Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
man is what he chooses to be. It’s not how he’s born,
or how he’s raised, that makes the man. It’s his
choices. Right now, you’re choosing to walk this dark
path I can’t condone. But a man can turn his life
around with a single thought, a single decision. You
can always choose to be something new. Never
forget that.”
He eased back down, the effort clearly having
exhausted what little strength he had. His face was
pale and he was trembling, probably from pain. “I love
you, Son.”
The recording ended.
For a long moment Jim simply stood, breathing
hard, trying to process what he had just witnessed. He
took a steadying breath and turned to face his mother.
She sat where he had left her. The iced tea had
spil ed in her lap, the empty glass lying on the
upholstery beside her. Her face looked less drawn,
and her eyes were closed. There was a slight smile
on her lips.
“Mom,” Jim said, tears fil ing his eyes. He went to
her, gathered her in his arms, and sat with her for a
long, long time.
Myles knew what had happened the moment Jim
opened the door. The older man’s face fel , and he
seemed to be fighting back tears himself.
“Your mother’s gone,” he said quietly. Jim nodded.
“I’l take care of everything; don’t you worry. It’s a
blessing she hung on long enough to see you, and
that’s a fact, though it might have been sheer
stubbornness. She always knew you’d come home.
And with the pain she was in, and what she had to
look forward to as this Confederate-cursed disease
advanced … wel , it’s a blessing she’s with your father
now too.”
He squeezed Jim’s arm. Jim stared at him with
haunted eyes.
“A blessing,” he said in a hol ow voice. “Maybe
you’re right.”
The thought was a bitter one.
“You’d best be off. Leave the clothes in the truck; I’l
get them after dark. Right now I’m going to attend to
your mother. And, Jimmy … don’t forget what I said
about Mar Sara. You’d be right welcome there.”
Nearly an hour later, Jim Raynor sat in the
copilot’s seat of a system runner. He stared as the
ship lifted off, soaring upward. The brown earth
dropped away, becoming not fields as far as the eye
could see but merely patchworks the size of a hand.
He had worked those patches, had walked those
now-tiny streets. Had napped beneath trees that, from
this height, looked only as large as thumbnails. He
closed his eyes for a second, then focused on the
vessel’s control panel as he and Tychus flew up past
the clouds, into the atmosphere, and then among the
stars.
“You’re mighty quiet, Jimmy,” Tychus said.
Jim didn’t answer. His thoughts were elsewhere: in
his mind he was sitting in the living room with his
mother, watching the holovid of his dead father….
And wondering why the thought of a night with
Evangelina—complete with al the booze he could
drink—didn’t sound as appealing as it once had.
TARSONIS
The room was fil ed with the noises that never
ceased: the whooshing of Vanderspool’s forced
breathing, the whir of machinery, the click-click of the
elaborate machines that made bil ions of calculations
a minute. Other than that, it was silent.
The door opened. One of Vanderspool’s resocs
entered and approached the giant metal coffin.
“They’l be dead in two days.”
SKYWAY STARPORT, HALCYON
They met, far too early for either man’s taste, at
the Skyway Starport at 0600. Jim had tried to grab
some shut-eye at the hotel, making ful use of the
credits O’Banon had given them for lodging, but
Tychus looked as if he’d simply stayed up al night.
Jim was so tired he felt almost drunk, and Tychus
looked the same. It was not the optimal way to begin
an extremely important assignment.
They headed off in groggy silence in the attractive,
sleek little system runner that was waiting for them.
Once they had cleared the atmosphere of Halcyon,
Jim reached under the seat for the packet he had
been told would be there. He broke the seal, stifling a
yawn as he did so.
Tychus raised an eyebrow. “Mighty cloak-and-
dagger fancy,” he said.
“Yeah,” Jim said. In the packet were a smal , old-
fashioned key, falsified IDs, a notification that they
had outfits awaiting them in the back, and a data chip,
which he inserted into the ship’s drive.
Jim read through it quickly. His eyes widened; he
looked at the key and then summarized for the benefit
of Tychus, who was entering their route.
“Our heist … wel , half of it, anyway … is a person.
Who is apparently eagerly anticipating us.”
“What?”
“There is someone named Andrew Forrest. He’s …
a pharmacologist.”
Tychus snorted. “‘Hel o, Dr. Forrest, I need
something for this
pain in the ass
I’m experiencing.’
Why the hel are we picking up a pharmacologist? I
thought Scutter wanted us to steal something useful.
Like credits.”
Jim started to shake his head, then he figured it out.
“Drugs. O’Banon is also a drug runner.”
“Then steal the drugs, don’t steal the …” And then
Tychus figured it out too. “
Do
steal the guy who
created the drug! Scutter, I take it back: you are one
smart bastard.”
Jim nodded. “I’l bet you anything this Dr. Forrest is
one of a handful of people who know how to replicate
the formula for something that’s currently very popular
and very lucrative. He may even have been the one
who initiated the contact with Scutter.”
Neither, for al their myriad other vices, was heavily
into the il egal stuff. While they’d had the chance to
snort, swal ow, or smear on an impressive variety of
pharmaceuticals at various times over the years,
alcohol was stil their drug of choice. It was cheap and
easily obtainable in vast quantities, which was how
both of them liked it.
Tychus had once said that he didn’t want to be
beholden to anyone or anything—up to and including
women and addictive drugs. Jim just never saw the
appeal.
Too, the recent encounters with sicko Daun had
started to stir up memories they’d tried their best to
forget. It had been a long time since either of them
had thought about Lisa Cassidy, once known as
“Doc.” Doc had been hooked on a substance cal ed
crab. The despised Vanderspool had played on her
addiction in order to get her to betray not just Tychus,
whom she had hooked up with, but also the rest of
Heaven’s Devils. It had worked, too: eventual y she
had become a wil ing informant, with the lure of the
drug to keep her going. In the end, Doc had died of a
battle wound in front of Tychus, assuring him that her
deception “wasn’t personal.” Both Tychus and Jim
had known it wasn’t: there was nothing personal about
what a highly addictive drug could do to you, nor the
torment another human being could put you through
when you desperately needed the stuff.
“What do you think it is?” Jim wondered aloud. With
Doc in his mind, he couldn’t help but wonder if it was
crab. Almost at once, though, he dismissed the
thought. Crab was once hard to come by, but these
days it was becoming more and more common. No,
whatever O’Banon was after, it had to be something
out of the ordinary. Something rare, expensive,
upscale—and probably more addictive than anything
Jim had ever run across. That would be the only thing
that would make it worth O’Banon’s while.
“Don’t know, don’t care, just want my payment. Get
in, get the guy, get done in time to get drunk and poke
a pretty girl.”
The words and images they conjured up were
rough and tumble, crude, physical. Just what Jim
needed so he could stop thinking about Doc—and,
even closer to his heart, about Shiloh, and his mother,
and that damned holovid.
“I like this plan,” Jim said.
Halcyon was a fringe world that, right from its
colonization, had opened its arms to corporate
development, and probably half the big companies on
Tarsonis and other worlds had branches here. It was
a pleasant world: not quite nice enough to be a
vacation destination but the sort of place where
hardworking businessmen could be provided with fine
facilities, earn excel ent pay, and have decent places
to raise the kids. The research and development
branch of Besske-Vrain & Stalz Pharmaceutical
Corporation looked like any other building on a fairly
wel -established fringe world. It was large and
comfortably sprawling, with neatly manicured lawns
and benches and fountains scattered here and there.
The whole was encased in state-of-the-art security
designed to be as unobtrusive as it was efficient. If
you didn’t know where to look and what to look for,
you would miss the cameras, the heat sensors, the
motion detectors, and the approximately sixteen other
devices being employed. Jim and Tychus would have
needed a security systems expert if they had had to
break in.
Fortunately, they did not have to do it the hard way.
They had badges proclaiming their identities. Jim
was now a high-ranking faculty member of the
Tarsonis University, City of Tarsonis campus. Tychus
was the point man for an organization cal ed
Physicians for Results Now. According to the
literature, the organization wanted to cut through the
red tape to get “results now” for patients who were in
the latter stages of diseases. In other words, they
advocated legalizing and distributing medications that
perhaps hadn’t been tested enough to be proven
safe.
“Yeah, I can see you pushing for results right now,
damn it.” Jim laughed.
“Can’t see
you
as a doctor, though,” Tychus shot
back.
Their clearance level was extremely high. It would
permit them access to the laboratory, private offices,
and, as a special bonus, the executive bathroom.
They were greeted in the cavernous lobby by a
meticulously wel -groomed, bright-eyed young man
who introduced himself as Jason Richfield. He
seemed a touch suspicious of Tychus—probably
because of the man’s size and roughed-up
appearance, even with a shower and haircut—but
after checking out their clearance levels, he ushered
them in graciously.
“I’l let Dr. Forrest know you’re here,” he said. Jim
and Tychus waited patiently while listening to generic,
non-threatening music piped in from somewhere, their
large frames nearly swal owed by comfortable
upholstery, until said Dr. Forrest appeared.
“Gentlemen, welcome to the research and
development branch of Besske-Vrain & Stalz,”
Forrest said, smiling and extending a hand. He was in
his later middle years, tanned, healthy-looking, and
graying in a most distinguished manner. He had a
firm handshake, soft, wel -manicured hands, a crisp
white coat, and a fine chin. Jim disliked him
immediately. He couldn’t put his finger on it. Maybe
the handshake was too practiced, the voice too wel
modulated.
Or maybe it was because Forrest was going to
come work for a man who’d pay him mil ions to get
people hooked on something that would in al
probability turn them into desperate slaves.
Jim knew it was not his place to pass judgment. But
somehow everything had felt cleaner when he was
robbing trains and stealing Confederate credits.
“Let me give you a tour of the lab area first, then we
can break for lunch and attend the meeting at 1400,”
he said. “You’l like our cafeteria: our chef used to
work for one of the top restaurants on Tarsonis. The
food’s both delicious and nutritious—not a mean
feat!”
Jim and Tychus smiled and nodded, fol owing him
down the marble-floored corridor as they went to the
elevators. The two took their cue from the scientist
and chatted about inanities while they were in the
elevator. So calm and unruffled was Forrest that Jim