A lopsided smile creased Chandler's face. "You're getting cynical in your old age."
Corwin looked back out the window again. "No," he said with a sigh. "Just getting political."
And wondered why that should sound so like a curse in his ears.
Chapter 6
Late spring in Syzra District, Jin had once heard, was the most enjoyable time of the year in that particular part of Aventine... if you happened to be a duck.
Supposedly, for the better part of three months straight, the sky over Syzra was either heavily overcast or pouring its guts out in torrents of cold rain.
But if those stories were true, this day was a pleasant exception. The rising sun, peeking through the dense forest surrounding them at a distance on three sides, shone clear and bright through a sky that had only a few high cirrus clouds to add counterpoint to its brilliant blue. What wind there was came in short, mild gusts; and the air temperature, while chilly, was more bracing than uncomfortable. It was the kind of day Jin had always loved.
And she felt absolutely terrible. Squinting her eyes slightly against the sunlight, she clenched her fists at her sides, tried to stand as tall as the three young men to her right, and fought hard to keep from throwing up.
"All right, recruits, let's bend your ears forward," the man standing facing them bellowed, and Jin clamped down a little more on her rebellious gastrointestinal tract. Instructor Mistra Layn's voice, unusually rich in deep tones, wasn't helping things a bit. So much for my celebrated cast-iron gut, she thought wryly to herself, remembering the warnings everyone had given her about the normal physiological reaction to Cobra surgery. Clearly, she'd been too quick to dismiss them; now all she could hope for was that the reaction was as short-term as they'd all said it would be.
"You already know," Layn continued, "that we've been selected for a special mission to Qasama. So I won't bore you with that harangue again. What you're probably wondering instead is why we're out here in the middle of nowhere instead of at one of the main Academy centers. Well?"
It took a second for Jin to realize that he was asking them a question. It took a few seconds longer to realize that none of her fellow trainees were going to respond. "Sir?" she said tentatively.
A flicker of something crossed Layn's face, but his voice was neutral enough.
"Trainee Moreau?"
"Sir, are we here because the mission will involve travel through forested areas of Qasama?"
Layn cocked an eyebrow and threw a leisurely look behind him. "Why, yes-there is forest here, isn't there? There's forest at the training center in Pindaric
District, too, as I recall. So why aren't we there instead of here?"
Jin gritted her teeth. "I don't know, sir."
The young man at Jin's right stirred. "Sir?"
"Trainee Sun?"
"Sir, the Pindaric center concentrates on teaching new Cobras how to hunt and kill spine leopards," Mander Sun said. "Our mission won't involve hunting so much as it will evasion and simply staying alive."
"Don't the Cobras at Pindaric need to learn how to stay alive?" Layn countered.
Her eyes locked on Layn, Jin couldn't see if Sun flushed. But from the tone of his voice she rather thought he had. "The methods of training for attack versus defense are entirely different, sir," he said. "More than that, they would be obviously different to the other trainees there. I understood this was supposed to be a secret mission."
For a long moment Layn merely looked at Sun. "More or less correct, Trainee Sun.
The secrecy part, that is. But who says attack and defense training are different?"
"My grandfather, sir. He was Coordinator of the Academy for twenty years."
"Does that give you the right to stiff-neck your instructor?" Layn said coldly.
This time there was no doubt that Sun flushed. "No, sir," he said stiffly.
"Glad to hear it." Layn let his gaze drift to all four of them. "Because I have no intention of going to Qasama without the absolute best people available backing me up. If I don't think one or more of you measures up, I can and will bounce you-and I don't much care whether it's on the first day of training or while you're being wheeled in to have your nanocomputers implanted. All of you got that?"
Jin swallowed, suddenly conscious of the neck-wrap computer nestling up under her jaw. If she failed her training-was deemed unsuitable, for whatever reason-the nanocomputer that would eventually be implanted beneath her brain would be a mere shadow of the true Cobra computer, disconnecting all of her newly acquired weaponry and severely limiting the power available to the servos augmenting her muscles. She would be, in short, a Ject.
"All right, then," Layn said. "Now. I know you're all eager to find out just what those aching bodies of yours can do. For the moment, actually, that's not a hell of a lot. Those computers around your necks will give you limited servos and no weapons whatsoever. In four days-assuming adequate progress-you'll be given new neckwraps that let you activate your optical and auditory enhancers.
After that, over a period of about four weeks, you'll get the use of your fingertip lasers, the lasers plus enhancers, the sonic weapons and arcthrower, the antiarmor laser alone, antiarmor plus everything else, and finally your preprogrammed reflexes. The purpose, you'll note, is to give you the best possible chance of learning to use your new bodies without killing yourselves or anyone else in the process."
"Question, sir?" the trainee at the far end of the line spoke up tentatively.
"Trainee Hariman?"
"Sir, I was under the impression that the normal training period was six to eight weeks, not four."
"Weren't you told this wasn't going to be normal training?" Layn countered.
"Ah, yes, sir, I was. It just seemed to me... a little quick, that's all.
Especially with the new weapons being introduced with this group."
Layn cocked an eyebrow. "What new weapons are those, Trainee?"
"Ah... I was under the impression, sir, that the Council had approved the use of short-range voltage generators for use through the arcthrower circuits."
"You're referring, I take it, to the so-called stun-guns? You're well informed,
Trainee Hariman."
"Much of the weapons debate has been public knowledge, sir."
"So it has. As it happens, though, that won't be a consideration. For the simple reason that none of you will be participating in that experiment. The Council decided you were going to be experimental enough as it was-" Layn's eyes flicked to Jin "-and there was no need to give you untried equipment as well."
"Yes, sir," Hariman said. "That doesn't explain how we're going to learn how to be Cobras in four weeks instead of six, sir."
"You questioning your ability as a trainee, or my ability as an instructor?"
"Uh... neither, sir."
"Good. Did you say something a moment ago, Trainee Todor?"
"Sir?" The trainee standing between Hariman and Sun sounded startled.
"The question was simple enough, Trainee. Did you say something to Trainee Sun while I was explaining why you hadn't had stun-guns installed?"
"Uh... it was nothing, sir."
"Repeat it."
"I, uh..." Todor audibly took a breath. "I was just thinking that, as far as extra weaponry was concerned... uh, that Trainee Moreau could be easily implanted with a pair of turret guns."
Layn's expression didn't change, but it seemed to Jin that his eyes flicked briefly to her breasts before rising to her face. "Trainee Moreau? Any comment?"
A truly scathing retort had already come to mind, but it seemed better not to use it. At least not here and now. "No, sir," she said.
"No. Well, then, I've got one." Layn's eyes flicked to the other three trainees... and abruptly his face hardened. "It's pretty clear that none of you is exactly thrilled at having a woman in the unit. Now, you've all heard the