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Snowburn

Page 56

by E J Frost


  nerve. Doc Gray wasn’t kidding about the

  pain. I exhale to keep it off my face, and put

  it to my growl. “I failed.”

  “On the contrary, Sergeant. You passed.

  You asked the right questions. And when you

  discovered the truth of your employment, you

  avoided any further entanglement with my

  organization. You are the only one in the past

  several years to do so, in fact. It would have

  been a clever move, and protected you from

  further notice, under other circumstances.

  Under these circumstances, of course, it

  made you stand out from the crowd.”

  “Tough luck,” I say.

  “Indeed. Even when Miz Kerryon began

  showing such an interest in you, and I have

  been watching you, Miz Kerryon, for a very

  long time. Even then my network failed to

  identify you.” Another dark glance at Mike-

  the-Merc, who I’m guessing has lost a few

  pay-grades over the last couple of days.

  “Fortunately, I received a call from a . . .

  concerned citizen. She’d had a recent

  encounter with you. A very distressing

  encounter, I gather. It left a strong

  impression, and made certain connections in

  her mind. She is a devotee of violent

  entertainment, you see, and she recalled

  something she’d seen on wanted men. Your

  exploits on Tje Dhos featured prominently on

  this program.”

  Ma Quaak. I figured I’d be outed at some

  point in this fucking charade, but not by her.

  Feels like a blow to the solar plexus. If I

  walk away from this, I’m going back and

  having a long, sharp talk with Psycho

  Granny.

  “No,” Kez whispers. I stop in the middle

  of drawing the other knife, slide my hand

  around the nape of her neck. Hold her the

  way a mother cat holds a kitten. This stopped

  being her show as soon as Tyng said my real

  name, and became mine.

  “Once I realized who you were, Sergeant

  Hauser, I made enquiries. Discreetly, of

  course. I have no interest in exposing you.

  Not yet, at any rate. Your record is very

  interesting. You’re a killing machine.

  Extremely effective when unleashed. How

  unfortunate that those who trained you did

  not discover the correct mechanism to

  control you.”

  “Not for lack of tryin’,” I say mildly,

  keeping the pain of drawing the other knife

  out of my voice.

  “Military minds always underestimate the

  value of leverage. Violence is what they

  understand best. But you understand

  leverage, do you not, Sergeant?”

  I nod. He’s done a good job of getting

  leverage. He’s got Kez nailed down nice and

  tight, and from the way his dark eyes drift

  down to her and then back up, he’s figured

  out what she means to me.

  “So, Sergeant Hauser, back to my

  original question. Is there something you

  would like to offer me?”

  “Looks to me like you already got plenty

  of hired help.” I flick my eyes to Mike-the-

  Merc for emphasis, but I’m really gauging

  distance. Angles. Once I’m sure I’ve got

  them, I begin rehearsing the movements in my

  mind. The angle of my arms. The flick of

  each wrist. The amount of force to put behind

  each throw.

  “Ah, true. But none of them have your

  level of investment. As I mentioned, my

  organization suffers from high turnover. A

  problem which plagues all organizations.

  Training can only get you so far. Financial

  incentives are worthless. Some competitor

  can always offer more. Loyalty is illusory,

  easily shattered under the right pressure. No,

  Sergeant Hauser, it’s blood. Family. The ties

  that bind. And you, conveniently, have allied

  yourself with my blood.”

  His statement wipes all calculation of

  how to kill him out of my mind. There’s a

  long moment during which Kez and I both try

  to figure out what the fuck he’s talking about.

  Kez gets there a second before I do. “But Chi

  wants nothing to do with you.”

  Tyng snorts delicately. “What does it

  matter what Chiara Mae wants? It’s what she

  will do to protect those she loves. Her

  family. Your brother. What she can be

  compelled to do. Just as I can compel you by

  threatening your brother, and Sergeant

  Hauser by threatening you.” A slow,

  satisfied smile spreads across Tyng’s

  skeletal face. “Chiara Mae will succeed me.

  You, Miz Kerryon, with your contacts

  throughout Kuseros, will assist her in

  promoting my family’s business interests.

  And you, Sergeant Hauser, will protect them

  both. That is the flesh I require.”

  “You got it tied up nice and tight, don’t

  you?” I ask, focusing again on angles and

  distance and force. I begin moving into

  position, sliding my hands down Kez’s arms,

  holding the bone blades between us. I feel

  her trembling under my hands, whether it’s

  with fury or fear, I don’t know. Probably

  both.

  “An example to you, Sergeant Hauser.

  Remember this, in the months and years to

  come. This was not my first succession plan,

  or even my second. But I saw the possibility

  months ago. All that was required was that

  the bond between you and Miz Kerryon be

  sufficiently cemented, which it has under the

  trying circumstances of the last several days.

  That your competition within my

  organization be neutralized, which Miz

  Kerryon’s sister has finally accomplished.

  And that I survived to this moment, which

  you have facilitated as well, for which I

  thank you.”

  “No, no.” Kez starts shaking her head,

  muttering under her breath. “This wasn’t all

  a set-up.”

  “Of course not,” Tyng says, proving his

  hearing hasn’t been affected by his illness.

  “It was an exploitation of circumstances. Far

  more powerful. A lesson to you, Miz

  Kerryon. You need not twist those around

  you. Leave them to their own devices. Their

  natural weaknesses will give you the keys to

  control them. You, for example. I could have

  brought you under my thumb at any time.

  Your brother is one key. Your sister another.

  And your addict friend, yet another. Why

  would I ever need do something so crude as

  set you up? I have held the keys to control

  you for a long time.”

  I clamp down on Kez’s arms to keep her

  from launching herself out of her chair at

  Tyng. She twists against my hands, her breath

  coming in sharp bursts of anger and

  frustration.

  Tyng looks up at me slowly. The roll of a

  predator’s eyes right before the kill. “I


  believe our business is concluded.”

  “Not if I tell you to go fuck yourself.”

  Tyng chuckles dryly. “That would be

  most unwise. Miz Kerryon still owes me

  flesh, which I will collect, one way or

  another. Acquiescing will spare Miz

  Kerryon a great deal of pain.” He taps his

  fingertips against his chin. “You might also

  consider the benefits of my offer. I have no

  illusions about my daughter’s abilities. The

  two of you will control my organization.

  That you have no love for the business will

  make you better stewards of my family’s

  interests. And, finally, I suggest that you

  consider inevitability.”

  “There’s nothing inevitable here except

  your death,” I growl.

  “On that, Sergeant, we are in complete

  agreement. As I have allowed you to learn, I

  am dying. Today, tomorrow, or next year, it

  makes no difference. I am going to die.” He

  waves his hand and I see I was right. Erin

  did pick up that gesture from him. “The

  inevitability of my death has become yet

  another problem of corporate turnover.

  Sergeant, you know what will happen on my

  death. You warned Miz Agosante to flee to

  avoid its repercussions. Wise counsel, which

  I am sorry to say she hasn’t heeded. But then,

  she lacks her sister’s humility.”

  I don’t need Tyng to spell out what will

  happen on his death. His enemies won’t just

  target the higher-ups in his empire like Erin.

  They’ll go after his family. And after Kez’s,

  since Baby Tyng is now part of it. This isn’t

  about revenge, or at least, it’s not all about

  revenge. It’s about something far more

  powerful.

  I lean down and kiss the top of Kez’s

  head. “A man can be measured by how he

  cares for his women,” I say, repeating

  Acker’s phrase.

  She twists to look up at me. Blinks

  tearily. “What?”

  “Remember what you said? How you

  knew who it was on that black box? He

  called Chiara by name, an’ he said her name

  —”

  “Like a father would.” Kez frowns and

  shakes her head as what I’m saying sinks in.

  She turns to stare at Tyng. “You’ve done all

  this to protect Chi?”

  “I have four surviving children, Miz

  Kerryon. They are all equally worthy of

  protection. I trust you will remember that,

  Sergeant Hauser.”

  I could torture him. Shrug or something,

  to show my indifference. But torture’s never

  been my bag. “Yeah, I’ll remember.”

  “Then I repeat that our business is now

  concluded. You may kill me now if you like,

  Sergeant Hauser. With those knives you have

  transported in your own flesh. That was

  extremely resourceful, by the way. You will

  make an excellent Chief of Security.”

  Mike-the-Merc starts in surprise, and

  that’s all the trigger I need. Before he moves

  out of position, I flick my wrists. Hard. Mike

  sees the movement. His eyes, no longer quite

  so inscrutable, widen. He twists, shivers his

  body elegantly to one side and claps his

  hands in the air beside his cheek. Neatly

  catching the bone blade between his palms.

  He turns back to me with the beginnings

  of a smug smile.

  My second shiv hits Tyng square in the

  eye. Slides into his brain. He smiles, very

  slightly, before his head rocks back against

  the bundle of tubing rising from the back of

  his wheelchair.

  Mike-the-Merc drops the first knife with

  a muttered curse and plucks the second out of

  Tyng’s eye. But Tyng is beyond saving.

  They never expect the second one.

  Kez half-rises from her chair. “Hale—”

  “S’okay, kitten.” I step around the chair

  and hold my hand out to her. She takes it and

  tucks herself tight against my side. I wrap my

  arm around her. “It’s over.” Her nightmare’s

  over. Not the way I anticipated, and the

  consequences won’t be anything either of us

  expected. But it’s done. “So, Mike.” The

  merc’s head snaps up from where he’s bent

  over Tyng. “Looks like you work for us

  now.”

  “My-my contract is with Tyng

  Enterprises,” Mike stammers, clearly trying

  to think his way around the ramifications of

  what’s just happened.

  I wave that off. “You heard him. You take

  your orders from me now and I’ve got a job

  for you. Here.” I take the Marie’s master

  control out of my pocket and toss it to Mike.

  “I want you to find Erin Agosante and give

  that to her.”

  “Hale,” Kez says reproachfully.

  I tilt my head to look down at her. “We’ll

  buy another ship tomorrow. You an’ me. One

  thing we don’t gotta worry about anymore is

  our credit.”

  “Hale!” She’s not yelling at me for giving

  away the Marie. She’s yelling in alarm. I

  glance back towards Mike-the-Merc. Find

  him turning towards me, leveling a small

  plasma cannon he must have drawn from

  behind his back.

  A writhing line of light whips past me. It

  snicks across Mike’s wrist. Burns through

  skin and bone like a laser. His hand and the

  gun clatter to the floor. Mike stares for a

  second, then falls to his knees clutching the

  cauterized stump of his arm. His mouth

  stretches in a scream that never quite makes

  it out of his throat.

  I leap forward and snatch up the gun.

  Train it on Mike and keep it there while I

  speak to him. “Call your backup right now. If

  they’re fast, they might get here soon enough

  to reattach your hand. Then get yourself as

  far away from Kuseros as you can. Your

  contract’s fucked. And if I ever see you

  again, I’ll put a shiv through your eye, too.”

  Mike’s mouth snaps shut. He rocks on his

  knees over his injury, but after a moment, he

  reaches for his fallen spectacles.

  I back away from him, grab Kez’s hand

  and push her behind me as I back towards the

  exit. There’s nothing more dangerous than a

  wounded predator. I want Kez well away

  from him. I watch him struggle to put on the

  spectacles. He’ll hate me, even more than

  Kez, for seeing his weakness. Maybe that

  will balance out owing me his life.

  I hear the warehouse door snick open

  behind me, then Kez pulls me out into the

  cool night.

  I wait until the door closes before I turn

  and sweep the empty dock with my eyes. Kez

  had my back and she wouldn’t have dragged

  me out unless it was clear. All I’m doing is

  double-checking. The guard that let us get

  past him with the bone-knives is gone. The


  surrounding warehouses are dark and quiet.

  My trike sits a couple of meters away. Right

  where we left it. The protective cover’s still

  down. Security holo shimmering on the front

  wheel lock. Looks untouched.

  Kez picks up my left hand and inspects it.

  “We need to get you to a medcen.”

  I glance at it. Shake my head. Blood has

  smeared across the back of my hand, but it’s

  just where the absorbent wrist guard has

  overspilled. The bleeding’s stopped, and the

  accelerated healing that G.D.F. built into my

  ancestors’ genes to make them more efficient

  miners has already started closing up the

  holes. If I eat well for the next couple of

  weeks, the grooves will even fill in. “Your

  place or mine?”

  “Mine. We need to tell Chi her father’s

  dead.”

  “And that she’s the new head of the

  family.”

  “Yeah, and that.” She shakes her head.

  “Fuck, I never saw that coming. What are we

  going to do?”

  I smile up at the night sky. The Broken

  Moon hangs low over the industrial blocks

  and high-rises of Hemos. Tyng’s city. And

  for the foreseeable future, our city. I should

  be resentful of how he manipulated us. But

  I’m not. We’re alive. Kez is safe. And our

  future is back in our own hands. Even better,

  out there, far beyond the Broken Moon,

  there’s a pleasure planet with our names on

  it. “First thing we’re doing is bookin’ a five-

  day on Yrillo. Then we’re buying the boat

  that’ll get us there.”

  Kez snorts. “You finally managed to give

  away your ship.”

  “Yeah, I did.” Hopefully Erin’ll be smart

  about using it. “C’mon, kitten. Let’s get out

  of here before Mike’s backup arrives.” I

  lead her to my trike.

  She stands beside me, shifting from foot

  to foot while I unlock the trike and retract the

  cover. “Are we really going to do this? Run

  things for Chi and her family?”

  “Maybe.” In the short term it’s the best

  way to protect Kez, and the people she cares

  about. Doing that thing I do best will be a

  fuck of a lot easier with the resources of

  Tyng’s empire at my command. In the longer

  term, I suspect that Kez’s feelings on the

  subject will prevent either of us from making

  Drug Baron a permanent career. Besides,

  we’d both miss flying. But that’s a worry for

  another day. Tonight, we should be

  celebrating our strange, unexpected victory.

  I swing onto the trike. Reach back and

 

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