Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
“Bet I’l stil be right here … except facedown and
with a few more bottles around me.”
“You should get that hand looked at,” Tychus said.
“Yeah … I don’t feel like asking Scutter for anything
right now.”
“There are places around here that’l fix you up, no
questions asked, for enough credits.”
Jim shrugged. “Scotty Bolger seems to be a pretty
good doctor too. Ain’t feeling much pain right this
moment.”
Tychus grinned, clapped his old friend on the back,
and left.
Jim poured himself another shot but did not drink it
immediately. Instead, he lifted the smal , clear glass
and idly looked at the amber liquid within. He
remembered the first time that he had been
introduced to the stuff. Tal , gangly Hank Harnack, a
former enemy who had become a cherished if
unpredictable brother in arms and fel ow Heaven’s
Devil, had ordered Scotty Bolger’s Old No. 8 for
himself, Raynor, and Kydd, cal ing it “the good stuff.” It
had, of course, tasted like crap, but Harnack had
assured Jim he’d get used to it. A fistfight had broken
out, of course, and the three of them had escaped on
a “borrowed” vulture hovercycle. Jim smiled at the
recol ection of the happy chaos of that evening.
So much had gone away in the last few years. Jim’s
unfamiliarity with drinking. The camaraderie of the
unit. His parents, both of them. Ryk Kydd and
Vanderspool both—the good and the bad. Hel , Jim
thought with a self-deprecating smile, he could count
his own naïveté among the casualties.
It had been unsettling, revisiting Shiloh. Even if his
mother had been wel , the trip would have been
uncomfortable. Everything had changed, and nothing
had changed. There was new building in progress,
new hardships, but the land and the sunsets and the
struggle were the same as what he had faced as a
child growing up there. Except then he had had a
family, a place. He had turned from that path, and he
wasn’t sure where he was anymore.
Jim had first turned from it when he had opted to go
off world, dazzled by a recruiter offering a “generous”
enlistment bonus, to become a Confederate marine
and fight in the Guild Wars. That path had led him to
witness acts both heroic and despicable, to trust and
to have trust betrayed.
His eyes narrowed and he gulped the liquid,
relishing the fire as it burned its way down to his gut.
Vanderspool.
Jim wasn’t a man who hated easily; that kind of
emotion had to be earned. But by God, Colonel Javier
Vanderspool had earned it in spades.
He’d earned it because he was utterly corrupted—
rotten to the core. Because he had been prepared to
sacrifice the lives of—wel , everyone under his
command for money. Because he had instal ed kil
switches in suits that were designed to save the lives
of soldiers in battle. And because, in the end, he had
given Jim Raynor a choice that was no real choice at
al . Raynor had gone AWOL rather than face
resocialization. That decision had forced him to turn
his back on his parents, and both of them were now
dead.
Fortunately, Vanderspool had met a fitting end. Jim
Raynor himself had fired the gauss rifle spike into the
man’s chest.
When you broke it al down and analyzed it, he
supposed it al made sense, each step of the journey.
But when you just looked at now versus then …
Raynor poured himself another shot.
He was glad, fiercely glad, that he had had a few
moments with his mother before her death. He wished
he had had the same with his father. In a way he had,
through the holovid. His mind went back to what his
dad had said.
I love you, Jim. You’re my son, and I always will
love you. I used to think I could also say, “I’ll always
be proud of you.” But I can’t honestly say that
anymore.
Jim grimaced and knocked back the shot.
We love you, but we can’t take your money. That’s
blood money, Son, and that’s not how you were
raised…. Do you remember what I used to tell you,
Son? A man is what he chooses to be…. You can
always choose to be something new. Never forget
that.
Words. Nice-sounding ones. “Some things are
easier to say than to do, Dad,” Jim said softly.
Where he was right now was good. He knew it.
Sure, there was Daun, but there was also Scutter,
who would kick Daun’s ass at some point; Tychus
seemed certain of it. The money was good. They
could buy the best booze, women, and parties with it.
He hopped from high to high.
But in return for Scutter’s help in defeating Daun—
and whoever the hel had sent the bastard after them
—O’Banon would own them. Their legacy would be
not portraits hung in museums or colonial courtrooms,
or names carved on memorials for the honored dead,
but having their pictures on wanted posters. The
money would run out; the women would betray them;
the booze would make them sick. From high to high.
Jim didn’t want to think anymore. He’d heard that
answers were sometimes found at the bottom of a
glass. He intended to find out.
DEADMAN’S PORT, DEADMAN’S
ROCK
Tychus blinked awake to find Raynor staring
down at him. “I’m getting mighty tired of people wakin’
me up,” he grumbled. The girls on either side of him
muttered.
“I know. Me too. Come on. Let’s get some food.”
Ten minutes later, they were in a seedy diner
chowing down on flapjacks, crispy fried skalet strips,
eggs, toast, jam, and black coffee strong enough to
stand a spoon up in. Jim was surprised to see so
many people up at such an early hour; the place was
bustling. He supposed that in a port like this, there
was no “better” or “worse” time for activity, criminal or
otherwise.
“Got your hand fixed, I see.”
“Yeah. Booze wore off and it hurt like hel , so
around three I found someone to do the job.”
“Surprised you didn’t end up with another tattoo.”
They grinned at the memory. Ages ago, it seemed
now, the entirety of Heaven’s Devils had trundled,
absolutely blotto, into a tattoo parlor and gotten their
emblem placed on various parts of their bodies. Jim
remembered very, very little of it, so “memory” was
perhaps not the most accurate term. Stil , it made him
smile.
“So, Jimmy, I know you. Spil . You didn’t get me out
of a sandwich just to go eat flapjacks.”
Jim chewed the surprisingly delicious flapjacks
under discussion, washed the bite down with a swig
of thick coffee, and nodded.
“You’re right. And because you know me, you may
not like what I’m gonna say, but I bet you’l understand
it.”
Tychus scowled. “I better get more coffee in me if
you’re gonna start talking like that. Maybe with a shot
of something.”
Jim put down his fork. “Tychus … I been doing a lot
of thinking. And I’ve made a choice.”
Tychus looked at him expectantly, chewing.
“I want out.”
“Aw, hel , Jimmy,” Tychus groaned. But as Jim
suspected, Tychus didn’t look surprised. He forked
another mouthful of eggs into his mouth and looked
around with studied casualness. More quietly he said,
“That ain’t something you should be advertising in
Deadman’s Port. Be careful about that kinda talk, you
hear me?”
“I hear you,” Jim said. “That’s why we’re here.
We’re not as wel known here as we are at the bars
and gambling dens and whorehouses. Places I find
I’m getting right sick of being in.”
Tychus stared at his half-eaten breakfast, then
pushed his plate away. “You don’t just ‘get out.’”
“
I
do. And you can too. Tychus, you’re a bul , and it
makes me sick to see anyone riding you.”
“Anyone who’s not a pretty female, anyway.” Tychus
leered.
Jim didn’t bat an eye. “Scutter—”
Tychus made a keep-it-down motion with his hand.
Jim continued more quietly but with equal vehemence.
“Scutter O’Banon has got a ring through our noses,
and yet he ain’t done a damn thing for us. I know that’s
gotta sit bad with you.”
Tychus nodded slowly. “We stil can’t just up and
leave.”
“Damn it, Tychus—”
“Shut up and listen to me, boy.” Tychus’s voice was
serious. “We don’t jump without a parachute. We
don’t ditch O’Banon without some way of taking care
of ourselves. We can’t say, ‘Why, thank you, kind sir,
but we’d like to go work for someone else.’ If we’re
getting out, we need to get out and be able to
stay
out. Drop out completely, for good. Do you
understand what I’m saying?”
Jim did. Tychus, as usual, was one step ahead of
him. Jim knew that plenty of people underestimated
Tychus Findlay. They saw how powerful y, almost
impossibly built he was, and didn’t think past the
muscle. Big as he was, Tychus was extremely fit. He
was also extremely intel igent. Jim knew he himself
wasn’t a slouch in the fitness or mental acumen
department, but Tychus thought about things in a
different way than he did. They complemented each
other wel .
“Sounds like you might already know of something,”
he said, taking another bite of flapjack.
“I listen,” said Tychus bluntly. “Even when I’m doing
other things. And people talk, even when
they’re
doing
other things. Scutter’s boys are no exception. Now,
Cadaver and that butler know how to keep their
mouths shut, but some of the others … wel , let’s just
say Scutter’s got a big, big score coming up. One that
could keep us set for a long time. A
long
time.”
Jim was intrigued. “You know who we’re robbing?
Where the money’s coming from?”
Tychus shook his head. “Nope. And it don’t matter
none, anyway, because by the end of it al , that
money’s going to be ours and no one else’s.” He
grinned wickedly.
The man in the duster landed his smal vessel at
Deadman’s Port. He emerged from the ship and
looked about, fixing his one-eyed gaze on the
“authorities” there. The other eye was covered by a
patch. There was something in that single cold eye
surrounded by scars that made the men avert their
own. They took his credits, wished him good day, and
were happy to see the back of him.
He strode through the channels between hulking
vessels with the confidence of one who knew he
would not be bothered, and he was not. Not by adults,
anyway. One member of a gang of urchins made the
mistake of reaching out a smal hand to clutch the
duster. The child found herself staring wide-eyed at a
pistol an inch from her face.
Daun smiled at her fear. “You know who I am?”
Tears wel ed in the brown eyes, slipped down the
tanned face. “N-no sir.”
“I’m the bogeyman,” Daun continued. He clicked off
the safety, slowly, knowing it would be heard clearly in
the frightened silence that had fal en on the cluster of
children. He lowered his face to the little girl’s, then
lifted the eye patch. The girl shrieked. Beneath the
black fabric was a patchwork of scar tissue. A
glowing red orb sat in the black, acid-scarred socket.
The orb seemed to dilate and constrict, making a
slight whirring noise as it did so.
“I’m going to come at night, and crawl into your
head, and haunt your dreams as I stare at you with my
red, red eye. And then tomorrow I’l be fol owing you.
Watching
you. Do you know what I want to see with
my red, red eye?”
She was fighting back sobs now, her whole body
trembling. Her terror was intoxicating. It was a pity his
line of work didn’t bring him into contact with children
more often. Their fear was so …
pure
.
“No, sir,” she whispered. “What do you want to
see?”
“I want to see you looking over your shoulder,
wondering where I am. Wil you do that for me?”
She nodded, screwing her eyes shut. Mucus ran
from her nose.
“Good. Maybe I won’t come back in your head after
that. Or maybe I wil . Run along now.”
She and her little group fled, scattering like roaches