Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
hammering in his head, he recognized this man, too,
and his heart spasmed as memories—unwanted and
unwelcome—slammed down on him.
“It’s Ryk,” whispered Jim.
Ryk Kydd. The only one besides the two of them
who had survived; the rich kid who had become an
assassin but somehow had never lost a sense of
innate decency. Feek, they cared about; Hobarth, they
knew; but Kydd had been one of
them
. Now they
stared, watching sickly as Kydd’s face contorted in
agony. The attacker sprang back, lithe as a cat.
“One down,” the man said, grinning. Now Jim could
see his face clearly: lean, angular, a thin, cruel mouth
framed by a trimmed goatee. “Three to go.”
“Jimmy?” The voice belonged to Tychus. It was
trembling, uncertain, and the sound of it issuing from
Tychus’s throat shocked Jim to his core. He kept the
slugthrower raised, but despite the danger, he
couldn’t help but glance over at Tychus. His gut
clenched at what he saw.
Tychus Findlay was utterly terrified. He turned a
face greasy with sweat to Jim and swal owed hard.
“Jimmy … w-we’re in trouble.”
“I see you recognize me.” It was the same voice
as in the hologram—the hologram that was currently
pinning the holographic Ryk Kydd to the floor with a
dagger through the hand.
Jim whirled, the slugthrower out in front of him,
trying to figure out where the voice was coming from.
To Jim’s unspeakable relief, Tychus appeared to
have gotten his terror under control—for the moment
at least.
Who the hel
was
this guy, who could rattle the
normal y unflappable Tychus Findlay so badly?
“Maybe. One thing’s clear: you’re one sick puppy.”
Tychus’s voice betrayed none of the fear Jim knew he
was experiencing.
“And you’re not? The pot is, I believe, cal ing the
kettle black. Your reputation precedes you, Tychus
Findlay—as, obviously, does mine.”
The two people in the hologram continued to
struggle. By now their comrade in arms was being
forced to fight with two ruined hands. But he was not
giving up.
Jim knew what he was watching. And knew why the
stranger wanted them to watch it.
He wanted them to see Ryk Kydd’s murder.
He gritted his teeth, closing his hands more tightly
around the gun to steady their shaking. He didn’t want
to watch, to give this bastard the satisfaction of
knowing that his sadistic little light show had gotten to
them. The voice seemed to come from different
places. It was hard to get a bead on him, and the
flickering light of the hologram kept drawing his eye
back.
“Who is this guy, Tychus?”
For a moment Tychus didn’t reply. Jim risked a
quick glance, saw the big man close his eyes and
swal ow. “Goes by the name of Ezekiel Daun.”
“Wel , we’re gonna kick Ezekiel Daun’s ass,” Jim
said with assurance he did not feel.
The holographic Daun now had his implacable
cybernetic hand clamped around Kydd’s throat and
was lifting him off the floor. Kydd’s feet kicked
frantical y as he slapped ruined hands futilely against
the cybernetic arm. Daun was grinning. Enjoying
kil ing Ryk, as he was enjoying watching Jim and
Tychus witness the murder.
“Somebody wants you dead,” Daun said. “That’s
fine by me. But he didn’t stipulate
how
you were to
die. Nor how long it should take. That was left up to
me to decide. And we got
all night
.”
Tune it out, Jimmy
, Raynor told himself.
Focus.
Where is he? How’s Tychus handling this?
The latter question at least had an answer. Tychus
was stil afraid, but he wasn’t letting it get in the way of
escaping.
“He’s set this al up very careful y,” Tychus muttered
to Jim, a hint of his old self creeping into his voice.
Jim felt a brush of relief as his friend continued to
regain control. “Which means that he’s going to want
us to watch it al . Bet those voices of Feek and
Hobarth also came from a hologram of their …
murders.”
Jim swal owed.
“He won’t do anything until he shows us that Ryk’s
dead, and maybe not until he forces us to watch him
kil Feek and Hobarth too. Stil , we’d best haul ass.
Where is the central control area?”
“If we’re at six, then it’s at eleven,” Jim replied,
using antiquated references that were stil useful for
military purposes, if not their original.
“What’s at the other hours?”
Jim tried to think, tried to shut out the sound of his
friend being strangled.
“How’s it feel now, Ark? Having trouble getting air
in? Feeling the blood pressure build up? Do you want
to swal ow?”
“Nothing at seven,” Jim continued, forcing the
words out, clinging to the calmness thinking provided
him. “Eight is the crane-operating station.”
“Those manual y control ed?”
“Usual y, unless specifical y set otherwise. At two,
we’ve got—”
“That’s enough hours in my day. We need a
distraction. I got an idea.”
They moved quickly, Jim’s shoulders itching,
expecting at any moment to feel a bul et or a metal
spike between them. But he believed that Tychus was
onto something. This Daun wouldn’t have set up such
a complex little display if he hadn’t wanted them to
appreciate al the effort he’d gone to. They had time.
The question was: how much? And if it would be
enough.
They approached the crane-operating station. In the
center, Jim watched, sick to his stomach, as Ryk
Kydd struggled, then went limp.
“Damn it, not yet!” cried the holographic Daun.
“Tychus? Whatever you’re gonna do, do it fast,
because I think we just ran outta time.”
“Already on it.” Tychus, his face close to the
controls, was trying to figure out which was which.
Then he muttered, “Hel , let’s just do this thing,” and
punched one.
The station shuddered. Jim almost lost his footing,
staying erect only by grabbing on to the console as
Tychus was doing. The hologram, merciful y, winked
out; its holoprojector had probably toppled over.
There was an angry cry from above them, and the
sound of bul ets firing. Tychus hit another control, and
another, grabbing a joystick and yanking it about
wildly in various directions. Then Jim realized what he
was doing: he was using the cranes to slam into the
station. As distractions went, it seemed to be
working.
Unless, of course, one of the cranes actual y broke
through a bulkhead of the station, and al the air ran
out.
The shots went wild, then stopped. Daun was trying
to get to a better position.
Jim turned and bolted for the main override control
panel. As such an important part of the station, it had
more blue emergency lights activated than most of
what they had seen until now. Jim perused it quickly.
As the seconds ticked by, his tension rose. Doors,
where were the doors? They—
“Damn it!” He pounded his fist on the console in fury
and frustration.
“For fekk’s sake, what now?” shouted Tychus from
across the room.
“He took the master key. Nothing can be overridden
without that. Nothing!”
A pause. “Oh.”
Jim knew he was perilously close to losing it. The
unexpected betrayal of the Skul s; Tychus’s sudden,
almost overwhelming terror; being forced to watch the
torture and murder of a man he had cared about, who
was a brother in arms, a
friend
, damn it; and this
horrible sensation of feeling like a trapped animal—
“We can’t get out! Don’t you get that, Tychus?” he
said, his voice rising in panic.
“I certainly do,” came Daun’s voice. Another crane
slammed into the station, rocking it hard. There were
groaning and crashing sounds as pieces of
equipment came loose and toppled over. Tychus
turned toward the sound of the voice and fired
repeatedly.
Daun’s laughter came, echoing and triumphant.
“Nowhere for the Heaven’s Devils to flee or fly,” he
said mockingly. “Your friends suffered. And so wil
you.”
Jim, too, turned, firing and reloading. He ran out of
ammo for the slugthrower and quickly switched to his
beloved Colt. Though he used the revolver only rarely,
simply firing the thing heartened him. It was a lucky
weapon for him, and a smile tugged at his mouth as
he took aim and fired.
The station was fil ed with the sounds of gunfire and
laughter. Something on the other side of the level
caught fire and added a glowing orange flicker to the
blue emergency lighting. Sparks hissed and sizzled,
and acrid smoke started to fil the air.
Click click click.
The sound of a Colt out of ammunition.
Jim lowered it, sickened.
Was this how it was to be? What a rip-off.
Betrayed, trapped, and gunned down by a lunatic. It
was such … a stupid, anticlimactic end.
His duster flying out like wings on either side,
Ezekiel Daun dropped down from a catwalk. He
landed beautiful y, in a crouch, smoke swirling about
him, and rose slowly. He had been intimidating in the
hologram. But now, with orange and blue light dancing
about his tal frame and catching the gleam of both the
metal ic hand and the metal ic gun, he looked to Jim
like an incarnation of Death. He kept the pistol trained
on them, and they raised their hands slowly. Jim
realized that both he and Tychus were shaking.
In his cybernetic hand, Daun held the control er of a
hologram. “You’re being recorded, Mr. Findlay, Mr.
Raynor. I have crafted an extensive library of my work,
so I am able to sit down and watch whenever I feel like
walking down memory lane. So far, this has been
quite the little cinematic presentation. Feek was the
only other who gave me a worthy show, I think. Ho-
barth was weak from her old wounds and Ryk Kydd
went too fast to be properly appreciated.”
Anger cut through the fear as Jim envisioned this
man torturing Hiram Feek and Clair Hobarth. He clung
to the anger. It cleared his mind of the crippling
sensation of mindless terror.
“But I think I’d like to see a bit more from the two of
you before I close the curtain,” Daun said. “Maybe a
little … dance routine?” He aimed the gun at Tychus’s
feet.
“Who the hel are you, and why are you letting our
own cranes attack the station?”
The voice came from directly above them, and it
belonged to the formerly highly bored Fitz-something.
Now he sounded angry and not a little frightened. Jim
realized that Daun had not factored the tech into his
plans. He had kil ed everyone on the station, but he
had not expected Fitz—who would, of course, have an
override key—to leave his post. Daun had likely been
tripped up by the very “comm problems” he had
created.
Daun snarled bestial y and lifted the gun. Two shots
rang out, and Fitz’s lifeless body toppled down,
landing with limbs askew, right at Jim’s and Tychus’s
feet.
They acted as one.
Jim and Tychus sprang to either side of the stil -
twitching corpse, quickly holstering their guns. They
grabbed Fitz’s body, lifted it up in front of them, and
charged Daun. The enemy fired at the center of Fitz’s
body. Jim and Tychus were behind the corpse but
slightly to either side. The bul ets passed between
them.
They were on him now. Daun kept firing, but the
shots went wild. Snarling, he dropped the gun, drew
back his gleaming metal ic arm, made a fist, and
swung it at them. He punched directly through Fitz’s
sternum. The bloody silver fist protruded, covered in
gore, from the tech’s back. Stil Jim and Tychus kept
coming, using their momentum to push Daun’s arm
through even farther and trap it there. The bloody
metal ic limb stil clutched and reached ineffectively as
Daun went down under them.
Tychus raised a fist and slammed it down, but
somehow Daun jerked to the side just in time. Tychus
grunted as his knuckles met metal flooring. He drew
his fist back for another punch. Meanwhile, Jim was