s music drowned out the noise of the platform plate accidentally
jarred loose by a clumsy landing. Sharp and Cowboy reached the rear of the
pilot’s bubble first. Cowboy lowered the plasma cannon to blow the steel
door off, but Sharp waved for him to stop and turned the latch. The door
wasn’t even locked. Nim edged over to them while Bill covered them from
the ore bin. The bubble had a circular track enabling it to rotate to utilize the
crane unit folded away atop the engine compartment. Blast marks or a broken
bubble would have to be explained when they passed the outer line.
Noticing the increased volume of the loose metal plate, both occupants
only turned to find themselves facing the barrels of very large energy rifles.
“Stick ‘em up.” Cowboy thrust the plasma cannon at the driver. “You ain’t
fast enough to clear leather, so don’t even think about it.”
Sharp pressed the gun barrel into the guard’s neck, then called over the
radio.
“This is the Four Bandits. We just robbed the stage.”
____________________

“Do you mind not chewing gum so loudly, Delwin?” Van’s voice echoed
down the sewer pipe.
“Anything to please you, sweetheart,” Delwin spoke in a low he-man
voice, then smacked loudly once before sticking the wad on his armor. “I’ll
get back to you later,” he said to the gum.
“You’re not planning on putting that back in your mouth, are you?”
“Did you have somewhere else in mind?”
“Forget it.” Van wondered how Sir Renfield survived the journey down
from Northern Gun with the loony in pastel armor. Delwin left the weed at
camp, finally ending his running commentary on the universe as they de-
parted on their mission. Now he practically bounced off walls and ceilings,
rapidly chewed gum at high decibels and had a wisecrack for everything. Van
wasn’t sure which was worse.
“This is the pipe running underneath the road near the radio station. Next
clean spot we see to surface will do.”
“What made those cobweb strands?” Sir Renfield pointed down the tunnel
illuminated by Van’s daylight globe.
“A really, really big spider.” All three donned helmets and readied weap-
ons. Delwin bounced from spider strand to spider strand.
262
“These are springy!”
“That may not be a wise thing to do Delwin. What if you attract the spi-
der?”
“I’ll tell it I’m not interested in a serious relationship at the moment.”
Delwin trotted ahead.
“You know he’s gonna get us caught before we even get to the station.”
Van watched the Crazy man weave through the web strands.
“I’ve never seen him act like this, but I’m not in the least surprised. This is
the first time I’ve ever seen him go more than twenty minutes without toking
up. Some nights he’s tested my patience more than anyone I’ve encountered.
Let’s look on the bright side. He does have a working knowledge of transmis-
sion equipment. That will be to our advantage.”
“First we have to get in the station.”
Shotgun blasts echoed down the tunnel. Red, yellow and green paint
splotched the spider’s head and hexagon eyes.
“Ayyy Yiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyi!” Delwin ran straight at the giant spider with
an inarticulate war cry and continued painting the startled creature with a
rainbow of colors. Having never before encountered prey behaving in this
manner, the terrified spider ran back down the pipe. Thrusters were fired and
Delwin was propelled head-long by his jet pack. Getting hit from behind only
made the spider run faster. A junction of sewer pipes served as a place to face
the cackling opponent hounding it. Fangs wide and forelegs raised, the spider
took a defensive stance. Its body was the size of a Saint Bernard, with fangs
dripping poisonous saliva where the keg of brandy should be.
Shotgun empty, the mentally augmented warrior wildly feinted and jabbed
with a high-frequency sword.
“Back! Back foul creature of the shadows! Back, back!”
“Get out of the way, Delwin!” Sir Renfield aimed a pump-action projectile
rifle at the beast, but Delwin was moving around too much to take a clean
shot.
“Cut it out, Delwin! You’re just aggravating it!” Van shouted.
Leaping over the spider, Delwin flipped over once in midair before land-
ing, his legs straddling the spider’s abdomen. He held his sword up over his
head and then with a gymnastic back bend, thrust the blade through the spi-
der’s thorax and into its multicolored head.
Van and Sir Renfield found a triumphant Delwin Moonbeam with one foot
resting on the creature’s body and posing statuesquely.
“Years from now someone will discover my colorful artwork and say,
‘My God, it’s a Moonbeam.’”
Deficient of a response, they trudged past without a word. Lifting a man-
hole cover as though it had no weight, Delwin gave them an all clear for the
vacant street. Curfew hadn’t gone into effect yet, but few people desired a
run-in with the mercenary police.

263
Following the man in pastel armor wasn’t the original plan, but Van and
Sir Renfield found themselves hard-pressed to maintain the pace as quickly
as their self-appointed guide. Van wondered what Delwin had planned for the
manhole cover he still carried with him.
As expected, the radio station was guarded by a pair of rebels, with more
protection inside.
“Men, I’m going in there.” Delwin was solemn. “I may not come out alive,
but I’ll go down fighting. Remember me well.”
“We’re all going in,” Van remarked irritably. “Next time the patrol is out
of sight, we can sneak over to their ATV and take ‘em out when they come
back. There now!” The three men ran to another place of hiding.
“It is counter to the code of fair play to attack from behind like a coward,”
Sir Renfield confessed.
“Oh, brother,” Van grumbled. “Now you tell us.”
“Psst!” Delwin beckoned to the two rebel guards. No response. “Pssssssst!”
He was so loud Van was sure the men would hear him only two yards away.
Delwin looked back at them, a bewildered look on his face. “Hey, you!” Both
turned.
The one without the helmet was knocked unconscious by an airborne man-
hole cover. Full environmental armor protected the second from a blow from
Delwin’s pistol grip shotgun. Blue paint splattered the front of the rebel’s
faceplate, rendering him effectively blind. The report from Delwin’s shotgun
would undoubtedly bring those inside out and ready for battle. Van ran for
the door, blowing out the lock and a good portion of the door frame with an
exploding projectile from his TX-5. The good Cyber-Knight had graciously
offered spare rounds from his TX-16 rifle that used the same projectile; natu-
rally, Van had accepted.
A rifle butt connected with Van’s helmet as he crossed the threshold.
Knocked flat on his back, Van fired up at the form holding the rifle. Energy
rifle fragments exited the small concussive explosion between Van and the
rebel.
The weaponless rebel staggered back, a gash in his helmet’s visor impair-
ing his vision. The TX-5’s trigger wouldn’t depress, apparently damaged by
the close proximity of the explosion. Dropping the pistol, Van jumped up,
grabbing the rebel before he finished drawing a high-frequency saber from
its sheath. Both men hurtled out the door and onto the sidewalk struggling to
get control of the deadly blade. High-pitched metal vibrations screamed from
a public mailbox that was sliced in two by the struggling pair.
Armed with a menacing Northern Gun-manufactured particle beam rifle,
the last defender exited the station opposite the fighting and sidled around the
corner. He stopped and took careful aim at the Cyber-Knight’s back.
Metal slugs ripped through plated, padded armor, filling the defender’s
body with hot lead. Hearing the impact of metal on armor and seeing blood

264
splatter the wall beside him, Sir Renfield whirled to see a rebel slide toward
him gushing blood, particle beam rifle still gripped in spasmodic hands.
Somehow, Delwin had removed the helmet of the painted guard and left
him unconscious near the smoking doorway before entering the facility as a
decoy. He had then come around behind Sir Renfield’s would-be attacker and
had shot him with a real round. Sir Renfield only knew it was Delwin who
had saved his life by catching a fleeting image of the crazy heading back into
the station.
In an unexpected move, the rebel fighting over the Vibro-Saber with Van
had mastered his footing and pivoted hard, capturing the blade before turning
it back on his attacker. Van backed away from the humming saber. Hissing
toward him, the blade was stopped by a shimmering long sword made of
glowing, psychic energy held by Sir Renfield. “Put down the saber and sur-
render.” The Cyber-Knight held the panicked gaze of the rebel. “If you give
up quietly, I will show mercy and spare your life.”
Watching in awe, Van’s jaw dropped when the rebel surrendered his saber
to the Cyber-Knight. Sir Renfield dispelled his psionic blade. “A prudent
choice. Your saber would not have withstood a duel with a psionic sword.”
“Uh, David, I mean Sir Renfield? The broadcast? Remember?” Van didn’t
want to spoil the knight’s proud moment, but they were behind schedule for
the radio transmission.
“I will see that these men do not rejoin the battle later.”
“Great, but Delwin’s already inside the station,” Van pointed.
“I will hasten my efforts,” Sir Renfield spoke in earnest. Van ran back
inside.
He found Delwin already on the air.

265
Chapter 14
One in the hand is worth two on the carpet
Time seemed to crawl along at a frustrating pace while those waiting to at-
tack the town listened for the signal that would set them free. Blood pounded
in the veins of the soldiers anticipating the battle to begin. Buried in shallow
trenches dug in the ore of the transport, the troops had gone undetected by a
lax check over at the roadblock. Metal detectors would have been rendered
useless had the guards used them. Strapped down on their backs in the En-
forcer, Dave and Lisa awaited the movement of the transport they had been
hiding in for over two hours to come to a stop. Cowboy masqueraded as the
transport’s guard, all the while aiming a gun at the driver during the brief
check at the roadblock. Boundaries marked by chain link fence were token
barriers to prevent the oversized transports from leaving the refineries and
entering the town. With wheels taller than the fence, the transport was able
to roll over it, straight into the heart of Youngstown. Winters waited with
Cowboy in the pilot’s compartment for the disco music on the FM station to
end and the new broadcast to begin.
“Psssshht! Testing, one, two, three, testing.” The irritating music ended
with the shriek of a needle on vinyl, followed by a discordant mix of tones.
“This is not a test of the emergency broadcast system. Repeat, this is not a
test. If it were a test, you might hear something like this.” Delwin’s voice
faded into a wind-up jack-in-the-box version of “Pop Goes the Weasel.”
Sergeant Winters and Cowboy exchanged looks of utter bewilderment. “But
since this isn’t a test, you won’t have to –” A clattering sound followed by a
distant argument over who should talk on the mike finally ceased when a low,
strong, confident voice took charge.
“Citizens of Youngstown. This is Sir David Renfield, knight-errant. Your
town’s leadership has been overthrown, and a self-serving band of merce-
naries has taken control. To those men stationed on the line defending your
homes and families, the threat lies not with outside invaders but with the
enemy disguised as your police force. Many despicable acts are taking place
under the veil of martial law. Atrocities to the citizens of Youngstown must
end with the expulsion of those now in power. Warriors of the militia, find
your families and protect them. A general advisement to find cover is hereby
issued. Do not leave your homes or take to the streets. I repeat, Youngstown
is under the dominion of an evil dictator who challenges your rights to free-
dom. Forces will be engaged and driven from your city, so please find cover
for your own safety. As for the instigator, Zenjori Suka, I challenge you to
a dual, man to man, to the death if need be. The loser will forfeit his claim
to the town and thereby eliminate the need for further bloodshed. If you’re
listening to this Mr. Suka, then meet me in the town square near the fountain

266
and we will settle this honorably, like men. This message will be repeated as
long as this station can repel attempts to end this transmission.”
____________________

“Time to kick some ass.” Winters donned his death mask helmet. “Cow-
boy, take us in.”
“Yes, sir!” Cowboy responded enthusiastically. Harsh, guttural engine
sounds of the transport’s motor were followed by wheels flattening the fence
beneath the giant vehicle. Slowly, the massive transport picked up momen-
tum. Once moving, nothing could stand in its path to the radio tower.
____________________

Incensed by repeated failures, actions became fueled by anger rather than


self-gratification. Zenjori wetted the cat-o’-nine-tails and threw the lash full-
force across Cyndiara’s legs. Her body jerked and swung gently, but she ut-
tered no sound. There being little unflayed flesh left to strike, Zenjori called
for Notec to heal the unfortunate woman. Heat was a useless implement and
he’d run enough current through her body to kill most people. None of the
other prisoners had offered so much resistance. A spark of rebellion still
flared up in her emerald eyes when he spoke to her. The white-robed Mind
Melter was exhausted from the many interrogations of the day and could
only heal the Burster partially, before returning to bed for some rest. Colnae
grabbed Notec’s arm and pulled him to the radio the instant he entered the
observation room.
“Listen to this! Are these your men?” Colnae asked as Notec listened to
the radio.
“No,” Notec replied as Sir Renfield’s message played over the set. “No,
and it means our predictions were accurate.” Notec ran to the interrogation
room/torture chamber to warn Zenjori.
“Suka San, a Cyber-Knight is on the radio. He’s telling everyone to find
shelter because there will be a battle in town tonight. He’s telling the men on
the line that we’re controlling the town and to return home to protect their
families.”
“A Cyber-Knight. I should have guessed a self-righteous, pompous knight
would instigate trouble. No doubt the Coalition will hear this broadcast and
take advantage of the disarray on the line. How long has it been on the air?”
“I’m not sure.”
“Send Drake and a few Headhunters to the station. Capture him if possi-
ble, but end the transmission one way or another.” He calmly wiped the blood
from his hands and knife on a scarlet stained rag while he spoke. Stifled cries
from Cyndiara brought some long-awaited satisfaction. “Shame I don’t have
the time to finish her properly, but it’s time to move on.” He turned to face

267
Cyndiara. “None of those cuts will be fatal, you understand, but I’m leaving
you like this so you can contemplate your pain. Goodbye, Miss Cyndiara.”
He bowed graciously and followed Notec upstairs to the police station. His
men awaited his commands, also having heard the broadcast.
“Kruno,” Zenjori called the mercenary leader. “Contact Drake and have
him end this transmission, then take everything of value and get a head-start.”
Kruno left with a flock of armored mercenaries.
“What about the prisoners?” a town policeman asked.
“They’re yours to do with what you want. All of them except the blonde
and the mayor’s grandson. Colnae, bring the boy and the woman with us.
They will prove much easier subjects to demonstrate my methods with. You
locals may as well use this opportunity to grab anything you want. Nobody
is going to stop you.” Two policemen darted down the stairs immediately.
“Get an NG-V10 and the Glitter Boy over to town square. I want this
Cyber-Knight splattered all over in plain sight. The rest of the armor units
will follow Kruno’s men. You four take a police rover, load it with as much
ordnance as you can lay your hands on. By the time the Coalition enters the
city, I don’t want a single building without some explosive device. When the
smoke clears, we’ll be long gone, and the survivors will have only one group
left to blame.
____________________

Invisibility was one of Targo’s less well-known abilities. Very few of his
race were identical to each other, each possessing varied traits. Breezing into
town unnoticed, Targo had patiently sat across the street from the radio tower
and station awaiting Van’s arrival. Killing men who hadn’t done anything to
him didn’t sit right with the giant, but the murder of innocent people made
him angry. Van told him to kill the bad men who came to destroy the radio
station, so that’s what he would do. Resting his NG-202 rail gun across his
shoulders, Targo listened carefully for approaching threats. Weighing over
two-hundred pounds, the rail gun he carried originally was designed for use
by Samson Power Armor units. Faithful service in Northern Gun’s forces
had seen the weapon stay in his possession, ammo drum and nuclear power
supply included as payment. The four-hundred-pound backpack bolted to his
armor only got heavier after many hours of wearing it. The twelve-foot Gi-
gantes barely noticed it now that the action had begun.
One hand on his shotgun and the other grabbing rungs, Targo watched
Delwin Moonbeam rapidly ascended the transmitter tower. It puzzled Targo
when the Crazy man began shouting from atop it.
“I can see ye, Mr. Christian, plotting thy foul mutiny from the tallest mast!
Be quick about ye or I shall hang ye from the highest yardarm!” Delwin
waved the shotgun in the air while he shouted. The oration ceased when a
four-armed, nine-foot, full-conversion cyborg led a squad of three partial-
268
conversion cyborgs and a Headhunter with a hovercycle from one of the side
streets into the square toward the station.
Invisible to normal vision, Targo stood behind the corner of a building and
fired his NG-202 at the approaching forces. Caught by the angled rail gun
burst, a partial conversion ‘Borg spun around and splayed out on the street.
Partial cyborg conversion left the main trunk and head of the mercenary’s
body the most vulnerable targets because they were human flesh and bone.
That said, the fact that they were still bristling with armament and wearing
comparatively heavy armor, meant that even a partial conversion ‘Borg never
went down easy.
Undaunted, the ‘Borg retrieved his weapon, got up, and started off again.
Sixty kinetic slugs again ripped gashes into armor and pressed shrapnel into
the mechanical workings of the ‘Borg’s bionic left arm. As he ran for the
cover of a stairwell, another loud roar of metal pierced the air and connected.
Stunned by hardened metal impacting his chest plate, the ‘Borg collapsed
momentarily but came up one last time, rifle in hand. Armor plating and
metal slugs joined course to shatter ribs and puncture vital organs. Knocked
back, the ‘Borg convulsed and died, blood spreading in a pool around his
body.
“Switch to thermo,” Drake’s low metallic voice ordered. “One target in-
side the station, one across the street with a rail gun. Take the one in the sta-
tion alive if possible. “Kill the other.”
A ‘Borg with light infantry armor and an NG-E4 plasma ejector crouched
and shot plasma frisbees through the wall Targo hid behind. Its wood frame
went up like a matchstick. Fire spread throughout the building as poorly-
placed plasma bolts struck all around. Heat from fires distorted the twenty-
foot target in the ‘Borg’s scope. Targo remembered a lesson from his days in
Northern Gun’s army regarding several fights with cyborg combatants. Dis-
able their main weapon and restrict their mobility. By the time one dropped a
‘Borg outright, they could kill everyone around you. That’s how tough they
were built.
Any slugs that failed to destroy the weapon scored home on the ‘Borg’s
armor as Targo lay into him. After a rather satisfactory ping from one lucky
round, the ‘Borg cursed and changed tactics now that his main weapon was
disabled. Targo lost sight of him as he crashed through a wall of the print
shop. Running through the facility, the ‘Borg paused long enough to pull
an ion rod from a leg compartment and disarm the safety for his forearm-
mounted minigun.
Across the town square, a rebel in Explorer body armor with a stolen C-12
laser assault rifle in one hand used the other to aim his hovercycle on a crash-
course with the station door. Shotgun blasts rang out from above and a por-
tion of his armor turned yellow mixed with orange.

269
“What the hell?” the rebel shouted, looking up. There he saw a figure leap
from the top of the tower with a yell and dive toward him while holding onto
a cable, shotgun spewing paint pellets on the way down. Delwin’s Tarzan-
like, vine-swinging battle cry ended with a WHUMP when he collided, body-
to-body with the rebel. Totally stunned, the painted Headhunter flew with
the crazy into the street with a sickening collision. Tiny brain implants told
Delwin’s body that it was perfectly normal to swing over a hundred feet and
crash on someone driving a hovercycle. Unfazed by pain, Delwin stood up,
snatching the C-12 from its dazed owner. Giggling insanely, he pressed the
trigger, full-auto, at the cycle rider two feet away.
In an attempt to draw fire away from the station, Van ran out the station
door past the ‘Borg with a CR-1 Rocket launcher and randomly fired ion
blasts from one of the guard’s rifles. Drake spotted the fleeing Techno-Wiz-
ard. This was his prisoner.
Delwin tossed the rifle into the smoldering crater in front of him and
revved the hover cycle’s engine. Pulling a grapple and cable from a rear com-
partment, he clipped one end to a tow hook on the cycle’s rear and hooked the
other end around the ‘Borg’s leg. Rocket launcher aimed and ready to end the
transmission with a dust cloud, the ‘Borg saw the cycle go past trailing some
kind of line. Metal feet were no longer planted on the street, legs yanked from
beneath him, the ‘Borg found himself being dragged across the road. Impact-
ing asphalt jarred his trigger finger. A high explosive mini-missile skimmed
10 inches above the road to barely clear the curb, destroying a small factory
a block away.
“Wave your arms if you want to go faster!” Delwin shouted back at the
‘Borg flailing for a hand-hold on the street. Delwin felt whimsical. Tonight
was a beautiful night for a joy ride.
Behind them, Drake closed on Van.
____________________

Charged ions blackened a patch on Targo’s armor. Playing cat and mouse
with the giant left the rebel mercenary at an advantage. With the twelve-foot-
tall D-Bee away from the fire, the thermo-imaging from the rebel’s multi-
optic cybernetic eye tracked his enemy well. Firing from a window only a
few feet away, the ‘Borg had the element of surprise... or so it had seemed.
Targo’s fist smashed through the wall and gripped the ‘Borg’s head.
Yanked through the wood and plaster, the ‘Borg’s metal spine literally saved
his neck. Targo’s fist clenched around the ‘Borg’s helmet held him too far
from the giant for the rebel to make physical contact. A minigun spat tiny
rounds from its tri-barreled mouth, leaving small pit marks all over Targo’s
chest plate.
His NG-202 too close for close-quarters use, Targo dropped it with a clat-
ter and twisted the blazing minigun off the ‘Borg’s arm.
270
Ion rod in the other hand, the ‘Borg burned another patch of Targo’s ar-
mor. The giant raised up the rebel and slammed him down into a minivan in
the street. The ‘Borg lost the ion rod but was grateful the grip on his head was
released. Targo, not one to let an advantage slip by, was on the partial cyborg
again in a second, grabbing the rebel’s left arm to keep him in place. Minivan
bent in half around him, the ‘Borg tried to wrench his arm from the giant’s
grasp, as his hydraulics and servos were slowly being compacted. The ‘Borg
sprung a secret component in his free arm and a tiny derringer style laser shot
into his hand. Tango barely felt the light powered laser burn his palm when
he crunched the ‘Borg’s right hand in his grasp. Metal fatigued and protested
from the back and forth twisting it was receiving.
Finally, Targo felt the arms buckle as the rebel tried to kick at his chest. He
let go for a moment, observing his handiwork as the ‘Borg tried to get up, his
arms failing to aid him. The last thing the ‘Borg saw was the giant’s clenched
fist strike his helmet’s faceplate. The multioptic eye shattered, its mechanical
workings shoved back, crushing bone and mingling with brain matter.
____________________

Rammed from the side by a half-ton full-conversion ‘Borg, Van skidded


across the street, scraping his armor. The rifle was knocked from his grasp by
a swing from his assailant.
“Do not move.” Drake shoved his rail gun in Van’s face. The gun was a
remnant of his days working for the Coalition before he went mercenary. A
feed belt and flexible power conduit fed the rail gun from a nuclear power
plant and ammo drum within the ‘Borg’s body.
Feigning acquiescence, Van powered the invisible magic armor he’d re-
cently improved. That done, he still didn’t want to be shot.
“Remove your armor,” Drake commanded.
Van slowly reached to his right wrist where a tiny panel slid open. The
flyssa appeared in his hand, its tip slicing the feed/power belt to the rail gun.
Van scrambled back and to his feet while the angered ‘Borg repeatedly pull-
ing the trigger on his now useless weapon.
“Magic user!” Drake yelled and dropped the C-40. Drake’s armored fists
did little to weaken the barrier surrounding Van but knocked him back sev-
eral feet regardless. The ‘Borg backed up a few paces and sent the Techno-
Wizard through a brick wall with an armor piercing mini-missile from his
right forearm launcher. Drake didn’t take chances with magic users, another
carry-over from his Coalition days.
Pitted craters extended from a three-inch-wide blast mark on Van’s armor.
Every bone and muscle ached, but he was still alive.
“Guess the shield still needs some improvement,” he mumbled, crawling
out from under bricks and rubble. The pain hit his brain like an electric shock,
dropping him back in the debris. A shadow loomed by the new entryway he’d
271
just created. The ‘Borg’s arm locking another mini-missile in for a close-
range kill.
Bricks exploded, dusting the scene as plasma engulfed Drake’s body. Bi-
onic legs whined as Trenton emptied his C-27 canister into the ‘Borg on fully
automatic fire. Drake calmly turned and sent a volley of mini-missiles from
both his forearms back at the Coalition ‘Borg assaulting him from down the
street. Smoke trails streamed away from Drake’s smoldering form as two
concussions sounded like one long explosion. When the warehouse behind
Trenton turned into a massive fireball, Drake turned back in the widened
opening to face his original foe. Building fragments rained down from the
cloud billowing out from the collapsing wall of the building. Trenton, unbe-
known to Drake, emerged from the cloud of smoke and flame, his death mask
streaming white smoke, looking like a god of death.
Van scrambled away from the wall, more out of reflex than thought. Tren-
ton hit his jet pack, hurtling twenty-five miles per hour into the larger full
conversion ‘Borg, both smashing brick and metal as they sailed through the
far wall and past Van.
Wooden boxes full of tractor parts fell aside and burst open as the two
‘Borgs broke apart to face off. Trenton clenched his left fist and three high-
frequency blades sprung out. At the same time, his right arm spit crackling
energy that seethed from the forearm particle beam cannon into Drake’s left
shoulder, blasting it into oblivion. Drake’s pair of smaller arms came up, Vi-
bro-Blades humming into a defensive stance while his remaining larger arm
snatched one of his ion pistols from its holster and shot American-style from
the hip. Caught by several blasts, Trenton threw himself aside as charged
ions burned the length of the warehouse. Boxes and components vaporized
in miniature explosions.
Van made for the opening in the wall and found his flyssa where he had
dropped it. Inside he could hear the grating sounds of the ‘Borgs’ high-fre-
quency blades striking each other, then the wind-up and discharge of particle
beams. Instinctively running from the battle of the ‘Borgs, he felt a shock
wave and was thrown face-first onto the street. Burning fragments of wood
covered the asphalt. Standing amidst the rubble burying the street, Van
watched in disbelief as a nine-foot ‘Borg crawled out from under a section of
burning roofing shingles and, with set determination, began making his way
toward him.
“Enough of this, I’m not playing patty cake anymore.” Van struck the
sword into the street and pulled out a grenade with a yellow C painted on it
and threw it at the ‘Borg. Drake was hit but the grenade didn’t detonate. It
simply fell at his feet. Confused, the ‘Borg looked down. When the explosion
never came, he grimaced. Looked back at Van and made to move, but he
found his legs and feet stuck to the ground.

272
“No! I will not be the victim of magic!” Drake fought the spell that glued
him in place. He’d beaten magic before and he wouldn’t lose this time. For
some reason, the grenade hadn’t gone off, but when Drake looked up, he
knew the explosion he had expected would be inconsequential compared to
what was coming toward him.
Van circled Drake, ignoring the ion blasts coming from the frustrated
‘Borg as they harmlessly dissipated over his armor. In his hand, he held a
type 3 Fusion Block. Taking his time, Van strode behind the helpless ‘Borg
to place the explosive charge in the center of his back.
However, before he could reach his helpless opponent, he sensed some-
thing wasn’t right. Van stopped, a sinister feeling creeping through his body.
There was a presence of danger he’d felt before. Torrak.
Focusing on the new threat, Van reengaged his protective barrier and
scanned for his arch-nemesis. A guttural laugh of triumph came from the
burning warehouse across the street. In his element, Torrak calmly walked
through the inferno protected by a shimmering red halo. For a moment, Van
could have imagined the horned Gromek to be a demon stepping forth from
its native hellish dimension. Torrak paused in the street, removing Van’s
flyssa from the asphalt and testing the balance. Then it vanished in thin air.
“Can’t use what you don’t have,” Van yelled, willing the sword out of
existence, concealing the Fusion Block behind his back and pressing the
30-second delay. Torrak was chanting. Van activated the eagle wings on his
helmet and lifted off the ground. He didn’t think the Shifter could cast a spell
to strike him over two-hundred feet away, but no reason to take the risk.
The Gromek’s glowing yellow eyes fixed on Van, their owner determined-
ly advancing, mace swinging menacingly with each step he took. Van could
tell that the shifter was enjoying the moment, wanting to make his victory
last. Slowly, Van floated backward, keeping the immobile ‘Borg between
Torrak and himself.
Then Torrak stopped and not by choice but held by magic. Van smiled
when his grenade of adhesion had captured a second victim. Now he could
place the Fusion Block between his two enemies and kill them both with one
explosion; neither were going anywhere when stuck to the ground. Flying
just out of arm’s reach, Van dropped the explosive brick midway between
the two enemies and flew away. The ‘Borg and the Shifter stared at the block
counting down. Van was elated his magic grenade had trapped both targets
so close together. As he flew, he listened for the explosion.
“Force field, over the device,” Torrak commanded Mind Crusher and then
quickly began an incantation to counter the effects of the Techno-Wizard’s
spell. Drake slid another mini-missile into a forearm launcher and sent it on
its way toward Van. If Drake was going to die, he’d take his enemy with him.
Part of Van’s body was fortunate enough to meet with little resistance
through an upper story window, but his legs hit the sill and spun him face-

273
first to the floor from the explosive concussion of Drake’s mini-missile. Los-
ing consciousness, the last thing Van felt before the world went fuzzy was the
building shaking from an explosive shock wave.

274
Chapter 15
The Deadly Disco Ball
The town square was vacant of spectators to Sir David Renfield’s relief.
According to the Coalition, this Zenjori Suka was a very dishonorable crimi-
nal who wouldn’t even accept the challenge, but he might still choose to
face him out of anger. Either way, Sir Renfield would be where he said he’d
be. From his place near the fountain, the Cyber-Knight could hear explo-
sions and see the night sky lit up with resulting fires. Strangely, most of the
blazes were nowhere near the radio station and instead seemed to be speed-
ing through residential neighborhoods. Weapons fire from the transport route
had begun, but that was still centered away from as many people as possible.
A sickening thought occurred to him. Perhaps the Coalition was right about
the rebels destroying a town before they retreated. Somebody was destroying
residential areas and it wasn’t the Coalition.
Torn between protecting innocent lives and meeting the challenge he’d
laid down, Sir Renfield repeated his code over and over to himself to deter-
mine his course of action. Protection of the innocent and defending life was
more important than mortal conflict with a man who had not yet accepted the
challenge. Secure in his decision, the Cyber-Knight jumped to the street to
end the senseless loss of life. Part of the fountain exploded behind him.
Far down the street was a twenty-foot robot. A simple, unadorned design
of Northern Gun manufacture, the NG-V10 had utilized its palm laser cannon
to blast a hole where the knight had been standing. Primarily a labor unit, the
V10 became immensely popular with organizations needing a heavy labor
robot with limited defensive capabilities. While renowned for dependability
and easy maintenance, the NG-V10 also had a reputation with mercenaries
and Headhunters because of its availability and relatively low cost. One NG-
V10 was more than enough for a single Cyber-Knight to handle.
Kreg kept the Glitter Boy pointed at the Cyber-Knight and watched his
accomplice, piloting the one-man robot, do his stuff. No purpose in wasting a
round from the Glitter Boy’s rail gun on a single Cyber-Knight. Sir Renfield
ran for cover as the NG-V10 advanced at on him leisurely.
____________________

“Yeee Haw!” Cowboy punched the accelerator to the floor and swerved
the transport at a pair of fleeing rebels. Telephone poles and streetlights
snapped like twigs before the multi-ton vehicle. Rammed by the steel prow at
the front of the transport, the less fortunate of the two rebels was squashed by
a series of eight-foot-tall wheels. The other one was hit by an underside plate
and nearly decapitated before his duck took him low enough for the craft to
pass over him.

275
Sidewalks and surface streets buckled under the weight and several build-
ings’ corner structures were completely missing after Cowboy’s high-speed
turns. The transport’s forward spotlight beams bounced with each new “speed
bump.”
“Damn it, Cowboy! You said you could drive this thing!” Winters griped
as a rebel ATV disappeared beneath them, followed by a convenience store
Cowboy brushed aside in his zeal.
“I am, sir! Isn’t this more fun than skinny dipping in summer?!” He
laughed as he aimed for a Samson power armor blocking the road. “This
thing’s just like an APC only a lot bigger and heavier – used to drive my
dad’s eighteen-wheeler across the state when I was younger. Old’ Betsy here
is just a bit slower.”
Laser fire rained down the street, engulfing the power armor seconds be-
fore the transport smashed it into a crater. Riding in the back, the platoon
used the bed as cover. In the event of encountering a group of rebels retreat-
ing from the city, the transport served as an armored personnel carrier and
bulldozer. Flying overhead, Merrick watched in dismay as Cowboy plowed
a swath through town. In the distance, a line of fire was extending through
residential areas, explosions marking the course. That simply had to end.
“Merrick to SAM 15.”
“15 here. Over.”
“You’re not near blue 3, are you?”
“Uh-uh. Checkin’ out town – uh, red four, sir,” Darren tried to remember
the zones they’d assigned the town. “NG-V10 chasin’ down Sir Renfield, so
I’m gonna kick its butt. Any counter orders?”
“Go ahead, but don’t waste too much ammo. There’s still the Glitter Boy
to deal with. Oh god!”
“Sir?”
“Cowboy just drove through a supermarket.”
“Oh, I thought something unexpected happened.”
“You’re clear, SAM 15. Try and keep radio communications down.”
“15 out.”
“Jerry, you’re on your own. I’ve got a rebel sighting a mile from here.
You’re in charge of the stage.”
“Roger that.” Winters didn’t exactly feel in charge at the moment, not with
Cowboy at the wheel. “Turn the transport around.”
“Come again, Sarge?”
“Turn the transport around and drive it in reverse. That way we got all that
metal and ore stoppin’ enemy fire and not the engine.”
“Great idea, Sarge!” Cowboy slammed the brake and the transport slowly
ground to a halt. Dave lost his balance and had to grip the side of the ore bin
to prevent the Enforcer from falling on the grunts. Lisa watched in horror as
buildings on both sides of the street were shoved aside by the teetering giant

276
vehicle. The pilot’s bubble swiveled to face the new front end and the trans-
port gradually accelerated. Turning a corner, the ore hauler smashed through
a barber shop and left a geyser from a missing hydrant. Buzzing rooftops, an
X-10 came to intercept.
“Predator on an aggressive approach. Radar locked,” Lisa reported to
Winters. “Do we have a go-ahead?”
“Not yet. It may be on our side.”
Rapid laser pulses scarred the ore bin.
“Waste it.”
“It’s wasted. Two short-range plasmas locked and away.” Repaired shoul-
der launch tubes flipped open and spit four relatively short distance self-seek-
ing missiles. Smoke trails swirled as missiles corrected for the evasive action
taken by the X-10. Plasma warheads detonated on impact, the X-10 vanishing
in a cloud of white-hot energy. From the halo, a wingless, thrusterless power
armor streamed smoke and flame dropped through a tile roof, disappearing
out of sight.
“One X-10 out of commission.” Lisa set the radar back to scan mode. The
transport was considerably slower than the Enforcer, but she and Dave were
content to let the borrowed craft take the brunt of an assault. For now, the
enemy was doing much worse than they were.
____________________

Anger welled up in Lieutenant Merrick as he surveyed Youngstown from


above. Block after block of homes were partially destroyed, their occupants
still inside. All were burning. Spotting the hovercraft responsible, he saw
a pair of rebels firing grenades at residential homes as they passed. What’s
more, they were using Coalition C-14 Fire Breathers to reinforce the mas-
sacre. Merrick stopped the power armor, landing to help steady his aim. Two
blocks down, an infrared dot centered on the back of the hover rover. Ab-
sorbed with their mayhem, neither of the two men saw the mini-missiles hit,
just felt a flash of heat clear through their armor. Plasma warheads detonated
boxes of grenades and explosive ordnance. Bodies flaming from the intense
blaze as they flew from the rover to land twenty meters away, already dead.
“Merrick to the stage. Will be returning for escort.”
Finding the transport wasn’t difficult. Nearing the town square, the trail of
destruction was a path a blind, deaf person could follow.
“Cowboy, do you think you could keep that thing on the road?!”
“But there’s guys shootin’ from behind buildings. I’m just runnin’ them
over,” Cowboy protested. Winters was in the back preparing the platoon for
ground assault and wasn’t paying attention to Cowboy’s driving habits.
“Let the platoon shoot them while you pass. We’re not here to level the
town, just eliminate the rebels and get out.” Another quick look at the town
from above and Merrick knew the Mystic’s prediction had begun.
277
____________________

Brian hated being left out of the action. The two Lieutenants had argued in
front of the troops over leaving behind heavy support for the small crew left
at the camp. Finally, Lieutenant Merrick assigned Brian to pilot the retrieved
SAMAS power armor as he was the only one left who could. Brian’s combat
training was more basic than others, his time not allowing the mastery that
the RPAs or commissioned officers had gained. Still, having the option made
Brian feel less restricted in his duties as a technical officer. It irked him that
after all the time he’d spent planning the ore transport assault, he could only
listen to the action over the radio and view the town from a distance.
He’d always considered himself open-minded, but the whole thing stank
with magic users and D-Bees involved. Having that monster disguised as a
temptress in his camp didn’t make the situation any better. Brian didn’t like
the Military Specialist before, but now he liked him even less. The Espionage
officer and the Mystic sat watching the lights and sounds from the distant
battle from the back of a rover and Brian wondered just how badly the officer
had fallen prey to her magic. Suspicion and curiosity got the better of him.
Brian aimed the directional audio pickup at the rover. If he couldn’t see what
the two were up to, he’d at least eavesdrop.
____________________

“I’m not saying I don’t believe you, I’m saying there has to be more basis
for my decisions than your vision of the future. Can you see me telling the
troops to act upon a Mystic’s clairvoyant dreams? That is far from how things
are done with the Coalition.”
“But people are dying because nobody would believe me and there’s noth-
ing I can do about it except try to convince you to end this attack,” Anja’s
soft voice pleaded.
“I couldn’t end it now even if I wanted to.”
“But you believe me, don’t you?”
“I can’t rule out your prediction,” Sorrenson said noncommittally.
“Mike, I know you’re a good man who doesn’t always like the way things
are done. I can sense your conflict, wanting to believe what you know is true,
but forced to act on someone else’s orders. Isn’t there something in between
you can do to end the bloodshed?”
Mike looked at her in the semi-darkness. Tears glistened on her cheeks in
the moonlight, her face turned toward the burning town. Her beauty was truly
breathtaking. A pang of loneliness hit him in the chest with the memory of his
fiancée, Karren. None of the men could understand the conflict this Mystic
seemed to sense intuitively. If her vision of the future was correct, it implied
something had to be altered for the course of events to deviate. The one thing

278
that couldn’t change was his rejoining the battle. How could he with injuries
remaining severe? Anja was right, though, something needed to change.
“I can heal you.” Anja was looking at him now. Mike faltered momen-
tarily, realizing how open his thoughts were for him not to notice her gentle
telepathic reading.
“I can’t allow that. You should already know that.”
“But if you rejoin the battle, it may bring it to a quick end.”
“How do I explain my sudden recovery?”
“You can’t just tell them the truth?” Anja was honest by nature.
“No, I think that would be a really bad idea. I might be able to convince
them my injuries weren’t as severe as we first thought, but then I’d have to
pretend like I’m recovering when it’s over. No, I can’t.”
“Do what you must.” Anja looked back to the fires. Mike fought the urge
to concede.
“Please understand, my fear of magic is not what’s barring me. It wouldn’t
be the first time. I’ve been in many desperate situations while on missions
where I’ve bent the rules, but this isn’t a situation I can defend. Not to my
superiors.”
“It won’t be magic. I can heal your wounds with a psychic trance. You of
anybody should trust in psychic healing, Mike.” She put her hand on his leg
and leaned forward. Mike was slightly unnerved at how well she read him.
She knows about my psionic abilities, he thought, this woman is no charlatan.
With a big sigh and feeling like he had a loophole for his own conscience,
he asked, “I can take the SAMAS unit we recovered. How long will it take
you?”
“Is there still internal damage your robot things didn’t fix?”
“I don’t think so.”
“About four or five minutes. That won’t completely restore you to health
as you were before, but your body can finish what I will begin. Sit over there
and give me your hands.” Mike held each of her warm hands in his and
waited for her instructions. “Are you sure you want to do this, Mike?’
“Yes, I guess. Something must be done before more people die.”
“Relax and clear your mind of turmoil.” She knelt on the floor in front
of his seat. “This will heal the most severe of your injuries, but you must
remember that your body is not as well as your mind will want it to be. Now
calm the disquiet and think of pleasant things. Quietly, calmly, relax.”
____________________

Amplified audio pickups and digitized recorders transmitted the conversa-


tion. Brian burned with anger at the treason he felt was being committed by
his superior officer. He’d said nothing of the disk he discovered in the secret
compartment of Mike’s mangled SAMAS; he had intended to download it at
the next available opportunity. Something was definitely amiss, and it was
279
the Specialist’s doing. Now might not be the time to report the unthinkable
acts, but eventually, a time would arise. Brian quickly downloaded the voice
recording onto his portable computer and then blanked the record in the SA-
MAS before Lieutenant Sorrenson returned to take the power armor away
from him.
____________________

Keeping the NG-V10 from attacking Sir Renfield became incredibly sim-
ple. Darren had never been impressed much by the often bulky and slow
Northern Gun manufactured robots. This time he had to hand it to the NG-
V10 designers. The usual vulnerable spots were missing, and the ‘Bot man-
aged to stay quick enough to make him keep changing tactics. After six direct
hits from the C-40 rail gun, the robot continued to operate without any visible
signs of systems damage. Dodging from the laser’s trajectory, Darren kept
from being in the same place when it fired. Unexpectedly, the unit turned and
ran from town square down a street. Swinging the power armor about, Darren
waved to Sir Renfield then gave pursuit.
“Damned tough S.O.B.” Darren could see the robot’s speed was hindered
by the multiple blast marks from the knight’s TX-16 Pump Rifle. Looking
back up, Darren saw the Glitter Boy at nearly the same moment the weapons
lock shrilled.
“Crap!” The sonic wave tore down the street after the projectiles. Every
window in its path shattered inward, v-shaped sonic wave following visi-
bly slower than the supersonic projectiles. Throttling up, the next shot went
low, finishing off the windows the first sonic boom didn’t get. Darren rarely
dropped the unit to avoid a blast in combat. A leg could be replaced. A head
could not.
“SAM to stage, I just found the desperado!”
“Thank you, 15, we kinda figured that,” said Lisa. The V10 continued run-
ning down the street, Darren sped past the Glitter Boy and then braked, heels
tearing asphalt. Spinning on the Glitter Boy, Darren fired before his opponent
could lock the unit in place. The C-40 feed belt jerked, current surging down
rails, expelling ferrous slugs at high velocity.
“Yes!” Darren finally connected his SAMAS’ rail gun rounds decisively
with the deadly power armor. Tiny imperfections in the mirrored surface be-
trayed the impact of each slug. Laser drills bored holes for external pylons
and toe hooks dug into the street surface. A thruster assisted leap saved Dar-
ren from a quick death from a close-range rail cannon discharge. Sound trav-
eling slower than the speed of the projectile swept down the street removing
windows in the other direction. Sound and impact dampeners kept Darren
from being deafened, but the sonic boom still made his ears ring.
____________________

280
Stopping long enough to call in backup, the rebel NG-V10 noticed for the
first time a large vehicle coming in his direction. A burst from Greg’s rail gun
in the back of the huge transport got its attention. Bits of armor embedded in
the neck servos prevented the robot from turning its head. Cowboy aimed the
transport directly at the unsuspecting power armor. The horrendous crunch of
36,000 lbs colliding with over two hundred tons of machinery was no more
than a jerk to those riding in the transport. Strapped into the pilot’s compart-
ment and padded from impact, the NG-V10 pilot was very much aware of his
robot being thrown down and pushed along the road by something bigger.
Dave vaulted the Enforcer over the bin edge and met the street at a 55-
kph lope. Running alongside the transport, he used the larger craft to conceal
his large robot’s location. If he could get close enough to the Glitter Boy to
grapple hand-to-hand, then the battle would be won. It might take a while to
pry the rail gun off its shoulder mount, but without its Boom Gun, the Glitter
Boy would be weaponless and much easier overall to finish off.
____________________

Keeping the Glitter Boy with its back to the transport was easy. Darren
maintained an erratic flight pattern so the Glitter Boy couldn’t get a good shot
off and waited for the giant craft to ram the unit. That much mass colliding
with the drilled in power armor was sure to snap the pylons of its recoil sup-
pression system. No pylons and the Glitter Boy would be getting up off its
back after every shot.
____________________

Warned too late of the oncoming vehicle, Kreg barely had time to pull the
toe hooks and pylons before his power armor was hit by the transport.
____________________

“Yeee Ha!” Cowboy’s victory cry came over the comm. “Got me a Glitter
Boy, partners.” He plowed the two rebel units three blocks, directly into the
town square fountain. Statues of mermaids and dolphins that had long ago
been created by some stone master shattered to the wind, water gushing in
streams over broken marble. Grinding brakes and screeching metal on stone
failed to stop the transport.
“Oh, no!” Cowboy pressed the brake handle, but the vehicle continued
onward, up and over the robot and power armor and through the Youngstown
Bank before rocking forward, its front-end smashing into the basement of the
bank. Building materials fell in stages. First, the walls buckled outwards and
then the roof buckled. The transport slammed to a full halt, the vault finally
preventing it going further. The only walls left standing held for a moment,

281
then crumbled into piles of rubble. Darren and Greg looked on in awe and
disbelief.
“Da-amn!” Darren exclaimed. From its indentation, the NG-V10 rose for
more punishment.
“It’s mine!” Dave yelled, turning the Enforcer to face over the crew bub-
ble of the transport and back at the run-over ‘Bots as he locked four mini-
missiles onto the staggering NG-V10.
“Hope we fixed this,” he continued, as the mini-missile turret spat out the
self-propelled rockets. Fireworks erupted in starburst patterns from plasma
warheads detonating in rapid succession. When the fireballs lifted into the
night sky, the robot lay amidst smoldering stone with water hissing and ex-
ploding on metal fires across its body.
Troops poured from the transport and found their way out of the massive
crash site of the bank building. Reesa helped the CR-1 team with their case of
rockets. When a section of road suddenly lifted up and a nearly undamaged
Glitter Boy rose from the trench it had carved in the town square, Winters
didn’t have time to keep his men from opening fire. Dozens of laser beams
struck the unit’s mirrored surface armor and the world around them was en-
gulfed in redirected laser fire.
“Cease fire! Why are you all shooting a disco ball of death?!” Winters
roared from hiding. Thankful his standing order of level two weapon settings
had been obeyed, the chatter over the comm made it sound like the platoon
had been ambushed by rebels with laser rifles. When the dust settled, the
Glitter Boy was gone.
____________________

Keeping his eyes on the rebel power armor, Greg dropped in his SAMAS
from a rooftop in its path and kicked the head of the retreating Glitter Boy.
Stumbling, the unit caught itself by using its recoil suppression system. Greg
was amazed to see how many pockmarks the laser assault had caused. The
Glitter Boy looked like it had been through a hailstorm.
The Lieutenant took a free shot while the Glitter Boy brought down its
primary weapon and prepared to fire. A strip of tiny dents appeared across the
unit’s chest and free arm as forty slugs struck in rapid succession. Lunging to
the left when he saw the fingers close on the Boom Gun’s trigger, Greg tried
to block out the sonic assault striking him from only five meters away. He
knew it was over the second he let fly another burst. The sonic boom drowned
out the suppressed sound of his C-40.
Turning sideways to avoid looking down the barrel of the Glitter Boy’s
rail gun had saved his life. Two hundred slugs caught the edge of his chest
and spun the SAMAS like a top, wings and all, through the open face of a
storefront. Confusion overwhelmed Greg, his mind fought to retain control
of his unresponsive extremities. Breath wouldn’t come when he gasped and
282
painful spasms racked his chest. Not being able to evade his own death was
worse than knowing he was about to die.
____________________

A missile lock kept Kreg from splatting the helpless SAMAS. Rotating
at the hip, he pulled the trigger without taking careful aim at the Enforcer a
block away.
Strips of armor and hydraulic workings meshed together in a burst of
sparks above the Enforcer’s right knee. Dave put his arm out and kept the
robot from going down on its face, the knee buckling beneath him. The sonic
wave caught up with its target. Lisa pulled her hand away from the missile
launch button; firing missiles from a prone position was not wise.
Perfect aim from the rocket launcher team placed an armor-piercing mini-
missile dead center of the Glitter Boy’s chest. The Glitter Boy swung to the
left and used its telescopic sights to target the CR-1 Rocket launcher team.
The loader’s body splattered the CR-1 operator. Rocket in place, the operator
tried to separate his target from the smears of his comrade on the sight’s lens.
Ignoring Darren’s rail gun bursts at his feet, the Glitter Boy blew away the
lower half of the CR-1 operator before he could fire the next mini-missile.
____________________

Back in the square, weapons fire from a side street converged on a Coali-
tion soldier not well concealed. What was left of his body was unrecogniz-
able.
“Crossfire! Get down!” Winters yelled but couldn’t be heard by deafened
troops. Structures surrounding the square shuddered and collapsed from rapid
exchanges of high-power weapons fire. Amidst the crossfire, Reesa ran for-
ward and shouldered the CR-1. Wiping blood from the multi-optics eyepiece,
she centered the Glitter Boy in the viewfinder. Flame spewed from the back
end of the launcher and the missile trail led directly into the Glitter Boy’s leg.
A plume of flame instantly engulfed the unit and then evaporated. Asphalt
melted away and the toe hooks lost hold of the solid road surface. Kreg de-
cided it was time for a strategic retreat and released the pylons. Reesa rolled
over to cover and reloaded the CR-1 amidst the blazing gun battle she was
surrounded by in the square.
“Damn, she’s got guts!” Rex remarked. Feeling adrenaline override his
own self-preservation instinct, he leapt from the crater he’d found cover in
and readied the next rocket for rapid loading. The next plasma mini-missile
narrowly missed the running Glitter Boy but threw up a cloud of burning
asphalt in front of it. Rex slapped another one into the launcher and smacked
Reesa’s helmet in confirmation. Dave brought the Enforcer into a kneeling

283
position. Lisa resumed the lock and pushed the trigger, the same moment
Reesa let fly another rocket.
The Glitter Boy rounded a corner. Missiles pierced walls, then detonated,
mushrooming outward. Flames, stories tall, rose in homage to the element of
fire. Debris ricocheted off the fleeing power armor, the shock wave passing
by as if it was standing still.
____________________

Just above the carnage, Darren’s wing caught the expanding heat wave
and forced him to control the SAMAS instead of firing while the Glitter
Boy’s back was turned. Leaving the troops in the town square to take on the
attacking rebels, Darren hit the thruster and pursued the hardest target.
Making a shot few could pull off in flight with a moving target, Darren
connected a rail gun burst with the Glitter Boy’s head. That merely got its
attention. Veering down a side street, Darren paralleled the Glitter Boy on the
next street over, firing when the next opening between buildings appeared.
The rebel power armor found a four-way intersection to make a stand.
Darren skidded to a halt and fired his plasma mini-missiles from the fore-
arm launcher. Turned sideways from the oncoming rockets, the Glitter Boy
was already drilled in and couldn’t budge from its position. In an effort to
prevent further damage to the body of the unit, Kreg raised the left arm to
absorb the brunt of the missile attack. When the white-hot ball of fire faded,
the arm withstood the explosion and all systems were fully operational. Kreg
smiled at the near indestructibility of the pre-Rifts unit. Switching to thermo-
imaging, he followed the SAMAS antagonist by thruster heat. Anticipating
the next clear shot down a street, he pulled the pylons, then reset them in the
proper position. Darren’s passing shot went wild, tearing down a post office
wall with metal slugs. The rail cannon’s sonic return followed the projectile
in a widening V-shaped wave. Tinkling glass could be heard when the sonic
percussion passed.
____________________

Kreg cursed at having missed and repositioned for the next street. Again,
the exchange of fire was a loss for both. Doubling back on his flight path,
Darren found the Glitter Boy had compensated for his course change. Iron
slugs clanked noisily in a strafe covering the Glitter Boy’s gun and head and
then SAM 15 was on its way before Kreg could return fire.
Kreg determined the approximate entry point for his next shot and fired
the weapon through a city block’s worth of structures, aiming true at the heat
signature barely visible even with enhanced optics. Most of the two hundred
slugs met with the SAMAS. The dispersion effect caused misdirection and
Darren felt the impact of high-speed one-inch slugs in a dozen locations.

284
Complete loss of control followed the muffled sonic boom. The right wing
spun away from his unit and the right maneuvering jet sent him heels over
head down the block.
____________________

Intense surges of pain fought to control Darren when he struggled grog-


gily to his feet. The C-40 was four meters away, its feed belt severed. Shut-
ting down malfunctioning thrusters, Darren picked up the useless weapon,
noticing pain in his right forearm. The forearm armor sported a slug crater.
Hand closing over the C-40 rail gun, thousands of tiny pain shards ran up his
arm from wound trauma.
Darren cautiously located the intersection his opponent had last occupied.
His computer screamed weapons lock over continuous damage reports. A
sidestep slammed the remaining SAMAS wing through a bus stop, but the
movement saved Darren from meeting kinetic slugs.
“Override Jared-Echo-4-2-4! Wing eject!” Darren shouted the command
for wing ejection. Free of the encumbrance, he threw the SAMAS flat to
avoid another shot, then bounced up, not feeling the pain and ran behind a
building, leaving the wing behind. Adrenaline pounded hard in his veins, fear
reaching its icy tentacles where Darren refused them before. The Glitter Boy
was only a hundred feet away and patiently waited for the weaponless SA-
MAS to reveal itself. Darren tried to think but only survival mattered at this
point. Kicking down a door to a vacant building, he ducked inside, taking part
of the door jam with him, then smashed through the wall to take the Glitter
Boy in hand to hand combat. The unit wasn’t there. Frantically searching the
vicinity, he caught a glimpse of it turning a corner three blocks away. The
Glitter Boy had retreated from a sure win.
“Sorenson to SAM 15, do you copy?”
“Yeah. Sir.”
“What’s the status on the G. B.?”
“Runnin’ away. I haven’t a clue why, but it’s runnin’ away.”
“Can you pursue?”
“Yeah, but my C-40’s dead and I’m out of ordnance.”
“Get back to the stage on the double. Sharp’s tracking the rebel retreat
southeast of Youngstown. I’ll be escorting the ore hauler.”
“Great. Say what?” It dawned on him who he was talking to.
“Not as broken up as you guys thought. Thanks for retrieving the SA-
MAS for us, Darren. I’ll put in a recommendation for promotion when we
get back.”
“You’re flying a ... a SAM?!” Darren was incredulous. Mike ignored him.
“Greg’s going to be alright, he managed to avoid a direct hit. We need
you back there right away to help get the hauler out of a ditch. On the double,
SAM 15,” Mike ordered.
285
“Hold the horses. I’m comin’.”
The streets danced in Darren’s pain-numbed mind, but he tried to maintain
an air of indifference, striding back into the square with the rail gun over his
shoulder. Greg’s SAMAS looked far worse than his own.
“Damn, Lieutenant. And I thought I was screwed up.” Darren shivered at
the giant crater warped into the chest of Greg’s unit. The Lieutenant was still
piloting the barely operational power armor.
“I’m okay,” he gasped. “Help clean the debris out of the way.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Everybody git away from the hauler, I’m dumpin’ the bin!” Cowboy
yelled. Tons of collapsed brick spilled onto the rubble of the bank as the
transport inched out. Weight lessened and the spinning wheels took hold as
hydraulics pressed the bin downwards. The transport leveled out, leaving a
giant mound where the bank once stood.
“Move out! Quickly!” Mike ordered. The man who returned from the
grave was now taking command once again. Even Sergeant Winters was
puzzled at his miraculous recovery, but respected whatever drive caused the
Military Specialist to leap back into the fray.
“Darren! I said we’re leaving!” Mike saw Darren’s SAMAS running in
the opposite direction.
“I’m going after Suka!” he shouted back.
“That’s an order, Private!” He thundered.
“Up yours, sir. I’ve seen what he’s done and I’m not letting him get away.
I’m going after him.” Darren continued running.
“Get back here now!” Mike screamed. Never had anyone so blatantly de-
fied him. In peace, this would be cause for court-martial, but in the field, more
drastic methods were called for. Rage now controlled the espionage agent
and rational thought escaped him. He brought his C-40 up and set the laser
targeting dot on the grossly insubordinate RPA. He was suddenly tackled
from behind and the two SAMAS units sailed into the empty ore bin. Mike’s
C-40 cut a strip in the weakened metal wall. Red haze filled his vision and
he thrashed away from Greg’s weakened hold. Again, the damaged SAMAS
knocked Mike down. By far a better fighter, Mike’s temper surged more at
being overpowered by a wounded, uppity grunt in a thrashed exoskeleton.
By luck or skill, Greg spun the out of control military specialist into a corner
and pinned him there.
“He’s one of ours! What’s the matter with you?! He’s one of ours!” he
shouted.
Chest blazing with searing pain, cutting through blazing rage, Greg’s
words struck home. Mike’s anger ebbed away.
“I’m all right. Let go of me, I just lost my temper, that’s all.”
Greg cautiously released him. Troops watched the struggle from the edges
of the transport.

286
“Let’s get moving,” Mike ordered. Nobody moved. “I said let’s go!” A
few looked as though they would obey, but glanced around to see if anyone
else was. Lieutenant Merrick slowly panned around.
“Load up,” Merrick ordered. The unit sprang into action and within sec-
onds the transport’s wheels crunched the fountain remnants on their way out
of town. Greg stared at the military specialist, then climbed atop the trans-
port. Silence said it better than words could. Mike knew exactly who com-
manded the unit now.

287
Chapter 16
Horrors of War
Leaving his wingless SAMAS in a dark alley, Darren inched along the
wall across the street from the police station. The complete lack of any visible
guards didn’t seem right. A quick dash across the street and he was up the
steps he’d been unwillingly escorted up the night before. With only a survival
knife in hand, Darren didn’t desire weapons fire in his direction. Originally
planning to borrow a rebel’s wardrobe to close in on the Police Chief, plans
changed when there was nobody around to beat unconscious and relieve of
their belongings.
Inside the front office, a police officer was laying out riot shotguns on the
front desk while another brought tables out to build a makeshift barricade.
Neither wore armor. Darren waited until the man loading shotguns had his
back turned, then slipped inside and removed a shotgun from the desk. Re-
engaging to the even flow of adrenaline he was accustomed to in combat
made his movements smooth and deliberate.
“Excuse me,” he said politely. The officer looked around in time to receive
a ring-shaped dent in his forehead. Darren pulled the policeman onto the desk
and assessed the man’s clothing size. Not a perfect match, but they would do.
“Hamburg?” A voice approached from the hall, “I don’t know why you
want these tables lined up out there. They won’t even stop bullets!”
Ducking behind a wall, Darren swung the shotgun low, with enough force
to bend the heat guard against the barrel. It struck the guard hard, cracking his
shin and causing the officer to collapse on top of the furniture he was moving.
Darren rammed the shotgun against the man’s trachea, turning the cries of
pain into gurgling gasps for air. Eyes glazed over then rolled when the heel of
Darren’s hand slammed down on the gun barrel, crushing the officer’s throat.
Glancing around for other opponents, the RPA noticed video cameras
watching him with little glass eyes. Figuring not everyone could be watching
a monitor, Darren donned a uniform coat and policeman’s utility belt. Hand-
cuffs served to ensure the sleeping officer wouldn’t wake up and try to find
out who clobbered him.
Shoving a handful of magnum hollow point slugs into his jacket pockets,
Darren sauntered into the back section as though he’d walked the route hun-
dreds of times before.
His composure was lost entirely at the sight in the back room. The fetid
stench of death filled the air like a thick fog; strewn across the floor and piled
into the jail cells were dead bodies. Worse still, Darren recognized some from
the night before. The body of the girl he tried to rescue was among them.
Now her partially clad, lifeless body stared back at him, mocking his past
efforts to save her.

288
Throwing open the door to the room with the tinted glass windows, Darren
found a mirror image of the larger room, only much more graphic. Gagging
involuntarily, he threw up in the doorway, head swimming. Muffled shrieks
of pain brought him back to gruesome reality. A man was screaming from
excruciating agony. Darren tracked the tormented howls to the blood-slick
stairs leading down.
Whatever mental barricades Darren had fortified over the years were laid
siege and breached by the experiences of the past few days. Affected in a way
unlike ever before, Darren let fierce wrath overtake him.
A policeman stepped out of the observation room to go upstairs, only to
meet a hollow point shotgun slug at close range. Darren let several more
shred through the man’s lifeless body before he hit the floor. The sharp “chk-
chk” of his pump-action shotgun filled the momentary silence after the first
avenging.
Darren came down the hallway to the interrogation room as a man pos-
sessed. Heads popping out of doorways to see the source of the weapon re-
ports were removed from the shoulders of their owners. Shotgun empty, Dar-
ren dropped it to the blood splattered floor and took a .45 in each hand. Then
he broke into the interrogation room.
One of the prisoners was missing flesh from most of his body and contin-
ued to scream from the acid eating away muscle and vein. Darren emptied
both firearms on his torturer. Another torturer tried to flee, only to have Dar-
ren clock him over the head as he tried to get out the door. Whimpering, the
man crawled toward the stairs.
“If you think you’re getting away, you got another thing comin,’” Darren
slapped another clip into each pistol. A woman with a bruised face and body
stepped into the hall clutching a torn shirt to her chest. Darren instinctively
aimed at the motion but realized it was only a terrified victim. She jerked
when Darren shot the crawling police officer in the leg instead. The howl
from the man went from a cry full of pain to a death rattle as his ragged soul
left his body, Darren’s finger blurring inside the trigger guard. The shots ran
together, deafeningly loud in the enclosed hallway. The woman covered her
ears and cowered back. The guns still looked at the holey body, their sights
still locked in over smoking slides, both waiting for new clips.
“Where is Suka San?”
She trembled with fear in answer.
“Where is the police chief?!” Is he here?!” Darren shouted.
She shook her head.
“There are people still alive in here. Go get a doctor.”
She inched away, glancing up the stairs. Darren slapped in his last clip and
reholstered one of the handguns.
“Go get a doctor! I’m not going to kill you. I’m not a police officer, okay?
I’m here to help you, now go get a doctor for these people.”

289
Suddenly, she screamed, slipping on the blood-slick floor, but her eyes
focused behind Darren. Whirling around, Darren saw the horror of an acid
tortured prisoner groping for walls with skeletal fingers. The blinded prisoner
fell backward and convulsed. Acid had eaten away the flesh to leave fizzling
muscle and bones where fingers had been and most of the man’s face was
gone. Darren looked about helplessly, trying to figure a way to help the poor
soul.
Thinking of Van’s medical device, he ran up the stairs and out of the sta-
tion. When he reached the SAMAS, he tuned its radio to the pre-set he and
Van had established.
“Van! Van! This is Darren, do you copy?!”
“Darren? What’s the problem?” Van’s voice sounded weary.
“I need your medical device-thing!”
“What’s going on, Darren?”
“He killed ‘em, Van. That monster Suka killed them all!”
“Who? Where are you?”
“Police station. There’s a lot of hurt people here. Suka killed all the ones
we saw last night and more. I can’t help the ones that are still alive without
your medical device.”
“I’ll get there as soon as I can. The radio station’s still broadcasting the
message and most of Suka’s men are gone. Be there in five minutes!”
Darren ran back into the station, this time, knowing what to expect, he was
numbed to the gruesome decor. Finding four women alive in holding cells, he
moved back to the interrogation room. The man with the acid-covered face
was dead.
Finding a high-frequency blade in the possession of a dead officer, Darren
cut down a burly man who seemed somewhat coherent. The man collapsed,
unable to support his own weight, but his eyes focused well enough for Dar-
ren to make visual contact.
“Do you know where Suka San is?”
The man stared at him, his eyes unfocused, seeing terror-filled visions of
what he’d lived through before answering. “I don’t know. I... I don’t know
anything. Don’t hurt me anymore. I already told you where the jewels are
kept.”
“You’re not gonna be hurt anymore.” Darren cut the chains with his Vi-
bro-Blade, let the man lay flat, then began lowering the others as gently as
he could.
Almost unrecognizable as the red-haired woman from the night before,
Cyndiara’s eyes were swelled-over slits, her body hung limply. Darren swung
the blade above her head and caught her waif-like form over his shoulder,
then carried her upstairs to the front desk. Shoving firearms off the desk and
onto the floor to lay her down, Darren kicked the stirring police officer in the

290
head to return him to slumberland. Cyndiara’s mouth moved but no words
came out.
“You’re gonna be fine. I’ll be back,” Darren said, before running down to
the basement to heft the others upstairs.
The front door flew open and Darren stared down the barrel of a very large
rail gun. Targo’s gargantuan head peeked under the door sill.
“You good man.” The giant recognized Darren’s face.
Van squirmed around Targo’s large form to get inside, armor sporting
matching blast marks front and back.
“Darren, we gotta split. There’s a police vehicle headed this way and the
militia is retaking the town. They’re really mad and are going to shoot first
and not bother with asking questions, especially if you’re dressed like that.
We can’t stay here.”
“But there’s wounded here!” Darren still carried the jeweler man over his
shoulders. “We can’t leave them!”
“We can put them in the back of my Mountaineer outside. Hurry!” Van
lifted Cyndiara from the desk and led the way to a large, three-wheeled ve-
hicle taller than the concrete stairs.
“My SAM, I can’t leave that here either!”
“Where is it?”
Darren hoisted the man into the Mountaineer’s cargo bay, then said,
“Down that alley.”
“Targo, go get Darren’s SAMAS and put it in the Mountaineer.”
“Okay.” Targo lumbered off.
“Where’d you steal this?” Darren asked.
“I didn’t steal it. It’s mine. I told you I live here part of the year. C’mon,
we haven’t much time!”
The two men raced down the stairs and down the hall. Van slipped on
the blood-covered floor. Frantically trying to regain his footing, the Techno-
Wizard almost repeated Darren’s response to the carnage in the back room.
Darren pulled him past the gore down to the interrogation room.
“Don’t look at them. Just don’t think about it,” Darren advised, hefting a
tortured prisoner across his shoulders. Adrenaline flowed freely, the focus of
their task eliminating their pain and fatigue.
The giant gently moved people into the cargo bay to accommodate Dar-
ren’s SAMAS. The police APC was coming into view when Darren sprinted
back down the stairs to rescue more prisoners.
“Darren! C’mon! They’re here!” Van shouted, climbing up into the Moun-
taineer’s pilot compartment. The RPA disappeared inside the building.
Speeding up the street, the tracked vehicle ran into an unexpected obstacle.
Targo stepped from behind a building and simply pushed it over as if it
were a toy.

291
The armored policeman pried the side hatch open, only to get a look at
Targo’s descending fist. Armor buckled and the man’s skull was shoved into
his chest cavity as he fell back into the vehicle. The back hatch sprung open
and others swarmed out. Targo stuck his hand in the side hatch and shoved
the APC into the group of armed officers like a kid driving their toy truck into
a group of plastic army men. The bewildered men searched for the cause of
their sudden upset, but they only saw a Mountaineer ATV parked in front of
the police station. Targo stepped aside, invisible, and snatched the last one
in line before he could utter a sound. The six other officers ran toward the
Mountaineer.
Automatic weapons fire poured into the six men from a group of vehicles
on the other side of the Mountaineer. Caught in a cross-fire between militia-
men and police officers, Van couldn’t afford to wait long.
A woman across his shoulders, Darren ran, heedless of the destruction
around him. Literally tossing the dazed woman into the cargo bay, he grabbed
the rail and pulled himself onto the moving ATV.
“Go!” He shouted, but Van was already punching the accelerator.
Darren knew he’d been hit the instant his hand refused to grip the blood-
splattered railing. Severe trauma from a rifle round shattering his shoulder
took only seconds to cause the arm to cease functioning. The front exit
wound was not a thing of beauty. The other hand missed the rail and Darren
hit the street. Complete realization of the wound’s severity hadn’t reached his
brain. Bringing himself to his knees with his good arm, Darren watched the
Mountaineer speed away. A wave of gunfire swept his way.
None of it hit him.
Something jerked him off the ground and he felt himself carried aloft by a
tough, leathery cushion-like object as the street swept by below.
Magic, he thought. What else could it be?
Targo matched speeds with the Mountaineer and inserted the wounded
RPA through the open hatch.
Fighting off the torrent of irrational thought, Darren propped himself
against the cargo bay wall to staunch the profuse bleeding on his back, hold-
ing the gaping exit wound with his other hand. Cold perspiration covered his
skin. He viewed the world through hazy eyes, vision narrowing to a long,
dark tunnel. Darren lapsed into unconsciousness wondering if a rebel’s bullet
or a Coalition firing squad would end his life.
____________________

Just behind the edge of a small strip mine, a large ore transport idled badly.
Near the bottom of the steep mine wall, a convoy of hover vehicles, ATVs,
robots and exoskeletons made their way along the road. Beside the mine road
that had become a major access road for those traveling further into the Fed-
eration of Magic, the floor dropped away into a lake of unknown depth.
292
Lieutenant Greg Merrick turned away from the rebel convoy and looked
back to the smoke-filled skies over Youngstown nearly 35 kilometers away.
The smoke from the town was lit in the evening sky from the fires below
and the sunset to the west, making the whole thing appear even more red
and blood-soaked. The scene reaffirmed his disgust at the horrors one could
experience while outside the safety of the Coalition States.
He walked back to the ore transport where his men awaited his next order.
After a quiet moment, he looked up to meet their questioning eyes.
“Show no mercy.”

To be Continued in Book Two:


Deception’s Web™

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