The last thing Private Pak ever saw was a terrible brilliance in the millisecond before he exploded in a flash of super-heated body fluids.
General Quang cursed as his three lead men died, but it had not been entirely unexpected. It must be the American’s African aide, yet there was only one of him, bioenhanced or not, and the ramp was not the only way up.
“They’re spreading out,” Germaine reported. “I can’t get a good implant reading through the ramp, but some of them are swinging round front.”
“There is a scaffold below the edge of the platform,” Tsien said.
“Damn! Remind me to detail armed guards to each construction site when we get home, Al.”
“Yes, sir.”
Litanil wiped out Private Pak’s team and raged off after fresh targets. Ahead of her, half a dozen bioenhanced Terra-born construction workers armed with steel reinforcing rods and Imperial blasting compound began working their way around the flank of a second assault group.
Quang poked his head up. This was taking too long. But there would still be time. His men were in position at last, and he barked an order.
“Down!” Germaine shouted, and Hatcher and Tsien dropped instantly as the stubby grenade launchers coughed. Two grenades hit short or exploded against the outer wall; the third headed straight into the door, and Germaine’s left hand struck it like a handball. The explosion ripped his hand apart, and shrapnel tore into his chest and shoulder.
Agony stabbed him, but his implants stopped the flow of blood to his shredded hand and flooded his system with a super-charged blast of adrenalin. The first wave came up the ramp after the grenades, and he cut them down like bloody wheat.
Hatcher fired as a head rose over the edge of the scaffolding. His first shot missed; his second hit just above the left eye. Beside him, Tsien was flat on his belly, firing two-handed. Another attacker dropped.
A sudden burst of explosions ripped the dusty smoke as the construction workers tossed their makeshift bombs. The attack squad faltered as three of their number were blown apart. A fourth emptied a full magazine into a charging man. He killed his assailant, but he never knew; the steel rod his victim had carried impaled him like a spear.
His six surviving comrades broke and ran—directly in front of Litanil’s power bore.
Eight more of Quang’s men died, but a ninth slammed a heart-rupturing burst into Allen Germaine. Major Germaine was a dead man, but he was a bioenhanced corpse. He stayed on his feet long enough to aim very carefully before he squeezed the trigger.
Gerald Hatcher swore viciously as his aide toppled without a sound, grav gun bouncing from his remaining hand. Bastards! Bastards! He squeezed off another shot, hitting his target in the torso, then dropped him with a second.
It wasn’t enough, and he knew it.
Quang’s number four attack squad had a good position between two huge earth-movers, but there were no more targets in their field of fire. It was time to go, and they began to filter back in pairs, each halting in turn to provide covering fire for their fellows. It was a textbook maneuver.
As the first pair reached the ends of their shielding earth-movers, a pair of bioenhanced hands reached out from either side. Fingers ten times stronger than their own closed, and two tracheas crushed. The twitching bodies were tossed aside, and the crouching ambushers waited patiently for their next victims.
Quang popped his head up and saw the grav gun lying two meters beyond the door. Now! He clutched his assault rifle and rose, waving his surviving men forward, and followed up the ramp in their wake.
A last attacker crouched on the scaffolding. He’d seen what happened when his fellows exposed themselves, and he poked just the muzzle of his rifle over the edge. It was a sound idea, but in his excitement he rose just too high. The crown of his head showed, and Gerald Hatcher put a pistol bullet through it in the instant before the automatic fire shattered both his legs.
Litanil swung her power bore again and knew they were winning.
The attackers had achieved the surprise they sought, but they hadn’t realized what they were attacking. Most of the site personnel were unenhanced Terra-born, but a significant percentage were not, and those who were enhanced had full Fleet packages, modified at Colin MacIntyre’s order to incorporate fold-space coms. They might be unarmed, but they were strong, tough, fast, and in unbroken communication.
And, as Litanil herself had proved, a construction site abounded in improvisational weapons.
Tsien Tao-ling was no longer a field marshal. He was a warrior alone and betrayed, and Quang was still out there. Whatever happened, Quang must not be allowed to live.
Tsien tossed aside his empty pistol, his mind cold and clear, and rose on his hands and toes, like a runner in the blocks.
General Quang blinked as Tsien exploded from the control room. He would never have believed the huge man could move that quickly! But what did he hope to gain? He could not outrun bullets!
Then he saw Tsien drop and snatch up the grav gun as he rolled towards the scaffolding. No!
Assault rifles barked, but the men behind them had been as surprised as Quang. They were late, and they tried to compensate by leading their target. They would catch him as he rolled over the edge of the scaffolding into cover.
Tsien threw out one leg, grunting as a kneecap shattered on concrete, but it had the desired effect. He stopped dead, clutching Germaine’s grav gun, and the bullets which should have killed him went wide. He raised the muzzle, not trying to rise from where he lay.
Quang screamed in frustration as Tsien opened fire. Three of his remaining men were down. Then four. Five! He raised his own weapon, firing at the marshal, but fury betrayed his aim.
Tsien grunted again as a slug ripped through his right biceps. A second shattered his shoulder, but he held down the grav gun’s trigger, and his fire swept the ramp like a broom.
Quang’s last trooper was down, and sudden terror filled him. He threw away his rifle and tried to drop down the ramp, but he was too late. His last memory on Earth was the cold, bitter hatred in Tsien Tao-ling’s pitiless eyes.
Gerald Hatcher groaned, then bit his lip against a scream as someone moved his left leg. He shuddered and managed to raise his eyelids, wondering for a moment why he felt so weak, why there was so much pain.
Tao-ling bent over him, and he bit off most of another scream as the marshal tightened something on his right leg. A tourniquet, Hatcher realized dizzily … and then he remembered.
His expression twisted with more than pain as he saw Allen Germaine’s dead face close beside him, but his mind was working once more. Poorly, slowly, with frustrating dark patches, but working. The firing seemed to have stopped, and if there was no more shooting and Tao-ling was working on him, they must have won, mustn’t they? He was rather pleased by his ability to work that out.
Tsien crawled up beside him. One shoulder was swollen by a makeshift, blood-soaked bandage, and his left leg dragged uselessly, but his good hand clutched Allen’s grav gun as he lowered himself between Hatcher and the door with a groan.
“T-Tao-ling?” the general managed.
“You are awake?” Tsien’s voice was hoarse with pain. “You have the constitution of a bull, Gerald.”
“Th-thanks. What … what kind of shape are we … ?”
“I believe we have beaten off the attack. I do not know how. I am afraid you are badly hurt, my friend.”