Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
They ran up the rest of the stairs, and Tychus
automatical y headed to the room Daisy shared with
three other girls. She shook her red head. “Not
tonight,” she said. “I told you: special.”
She led him to a door on the far end of the hal , to a
room he’d never visited before. She fished for the
key, unlocked it, and pushed open the door.
The room was lavish, painted in dark, soothing
colors, and Tychus whistled softly, impressed. Art
hung on the wal s, and the furnishings appeared to be
genuine antiques. In one corner was a large claw-foot
tub with gleaming gold fixtures. But the centerpiece of
the room was the bed. Huge, canopied, large enough
for more than two, its frame was heavy cast iron and
was probably handmade. Fanciful creatures twined
their way around the bed frame, culminating with two
gargoyles perched on smal golden orbs on each
corner. The sheets were red and satiny-looking.
“My, my, girlie, you pul out al the stops when you
say ‘special,’ don’t you?”
“I most certainly do!” laughed Daisy, throwing her
arms around him and kissing him. His massive arms
went around her and he lifted her off her feet, kissing
her back and then moving toward the bed. Daisy
pul ed free of the kiss and slapped playful y and utterly
ineffectively at the broad shoulders.
“Hey, now, this is my surprise! Don’t you go rushing
and spoiling things!”
Tychus obediently set her down on the bed and
grinned at her. “Al right, darlin’, you’re running this
show, and so far I like what I see.”
Her gaze flickered down to his crotch. “So do I,” she
said. “Now, you gotta do just as I say.”
He placed a hand to his heart and bowed
mockingly. “I am your obedient servant, madam.”
Stil ful y clothed, she kicked off her boots and
scooted back on the enormous bed, her eyes bright
with mischief. “Very good. Now. First of al , take off
your boots.”
He obeyed as she instructed him to divest himself
of boots, shirt, weapons, and pants until he stood
proudly naked before her. She patted the pil ow.
“Now, stretch out here for me,” she invited. He did
so, appreciating the fact that the bed was large
enough so he could ful y stretch out. Daisy leaned
over and kissed him, lingeringly and passionately.
She trailed her fingers over his huge chest, then up
one of his arms, and then—
Tychus laughed as a handcuff snapped into place
around his wrist, securing him to the iron bed frame.
He stared at the gleaming metal for a moment, then a
huge grin split his face.
“Oh, darlin’ Daisy,” he said, warmth in his voice, “I
didn’t know you was into this sort of thing, or we’d
have been playing games like this long before now.”
“Wel , I think tonight’s the perfect time to start,”
Daisy replied, leaning forward to kiss his nose before
snapping the second restraint around his wrist.
Tychus tugged experimental y. These were the
genuine articles, not play toys. It would seem Miss
Daisy was more hard-core than he had imagined. It
was a wonderful thought. Tychus made himself
comfortable on the pil ows, letting his arms relax in the
handcuffs, and smiled as he anticipated the delights
to come.
Daisy slipped off the bed and flounced to a large
dresser with several drawers and cabinets. She
opened a drawer and withdrew something she
playful y hid behind her as she approached the bed.
“Whatcha got there, darlin’?” he asked, waggling
his eyebrows.
Her smile grew, became one of triumph. She took
her hand from behind her back and showed him.
In her painted and manicured fingers was a hypo.
“You should have paid me two months ago when I
asked, Tychus Findlay,” she said.
Al the heat that had been rushing to his groin
dissipated, as if he had just had cold water thrown on
him. He felt armor going up around his soul just as it
did when he had put on the hardskin back in his army
days. It was the oldest trick in the book, and he’d
fal en for it. The thought infuriated him. He gave her a
little smile.
“Aw, honey, that was a nice night. I thought that was
a free-bie,” he drawled.
She laughed harshly. “You ain’t that pretty, Tychus.”
“Honey, that wounds me right to the core, that does.
Hurts my ego.”
Daisy was done bantering. She continued in a hard
voice. “And that nonsense, sending me like a damn
cal ing card to Marshal Butler when you and Jim made
off with those planet-hoppers. Also an unpaid job, I
might add. Wel , I told him quite a few things he was
mighty interested in hearing. He and his boys are
going to be here in just a few minutes. And when they
get here, I’m going to be one rich woman off that
bounty that’s on your head.”
“I think you get more if I’m alive,” he reminded her
as she scooted over to him on the bed, bringing the
needle closer to his neck. “Last time I checked,
anyway.”
“You afraid of dying, Tychus Findlay?” she scoffed.
“Course I get more money if you’re alive. This is just
enough sedatives to knock out a horse. Which should
take care of you. You hold stil , and this doesn’t have
to hurt any more than—”
He had been lying quietly, channeling his rage,
control ing it. Now, as a teased animal kept in a cage
might do, he flung open the door to his fury. Tychus
directed his rage into his right hand, wil ing it to pul
against the chain that imprisoned him, demanding
that it break. It did, with a loud crack.
Daisy’s eyes widened to the size of credit chips. An
instant later his fist, his wrist stil encircled by metal
and trailing the snapped chain, was in her face. She
flew across the bed and col apsed like a rag dol in
the corner.
He let out a bel ow of fury, using the sound to focus
his strength, and snapped the chain on the left
handcuff. His feet hit the floor with a thump, and a
heartbeat later Tychus Findlay was racing down the
stairs, shouting for Jim at the top of his lungs.
It had been a good evening for Jim Raynor.
He had been enjoying himself, as he always did
here, even before Daisy had sidled up to Tychus and
stolen him away for the rest of the evening. With
Tychus out of the game, Jim’s luck had continued to
improve, and he’d won three out of the last five hands.
The alcohol had been doing its happy job, and he had
grinned cheerful y at the glowering men whose chips
he had gathered to himself lovingly. When in his
unsteadiness a few had fal en to the floor, he had
yel ed, “Hey! Misty! Those are for you!”
“Jim, honey, you’re a dol ,” she’d shouted back
across the noisy room.
Jim went to the cashier’s table, dribbling chips
along the way and not caring because it was a drop in
the bucket. He exchanged the colorful chips for
credits and, feeling generous, bought the table of
losers he’d left a round of drinks.
He made his way, careful y, to the dance stage and
gazed up raptly at Evangelina. She gave him a big
smile and a wink, and licked her lips.
Oh, yes, Jim thought as he settled in with a beer
and a goofy smile. This night was shaping up to be
among the best he’d spent here.
And that was when he heard the bel owing.
“Jimmy! Jimmy, goddamn it, where the fekk are
you?”
There was only one person who could yel so loudly.
Jim turned, surprised, to the stairwel and blinked at
what he saw there.
Tychus Findlay, in al his unclothed glory, fil ed the
door frame. Even in the dim, smoky lighting, Jim could
see the fury on his face. The faint il umination glinted
off something metal ic around his wrists.
The band fel silent and the crowd alternately
gasped and laughed. The girls, pausing in their
dancing routine, made approving whooping noises
and applauded. Tychus ignored them al , marching
through the room as the crowd hastened to part for
him. He grabbed Jim by his shirtfront.
“Let’s go! Now! Butler’s on his way.”
“Whoa, Butler? What happened? Where’s Daisy?
And how come you’re na—”
Tychus shoved his face to within a half a centimeter
of Jim’s. “NOW!” He did not give Raynor an option.
He slipped his hand around to the back of Jim’s dark
head, tangled his fingers in his friend’s hair, and
began to pul as he ran to the door.
“Ow! Hey!” Jim tugged free and cast an apologetic
glance over his shoulder at Evangelina, who was
laughing as hard as the rest of the girls and who blew
him a kiss.
“What about your clothes?” Jim asked as he
fol owed Tychus, deliberately not looking at anything
but the other man’s face.
“Ain’t got time!” Tychus shouted. “Daisy turned me
in, the bitch. They’re gonna be here any minute now.”
Tychus’s lack of apparel continued to cause a bit of
a stir as the two bul ed their way through the gambling
hal area to mingled exclamations of irritation, offense,
amusement, and, from some of the female patrons,
appreciation. Tychus almost didn’t bother opening the
back door as he kept going.
“Damn,” Tychus said. “Left my keys in my pocket.”
“Come on, then,” Jim said. “I probably shouldn’t be
driving, but this is an emergency. Sit behind me. But
not too close, okay?”
Tychus laughed. They headed for the new vulture
Raynor had purchased and jumped on. Tychus
grunted a little; the seat was no doubt cold and
uncomfortable. Jim couldn’t help it. He started to
laugh, and once he’d started, he couldn’t stop. As he
gunned the engines and the responsive bike surged
forward despite the extra weight, he could see several
lights approaching Wicked Wayne’s.
“Damn,” Tychus muttered.
“What?”
“Left my smokes in my pocket too.”
Jim laughed, then pointed. “See those lights over
there? That’s Butler and his buddies. They are going
to be so pissed off.”
“Makes me wanna stay just so I can see their
faces.”
They were already several hundred yards away,
fleeing to—
“Uh, Tychus? Where the hel are we going?”
“Away from Butler, capture, and deceitful women,
Jimmy. And that’s real y al we need to know, ain’t it?”
“You know,” Jim said as he turned toward nature’s
stone sculptures that were the badlands, “I reckon it
is.”
Dawn was spectacular as it spread languidly and
in startling shades of color over the badlands. It
looked to Jim, as he stood in the mouth of the cave,
sipping a cup of powdered coffee heated with water
boiled over a campfire, as if someone had poured
pink and gold and lavender over the red stone.
“That’s mighty pretty,” he said.
From the depths of the cave, Tychus gave a grunt.
“Sure is.”
Jim turned from the painting coming to life before
his eyes to glance at his friend. He could see Tychus
only by the light of the glowing ember of a cigar he’d
bummed off Jim.
They had managed to swipe some clothes after
giving Butler the slip, but they fitted Tychus poorly. The
shirt didn’t button across the chest—hel , it was a
good three inches shy of even closing—and already
one of the thighs of the trousers had split. Findlay was
lying on the stone floor, chewing his stogie, eyes
catching its orange gleam. On one side of him was a
sack containing various items they’d stashed here for
just such an emergency: extra smokes, coffee, and a
few credits. On Tychus’s other side was the jukebox
they had stolen from the maglev train. Jim sighed
inwardly as he looked at “her.” One of these days,
they’d need to get her someplace where they could
juice her up. She’d look like a stained-glass window
and sound like a church choir.
Silence. Jim lit a cigar of his own and swirled the
muddy coffee around in the canteen. He took another
swig and grimaced. The fire crackled, burning
cheerful y and adding some warmth to the cold stone
cave.
“This is bucolic, ain’t it, Jimmy?”
“Yep.”
Another silence. Tychus sat up, ripping another
seam, strode to the campfire, and tossed the cigar
butt in.
“I hate bucolic.”