Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
toward its final destination, where it would disgorge
its precious cargo.
Two men waited in the cool shelter of a cave,
watching the silvery serpentine object. They were
silent, but it was an easy silence, and the only sound
was the inhalation of one of them as he sucked
smoke from a glowing cigar one final time, dropped
the stogie, and crushed it out with a single step from a
massive boot.
“Let’s go ride that pony,” said Tychus Findlay. Next
to him, not in any way a smal man but looking
comparatively tiny next to the giant that was Tychus,
was a shaggy-haired, bearded man who was already
sitting astride a vulture hoverbike. He gave his friend
a wicked grin.
“Move your ass, then, slowpoke,” he said, kicked
the bike into life, and charged down the sloping ravine
toward the maglev train. Tychus swore, jumped on his
own bike, and took after Jim Raynor at a reckless
speed.
It was at times like this that Jim Raynor, former
marine lance corporal, proud citizen of the
Confederacy and erstwhile farm boy, felt most alive.
At the speed at which he was urging the vulture, the
wind cooled his face so that the oppressive heat
vanished. He felt like a wolf hunting down his prey,
except the purpose of today’s adventure was not the
death of a living being but the death of the empty state
of Raynor’s and Tychus’s wal ets. This was a cargo
train, not a passenger train, and inside its silvery
innards was—if Tychus’s tip was right, and Jim had
every reason to believe it would be—a very lovely,
very large safe fil ed with Confederate credits.
“Why, it’s a rescue mission, Jimmy,” Tychus had
rumbled, his blue eyes dancing with good humor as
he had fil ed Raynor in on the plan. “Those poor creds
—they’d just be condemned to lining the pockets of
some Old Families who don’t need any more money.
Or else put to some nefarious scheme that could hurt
somebody. It’s our duty—hel , it’s our
calling
—to
liberate them creds to where they could do something
that real y mattered.”
“Like buying us drinks, women, and steak dinners.”
“That’s a good start.”
“You’ve got a heart of gold, Tychus. I’ve never met
such an altruistic man in my life. I got goddamn tears
in my eyes.”
“It’s a tough job, but somebody’s got to do it.”
Jim grinned as he recal ed the conversation. He
and Tychus were behind the train, catching up to it
quickly. He stayed right and Tychus veered left.
Tychus crossed over the maglev tracks, adjusting the
magnetic frequency on his bike to compensate so
that he, like the train itself, could cross easily. Jim
increased his speed, moving alongside the maglev
until the right car came into view. He and Tychus had
spent hours analyzing al kinds of transportation
vessels over the last few years, sometimes simply
from blueprints or images, but usual y up close and
personal, as they were about to do now. They had
“liberated” other credits before—it seemed to them
like hundreds of thousands over the years, although
the liberated credits never seemed to stay with them
very long. That was al right too. It was part of the ride
that life had become.
“Careful, boy. Don’t move ahead too fast,” came
Tychus’s gravel y voice in his ear. “I ain’t coming back
for you if you drop in on the wrong car.”
Raynor grinned. “Right. You’d just take al the creds
and hightail it out to Wicked Wayne’s.”
“Damn straight. So hit the mark.”
Timing was crucial. Raynor sped up even more,
glancing down at his controls to see the smal dot that
represented Tychus doing the same. He knew they
were mirror images of each other after doing this as
often as they had over the past five years.
“Upsy-daisy,” Tychus said. In unison, they hit the lifts
and rose vertical y so the vultures—customized within
an inch of their lives—were now flying, if not as high
as their namesakes, then at least slightly higher than
the train’s roof. The uniquely modified hoverbikes
landed, bumped the top of the train, landed again,
and the two men had them clamped and locked down
within half a second—the magnetic locks also
custom-instal ed for exactly this purpose. They leaped
off the bikes. Next step: getting to the back of the car,
climbing down, opening the door, and seeing who
comprised the welcoming committee.
At that precise instant, the train took a bend and
brought them right into a crosscurrent of wind. The
sudden sharp movement threw Raynor off balance.
He fel hard and started sliding toward the edge.
Tychus’s gloved hand shot out and grabbed the neck
of Raynor’s vest while he threw himself down, reached
up, and seized the secured vulture.
Raynor jolted to a halt. Adrenaline shot through him,
but not fear. He’d done this before, too, and he was
prepared. He took a second to get his bearings, then
pointed. One hand on the bike, the other clutching
Jim, the bigger man moved Raynor about a third of a
meter until he was facing the end of the car rather than
the side.
“Hold my legs!” Raynor shouted to Tychus. Tychus
grunted, releasing the vest col ar, then grabbing first
Jim’s belt and then his ankle as Raynor slid forward.
Raynor pressed a button and activated the powerful
magnets embedded in his vest. Between these and
Tychus’s near-bone-crunching grip on his ankle,
Raynor wasn’t going anywhere. Normal y he’d try to
drop down on the smal platform at the back of the
car, but the train was stil going through what seemed
to be a damned wind tunnel, and time was of the
essence once they’d landed with what had to have
been an audible thump on the roof of the thing. Raynor
stretched forward far enough so he could get one arm
down and felt about quickly but blindly. There it was:
the top of the door. Not the ideal place to plant the
explosive, but it would have to do.
He fished out the smal device from his pocket,
tapped in the activation code, slapped it on the door
as far down as he could put it, deactivated the mag
grips, and yel ed, “Pul back! Pul back!”
Tychus yanked him back so hard, Jim felt the
exposed part of his arms burn from the friction. It
wasn’t comfortable, but he didn’t mind too much, as
he was safely away from the explosion, which shot
black smoke and bits of debris in al directions.
“Don’t suppose you got anything resembling a look-
see?”
“Nope,” Jim said. Stil lying down, he grabbed his
pistol from his holster, shot Tychus a grin, and said,
“What? You scared of dropping in on a bunch of
Confederate guards?”
“Not me, little girl,” Tychus said. His own weapon
was strapped to his back. He reached and pul ed it
out: an AGR-14 that looked as mean as Tychus
himself. “Let’s go.”
Tychus dropped to his bel y beside Jim, and they let
the very speed of the train move them forward. They
slid to the edge, and at the last minute each man shot
out a hand, gripped the top of the train, and flipped
down, somersaulting into the cabin, ready to attack.
They were greeted by no one.
“Aw, shit, Jimmy,” Tychus said. “This ain’t the car
with the safe!”
Indeed it was not. It was crammed to the brim with
cargo: instruments, statuary, furniture, al careful y
wrapped up and secured. No doubt there was a
fortune here, but it was nothing they could do anything
about.
Jim half expected Tychus to slap the back of his
head, but the man was already moving forward to the
end of the car. “You were supposed to have done your
research,” Tychus muttered.
“I did,” Raynor said. “Seventeenth car. They must
have changed—”
Raynor was fol owing, pistol out but pointed down,
when a curious shape caught his eye. Tychus was
wrestling with the door, so he permitted himself to pul
back the protective covering.
His eyes went wide.
“We’re gonna have to blast this one too, looks like
—Jimmy, what the hel are you doing back there?”
Raynor paid him no heed. He tugged more, and the
covering slipped away.
“I think I’m in love,” he breathed as his eyes took in
the beauty of the antique in front of him.
“You say that every time we visit Wayne’s,” Tychus
muttered, but swung his head back to see what had
Jim so distracted. “What the hel is
that
?”
Jim felt as though he were having a religious
experience, and indeed the item he was gazing at
worshipful y reminded him of the old-style stained-
glass windows he had seen images of. It was a piece
of furniture, though, huge and solid and curved at the
top, like a window. Glass of bright colors covered its
front, and if it was what Raynor thought it was, those
curving tubes of glass would light up when the thing
was activated. And inside—oh, inside was where the
treasures were.
“I’m not sure—I’ve never seen one before, but I think
… I’m pretty sure it’s a jukebox,” Raynor said,
reaching out a gloved hand to touch the curving metal
and wood and glass construct.
“I am no more enlightened than I was before,
Jimmy,” Tychus growled, “and time is wasting.”
“A jukebox is an old, old method of playing music,”
Raynor explained. “Music used to be pressed into
vinyl disks cal ed records. There might be up to a
thousand songs in here—songs that no one’s heard in
maybe a couple hundred years.”
“You and your old-fashioned crap. First the Colt,
now this.” They had done one robbery, early on, of the
summer home of one of the lesser Old Families of the
Confederacy. The place had been oozing valuable
antiques, and when Raynor had stumbled across a
Colt Single Action Army revolver hundreds of years
old, he’d had to have it. It went with him constantly,
although he had more contemporary weapons as wel .
Getting bul ets made for the antique was expensive,
so he rarely fired the thing. He just liked the feel of it
on his hip. Tychus had rol ed his eyes then the same
way he was rol ing them now. “Nice history lesson,
Professor. Now, let’s get our asses outta here. We
stil got a safe to blow.”
Tychus was right. Raynor gave the old machine a
final pat and turned to fol ow Tychus.
Final y, with a muttered grunt and a wel -placed
heave of his shoulder, Findlay opened the door,
stepped out, placed the second explosive device on
the door of the car ahead of them, and then ducked
back into the car with Jim. Both of them dove for
cover as the device detonated.
Raynor grimaced, for two reasons. One, they
usual y only brought four sets of explosive devices
with them: one to blow the door, one to blow whatever
safe they were trying to open, and two as backups.
Which they had just used. There had better be only
one last door between them and their goal, or else the
Confederate credits would not get liberated after al .
Two, they’d have to make a stand here, in this room,
and the jukebox might get hit. He found he was
unreasonably distressed by the thought.
Even before the smoke cleared, the first few rounds
of gauss rifle fire came through the blown-open doors,
spraying down the contents of the room. There was a
clang as metal struck and pierced metal, and pieces
of wood splintered and flew up in the air. Crouched
down behind what seemed to be an upright piano,
Raynor didn’t dare raise his head to see if his jukebox
had taken any damage. He’d find out soon enough.
Tychus, with a roar, rapidly closed the distance
between himself and the guards and began slamming
them with the butt of his rifle. They were taken
completely off guard, having expected an in-kind
firefight and not anticipating that they would be rushed
by an apparent madman. At such close quarters, they
couldn’t fire lest they harm one another, and Tychus
and Jim whooped as they either knocked the hapless
fel ows unconscious or tossed them off the train
through the blown-open doors. Tychus kicked the rifle