Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
the two former marines fought back grins as crowds
often literal y parted for them. They were able to bel y
up to any bar and get top-shelf drinks for the regular
price, and sometimes on the house. The top gambling
dens seemed to have a seat for them, and every
“show” saw them at the best seats. Quieter offers
were made, too, for more private shows.
There was one particularly notable incident that Jim
knew he would remember for a long, long time.
Tychus had had more to drink than any man ought to
be able to stomach and survive. Even so, to the eyes
of those who didn’t know him wel , he seemed little
affected by the liquor. Jim knew better, and when
Tychus pul ed the stunt that had everyone talking for
the next week, he alone was unsurprised.
There was one place cal ed The Silver Bel e. It was
one of the more respectable “female dancer” venues
in Deadman’s Port—which was to say it was cleaner
than most and the alcohol was pretty good. The girls,
too, were cleaner than most, and also pretty good.
They had a genuine show, with an actual script and
something approaching decent acting. There were
three shows that they cycled through regularly.
This one was some sort of romantic tragedy. It
vaguely reminded Jim of one of the classics … if the
classics had simulated sex scenes and reasons for
the characters’ clothes to conveniently become torn,
damaged, or removed in some other fashion.
They had shown up halfway into the first scene—
which was fine, as they’d seen it before—and Tychus
immediately went to use the facilities. Five minutes
later Jim, who had been relaxing in his seat, sat bolt
upright.
Tychus Findlay stood on the stage, playing the lead
male character. He wore a huge grin, and very little
else. Jim groaned and placed his head in his hands.
Over to the side, the manager looked slightly sick, but
he was also holding an enormous sack of credits.
Jim had to admit that Tychus wasn’t half bad. He
knew the script—wel , mostly. And when he didn’t, the
other actors ad-libbed or shed their clothes for no
particular reason, and the crowd seemed to approve.
Jim found lots of reasons to get up and leave during
particularly, uh,
dramatic
scenes.
There was a party afterward, and later Jim was
sorry that he had gotten so drunk that he remembered
very little of it.
Despite the giddiness of their new, elevated
status, Jim found himself more subdued than one
might have expected. Tychus, knowing Jim as long as
he had, picked up on it and commented with his usual
subtle, caring understanding as they watched a floor
show.
“You look like you’ve been drinking piss instead of
fine booze,” he said.
Jim, who had in fact been drinking quite a lot of fine
booze, nodded somewhat unsteadily. “Yeah,” he said,
“I reckon I do. Things don’t feel good, Tychus.”
Tychus leaned back in the chair, watching the
nearly naked women gyrating about two feet from
them. He puffed one of Scutter’s cigars—a handful of
which he had accepted from O’Banon before Randal
had shown them out. Jim thought that Scutter had
looked surprised and was fairly certain he had been
offering only one or two, but was also fairly certain it
was no skin off his nose to acquire more.
“What don’t feel good about this?” Tychus lifted his
arms expansively to include the view, the booze, and
essential y the entire joint.
Jim opened his mouth to tel him about the
message Myles had sent, but thought better of it, at
least for the moment. Instead he said, “I keep seein’
Ryk in my head. With his neck squeezed by Daun.”
Tychus’s grin faded. “Yeah. I seen a lot in battle,
Jimmy. And I seen a lot just bein’ me. But that …” He
shook his head and was quiet for a long moment.
“Jimmy, I don’t think it makes me any less of a man to
tel you that Ezekiel Daun scares the shit out of me.”
“Me too,” Jim said. “I think he’d scare the shit out of
any sane human being. Kydd was a good one.
Better’n you and me, Tychus. He had a chance to go
back to the sort of life we’re scrambling to find, and he
didn’t.” Jim was surprised to feel tears stinging his
eyes. He blamed it on the booze and the extreme
agitation Daun had caused.
“Yeah,” Tychus agreed quietly. “He didn’t never let
anyone down. Not ever.”
“When they came for him, and he coulda gotten his
old life back…. Turning away from that chance was a
noble thing, Tychus. A noble thing. He stayed
because he wanted to make sure his friends stayed
alive.”
Tychus nodded, blowing a stream of smoke into the
air. “That it was. I ain’t seen a lot of noble things in my
life, but I seen that.”
“We didn’t do that much with him afterward,” Jim
muttered, knocking back a drink and pouring himself
another with an unsteady hand.
“Don’t you go blaming yourself, Jimmy,” Tychus
said, his voice slightly sharp. “We didn’t ditch him or
nothing. We just kinda went our separate ways.”
“Yeah? And what kind of way did
he
take? We
didn’t even bother to ask.”
“Ryk was a sniper. Stands to reason he’d use the
skil s he had.”
“Yeah, but … you know how he looked at it.” Jim
fumbled for words. “Ryk used his talents to keep us
safe. He was … protective. But I’m thinking that
maybe he just went and hired himself out as an
assassin.”
“Again, I say that complicated word: ‘so’?”
“That ain’t right. Kil in’ ain’t just kil in’, and you know
it. Not for him, at least, it wasn’t. For him it was about
helping his friends stay alive. About doing something
good. Maybe if we’d stuck together, he wouldn’t have
had to go hire himself out like a common kil er. Take
that gift and just use it for money.”
“Maybe if we’d stuck together, Daun would have
had three at once.”
“Maybe not. Maybe we could have stopped the
bastard.”
“You know, Jimmy, ‘maybe’ is a fine word, but it
don’t get you drunk, rich, or laid,” drawled Tychus.
Jim al owed as how Tychus had a point. “Stil ,” he
said, “we’l never know, because we didn’t do a noble
thing. And I wish to God we had.”
“Hel , Jimmy, I ain’t any more capable of doing
something noble than of jumping off the roof and
flying,” Tychus said.
“On that we are agreed,” Jim said, smiling a little.
He lifted his glass. “Here’s to Hobarth, who had the
guts to crawl out of a prison camp with enough wits
left to bring it down. To Feek, who saved our lives
more than once. And to our buddy Ryk. Noble people
al , and I aim to never forget them.”
“I’l drink to that,” Tychus said, and began to back
up his words with action, adding, “Course, I’l drink to
just about anything.”
As they stumbled down the troughs between
ruined ships that served as streets, Jim’s mood grew
darker and darker, and his thoughts turned to what
Scutter O’Banon did. Jim didn’t mind exotic dancers
who did a little more on the side. He didn’t mind
getting drunk. He didn’t mind “liberating” credits.
He minded sel ing people. He minded running
drugs known to be dangerous or far, far too addictive
—substances that turned people into zombies. And
he very, very much minded torture. He did not like
Scutter O’Banon: did not like what the man did, did
not like that the deal had changed now that Ezekiel
Daun was on their tail—did not like that Daun was on
their tail, period—and did not like that he had had to
hightail it out of New Sydney space before finding out
what the
hell
Myles had wanted with him.
So, while Tychus wanted to pop his head into every
crevice that promised “Girls,” “Booze,” or “Gambling,”
Jim, despite the fuzziness of his head, found himself
looking for other, tamer distractions. He did not find
them, and so he was in a surly mood when he found
himself at a bar, both hands wrapped around a beer,
talking to the bartender who, while not Misty, actual y
looked like she gave a damn.
“Just … you know, wanna make sure she’s okay,”
Jim was slurring as the dark-skinned girl nodded
sympathetical y. Her brown eyes were kind as she set
another bottle down in front of him.
“Been a long time since you’ve seen your
momma?” she asked.
“Yep. Too long.”
She dried a glass. “I’ve not seen my momma and
daddy for a long time myself.” She smiled a little. “Not
by my choice, though. Guess that being a bartender in
a place cal ed Dead-man’s Port isn’t exactly the future
they envisioned for their little girl.”
Jim winced. Her words had struck too close to
home for his comfort. A few meters away, Tychus
cried, “Come to Papa!” and presumably either was
hauling in his winnings at the gambling table or
hauling an attractive girl onto his lap.
“I got a friend might be able to link you up—for a
fee,” the bartender continued.
“What do you mean, ‘link me up’?”
“He could get a message through to your momma.”
Jim started so violently, he almost spil ed his beer
but, with the reflexes of several years spent drinking,
caught it just in time. “I don’t wanna talk to my mom.”
The girl seemed puzzled. “Wel , al right, then.
Anything else I can get you, hon?”
“Wait.” He hesitated. “Your friend. I want to talk to
him.”
“He’l find you,” she said, and winked.
Jim was even further in his cups when a man of
medium build and nondescript appearance sat down
beside him as he watched the show. The girls had
barely started their routine and most of their clothes
were stil on. Jim didn’t even notice the man until he
spoke—quietly—yet somehow managed to be heard
over the whooping of appreciative customers and
blaring music.
“I understand you need a message delivered,” the
man said.
Jim turned. The man was completely forgettable,
although being drunk probably didn’t help Jim’s
powers of observation. It took him a couple of
seconds, then his eyes widened. “Bartender’s friend,”
he said.
“Exactly. Now, how can I help you?”
Jim told him. The man listened, nodding now and
then. “Yes, I believe I can assist you. Shiloh is rather
out of the way and a bit of a backwater, so I’m afraid
I’l have to charge extra.”
“Don’t care.” Jim didn’t.
“Wish more customers were like you, Mr. Raynor.”
The man smiled. “I receive messages at this
address.” He slipped Jim a data card. It was too dark
and Jim was too drunk to read it anyway, so he
merely nodded. “If you don’t hear from me, feel free to
stop by,” the man suggested. “Quietly. With a little bit
of luck, you’l be hearing from one Mr. Myles
Hammond of Shiloh very soon.”
He named his fee; Jim paid it; they shook hands;
and Jim returned his attention to the dancers. His
heart felt somewhat eased, and he realized just how
much this had been weighing on him. He even felt
better about the deal they had struck with Scutter
O’Banon. At least it would keep the walking nightmare
that was Ezekiel Daun at bay.
He ordered another beer, stretched out his long
legs, and smiled at the buxom beauty gyrating near
him. She responded by closing one heavily made-up
eye in an inviting wink.
The sun was merciless and cruel, and when the
door to the room Jim had reserved for the night
opened and the men who entered pul ed the shades,
Raynor was hard-pressed not to yelp in agony even
as he reached for his gun and trained it on the
intruders. He blinked, lowering the gun as he
recognized Cadaver.
“Baines? What the hel are you doing here?”
The girl beside Jim, significantly less lovely in the
harsh morning light, muttered and ducked her head
back under the covers.
“Mr. O’Banon has just learned that you have
received an encrypted message from Shiloh.”
Jim was so muzzy-headed it took him a few
seconds to catch up with Cadaver’s words. From
Shiloh? Already? Damn, that … whatshisname was
good.
“That was fast,” he said, moving as quickly as his