Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
“Because I thought I could make a difference. The
Confederacy has become more corrupt than ever,
and there was a little while when I was able to do a
little good for people. But not anymore. Not here.
They’ve got too good a grip on things here. Maybe
things would be different somewhere else. I’ve been
thinking about going to a settlement on Mar Sara.”
“Mar Sara?” Jim laughed. “Remind me never to go
on vacation with you. That planet is a hel hole.”
Myles chuckled. “Maybe. But I ain’t going there for
the climate. There’s good people out there, Jim.
People just trying to make a decent living and lead
decent lives. I’ve been offered an opportunity to
become a local magistrate.” He’d been looking off in
the distance, his gaze unfocused, but now it snapped
sharply back to Raynor. “If I go … why don’t you come
with me?”
“What? No, thanks. I got better things to do with my
time.”
“Sure you do.” Myles’s voice dripped sarcasm.
“Just remember, the offer’s there if you should change
your mind.”
“I won’t, but … thanks.”
“Anything for a Raynor. You know that.” He cleared
his throat. “Wel , come on. I’l take you to see your
momma.”
Jim stood for a long moment in front of his
boyhood home. It was exactly how he remembered it.
Most of it was located underground, keeping it safe
from both blowing snow and sand and the annual
temperature fluctuations. The roof was a dome
covered by a semitransparent membrane that
col ected heat during the day to be stored in the
farm’s power cel s. At night, the membrane was
retracted. He used to lie back in a lounge chair and
look up at the stars, wondering what was out there.
Now he knew, and he realized he’d give an awful lot
to be that boy again, working hard during the day,
gazing up at the stars at night and wondering, and
then sleeping the sleep of the exhausted innocent.
He swal owed hard past the unexpected knot in his
throat and had to make a determined effort to get his
feet to move down the ramp.
Habit saw him removing his boots in the entryway
so as not to track dust al over the house. In his
stocking feet, he slowly went through the living room,
with its old furniture and steadily ticking chrono, into
the kitchen, which had been the heart of the home.
His mother was there, as he knew she would be.
Her back was to him as he entered. He took it al in:
the wooden table and chairs, the tiny counters stil
scrupulously clean. She was busy making a meal for
herself. No more large roasts from the local ranchers,
served with potatoes and homemade bread, for a
hardworking farmer husband and a growing young
son. Just simple vegetables for a salad. She was
standing, but there was a cane within easy reach, and
she moved very slowly as she chopped the bright
yel ow farra roots and round, purple sur fruit. A box sat
on the counter with FARM AID SUPPLIES
emblazoned upon it.
Suddenly she went very stil and straightened, and it
was only then that Jim realized just how stooped she
was.
“Jim,” she said, the word a statement, not a
question.
“Hel o, Mom,” Jim said, his voice thick.
Stil with her back to him, Karol Raynor careful y put
down the knife, reached out for her cane with a
trembling hand, and turned to face her only child.
Jim had known his mother was il . Had known she
didn’t have long to live. But that knowledge had not
prepared him for the sight of what a handful of years
and the ravages of sickness had done to a formerly
robust and hearty woman. Once-ebony hair was
almost completely white now, and thin, as if it had
started to fal out in places. Her green eyes were
sunken and dul , and what Jim remembered as a few
wrinkles had deepened to crevices. Her cheeks were
hol ow, and he realized that she had lost a great deal
of weight. But the most immediate, most visible thing
about her was the look of pure joy on her face.
Tears blurred Jim’s vision. He stumbled forward
three steps and caught her up, so fragile, so
breakable, in his arms and hugged her.
Twenty minutes later he was seated in the living
room, having made iced tea for both of them. Both
glasses sat untouched. Karol Raynor leaned back
against the sofa, seeming to need it to support her
fragile weight. She looked as if a good puff of wind
would blow her away. He could see the fine bones in
her hands and arms.
“He was with us for a day and a half before he
succumbed to the injuries,” she was saying of his
father. Jim had heard about it through Myles right after
it had happened. The ancient robo-harvester had
malfunctioned, stal ing out in the middle of a field.
Trace Raynor had been attempting to make repairs
when the machine had unexpectedly roared to life,
crushing him beneath it.
“The doctors wanted to put him on al sorts of
painkil ers, but he wouldn’t let them. ‘Just treat the
injuries,’ he said. ‘Let me stay for as long as I can.’”
Jim winced and reached for the bony hand, holding
it gently in his own. It was like holding fine china.
“So … he was in pain the whole time?”
“It was his choice, Jim,” Karol said gently. “We al
knew he wouldn’t make it. He just … wanted to be
present for the last few hours of his life.”
Tears stung Jim’s eyes, and he blinked them back.
She patted his hand. “There was nothing you could
have done, even if you’d been here.”
Except say good-bye
, Jim thought bitterly, but he
said instead, “The money could have helped.”
She smiled slightly, the gesture lighting up her
haggard face. “Now, how do you reckon that?
Wouldn’t have made the surgeons any more skil ed;
they did the best they could with what they had. Shiloh
doesn’t have a lot of the high-tech medical equipment
that other planets do. Even if we’d taken your money,
Jim, we couldn’t have gotten your father to a proper
facility in time for al that technology to be of use. It
was just his time, Son. Money wouldn’t have done a
thing.”
“Might have bought a new robo-harvester.”
She looked at him with deep compassion. “I love
you, Jim. But you know we couldn’t take money that
was earned through criminal activity.”
“It’s not from that.”
Karol squeezed his hand, and her smile deepened.
“Ah, now you’re a criminal
and
a liar.”
Jim couldn’t help it: he laughed at that. She joined
him. “Stubborn woman. Always too smart for your own
good.”
They chuckled together for a moment, enjoying the
release of tension in the room, and then Karol’s laugh
turned into a violent coughing spel . She turned away
quickly, hacking into a handkerchief, but not fast
enough so Jim didn’t catch the sight of blood on the
white linen.
“Mom,” he said quietly, “Myles said you were dyin’.”
She wiped her mouth and leaned back. The fit had
clearly exhausted her. “Myles is right,” she said
resignedly. “Which is why I am so glad to see you.”
“What is it, Mom?” He reached again for her fragile
hand.
“Some kind of cancer. Doctors don’t rightly know.
It’s something new, and we don’t have the testing
equipment here to do research on it. There are
several of us with the same symptoms, though.”
“So … something caused this?”
She nodded weakly. “Looks like. They think it might
have something to do with the material the old canned
rations came in. We stopped using those once Farm
Aid stepped in, but—”
“Rations?” Jim stared at her, aghast. “During the
Guild Wars?” He had joined up with the sole intention
of getting money to send back home. “Mom, you
didn’t use the money I sent you to buy food?”
She smiled at him again, but there was a trace of
irony in it. “We used the money to pay down the debt,
Jimmy. We didn’t need food. The Confederacy was
providing it.”
“Damn it!” Jim sprang up from the couch, stalking
about the smal room like a caged tiger. He wanted to
break something, but everything he saw had a newly
found value to him, as a relic of his childhood and
youth. As something his late father and his dying
mother had touched, cleaned, cherished. His hands
clenched with anger that had no outlet. “And no one’s
saying anything about this? That the Confederacy’s
decision to cut corners is kil ing people?”
She didn’t answer and he knew why. Ever since
Korhal IV, people were scared. No one would dare
speak out now.
“You know,” his mother said, breaking the
uncomfortable silence, “your father always believed
you’d come back one day. When he was in that
hospital room, broken and dying, he knew he wasn’t
going to live long enough to see that day, but he knew
it would come.”
Jim was standing with his back to her, one hand
gripping the mantelpiece hard. He was glad he had
come, but at the same time the emotions that were
racing through him were ripping him to shreds, and he
just wanted them to stop.
“Myles helped us out, and your father made a
holovid so he could say good-bye properly.”
Jim was surprised. His family couldn’t afford to
make a holovid. Myles had helped again, indeed. His
eyes fel on a smal urn a few centimeters from where
he grasped the mantel, and he felt a fresh wave of
pain as he abruptly realized what it contained. Or,
more accurately, who.
He had to get this over with, had to get out of here,
into the comfortable, familiar world of violence and
near escapes and theft, of drinking and women and
forgetting.
“Wel ,” he said, surprised at how steady his voice
was, “that was right nice of Myles. Can’t say as I’m
surprised, though. Where is this holovid Dad wanted
me to see?”
“Right there, beside his ashes,” his mother said,
confirming what he already knew. He looked over
and, sure enough, there was a smal , personal-sized
holoprojector and a disk. It was an older model, clunky
and unrefined, but it would get the job done.
“I keep it there so I can see him now and then,” his
mother said. “The recording was for you, not me, but
… wel , I’m sure you wouldn’t mind if your old mother
got a little comfort from seeing her husband
sometimes.”
The lump that suddenly fil ed Jim’s throat rendered
speech impossible. He turned his head and gave her
a faint, strained smile. She nodded, reaching for her
iced tea.
“Go on, play it, Jim. I’ve wanted to watch this with
you for a long time now.”
He turned back, inserted the disk, and pressed the
button.
His father appeared. He was in a hospital bed, and
the camera was jumpy: probably the ever-reliable
Myles had filmed it himself. Jim could barely see his
dad through al the things that were hooked up to him.
He seemed almost lost in a jungle of tubes and
hanging bags. He looked terrible, and his voice was
faint.
“Hel o, Son,” he said, managing a smile. “I sure
wish I could be looking better for my only holovid
recording, but these damn doctors say I need al
these things. Won’t for too much longer, at any rate.
And that’s why I’m making this for you, Jim. Because I
know in my heart that, one day, you’re going to come
back to Shiloh. I’m just sorry I won’t be around to tel
you this in person when you do.
“I love you, Jim. You’re my son, and I always wil
love you. I used to think I could also say, ‘I’l always be
proud of you.’ But I can’t honestly say that anymore.”
Jim looked down, hot shame and grief fil ing him,
but continued to listen.
“You’re walking down a dark path, Jim. A path I
never could have foreseen for you, and one I simply
cannot respect. We love you, but we can’t take your
money. That’s blood money, Son, and that’s not how
you were raised.”
There was a rustling. Jim looked up again to see
his father struggling to sit up and lean forward,
peering earnestly into the recorder.
“Do you remember what I used to tel you, Son? A