Читаем When the Devil Dances полностью

“Oh, bloody hell,” Nichols said quietly.

“Somebody spotted the path,” Mueller added unnecessarily. “Jake?”

“Sister, call for fire on that field, call for scatterable mines on our trail, too. Let’s didee-mao, people.”

* * *

Cholosta’an scratched up behind the head of the superior normal as he drew his blade. It bothered him to gather this one. The normal was, without a doubt, the best of his oolt’os, but he was wounded sore and the path of duty was obvious. Cholosta’an scratched the chosslain and told him how good he had been to find the trail of the threshkreen as he laid the monomolecular blade against the normal’s throat.

“Wait,” Orostan said quietly. “Is that the one that found the trail?”

“Yes, Oolt’ondai,” the younger Kessentai answered. “It… bothers me to gather him. I have none better. But the way is clear.”

“Leave him. We will provide him with food. With enough food and rest he may grow well.”

“Even if he survives he will be crippled,” Cholosta’an protested feebly. The idea was attractive, but the oolt’os would be nothing but a weight on his balance sheet.

“If you will not support him, I will,” Orostan said. “Keep the genes. Keep the material. Put him to the work of a Kenstain, that which he can do. We need such as he. And you have other things to do.”

“As you bid, Oolt’ondai,” Cholosta’an said, sheathing the blade. He gave the oolt’os some of his own rations, a singular honor, and stood up. “Well, you suggested I give up half my oolt and that is, more or less, what has occurred.”

“Not exactly as I had intended,” Orostan said. “But not without some good. We now have these damned threshkreen, this Lurp team, localized. We can put all our patrols on a few roads and narrow the area down even more. Once we have them in a tiny box we will find and destroy them if it takes the entire host to do it.”

“Good,” Cholosta’an said savagely. “When we do I want to eat their hearts.”

Orostan hissed in humor. “I am no human lover, but they do have some good expressions. They refer to that as ‘payback.’ ”

<p>CHAPTER 10</p><p>Near Seed, GA, United States, Sol III</p><p><emphasis>0623 EDT Sunday September 14, 2009 ad</emphasis></p>

Mosovich cursed bitterly. “I’m getting too old for this shit.”

“Yeah,” Mueller whispered. “Tell me about it.”

Oakey Mountain Road was a tiny thread paralleling the Rabun/Habersham county line. The line itself followed the ridges that the team was using to avoid detection, but the road, not all that far away at most points, was generally obscured by the thick forests of the hills. This was their first clear glimpse, paused on the mountains above Lake Seed, and it was horrifying; the narrow trail was crawling with Posleen.

“That’s a couple of brigades’ worth, Jake,” Mueller whispered.

“Yeah, and if they’re there, they’re going to be on Low Gap Road… They’re boxing us.”

“Jake, Posleen don’t do that,” Mueller protested, ignoring the evidence of his own eyes.

“Yeah, well, these Posleen do,” Mosovich answered. “Sister Mary, are we secure?”

“Yep,” she answered. “There’s a box over on the other side of Lake Rabun and I’ve put in a couple of new ones. We’re solid laser back to corps.”

“Wake somebody up. I want a human being, not a machine. I think this mission is a bust and we’re going to have to cut our way out.”

* * *

The officer rubbed his eyes sleepily and took the proffered headset from the communications tech. “Major Ryan, FSDO. Who is this?”

Ryan sometimes wondered if he wouldn’t have made a greater contribution to the war effort in the Ten Thousand, a posting that came automatically with the tiny “Six Hundred” embroidered on the right chest of his BDU uniform. However, a brief but memorable “counseling session” with the Chief of Staff of the Army Corps of Engineers had convinced him that there were better places for him, and for the Army.

The Ten Thousand generally depended on other units for their engineering support and their senior engineer was basically a liaison. Sergeant Leo, now suitably promoted to warrant rank, fulfilled the position perfectly. And it would be a dead end for a junior engineer who had realized he liked being an officer.

Thus had started a series of usually high profile, and always critical, assignments. The first had been as junior aide to the Commander of the Corps of Engineers and almost all the others had involved positions equally challenging and career advancing. Even this last, a redesign of the Rabun Gap defenses, was a high profile job. He was, technically, just the Assistant Corps Engineer, but in reality he was directing not only the brigade of engineers but all the divisional engineers in a complete rebuild of the valley’s defenses.

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