Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
when someone turns on the light. Daun grinned and
replaced the eye patch, straightening.
He always had liked Deadman’s Port.
He had a lead on whom he was looking for, and
where he might be found. There was a smal opening
off to the side that denoted either a very secretive
establishment or a very seedy one. His intel told him
that this would be a good starting place to look, and if
his quarry was not here, he would flush the rabbit
elsewhere.
Daun slipped inside, pistol at the ready. No one
chal enged him. The building opened up as he went
farther in, and strains of … singing? … reached his
ears. The soft voice of a woman, not shouting
obscene lyrics, nor fighting to be heard over blaring,
raucous music. She was softly singing, with only a few
instruments as background noise, an old, old song
about love found and lost.
Daun frowned and moved ful y into the room. The
environment was calm, one might even say placid,
even though there were a surprising number of
customers sitting at smal tables lit only by a few
candles. The décor was subdued, almost spartan.
The singer was on a stage il uminated by a single
spotlight. She was attractive, but older and a little
overweight, and her clothing actual y left something to
the imagination.
He shook his head at the strangeness of the place
—no wonder the clientele was so secretive: in a place
like Deadman’s Port things like this were shameful,
he thought—and looked around for his target.
The man was sitting alone, sipping something out
of a smal glass and watching the singer with a half
smile on his face. Disgusted with the mel ow feel of
this place, Daun slipped beside him and pointed the
gun at the base of his skul . The man’s sudden spike
of fear was most rewarding.
“You’re Edward Baines, aren’t you?”
The man started to nod, felt the muzzle at the back
of his neck, and stopped the motion. “Yes,” he said,
with calmness that was both admirable and annoying.
“And you must be Ezekiel Daun.”
Surprise flitted through Daun. “I could be a two-bit
thug.”
“Unlikely,” Baines continued. The man was thin and
as gaunt as a corpse. Daun disliked him, not least
because Baines was quickly mastering his fear. “A
two-bit thug wouldn’t have the connections or the
funds to pul the sort of strings it takes to learn about
this place, let alone be able to sneak up on me.”
“Don’t flatter yourself,” Daun snorted, lowering the
gun. Baines turned around to face him, regarding him
with calm, watery eyes.
“So. What do you want from me, Mr. Daun?”
“I need the dog to take a message to his master,”
Daun said, smiling a little. “You tel that comfortable
bastard who plays al sides that I’l respect his little
duchy here. I won’t make a play on Findlay and
Raynor while I’m in town. Bad for business … his
and
mine.”
Baines nodded. “I wil tel him. I’m sure he wil
appreciate your business acumen.”
“But,” Daun said, reaching over and picking up
Baines’s drink, “that only lasts while I’m here and
they’re here. I’m not interested in any kind of deal that
makes me renege on a bounty. I don’t care how much
someone pays. Besides, it’s gotten personal now. I
want those two. And I’l have them.” He swirled the
drink, sniffed it, and raised an approving eyebrow
before gulping it down and setting the glass back on
the table with an exaggerated thump.
“Once Raynor and Findlay leave Deadman’s Port,
they become fair game.”
Baines nodded. “I wil tel him. Anything else?
Perhaps about how long you expect to be in town?”
Daun chuckled. “I only came down to find you to
deliver the message. I’m not interested in any of the
other entertainment Deadman’s Port provides.”
It wasn’t quite true, of course. He stil had to get
back to his ship. There were a lot of places a man
could visit while retracing his steps. But once he had
reached his vessel, he would simply stay in orbit, a
spider watching his web very, very careful y.
“That might be best for al involved, sir.”
Daun rose, patted Baines on his bony shoulder,
regarded the singer with a thin smile of contempt, and
left as quietly as he had come.
“How the hel did you even hear about this heist?”
Scutter O’Banon was saying.
He, Jim, and Tychus were at O’Banon’s mansion.
Tychus had insisted on meeting there, due to the
extremely private nature of the information. “You don’t
want this to be overheard,” Tychus had warned, and
had been quite correct in the assumption. Even so,
they were no longer being feted with lavish food and
drink. The dapper Randal was conspicuously absent,
and they were meeting in a smal room off the front
hal rather than in the parlor. There were no chairs.
Scutter was saying without words that the business
would be conducted quickly.
“I ain’t gonna name names, but people do talk,
especial y when they’re liquored up,” Tychus said.
“It would be worth your while to name names, Mr.
Find-lay,” O’Banon said. “Especial y considering the
trouble you and Mr. Raynor here keep causing me.”
Tychus shook his head. “Naw. You’d know I’d rat
someone out then, and the next person I ratted out
might be you.”
Scutter sighed. Tychus had raised a good point.
Stil , he frowned. “You two are starting to become
more effort than you are worth.”
Jim felt a chil . Words like that were never pleasant
to hear. If Scutter felt they had exceeded their value to
him, no one would ever find their bodies. Not that
anyone would miss them, he mused darkly.
“Your hound showed up on my planet today,”
Scutter said.
Jim’s stomach dropped into his shoes. Daun! He
was alive after al . Jim had dared to hope—but it was
hard to kil someone like him. Hard as hel .
O’Banon walked over to a hutch, opened a
humidor, fished out one of his thin cigars, and began
to trim it as he spoke. He did not offer one to Jim or
Tychus. “Told me that he was going to play nice and
not cause any trouble in my sandbox.” O’Banon
almost spat the words. “Mighty gracious of him, don’t
you think?” He lit the cigar and turned back to them.
“So you’re safe here. But once you leave, he’l be after
you. I’l do what I can.”
“Oh, that’s just great—” Jim started to sputter, but
Tychus held up a hand.
“See, and that’s another reason we should go on
this heist. Your boys might talk, but they ain’t stupid.
Might have figured Jimmy and I already knew about it.
Point is, nobody else does. Including Daun.”
O’Banon’s eyes narrowed. “True,” he said. “And
you two do have certain …
expertise
that could
enhance things.”
“Damn straight we do.”
“Very wel . I’l let you come along.”
“‘Come along’?”
Scutter smiled with his very pursed, very red mouth.
“You couldn’t possibly imagine that I’d send you two
off alone with something of this magnitude…. Hel ,
boys, you’re lucky it’s Randal ’s day off, or you’d be
bleeding on the floor right now.”
“Now wait a—” Jim began. Again Tychus held up a
hand, though the strain was starting to show on his
face.
“We’l do it. But we want an equal cut.”
Scutter chuckled. “You pul this off, you’l get an
equal cut. My word on it.”
“I knew we could come to an agreement that would
be of mutual benefit,” Tychus said. He ambled over to
the sideboard and helped himself to a cigar. Scutter’s
eye twitched, but he said nothing as Tychus prepped
the cigar and began to smoke it. “So. Here we are.
Fil us in.”
“I’m sure you boys are familiar with Bacchus Moon,”
Scutter said.
“Hel yeah,” Tychus replied. “Gambler’s paradise.
The Koprulu sector’s high rol ers go there. Lots of
entertainment too.” He looked at Jim and waggled his
eyebrows.
“Entertainment of that sort, certainly,” agreed
O’Banon,
“and
other
types
of
shows
and
performances for those with more discerning tastes.
Incredibly fine hotels, famous restaurants. Fantasy
fulfil ment on al levels, for the right price. The place
caters to gamblers, as you say, but also hosts
conventions. A very great number of people are
moving through there at any given minute.”
“Good place for crime,” Jim said.
“Less than you would think,” Scutter said, in a
this is
why I’m the boss and you are the henchmen
tone of
voice. “Security is a going commodity, and people
can pay for the best. Especial y,” he emphasized, “the
banks.”
Jim’s heart sank. He had hoped that they would
have a specific mark, or that they would pul off a sting
or fleece some gamblers. He didn’t know a lot about
Bacchus Moon, but he knew the things that everybody
knew, and one of the things that everybody knew was
that if your money was in a bank safe on Bacchus
Moon, the operative word in that sentence was “safe.”
Nobody was going to touch it.
He began to wonder if he and Tychus were being
set up for a suicide mission, just as a way for Scutter
to punish them. Then he realized that al Scutter
needed to do was let Daun have a crack at them. In
the end, that would be more efficient.
Even Tychus’s body language changed. “I see,”
was al he said, though, as he thoughtful y blew out
smoke.
“It has come to my attention that the Covington
Bank wil be the location of a massive stockpile of
Confederate credits for exactly thirty-seven hours
before the credits are dispersed.”
“Define ‘massive,’” said Jim.
Scutter eyed him. “Seven hundred mil ion, thirty-six
thousand, four hundred and twenty.”
Jim wasn’t sure, but he thought he made a smal
choking sound. Even Tychus coughed a little as he
inhaled the smoke from his cigar.
“For thirty-seven hours,” Tychus confirmed.
“At the Covington Bank.”
“Wel , now, I must say, Scutter, that’s a right tidy
sum.”
“I thought so. And since it’s so bountiful, and the job
so tricky, I’m inclined to be generous with the men
who get it for me.”
“There’s the rub, isn’t it?” said Tychus. “Gettin’
those seven-hundred-plus-mil ion credits. What’s the
current plan?”
“One cannot simply march in and ask for the
money, so my man Ash Thompson has been doing
some research into what’s below the bank. There was
a cave-in about six years ago that severely damaged
the sewer system. Costs to dig it out and rebuild it to
meet safety regulations were prohibitive, so they
simply let it stay caved in. Now, we don’t care about
how good a sewer system it is; we just need to get
access to the vault. Ash believes that—”
“Nope. That plan is total shit.”
O’Banon blinked. “‘Shit’?”
Tychus shook his head. “Too risky, from a lot of
standpoints. Too time-consuming and uses too much
manpower.”
A slow flush began to creep up Scutter’s face. “You
have a superior plan?”
“I think I do,” drawled Tychus. “And you wil recal , it
was our reputation that got you interested in us.”
“I agree with Tychus,” Jim said. “We need to get in,
get the credits, get out. The longer we’re digging in
the dirt, the greater the chance someone wil find us.”
Scutter took a puff of his skinny cigar and narrowed
his eyes, thinking. “You know,” he said at last, “I did
not get to the current position I so happily occupy by
doing the dirty work myself.” He smiled thinly—at
least, as thinly as was possible with his ful lips. “Both
you and Ash know your jobs. I think I’l leave you three
to figure it out. May the best man win, eh?”
He retrieved a piece of paper and a gold pen from
the desk, jotted down an address, and handed it to
Tychus. “Be there in three hours. I wil expect to hear
what you come up with in five.”
DEADMAN’S PORT, DEADMAN’S
ROCK
JACK’S SPOT
Jim and Tychus knew the place wel . Scutter