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“Talk, damn you.”

 

“There are two pieces to this, and you better take notes because I’m not going over this again. First, there’s the coordinates of a particular mountain valley you’ll find interesting—”

 

Klaus stored the location of Dom’s little commune on the computer in his desk.

 

“Next, if you want Dominic himself, you’re going to have to make a few modifications to your ship before oh-six-hundred tomorrow morning....”

 

<<Contents>>

* * * *

 

 

PART THREE

 

Covert Action

 

 

“Whatever is not nailed down is mine. Whatever I can pry loose is not nailed down.”

—Collis P. Huntington

(1821-1900)

 

 

<<Contents>>

 

* * * *

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

 

Media Exposure

 

 

“Most of life is sitting around waiting for the shitstorm to start.”

The Cynic’s Book of Wisdom

 

“Property is theft.”

—Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

(1809-1865)

 

 

06:30:00 Godwin Local

 

“Twenty minutes, people. Get your shit together.” Tetsami’s voice echoed through the tunnel even though she was whispering into a tight-beam LOS communicator. Down the tunnel, Ivor’s contragrav was invisible but for the red warning lights glowing through the digging equipment’s scaffolding.

 

Mosasa, Shane, and Random were up there waiting for the signal to make the punch through to the surface.

 

Tetsami was under more scaffolding at her end. Above her, a trio of mining robots hugged the walls of a triangular hole. The hole went up at a steep angle to end facing a scarred concrete ceiling thirty meters away. From Tetsami’s position she could barely see the concrete underside of the GA&A complex, lit by the targeting lasers from the robots.

 

In an hour that concrete ceiling wouldn’t exist.

 

“Shane’s made it into position,” came Ivor’s voice over the communicator.

 

The ground team would be up the hole. Shane and company were another thirty meters closer to the surface than GA&A’s subbasement. They had to weave through a lot more scaffolding. The hole under the woods traveled through fifteen meters of clay, soil, and mulch after it left the rock that housed the maglev tube. Keeping the hole from caving in required a lot of scaffolding—and the last five meters would have no support.

 

Eventually, Ivor would have to get his contragrav van up that hole—he was the only person Tetsami would trust with that job.

 

“Tell the team to prep for the signal.”

 

“Will do,” Ivor replied. Shane and company were out of direct RF contact because of rock and soil. At the moment, Ivor was Tetsami’s only link to them. Once the job started, the only comm they’d have would be the clock.

 

A clock that read 6:35. It was time to grab the sat.

 

Tetsami opened the back of the maglev van parked next to her hole. Inside, Zanzibar was checking the charge on their weapons. Beyond the front of the van, Dom and Levy were making final checks on their equipment. Flower’s feathery form sat in the passenger seat in the van. It had insisted on coming, even though it had done its job during the planning stages. It wanted to see the operation personally, and right now it was watching everything with its serpentine, eyeless face.

 

Tetsami pulled a case containing the portable groundstation and attached it to a loose cable that was lying on the floor of the tunnel. The cable led off to the west, where it led to a surface sat antenna.

 

On the floor of the van she opened the case and powered it up. A holo globe began to rotate above the groundstation, and lights carved out the tracks of the orbital flotsam that surrounded Bakunin. Tetsami tapped in a few code sequences, and tracks began falling out of the picture. By the end of her key sequence, only one glowing yellow track remained, pacing Bakunin’s equator as the planet turned.

 

Tetsami looked up at Zanzibar, who had finished with the weapons. “Zanzibar, I’m going to fugue out for a few minutes while I talk to the sat. Keep tabs on Ivor in case something ugly happens.”

 

Zanzibar nodded wordlessly. Tetsami didn’t like the expression Dom’s sergeant wore. Zanzibar had never been enthusiastic about this mission, despite her loyalty to Dom. In fact, with the exception of Dom, she didn’t seem to fully trust anyone else on the team.

 

Despite Dom’s assurances, Tetsami understood the feeling. Attacks by Confed marines on two separate occasions made everyone a little nervous. However, Dom had assured everyone—Tetsami and Zanzibar included—that he was in control of the situation.

 

Besides which, they had a very narrow window in which to pull this off, leak or no leak.

 

Tetsami looked off, past Zanzibar and Flower, and at Dom.

 

You’re hiding something. You’re always hiding something.

 

Tetsami jacked into the groundstation and felt the shell software take over her senses. It was a high-class shell she’d written herself. It grabbed the whole sensorium in order to get the biggest shitload of info across in the shortest possible time. Every sense—vision, hearing, smell, kinesthetic—meant something.

 

She felt herself shoot through black space, a virtual universe that had every distraction edited out. There were only two things here. Her, and the commsat.

 

A glowing yellow dot appeared and, as she focused, shot toward her. In Tetsami’s time-dilated world its approach was majestic, even though its appearance and orientation took only a fraction of a second.

 

It resembled a golden spider. Its body was a spherical golden shell made of geodesic hexagons, its legs beams of yellow light flying off to infinity. Tetsami skimmed the surface of the geodesic, a tiny fly darting through its web, looking for the hole.

 

Millions of command structures shot by her, glowing, golden, venomous. The defenses on this sat were active and waiting for her to take a single misstep so they could entangle her and suck her dry.

 

However, Troy Broadcasting wasn’t quite as worried about the integrity of their transmission command set as they were about the integrity of the sat itself, or the content of their broadcast. It wasn’t a major weakness, but it was enough for her. Her fly landed on a control node right next to one of the golden lasers, and she leeched on to the control driver for the sat’s broadcast antenna.

 

The sat’s whole instruction set shuddered as her commands rippled through it. It tried to poison the data, but she had venom of her own—and since the sat’s first priority was to survive and its second to keep broadcasting no matter what, Tetsami’s little fly finally melded into the structure of the spider.

 

Tetsami unhooked herself from her subprogram and slipped away from the sat’s command structure. The golden sphere had changed. There was a black dot, a speck really, glued to its surface. Tetsami’s program.

 

And now the legs were moving. They were brightening and slowly converging on a new leg that had sprouted below the sphere. One of those glowing legs of light passed by her like a searchlight, and she had a brief full-sensory image of a melee going on in TBC’s gladiatorial stadium. An ax was swinging right at her as the contact was broken.

 

Mission accomplished.

 

She allowed herself a silent mental chuckle at the expense of Troy Broadcasting. It might not be a suitable payback for the death of her parents, but her little program might permanently lock up the sat’s command structure and cost TBC a few megagrams in lost revenue and hardware.