Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
spare magazines. There were two bodies on the floor
that were not law officers. Neither of them was
Raynor. Raynor’s body was also not among those
found in the lobby, and the single surviving witness
had said both Raynor and Findlay had escaped.
Conclusion: Raynor had escaped, and Findlay was
taking the fal .
Tychus Findlay therefore had nothing to lose. Butler
swal owed hard.
He leaned over, took aim, and fired. Findlay
grunted as a bul et embedded itself in his arm. His
head snapped around, and his eyes locked with
Butler’s. A grin curved his mouth as he brought one of
the guns around and pointed it right at the marshal.
It clicked. Empty.
Findlay didn’t even slow down. He charged toward
Butler, who stepped out from behind the protection of
the pil ar. Butler took slow and careful aim—
Four of the armored cops jumped on Tychus. He
shook them off as if they were so many flies, but they
kept coming. Three more sprang on him, including
Wilkes Butler. Even now Tychus Findlay tried to rise,
but he had been wounded in the fight, and at last they
had him pinned.
Butler snapped a pair of handcuffs on the bul of a
man and stood over him, panting. Paramedics were
already swarming over the wounded. He did a quick
count: almost twenty. Some of them were far too stil .
He turned his gaze back to the man who lay before
him, blood flowing from at least half a dozen places.
“Marshal Butler,” came a voice, “this one’s stil
alive.”
Butler glanced away to see one of the paramedics
tending to one of the bodies that had been in the
penthouse before they had broken in. His eyes
widened. The man had a cybernetic arm … and an
ocular implant. Butler glanced up at the stil -playing
holograms, then back at the man on the floor.
“Hel ’s bel s,” he said. “That’s Ezekiel Daun.”
“Aw, for fekk’s sake,” muttered Findlay, “won’t that
bastard just die already?” His voice was strangely
thick, and as Butler turned to regard him, Findlay spat
out a great deal of blood and a few teeth.
“Patch Daun up and arrest him,” he told his deputy.
He thought about the bounty hunter’s reputation.
“That’s someone who real y needs to be behind bars.”
“This the best you could do, Butler?” drawled
Findlay. “Just the sort of pansy-ass takedown attempt
I’d expect from someone dil ydal ying at a convention.
Couldn’t even kil me.”
Butler’s nostrils flared with anger. For so, so long,
he had been chasing Raynor and Findlay. Findlay had
gotten away every time, often with some scathing
insult. But now the tables had turned. Tychus Findlay
had final y been caught—by Marshal Wilkes Butler.
He yearned desperately to find fitting words to
humiliate this man, who had led him on such a merry
chase—something memorable to quote as he told the
story again and again over the years.
Tychus’s grin widened, though it had to be a painful
gesture. The seconds ticked by.
“Wel ?” said Tychus Findlay.
“You’re under arrest,” was al Marshal Wilkes Butler
could say.
Tychus laughed.
There was, mused Myles Hammond, about the
same amount of papers to push here as on Shiloh.
And there was red tape—because there was
always
red tape. But the furniture and supplies in his office
were newer, and there was a lot less dust.
Best of al , when he pushed the papers and cut
through the red tape, papers stayed pushed, and tape
stayed cut. Things … got done. There were no veiled
offers of bribes, no looking the other way. No trying to
get something taken care of, only to find unexpected
obstacles. He was now Magistrate Myles Hammond,
and he was making a difference.
So it was that despite the pile of work on his desk,
he was whistling as he brewed a fresh pot of coffee
and his door swung open.
He did a double take and started to grin. “Wel , if it
ain’t Jim Raynor.”
“Magistrate Myles Hammond,” Jim said, walking up
to his old friend and shaking his hand. He looked
around. “Bigger office. Nicer title.”
“Better chance of actual y doing something useful,”
Myles said, handing Jim a cup of coffee.
Jim nodded his thanks and took a sip. “Better
coffee here too. So … this is your little slice of
perfection.”
Myles chuckled and took a sip. “No, it ain’t perfect.
But it beats Shiloh, that’s for sure. At least there’s
some decency here. Some damned honesty. People
look out for one another instead of just themselves.
They help. And my hands aren’t tied here, so I can
help too.” He gave Jim a fond, proud look. “Welcome
home, Jim.”
“Whoa, whoa,” Jim said, “I didn’t say I was staying.
Came to take a look-see is al . And I’m stil looking.”
“I think you’l like what you see,” Myles said. “These
parts … wel , like I said, there’s decency here. But you
know as wel as I do—hel , maybe better than I do—
that when there are decent folks, there’s people
looking to take advantage of them. Mar Sara stil
needs some law to make sure that decency doesn’t
vanish. A man who understands both sides of that
situation could real y make a fine marshal.”
Jim chuckled and scratched his nose. “You gotta be
out of your mind, Myles.”
Myles raised an eyebrow. “I don’t think you came al
the way out here, sneaking the whole way, just to have
a cup of coffee—mighty fine though it is.”
Jim shrugged and turned away, sipping his coffee.
Myles continued.
“There’d be something in it for you other than
altruism,” he said. Jim turned his head slightly,
listening. “I can offer you clemency.”
“It was just a job you were offering back on Shiloh,”
Jim said. “You can real y give me clemency?”
“Absolutely. It’s within my authority as magistrate
here.”
“What would I have to do?”
“Be my right hand,” Myles said. “Be my marshal.
Get out there and protect the good folks and catch the
bad. You do that, and I can promise that clemency’s
yours.”
Jim finished the coffee and set the cup down on the
desk. “Wel , Myles, I gotta say, you make some mighty
fine coffee here.” He moved toward the door. Myles
grasped his arm.
“Jimmy—marshal’s where I can use you the most.
Where you’l be able to make the most difference and
—clichéd as it’s gonna sound—do the most good.
But the offer stands for anything you want. Even if
you’re just working for me filing papers, you’l have
clemency.”
Jim paused at the door to put on his hat. He turned
to Myles. “I won’t lie to you, Myles. After al I’ve seen
and done … it’s mighty tempting. But before I can tel
you yes or no, there’s something I need to put to bed
first.”
Something in his voice made Myles’s eyes narrow,
but he nodded. “You go on and do what you gotta do. I
respect that. Offer’s always on the table. After al ”—
and he winked—“it’s not like Mar Sara is going
anywhere.”
The moment had been long in coming.
Raynor had begun planning it as soon as he
jumped out of the Covington Bank building. It had
been forming in the back of his mind as the modified
prototype hardskin took him through the city, fighting
off pursuit, outrunning and outgunning it until he got far
enough away to break into an abandoned building
and shuck the suit. He continued to elude capture the
next day, final y managing to sneak out on foot to
where the ship was waiting for him. The poor pilot
seemed confused to see Jim instead of Ash, but went
along with it long enough to give Jim the chance to
knock him out and commandeer the vessel.
Then the journey had begun. Researching. Digging
up old contacts who owed him favors. Getting in good
with the right people. Five years of criminal activity
harnessed, sifted, and milked dry to find out what he
needed to learn, to do, to become, in order to put the
plan into action.
For seven months, Raynor had been investigating
something that made the heists he and Tychus had
pul ed seem noble. There was a black market for a
very specific type of commodity—hard to learn about,
harder to locate. It involved not just trafficking in goods
but in humans—and not just the sel ing of bodies but
of souls, minds, and hearts.
Unlike Tychus, Jim had not spent al his money like
water—wel , not quite—and was able to grease more
than a few palms. He had next to nothing, now, at
least with regard to funds—but he had something
more important. He had the ID, the cover, the codes
…
… and the room location.
He had easily negotiated the labyrinthine building’s
twists and turns. While he had never physical y been
inside before, he had been here a thousand times via
a hologram he had had privately constructed, based
on expensively stolen blueprints. He stood dressed in
the white uniform of the resocs who had access to
this, the inner sanctum of what was the modern
equivalent of a medieval fortress.
As if to confirm the analogy, the resocs cal ed it “the
master’s quarters.” The door before him was large,
dark, sinister. Considering whom it housed, Jim
thought that was quite apt.
He looked at the door, and thought that he and
Tychus had blown safes that seemed more secure.
The thought made him recal the train robbery, and
Woodley, and the jukebox, and Wilkes Butler.
Already, the memories had a nostalgic quality to
them. The taste of something that had passed.
Soon he would feel the same way about the next
few minutes.
He looked over at the security pad. The code was
not a problem. It was triply secured: the correctly
entered code, fingerprint identification, and a retinal
scan were al required. As he had managed to get
himself hired by forging a completely new and
thoroughly verifiable identity, this should be easy.
His “new identity” was as a resoc.
Raynor noticed that his hand trembled slightly as he
entered the code, and forced himself to be calm.
The massive barricade slid open. It was even more
dimly lit inside than in the corridor. Jim hadn’t been
expecting this and closed his eyes as the door closed
behind him, helping them adjust quicker despite the
burning desire to behold his enemy.
In front of him was a metal contraption that looked
like a large coffin. Jim’s lips twitched in a bitter smile
at the appropriateness of the image. Lights flickered
along the outside in a running pattern, and various
tubes went in and out through smal apertures. Jim’s
eyes strained, but he could make out only the barest
outline of a head extending from the end of the metal
box. A short distance away, a large bel ows worked
slowly and methodical y, emitting a dul thunking
sound as it operated.
This was what Ezekiel Daun had showed him and
Tychus when he had revealed who had hired him to
kil them. This room, this metal box … this shel of a
man inside it.
Jim forced himself to turn his attention to the resoc
standing off to the side in front of a screen, careful y
examining rol ing statistics. His hand dropped to his
pocket and closed about a syringe.
The resoc looked up at him. “You’re new,” he said,
frowning slightly.
“Yes, I am. I just got started a few days ago. I’m so
pleased to be here.” Jim stuck his hand out and
smiled cheerful y, receiving a handshake and smile in
return.
“How is the master doing today?” Raynor asked,
feigning interest in the scrol ing statistics.
“His condition hasn’t changed much. He—”
The resoc gasped in pain at the sudden sharp
needle stab, turned confused eyes on Jim for a few
seconds, and then crumpled. Jim checked to make
sure the man was real y out—and that he would be out
for a while—then rose and turned to the coffin.
“What’s going on over there?”
The voice was hol ow, weary, querulous. But it stil
had that same cool arrogance, and Jim was surprised
at the quick flash flood of hatred that washed through
him.
Javier Vanderspool.
He heard that voice again dripping contempt,