Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
snarling in anger. Heard it issuing commands. Heard
it pathetical y begging.
Jim’s hand slipped into the other pocket and closed
on the handle of his Colt.
He didn’t answer at once. Partly because he
wanted the bastard to sweat. And partly because he
didn’t trust his voice.
He relaxed his grip on the revolver, though he kept
his hand on it. He had not come here as a vengeful
murderer. He had come here for something else
entirely.
“Who is this?”
“A ghost from your past, Colonel. Just the past,
coming back to haunt you.”
There was silence. The thunking noise continued. “I
know that voice. Come over to where I can see you!”
Vanderspool barked.
“Of course,
sir
.”
He moved slowly to where the light seemed
greatest. There was movement as Vanderspool
craned his neck to look at him. Their eyes met.
“Raynor,” Vanderspool said quietly.
“The same. You don’t look so good, Colonel.”
Silence.
“Your dog got caught. But not before he tipped us
off as to who was holding the leash.”
“You always were so damn smug,” snarled
Vanderspool. “You and Tychus. Wel , Tychus isn’t
going to be seeing sunlight anytime soon. I wil be
content with that. And I’ve spent quite a lot of money
making sure my facility is secure. You might have
gotten in, but any second now you’l be stopped. I’l
have you. I always get what I want in the end.”
“You got the others,” Jim agreed. He drew out the
Colt, as always admiring the craftsmanship. “Your
sick dog filmed everything. You two probably watched
the holograms together while he fed you popcorn. But
you ain’t getting
me
, Colonel. There’s a balance in
this universe. I knew that once, and then forgot it. But
I’ve had a lot happen to me since then, and I
remember it now. When I learned who was behind
Daun, I wanted to kil you so bad, I could have ripped
you apart with my teeth.”
Despite his bluster, Vanderspool had to know that
help wasn’t coming. It would have been here by now.
Why should it? Jim was a duly hired employee. He
had access to this room. The weight of the gun was
familiarly heavy in his hand.
“Yes, brave, noble outlaw James Raynor,” drawled
Vander-spool. “How tragical y wronged you were. You
rob from the rich, give to the poor, help little old ladies
across streets, no doubt. It takes such courage to
shoot a completely harmless man trapped in an iron
lung.”
Jim smiled in the dim light. “See, that’s the whole
point, Colonel. You ain’t never gonna be harmless as
long as you draw breath—even if you have to rely on a
machine to draw that breath for you. Only reason
you’re even alive is that you’re just too ful of hate and
twisted darkness to die properly the first time like you
shoulda done. That’s partly my fault. I was so damned
angry, I couldn’t see straight.” The moment was as
clear in his mind as if it had been one of Daun’s
holograms. Vanderspool, wounded, clutching his
shoulder and sobbing. Begging for a medic. Offering
to pay.
Pay. Like the soldiers he had tried to kil , control, or
turn into resocialized zombies would accept money
from him to tend his injury.
Vanderspool had first tried Tychus, then Kydd.
Raynor had deliberately stepped on the man’s hand
as the bastard reached for a weapon, crunching the
fine bones and relishing the screaming that resulted.
He had fired a metal spike into Vanderspool’s chest,
watched him slump and, he thought, die. There had
been a harsh pleasure—and then an ashy emptiness
as he realized that he had become part of what he
most loathed.
He had spent five years running since then. He
thought he’d been running
to
something—but he’d
been running
from
it. It was time to end the running.
It was time to end a lot of things—and to begin
others.
“But I can see clearly now. And I know what has to
be done.”
“You can stil get out of here alive,” Vanderspool
said. “Just walk out the way you came in. Tychus
Findlay is going to rot in prison. I can afford to let you
go.”
Jim stared for a moment, completely taken aback
by the sheer arrogance of the man. Then he laughed.
It echoed in the large room.
“You stil think you’re in charge. Directing the show,
even if you can’t act in it anymore. I used to hate you.
Now I just feel sorry for you. And not because you’re
stuck in that contraption, neither. I feel sorry for you
because al you got is hate, and control, and greed. I
got more than that. But as long as you’re alive, I’m
stuck down here in the mud with you, Vanderspool.
And I’m aiming to final y crawl out of the mud.”
“I’l pay you.”
“What?”
“Whatever you’d like. Enough for you to be
comfortable the rest of your life. You don’t have to do
this. I’l leave you alone, I swear.”
Jim shook his head, disgusted. He lifted the gun, as
he had so many times before. With his thumb, he
eased back the hammer, hearing the familiar and
distinctive series of clicks. Vander-spool heard it, too,
and actual y whimpered.
“Please … look at the sort of life I’m consigned to,
Raynor. Surely this is revenge enough!”
Incredulous, Raynor snorted, even more surprised
by this tactic than Vanderspool’s arrogance. “You’re
not helpless, and you fekking know it. You’ve done
more harm from here than most people do in their
whole lifetimes. From this damned coffin, you hired
Daun. From here, you took delight in watching the
Heaven’s Devils fal , one by one. Because that’s al
you got, you sick shit. You’re a rabid dog,
Vanderspool. You wil continue to harm, and
contaminate, and destroy as long as you are
permitted to exist. Even if you did keep your word to
let me alone, which we both know you won’t, some
other poor bastard is going to pay for some imaginary
sin against you. You’l never stop. You’l think of
another person, and another, and another. I once shot
you in hate. I ain’t doing that again.”
“Your revenge—”
“Don’t you get it?” Jim shouted. “This ain’t about
revenge. This is about justice. About restoring the
balance. About taking something dark and ugly out of
the galaxy once and for al , so that something—
something decent and good—can grow instead.”
He strode up to Vanderspool and gazed down at
the remnants of the man. The face was pale, the eyes
sunken. The being before him was so shriveled, so
worn, that Jim almost hesitated. But then the lips
thinned, the eyes flashed with hate.
No. Vanderspool’s body might be crippled, but the
essence of the man was as vile and as strong as
ever. “This is for the Heaven’s Devils,” Jim said
quietly. “For everyone who was their friend. And for
everyone whose life you have ruined along your way
to this moment.”
He kept his gaze locked with Vanderspool’s as he
pul ed the trigger.
The gunshot was shockingly loud and seemed to
go on forever. Slowly, Jim lowered the gun, not
flinching at the sight of the ruined face. This time there
was no sick gnawing at his gut that he had become
the thing he despised. Nor hot, glorious, righteous
delight.
Just peace. Just quiet in his soul.
The rabid dog would never harm anyone, ever
again.
The hologram that had been playing in his mind’s
eye shifted. It was no longer of him standing over
Vanderspool and shooting him.
Instead, he saw his father, and heard words that
echoed more loudly in his soul than that final gunshot
in his ears.
Do you remember what I used to tell you, Son? A
man is what he chooses to be … a man can turn his
life around in a single thought, a single decision.
You can always choose to be something new. Never
forget that.
I won’t forget, Dad. I won’t. Maybe I’m not the man
you thought I’d be … but that don’t mean I’m not
capable of being what I choose.
Jim looked at the gun for a long moment,
remembering when his fingers had first closed about
it; how it had fitted his hand perfectly; how he had felt
at that instant that it had somehow been waiting for
him—that it had been made just for him. And perhaps
it had been: made for the man who was a thief and a
criminal, who pointed it at innocent, frightened people.
It stil fit his hand, but it no longer fit
him
.
Slowly, James Raynor placed the antique Colt
Single Action Army revolver on top of the metal coffin,
turned, and walked out.
JANINE’S
The bar was one of the smal er, friendlier ones
Jim had run across. Cleaner, too, and brighter. Of
course, he was here in the middle of the day, not at
oh-dark-thirty like he usual y was when he visited such
establishments, so that probably made at least some
difference.
He’d ordered a beer. One. Without Scotty Bolger’s
Old No. 8. And he’d been nursing it for the better part
of an hour, settling his lanky frame into an old,
comfortable chair and simply thinking and observing.
Oddly, he found his thoughts turning to Marshal
Wilkes Butler. He and Tychus had made fun of the
marshal’s methodical, unimaginative pursuit of them.
And yet … Jim found himself respecting the man.
Tychus and he had been almost impossibly wily—half
the time, because they never knew what they were
going to do themselves. And yet, Butler had come
after them time and time again, doggedly, doing
everything by the book, until final y he’d gotten at least
one of them. He’d not been seduced by Daisy’s
charms, nor used underhanded methods, nor ever
employed greater force than was necessary. He’d
been—and Jim was surprised to find himself thinking
this—a decent man.
Janine’s was more of a gathering spot than a
watering hole. There were few hard drinkers here, and
the food was actual y pretty good. Standard stuff for a
bar—skalet burgers and fries and such—but some
fried range hen was also on the menu that the bar
owner, the cheerful y hefty brunette Janine, made
fresh herself every day. He was gnawing on a
drumstick when the door opened.
“Afternoon, Liddy!” cal ed Janine. “The usual?”
Stil chewing the delicious range hen—Janine used
some kind of spice that made it real y zingy—Jim
turned idly to see the newcomer.
She was slim and tanned and exuded that
wholesome fresh-scrubbed appeal that women strove
to attain through artful y messy hair and makeup
careful y applied so as to not look applied at al . This
woman didn’t need to bother with artifice to look
beautiful y natural.
Her long blond hair, the color of the triticale-wheat
his family used to harvest back on Shiloh, was tied in
a careless braid and draped over her shoulder. Her
eyes were sky blue and crinkled at the edges when
she grinned. Her tanned face had just the faintest
smattering of freckles.
“Heya, Janine. You bet: it’s a hot one today.” Her
voice was as cheerful and warm as the rest of her.
Jim lifted an eyebrow as something sunny yel ow
was plunked down in front of the newcomer.
“Don’t tel me that’s lemonade,” he said before he
could stop himself. It wouldn’t be made from actual
lemons, of course. It was synthetic, but everyone had
their own recipe, adjusted to their particulars.
“Best in the county,” Janine said with pride.
“The county? Janine’s range hen, potato salad,
cobbler, and lemonade beat any other meal on the
whole planet,” asserted the incredibly gorgeous girl.
“Okay, you got me curious. I’l agree with you on the
chicken, so, Janine, a lemonade here, too, please.
And this lady’s serving is on me.”
The girl raised a golden eyebrow and toasted him
with the beverage. A moment later Jim was drinking
something cool, tangy-sweet, and utterly refreshing.
He couldn’t remember the last time he had had