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“Card,” said Turbo.

Omi slipped him one.

Turbo frowned as he settled the card into his hand.

“I heard we’re gonna be fed into the Tokyo maw,” said Stick. “For once Social Unity refuses to be overrun. It’s a meat-grinder from what I hear.”

Marten shrugged. He hadn’t heard anything like that.

“They said High Command wants… some kind of missile battery taken out.”

“Merculite missile battery,” Turbo said, still mulling over his cards. He’d become the Second Platoon’s newsmonger, finding it wherever he found his illegal drugs.

“What’s a merculite missile?” asked Stick.

Turbo tugged the peak of his hat lower over his eyes. “It’s fast, is what it is. Zooms out in seconds and drops orbital fighters so they plop into the ocean. High Command’s gone crazy over it.”

“Precious Highborn losses,” grumbled Stick.

“Yeah,” breathed Turbo. “Twenty credits!”

Omi scratched that onto the pad and quietly set his hand down. “Out,” he said.

Stick flicked a gaze over his cards.

Omi’s stylus hovered over the plex-pad in anticipation.

“They say it’s a blood-bath in Tokyo,” said Stick. “The Japanese have lost their minds, is what I hear. They run screaming at you with bombs strapped to their chests, and they blow both you and them to death. Behind them, follow honor-mad Samurai Divisions, one after another in an endless procession. And don’t let them capture you alive, either. They got these knives, sharper than my vibroblade. They use them to cut off your balls and—”

“You in or out?” asked Turbo

Stick nodded for a card.

Omi’s stylus glided over the pad.

“Two cards,” said Marten.

“It’s called the Siege of Tokyo,” said Turbo matter-of-factly. “And yeah, it’s a blood-bath all right, but with FEC Divisions and a scattering of Jump-Jet battalions.”

“No panzers?” asked Marten.

“Nope,” Turbo said. “They’re up north sweeping the home islands, as the Japanese buggers call them.”

“What about Highborn?” asked Omi.

Turbo shrugged as he adjusted his hat. He squinted at Marten to make up his mind.

“So we’re all killing each other for some worthless missiles?” asked Stick.

“Earth is on the run, don’t you know,” said Turbo. “But it’s gotten too easy for the High Command, so this time they’re not using as many Highborn. It’s an all-volunteer show.”

“The Earth on the run part is right,” Stick said. “An old-timer told me the Highborn move all their units like lightning, theirs and the volunteers. He said their staff work is amazing. If they’d ever tried this in the Old Army, said the old-timer, it would have been a balls-up from the get go.”

“In and call,” said Marten.

With a grin, Turbo spread his cards: three queens, ace high.

Stick threw down his hand with disgust. Marten quietly folded his and handed the cards to Omi. He slid out from the booth and stretched, staggering as the ship rolled. He bumped against the table as the ship swayed in the other direction.

“I’m going topside,” said Marten.

Omi grunted and slid out too. “Mind if I join you?”

Marten nodded.

As they left the rec-room Turbo yelled, “We need two more players.”

Marten and Omi slid along the corridor and crawled up the stairs. They donned rain gear, slick hats and staggered to the front deck railing, where they hung on. Huge gray waves rose and fell, while darkening clouds loomed threateningly in the sky. Only sailors moved here and there above deck, attaching lines or running to perform some unknown chore. Behind the lead hover followed the other twenty-nine transports. Overhead a chopper thumped somewhere, barely audible over the blistering wind.

Cold salt spray lashed the two men. They wiped their faces constantly.

“I’ve never been on the ocean before,” Marten shouted.

“Just one time for me when my mom and I visited Korea,” Omi said.

“You’ve been out of Sydney before?”

“A year before she was divorced and escorted into the slums. Thanks to my dear old dad.”

Marten rubbed salt out of his eyes, glancing at the grim-faced gunman.

Omi’s mouth twitched. “A drunk fell overboard that journey.”

“Yeah?”

“They stopped the ship and picked him up, but he’d broken his neck, probably from the fall.”

“Probably?”

Omi shrugged.

Marten was struck by Omi’s moodiness. Normally the man was the Rock, as some of the men had taken to calling him. “What really happened?” Marten asked.

“A thief pinched the drunk’s wallet. But the drunk wasn’t so drunk and whirled around, starting to holler for help. So the thief, he was a little guy, hardly even a teenager. He used a martial arts move. He snapped the drunk’s neck, and was pretty surprised it worked liked it was supposed to.”

“So the thief pitched the drunk overboard?”

“Yeah.”

Marten thought about that, finally asking, “So what’d he find in the wallet?”

Omi frowned sourly, taking his time answering. “Some plastic, a sheaf of porno pics, nothing much for all the work he’d gone to.”

Overhead a bomber zoomed low over the water. It seemed to be in a hurry somewhere. Marten and Omi watched. Thirty seconds later what seemed like small packages tumbled out of the bomber’s bottom.

“Depth charges?” asked Marten.

“Seems like.”

The packages plopped into the wild sea and disappeared.

They watched the spot. Suddenly, water sprayed upward, twin geysers. They kept watching, but nothing like oil or mangled bodies or anything else surfaced to show that an enemy sub had been hit.

“Turbo tells too many stories,” Omi said.

“You mean the ones about convoys that get hit before they ever reach Japan?”

“Yeah.”

“You’re right. He shouldn’t tell those.”

“I think they’re BS.

“Why is that?”

“The Highborn have the game sewn up,” Omi said. “Social Unity is on the run. No way is Social Unity going to train soldiers fast enough to face the Highborn before it’s all over.”

“Social Unity might get desperate.”

“So?”

“Desperate men do dangerous things.”

“I suppose…”

3.

One of those desperate men wiped sweat off his face. He was a little over thirty kilometers away, deep under the tossing waves. The captain of the Riga stepped behind the tracking officer. The officer tapped a chart, and whispered, “As clear as it’s going to get, sir.”

The captain closed his eyes. He was queasy. The enemy’s hunter/killers were too efficient. Too many fellow captains had already paid the ultimate price for this wild strategy. Yet he nodded. One must obey Enkov.

“Fire one and two,” he whispered.

The watch officer stared at him. Everyone else held his breath.

“Fire,” repeated the captain. “Tubes one and two.”

“Firing one and two, sir,” said the firing officer.

The Riga shuddered.

In the dark ocean depths, two nuclear-tipped missiles hurtled skyward. Enemy radar and sonar picked them up. Enemy officers roared orders. Planes turned to intercept. Counter missiles left circling bombers. Other bombers and choppers needed less than fifty seconds to rendezvous to the drop zone to let their ultra-powerful depth charges sink. None of them, however, were going to make it in time.

4.

Unaware of their fate, Marten and Omi continued to talk. Then, over twenty kilometers away, an amazingly bright flash lit up the dark clouds. A huge, ominous mushroom cloud arose. It towered higher and higher. Marten and Omi stared at it in shock, their mouths open.