Endworld 7
Endworld 7
Armageddon Run By
David L. Robbins
Chapter One
It was time to kill again.
The big man cautiously raised his head, his penetrating gray eyes
scanning the scene directly ahead, counting the soldiers once more. He
had to be sure. Too many lives depended on his judgment. Cautiously,
insuring his dark, curly hair wouldn't be visible above the lip of the ditch
he was lying in, he verified his earlier count: 12 guards and 48 prisoners.
So far, so good.
The man in the ditch flexed his huge muscles, alleviating a sharp cramp
in his left arm. His bulging biceps and triceps, as well as his black leather
vest and green fatigue pants, were caked with dirt from his prolonged
crawling along the ditch. A pair of Bowie knives dangled from a brown
belt, one on each hip. In his right arm he cradled a Commando Arms
Carbine, a 45-caliber machine gun. Suspended under each arm in a
shoulder holster was a Vega 45 automatic pistol.
Startled, the man with the Bowies suddenly noted an interesting fact
about the 48 prisoners: they all seemed to be Indians.
Could it be?
The big man glanced to his right, searching for another of his
companions, but there was no sign of the stocky Geronimo. If figured.
With his green shirt and pants, both constructed from the remains of an
old canvas tent, Geronimo would blend into the scenery.
"Move your butts!" one of the soldiers abruptly barked, goading on the
workers.
The afternoon sun was high in the sky, the early November weather
mild with the temperature hovering in the 60s, typical of northeastern
Wyoming for this time of the year.
The man with the muscles tensed, hoping the others in his party were
set in their assigned spots. Except for Hickok, Geronimo, and Bertha, the
rest of his group were strangers, and he felt uncomfortable about working
with the newcomers. Still, orders were orders. If it was necessary to join
forces with Lynx, Rudabaugh, and Orson, so be it. He had heard about
Lynx, about how deadly the genetic deviate could be, but Rudabaugh and
Orson were unknown quantities, and he disliked relying on them in
matters of life and death.
The big man looked at the officer and the other two troopers standing
near the vehicles at the far end of the work detail. It would be up to the
diminutive Lynx to insure none of the soldiers escaped in those vehicles.
Lynx had better be as good as his reputation, or all of their plans would be
for naught.
Six feet separated him from the closest trooper. The soldier was facing
in the other direction, watching the laborers.
The man in the ditch placed his right index finger on the trigger of the
Commando.
Four feet. The soldier, backing toward him, took another step.
Now!
"Get down!" the big man shouted as he rose to his knees, not bothering
to wait and see if any of the prisoners complied with his command. He
angled the Commando upward and pulled the trigger, the stock bucking
against his shoulder as a burst ripped into the nearest soldier, the heavy
slugs catching the man at the neck and nearly decapitating him,
showering blood and flesh everywhere.
"Get down!" the man with the Bowies repeated, rising, sweeping the
Commando to the right.
The big man let him have it in the chest, the impact flinging the
trooper to the ground, his chest exploding in a crimson spray.
Bedlam ensued.
Hickok popped up from behind the pile of asphalt sacks, the Henry
leveling as he sighted on a nearby guard. The 44-40 boomed, and the
soldier was propelled backward, collapsing in a disjointed heap. Hickok
swiveled and fired again, downing a second foe.
The man in the black vest started toward the prisoners, spotting
Geronimo as the black-haired Warrior rose from concealment in a cluster
of sagebrush and let loose with an FNC Auto Rifle, ripping one of the
hapless soldiers from his crotch to his forehead. Geronimo was also armed
with an Arminius .357 Magnum in a shoulder holster under his right arm
and a genuine tomahawk tucked under the front of his leather belt.
Beyond the stack of asphalt bags, a tall man with a bristly black beard
and bushy eyebrows, dressed in tattered, patched jeans and a faded
brown-flannel shirt, jumped up from the ditch and pulled the trigger on a
Winchester 1300 XTR Pump Shotgun. A soldier in front of him was struck
in the stomach and almost cut in two by the buckshot. The bearded man,
the one called Orson, pivoted and blasted a youthful trooper vainly turning
to flee.
The man in the vest saw two soldiers at the far end of the work detail
running in the direction of the vehicles.
The big man glanced toward the vehicles in time to see a furry figure
pounce from the top of one of the troop transports. The figure landed on
the officer, knocking him to the ground. There was a flash of lightning
claws, punctuated by a hideous shriek, and in an instant the officer and
his two companions were dead, their throats torn open, gaping at the blue
sky with lifeless eyes.
Geronimo approached the man in the black vest. "Any orders, Blade?"
The big man nodded. "Check the bodies," he instructed. "If any are still
alive, then put them out of their misery."
Hickok strolled over to Blade, a grin on his handsome face, his long
blond mustache drooping over the corners of his mouth, his blue eyes
twinkling. "I knew these wimps wouldn't be a problem," he stated. "It was
a piece of cake."
"It's just the beginning," Blade reminded him. He stared at the Indians.
All 48 were prone on the highway. Miraculously, none of them had been
hit.
"Orson," Blade directed, "see if you can find the keys to these shackles
on one of the soldiers. Your best bet would be the officer."
Orson's pudgy features twisted in a frown. "Why should I do it? I'm not
your errand boy. Have somebody else do it."
Hickok took a step toward Orson, his right hand lowering near the
pearl handle of his right Python. "You keep flappin' your gums like that,
pard, and I'm just liable to put a hole between those beady eyes of yours."
Orson glared at the gunman. "You don't scare me, Hickok! Oh, sure,
I've heard all about you. How you're supposed to be the fastest man alive
with those Colts. But you don't scare me! Personally, I think you're a lot of
hot air!"
Orson glanced at the speaker, and the faintest flicker of fear was visible
in his face. "No, Lynx. I never included you in the same catagory as
Hickok."
"I don't get you, Orson," Rudabaugh interjected, his hands on the
pistols resting in the holsters attached to the black belt around his slim
waist. "You volunteered for this mission, just like the rest of us. You
agreed, before we left, that Blade would be our leader. Yet you've been
bucking him at every turn, and usually over the most chicken-shit things
imaginable. What gives?"
"Not me," Orson said, frowning. "Wolfe told me to come or else. There's
no way I could say no to Wolfe. You know that."
"I know," Blade admitted, his brow furrowed. What was going on here?
Why hadn't Orson told the truth earlier? What was Wolfe up to? "Go look
for those keys now and we'll talk about this later." Blade watched as Orson
walked off.
"Good." Blade glanced over his shoulder at a curve in the road 500
yards distant. "Hickok, I want you to run back and get Bertha and the
SEAL."
Blade turned.
One of the Indians, a lean man with shoulder-length black hair and
angular features, was slowly rising. Like all of the captives, he wore dingy
gray pants and a matching shirt. "Who are you?" he inquired. "Where did
you come from?"
Blade ignored the question. "How far are we from Catlow?" he inquired.
Red Cloud pointed to the south along U.S. Highway 85. "Catlow is
about ten miles from here," he replied.
"Geronimo."
Red Cloud studied Geronimo from head to toe. "And what tribe are you
from?"
"What is the Family?" Red Cloud asked, perplexed. "Where are you
from?"
"All you need to know about the Family," Blade answered, "is that we
have the same enemies you do, namely the military forces of the Civilized
Zone and their leaders, the Doktor and Samuel the Second."
Red Cloud stared at one of the dead soldiers. "I noticed you are not
especially fond of them.
"If you feel about them the same way we do," Blade said, "then maybe
you will join us in our cause."
Red Cloud's astonishment showed. "Do you know how powerful they
are? They defeated my people!"
Our chief had his wife and daughter escorted to safety." Red Cloud
stopped.
"We fought them off once," Red Cloud continued his narration. "That
was when they used the clouds."
"Yes. Giant green clouds. These clouds would drift over our lines, and
the people swallowed by the clouds would never be seen again. The clouds
ate them."
Blade took a step toward the Flathead. "You're certain about this? They
actually caused the clouds to drift over your positions?"
"They sent in the demons again, backed by the regular troops. Our
numbers were too depleted, and there were too many gaps in our
defensive formations. They overran us." He paused and shuddered. "It was
horrible! They killed men, women, and children without mercy. The
demons were the worst! It was like they went crazy for our blood! There
was no way we could stop them! If the demons hadn't been called off, they
would have annihilated us. As it was, they took all of our youngest
children, all of our babies, to the Cheyenne Citadel. The rest of us were
scattered in groups and sent throughout the Civilized Zone as slave labor.
They told us we weren't even good enough to be sent through one of their
Reabsorption Centers."
"Would you like to get back at them?" Blade asked him.
Red Cloud gestured at the nearest Flatheads. "Let them answer for
themselves. How do you feel?" he asked them. "Do you want to take
revenge on those who conquered us?"
Blade nodded. "I was hoping you would say that." He raised his voice so
every Flathead could hear him. "Listen to me! I have an offer for you! We
will free you from your shackles if you will agree to aid us in our fight
against the Doktor and Samuel the Second. Are you willing to fight?"
Blade waited until they quieted, then held his arms aloft to attract their
attention. "We will supply you with the arms you will need. If you will
stand by us, after it is all over we will reunite you with the daughter of
your chief."
Red Cloud gripped Blade's right arm. "Star? You know where Star is?"
"It's a long story," Blade responded, "and we don't have the time to tell
it right now."
"Star has been adopted by our Leader and his wife," Blade explained.
"Plato and Nadine are taking excellent care of her."
Lynx suddenly appeared at Red Cloud's left elbow, and the Flathead
inadvertently recoiled in shock.
Red Cloud and the rest of the Flatheads were gazing at Lynx in
wide-eyed stupefaction. "What are you?" Red Cloud blurted out.
"My people call you, and the other creatures like you, demons," Red
Cloud answered. "We have heard fantastic tales about the Doktor, about
how he creates you out of the thin air to do his evil bidding."
Lynx shook his head. "Someone's been feedin' you a line, dimples. The
Doktor creates us, sure, but he does it from test-tubes. Ever heard of
genetic engineering?"
"No," Red Cloud admitted. "My parents taught me to read, and I did
own a dozen or so books, but I never heard of genetic engineering. What is
it?"
At that moment, Orson ran up, holding a key chain in his left hand.
"Look at what I found," he announced.
Blade took the keys and knelt in front of Red Cloud. There were seven
keys on the chain; with the third key, the shackles came unlocked.
Red Cloud reached down and placed his right hand on Blade's left
shoulder. "Thank you. For this act of kindness, you have my undying
friendship."
Red Cloud beamed from ear to ear. "I would!" He turned and walked to
the nearest prisoner.
Blade thoughtfully stroked his chin. "We'll give them some of the
weapons we've confiscated, and let them take the two troop transports and
the jeep—
"Why don't we keep the jeep for ourselves?" Orson asked, interrupting.
"It's too crowded in that SEAL of yours with all seven of us inside. Why not
let a couple of us ride in the jeep?"
"Could you drive it?" Blade demanded, his jaw muscles tightening.
"No," Orson confessed. "But I know Hickok could, 'cause he drove the
SEAL part of the way here. Let him do it."
Lynx laughed.
"Now if you have any objections," Blade stated with a hint of menace in
his tone, "speak right up. We're going to settle this here and now. The lives
of all of us will depend on how well each of us follows orders when we
reach Catlow. If I can't rely on you, I don't want you with us."
Blade released Orson and shoved. Orson stumbled backward for several
steps before he regained his balance. He rubbed his neck, glowering at
Blade.
"Wipe that scowl off your face," Blade threatened, "or I'll do it for you!"
Orson gulped and managed a feeble grin. "I didn't mean anything by
what I said!"
"I've got to stay," Orson whined. "Wolfe will have me killed if I leave."
"If you stay," Blade warned him, "you'll do what I tell you, when I tell
you, with no lip. Is that understood?"
Orson nodded.
"I can't hear you," Blade said.
Blade picked up the shotgun and tossed it to Orson. "I want you to walk
south a couple of hundred yards. Keep your eyes peeled. If you see
anything coming our way, report back on the double. Move!"
Lynx was beaming. "I like your style, big guy! You should have punched
his lights out, though."
"If we didn't need Orson in Catlow," Geronimo interjected, "you can bet
Blade would have."
"Like I was saying," Blade said, "we'll give the Flatheads the jeep and
the two troop transports, as well as some of the weapons. I 'll give them
explicit directions so they can join up with our main column." He paused
and glanced at Red Cloud, who was still busy releasing his fellow
Flatheads. "Hey, Red Cloud!""
Chapter Two
All he kept seeing, repeating over and over again, were vivid scenes of
death and destruction. A tremendous battle, the ultimate conflict between
good and evil. Thousands upon thousands died on both sides, the innocent
as well as the guilty.
He had formulated the initial plan, and set the wheels of combat in
motion. Whatever happened next, the outcome would be on his shoulders.
Maybe he should have waited for the Doktor to make the next move.
Maybe he should have upgraded the fortifications protecting the Home
and waited for the Doktor to show up.
Plato sighed and shook his head, clearing the cobwebs, his reverie
shattered. "What did you say?" he absently asked.
The speaker was standing on the bank of the moat in the northwestern
corner of the 30-acre plot known as the Home. The moat was a stream,
diverted under the northwestern corner of the 20-foot-high brick walls
surrounding the Home. The stream was channeled along the base of the
inside of the walls, providing a secondary line of defense as well as the
essential water for the inhabitants of the Home, the descendants of
followers of a wealthy survivalist named Kurt Carpenter. They called
themselves the Family, and at the moment, their aged Leader, Plato, was
supervising a special project. The stream entered the Home through an
aqueduct in the northwestern corner, with half of the water flowing to the
south and the remaining volume flowing to the east. Eight-foot-deep
trenches carried the water along the four walls until they merged in the
southeastern corner and exited the Home via another aqueduct. In
addition to the walls and the moat, strands of barbed wire were strung all
across the top of the wall to impede potential attackers. Of the six huge
concrete blocks Kurt Carpenter had had constructed on the property, one
of them was a well-stocked armory. Carpenter had known civilization
would revert to bestial levels after World War III, and he had wanted his
beloved Family to be prepared to repel any assault on the Home. He had
tried to project probabilities and cover every contingency.
Actually, two.
Twice the Family had been attacked inside the compound, and it wasn't
until after the second attack that Blade had deduced the faulty link in the
Family's armor. First, some time back, a mutated frog had leaped from
the moat and savagely assailed some nearby Family members. Then, only
recently, two of the nefarious Doktor's deadly genetic assassins had
invaded the Home. One of them had let it slip that they had gotten into
the Home by swimming. It didn't require a genius to ascertain their
method.
Plato glanced at the four men in the moat near the aqueduct. They
were putting the finishing touches on the large screen they had attached
to the interior aqueduct opening.
"It's getting late," the speaker on the bank reiterated. "It will be dark
soon. Should we wait until morning to put the other screen on the
southeastern aqueduct?"
Plato looked at the speaker, a tall man with blue eyes and short blond
hair. He wore a brown shirt and buckskin pants, as well as the traditional
Family footwear: moccasins. Strapped to his waist was a long broadsword,
just one of the many unusual and exotic weapons Kurt Carpenter had
stocked in the Family armory. Plato grinned. "The aqueducts haven't had
a screen on them in the one hundred years since World War Three," he
said. "One more night won't hurt. Yes, we'll wait until daylight to complete
our task, Spartacus."
"Come on," Spartacus rejoined. "I've seen that look before. You're
worried about Blade and the others, right?"
"That's what I keep telling myself," Plato said. "But it doesn't seem to
help much."
The Founder of the Home, Kurt Carpenter, had been a firm believer in
social equality. To that end, he had instituted a practice whereby each and
every Family member would receive an official title. Whether it was Tiller,
Empath, Warrior, or one of the others, every Family member would be
assured equal social footing. Of the over 6 dozen Family members now
alive, 15 had been selected as Warriors, the defenders of the Home and the
protectors of the Family. The 15 were divided into 5 Triads of 3 Warriors
apiece. These 5 Triads were known as Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Omega, and
Zulu. Each Triad had a head or leader, but the head of Alpha Triad, Blade,
was the chief Warrior, responsible for the Home's security. Blade, Hickok,
and Geronimo comprised Alpha Triad, and since they and Beta Triad were
currently away from the Home, Spartacus, as the head of Gamma Triad,
had become the chief Warrior in their absence.
Spartacus walked over to Plato and gently placed his right hand on
Plato's narrow shoulder. He had never seen the Family's Leader look so
sad. "Cheer up!" he stated as happily as he could. "Everything will work
out."
"Hey! What's the matter? Aren't you the one who is always telling us to
have faith?"
"So what's got you so down in the dumps?" Spartacus said, pressing the
issue. "The senility?" he queried tactlessly.
"It has been affecting me greatly of late," Plato divulged. "If only we
could find a cure…"
"You'll find a cure," Spartacus predicted. "With all that medical and
scientific equipment Blade and Geranimo brought back from Kalispell,
and the help you're getting from Gremlin, you should find a cure real
soon."
"Much of it is over our heads," Plato replied, "but we are still in the
process of examining them. They're written in the Doktor's own longhand,
and he doesn't have the most legible writing in the world. A lot of the
contents concern highly technical medical and scientific experiments and
data."
"Are the rumors I hear true?" Spartacus inquired. "About the Doktor
being so old?"
Plato's brow furrowed and he scratched his neck. "If the dates in the
notebooks are correct," he said slowly, "then the Doktor is one hundred
and twenty-seven years old."
"Is it possible? How could he be that old? He would have been alive
before World War Three started."
"Well, suffice it to say the Doktor hit upon a technique to inhibit the
development of the oxyradicals and the peroxide, thereby drastically
reducing the rate of which he aged."
"By having regular transfusions, and using only the blood from healthy,
compatible infants, the Doktor is able to prevent the oxyradicals and
peroxide from increasing in his own system and triggering the aging
process. The longer he lives, the more frequently he must have the
transfusions. The notebooks reveal he starts to age if he neglects the
transfusions, although the process is partially reversible if caught in time."
Plato paused. "So, to answer your earlier questions, yes, I do believe it is
possible for the Doktor to be one hundred and twenty-seven years old."
Spartacus patted the hilt of his broadsword. "I wish I was with Blade
and the others!" he declared. "I'd like to find this Doktor on the business
end of my sword."
"The use of the infants is not the only horror we've discovered," Plato
commented.
"There's more?"
"Is there anything the Doktor isn't involved with?" Spartacus asked.
"We'll know more after we have finished analyzing the four notebooks,"
Plato said. "We've gleaned considerable knowledge concerning the
Doktor's research and work with genetics. In the realm of genetic
engineering, he's phenomenal. Before World War Three, scientists were
able to produce babies from a test-tube. They even designated them
test-tube babies, and would implant them in a female's womb—"
"We in the Family may believe that," Plato stated, "but the Doktor
obviously doesn't, nor did many in the scientific community before the
war. Some of them would perform any type of research for money. Money
talked."
"Living in a world where they used money. From what I've read, money
was responsible for a lot of greed and sorrow and even war.''
"The root of all evil, they called it." Plato turned and watched several of
the children playing tag 30 yards away. "Men and women committed all
manner of immoral and wicked acts to acquire monetary wealth."
"It's a good thing the Family doesn't use money," Spartacus stated.
"We're fortunate. With only slightly over six dozen members, the
Family is small enough so that we don't need it. Each of us performs our
work to the best of our ability, and we all share in the fruits of the Tillers'
efforts," Plato said.
"You mentioned that the Communists denied the Spirit, and that
reminded me of something I've wanted to ask for some time, but kept
forgetting to bring up. We, the Family, call the Creative Force the Spirit.
In many of the books in the library, I've noticed that before the Big Blast
they called the Spirit by another name. They usually used the term God.
So how come we use the Spirit instead of God?"
Plato stood and stretched. "I'd best be getting along. Nadine will have
my supper waiting, and she can become quite cross if I'm detained."
"I'll see you in the morning," Spartacus stated. "Don't worry about the
guard schedules. I have everything worked out, which Triad is supposed to
be on duty and when."
"You're doing a superb job. Blade will be proud of you." Plato smiled.
"And thank you for the stimulating conversation. It has perked me right
up!"
Spartacus gazed up at the darkening sky, noting the first visible stars.
What was Blade doing at this very moment? he wondered.
Chapter Three
All of these facts flitted through Blade's mind as he viewed the town
using binoculars. He was lying on a small rise 200 yards north of the
outskirts of Catlow. The town had quieted considerably since darkness had
fallen. Lights had come on all over the place, indicating the town had
electricity.
How soon before a patrol was sent out to ascertain why the work detail
was overdue?
Blade glanced over his shoulder at the SEAL, parked on the highway
below.
The SEAL. Kurt Carpenter's most important legacy to the Family, a gift
costing Carpenter millions. He had wisely foreseen the need for an
exceptional vehicle after World War III, knowing conventional cars and
trucks would only last as long as fuel was obtainable and parts could be
replaced. Consequently, Carpenter had personally financed the research on
and construction of the SEAL. The Solar-Energized Amphibious or Land
Recreational Vehicle, more commonly referred to by the acronym SEAL.
The SEAL was van-like in its contours, its body composed of a
heat-resistant and shatterproof plastic, tinted green to enable those within
to see out but preventing anyone outside from looking in. The SEAL's
source of power was the sun; sunlight was collected by two revolutionary
solar panels affixed to the roof. The energy was then converted and stored
in a bank of six singular batteries, stored in a lead-lined case under the
transport. Four huge tires completed the exterior picture.
Almost.
Blade saw a buckskin-clad figure emerge from the SEAL and climb
toward his position. He glanced through the binoculars one more time,
then turned to face his friend. "Why didn't you stay in the SEAL?" he
inquired.
"I got tired of hearin' Orson bellyache, pard," Hickok said as he knelt
alongside Blade. "I reckoned I'd best skedaddle before I was tempted to
call him out."
"It wasn't our idea," Hickok reminded him. "Plato was the one who said
each outfit should send at least one fighter."
"At least Orson can fight," Blade commented. "He proved that when we
ambushed those twelve earlier."
Blade gazed at the starry sky. "We'll wait a while longer before we make
our move."
"I never got around to asking you," Blade noted. "How did Sherry take
to this campaign?" Sherry was Hickok's wife.
The gunman laughed. "She didn't want me to come. She said she
thought Plato's plan is too risky, and I had to agree it is a mite on the
cockamamie side. She was worried I might get hurt, which is only natural
seeing she worships the ground I walk on."
Blade chuckled. "I'll bet what she loves the most about you is your
humility."
"How did Jenny take it?" Hickok queried, referring to Blade's spouse.
"The same as Sherry. Geronimo's wife probably reacted the same way,"
Blade commented.
"I was talking to Geronimo a while ago," Hickok explained. "He claimed
Cynthia told him to kick ass and bring back some white scalps."
"I figured as much," Hickok said. "That mangy Injun wouldn't tell me
the truth if his life depended on it."
Blade smiled. "You do the same to him. That's what you get for having
him as one of your best friends."
"Yeah." Hickok smiled also. "We know we can count on him when the
going gets rough."
"I like Rudabaugh," Hickok declared. "He's right handy with those
pistols of his, but the poor boy suffers from delusions."
"Delusions?"
"One of these days," Blade told him, "you may meet your match."
Hickok snorted. "Thanks for the vote of confidence! The only way
anybody is going to beat me is if they tie my hands behind my back."
"What?"
"There's no doubt the furry runt can kill," Hickok said. "He just takes
some getting used to, is all. I mean, when you saved Gremlin from the
Doktor in Kalispell and brought him back to the Home, he took some
getting used to also. But I like him fine. I do know I could count on Lynx to
back my play in a pinch, which is more than I can say for that wimp
Orson." He paused. "I wonder how the Doktor does it?" he asked
thoughtfully. "How does the madman make critters like Lynx and Gremlin
and all the others?"
"Beats me," Blade confessed. "I think Plato and the Elders are close to
understanding the process."
"Damn it, you idiot!" Hickok exclaimed. "I could of blown you away!"
His body was half-twisted in the direction of the newcomer.
"Not the pitiful way you shoot," a husky feminine voice taunted him.
"Be cool, baby," Bertha advised him, kneeling next to Hickok. She was a
lovely, statuesque woman, with dusky skin and curly black hair; one of her
parents had been black, the other white. Her clothing, fatigues confiscated
from a deceased soldier, blended nicely with the night. Alpha Triad had
rescued her months before from an Army contingent in Thief River Falls,
Minnesota. Originally from the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul,
where she had served as a "soldier" in a faction called the Nomads, she
had later become instrumental in assisting the Family in relocating the
inhabitants of the Twin Cities to a deserted town known as Halma,
situated very close to the Home. The Home itself was located on the
outskirts of the former Lake Bronson State Park. "I wanted some fresh
air," Bertha stated. "Besides, you got no call to get on my case. But I want
you to know I'm still ticked at you for what you did today."
Bertha playfully slapped Hickok's shoulder. "Do you hear this bozo? He
has a short memory. Who was it who almost got us killed when we made
that run to the Twin Cities? Who was it who almost lost his gonads to the
Wacks?" She stopped and pointed at Hickok's Pythons. "You gonna put
them away or shoot me, White Meat?"
Bertha faced Blade. "You ain't off the hook yet, sucker! Why'd you do it?
I can hold my own, and you know it. Why didn't you let one of them other
jerks guard the SEAL today?"
Blade put his brawny right hand on her shoulder. "Bertha, I'd never
treat you differently because you're a woman. Remember, I'm the one who
picked two women to be Warriors in the Family. I happen to think women
can handle combat as competently as men, provided it's the right
woman—"
"What do you mean by that?" Bertha curtly cut him off.
"Just what I said. Certain women are natural fighters, others aren't. It's
the same with men. Some make excellent fighters, while others don't.
You've met Joshua. He's a case in point. He's too spiritual to become an
effective fighter. Why do you think my Family has such an arduous
selection process for the status of Warrior? Why is our screening of
potential candidates so rigorous?"
"You still haven't told me why you left me behind today," Bertha noted.
"How so?"
Blade pointed at the SEAL. "You know how important our transport is.
It's essential to the Family's welfare. So put yourself in my shoes. There I
was, about to leave the SEAL unprotected in enemy territory. I had to
leave a guard. But who could I pick? Lynx or Rudabaugh or Orson? Not
likely. I don't know any of them well enough to trust them alone with
something as valuable as the SEAL. Hickok or Geronimo? They're my
Triad partners. We trained together, and we've fought side by side for
years. I needed them with me to maximize our capability. There was only
one person I trusted enough to leave with the SEAL, only one person
whose ability and reliability I could count on.
Bertha leaned down and kissed Blade on the left cheek. "You adorable
hunk, you!"
"Don't worry," Bertha said to Hickok. "I ain't about to fall for him. Not
like I did for you, before you went and got yourself married to someone
else."
"I wasn't talking about you," Hickok corrected her. He pointed toward
Catlow. "Look."
A pair of headlights was just leaving the outskirts of the town, bearing
north on U.S. Highway 85.
The three of them raced down the rise to the SEAL. The rise and a
slight curve temporarily blocked their view of the town and the
approaching vehicle.
Blade grabbed Bertha's right elbow and pushed her to the center of the
road. "Lay down," he ordered.
"What?"
Blade quickly clambered into the SEAL, into the driver's seat.
The interior of the SEAL was spacious. There were two bucket seats in
the front, one for the driver and the other for a passenger, with a console
between them. A comfortable long seat ran the width of the transport
right behind the bucket seats. The rear section of the SEAL was utilized as
a storage space for their provisions. Two spare tires and tools were
stocked in a recessed compartment under the rear storage area.
Blade hastily placed the key in the ignition and gunned the motor. He
kept the lights off and carefully backed the vehicle from the highway, into
the cover of the rise. He stopped the SEAL 20 yards from the road and
switched off the engine.
"Don't know yet." Blade glanced at Geronimo. "Stay put and watch the
SEAL."
Blade climbed from the transport and sped to the boulders Hickok was
hiding behind.
"I want them taken out quietly," Blade said as he crouched near
Hickok.
Blade raised his right pants leg. A stiletto was strapped to his calf below
the knee. Another stiletto was secured to his left leg. He gripped the hilt
and handed the weapon to Hickok.
"Thanks, pard," Hickok whispered. "I hope you won't fuss if I get it
bloody."
"Be my guest."
The jeep was traveling at a sedate speed, not more than 30 miles an
hour, when the lights illuminated Bertha's prone form. The driver
promptly slowed to a crawl.
Two more soldiers emerged from the jeep, one of them the driver. They
also carried M-16s.
The first trooper, a sergeant, put the barrel of his M-16 on Bertha's
head. With his right hand on the trigger, he used his left to reach down
and touch her cheek.
Blade hesitated in making his move, hoping the troopers would spread
out a bit more or turn their bodies in another direction. As it was, the
three were practically facing the boulders.
"I think she's faking it," the sergeant was saying. "Look at the uniform
she's wearing."
Damn!
Damn!
"If you don't open your eyes right this instant," the sergeant stated
harshly, "I'm going to add another hole to your head."
Bertha opened her eyes and rolled over. She grinned at the sergeant.
"Hi, there! Thanks for waking me from my nap."
"Cut the crap, bitch," the sergeant rejoined. "I happen to know for a
fact that women aren't stationed at outposts like Catlow. So where did you
come from? And how did you get out here in the middle of nowhere?
Where'd you get that uniform?"
"My, ain't you a bundle of questions," Bertha said.
The sergeant jammed the barrel of the M-16 against her right breast. "I
want answers, and I want them now."
Hickok was moving to the right, crouched over, heading for the
highway.
"I'm going to count to ten," the sergeant told Bertha. "If you haven't
told me what I want to know by then, I 'm going to ram this thing up your
snatch and let you have it."
"Two."
Blade had lost sight of Hickok. What the hell was the gunman up to
now?
"Three."
"Four," he said.
"Five."
"Anyone ever tell you that you've got a one-track mind?" Bertha asked.
"Six."
Bertha glanced at the other soldiers. "Are you just gonna stand there
and let him blow me away? Didn't your momma ever tell you it ain't polite
to waste a lady?"
"Seven."
The three soldiers looked up, elevating their weapons, covering the
interloper.
"Who the hell are you?" the sergeant demanded, flabbergasted at his
audacity.
"Hold it!" the sergeant growled. "Another step and you're history!"
"I'm not fooling!" the sergeant warned. "Do it right now or else!"
Hickok's left hand drifted to his belt buckle. "I don't reckon I could
prevail upon you to surrender peaceably?"
The sergeant never saw the massive arm encircling his neck, nor did he
feel more than a twinge of pain as the razor point of a Bowie knife ripped
up and into his neck, piercing his jugular, driving past his jawbone, and
imbedding itself in the base of his skull. He gurgled once, blood erupting
from the wound and cascading down his chest.
Frantic, the third trooper swung toward the giant in the black vest.
Before he could fire, the gunman was there.
Hickok charged in a rush, grabbing the stiletto from behind his back
and lunging, the narrow blade penetrating the third trooper's left eye.
The trooper screamed and fell to his knees, futilely striving to extract
the stiletto from his eye.
Bertha was on top of her foe, pinning him to the road with the M-16
pressed against his neck. He was gaping at her in sheer horror.
"Watch him for a moment," Blade instructed her. He turned and strode
into the darkness.
Bertha stood, the M-16 in her hands. "Don't move!" she told her
prisoner. "And keep quiet!"
"Too bad you had to go and marry Sherry," Bertha stated. "We would of
made a great combo."
Hickok nodded at the captive. "Now's not the time nor the place.
Besides, I thought we had this all settled."
Hickok, desperate to change the subject, leaned over the soldier. "Did I
just see your eyelid twitch?"
"You sure?"
"Yes, sir!"
"Yes, sir!"
"Leave the poor boy alone," Bertha said. "He might pee his pants if you
keep it up."
They clearly heard the sound of the SEAL starting, and a few seconds
later Blade drove the transport onto the roadway. He braked, turned it off,
and jumped outside to the ground. Geronimo and the others followed his
example.
"What the hell do you think you're doin', big belly?" Bertha angrily
inquired. "There was no need for that!"
"Just giving him some of his own medicine," Orson answered, surprised
by her attitude. "What's the big deal."
Blade squatted next to the soldier. "I'm going to ask you some
questions. I want honest answers." He drew his right Bowie, the one he'd
used to kill the sergeant. "If I suspect you're lying, you know what I'll do."
"Yes, sir."
"Fine. How many soldiers are left in Catlow?" Blade inquired as a test
question.
Blade nodded. The number fit. He'd already known there were
originally 40 in Catlow. They had wiped out the 12 guarding the
Flatheads. The 3 here made it 15. Subtract 15 from 40, and the result was
25. The trooper was telling the truth.
"There's a large square in the center of town," the soldier said. "Our
headquarters is a concrete building to the south of the square."
"Captain Reno."
"Not before morning," the soldier stated. "He told us he thinks they had
mechanical trouble, and they wouldn't want to leave one of the transports
with a load of Indians out overnight. He said they were probably camping
out and would send the jeep back in the morning for a mechanic. It's
happened before."
"Why wouldn't they just send someone back at night?" Blade inquired.
"We don't do a lot of driving at night, not unless it's really necessary."
The soldier fearfully gazed skyward. "There are… things… out at night."
"He felt it would be safe," the trooper responded. "The moon is not out
tonight."
"What the blazes does the moon have to do with anything?" Hickok
questioned.
"I don't rightly know. I'm kind of new here. I was assigned to Catlow
only a month ago. I've heard a lot of stories— “
"We could tie him up and leave him at the side of the road," Hickok
suggested.
"The… things."
"Why not give him to me?" Lynx requested. He had been quietly
leaning against the SEAL, but now he moved forward and stood near
Blade. "I could use a tasty snack."
At the sight of the genetic mutant, the young soldier recoiled in stark
fear. "Keep him away from me!"
"He won't hurt you," Blade promised.
"Sure, sonny," Lynx said, grinning, his green eyes twinkling. "I was only
foolin'."
"Yeah. I saw you on the news. You're the one who tried to kill the
Doktor! You're the one who nuked the Citadel!" The trooper's eyes were
terrified saucers.
"What's the big deal?" Lynx demanded defensively. "It wasn't a big
nuke! Just a little thermo, the portable missiles they used a lot during
World War Three."
"You nuked the Citadel?" Bertha shook her head in disbelief. Her
knowledge of nuclear weaponry was scanty, a result of her lack of
schooling. But she had heard many tales during her gang years in the
Twin Cities, and she knew from firsthand experience some of the
horrifying results of the nuclear devastation caused by the Third World
War.
"You're the one they call Lynx!" the soldier exclaimed. "You're the
reason they had to evac—“ He abruptly stopped, his head cocked to one
side.
They all listened intently. There was a faint swishing sound in the air.
"It's what?" Blade inquired. "What are these things you keep talking
about?"
"It's going to get us!" the trooper yelled. Before any of them knew what
he was doing, in a surprising display of speed, he twisted, pushed himself
erect, and bolted into the night, into the field on the far side of the
highway.
"I'll get the dumb kid," Lynx volunteered, and took off in pursuit.
Blade shook his head. "Lynx can move faster than any of us, and those
eyes of his enable him to see in the dark much better than we can. He'll
catch the soldier."
They waited in the glare from the jeep headlights, their hands on their
respective weapons. Blade debated having the jeep headlights doused, but
discarded the notion. Whatever was up there had fallen upon the soldier
in the gloomy field, not in the bright headlights. Maybe the… thing…
didn't like the glare.
"I don't know," Lynx replied. "I saw this form diving from the sky, and I
could make out a gigantic pair of wings. You heard the kid when the thing
got hold of him? It never slowed, just grabbed the kid and up it went
again. There was nothing I could do."
Rudabaugh shook his head, breathing deeply from his dash down the
rise. "Not a peep."
"Okay." Blade noticed Orson standing near the SEAL, fear on his
features. "Hickok, I want Geronimo and you to put the bodies in the jeep
and drive it into the field. See if you can find a suitable hiding place, like a
ravine or arroyo. Then get back here on the double. Watch out for colossal
canaries!"
"You don't have to tell me twice," Hickok said.
"The rest of you," Blade addressed them, "inside the SEAL. We'll spend
the night inside, just in case there are more of… whatever they are…
around here."
Lynx climbed into the rear section, while Orson, Rudabaugh, and
Bertha took the wide seat. Blade retrieved the arms from the dead soldiers
and passed them to Lynx, then stood outside observing Hickok and
Geronimo comply with his instructions. When Hickok drove the jeep into
the far field, he clambered into the driver's seat.
"We just gonna stay here on the highway?" Orson asked. "What if some
traffic comes along?"
Before Blade could reply, Bertha rammed the barrel of her M-16 into
Orson's fleshy chin.
"You know, honky, I'm gettin' real tired of your face," Bertha said in a
hard tone. "First, you beat on that boy out there, a kid just doin' his job,
when he couldn't fight back. And now, you badmouth the Warriors. You
must be one stupid honky! I've seen these Warriors in action, and I'm here
to tell you they can be mean mothers if you tick 'em. off. But don't take my
word for it. I've seen how you like to get on Blade's case all the time. Do me
a favor. Do all of us a favor! Why don't you pick on Hickok, but do it when
Blade ain't around, 'cause Blade is a nice guy and wouldn't let Hickok do a
number on you. You see, lover," Bertha mentioned softly, leaning nearer to
Orson, "you don't know Hickok like I know Hickok. That man is stone
crazy when it comes to killin'. You might be able to cross him once and get
away with it, if he had a reason to let you live. But dump on him twice…"
Bertha paused and laughed. "Well, let me put it to you this way. I don't
know of anyone who's crossed Hickok twice and is still alive to tell about
it. Do you, Blade?"
Blade suppressed a grin. "No," he confirmed.
"This is real interesting, Bertha," Lynx chimed in. "You should have
been with us earlier, when we jumped the work detail guards."
"Because fatso here told Hickok he was full of hot air." Lynx frowned
and snapped his fingers. "And dummy me! I had to go and butt in before
Hickok made his play!"
Bertha looked at Orson, her brown eyes dancing with delight. "Did you
really?" she inquired sweetly. "Orson, I'm here to tell you, I haven't met
anyone in all my years with less brains than you have." She removed the
barrel of the M-16 from his bearded chin.
Orson turned and glared at her. "You talk real big when you have a gun
in my face!"
"Are you…" Bertha began, then hesitated, her face creasing in a pleased
smile.
The passenger side door was jerked open and Geronimo entered the
SEAL, followed by Hickok. Geronimo sat on the console, the gunfighter in
the remaining bucket seat.
"It was a piece of cake," Hickok affirmed. "Not more than fifteen yards
thataway"—he pointed to the southwest—"is a gully. Not very big, but the
jeep fit in it real nice."
"Good," Blade declared. "We'll back up behind the rise and spend the
night there."
Bertha eased forward on her seat. "Say, White Meat?" she said, using
her pet expression for Hickok.
Hickok glanced over his shoulder. "Anything except marry you. I keep
tellin' you I'm already hitched."
"He sure has," Bertha verified. "Me, and Blade, and everybody else, for
that matter."
Hickok's blue eyes narrowed. "I told you I'd put a hole between those
beady eyes of yours if you kept it up." He reached for the door handle. "I'll
wait for you outside."
Orson's mouth fell open. He shot a glance at Blade. "Are you just going
to sit there and let him shoot me?"
Blade slowly stretched. "Orson, I'm tired. It's been a long day. I don't
have the energy to waste trying to talk Hickok out of killing you."
"This is supposed to be a joint venture," Orson said. "We were sent here
as a team! Your Family and my people have signed a treaty!"
"True," Blade admitted. "The Family and the Moles did agree to a
pact."
"So, if you let Hickok kill me, it would violate the treaty!" Orson
declared.
"How would your people find out? I'm not about to tell them," Blade
asserted.
"My lips are sealed," Lynx interjected. "And besides, I really could use
the snack!"
Hickok opened his door. "There you have it. I won't wait long."
Orson paled.
"Oh, darn!" Geronimo said, then sighed. "I hate to be the party-pooper,
but I don't think you should kill him."
"Refresh my memory."
"He told us he was counting on us," Geronimo said. "He said all his
hopes and aspirations were riding with us. And he added it would be up to
us to set an example for all the others. If all of us can't get along, how
could anyone expect the Family, the Cavalry, and the Moles to exist in
peace?"
Blade grinned and started the SEAL, wondering if Hickok really would
have shot Orson or if the gunman was merely applying some basic
psychology. Because, as much as he hated to admit it, they would need
Orson in the days ahead. Need him badly.
Bertha reached over and tickled Orson's chin. "No hard feelings, are
there?"
Chapter Four
He was bedded down for the night, camped under an overhanging rock
at the base of a steep ridge. His horse was tethered nearby, munching on
the grass and other edibles he'd gathered before nightfall. He deliberately
maintained a low fire to minimize the risk of detection. Absently chewing
on a piece of jerky, he gazed out at the twinkling stars.
Why was he doing this? he asked himself for the umpteenth time. What
was he trying to prove?
The going had been easier than he'd expected. Staying on course wasn't
difficult; every Family member was taught to read the stars and navigate
by the sun at an early age. Even hiding in one of the convoy trucks when
they departed the Home had been simple, facilitated by the stacks and
stacks of provisions affording ample hiding places. Once the column was
on its way, the hard part had begun: keeping out of sight of Beta Triad
and anyone else who might recognize him. Mingling with the Moles and
the Cavalry had posed no problem, nor had stealing his mount to complete
his journey.
So here he was, not half a day from his destination, if he read the map
right.
He had to do it.
Even if he failed, even if they put him to death, at least he would know
for certain before he died.
He had to know.
Longer.
How could he have fallen so far so fast? How could he have permitted
himself to be drawn down to their level? Was it a lack of faith? A lack of
dedication? What?
Whatever it was, this trip was essential to his well-being. He would try
it his way for a change. There was always the distinct possibility he would
fail, but the prospect of defeat was secondary to knowing he had tried his
best.
He closed his eyes and silently prayed. "O Divine Maker and Sustainer,
please guide your servant Joshua in this enterprise. Lead me by the hand,
and enable me to reveal the full glory of the knowledge of sonship with the
First Source and Universe Center. We are all your children, and you have
commanded us to love one another even as you love us. Help me. Father,
to love others. Let my light so shine with the brilliance of your love that all
others will recognize your presence in me and be led to worship your
greatness. Steady me in the confrontation ahead. I pray I may be
successful in my goal. I pray I may reveal your love to the Doktor."
Chapter Five
Yet another sleepless night compelled Plato to arise early and tiptoe
from the cabin without awakening his darling wife, Nadine. He stood near
the door and sadly gazed at the first trace of light on the eastern horizon.
Plato clasped his hands behind his stooped back and walked eastward,
toward the fields and wooded sections preserved in the eastern part of the
Home. The cabins for the married couples and families were aligned in the
middle of the 30-acre plot, while the western portion contained the six
concrete blocks and the open space used for Family social and religious
activities.
If all was proceeding according to plan. Blade and the others would be
assuming control of Catlow today. If the Doktor took the bait, the next
phase would swing into operation. And if the column adhered to his
explicit dictates, the Freedom Federation would score a major victory in
its battle against the oppressive Civilized Zone.
So many variables.
The Freedom Federation had been his idea. Actually, he had favored
the designation Freedom Confederation, but when the final tally had been
taken, after Zahner had expressed his preference for the "snappier"
Freedom Federation, the leaders of the unifying factions had opted for
Zahner's choice.
Quibbling over the title would have been inane. The primary
achievement was effecting the union of such diverse groups.
The Cavalry people had been easy to convince. They had suffered
repeatedly from raids by Civilized Zone forces. Based in eastern South
Dakota, the Cavalry was the closest to the Civilized Zone. Originally
formed as a protective association immediately after World War III, a
vigilante group devoted to defending the residents from looters,
scavengers, and Government troops, the Cavalry was now a precision
military force with approximately 700 armed and mounted riders at its
disposal. Its leader, a rugged man named Kilrane, had eagerly embraced
the concept of the Freedom Federation and an assault on the Civilized
Zone. Kilrane and over 500 of the Cavalry were now leading the attack
column. Because 6 of the Family's 15 Warriors were also on the expedition,
Kilrane had graciously left 20 of his men, under the command of a
gunman called Boone, at the Home as support for Spartacus and the other
remaining Warriors.
The refugees from the Twin Cities had also been happy to join the
Federation. Alpha Triad had led about 550 people, the surviving members
of three separate groups, to safety. The three groups, known as the Horns,
the Porns, and the Nomads, had been fighting among themselves for years
over their miserable turf. Now all three were working to build a new home
in Halma, not far from the Home. The Family was industriously aiding the
refugees in adapting to their new locale. After their arrival in Halma, the
heads of the groups had held a conclave and decided to strive to bury their
animosity and begin anew. They had selected a title for themselves, using
the Family as an example, and called themselves the Clan. Elections had
been held, and Zahner had been chosen as their first collective leader. A
man named Bear and another known as Brother Timothy had been
appointed as Zahner's lieutenants.
The final faction comprising the Freedom Federation was the Moles.
Initially discovered by Hickok, they existed in a subterranean city over 50
miles east of the Home. They were led by a man called Wolfe. Plato
distrusted this Wolfe, but didn't know why. There was simply some quality
about the man engendering unease, an air of deviousness, as it were. Still,
Wolfe had agreed to the Federation concept and sent 150 men as his share
of the attacking force.
With the 500 or so Cavalry riders, and the 150 Moles, plus the 200
fighting men the Clan could spare, the Freedom Federation was launching
an attack on the Civilized Zone with only 850 "soldiers." The number
seemed considerable, until one compared it to the amassed might of their
foes.
Plato watched the edge of the sun appear above the horizon.
And now the Freedom Federation was poised to strike before the
dictator could realize his vision of conquest. The first major blow had
already been struck, when Yama and Lynx had destroyed the Doktor's
headquarters at the Cheyenne Citadel. After Yama had returned from
Wyoming and detailed his adventures, Plato had concocted the current
plan. The beginning phase necessitated seven fighters entering the
Civilized Zone. A conference had been held, and it had been agreed that
each faction—the Family, the Clan, the Cavalry, and the Moles—should
pick someone for the seven. Plato, Zahner, Kilrane, and Wolfe had agreed
to use the SEAL for the operation, and the SEAL never went anywhere
without Alpha Triad. With three of the seven automatically chosen, the
Cavalry had nominated Rudabaugh as one of its best men, the Clan had
opted for Bertha, and the Moles had volunteered Orson. Lynx had stepped
forward on his own initiative. His intense hatred of the Doktor, combined
with his thorough familiarity with the Civilized Zone, had made him an
ideal candidate.
Chapter Six
The morning sun was slightly above the eastern horizon when the
garrison commander, a portly officer with a crew cut and a neatly
trimmed black mustache, emerged from the front door of the concrete
command post. He lazily stretched and idly gazed across the town square.
How odd, he thought. Usually, even at this early hour, there would be
people in the square, most enroute from one side of the town to the other.
With vehicles at a premium, the majority of them having been confiscated
by the military over the years, "pedal power," as the officer preferred to
refer to it, was the normal means of locomotion. Civilians walked
everywhere.
There was a fountain in the center of the square, the geyser long since
defunct. The white basin mainly served as a catch for rain water, and at
the moment was two-thirds full.
The officer walked toward the fountain, hoping he could spot the young
woman he had seen at the fountain the day before at about this same
time. His fatigues had been pressed and starched, and his Government
Model Series 80 Automatic Pistol hung on his left hip. He wanted to
present a favorable impression when he ordered her to join him for
supper, a candlelit repast for two.
Smiling smugly, the officer stopped near the fountain and scanned the
area, disappointed that the young woman was nowhere in sight. He was
about to return to the command post to arouse his men when he saw
someone heading his way. At first, he mistakenly assumed it was one of
his men. Several seconds elapsed before he realized it was a woman.
His next move was to drop his hand to his pistol. He started to draw,
then hesitated, perplexed by her friendly smile. She waved to him, as if she
knew him. An M-16 was slung over her left shoulder, but otherwise there
wasn't the faintest indication of hostility on her part.
There was a commotion in the fountain behind him, and the sound of
water splashing.
The barrel of a machine gun was an inch from his nose, being wielded
by a huge man with bulging muscles. He wore a black vest, fatigue pants,
and moccasins, all dripping wet.
Reno gingerly released his pistol and slowly raised his hands to
shoulder height. "You have the advantage of me, sir," he stated.
"Do you keep up with the intelligence reports?" the stranger inquired.
Reno was confused by the unexpected query. "I beg your pardon?"
"I know the Army has been spying on us for years," the giant said.
"Have you ever heard of the Home and the Family?"
"Ahhh. I take it you have." The big man grinned. "Then I can assume
you have heard of the Warriors?"
A blond man in buckskins stood at the east end of the fountain, a rifle
in his hands, two pearl-handled revolvers on his hips.
"You're Hickok!" Reno stated.
"And where Hickok and Blade are," interjected another voice to the left,
"can their faithful, smarter, and braver Indian companion be far behind?"
The one known as Geronimo was there, an FNC Auto Rifle at the ready.
"What are you idiots doin', standing out in the open like this?"
demanded the woman in the fatigues as she joined them.
Reno recognized he had been set up. Blade must have been lying in wait
in the fountain, with Hickok and Geronimo on either side. The woman
had served as a distraction, allowing Blade to get the drop on him. "My
compliments on your strategy," he said, addressing Blade. "How did you
know I would be coming out here so early?"
"We didn't," Blade admitted. "I was expecting your men to come out
first."
"What we want," Blade said, "and what we will get, is Catlow. You can
make it easy for us, or hard on yourself. The choice is yours."
Reno looked at the command post. Where the hell were his men? He
stalled, acting friendly. "Just the four of you against my garrison? You
can't be serious!"
The creature, smiling, stopped next to Reno and tweaked his chin.
"What the matter, chuckles? Cat got your tongue?" He laughed.
Lynx made a show of examining his own body. "Are you sure?"
"Lynx, here, is famous," Reno explained. "He was in all the papers and
on all the newscasts after he tried to kill the Doktor. He actually turned
against the Doktor!" Reno said in a stunned disbelief.
"Too bad I wasn't able to rip him to shreds, like I wanted," Lynx stated
regretfully.
"Did you know the Doktor has posted a reward for your capture?" Reno
asked Lynx.
"The Doktor wants you real bad," Reno elaborated. "I can imagine the
reason. Everyone knows what you did to the Biological Center. All the
newscasts reported how you used a thermo on the Doktor's headquarters."
"A million credits, dead or alive," Lynx said, marveling at his notoriety.
Lynx's brow furrowed in perplexity. "I don't get it. The Doc doesn't
want me dead?"
Reno grinned. "The Doktor has made it clear he wants you alive. He has
threatened to kill anyone who harms you."
"How would you like to impress the Doktor and win his good favor?"
Blade asked Reno.
"It's simple. You drive to the Citadel and tell the Doktor Lynx is waiting
for him here in Catlow," Blade explained. "Along with us, of course."
Reno looked from Blade to Lynx to Blade again. "You must be crazy!
You want me to inform the Doktor you're here?"
"You let us worry about the reason," Blade said. "Just take your men,
drive to the Citadel, and let the Doktor know we're here. It's easy enough,
isn't it?"
"First, I'm not certain the Doktor is still in the Citadel," Reno said.
"Who are you kidding, dimples?" Lynx snapped. "The Doc has always
used the Cheyenne Citadel as his base of operations."
"That was before you obliterated his headquarters and all of his
scientific equipment," Reno retorted. "Don't you know how many
thousands of people you killed when you used that thermo? Do you have
any idea how much hardware you destroyed? They had a panic on their
hands! The civilian populace went bananas! The Doktor and Samuel the
Second believe you've joined the rebels. They're concerned you might have
access to additional thermo units. The last I heard, they were in the
process of evacuating Cheyenne."
"Precisely. The Doktor salvaged what he could from the rubble. You
annihilated most of the Genetic Research Division. The last I knew, there
were rumors the Doktor was relocating his operations in Denver. So you
see, I might not find the Doktor in the Citadel to deliver your message."
"You said you had two problems with the idea," Blade commented.
"What's the other?"
"I'm not stupid," Reno said harshly. "What you're proposing is certain
suicide for all of you. You must have an ulterior motive."
"Like what?"
"Uh-oh," Hickok interrupted. "Look who finally rolled out of the sack!"
"It's up to you," Blade told Reno. "Which way will it be? Easy or hard?"
Captain Reno was calculating his move. If the Warriors and Lynx were
here, in Catlow, it did not bode well for his missing work detail. In
addition, the patrol in the jeep he'd sent out the night before had not
reported back as yet. And there was no sign of the guard he always posted
on the roof of the command center each night. Which could mean only one
thing: 16 of his men were more than likely dead, leaving him with 24.
More than enough to polish off Blade and his companions! Blade was a
fool if he expected a career military man to capitulate so readily! Reno's
lips tightened in resolve. His friends did not call him "Bulldog" for
nothing!
Reno slowly twisted, staring at his men. Eight of them were now
outside, and the rest would join them any second. He smiled at his men,
hoping to convince Blade he was going to comply. "Men!" he shouted.
"Listen to me real good!"
The soldiers started firing, advancing toward the middle of the square.
Hickok backed up, raising the Henry to his shoulder and pulling the
trigger.
One of the troopers was struck in the chest and propelled to the ground.
Bertha and Geronimo opened up, both of them crouching to pose less of
a target.
More and more soldiers were bursting from the command post on the
run, fanning out, deploying with an eye to encircling the fountain.
The explosion was tremendous, spraying dirt and dust and chunks of
flesh and blood in every direction.
Dumfounded by the blast, the soldiers still alive were looking for the
source, unaware of the man on the roof above them. The concentration of
gunfire directed at the fountain momentarily slacked off.
One of the troopers spotted the man in black on the roof and tried to
get off a hasty shot.
A second blast rocked the town square. Soldiers were screaming in pain
and fear. Three of the troopers broke from the rest and ran toward the
east side of the command post.
Orson leaped into view at the corner of the structure, his shotgun
thundering.
Hickok held his fire, waiting for an enemy to show himself. The air was
choked with dust and dirt, obscuring both sides in the clash. The area
near the fountain was still relatively clear, and the gunman clearly saw
Blade and Reno thrashing inside along the rim. What was taking Blade so
long to finish off that wimp?
Lynx rose up next to the struggling pair, his lips contorted in a feral
snarl. His right hand flicked out, and his claws closed on the back of
Reno's squat neck. Lynx heaved, yanking Reno away from Blade and
shoving the officer under the water. His pointed teeth exposed, Lynx piled
on top of Reno.
Something was wrong with Blade. He was leaning on the rim of the
fountain and gasping for air.
Bertha beat him there, reaching Blade and lifting his head in her left
arm.
What the blazes was the matter with Blade? Hickok was less than ten
yards from them when the dust and dirt dispersed enough for the soldiers
to see their opponents. Without warning, the remaining troopers bore
down on the fountain.
Rudabaugh entered the fray, using a Winchester from the roof of the
command post.
Caught in a withering cross fire, the soldiers were getting the worst of
the battle, littering the ground with their dead and dying. A small cluster
was racing toward the fountain, determined to reach their commander.
Hickok perceived there was no way Bertha could hold them off, that
some of them might even reach the fountain. He dropped his Henry and
drew his Pythons, running at full speed now, firing as he ran, going for the
head as he invariably did, his shots spaced so closely together it was
almost impossible to tell them apart. He reached Bertha's side, the two of
them shoulder to shoulder.
Bodies filled the area between the fountain and the command post.
Some of the injured were moaning. Pools of blood dotted the square.
Hickok took hold of Blade's right arm. "Are you all right? You look a
mite pale."
"It isn't funny," Blade stated. "Jenny and I may never have kids!"
"Yeah, I know how that can hurt, pard," Hickok agreed sympathetically.
He glanced at the pool of water in the fountain. "What happened to…" He
stopped, shocked.
Blade turned.
Lynx was standing near the center of the fountain. Floating next to his
left leg was Captain Reno's body. Floating next to his right leg was Captain
Reno's head, the neck a jagged ring of red flesh, the captain's eyes open
and seemingly alive as the head bobbed in the murky water. Blood
dribbled from Lynx's mouth and over his hairy chin. He walked to the rim
of the fountain and stepped over it to firm ground. "That was my idea of a
fun time," he quipped. "I can't wait for the Doc to show his ugly face so we
can do it again."
Hickok scrutinized the genetic deviate. "You like doing what you just
did?"
Hickok gazed at the grisly corpse in the pool. "Lynx, I've been accused
of being trigger-happy now and then. But you, pard, plumb take the cake."
Blade strode several yards from the fountain, scanning the town square.
The residents of Catlow were wisely staying in their homes. Earlier in the
day, just before sunrise, when Blade and his strike force had
surreptitiously entered the town, they had inadvertently bumped into
several of the local citizens. Without exception, each one had gawked for a
few seconds, then wheeled and fled.
Geronimo and Bertha were still verifying the status of the soldiers
sprawled on the square.
Blade looked at Hickok. "Take Lynx with you. Bring the SEAL here."
Hickok nodded and ran off, Lynx in tow. They had left the vehicle
parked behind a dilapidated shack four blocks to the north.
"Not much," Rudabaugh detailed. "Two big rooms with cots for
sleeping, a smaller room with a bunch of tables and a stove, an office, and
a room with a lot of electronic equipment."
"Stay here and keep alert," Blade ordered. "I'm going to have a look."
He took two steps, then paused. "You both did a good job," he praised
them.
Blade headed for the command post. He sincerely hoped there was a
radio inside. Unless they could find a trooper relatively unscathed, capable
of driving an extended distance, they would need to devise another
method of contacting the Doktor. A radio might be just what the…
doctor… ordered.
Blade crossed to the chair and touched the trooper's left shoulder.
The chair swiveled to one side, causing the trooper to begin to slide
toward the cement floor. There was a neat hole in the back of the soldier's
head, and a larger cavity where his right eye had once been.
The soldier slipped from the chair and landed in a disjointed pile on the
floor.
Blade leaned down and stripped the headphones from the soldier. He
placed them over his own ears.
Blade sat down in the chair and studied the equipment on the table.
Blade racked his memory. The Warriors had confiscated some portable
radio equipment during their previous encounters with the Army, but the
items on the table were completely different in many respects. He recalled
his hours spent in the Family library, and one book in particular.
Kurt Carpenter, the Founder of the Home, had personally stocked the
hundreds of thousands of books included in the library. Books on every
conceivable subject. History books, literature books, humorous books,
music books, books on math, geography, astronomy, and all other
branches of science. Encyclopedias, dictionaries, and reference books
galore. How-to books proliferated. Carpenter had foreseen the Family's
future need for sources of knowledge and instruction. Accordingly, he had
included books on the fundamentals of everything from gardening and
weaving to metalworking and gunsmithing. As an added treat, Carpenter
had added scores upon scores of photographic books to the library. These
photographic books, filled as they were with pictures of the prewar society
and its incredible accomplishments and lifestyle, were especially cherished
by the Family, affording a glimpse of the wonders of the previous age. One
of the books, a book Blade remembered at this instant, contained glossy
photos and a fascinating narration of the astonishing array of electronic
means of communication: television, radios, CBs, telephones, and more.
Blade reached out and took hold of a metallic stick on a stand. If his
memory served, this thing was called a microphone. There was a black
switch on the base of the microphone. He depressed it and heard an
audible click.
Blade cleared his throat and pressed the switch. "The emergency is
over," he informed the man at the other end. "But I do need to ask a
favor."
"A favor? What are you talking about?" the man demanded.
"I need you to relay a message for me," Blade told him.
"I don't know who you are, buddy," the man snapped, "but you're in
violation of standard operating procedure. Identity yourself!"
"What message are you talking about? Why don't you send it yourself?
Who the hell is this?"
"You'll do it?"
"I didn't say that. First tell me what this message is that's so
important."
Blade smiled. "I can assure you the Doktor will want to receive this
message. You have nothing to worry about."
"Lynx! Lynx!" the man sputtered. "Is this some kind of sick joke?"
"It is no joke."
"Are you trying to tell me Lynx is there, in Catlow? Who is this,
anyway? What the hell kind of game are you playing? If you don't—"
Blade removed the headphones and switched off the set. He had no
doubt the message would get through to its destination. The radioman
would consult with his superior, and they would endeavor to contact
Catlow again. After failing several times, the radioman's superior would
notify his superior, and so it would go on up the line until someone with
the proper authority decided to report the situation to the Doktor. Hours
might pass, but the Doktor would be apprised of the message.
Would the Doktor respond as Plato and Lynx had predicted? From
what Captain Reno had said about the million-credit reward, the Doktor
just might take the bait. Certainly, a man with the Doktor's intellect would
deduce the setup was a trap of some kind. But the key to the success of
this operation was the Doktor's monumental ego; would the Doktor march
into the ambush anyway, confident in his ability to exterminate his
adversaries? Another factor would be the Doktor's unquenchable thirst for
revenge against Lynx. According to the diminutive mutant—and verified
by the statements Captain Reno had made—the Doktor would want to get
his hands on Lynx personally.
Blade walked outside and spotted the SEAL parked next to the
fountain.
"There are eleven injured," Geronimo reported. "Seven or eight will die
soon, and the rest might pull through with the proper medical help.''
"We were lucky today," Blade declared. "We can thank the Spirit none
of us was killed. Now we have to get ready for the Doktor—
"How are we going to let him know we're here if none of the garrison
can take the word to him?" Geronimo interjected.
"I've taken care of that," Blade disclosed. He jerked his right thumb
toward the command post. "There's a radio inside. I've just sent a message
to the Doktor."
Blade nodded. "The same one you gave when you destroyed the
Biological Center in Cheyenne."
"Do you really think it's gonna work?" she bluntly asked.
"Figured as much." She gazed around the square. "I must be as wacko
as you boys are to go through with this! But there's something I wanted
you to know."
"What's that?"
"We're all going to live through this," Blade disputed her. "You'll see."
Bertha laughed cynically. "I ain't much for fairy tales, so don't try and
jive me, sucker! Besides, I got me a… a feelin' about this."
Bertha started to leave, chuckling. "You just keep thinkin', Blade! That's
what you're good at!"
Blade walked toward the SEAL, troubled. Bertha's intuition had better
be wrong, because he didn't relish the thought of dying in Catlow, a town
he'd never heard of until a couple of weeks before when Yama had
returned from his spying mission to Cheyenne with Lynx. After several
long talks with Lynx, Plato had formulated his plan. He had picked Catlow
because it was one of the northernmost towns in the Civilized Zone, had a
relatively small garrison, and was close to South Dakota, the Cavalry's
stamping grounds. Speed was imperative, with Plato insisting they
achieve their objectives before the heavy snows began. Well, the first step
had been taken.
Chapter Seven
Joshua reined in his horse and stared at the road only five feet in front
of him. U.S. Highway 85. He had made it! He glanced in both directions;
there was a hill to the north and a plain to the south. He turned the horse
to the north and slowly followed the road. If his calculations were correct,
he should be five to ten miles south of Catlow.
Perfect.
Just perfect.
His long brown hair blew in the wind as his brown eyes surveyed the
surrounding terrain, a panorama of sparse vegetation and essentially flat
fields punctuated by a periodic low hill, like the one in front of him. His
lean frame was garbed in a green shirt and faded brown pants. Moccasins
covered his feet. Hanging on a chain draped around his neck was a large
gold cross.
The Doktor.
Joshua couldn't really pinpoint when the idea had first occurred to
him, but he did know it was shortly after hearing Plato disclose the plans
for eliminating the Doktor and conquering the Cheyenne Citadel. Several
of the Warriors had been enjoying their supper near a roaring fire, and
Joshua had joined them.
He could do it!
He had done it once before, in the Twin Cities. He had been responsible
for achieving a truce between the warring parties there. If he could do it in
the Twin Cities, he could do it now—between the Family and the Doktor.
He would show everyone!
But especially Hickok! He liked the gunman. He truly did. But Hickok
had to be shown the truth. Love was the greatest power in the universe of
universes, not a pair of Colt Pythons.
Chapter Eight
Blade, perched on the top of the SEAL, glanced down at the 340 or so
people thronging the town square. The SEAL was parked in front of the
command post.
Bertha, Rudabaugh, and Orson had spent several hours lugging the
bodies of the slain soldiers to a house two blocks from the square. A dozen
of Catlow's residents had assisted in conveying the injured to a house on
the northern outskirts. Hickok and Geronimo had gone from house to
house, rounding up the inhabitants. Owning a firearm was illegal for
civilians in the Civilized Zone, and since the military had long since
confiscated all privately owned weapons, resistance had been nonexistent.
And now, after having climbed the metal ladder attached to the rear of
the transport to permit access to the solar collectors on the roof, Blade was
prepared to address the assembled citizens. Hickok, Geronimo, Bertha,
Lynx, Rudabaugh, and Orson stood near the SEAL, their respective
weapons at the ready. Lynx was there too, but he disdained guns and
relied exclusively on his pointed claws.
"As all of you undoubtedly know," Blade continued, "we wiped out the
garrison this morning. Why we did it, I can't say. Who we are, I can't say.
But I can say we are enemies of the Doktor! I can say we want to bring
freedom to the Civilized Zone! We want you to become masters of your
own lives, to live without the Government telling you how to do
everything! Think of it! How would you like to be free? How would you like
to set up a new Government, one where the people have the power and not
a dictator?"
Blade paused to gauge their reaction. Most were gaping at him in stark
bewilderment.
"My friends and I came here for several reasons," he resumed. "One of
them concerns a man named Toland."
"Let me explain!" Blade shouted. "We know there are many in the
Civilized Zone who are unhappy with the way things are! We know many
want to change the status quo! The Government calls these people rebels!
We call them freedom fighters! A friend of mine took a paper from the
Doktor when he visited the Citadel recently. This paper was classified. It
told us about rebel activity in this area and about one man in particular, a
rebel leader called Toland. This report said Toland was born in this town,
in Catlow. It said he is believed to be hiding here, but the Government
troops haven't been able to ferret him out. Well, if he is here, we want to
talk to him. Toland! If you can hear me, come forward! I give you my word
you will not be hurt! Don't be afraid! The future of the Civilized Zone
hinges on what you do!"
"What? We attacked the garrison just to flush Toland out into the
open?" Blade retorted.
"That's easy enough!" Blade declared. "I take it all of you have heard
about what happened at the Cheyenne Citadel? How the Biological Center,
the Doktor's headquarters, was destroyed by a thermo?"
"So do you know who is responsible for doing what the rebels were
unable to do in a hundred years?" Blade queried.
"So who did it?" Blade challenged them. "Who did have the know-how?
Who's responsible?"
Blade grinned. "That's right! Lynx! I understand some of you have seen
pictures of Lynx in the news. He's probably the most famous rebel in the
entire Civilized Zone." Blade straightened to his full stature and swept his
right hand up and down, pointing at the furry man-thing below him.
"Take a good look! Who is he? Take a good look, and then tell me we're in
league with the Doktor!"
The gathered citizenry began milling about, as those farthest from the
SEAL pressed forward to catch a glimpse of the smallish creature. Some of
them recognized him, and there were gasps and startled countenances
galore.
Lynx, Blade noticed, ate up all the attention, standing with his arms
casually folded and an imperious expression on his feline face.
Minutes passed.
Finally, a tall man with black hair and blue eyes, attired in a denim
shirt and old jeans, moved through the assemblage and stood in front of
Lynx.
Toland glanced up at Blade. "Whoever you are, you must know they will
send more soldiers. You should leave while you still can."
"Yeah," Lynx chuckled. "I can't wait to see the Doc again!"
"If all goes well," Blade affirmed. "Which is why we need your help."
"I will do what I can," Toland offered, "but I must tell you my people are
too scared of the Doktor to fight him."
"I don't want you to fight for us," Blade elaborated. "I need your
assistance in another respect."
"How many rebels like you are there in the Civilized Zone?" Blade
inquired.
"Thousands and thousands," Toland stated. "And for every one willing
to resist the tyrant Samuel the Second and the Doktor, there are two or
three more who would join our cause if they thought they had a chance of
winning. There are far more than the authorities suspect."
"Could you get in touch with the other rebel leaders within, say, the
next week?" Blade queried.
"I might be able to do so," Toland said warily. "Why are you asking all
of these questions?"
Blade crouched and stared into Toland's eyes. "Because in a week the
Doktor will be dead and the Cheyenne Citadel, or what's left of it, will be in
our hands. Two weeks after that, we will take Denver and oust Samuel the
Second. We could use your support."
Blade laughed. "Think of us as the bait laid out for a marauding bear.
Once the bear takes the bait, we spring the trap we've set. I can't supply
the details, but there are many, many more of us. We are called the
Freedom Federation and we have declared war on the Civilized Zone. We
have no ambition to conquer the Civilized Zone and subjugate its
inhabitants. We only want you to install a new, free Government. It will
then be up to you whether you enter our Federation."
Blade nodded. "Good. You must get your people organized and ready to
leave Catlow as soon as possible. We don't want them here when the
Doktor arrives—"
"I can see why," Toland interrupted.
"We've found two jeeps and two trucks behind the command post you
can use," Blade went on. "You'll have to carry as many provisions as you
can. We'll give you enough firearms and ammunition from the garrison's
stores to adequately defend yourselves."
"Have your people travel north and wait," Blade said. "In two or three
days it should all be over, one way or the other, and they can return to
their homes. They can take the injured soldiers with them." He paused.
"As for you, take whomever you need and begin contacting the other rebel
leaders. I will detail what I want you to tell them."
"It's true," Blade assured him. "It may be the only opportunity you will
ever have to throw off the oppressive yoke of totalitarianism."
Hickok glanced up at Blade, a sour look on his face. "Gee, pard, you're
gettin' worse than Plato when it comes to using those ten-syllable words!"
"Where do you think I first heard it?" Blade rejoined. "So! Do we have a
deal?" he asked Toland.
Blade started down the ladder. He stopped on the third rung and stared
at the rebel leader. "Before I forget, there is one thing you must not do
under any circumstances. Don't allow any of your people to head due
south along U.S. Highway 85."
Toland glanced over his left shoulder in the direction of the highway. It
went completely through the town, but bypassed the town square three
blocks east of where they stood. He nodded his comprehension. "The
Doktor will be coming from the south."
The small, wiry man with the Oriental features placed his right hand on
the hilt of his prized katana, his brow knit in thought. He wore a black
martial-arts uniform fashioned by the Family Weavers. 'Are you certain
one of your horses is missing?"
The man in the buckskins pursed his lips. His clear blue eyes were
focused on the Warrior in front of him. He ran his right hand through his
light brown hair, hair streaked with gray. "You're from the Family, Rikki,"
he said. "Wouldn't you know it if one of the Family turned up missing?"
Rikki nodded. "Of course. But the Cavalry has so many horses, Kilrane,"
he reiterated.
Kilrane stared at the column below them, stopped for the midday meal
at the foot of a ridge. The 510 Cavalry riders were divided, with half at the
head of the column and a like number bringing up the rear. Following the
first half of the Cavalry, all robust plainsmen garbed in buckskins like
Kilrane, came the 14 trucks, troop transports that Alpha Triad had taken
from soldiers in the Twin Cities. Because some of them could drive,
members of the Clan were handling the chore of navigating the trucks over
the rugged South Dakota landscape. The troop transports could
accommodate over 500 passengers; consequently, there was ample room
for the 200 fighters from the Clan, 150 Moles, and all of their supplies and
spare gasoline. "Our horses are our life," Kilrane said to Rikki. "Every man
knows his horses as well as he knows his wife." He turned and motioned to
a balding man in buckskins below him on the slope of the ridge. "Come
here."
"This is Vern," Kilrane said, introducing the Cavalryman. "Vern, I'd like
you to meet Rikki-Tikki-Tavi. I know he's got a strange name, but he's the
head of Beta Triad and as such, with Blade in Catlow, is in charge of this
here expedition."
"Howdy," Vern said.
"I understand one of your horses is missing," Rikki stated, getting right
to the point. Plato had placed an awesome responsibility on his slim
shoulders, commanding the Freedom Federation's forces until such time
as Blade took over, and he intended to discharge his duties as efficiently as
feasible.
Rikki thoughtfully ran his left hand through his short black hair. "Is it
possible you misplaced your animal in so large a herd?"
Vern shook his head. "No, sir. I'd know her anywhere."
"When you are around horses all the time," Kilrane added, "you are
able to tell 'em apart as easily as you can tell the difference between two
people. No two horses are alike. Their build, markings, and even their
behavior is distinctive."
Vern snorted. "No one else had better be riding my horse, if they know
what's good for 'em! That'd be the same as stealin', if they didn't ask my
permission. Besides, our guys ridin' guard on the herd know better."
"And you don't think the animal might have slipped from the herd
undetected and is roaming around somewhere?" Rikki asked.
"If the mare isn't lost, and you didn't overlook it," Rikki said to Vern,
"then it can only mean one thing. The horse was stolen," he deduced.
"You've checked the Clan and the Moles as well as your own riders?"
“Explain.”
“Well, the second night we were out, one of the Mole captains was
making his bedcheck of the men in his truck. He counted one more than
he should have.”
Kilrane shrugged. “He didn’t think much of it at the time. After all,
we’re concerned about losing someone, not gaining another fighter. It was
late, and all of the men were sleeping, so he didn’t bother waking them up.
He decided to wait until morning. Funny, though.”
“What?”
“The very next morning, when he counted again, he had exactly the
number of men he was supposed to have in the truck.”
“Do you think it could have been a spy from the Civilized Zone?”
Kilrane asked.
“Anything is possible,” Rikki declared, “but I doubt it. Why would a spy
draw attention to his or her activites by stealing one of our mounts? Why
would the spy leave now, before ascertaining our destination? Remember,
only you, Yama, Teucer, and myself know where we're headed. Plato,
Zahner, and Wolfe know, but they stayed behind with their people. I think
some of the other Warriors were informed but, again, they're not here."
Rikki nodded. "Post extra guards at night until we reach our assembly
point, just to play it safe."
"Will do."
"Watch the camp for awhile." Rikki pointed at some boulders 20 yards
off. "I'm going to go behind them and spend some time in communion
with the Spirit."
"I've been meaning to ask one of you Warriors about this." Kilrane
patted the Mitchell Single Action revolver on his right hip. "You Warriors
are fighters. I've got a rep as being something of a fighter myself. What I
don't get, and what I'd really like to understand, is how you guys can be so
good at what you do and be so… religious… at the same time."
"It just puzzles me, is all," Kilrane said. "I mean, I believe in God. I may
not know what God is like, but I'm smart enough to know there is one. But
you Warriors! You're something else! Everybody—the Moles, the Clan, and
my people— all believe the Warriors are the deadliest folks alive. Yet, at
the same time, I've never met anybody as religious as you Warriors. Your
whole Family is the same way. What gives?"
"Yep. My parents taught me. I own some books," Kilrane said proudly.
With the demise of civilization outside the Civilized Zone, public
education had become a thing of the past. Being able to read had become
a badge of social distinction.
"Have you ever read any books on the philosophy of the samurai?"
Rikki asked.
"The what?"
Rikki opted for another tack. "Ever read the Holy Bible?"
"Let me put it this way," Rikki said. "Imagine there are two groups of
people left in the world. One group is very savage. They kill everyone else
they meet. They want to conquer the whole world. The other group is
composed of kind, loving people. They are friendly to everyone they meet.
Now, I ask you, of the two groups, which one is the better group? Which
one has the higher ideals? Which one would prefer peace to violence?"
"But what will happen to this second group if they won't defend
themselves? What will happen to this second group if they offer their
hands in friendship to the first group?"
Kilrane's brow furrowed. "I'd say the first group would kill off the
second group or enslave them."
"Without a doubt," Rikki stated. "The lesson learned is this: those who
would practice the Golden Rule must be prepared to protect themselves,
their children, and their higher culture, their ideals and their liberties,
from those who do not live by the Golden Rule. All the members of my
Family, from infancy, are impressed with the wisdom of perceiving the
reality of our Spirit Maker. We also know what the world outside the walls
of our Home is like. If we do not defend ourselves, we will be wiped out.
We can't permit that to happen. The Warriors are pledged to insure it
never does. We would give our very lives to preserve our Family. Do you
understand now?"
"The meal is completed," Yama reported in his deep voice. "The horses
are well rested, and the oil and gasoline levels in the vehicles have been
checked. We are ready to depart whenever you are."
Rikki sighed. So much for his meditation! "Then let's get going," he
said. "We don't want to be late. The consequences to our friends in Alpha
Triad could prove fatal." He stared toward the west. It wouldn't be long,
now. Not long at all.
Chapter Ten
Plato couldn't believe what he'd just heard. "You are certain of this?" he
demanded.
The woman standing in front of him nodded. She was a redhead with a
ruddy complexion, an oval face, and calm hazel eyes. Although short in
stature, she conveyed an impression of dignity and inner serenity. She
wore a loose-fitting yellow dress in immaculate condition. Her name was
Hazel, and she was the chief Family Empath, one of the six Family
members blessed with psychic capabilities.
"There is no doubt," Hazel said in her soft voice. "Joshua has left the
Home."
They were conversing only 15 feet from the drawbridge located in the
middle of the western wall to the Home. This drawbridge was the only
means of entering and leaving the 30-acre compound short of scaling the
walls.
"I agree," Plato said. He nervously chewed on his lower lip. If only he
hadn't been so preoccupied with this Doktor business! He might have
noticed Joshua was missing sooner! Spartacus had even mentioned
something about it, hadn't he?
"No," Hazel responded. "We're not able to do that. Yet. I didn't need to
read your mind to determine what you were just thinking. All it took was
one look at your worried face."
Plato turned and gazed fondly at the dozens of Family members, many
of them children, playing in the open area between the concrete blocks to
the east of the drawbridge. "I'm their Leader," he remarked. "It is my
responsibility to safeguard them from harm."
"It would be impossible for you to keep track of all of them at all times,"
Hazel commented.
"I can't," Plato replied. "I can't spare any of the Warriors to go after
him. Six of them are off, about to engage the Doktor, if my strategy has
attained fruition. The remaining nine Warriors must stay here to defend
the Home should an emergency arise."
Hazel could readily discern the turmoil raging in Plato's soul. "Don't
fret over Joshua," she said to calm his emotional upheaval. "The Spirit will
guide him in whatever he is doing."
"I should have seen this coming," Plato said berating himself. "He was
so quiet and reserved after his last trip to the Twin Cities. I should have
realized he was upset and endeavored to discover the reason."
"Joshua will be okay," Hazel stressed.
"I hope so," Plato declared. "I'll never forgive myself if something
happens to that boy."
Chapter Eleven
He was seated at the base of the hill, near the highway, his body in the
lotus position, his hands formed into a pyramid in his lap, worshiping.
The mare was in the sagebrush behind him.
The faint roar of powerful engines carried on the wind. Dozens of them,
traveling north on U.S. Highway 85.
Joshua slowly opened his eyes and gazed up at the blue sky overhead.
The bright sun was well up; it was midmorning on the day after his arrival
at the highway. The Doktor hadn't kept him waiting long! To be expected,
he told himself. The Cheyenne Citadel was only 170 miles or so south of
Catlow. No more than a four- or five-hour drive, once the Doktor was
aware Alpha Triad had taken the town.
Joshua rose and walked to the mare. He unfastened her bridle and
saddle and dropped them to the dry ground. "Thanks for the ride, girl," he
said to her. "Now get out of here! I don't want you to be hurt." He pointed
her to the north and slapped her on the rump. "Get going!" he shouted.
"Go!"
Joshua watched her go for a moment, then stepped to the road, to the
very middle of U.S. Highway 85, and sat down, assuming the lotus
position again, his hands folded in his lap. He bowed his head and closed
his eyes, praying.
Joshua knew a vehicle was bearing down on him at great speed, but he
refused to budge. He had to demonstrate his resolve, to show them he
wasn't afraid, to earn their respect.
The sound of the first approaching vehicle abruptly altered, its racing
engine slowing, as simultaneously there arose a grinding screech, the
result of brakes being prematurely applied at great speed.
There was a ringing in Joshua's ears. He knew the first vehicle had
stopped mere feet from his position.
Joshua heard someone grunt, and a moment later hot breath fell on his
face. He opened his eyes, expecting to see a soldier.
He was wrong.
The thing leaning over him was one of the Doktor's genetic mutations.
It must have stood close to seven feet in height and weighed several
hundred pounds. Its body was covered with a fine coat of brown hair; its
only clothing was a brown leather loincloth. The most striking feature
about the creature was its apelike face: it had a sloping forehead,
protruding, bushy brows, deep-set, beady brown eyes, prominent cheeks,
and full pink lips. It took a step backward in alarm, hefting the
sledgehammer held in its massive right fist.
"Thank you for not running me down," Joshua said. There was a jeep
parked not five feet away, its motor still running.
The thing leaned down toward Joshua. "What are you doing here?" it
inquired in a throaty, gruff tone.
Other vehicles, jeeps and trucks and even a halftrack, were slowing to a
halt behind the first jeep. Figures detached themselves from the convoy
and came forward to ascertain the cause for the delay.
On the left was another genetic deviate, this one a female. She was
oddly beautiful, despite her serpentine features, her narrow lavender eyes,
and her yellow skin, complimented by her flowing oily black hair. She was
wearing fatigues.
On the right strode an imposing man with a commanding presence,
and without being told Joshua knew the man's identity.
The Doktor squatted in front of Joshua and examined him from head
to toe. "Now, why should I believe you?"
"Did you hear him?" The Doktor glanced at the woman. "He claims he
doesn't lie! Why, he must be perfect then! What an honor for us, to be in
the presence of perfection!"
"There hasn't been a perfect man on this planet for thousands of years,"
the Doktor said, and Joshua had the feeling the Doktor was toying with
him. "Now let me see! What was his name again?"
"Ahh, yes! The noble carpenter. Are you telling me, boy, you are as
perfect as Jesus? Or, perhaps, you are Jesus, risen from the dead? Again?"
The Doktor laughed, a bitter, brittle sound. "Who are you, boy?"
"I am Joshua."
The Doktor swept to his feet, glaring down at Joshua. "You! Here?" He
appeared to be startled by the news. "Why?" He scanned the nearby fields.
"The Family!" Clarissa repeated, and there were murmurs among the
creatures.
"Talk to me, boy!" the Doktor snapped. "I know who you are. We
haven't spied on your accursed Family for years for nothing! Talk to me!"
The Doktor looked at Thor. "What are you waiting for? I told you to
send out a patrol!"
"So you say." The Doktor began stroking his pointed chin with his right
hand. "Isn't this an interesting development, Clarissa? First, I receive a
report Lynx is in Catlow. And now, enroute to smash that furry lowlife into
the dust, we stumble across Joshua here, one of the Family, an Empath if
my memory serves. How very interesting!"
"Peace."
The Doktor's eyes seemed to blaze fire. "Do you take me for a buffoon,
boy? Would you have me believe you traveled all this distance merely to
converse with me concerning peace?"
"Yes."
"I believe you, Joshua," the Doktor said at last. "Very well. You shall be
granted your opportunity to present your case." He draped his right arm
over Joshua's slim shoulders and led him away from the others. When they
were 20 feet from Clarissa and the rest, he stopped and crossed his arms,
a slight grin tugging at the corners of his thin mouth. "Proceed."
"Right here?" Joshua objected. "I was hoping we could relax, break
bread together, and get to know one another."
"No. Turn back, now, before it's too late. We can establish a truce, right
here and now, and end all of this bloodshed and violence. Don't you see?"
Joshua said, gesturing with enthusiasm. "The future is in your hands! War
or peace, it's all up to you. Armageddon or a millennium of tranquility.
Why should we continue to fight, when we could work together in
harmony toward the betterment of both our peoples?"
"Tell me, Joshua," the Doktor urged, "does Plato know you're here?"
"No one does," Joshua divulged. "I told you, I came alone."
"Remarkable."
"Plato wouldn't have let me come," Joshua said. "His paranoia would
have gotten the better of him."
"Plato believes you are his enemy," Joshua elaborated. "He thinks the
only way to deal with you is with brute force."
"I think of you the same as I do of all men and women," Joshua stated.
"All of us are children of the Divine Creator. We are all brothers and
sisters, in a spiritual sense. We must learn to love one another, or our
world is doomed. Didn't World War Three teach us anything? Here we
are, on the verge of another war! When will we learn our lesson? How long
must violence be the norm instead of brotherhood? Why can't humankind
see the light?"
The Doktor was staring off into space. "Do you really believe peace on
earth is possible?"
"No." The Doktor sighed, a protracted, peculiarly sad sound, and faced
Joshua. When he spoke his voice was softer, tinged with regret. "No, I
don't. While I admire your youthful idealism, and I honestly do, I find
considerable fault with your wisdom. You see, Joshua, I was an idealist
once. Decades ago. Over one hundred years ago, to be precise. I took a
long, hard look at this paltry planet of ours, and I came to many of the
same conclusions you did. I saw a world embroiled in petty conflicts,
where hatred was the rule and greed the motivating factor in
civilization—"
The Doktor held up his left hand for silence. "I thought the same thing
at your age. I wanted the nations of the world to desist with their foolish
notions of national sovereignty. This is one planet and we all one people.
But I knew the various Governments would never willingly unite. So I
reached one of the major decisions in my life. I decided to devote my
recognized intellect to insuring that one nation could dominate all the
others, thereby ending the ceaseless bickerings and wars for all time. My
scientific genius was responsible for the regenerating chemical clouds and
resultant mutates, as you call them. I—“
"Nothing ever works out quite the way we expect it to, does it?" the
Doktor went on. "Did I tell you I constructed the very first thermo? A
potent, portable thermonuclear device. I was certain they would guarantee
that we won the war. I was wrong."
The Doktor looked at Joshua. "Do you have any idea how old I am?"
"Plato told me you are one hundred and twenty-seven years old,"
Joshua answered.
The Doktor's eyes narrowed and his arms dropped to his sides. "Plato…
has… my… notebooks?"
"A delightful bonus! I'll have them back soon," the Doktor cryptically
stated. "Yes. I am one hundred and twenty-seven years old, thanks to my
rejuvenation process. And do you know what my years of experience have
taught me?"
"There is no God—"
The Doktor's right hand lashed out and slapped Joshua across the face.
"Don't interrupt me again!
God does not exist! Where are your brains, boy? Look around you. How
could a loving God allow all the anguish and distress in this world to
persist? How could a compassionate God permit us to know pain?"
The Doktor backhanded him on the mouth. "I warned you! You
mindless jackass! How can any sane person propose a brotherhood of
humankind? Humans are cattle, boy! Nothing more, nothing less than
dimwitted cattle. How can they see the light when the only motivation
they appreciate is the crack of a sturdy whip? Why do you think I wanted
one nation, our nation, to dominate the globe? Because I knew I would
then be the one cracking the whip, or controlling those who did! Why do
you think I influenced the leaders of our military-industrial complex to
provoke the Soviets into initiating the war?"
"It was I, boy!" The Doktor suddenly cackled. "In the entire history of
this planet, my genius has never been surpassed! Einstein was a mental
midget compared to me! What Beethoven was to music, and Tesla was to
electricity, I have been to the art of war! The ancient Greeks were right in
worshiping a god of war, because there is a god of war, boy, and…" The
Doktor paused and glared at Joshua. "I… am… he!"
"I am the only god you will ever know," the Doktor stated.
"But you're not a god!" Joshua said, disputing him. "You're a man, just
like me! The Spirit of God indwells us, but this indwelling doesn't make us
gods."
Joshua's face was turning red, his efforts to free himself growing
weaker by the second and his lungs desperate for air.
"Don't worry, boy," the Doktor told him. "You won't die. Not yet,
anyway. I have a special treat in store for you when you awaken. You'll
thank me for the honor I will bestow upon you."
"I really should thank you," the Doktor said, and released his hold.
"Not yet." The Doktor smiled. "We owe this moron a debt of gratitude,
and you know I always repay my debts."
"A Warrior entered the Citadel!" Clarissa said, marveling. "You were
right, then, and Samuel was wrong."
The Doktor snorted derisively. "Samuel may falsely believe he rules the
Civilized Zone, but the simpleton couldn't locate his rectum in broad
daylight without a diagram of his anatomy! I warned him, repeatedly, the
Family should be eliminated. But no! He knew better! The Cavalry comes
first, he said! So there we were, preparing for our march on the Cavalry,
with most of our military hardware lined up like sitting ducks outside the
Biological Center, and what happens?" he demanded rhetorically.
Amazingly, the Doktor smiled. "Yes, they did, leaving Samuel with a
skeleton force at his disposal. Thanks to them, we'll have minimal
opposition when we reach Denver and dethrone Samuel." He chuckled. "I
happen to think I'll make an outstanding ruler. Don't you?"
The Doktor nudged Joshua with his right toe. "Thanks to him, I know
Plato has my notebooks. It's too bad the boy won't be around in ten days
when my little surprise is unleashed on the Home. I'll get my notebooks
back and my revenge on Plato and the Warriors at the same time!" The
Doktor laughed and laughed. "I can hardly wait! It's lamentable we must
attend to business in Catlow first, but I wouldn't consider depriving the
fools of the chance to spring their trap on us."
"You know it is a trap?" Clarissa asked. "Yet we walk into it anyway?"
The Doktor stared northward. "I was aware they were up to something
when our last monitoring patrol sent to the Home didn't return. But it
really doesn't matter. There is nothing they can do against our superior
force."
"Because we don't have any left," the Doktor said, frowning. "The units
were obliterated with the Biological Center, although the possibility exists
Lynx and Yama absconded with one or two."
"Yes, I do," the Doktor growled, clenching his fists. "And I vow to repay
them for every insult, starting with him." He pointed at the unconscious
Empath.
"Wood?"
"Yes. Two lengthy planks will do. Strip a pair of floor planks from one of
the trucks if necessary."
The Doktor nodded. "Yes, but we can't linger while you quench your
thirst."
"On to Catlow?"
Chapter Twelve
"It sure is quiet around here with everybody else gone," Bertha
commented, cradling her M-16 in her arms.
"I like the quiet," Rudabaugh said. "I never was much for city life."
The sun was hovering above the western horizon and the air was
becoming a bit chill.
"Why do you think the Doc ain't hit us yet?" Bertha asked, keeping her
eyes trained on the surrounding countryside. They were at the extreme
southern edge of Catlow, alongside U.S. Highway 85. Rudabaugh had dug
a hole in the ground and was carefully planting a bundle of dynamite in
the hole.
Bertha chuckled. "That's a good one." She watched him place dirt on
top of the dynamite while holding the fuse to one side. "Say, where'd you
learn to use this stuff?"
"The dynamite? The Cavalry has a lot of it. Some of the ranchers
hoarded it after the war. I learned how to use it from my paw, and he
learned from his. Some of it is real unstable." He completed hiding the
bundle and aligned the fuse to one side.
"When it gets real old, sometimes it'll go up if you just drop it or bump
the crate it's in," Rudabaugh explained.
"Lordy! You mean to tell me we rode out here with two crates of that
stuff and it could of went kablewy if somebody sneezed?"
"I checked it before we left," Rudabaugh said. "I know what I'm doing."
"And I know what I'm doing," Bertha stated. "I ain't sleepin' in the
SEAL tonight!"
"There isn't any in the SEAL," Rudabaugh informed her. "This is the
last of it."
"Yep. All I have to do is unwind this line back to the detonating point,"
Rudabaugh responded.
"They were blasting for stones they could use in their buildings,"
Rudabaugh elaborated. "Dynamite is wrapped in waxed-paper cylinders
we call cartridges. These cartridges come in all different sizes, depending
on the size of the job. The older dynamite was made up of something
called nitroglycerin, mixed in with inert materials. Before the war, they
used a lot of ammonium nitrate instead of nitro. Normally, the charge is
pretty safe, because you need a blasting cap, or detonating cap, to set it
off. We use the cap and one of two types of fuses, safety fuses or
detonating fuses. A safety fuse has black powder in it. It burns real slow
and gives the dynamiter time to get away before it blows. A detonating
fuse, on the other hand, has explosive in the core. I like to use a special
kind of cap sometimes, called an electric blasting cap. I hook it up to that
box you saw earlier, the one with the plunger. All I have to do is press the
plunger, and it sends an electric current through the line to the charge.
Boom!"
Rudabaugh stood and began unraveling his line. "It's one of the reasons
Kilrane wanted me to volunteer."
"A what?"
"I owned a dog once," Rudabaugh said, "but I've never owned a fox."
Bertha shook her head. "You people from the sticks sure do talk weird!"
"The Doc is gonna be in for a big surprise when he gets here," Bertha
stated.
"What?"
"I know that," Rudabaugh stated. "But I couldn't help but notice the
way you look at him sometimes."
"I know what I saw," Rudabaugh disputed her. They reached the wall
and he climbed over it to the other side. A wooden box with a handle on
top was resting on the ground.
Bertha, eager to change the subject, pointed at the line. "Won't they see
that and figure out what we're up to?"
"I'll cover it with grass and leaves, just like I did the others,"
Rudabaugh told her.
"How many of those charges do you have set up?" Bertha asked.
"Enough." Rudabaugh knelt and began attaching the line to the box.
"How come you didn't answer my question?"
"You shouldn't butt your big nose in where it don't belong," Bertha
advised him.
"Well, you know what curiosity did to the cat," Bertha reminded him.
"If you knew he's so fast," Bertha said, "why'd you challenge him to a
shootin' match?"
"I wanted to see for myself. I'm no gunfighter, mind you, but I'm right
handy with my pistols. I wanted to set up some targets and see how good
Hickok really is." Rudabaugh stood, brushing some dirt from his clothes.
"I've seen Hickok target shoot," Bertha detailed, "and it ain't the same
as the real thing. When White Meat's in action, there ain't nobody like
him!" she said proudly. "I saw him in Thief River Falls and the Twin
Cities. He was beautiful!"
"You see?" Rudabaugh said, grinning. "The look on your face right now
is the one I'm talking about."
"I used to like you," Bertha snapped, "before you became such a
know-it-all! If you…" she began, and abruptly stopped speaking, gazing
over Rudabaugh's left shoulder.
Hickok was strolling toward them, his Henry in his left hand, his right
thumb hooked in his belt buckle. "Are you done yet?" he inquired. "Blade
sent me to get you. He wants to palaver by the SEAL."
"Good. Let's mosey on back to the town square." Hickok led the way. "I
hope the Doktor gets here soon. I'm itchin' for some action."
"From what I hear, you see a lot of it," Rudabaugh mentioned.
"How about you?" Hickok inquired. "Have you seen a lot of action?"
"No."
"Just want to get to know you, is all," Hickok said. "I already know a lot
about Orson. He doesn't have a wife, either—"
"—and he comes from a big family and has seven brothers and sisters,"
Hickok went on. "I gather Wolfe, the leader of the Moles, couldn't find any
volunteers 'cause everybody reckoned this trip would be suicide, so he kind
of twisted Orson's arm to make him join up."
"How'd you find out Orson ain't married and about his family and all?"
Bertha questioned. "I didn't think you two was on speakin' terms."
"Geronimo and Orson had a talk last night," Hickok disclosed, "while
they were pulling guard duty. Geronimo told me about it this morning. He
thinks we've been a mite hard on Orson."
"So how about it, pard?" Hickok said to Rudabaugh. "Where do you
live?"
"I have a small ranch about thirty miles north of Pierre," Rudabaugh
answered. "I run about two hundred head of cattle, and I handle the
dynamiting chores for anybody who needs some blasting done."
"How many brothers and sisters have you got?" Hickok inquired.
Rudabaugh grinned at the mention of his family. "Two older sisters and
my younger brother. My sisters are married and they keep nagging me to
tie the knot."
"Oh, really?" Bertha said. "You get married, and all of a sudden you're
an expert on women, huh?"
Hickok nudged Rudabaugh with his left elbow and winked. "It's
because females are such contrary critters, no man could ever make sense
out of ‘em."
"I'll be sure and tell your wife you said that the next time I see her,"
Bertha commented.
They rounded a building and saw the SEAL still parked in front of the
command post. Blade and Geronimo were standing near the driver's door,
conversing. Lynx was leaning against the vehicle, listening. Orson was
visible on top of the command post, peering through the binoculars. The
concrete command post was rectangular in shape with a flat roof. Access
to the roof was gained via a flight of metal stairs attached to the western
side of the structure, only 20 feet from the northwestern corner. The front
door faced due north, and there was another exit in the eastern wall,
about halfway along the building.
"We're all here, pard," Hickok said as they reached the transport.
Blade turned from his discussion with Geronimo. "Okay. We have a few
things to talk about." He gazed up at the roof. "Orson, can you hear me up
there?"
Orson's bearded countenance appeared over the rim of the roof. "Loud
and clear."
"Good. Give a listen to what I'm about to say, but keep your eyes peeled
for any sign of movement on U.S. Highway 85," Blade directed.
Bertha grinned. Orson had obeyed Blade's every command since the
incident with Hickok the other night.
"The Spirit has smiled on us so far," Blade said to them, "but the worst
is yet to come. We're as ready as we're going to be for the Doktor. I'm
surprised he hasn't shown up yet, but his delay has worked to our
advantage, allowing us the time to prepare our little surprises." He
paused, glancing at each of them in turn. "You all know what we're doing
here. We're to stall as best we can. Somehow, some way, we're to hold out
here for two days."
"I doubt the Doc would waste a thermo on the Family," Lynx declared.
"There weren't too many thermo units still functional. If they have any left,
you can bet the Doc and Sammy will save 'em for something special."
"As I was saying," Blade resumed, "we want to draw the Doktor in,
deceive him into believing we're alone. If our main column stays miles
from here, if the Doktor doesn't know we have a well-armed army of our
own, he'll become overconfident. He'll throw everything he has at us, and
the longer we can hold out, the more convinced he'll be that we're by
ourselves. He'll concentrate on us and his perimeter security will lapse.
Two days should do it. Two days after the fighting starts, Rikki-Tikki-Tavi
and Kilrane will lead their forces in a combined assault on the Doktor's
flanks and defeat him."
"Rikki and Kilrane will attack unless they feel their column would be
slaughtered if they did. In which case, it has already been decided they
should retreat," Blade explained.
"Now you know why this was a volunteer mission," Blade commented.
"One more thing," Rudabaugh remarked. "How will Rikki and Kilrane
know when to attack? How will they know when the fighting begins if
they're off in the distance somewhere? And what happens if we need them
sooner, if we can't hold out for two days?"
"Already taken care of," Blade disclosed. "One of Kilrane's most trusted
men should be watching us at this very second. He's under orders to keep
Catlow under surveillance, evade the Doktor's patrols, and report to
Kilrane and Rikki on the double if we need them sooner than anticipated."
"He never told me all the details," Orson complained. "All he said was
whoever came here might not come back."
"We didn't want to divulge the entire scheme," Blade informed him.
"Who knows where the Doktor might have spies?"
"What?"
"Seven was the most we could comfortably cram into the SEAL," Blade
answered.
Blade reached out and patted the door. "The SEAL has already been
battle tested, and we can vouch for its reliability. Our Founder, Kurt
Carpenter, had two fifty-caliber machine guns hidden in recessed
compartments under the front headlights. There is a flamethrower hidden
in the center of the front fender. The SEAL has a rocket launcher
positioned in the middle of the front grill. And, finally, we have a
miniaturized surface-to-air missile mounted in the roof above the driver's
seat. The weapons systems are activated by a bank of four toggle switches
installed in the dash. You also know the body is shatterproof and
bulletproof. The SEAL will be our ace in the hole, so to speak."
"So we might be able to boogie out of here if things get too hot," Bertha
said.
"Uh-oh." Bertha frowned. "I don't like the sound of that. What do you
mean by yes and no?"
"Yes, we could boogie, as you put it, and we'd probably stand a good
chance of breaking through the Doktor's lines. But no, we won't do it
because I don't intend to let the Doktor know we have the SEAL here."
Bertha's brow creased. "I may not be too bright sometimes, but even I
can figure out you don't intend to use the SEAL in our fight with the
Doktor, do you?"
Blade shook his head. "Not during the first two days. We'll hide it in the
big shed behind the command post."
Everyone tensed.
Orson had the binoculars pressed to his eyes. "A lot of vehicles coming
over a low hill about a mile south of town. Ten, twelve, fourteen…" Orson
looked down at Blade "A hell of a lot of "em!"
"We've already covered this," Blade reminded him. "Save your favorite
weapons until you really need them. Use the M-16s as much as you can.
We have ample ammunition for them." He grinned at each of them. "Hop
to it!"
Lynx watched Blade climb into the SEAL and drive the transport
around the western corner of the command post.
Rudabaugh started into the building to claim an M-16. "Do you want
me to get one for you, Lynx?" he offered.
Lynx shook his head. "Thanks, chuckles, but I don't go in for firearms."
"Then what're you gonna fight the Doktor with?" Bertha inquired.
"Spitballs?"
Lynx chuckled and raised his right hand. One by one, he extended his
fingers and thumb, revealing the tapered nails, in reality iron-like claws,
on the end of each digit. "These little beauties will do just fine, thanks."
"If the Doc has brought his G.R.D.'s with him," Lynx said, "it'll be
even-steven, 'cause us genetic misfits don't go in much for guns. And as far
as the soldiers are concerned," Lynx said confidently, "if you don't think I
have a chance against guns, why don't you walk over to the fountain and
tell that to Captain Reno? I'm sure he'll be tickled pink at the news."
Rudabaugh had seen the gory remains of the hapless officer. "No,
thanks. I get the point."
Lynx clicked his nails. "So will they, bub! So will they!"
Chapter Thirteen
The Doktor waited until the next morning to launch his assault on
Catlow.
The night was cold, with the temperatures dropping down into the
upper 30s. A stiff breeze blew in from the northwest. Geronimo, huddled
in a blanket at his post behind a wooden fence in a yard just to the
southeast of U.S. Highway 85, spent the long hours reflecting on his wife,
Cynthia Morning Dove, and the likelihood of his being able to continue the
family tree given his present situation. He thought of Plato, and Joshua,
and Rikki, and all of his other close friends and loved ones in the Family,
and wondered if he would ever experience the joy of seeing them again.
Toward morning, when the first tinge of pink suffused the eastern horizon,
he roused himself and placed the blanket on the ground.
It would be soon.
Surprise! Surprise!
What gives? Geronimo mused. Surely the Doktor had brought some of
his genetic horrors with him. So why would he send in ordinary soldiers?
Geronimo could think of only one reason: the Doktor was saving his
G.R.D.'s, and the patrol coming in now was sent to test the defenses the
Doktor would have to face.
The troopers were cautiously heading toward Catlow, strung out in two
lines on either side of the highway, their weapons at the ready.
Geronimo could see their faces, their intent expressions and worried
eyes. Many of them were young, and he felt a twinge of sorrow for the
families they had left behind. Mourning a dearly beloved was a
devastating experience, and he didn't wish it on anyone. He vividly
recalled his own grief when his parents had died; such misery should be
kept to an absolute minimum.
Would the Mole pull his weight when push came to shove? Orson had
performed admirably during the fight in the town square, but they had—
Wait!
Two of the soldiers had detached themselves from the patrol and were
racing toward Catlow at top speed.
Geronimo inched forward and squinted between two of the slats. This
would complicate matters. He would have to let the two point men pass
his position.
Geronimo froze, immobile, holding his breath, as the two soldiers came
abreast of his station. They were nervously looking in every direction, their
fingers on the triggers of their M-16s.
Geronimo could see their legs and boots as they passed by. There was
less than a half inch of space between each wooden slat, and it was
unlikely they would detect his presence unless they gazed directly at him.
Otherwise, his prone body, dressed as it was in dark green, would simply
appear to be part of the shadows at the base of the fence.
Geronimo shifted his attention to the patrol. They were 30 yards out
and closing. His nose began itching, and he suppressed an impulse to
sneeze.
Orson disappeared from view as the window, the sill, and the wall
enclosing it were riddled with holes.
That idiot!
It didn't budge!
Five of the troopers ran up to the fence, blasting away.
Geronimo dove, landing on his elbows and knees on the porch, as the
wall above his body was perforated by bullets.
The firing near the highway rose in volume, as if others were joining
the fray. More soldiers were falling. The five near the fence turned to face
some unseen foes and were promptly cut to ribbons in a hail of gunfire.
Several more on the other side of the road dropped.
Geronimo nodded and rose to his feet. He could see eight soldiers
sprinting toward the rise to the south as rapidly as their legs would carry
them.
Hickok gazed at the bodies of the fallen troopers. "I reckon we've just
ruined the Doktor's day."
"We fall back to our next positions and wait for their next move," Blade
stated. "It won't be as easy the next time."
Geronimo opened his mouth, about to rebuke the Mole for his
carelessness, but he changed his mind. Orson, he deduced, hadn't seen
much combat, and it wouldn't do to discourage the Mole so early in the
conflict.
"From what I saw," Blade said, "you did just fine, although you may
have jumped the gun a bit."
Hickok patted Orson on the back. "Don't fret it! We all get the jitters
now and then."
"How long do you reckon the Doktor will wait before he tries something
else?" Hickok casually inquired as they headed deeper into town.
Chapter Fourteen
Bertha saw them coming first. She was posted behind a tree in the
backyard of a residence 50 yards west of U.S. Highway 85, and she was
extremely annoyed because she hadn't been able to render assistance
when the initial patrol had advanced on Catlow. She had seen them
approach, but when the shooting had begun there were several buildings
interposed between her position and the fire fight and she couldn't get a
clear shot at the soldiers. Blade had ordered her to stay put until he
notified her to the contrary, and it had taken all of her self-control to
comply with his command.
So when the jeep with a piece of white cloth affixed to its antenna
roared over the rise and streaked across the field directly toward her,
instead of using the highway, she was immensely pleased.
"Will you look at this!" she exclaimed to herself, raising her M-16 to her
shoulder. "Are these dummies in for a surprise! Come to momma, sucker!"
There were four figures in the topless vehicle.
"And you were going to shoot them anyway?" Blade asked her.
The jeep slowed to a stop approximately 30 yards from the tree and
slightly to the left.
"You, in the town! Can you hear me?" bellowed a deep voice. The
speaker was a tall, apish mutant bearing a sledgehammer in his huge
right fist. He stood on the front passenger seat, surveying the nearest
homes and other buildings.
Blade nodded.
Blade walked to within ten yards of the vehicle. "What do you want?"
"What is it?"
"You tell me," Blade stated, "and I'll relay the message to Lynx."
Blade noticed all four of the occupants of the jeep were mutants. "Why
didn't the Doktor deliver this message in person?"
Thor put his knobby left hand on top of the windshield and leaned
forward. "I won't tell you again!" he growled. "Get Lynx!"
"I'd like to see you try!" Thor angrily retorted. "Are you going to get
Lynx or not?" he stubbornly persisted.
"I told you already," Blade said flatly, "I'll relay the message to Lynx."
Thor seemed to be mulling the issue. "All right," he said at length. "You
can give Lynx the Doktor's message. Tell Lynx the Doktor is only interested
in him. If Lynx will surrender to the Doktor, the Doktor will allow the rest
of you to leave here alive."
Blade chuckled. "And you expect us to believe the Doktor will keep his
word?"
Thor glared at the Warrior. "I will tell the Doktor." He paused. "We will
meet again."
Blade rested his left hand on the hilt of his corresponding Bowie. "I'll be
looking forward to it."
Thor nudged the driver, and the jeep spun out, turned a tight circle,
and made for the rise.
Bertha stood to the right of the trunk, watching the departing jeep.
"Someone here to see you," she remarked.
Lynx walked around the left side of the tree. "I heard what you said," he
told Blade.
"Hey, I was being a good kitty," Lynx replied, "cooling my heels on top
of the command post, like you wanted. I saw the jeep coming and
recognized Thor and got curious about what Granite Head wanted. So I
came for a look-see."
Blade stepped up to the genetic deviate. "Don't ever desert your post
again!" he warned. "You're no different than Orson. When I give a
command, you're to follow it. Understand?"
Lynx's lips curled backward, exposing his pointed teeth. For an instant,
it appeared as if he were going to launch himself at the huge Warrior.
"That's the reason I didn't just rip you to shreds," Lynx said. "That, and
what you told Ape Face."
"You're one of us," Blade stated. "We don't betray our own."
Lynx averted his eyes. "Yeah, I gotta admit your Family treated me real
nice when I was stayin' at your Home. It can grow on you, thinkin' you
belong somewhere."
"He won't pussyfoot around," Lynx stated. "He'll send in his shock
troops."
"His G.R.D.'s," Lynx elaborated. "The things from his Genetic Research
Division, like Thor and me."
Lynx nodded. "If I know the Doc, and unfortunately I do, that's exactly
what the prick will do."
Blade gazed at the rise. The jeep had disappeared over the crest. "Do
you think he'll send them in from every which way, or straight on?"
"Straight on," Lynx responded. "He must know by now there aren't too
many of us. The Doc will want to get it over with. He's a real stickler for
not wastin' time."
Blade scanned the field and the nearby homes. "Okay. Lynx, return to
the command post and stay there, no matter what you hear or see."
"Bertha," Blade said, "give a yell if you see them coming over that rise.
I'll be right back."
"To get the others," Blade replied. "I'm going to redeploy them in a
skirmish line to your right and left. We'll hold Lynx in reserve, and I'll have
Rudabaugh redistribute some of his special surprise packages."
Blade left.
Bertha leaned against the tree trunk. She hoped Blade would put
Hickok somewhere close to her, so she could keep an eye on him. She
didn't want any harm to come to White Meat. The realization troubled
her. How could she allow herself to still care for Hickok? She knew the
gunfighter loved another woman. She knew he was married. But she
cared, anyway. And Rudabaugh had been right earlier. She had
volunteered because she knew Hickok was coming on this trip.
And she wanted to be near him so much, she was about to take on a
horde of crack-brained freaks!
Yes, sir!
From his vantage point on the roof of a garage 75 yards from the field,
he could see most of his companions. Bertha was at the edge of the field,
behind a tree. Hickok was about 20 yards to her right, crouched in a
shallow depression in the ground. Geronimo was approximately 30 yards
to the left of Bertha, waiting at the rear of a yellow frame house. In the
next yard to the left of Geronimo, Orson was squatting behind a large,
tumbledown doghouse. Blade wasn't anywhere in sight, and Lynx was to
Rudabaugh's rear, atop the command post.
Rudabaugh inched to the edge of the sloping roof and gazed down.
"Good. Remember what I told you. Don't do anything until I give you
the signal, and then let them have it!"
"Will do," Rudabaugh said. "Say, do you think they saw me placing the
charges?"
"Did you follow my instructions and keep the dynamite out of sight?"
Blade questioned him.
"Yep. I kept the charges tucked under my shirt, and when I buried
them I angled my body between the rise and the hole so they couldn't see
what I was up to," Rudabaugh detailed.
"Then I doubt they know what we've done. How many charges did you
relocate?"
"Seven. I thought I'd give them a present from each of us," Rudabaugh
replied.
Rudabaugh heard a loud noise in the distance and looked up at the rise.
Blade took off, running around the ramshackle garage and racing for
the tree screening Bertha.
Rudabaugh elevated his head above the top of the roof. The garage
contained a few pieces of furniture and a lot of dust; it evidently hadn't
been used to shelter a vehicle in ages. It was a detached structure; the
house it belonged to was ten yards behind and to the left of Rudabaugh.
Dozens upon dozens upon dozens of figures were cresting the rise and
pouring over the field.
There were hundreds of them! They came in all shapes and sizes, but
they shared one dominant characteristic: they were all members of the
Doktor's Genetic Research Division. Hairy, scaly, horrid creatures,
possessed of ghastly aspects and relatively few human attributes. Few were
armed, and even fewer wore any clothing except for a scanty loincloth.
Some resembled common animals, like dogs or cats, while others looked
like bizarre combinations of humanity and savage beasts. They shrieked
and howled, bellowed and roared as they closed on Catlow.
Rudabaugh saw Blade reach the tree and say something to Bertha. She
shook her head, apparently disagreeing, but Blade wasn't listening.
Blade swept the Commando and the M-16 in small arcs, emptying the
magazines into the on-rushing mass.
The Warrior hastily ejected a spent magazine from the Commando and
replaced it in a smooth, practiced motion. He rose and backed up, the
Commando chattering, felling the G.R.D.'s closest to him.
Rudabaugh lost all track of how many foes Blade killed. Two dozen.
Three. And still they came on, hungry for his flesh, anxious to crush him to
a pulp!
Blade whirled and ran toward the tree. He was five yards from it when
he suddenly clutched his left side and sprawled to the ground.
No! Rudabaugh screamed in his mind. Get up! Get out of there!
Bertha dodged out to support Blade. She was almost to him when she
too was hit, and went down on one knee.
No!
Blade rolled onto his side, firing from his prone position.
Hickok was running toward Blade and Bertha, his M-16 spitting death.
He wasn't more than ten yards away when the M-16 went empty and he
threw it away in disgust. Instead of unslinging his Henry from his left
shoulder, Hickok drew his Pythons.
Rudabaugh had never seen anyone draw so swiftly. One instant the
gunfighter's hands were empty, and in the next the Pythons were out and
up.
Hickok reached Blade's side, his Colts cracking, and two more G.R.D.'s
died, one of them clutching at a reddish hole in its hairy forehead. A
creature with the facial features of a weasel rushed up from the right, and
was met by a bullet in the brain.
Geronimo darted from cover, the FNC in his hands, heading for his
friends.
The G.R.D.'s in the center of the field, the ones bearing the brunt of the
conflict, were beginning to hold back, unwilling to needlessly risk their
lives confronting the Warriors and Bertha.
Rudabaugh noticed the G.R.D.'s on the flanks were still advancing. The
ones on the left were bearing down on Orson, who was picking them off
from behind the doghouse. The G.R.D.'s on the right, without any effective
opposition, were the nearest to Catlow. They were rushing in toward the
middle of the field, trying to sweep around and close on Bertha and the
three Warriors from the rear.
Rudabaugh glanced down at his feet. There were seven sets of wires
lying near the wooden box. He scooped up one set and quickly attached
them to the proper connections.
The G.R.D.'s on the right were sweeping toward the center, flowing over
a line of backyards, clamoring for blood.
Rudabaugh waited, keeping his eyes on his marker, a rusted swing set
in one of the backyards.
Now!
The G.R.D.'s in the middle and on the left slowed, taken completely
unaware by this development.
Orson left the cover of the doghouse and jogged to join them.
The G.R.D.'s on the left spotted Orson leaving and renewed their
onslaught.
Rudabaugh removed the first set of wires and applied the second.
The G.R.D.'s on the left were about 30 yards from the doghouse.
Then 20.
Then ten.
Rudabaugh depressed the plunger, and six more sticks of dynamite
blew countless genetic mutations to kingdom come.
Rudabaugh stripped the second set of wires and affixed the third.
Bertha tripped and fell. Hickok was at her side in a flash, yanking her
erect and propelling her toward the garage.
Orson caught up with the others and added his M-16 to their firepower.
The G.R.D.'s were fanning out, the flanks deploying in uneven lines,
evidently intending to encircle the defenders and finish them off.
Rudabaugh knew he would need to time this just right. He gripped the
plunger, observing the left flank as it swung wide of the area near the
doghouse. He hastily counted at least 20 of the brutes in the desired tract
and leaned on the plunger.
His nimble fingers flying, Rudabaugh replaced the third set of wires
with the fourth. An instant later, he pressed the plunger.
The G.R.D.'s on the left flank received the same destructive treatment
as their counterparts on the right.
The cool air was now filled with billowing dust, literally choked with
clouds of pulverized dirt.
Blade, his left hand pressed against his side, the Commando in his
right, looked up at the slanted roof. "Rudabaugh!"
Rudabaugh peered over the edge.
Rudabaugh waved them on. "Keep going! I have three more surprises to
set off!"
The others started toward the command post. Blade nodded once and
took off.
The dust was beginning to disperse. Bodies covered the field and the
backyards of many of the homes. The remaining G.R.D.'s were
congregating in the center of the field, gathering their forces for an all-out
assault.
Rudabaugh calculated his tactics. The final three charges were planted
in a line between the garage and the field. The first was 60 yards from the
garage; the second, 40; and the third, only 20. If the placements were to
be utilized to their peak advantage, he would need to insure that the
G.R.D.'s came directly toward the garage. He attached the set of wires for
the first charge, grinned, and stood up.
Some of the G.R.D.'s spotted him, and with a mighty din they advanced
on the garage.
The G.R.D.'s reached the tree Bertha had hidden behind, surging
forward, game for the battle despite their heavy losses.
The leading line of creatures approached the vicinity of the first charge.
Not yet!
Not yet!
He wanted the expanse of ground between the garage and the field to
be crammed with the fiends when he detonated the trio of charges.
The G.R.D.'s sprinted onward, and the fleetest of them arrived at the
20-foot mark.
Frantically, Rudabaugh took off the wires for the spent charge and
replaced them with the set for the next bundle.
There was a peculiar scraping noise coming from the other side of the
garage.
Rudabaugh depressed the plunger and the air vibrated with the
concussion of the 40-yard charge.
Hurry!
Only 20 yards from the seventh charge, the garage was buffeted by the
tremendous blast, its walls shaking and swaying. For a moment, it seemed
as if the building would collapse. Dirt, rocks, and tiny pieces of mushy
flesh showered from the sky.
Rudabaugh grimaced as a large stone glanced off his temple. His left
shoulder felt cold and clammy, and he backed up, scrambling down the
roof. He looked up at the box, regretting he had to leave it behind, and the
act saved his life.
Perched on the top of the garage roof was one of the Doktor's genetic
deviates. Decidedly reptilian, this one had bulging red eyes and scaly green
skin. Instead of four fingers and a thumb, the creature had three
abnormally long digits, each capped by a razor-like claw. It hissed and
leaped.
Rudabaugh went for his right pistol, his draw impeded by his awkward
position. He managed to clear leather, but not before the G.R.D. slammed
into him, driving him backward, both of them hurtling from the roof and
falling to the ground.
Rudabaugh twisted as they fell, hoping the creature would bear the
brunt of the impact, but they both landed on their left side. A lancing
spasm racked his body, and he forced himself to respond, to roll away
from the G.R.D. before it could recover. He lurched to his knees and
brought the 45 automatic up.
Rudabaugh fired, the 45 booming, the bullet catching the deviate in its
chest and jerking it rearward. But it recovered almost immediately and
sprang, snarling, its claws outstretched. He fired again and again, each
slug stopping the creature in its tracks, but each time it kept coming. His
fingers abruptly became weak as a wave of dizziness washed over him.
Rudabaugh attempted to use his pistol, but his sluggish body refused to
respond to his commands. He flinched, expecting the claws to slash into
him, to rend him apart, but instead a volley of lead crashed into the
creature and flung it against the garage.
Rudabaugh felt an arm encircle his waist and he was forcibly hauled to
his feet and half-carried, half-dragged in the general direction of the
command post. He turned his weary head, anticipating he would see Blade
or Hickok or Geronimo.
It was Orson.
"Hang on!" the Mole reiterated, casting frequent glances over his
shoulder to ascertain if they were being pursued. "We'll make it!"
Chapter Sixteen
Bertha answered his question. She was sitting with her back to the wall,
only two feet away from Rudabaugh to his left, resting her injured right
leg. "You've been out for hours, honey," she informed him.
"Those explosives of yours did the trick," Blade stated. "They broke and
ran after the last three. We haven't heard a peep out of them since." He
glanced up at the roof of the command post. "Anything?" he yelled. "Hey,
Lynx! Do you hear me?"
Feline features popped into view. "I hear ya, dimples! Don't you think
I'd let you know if I see somethin'? There's no sign of ‘em!" He vanished
from sight.
Blade frowned. "I don't like it! It's been too quiet!"
"Haven't you had enough fun for one day, pard?" Hickok asked. The
gunman was leaning on the door jamb.
Orson was squatting on the ground about four feet behind Blade,
absently tugging at his black beard.
"I do have nine charges left," Rudabaugh mentioned, "but they won't do
us much good if I have to detonate them all by hand. We'll need to dig
them up and replace the caps."
"They only work with my little box," Rudabaugh answered, "and I lost
it."
"Lost it?"
The two Warriors ran around the northeastern corner of the command
post.
"Thank Bertha," Blade said. "She took care of you and me before she
tended to herself."
"It's a clean hole," Blade went on. "The bullet missed the bone. Bertha
took a hit in her right thigh, but it's stopped bleeding and it isn't broken."
Blade shook his head. "We can all use a short breather, and Lynx will
spot them if they make a move."
"We'll eat and bed down in the command post," Blade answered. "We'll
rotate guard shifts tonight so everybody can catch some shut-eye."
"I'll take the first shift," Orson volunteered.
"Sure. I'm a Mole, ain't I? And we're used to living underground, which
means I can see real good in the dark. I'll relieve Lynx when you give the
word," Orson said.
"You weren't too keen on this mission a couple of days ago. What
changed your mind?"
Orson glanced at Bertha. "The other night, when all of you were picking
on me. It got me thinking. I saw I was being the world's worst pain in the
ass. You're right, Blade. I don't want to be here. But I am here now, and
there's nothing I can do about it. I'm pissed off at Wolfe for making me
come along, but there's no reason why I should take it out on all of you."
He paused and chuckled. "Besides, if I don't fall in line Hickok just might
put a bullet between my eyes, and the last thing I need is another hole in
my head."
"Do you still think we can hold out for two days?" Bertha inquired.
"You don't see!" Bertha sputtered. "Take a look around you! In case you
hadn't noticed, three of us have had our wings clipped. We came awful
close to gettin' racked today."
Blade grinned and cupped his hands around his lips. "Hey, Lynx!"
"It's not that." Blade said. "You know the Doktor better than any of us.
Will he try anything before daylight."
"It's hard to outfox the Doc," Lynx replied. "He took a real beatin'
today, and he may sulk all night and try again come morning. Then again,
he may send in some of his pets after dark to assassinate us."
Blade placed his hands on his Bowies and began pacing. If he were the
Doktor that's exactly what he'd do: send in some of his best men, or
things, to quietly slit a throat or three and reduce the opposition. To be
forewarned was to be forearmed, so what action could he take to negate
the threat? There was only one logical recourse. "Except for the guard on
the roof, we're going to spend the night in the SEAL," he announced.
"If we're so safe in the buggy," Bertha remarked, "why bother having a
guard on the roof? Wouldn't it be best if everybody was in the SEAL?"
"We can't shut ourselves off from the outside completely," Blade
explained. "If the Doktor should be foolish enough to launch a mass
assault at night, we'd need to know about it."
Rudabaugh had a question. "Did Kilrane say who it was who'd be out
there keeping Catlow under surveilance?"
"Nope," Blade said. "Just that it would be someone he could trust, and
he'd get word to their column if we were in trouble."
"And not one of us was racked!" Bertha stated, shaking her head in
wonder.
"But three of us were hurt," Blade pointed out. "We were fortunate
today, but only because the Doktor didn't know we had the dynamite.
Tomorrow will be a completely different story. He'll be more cautious.
He'll probably come at us from all sides."
"Gone? Where?"
Hickok leaned against the wall, catching his breath. Geronimo and he
had jogged both ways. "How should I know?" he rejoined. "We got there
and I took a look-see on the roof. No box."
"What about the charges you placed around the town square?" Blade
asked.
"We'll have to dig them up," Rudabaugh said. "I can't detonate them
remotely without the box. We'll dig them up, and I'll attach different caps
and fuses. Each of us can take a couple of bundles of dynamite, and when
the time is right, you just light the fuse, throw your bundle, and run like
hell."
"But you said you only have nine charges left," Blade noted.
"Okay. Tell us where they're buried and we'll dig them up for you,"
Blade offered.
"I know."
"How?"
Chapter Seventeen
He stood on the rise south of Catlow, the wind whipping his black cloak
and disheveling his dark hair. Overhead, the stars were bright pinpoints of
light.
Footsteps sounded behind him.
"I thought you might like some company, Doktor," Clarissa said. "And
it was cold in our cot without you to warm me."
"I miscalculated today," the Doktor stated. "I made serious blunders."
"For instance?"
"For instance, I should never have sent in the Genetic Research Division
en masse," the Doktor remarked.
"I tell you I am," the Doktor disagreed. "My mental lucidity is strangely
impaired. If I didn't know better, I'd swear I'm suffering from the same
premature senility I inflicted on the Family by poisoning their water
supply."
"But you haven't consumed any of their tainted water," Clarissa said.
"And even if you did, you have the antidote. You're merely fatigued."
"Of course," Clarissa asserted. "You haven't enjoyed a good night's sleep
since the Biological Center was destroyed."
The Doktor's shoulders slumped. "How can I sleep? For the first time in
decades, I'm facing the specter of my own demise."
"But you can't die!" Clarissa objected, striving to cheer her lover and
creator, the man she practically worshiped.
"No, I couldn't die," the Doktor muttered, "as long as I had access to my
laboratory, to my equipment and chemicals, and to a constant source if
fresh infant blood. But it's gone! All gone! Thanks to them!" He shook his
right fist in the direction of Catlow, his voice rising in mounting fury.
"They'll pay for what they have done!"
"Those imbeciles have meddled in my affairs for the final time! I'll
grind them underfoot as I would a common slug! I will show them why my
name is feared far and wide! They shall see!"
"We will crush them," Clarissa vowed. "And then we will travel to
Denver and establish a new laboratory. Locating healthy babies will be
simplicity itself. Once you've synthesized your rejuvenation complement,
you'll be as good as new."
The Doktor glanced at her, his black eyes probing. "Can you read my
mind then?"
She wasn't telepathic, but saying so would simply depress him further.
"What?"
"The boy's," the Doktor said quietly, "when he was nailed to the
crossbeam."
The Doktor turned and looked off into the distance. "Did you hear him?
Did you hear what he said to me when we hung him up?"
"No," Clarissa responded. She had been conversing with Thor when the
youth mumbled several words to the Doktor.
"He stared into my eyes with this pitifully sad expression," the Doktor
said, relating the incident, "and told me…" The Doktor paused, his voice
fading. "I was forgiven."
Clarissa threw back her head and laughed. "Forgiven! He—" Her
sentence was abruptly cut short as the Doktor whirled and grabbed her by
the front of her fatigue shirt.
"Doktor! Please!" Clarissa put her hands on his arm. "You're hurting
me!"
"Didn't you see his eyes?" the Doktor replied. "There was something
about them, an ineffable quality of… compassion. I've never beheld eyes
like his."
"I can't believe you let him get to you," Clarissa remarked.
"About what?"
Clarissa gently took his right hand in hers. "Doktor, get a hold of
yourself. You are not wrong. You are never wrong. Oh, you may commit a
small error every now and then. We all do. But your genius, your mighty
intellect, is unequalled. Your wisdom is beyond reproach. Your
accomplishments are unparalleled. Men and women tremble at the mere
mention of your name. You are the greatest man this planet has ever
seen."
"No. what?"
"Dying."
"I know," he said with conviction. "But the loss of my Center caused me
to begin to doubt myself. It shook my confidence. I've been troubled by a
sense of impending doom, and disturbed by my seemingly fragile
fallibility. Can you imagine!" He laughed at his childish fears.
The Doktor leaned down and kissed her on her scaly forehead. "Thank
you for restoring me to myself."
"Which is?"
Clarissa giggled. "I can hardly wait for our vacation to begin! It's a
marvelous idea!"
The Doktor grinned. "You see? Rumors to the contrary, I'm not such a
bad person after all!"
Chapter Eighteen
The column was halted at the western edge of the Black Hills National
Forest in South Dakota, only 15 miles from the Wyoming border and
about 23 miles from Catlow.
"How else do you think we found you?" the Indian responded. "Blade
gave us explicit directions. He said you would be waiting here for word on
when you should attack the Doktor."
"And your people are willing to fight, Red Cloud?" Rikki inquired.
"We will gladly join you against those who enslaved us!" Red Cloud
stated earnestly.
Rikki glanced at the two troop transports and the jeep parked in the
field ahead. Dozens of Indians were clustered near the vehicles. "How
many are with you?"
"You'll get your chance," Rikki promised him. He glanced over his left
shoulder. The Freedom Federation's fledgling army was encamped in a
wide meadow near the forest, awaiting the signal to march on Catlow. The
volunteers from the Clan and the Moles occupied the center of the
meadow, positioned next to the 14 trucks. The Cavalry riders encircled the
meadow, serving as a mobile buffer, prepared to take the field at a
moment's notice.
Five yards to Rikki's right stood three stalwart figures: Kilrane in his
inevitable buckskins, Yama in his blue "death shirt," and Teucer, the third
member of Beta Triad, a lean, rakish Warrior attired in a green shirt and
pants. Teucer's hair was blond, his locks secured in a ponytail, and he
cultivated a neatly trimmed blond beard on his chin. He carried a
compound bow in his left hand, and a quiver full of arrows was attached
to his brown leather belt and slanted across his right hip. Like every other
Warrior, Teucer had a preference in weaponry based on his natural
aptitude and ability. As the Family's best archer, Teucer preferred a bow
and arrows. Hickok, by virtue of his uncanny skill with handguns, was
entitled to possess the Colt Pythons. Blade, because of his expertise at
knife fighting, carried the Bowies. And Rikki, in honor of his position as
the Family's supreme martial artist, could claim the only katana in the
Family's armory. The Founder of the Home, Kurt Carpenter, had stocked
an incredible array of arms including hundreds of guns as well as more
exotic weapons. Family members, even the Warriors, could not
automatically assume ownership of a particular firearm or other weapon;
they first had to prove themselves worthy of such a distinction.
Rikki nodded.
"Why are you so far from Catlow?" Red Cloud inquired. "Wouldn't it be
wiser to be closer?"
"We don't want to alert the Doktor to our presence," Rikki explained.
"If we were any closer, we would risk detection by one of his patrols."
"We have a man watching Catlow," Rikki detailed. "He has one of our
fastest horses. If he determines Blade and the others require our
assistance, he will ride and warn us. If not, he is under orders to notify us
on the evening of the second day after the battle has begun."
Red Cloud slowly shook his head, his shoulder-length black hair waving.
"It sounds too dangerous to me. Blade and his companions could be killed
before you got there."
"It's a chance we have to take," Rikki said. 'We want the Doktor so
involved with defeating Blade, he won't realize we are here until it is too
late."
Chapter Nineteen
The Doktor strode from his tent and stared at the pair in front of him.
One was Thor. The other was a short man, standing slightly under five feet
in height, who was covered with a coat of light brown hair. His body was
well proportioned and muscular, but his face was a startling contrast to
his physique. His nose was circular and protruded at a slant above his
large oval mouth. Beady brown eyes were focused on his creator in abject
fear. The corners of his mouth tended to chronically droop, exposing his
oversized teeth.
"What is it, Thor?" the Doktor demanded impatiently. "I told you not to
awaken me unless it was absolutely necessary."
Thor bowed deferentially. "I'm sorry, Doktor, but I felt this was
important."
"What is it?"
Thor extended his right arm. Clutched in his furry right hand was a
bloodstained buckskin shirt.
The Doktor took the shirt and examined the fabric, noting the back of
the garment had been torn to shreds. "What is this?"
Thor hefted the sledgehammer in his left hand. "Tell him!" he bellowed.
"Do you know where this shirt came from?" the Doktor asked in a calm
tone of voice, smiling at the terrified Boar.
Boar began wringing his hands together. "You promise you won't get
mad?"
Boar took a deep breath. "I was going to tell you myself, really! Thor
didn't need to bring me."
The Doktor held up the bloody shirt in his left hand. "I'm waiting."
"I was going to tell you about it this morning," Boar said nervously.
"When I saw him," Thor interjected, "he was trying to bury it."
"Oh?" The Doktor stared into Boar's eyes. "Are you open to some
unsolicited advice?"
"Talk to me. Boar," the Doktor urged softly. "Talk to me right this
instant and explain to me where you got this shirt."
"I took it from the man," Boar hastily blurted. "Last night I was
assigned to patrol the area northeast of the town. I heard this sound, like
someone coughing, and when I went to check I found a man hiding in a
ravine. There was a horse with him."
"I tried to capture him, to take him alive for questioning," Boar said.
"But during our struggle I accidentally killed him. The horse ran away."
Boar paused.
"Where is this man now? Did you bury his body?" The Doktor
suppressed an impulse to laugh; he already knew the answers to his
questions.
"You still haven't told me what you did with the body," the Doktor said,
toying with him.
"What was that?" The Doktor grinned. "I'm afraid I didn't quite catch
what you said."
"Yes, Doktor."
"And when Thor spotted you," the Doktor deduced, "you were burying
the evidence."
"I brought one of his arms back with me wrapped in the shirt," Boar
said. "Sort of a snack."
The Doktor smiled. "No, I'm not mad at you, but…" His right hand fell
from Boar's shoulder, then streaked upward, his fingers clamping on
Boar's throat. He squeezed and heaved, lifting Boar bodily from the
ground.
"But although I'm not mad at you," the Doktor went on, as if he were
giving a lecture instead of strangling someone, "I am upset with you. Don't
you want to know why?"
"I can't abide liars," the Doktor commented. "And you are a liar. Don't
you want to know how I know?"
"Look at this shirt." The Doktor held the buckskin shirt aloft. "Take a
good look at it."
"Notice the back of the shirt," the Doktor directed. "The man wearing
this shirt was jumped from behind. You jumped him from the rear, didn't
you? You didn't give him a chance to defend himself or surrender, did
you?"
"You never tried to take him alive for questioning," the Doktor said.
"You were hungry. You thought you could kill him and eat him and no one
would be the wiser. Am I right?"
"Of course I'm right," the Doktor stated. "If Thor hadn't found you with
the shirt, you wouldn't have said a word. Correct?"
Blood was now running from Boar's mouth, down his chin, and
dripping on the Doktor's hand.
"Well, you don't disagree," the Doktor remarked. "No, Boar, I'm not
mad at you for consuming an impromptu meal. I might have satisfied my
appetite too, given a similar set of circumstances. Had you only confessed
the truth, I would have pardoned your monumental stupidity. But I can't
pardon a liar. When a person lies to another, it indicates a lack of respect.
I'm saddened, Boar, to discover the low esteem in which you hold me."
"I can't trust a liar," the Doktor said. "Whether predicated on respect
or fear, trust is essential to any relationship. Without trust, there can't be
a mutual rapport. Without trust, how could I possibly rely on you? And if I
can't rely on you, then I don't have any further need of you, do I?" The
Doktor sighed. "You can see I'm right, can't you?"
"Why didn't you just fry the turkey?" Thor asked, referring to the slim
metal collar around Boar's neck. All of the Doktor's genetically engineered
offspring wore the collars; it was his infallible technique for insuring
obedience. Thor had seen a number of malcontents subjected to the
electrocution treatment over the years, their flesh crisped from the neck
up by the collars.
The Doktor was inspecting the buckskin shirt. "Applying the personal
touch always boosts one's morale. I needed that."
"Who do you think the guy was Boar ate?" Thor queried.
"There's no way of telling from this," the Doktor replied, waving the
shirt in the air. "Buckskins are commonplace apparel outside the Civilized
Zone." The Doktor thoughtfully stroked his chin. "Are you still sending out
regular patrols as I ordered?"
"Every quadrant is covered at least once every four hours," Thor
responded.
"How odd," the Doktor commented. "And yet Boar finds a man with a
horse hiding in a ravine.
"Maybe," Thor suggested, "this guy was passing through and had
bedded down for the night in the ravine."
"A possibility," the Doktor said doubtfully. 'But why was he so close to
Catlow? Surely he heard the battle waged yesterday."
"Does it matter?" Thor asked. "Either way, the message didn't get
through. And today we'll finish off those bastards in Catlow.
"I find it difficult to believe there are only six of them," the Doktor
mentioned.
"I saw Blade myself," Thor mentioned, "and some woman behind a tree.
From the descriptions given by some of our troops, we know Hickok and
Geronimo are in Catlow too. Two others were also seen. Some fat guy with
a beard and another one who wears all black."
"What are they trying to pull?" the Doktor mused aloud. "Why hasn't
Lynx shown his face? If Lynx is in Catlow, that still means there are only
seven of them. Where are the rest?"
"The rest?" Thor repeated quizzically.
"Use your brain, Thor," the Doktor said testily. "Blade isn't a moron. He
wouldn't place himself and the others in jeopardy without a sound reason.
The Doktor glanced at Thor and sighed. "I can see where she was right.
Leaving you in charge would be a grievous mistake."
"What?"
"Why haven't our patrols seen any sign of them?" Thor asked.
The Doktor ran his right hand through his shock of dark hair. "Logic
would dictate reinforcements be close to Catlow so they could assist Blade
as promptly as possible. But if the reinforcements are beyond the
three-mile limit, they couldn't hope to reach Catlow before we…" The
Doktor's face brightened and he snapped his fingers. "Of course!"
"The rider?"
"Certainly. He was the one who would contact the reinforcements at the
proper time. There's no other rational explanation!"
"I don't know how you do it," Thor complimented the Doktor. "I would
never have figured it out."
The Doktor placed his hand on Thor's shoulder. "I appreciate your
devotion. It's why I made you my second in command."
"After my breakfast."
"No."
"But you didn't let me lead it yes—" Thor began, and then caught
himself before he aroused the Doktor's volatile temper.
The Doktor gazed in the general direction of Catlow. "I hope Blade is
enjoying a hearty morning meal. It's the last one he will ever eat."
Chapter Twenty
"They should have been here by now," Hickok groused. "The sun was up
hours ago."
"Hey," Hickok retorted, miffed, "the white man doesn't go looking for
trouble, pard. We're peaceable folks at heart."
Geronimo turned.
Over a dozen forms were moving toward the town, slowly advancing
across a sagebrush- and weed-covered field.
"I ain't one for running," Hickok stated. "Let's take 'em right here."
Geronimo hurried to the other end of the house so they could cover
both flanks. He cautiously peered around the northern corner of the home,
spotting more of their adversaries coming toward Catlow, noting the
assault force was composed of G.R.D.'s and soldiers. He looked down at
the light green pillowcase dangling from his belt, the pillowcase
containing his 2 bundles of dynamite. After Rudahaugh had prepared the
14 charges, 13 of them comprised of 4 sticks of dynamite and the final one
including only 2, he had distributed them among the others. Blade,
meanwhile, had entered the command post and emerged shortly
thereafter bearing seven pillowcases taken from the cots the garrison had
slept on. He had dispensed the pillowcases and a pack of matches to each
of them. The matches had been taken from a drawer in the command post
kitchen. Geronimo decided he wouldn't use the dynamite until it was
absolutely necessary. He glanced up.
Hickok's Henry suddenly boomed, and in the distance there was a loud
shriek.
The soldier jerked backward and flipped over, then lay still.
That should stir them up! Geronimo conjectured.
He was right.
Geronimo ducked back as a bullet bit into the corner of the building
and a brick fragment dislodged and whizzed past his eyes.
Geronimo shot twice, downing two foes, and then looked at Hickok.
Soldiers and G.R.D.'s poured around both corners of the brick home.
Geronimo grinned.
"Hold this," Hickok said, and handed his Henry to Geronimo. He drew
his Colts, winked at his partner, and stepped out into the open, his
Pythons leveled.
One of the troopers saw him immediately and attempted to bring his
M-16 to bear.
The Pythons blasted two, four, six times in rapid succession, and with
each shot an opponent dropped, felled by a slug to the head.
Unnerved, the remaining soldiers and G.R.D.'s raced to the rear of the
brick house and disappeared.
Hickok jumped from sight and twirled the Colts into his holsters. "Piece
of cake," he said.
"Let's play some hide and seek," Geronimo recommended, giving the
Henry to Hickok.
"Lead on," the gunfighter said. "You've always been better at gettin' lost
than I have."
"I sure do, pard," Hickok said, then reached out and grabbed
Geronimo's right elbow. "Listen!"
Geronimo nodded. He hurried to the back door and tried the knob. To
his surprise, the door opened. Together, the two Warriors entered and
Geronimo closed the door behind them. They found a flight of stairs at the
other end of a narrow kitchen and ascended to the second floor.
"I kind of like this spread," Hickok commented. "It's a lot bigger than
the cabins us hitched types get to live in at the Home."
In unison, the Warriors dropped to the carpeted floor and crawled out
onto the wooden balcony. They eased to the railing and peeped between
the rails, which were spaced about six inches apart.
Geronimo extracted his pack of matches from his right front pants
pocket. He studied the bundle of dynamite. Rudabaugh had instructed
them in its proper use, and had cautioned them they would have about
half a minute between the time they lit the fuse and the charge going off.
The troopers and G.R.D.'s were only 15 yards from the balcony.
Geronimo quickly lit one of the matches and applied the flame to the
fuse. It sputtered and crackled as it caught on fire.
Geronimo rose and threw back his right arm, intending to lob the
charge directly at the group nearing the house.
There was a trooper not more than five yards from the house!
Geronimo felt the bullet rip into his left shoulder, and he was slammed
backward by the impact, crashing into the window and tumbling to the
balcony.
Hickok aimed the Henry and fired, putting a slug into the soldier
below.
Geronimo, his senses swimming, gaped at the charge in his right hand.
The fuse was continuing to crackle and sparkle.
Dear Spirit!
Geronimo struggled to rise, to get rid of the dynamite. His body refused
to cooperate with his dazed mind.
Hickok was conducting a raging gun battle with the enemies below.
Geronimo shook his head to clear it, and managed to laboriously lift
himself to his knees. The strain of his exertion prompted a surge of
dizziness to engulf his consciousness. Unable to control his equilibrium, he
pitched forward, the fuse over half gone.
Chapter Twenty-One
Blade, squatting alongside of her behind a low stone wall not far from
U.S. Highway 85, recognized the vehicle from photographs contained in
several of the military history books in the Family library. "It's called a
half-track," he told her.
"I ain't never seen nothin' like it!" Bertha declared nervously.
Bertha was gawking at the green half-track. "I think we'd best go get
the SEAL!"
Blade frowned. She was right. The bundles weren't very heavy, but they
were ungainly and would be difficult to pitch any great distance with any
degree of accuracy. What else could they do? He stared at the half-track,
at least 400 yards from their position.
Blade gazed over his right shoulder. A yellow wood frame house was 15
yards behind them. He shifted his attention to the north. There were two
more homes between the stone wall and the downtown business district of
Catlow, a collection of a dozen or so brick buildings including a small
store, a pharmacy, a clothing establishment, and other retail enterprises.
The structure was two stories tall, with the bottom half devoted to
perishable foodstuffs and the upper portion, according to a large sign on
the building, a hardware emporium with the "greatest selection in
Catlow." Of course, the sign neglected to mention it was the only hardware
selection in Catlow.
"Follow me," Blade directed. Keeping low, stooped over at the waist and
ignoring the agony lancing his left side, Blade ran in the direction of the
business district.
Blade waited until they were out of sight from the highway and moving
down an alley behind the stores before he asked the obvious question.
"Why are you mad at me?"
Bertha snorted. "Don't play innocent with me, turkey! You knew I
wanted to pair off with White Meat! But, no! I get stuck with you!"
Blade grinned. "You have only yourself to blame for not being with
Hickok right now."
They reached the rear of the establishment Blade had been heading for.
Blade drew up his right leg and lashed out with his foot, striking the
door near the doorknob. The oak splintered and shattered and the door
swung open several inches. He pushed the door aside and walked into a
dark hallway leading to the front of the building.
Blade moved along the hall until he came to a flight of stairs leading up
to the second floor. "We're friends, Bertha," he said as he started up the
steps. "I don't want to see you killed."
"Oh? I'd have a better chance of gettin' racked with White Meat than I
do here with you?" Bertha asked, disputing him.
"How so?"
They reached the top of the stairs and found aisle after aisle of
merchandise.
Blade gazed at the ceiling, wondering if the structure would have the
feature he required.
It did.
In the middle of the room was a trap door to the roof.
Blade hurried toward it. "Bertha," he said over his shoulder, "I've seen
the way you look at Hickok-"
"We know it," Blade assured her. "I can imagine how you feel about
him. I don't think you've accepted his marriage, and possibly you never
will. But that's rightfully none of my business—"
"I would not," Bertha protested, but her tone lacked conviction.
They reached the aisle under the trap door. A piece of rope about a foot
long was attached to a handle in the door.
Blade jumped up and caught the rope in his right hand. He yanked, and
the trap door swung open.
There was a four-foot space between the top of Blade's head and the
opening.
"I was afraid you'd say that," Bertha mumbled, staying on his heels.
The roof was flat and rectangular. A large metal antenna was situated a
few feet north of the trap door. The surface of the roof was coated with a
peculiar sticky black substance.
"What is this?" Blade asked, noting how the coating stuck to his hands
and fingers where he touched the roof.
Blade, his body crouched over, ran to the front of the building and
dropped to his hands and knees.
Cautiously, Blade peered over the rim and looked to the south.
The half-track and its deadly entourage were approximately 100 yards
from Catlow.
"It's not too late to get the SEAL," Bertha remarked hopefully.
"So let me hear your great plan for takin' that thing out," Bertha said,
watching the rumbling halftrack.
"Simple," Blade declared. "You light your charge and we drop it on the
half-track as it drives by below."
"What if one of those boys in green spot us and begin blastin' away?"
Bertha inquired.
"That's the chance we take," Blade mentioned.
The half-track was abreast of the intervening homes between the stone
wall and the business district.
Bertha shut the noise from her mind, knowing it meant Hickok and
Geronimo were engaging some of the Doktor's forces.
"After you blow the half-track," Blade was saying, "I'll let the
infantrymen have it."
"When I give the word," Blade instructed her, then abruptly exclaimed,
"What the—"
One block south of the business district, the half-track took a left on a
side street, heading westward.
Bertha couldn't believe it. "What the hell are they doin'?"
"They're heading for the town square," Blade guessed. "Come on!"
Together, they descended from the roof and raced to the rear of the
store. Blade peeked out the door, looking south, and saw several of the
soldiers pass the mouth of the alley.
Damn!
Blade was angry at himself. Bertha and he had crossed the side street to
enter the alley, and it had never occurred to him the half-track might take
it instead of using U.S. Highway 85.
There was only one feasible recourse. Turn right up the alley until they
reached the next side street, one paralleling the street being used by the
half-track. Then they would need to outrace the lumbering vehicle and get
ahead of it.
Blade smiled reassuringly and bolted from the building, hugging the
wall, his eyes on the mouth of the alley to the south as he bore due north.
The troopers and G.R.D.'s were still passing the alley, but none of them
gave it more than a cursory examination.
Deep in the alley, partially concealed by the shadows, Blade and Bertha
ran to the next side street, designated as Lexington by a street sign. They
darted to the left, sticking to the sidewalk, their legs pumping as they
gathered speed.
Blade's left side was aching miserably before they reached the end of
the first block. He stoically suppressed the discomfort, hoping his
exertions wouldn't cause the wound to start bleeding again. At the
junction of Lexington and Hamilton he paused, prudently inching to the
edge of the sidewalk and glancing to the south.
Several troopers and G.R.D.'s were one block away to the south, as they
continued their advance toward the town square, now only two blocks off
to the west.
Blade frowned, frustrated. There was no way they could outrun the
half-track in their condition. They needed to do something to turn the
half-track around, to divert it from the town square. He had geared his
entire defensive stratagem on utilizing the town square as the penultimate
battleground. He wanted to draw the Doktor as far into the town as
possible, but not until he was ready.
"What's the holdup?" Bertha asked. She was bent over, her hand on her
injured thigh, and breathing heavily.
"I'll tell ya' later," Bertha promised. "Right now, we'd best split!"
They began jogging, retracing their footsteps to the mouth of the alley.
As they reached it, Blade peered over his shoulder and spotted four
troopers just arriving in the intersection of Lexington and Hamilton. One
of the four gave a loud yell, and they charged after the Warrior and his
companion.
Blade led her down the alley to the back door of the food-and-hardware
store.
"We goin' up on that roof again?" Bertha asked, holding up her right
hand. It was covered with the tar-like substance coating the roof. "This
icky gunk could ruin my beautiful complexion!"
Blade grinned and hurried into the structure and along the hall. Instead
of turning to take the stairs to the second floor, he proceeded straight
ahead until he came to a large chamber containing racks of food and other
items.
Bertha limped to the rack, chuckling. "You sure are sneaky, you know
that?"
Blade moved behind a rack filled with tin cans. He squatted and
verified the Commando was fully loaded.
From the rear of the building came the sound of muffled voices and the
dull tramp of boots on the floor.
Blade waited until he was certain they were clustered close to the front
door, and then jumped up, the Commando stock snug against his right
shoulder.
Three soldiers were huddled at the door, one of them framed in the
doorway as he peeked outside.
Blade shifted the barrel in a short arc as he fired, his bullets tearing
into them from a distance of only ten feet.
All three were flung from their feet by the brutal impact of the
Commando's slugs. Miniature bright red geysers erupted from their backs
as they were propelled forward and slammed to the floor or, in the case of
the trooper in the doorway, to the sidewalk beyond.
Blade caught a motion out of the corner of his left eye, but before he
could pivot to confront this new threat, Bertha's M-16 chattered.
A fourth soldier had just entered the chamber when Bertha's burst
caught him in the head. His eyes and nose disappeared in a crimson spray
and he toppled to the floor.
"Let's go!" Blade directed her. He ran to the front door and stepped out,
glancing to his right and left.
At both ends of the block, soldiers and G.R.D.'s came into view.
They were almost to the hallway when the clamor of uplifted voices
arose from the rear of the building.
Damn!
Chapter Twenty-Two
"It sounds like the others are already in the thick of it," Rudabaugh
commented.
Orson hefted his M-16. "I don't mind telling you," he said nervously, "I'll
be glad when this is over."
"So will I," Rudabaugh admitted, leaning against the shed and cradling
his Winchester in his arms.
"Do you think your boss, Kilrane, would mind if I came to live with the
Cavalry after this is done?" Orson asked hopefully.
Rudabaugh eyes narrowed in surprise. "You want to come live with the
Cavalry?"
"I know I don't want to go back to the Mound." Orson stated, referring
to the huge subterranean city inhabited by the Moles.
"Why not?"
"Because Wolfe will continue to make my life miserable for me," Orson
remarked.
Orson sighed. "It goes a long way back to when we were kids together.
You see, Wolfe always was a bossy bastard, even before he became ruler of
the Moles. We had a lot of fights when we were kids, because I was one of
the few who wouldn't take his crap."
"And he's held it against you all these years!" Rudabaugh commented.
"The man sure knows how to hold a grudge."
"Take a look."
Orson did, and immediately drew back, whistling softly. "Uh-oh. I'd say
we're going to have company."
Two blocks south of the shed he found what he was looking for.
"I don't rightfully know," Rudabaugh confessed, "but they'll serve our
purpose."
There was a flatbed trailer parked next to the curb on the north side of
the street. Stacked on the trailer, and secured by sturdy metallic lashings,
were ten huge concrete pipes or culverts.
They ran around the trailer and started ascending the pile of pipes.
Rudabaugh was finding the climbing extremely difficult, what with his
left shoulder hurting every time he moved. "We'll get to the top," he said,
"and wait for them to catch up."
Orson reached the apex of the stack first. He leaned down and extended
his right hand to Rudabaugh. "Here."
Rudabaugh lay down on the pipe on the right and unfastened his
pillowcase from his belt. He took out his pair of charges and his matches.
"What?"
"If something should happen to me," Orson said, "would you send word
to my mom for me?"
It was the last thing Rudabaugh would have expected Orson to ask.
"Nothing's going to happen to you."
"Just in case," the Mole persisted, "get word to my mom. Tell her I was
thinking of her at the end." He paused. "We've always been kind of close."
G.R.D.'s and soldiers were moving through the yards of the residential
neighborhood, alert for trouble.
Rudabaugh kept his eyes just high enough to note their proximity.
When the nearest troopers were 20 yards away, he lowered his head and
prepared to strike a match.
Rudabaugh counted to ten, then lit the match and applied the flame to
the first charge. He drew back his right arm, and then threw the bundle as
hard as he could. Instantly, he curled up, putting his hands over his head.
Seconds later, when the twin explosions came, the flatbed shook and
shimmied, and for a moment Rudabaugh thought it would collapse under
the stress. His ears felt like they were going to burst. Clumps of sod, dirt,
grass, and other debris rained from the sky, pelting his body and stinging
his skin, even through the fabric of his wool clothing.
The G.R.D. was struck in the forehead. Its arms flung wide, it was
catapulted from the pipes and tumbled to the ground.
Several dark figures were vaguely visible in front of the flatbed trailer.
Orson rose to his knees and cut loose with the M-16, his burst attended
by screams and shouts and curses.
Orson rose and turned, about to clamber over the side of the uppermost
pipe.
No!
Rudabaugh released his grip, falling the rest of the way and landing on
his feet. He quickly knelt alongside Orson.
The bearded Mole was on his stomach, writhing in torment, his M-16 a
few yards away, his shotgun still slung over his left shoulder.
"Can you get up?" Rudabaugh pressed him, looking both ways to insure
their foes weren't nearby.
"Hurry!" Rudabaugh led the way, running, bearing due south. Blade's
orders had been explicit: engage the enemy at the perimeter, then retreat
to the town square.
Soldiers and G.R.D.'s were pouring around both ends of the flatbed
trailer.
Orson was already on the other side, crouching behind the fence.
The troopers near the flatbed darted into view and unleashed a volley
from their M-16's.
Rudabaugh was framed in the gate opening when the hail of bullets
plowed into the fence, splintering wood in every direction, and something
tore through his left calf, sending a sharp spasm up his body and causing
his leg to buckle. He sprawled onto his knees and rolled to the left.
He'd been hit again!
The soldiers and G.R.D.'s were charging across the yard toward the
picket fence.
His fingers trembling, Rudabaugh removed his second charge from the
pillowcase and lit the fuse. He didn't bother counting to ten this time; his
only concern was providing them with enough cover to obscure their
escape to the town square.
Orson was doubled over and gasping for air, on the verge of
hyperventilating.
Rudabaugh rudely shook him. "Orson! I've been hit! I need your help!"
Orson blinked his eyes, responding to the plea for aid. "You too?" he
mumbled.
Orson nodded and stood. He slid his left arm under Rudabaugh's right
shoulder and heaved, straining to hold Rudabaugh erect. "I've got you,"
Orson stated. "We'll make it."
Chapter Twenty-Three
Lynx, alone on the roof of the command post, was mad as all get out!
His very genes craved to be in the battle, to be doing what he'd been
designed to do: kill and kill again. Gunfire was rising from every direction.
It sounded as if a veritable war were in progress.
And here he was, on top of the damn command post, missing all the
action!
Lynx was furiously pacing back and forth above the front door,
listening to the shooting and the explosions and chafing to leave his post
and join in the fun. He stopped and put his hands on the rim of the roof,
about to leap over the side.
He paused as the roar of a large motor drowned out the uproar of the
conflict.
Son of a bitch!
A half-track loaded with soldiers was wheeling into the town square.
Lynx grinned.
The rumble of the engine grew louder, until the building itself
trembled. There was the grating squeal of brakes applied rather abruptly,
and the motor was turned off.
The driver of the half-track had parked the vehicle within a few feet of
the front door!
Perfect!
Packed into the back of the half-track with little space to spare, the
troopers were unable to bring their M-16s to bear.
With a flashing swipe of both arms, Lynx dispatched two of the six
soldiers by ripping open their throats. He pounced on a third and jammed
the sharp claws of his right hand into the man's eyes. Blood spurted from
the burst eyeballs and the trooper jerked backward, attempting to escape.
Lynx grinned as he bounded onto the joker with the bayonet and sank
his pointed fangs into the jerk's neck. He twisted and yanked, and a large
portion of the trooper's throat was sheared off in a red geyser of blood and
gore.
Four down and two to go!
One of the remaining soldiers was trying to scramble over the tailgate
to safety.
Lynx went for the other trooper, who foolishly tried to punch him in the
face. In a blur, Lynx dodged under the futile blow and drove his left hand
up and in, his fingers and claws rigid, spearing the man in the throat and
gouging open a hole the size of his fist.
A gun thundered, and the soldier was struck in the center of his back,
between the shoulder blades, and toppled over the tailgate.
Lynx vaulted to the roof of the cab, ignoring the moaning, thrashing
forms on the floor of the rear section. For a second, he believed one of his
friends had returned and helped him.
"Surprise, surprise!" said a tall figure in black outside the cab to his
left, the man's cape covering his left arm, a 45 automatic pistol in his right
hand with tendrils of smoke drifting upward from the barrel.
"Hello, Lynx," greeted the apish hulk outside the cab to his right. "Long
time no see."
Lynx glanced from one to the other in astonishment. They must have
just gotten out of the cab of the half-track!
"What's the matter, Lynx?" the Doktor chortled. "Cat got your tongue?"
Thor laughed and raised his right hand, revealing his sledgehammer.
"Got a little present for you, Lynx," he said baiting him.
Lynx glared at the Doktor. "This must be my lucky day."
"Because," Lynx growled, "I've been looking to rip you to pieces, and
here you are, delivered on a silver platter!"
"You think that peashooter of yours will stop me?" Lynx taunted.
"I can't abide cowards," the Doktor said, "and he was fleeing."
"Why don't you shoot?" Lynx teased him. "What are you waiting for?"
The Doktor sneered. "I want to savor this moment. And there are a few
things I want to say to you."
Smiling, the Doktor shook his head. "I'll be brief. First, I want to
compliment you."
"Do you have any conception of the damage you've caused?" the Doktor
inquired. "You have set my work back decades."
"I want to thank you for what you've done," the Doktor stated.
Lynx looked at Thor. "What'd you do? Whack him on the head with
that hammer of yours?"
"Initially," the Doktor went on, as if Lynx had not spoken, "I viewed the
destruction of my Biological Center as a great calamity. It wasn't until last
night that I recognized the real significance of what you had done.
Certainly, you've delayed the implementation of some of my plans, and
you've ruined my laboratory, my precious laboratory!" The Doktor paused.
"But, as Clarissa said, I can always rebuild my laboratory. I'll continue to
live on indefinitely, so long as I have access to a fresh supply of blood and
can synthesize my unique dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate—
"Yeah, yeah, yeah," Lynx interrupted. "What's all of this got to do with
me?"
"I understand, all right," Lynx snapped. "I understand that you're
looney-tunes! You think the whole world should do what you want it to do.
You believe you can do anything you want."
Lynx pointed at his own chest. "Consequences, you bastard! You fiddled
with the laws of nature, and look at what you've done! Look at what you've
done to me!" Lynx hissed.
"Is that what's bothering your meager intellect?" the Doktor asked. "Is
that why you rebelled against me? Because I created you as a special being
with exceptional talents?"
"Special?" Lynx exploded. "You made me into a freak! Me and all the
rest of your misfits!"
The Doktor sighed. "You fail to see the light."
Lynx leaned forward. "Oh, I see it, all right! I see that you've got to be
stopped, no matter what it takes!"
Lynx noticed Thor was grinning. "What's with you, lunkhead? Do you
like being the Doc's pet monkey?"
"Your ass!" Lynx snapped. "Thor is an expendable flunky, just like all
the rest of us test-tube freaks!"
"Oh, yeah?" Lynx pointed at Thor. "Tell me you wouldn't kill him in a
minute if it suited your demented mind!"
"Don't listen to him," the Doktor said calmly to Thor. "He's raving."
"Am I?" Lynx gazed at Thor. "Think! Use your pitiful excuse for a brain!
Do you really think the Doc gives a damn about you?"
Thor glanced from Lynx to the Doktor, his sloping brow furrowed.
Thor hesitated.
Thor suddenly clutched at the metal collar around his squat neck, his
powerful body arching, as a jolting surge of electricity jarred his senses.
The Doktor's left hand emerged from under his cape, his fingers
grasping an odd black box about six inches in length and four inches wide.
There were a number of silver toggle switches and blinking lights on the
upper surface of the black box.
Thor dropped his sledgehammer and fell to his knees, his lips curled
back from his prominent teeth, his entire frame quaking.
Lynx was staring at the black box. It had to be one of the portable
control units the Doktor was known to secret on his person. Without it,
the Doktor would be unable to activate the transistorized electronic
circuitry in the collars. Without it, the Doktor would not be able to compel
his genetic aberrations to passively submit to his commands.
Lynx was thankful his own collar had been removed weeks before,
shortly before the Warrior known as Yama had rescued him from the
Citadel.
The madman was endowed with incredible reflexes. His right arm
swept upward, the barrel of his 45 connecting with Lynx's forehead and
sending him sprawling.
Lynx tumbled to the earth, rolling with the blow, and bounded to his
feet, his claws clenched, ready to pounce again.
The Doktor was pointing the 45 at Lynx's head. "Before I conclude this
fiasco, there is a question you will answer."
"What have you done with the rest of the thermos?" the Doktor
demanded.
Lynx did a double take before he understood: the Doktor must believe
that Yama and he had stolen several of the thermonuclear devices when
they fled the Citadel. Truth was, they hadn't, but there was no reason to let
the Doktor know. Lynx grinned. "I'll never tell."
The Doktor's eyes narrowed. "I need those thermos! What did you do
with them?"
Out of the corner of his eye, Lynx saw Thor stand and rub his bullish
neck.
Thor nodded.
Thor reclaimed his sledgehammer and moved around the front of the
half-track. He looked at Lynx, his features softening. "I'm going to smash
you to a pulp for getting the Doktor mad at me!" So saying, he raised the
sledgehammer above his head.
Chapter Twenty-Four
The thump of Geronimo's body on the balcony next to his own caused
Hickok to glance to his right. He saw the bundle of dynamite, its fuse
sparkling, drop from his friend's hand. The gunman's reaction was
instantaneous; his right hand flicked out and grabbed the charge and
heaved it up and out.
The dynamite went off, shattering the windows in the house, cracking
its foundation, obliterating the soldiers and the G.R.D.'s below, and
ripping the balcony from its supports.
His eardrums stinging from the blast and the subsequent concussion,
Hickok felt the balcony give way and plummet toward the turf. The floor of
the balcony was still intact, and it absorbed the brunt of the brutal impact
when they smacked onto the ground.
Both of the Warriors were bounced and jostled by the severe collision.
Geronimo's eyes flicked open and a devilish grin creased his mouth.
"Why, Hickok, I didn't know you cared!"
The gunman leaped to his feet. "You lousy Injun! I should of known you
were faking it!"
Geronimo chuckled, despite his agony. "Wait until I tell Blade! The
great Hickok got all misty because I suffered a little scratch!"
"Misty my butt!" Hickok leaned over and yanked Geronimo to his feet,
careful not to aggravate the wound in his left shoulder. "I just didn't want
to have to tell your wife you got yourself killed because you can't even
throw a few sticks of dynamite without getting yourself shot!"
Hickok bent down and picked up the Henry and the FNC. "In my sleep,"
he said when he straightened up.
Geronimo suddenly pressed his left arm against his side and winced.
"Here." Hickok placed his left arm under Geronimo's right armpit.
"Lean on me."
They could distinctly hear the din of gunfire and explosions coming
from the north, and more shooting off in the east.
"I hope we get there before the party is over, " Hickok commented.
"I hope Rikki doesn't wait too much longer," Geronimo mentioned at
one point.
Geronimo nodded at his injured shoulder. "Oh? What do you call this?"
Hickok made a show of rolling his eyes. "Brother! If you're gonna whine
every time you get a teensy-weensy scratch—"
Hickok grimaced. "Only your superior Indian heritage makes you such
a natural-born bull-shitter!"
"It takes one to know one," was all Geronimo could think of to say in
response.
They hastened in silence. The noise of conflict to the north had abated.
"We only have a block to go," Geronimo announced after a few more
minutes.
"Glad we found you," Orson said as they approached, his relief reflected
on his face.
Geronimo twisted his head, scanning to their rear. "It looks like we
have some company too."
They were nearing the town square from the west, passing homes and a
few scattered businesses. Ahead was a house with a low stone wall
paralleling the street.
"We'll never make it to the command post before they catch up with
us," Hickok stated. "Let's make a stand here."
They clambered over the wall and dropped to the grass on the other
side.
"If we can drive 'em back," Hickok remarked, "we'll make a run for the
command post." He gave the FNC to Geronimo.
Geronimo scanned the town square. He could see the fountain in the
middle and a military vehicle parked in front of the command post. What
kind of vehicle was it? he wondered. And was it his imagination, or was
there a commotion of some sort taking place on the other side of the
vehicle?
"And I have both of mine," Hickok stated. "Four charges and there are
four of us. Get them out."
"Here's the plan," Hickok informed them. "We'll wait until they're
almost on us, then toss the four charges all at once. The explosions should
cover our tracks."
"Make for the fountain," Hickok advised. "From there, we'll try and
reach the command post. Blade should be there soon, if he isn't already."
Geronimo nudged his friend and pointed at the command post. "What
is that?"
Hickok studied the military vehicle. "I think it's called a half-track," he
guessed. "Didn't we have pictures of them in one of the books in the
library?"
Geronimo, never one to miss his chance, grinned. "You mean to tell us
you can read?"
Orson was peering over the wall. "Here they come!" he declared.
Soldiers and G.R.D.'s were advancing from the north and the west.
"Get ready!" Hickok directed them. "Hold your charges out and I'll light
them for you."
"Because I'm the only one with brains enough not to have gotten shot,"
Hickok quipped. "How are you going to light it with one of your arms out
of action?"
Orson extended the bundle in his left hand, while Rudabaugh and
Geronimo used their right.
The gunman swiftly lit all four charges. As soon as the last one was lit,
which was his own bundle, Hickok nodded and swung his right arm down
and up.
When the explosions came, the very earth rumbled and shook. The
stone wall swayed slightly, but held firm, and the invariable billowing
cloud of dust permeated the sky overhead.
"Move it!" Hickok ordered. "I'll cover you." He slung his Henry over his
left shoulder and drew his Colt Pythons.
Rudabaugh and Orson took off, Orson helping the Cavalryman as they
made for the fountain.
Hickok waited several seconds, to insure they had deterred their foes.
He whirled and sprinted after the others.
There was movement near the half-track, and Hickok's blue eyes
narrowed as he tried to see clearly through the swirling dust and refracted
sunlight.
One of the Doktor's freaks, a huge ape-like thing, had scaled the tailgate
on the half-track and was swiveling a mounted machine gun in the
direction of the fountain—in the direction of the four defenders!
Chapter Twenty-Five
Blade's eyes blazed with an intense inner fury at being hemmed in by
his antagonists.
"Stay close to me!" Blade ordered her. He darted from the room and
into the hallway beyond.
Blade fired into them before they could bring their M-16s to bear, the
Commando thundering in the narrow confines of the hallway.
All three soldiers were struck, their bodies dancing and flouncing and
thrashing in uncontrollable spasms.
Blade ceased firing and brushed past their crumpled bodies. He burst
through the rear doorway and found himself surrounded by four G.R.D.'s.
One of them, a furry monster with pink pupils, was directly in front of
him. Blade rammed the barrel of the Commando into the thing's stomach
and pulled the trigger.
Blade pivoted, going for a scaly horror to his left, but the creature
grabbed the Commando barrel and wrenched it aside. Blade released the
gun and drew his right Bowie. His huge arm flashed up, then out, and the
knife gleamed as it cleaved the air and imbedded itself in the thing's chest.
The creature screeched and attempted to pull the Bowie from its body,
but a geyser of blood erupted from its narrow lips and it fell to the
pavement.
The third monstrosity leaped on the Warrior from behind and pinned
his arms to his sides.
The fourth, in the act of diving at the Warrior, was hit in midair.
Bertha's M-16 chattering from the doorway and puncturing holes in its
body from its head to its feet.
Blade swept his head straight back, connecting with the nose of his foe
and crushing the cartilage. The hairy arms securing him momentarily
weakened, and Blade surged his massive biceps and triceps, exerting his
prodigious strength, and broke free. He dove forward and Bertha gunned
the thing down.
Blade scrambled to his Commando and scooped it into his arms. Two
more G.R.D.'s were rushing up from the south. He cradled the Commando
and pulled the trigger. Both G.R.D.'s were bowled over, spurting blood and
flesh over the alley.
Blade bent over the scaly deviate and extricated his Bowie from its
chest. The knife made a slurping noise as it came loose. He wiped the gory
blade on his left pants leg, then slid the Bowie into its sheath.
Soldiers and G.R.D.'s were pouring into the north end of the alley.
Blade and Bertha started running toward the south end, their speed
impeded by Bertha's injured right thigh.
Bertha reached the south end of the alley and took a right, and a second
later Blade was on her heels.
Blade nodded.
Voices were heard all around them, as their adversaries closed in.
Blade and Bertha sprinted westward. A block and a half from the alley
Blade spotted a row of metal trash cans lined up alongside the sidewalk.
Blade grabbed Bertha's elbow and drew her from the sidewalk. They
dodged behind the trash cans and dropped to their knees.
Dozens of their foes were in hot pursuit, maybe a block away.
"Hurry!" Blade directed her, his chest heaving from the strain. "One of
your charges!"
"One…"
"Two…"
One of the approaching soldiers fired his M-16, and the trash cans
pinged as the bullets hit.
Together, they popped up from behind the trash cans and threw their
charges.
One of the troopers, faster than the rest, raised his M-16 to his shoulder
and snapped off a shot.
Blade heard Bertha grunt as she was struck, but before he could turn to
aid her the dynamite detonated. The tremendous concussion from the
blast knocked Blade onto his broad back. He swiftly rose to his hands and
knees.
Coughing from the dust as much from the pain in his left side, Blade
lifted Bertha into his brawny arms and jogged in the direction of the town
square. This fiasco wasn't going well at all. There was no way they could
hold out until the end of the day. If Rikki and Kilrane didn't show up soon,
they might show up too late.
About 20 yards from the town square. Blade saw a house to his right
with its front door wide open. The occupants must have evacuated in a
hurry. He angled toward the door and cautiously entered the home.
No response.
Blade gently lowered Bertha to a sofa flanking a wall not ten feet from
the door.
Blade exited the house, closing the front door behind him. He jogged
toward the town square, his left side smarting.
What the-!
The Doktor!
It had to be!
Blade had never met the infamous Doktor, had never even seen him,
but he intuitively recognized the man in black as the nefarious scientist.
The Doktor was concentrating on the fight between Lynx and the
ape-man. The ape-like figure was striving to bash Lynx's brains in with a
sledgehammer, but Lynx was more than holding his own, his superior
speed and agility enabling him to avoid the ponderous blows.
Blade darted to the left, crossing the street and zigzagging across a
yard. He passed several trees and a bicycle, running due south, keeping his
gaze on the command post, insuring the Doktor did not look in his
direction. He wanted to put the corner of the command post between
himself and the Doktor, then sneak up to the building and take the Doktor
completely by surprise.
Where were Hickok and Geronimo and the others? he wondered. Were
they faring any better?
Blade realized the Doktor and the half-track had disappeared from
view. The command post was now blocking his avenue of approach from
the Doktor. He turned, racing to the command post and stopping only
when he reached the east wall of the structure, and was 15 feet from the
northeastern corner.
"Don't toy with him," the Warrior heard the Doktor say. "Get it over
with!"
Blade grinned, placed his finger on the trigger of the Commando, and
leaped from concealment.
The Doktor was watching the combat, his back to the corner.
Nothing happened.
Lynx had twisted at the sound of Blade's voice, and for the briefest of
instants was off guard.
Lynx sensed the danger, but too late. He twisted, trying to avert the
sledgehammer, but it struck him a glancing blow, the stunning impact
sufficient to send him hurtling into the half-track. He slumped to the
ground next to the front tire.
Blade carefully drew the Vegas from their shoulder holsters and let
them fall.
The Doktor seemed to relax slightly. He smiled and studied the knives
on the Warrior's hips. "Bowie knives," he said matter-of-factly, and looked
up. "You undoubtedly are Blade."
"I truly wish I could prolong our encounter," the Doktor commented,
"but I must complete my business here and travel to Denver. Any last
words before we wrap this up?"
The Doktor chuckled. "Oh, come now! Not even a few words of spite
and malice?"
"Seriously," the Doktor stressed, "Haven't you ever heard that you can
measure the quality of a man by the excellence of his competition?" The
Doktor sighed. "Believe it or not, I shall be sorry to see you go. You and the
rest of the Warriors. There is no place in a society like ours, where peace is
promoted at the expense of personal liberties, for Warriors like yourself.
You are an anachronism Blade. You and Geronimo and Hickok and the
rest." The Doktor laughed. "Especially Hickok. I've heard of some of his
escapades and listened to some of the tapes of monitored Family
conversations. Does he use that phony Wild West jargon all the time?"
Blade nodded.
"Haven't you ever speculated who was responsible for your father's
death?" the Doktor inquired, a wicked gleam in his eyes.
The men with Blade's father had rushed to his aid, but the mutate
responsible for the savage onslaught had whirled and vanished in the
underbrush. Both men had claimed there had been something unique
about that particular mutate; they had insisted it had worn a collar, a
leather collar.
The collar!
Blade's memory flashed back to the run Alpha Triad had made to Thief
River Falls. He remembered the ferocious creatures called the Brutes, the
bestial beings the soldiers had used for tracking and guard duties. Blade
had barely survived a fierce fight with one of them, and it had worn a
leather collar!
Blade was feeling dizzy. He abruptly recalled an incident during the trip
to Kalispell. What was it the officer had told him? Yes! Now he recollected
what it was: "That metal collar is how the Doktor controls his freaks. His
earlier creatures… just wore leather collars."
Damn!
"It was necessary to dispose of your father," the Doktor was saying. "He
intended to send out expeditions to ascertain if there were other survivors
of the war. So long as your Family remained comparatively isolated, we
were content to periodically send monitoring teams to eavesdrop on your
conversations, using sophisticated electronic equipment, as we do with all
the other outposts of civilization beyond the borders of the Civilized Zone.
But we couldn't allow your Family to contact the others. We weren't quite
ready to commence reconquering the United States, and we wanted all
surviving factions to be as disorganized as possible to prevent them
unifying against us. Consequently, I sent in a team with one of my little
pets. Your father conveniently left the security of the Home, and the rest
you know."
Blade felt an intense fury mounting within him. His fists clenched into
compact clubs.
"I would have done the same to Plato," the Doktor revealed, "only he
decided to send Alpha Triad out so abruptly we couldn't assassinate him
beforehand."
Blade's cheeks were flushing from the passionate rage welling up inside
him.
"Killing your father wasn't anything personal," the Doktor commented.
"It was strictly business. Killing Joshua, on the other hand, was purely
personal."
"Oh? Didn't I mention it?" The Doktor chuckled. "The foolish pacifist
tried to convert me to the path of life and light! Imagine!" He tossed back
his head and gave vent to uncontrolled mirth.
A gigantic, thunderous explosion erupted from the west end of the town
square, sounding as if several charges went off simultaneously.
Both the Doktor and Thor involuntarily glanced in the direction of the
cacophonous blast.
It was the moment Blade had been waiting for. He charged, forgetting
to draw his Bowies, his arms extended and his fingers rigid.
The Doktor detected Blade's assault out of the corner of his right eye.
He turned and fired.
Blade experienced a burning sensation along his rib cage on his right
side, but he disregarded it and leaped the final four feet.
The 45 boomed again, but in his haste the Doktor missed, and before
he could aim again the Warrior slammed into him and bore him to the
ground.
Thor, about to hasten to the Doktor's defense, saw four forms hurrying
toward the center of the town square from the west. He recognized them
almost instantly; the fat one with the beard, the guy in black, the Indian
Geronimo, and, trailing a few yards behind, the gunfighter called Hickok.
Thor glanced at the Doktor and Blade. The Doktor had landed on his
back with the Warrior on top, but he suddenly swept his left knee up and
rammed it into Blade's left side. Blade winced and doubled over, releasing
his hold on the Doktor.
Thor ran to the rear of the half-track and climbed over the tailgate to
the mounted machine gun. He pivoted the gun, sighting on the four
defenders, and let the sledgehammer fall to the floor.
Blade, his left side in excruciating agony from the Doktor's blow, was
lying on his right side. He felt something hard being pressed against his
left temple and twisted his head to find the reason.
It was the Doktor, and he was holding the 45 next to Blade's head.
"Don't move!" the Doktor hissed.
"No one lays a hand on me!" the Doktor snapped at Blade. "No one!" He
sounded as if he were on the verge of going off the deep end, his tone
strident and ragged.
The Doktor's face conveyed the fanatical nature of his insanity: his eyes
were wide, the pupils distended; his nostrils were flared; his lips were
curled upward in a fake grin, exposing his teeth; and his entire
countenance seemed to be aglow with a bizarre inner light.
Lynx, unnoticed by the Doktor or Thor, opened his green eyes and rose
to his knees, still groggy, his movements unusually slow.
It did.
Pandemonium erupted.
"Over here, sucker!" a female voice screamed, coming from the east.
Bertha was ten yards away, weaving toward them, the left side of her
face caked with blood.
The Doktor instinctively swung the 45 at her, not realizing she was
unarmed and didn't pose a threat.
Blade drove his right hand, balled into an iron fist, up and around,
connecting with the madman's chin and slamming him to the ground. The
45 went flying.
Blade executed a flying tackle, bearing the Doktor to the turf. He kneed
the lunatic in the groin, then flicked his fists in a furious combination of
brutal punches, smashing his knuckles into the Doktor's face again and
again and again.
Thor had turned upon hearing Blade's cry, but he was too late.
Lynx cleared the side of the half-track in two bounds. His second leap
brought him to the top of the side panel, and he added to his momentum
by grabbing the upper edge and propelling his body at Thor like a shot out
of a cannon.
Thor lunged for his sledgehammer, but his reach was impeded by the
machine gun.
Lynx snarled with a feral frenzy as he landed on his foe, his feet raking
Thor's massive chest while his hands, his slashing talons, ripped ten
crimson furrows in Thor's face.
Thor shrieked and tried to cover his eyes with his hands.
The scent of fresh blood drove Lynx wild. He went berserk, his arms
flailing away at Thor's face and neck, as hair and flesh and gore splattered
every which way. A shredded eyeball sailed over the tailgate.
On the ground, Blade was grappling with the Doktor, the two of them
rolling back and forth as each attempted to gain the upper hand. One of
their rolls caused them to collide with the front of the command post, to
the right of the door. Blade bore the brunt of the collision, his head
banging against the concrete and momentarily dazing him.
The Doktor wrenched free of Blade's grasp, sprang to his feet, and
darted through the front door.
Blade shoved himself erect and took off inside in hot pursuit.
Chapter Twenty-Six
Hickok saw Lynx pounce on the apish figure in the rear of the
half-track. He concentrated on catching up with the others. Orson and
Rudabaugh had already reached the fountain and were crouched
alongside the basin. Geronimo joined them an instant later.
They could see the other side of the half-track for the first time. Blade
and a man wearing a black cape were wrestling on the ground.
Bertha was a few yards from the vehicle, her left hand pressed to her
face, staggering.
Soldiers and G.R.D.'s were swarming toward the town square from
several directions at once. They appeared to the west, the north, and the
east, hollering exultantly as they spied the four men near the fountain.
"This is it," Rudabaugh said, drawing his pistols, forcing his left arm to
obey his mental bidding.
Orson quickly unslung his shotgun. "Remember what I told you,'' he
stated, directing his comment at Rudabaugh, grimacing from the pain in
his right shoulder.
Hickok risked a last glance at the command post. The creep with the
cape and Blade had vanished! And Bertha was climbing over the tailgate
of the half-track, evidently intending to use the machine gun.
Hickok raised the Henry and fired, his aim rewarded by the sight of a
reptilian G.R.D. taking a slug in the head.
Hickok emptied his Henry and threw it aside. Into the fountain!" he
bellowed over the noise of the gunfire. The basin rim might afford some
shelter from the withering hail of lead.
Orson, his shotgun booming, went to take a step over the rim. His
whole body suddenly jerked to the left and he was knocked over the basin
and into the water. He fell on his stomach, splashing the water over the
sides of the fountain, and didn't move.
Geronimo backed up, stepping over the basin into the pool while still
firing the FNC. He crouched behind the rim, shooting the closest foes, the
gravest threats, as they presented themselves. As he twisted to mow down
three G.R.D.'s charging from the west, he realized Hickok was standing
and staring at Rudabaugh and Orson.
Enemy gunfire was chipping away at the basin and pockmarking the
pool with dozens of concentric ripples.
Hickok, miraculously untouched so far, looked up, his mouth a thin slit,
his blue eyes glaring.
Geronimo abruptly stiffened and toppled across the rim of the fountain,
his legs in the water, his head dangling outside.
"Geronimo!" Hickok took a step toward him, then stopped. His hands
flashed to the Pythons, the barrels glinting in the sunlight as they cleared
leather. Heedless of his personal safety, he left the pool, deliberately
walking toward the soldiers and the G.R.D.'s. His right Colt cracked, and a
furry G.R.D. clutched at a hole where its left eye had been and tumbled to
the ground. The left Colt bucked, and a trooper took a slug between the
eyes.
Hickok whirled, both Pythons blasting, and the lion-man was flung
backwards to crash to the turf.
Hickok spotted a soldier sighting his M-16 for a second shot, and let
him have a bullet in the brain for his efforts.
Hickok spun, thumbing the hammers and squeezing the triggers on his
Colts with a precision few men could equal. Three, four, five, six of the
pack were down, contorted in their death throes, and he was leveling the
Colts at a seventh when a hard object struck his right temple, stunning
him, jolting his senses and causing him to drop to his knees.
Move or die!
The G.R.D. with the club glanced to one side and its mouth gaped open
in astonishment.
Hickok saw a gleaming sword appear as if from thin air, swooping from
above, and the coyote literally lost his head as he was decapitated by the
stroke. One second he was intact, and the next his head was flying off
trailed by a crimson spray while his body swayed for a moment, then
keeled over backwards.
Hickok rose to his feet. He was about to reply when a wave of vertigo
engulfed him and everything went dark.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Blade halted a few feet inside the front door of the command post,
puzzled.
But that was impossible! He had only been a couple of yards ahead!
So where… ?
The Warrior cautiously moved toward the first door to his left, the door
to the communications room. He peered around the jamb, then froze.
The Doktor was serenely standing about three feet inside the doorway.
"Don't be shy," he said, and laughed.
Blade, wary of a trick, edged into the room. The Doktor didn't appear to
be armed. What was he up to now?
The Doktor's left hand was hanging loosely at his side, but his right was
curled into a fist. He chortled and unfurled his fingers. A silvery ball
plummeted to the floor and split open upon impact, releasing a stream of
odoriferous white smoke.
Blade recoiled in alarm, suspecting the smoke was a form of deadly gas.
The smoke formed a small cloud within the blink of an eye, completely
enshrouding the Doktor.
How could the cloud be toxic if the Doktor was immersed in it?
Blade took a step toward the cloud. It must be a wily ruse of some sort.
Maybe there was a secret passage and the fiend was escaping under cover
of the smoke.
The Doktor hurtled from the cloud and crashed into the unprepared
Warrior, sending him flying from the communications room to slam
against the far side of the hallway.
Blade's chest was lanced by an acute spasm, but he ignored the agony
and lashed out with his right leg, catching the Doktor on the left knee as
he closed in.
There was a loud snap, and the Doktor nearly fell, but he recovered and
lunged, his immensely strong fingers encircling the Warrior's throat.
Blade grabbed the madman's wrists and tried to pry the fingers from
his neck.
The Doktor howled and backed away down the hallway, his left hand
shielding his injured organ.
Blade leaped, his arms clasping the Doktor around the waist and
bearing him to the floor.
Blade detected the ploy out of the corner of his eye, twisting his body to
avoid the syringe and rolling to his feet.
The Doktor did likewise, the needle held at chest height. His left eye
was open but watering, a line of moisture flowing across his left cheek to
his chin.
Blade assumed the horse stance and waited for the Doktor to make his
move.
Instead, the demented scientist grinned. "You should see your face!" he
exclaimed. "Judging by your expression, your hate for me is unbounded."
"Why are you amusing yourself at my expense?" the Doktor asked. "I
didn't think you had it in you."
What was the psychopath talking about? Blade didn't reply. He waited
for that syringe to move.
"Why else haven't you used your knives?" the Doktor calmly inquired.
"Go ahead," the Doktor said. "Draw your knives. I won't go anywhere."
Blade was thoroughly confused. What was up the Doktor's sleeve? This
was insane! There had to he an ulterior motive.
"Tell you what I'll do," the Doktor stated. "I'll make it easy on you." So
saying, he tossed the hypodermic syringe to the floor.
The Doktor, smiling, extended his arms, palms up, toward the
perplexed Warrior. "See? There's nothing to be afraid of. Use your knives
and finish it. I'm tired of living."
"Go ahead," the Doktor repeated, goading him. "What are you waiting
for?"
The Doktor's left hand dropped at a 90-degree angle to his forearm and
a tiny metallic dart shot from under his sleeve trailing a thin wire behind
it.
Blade believed the miniature dart was meant for him, so for the briefest
fraction of a second he was relieved when the dart struck the blade on his
right Bowie. But instead of striking the steel and being deflected to the
floor, the dart stuck to the Bowie.
Blade felt a terrific jolt of… something… lance up his right arm and
course through his entire body. The shock to his system was staggering. It
was as if he had been kicked in the chest by a bucking bronc. He was lifted
from his feet and flung almost to the front door, crashing to the floor on
his back and lying there with his breath caught in his throat. His limbs
were trembling uncontrollably, although his mind seemed perfectly lucid.
The Doktor's sneering visage came into view directly overhead. "You're
still alive? Remarkable. The shock would have terminated any ordinary
man," the Doktor said.
No matter how hard he tried. Blade couldn't stop his body from
quaking.
"Aren't you the least bit curious about how I did it?" the Doktor
inquired.
The Doktor held up his left hand. It held the small dart and several coils
of thin wire. "Do you see this? Do you know what it is? Law enforcement
agencies once used a crude, cumbersome version of this device. I, of
course, have improved on the original design and incorporated many
advanced refinements."
The Doktor nodded at his left forearm. "There's a tube under my sleeve.
The dart is fired by means of a compressed gas cartridge."
"All I need do," the Doktor was saying, "is move my hand a certain way
and, presto! My target receives enough juice to kill a horse! Simplicity
itself!"
Blade glared at the Doktor, his intense hatred welling up inside of him.
The man had assassinated his father and claimed to have murdered
Joshua; he had caused untold hardship and suffering to the Family; he
had used countless infants as fodder for his rejuvenation technique. Who
knew the extent of his atrocities?
His bulging muscles rippling, Blade surged upward, his left arm driving
the Bowie up and in, planting the blade in the Doktor's groin, imbedding
the knife to the hilt.
The Doktor gasped and dropped the dart and wire. He uttered a feeble,
rasping squeak and looked down at his ruined loins.
Blade gripped the Bowie in both hands and drove the keen blade
upwards, slicing through the abdomen and reaching the ribs.
Blood was pouring from the Doktor's ruptured body, raining from his
abdomen and spattering the floor with continual red drops. His intestines
were seeping from their cavity, oozing slowly toward the concrete below.
"We can make a deal!" the Doktor cried in desperation. "We can make
a deal!" A crimson rivulet suddenly spurted from the right corner of his
mouth.
Blade allowed himself the luxury of having the last word. "A deal,
Doktor? You want to bargain with me, a man who represents everything
you loathe? Plato has told me a little about the contents of your journals. I
know you don't believe in the Spirit, Doktor. I know you think faith is for
simpletons. You see humans as nothing more than animals. You consider
love fit only for weaklings." Blade paused.
'Well, I don't, Doktor!" Blade stated, his voice hardening. "I was raised
to appreciate love as the greatest of all strengths. I see all men and women
as spiritual children, all part of one vast cosmic family. And I value my
faith, Doktor. It's the foundation of my life. And do you know what else?"
Blade growled. "I value wisdom, and my wisdom tells me you will never see
reality as I see reality. You will always be as warped and perverted as you
are now. You will always be a menace, Doktor. People like you think they
have the right to reshape the world in their own wicked image. And you
don't!"
"And so," Blade said in conclusion, "there's only one way to deal with
people like you." He tightened his hold on the Bowie. "And this is it!"
Blade rammed the Bowie upward, angling the blade over the sternum
and burying the knife in the Doktor's neck below the chin. Warm blood
flowed over his hands and arms and sprayed on his face.
The Doktor toppled over like a giant tree plummeting to the ground in
the forest, smacking onto the floor and making an odd squishing noise.
"I admire your style, bub," someone said from the doorway.
Lynx was leaning on the jamb, his arms folded across his hairy chest.
His body was covered with red splotches. "I wanted the Doc for myself," he
remarked. "But I didn't want to interrupt your work of art." He chuckled,
gazing at the form on the floor. "I couldn't of done better, chuckles."
Blade spotted his other Bowie on the floor near his feet. He scooped it
up, wiped the knife he used to slay the Doktor on his pants, and slid both
Bowies into their sheaths.
The town square was packed. Bodies littered the ground, the majority
of them G.R.D.'s or troopers. Cavalry riders were everywhere, tending to
wounded comrades or mopping up, checking on the prone figures of their
enemies to ascertain if any were still alive. A veritable stack of soldiers and
genetic deviates was piled on the east side of the half-track.
Bertha was slumped over the machine gun, her arms dangling in
midair.
"Bertha!" Blade ran to the back of the halftrack and vaulted over the
tailgate. He took her in his arms and examined her.
Blood was trickling from her right thigh and the wound on the left side
of her head. There was an additional injury, a bullet hole in her shirt on
the left side of her chest.
Blade scanned the crowd below and recognized Yama walking toward
the half-track.
"Take care of her," Blade ordered. "I'll locate Kilrane and have him send
over one of his men skilled in medicine."
"I will tend her," Yama promised, then added, "Rikki needs to see you
at the fountain."
Blade jumped from the half-track and headed for the fountain. The
strain of the combat was beginning to be felt; his left side was a mass of
torment, his right side along the ribs ached, and his body was feeling
extremely fatigued.
Blade stopped, shocked, forgetting his pain at the sight before him.
"It's deep," Rikki said, "but he'll be fine." He looked at the remaining
two forms. "I wish I could say the same about them."
"You look like you could use some tending, yourself," Kilrane
interjected.
Blade looked up. "First things first. How did the battle go?"
"Some did," Rikki detailed. "I sent the Clan to cover U.S. Highway 85 to
the south, and the Moles to the north. We heard some gunfire to the
south, but it didn't last long." He nodded at a dead G.R.D. "What
happened to the great army we were expecting to encounter?"
Blade shrugged. "I don't know," he admitted. "I estimated there were
several hundred, tops." A question suddenly occurred to him. "Rikki, don't
misunderstand me, because I'm glad you showed up when you did, but
what are you doing here so early? Did Kilrane's man inform you we were
in trouble?"
"Red Cloud?"
Blade put his right hand on Rikki's narrow left shoulder. "You
performed well. I will commend you to Plato after we return to the Home."
"A commendation isn't necessary," Rikki declared. "I was only doing my
duty as a Warrior."
Blade walked to the fountain and sat down on the basin rim. How could
he have forgotten Bertha? Damn! What an idiot! Sure, he was on the verge
of exhaustion, but that was no excuse. He frowned, displeased at himself.
If anything happened to her, he would never be able to forgive his part in
her death. She had been right all along. She usually was. Bertha had given
him sound advice before, in the Twin Cities, and he'd disregarded it with
disastrous consequences. Now he'd done it again! He should have heeded
her and used the SEAL. All of them might have survived in one piece.
Rudabaugh and Orson were dead because—
Hickok opened his eyes and gazed around. He raised his right hand and
gingerly touched the welt on his temple. "Howdy," he mumbled.
"I ain't gonna take it any other way, pard," Hickok muttered.
"He's right here," Blade said, indicating their companion. "He'll be all
right."
"That's how I'd like to pass on from this world," Hickok remarked.
"With my guns blazing." He glanced at Blade. "Say! Where the blazes is
Black Beauty?"
Hickok reached out and grabbed Blade's left arm. "Where is she?" he
demanded.
"I gotta check on Black Beauty," Hickok declared, and stalked off.
Rikki elected to change the subject. "Do you know what happened to
the Doktor?"
"I will pray we meet with equal success in Denver," Rikki said. "The
sooner we conclude this affair, the sooner we can return to our Home. I
miss it."
Blade thought of his wife, Jenny. "So do I." He wondered how Plato was
faring, and then he remembered what the Doktor had said. "Joshua!" he
stated in alarm.
"Yes. And there was a report of one extra man in one of the trucks. You
don't think…" Rikki left the sentence unfinished.
Blade reached into his right front pants pocket and removed a set of
keys.
"I'll be back," was all Blade would say as he started to walk away.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
She jammed on the brakes and the speeding jeep drew to an abrupt
stop.
She threw the gearshift into Park and hopped from the vehicle. Her
remorse was overwhelming, her sorrow affecting her to the core of her
being.
Tears crisscrossing her scaly cheeks, she gazed up at him, at the symbol
of all she despised. "He's dead!" she wailed. "I know he's dead! I can feel
it!" She fought to control her grief. "I wanted to go with him, but he
wouldn't let me. He made me stay behind. He must have known what was
going to happen!"
"I don't want your sympathy!" she screamed at him. "I hate you!" she
shrieked. "I hate you! I hate you! I hate you!"
"I hate all of you!" she raved. "I won't rest until every one of you has
paid for what you've done! I will avenge him!" She threw back her head
and cackled. "He'll have the last laugh yet! He dispatched a surprise
package for your precious Home. If there is someplace we go to after we
die, then you can die knowing you will see your friends there very shortly!"
She whirled and returned to the jeep, her purpose set, her
determination firm. Denver was her destination. Denver was the first step
in her plan. Exterminating Blade was the second!
Chapter Twenty-Nine
The SEAL rolled to a stop and Blade threw the door open and leaped to
the ground. He ran up to the stark figure and paused, his very soul in
agonizing distress.
No!
"Hey! Wait for me, dimples!" Lynx emerged from the passenger side of
the transport and joined Blade. He stared at the object before him,
puzzled. "What is it?" he asked. "I ain't never seen one of these before."
Joshua had been stripped naked. Two boards had been nailed together
at right angles to one another in the traditional form of a cross, with the
upright beam imbedded in the ground not ten feet to the east of U.S.
Highway 85. Large nails had been used to tack Joshua's arms to the
crossbeam, with one nail in each wrist serving to secure him to the wood.
A third nail had been utilized to fasten his legs to the upright beam; they
had crossed his legs and hammered the nail through both of them just
above his ankles, effectively impaling his slim body to the cross.
Blade frowned. "Lynx, I want you to go look in the back of the SEAL.
There are some tools in a metal box under the rear storage area. Dig
through our pile of supplies and find the tool box."
Joshua's brown eyes slowly opened. "Blade?" His voice was a ragged
whisper.
"None other," Blade affirmed. "We'll have you down in a bit. Hang in
there."
"Yes," Joshua replied, the word scarcely audible. "Throat… so… dry."
"I'll give you some water as soon as we have you down from there,"
Blade promised.
"Thank you."
Joshua licked his parched lips. "Lost track… of time. Two days… I
think. Not… certain."
"Joshua, this may not be the right time to bring it up," Blade stated,
"but if you can tell me, I'd really like to know what you were doing here."
Joshua stared into the Warrior's eyes. "Wanted to… prove to all of…
you. Wanted to do as… I… did in… Twin Cities."
"The Twin Cities? You succeeded there because everyone wanted to end
the decades of bloodshed. The Doktor was just the opposite. He reveled in
spilling innocent blood, in slaughtering others for the thrill of it." Blade
paused. "Did you really believe you could change him?"
Joshua quoted from memory: "Give not that which is holy unto the
dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them
under their feet, and turn again and rend you."
"You must realize by now that not every man and woman craves peace
and brotherhood," Blade emphasized diplomatically. "Until everyone does,
those who do must beware of those who don't."
"I think… I've… learned my lesson," Joshua said. His chin dropped and
his eyes flickered.
Blade spun around and cupped his hands around his mouth. "Lynx!
Where the hell is that tool box!"
Chapter Thirty
The gusting wind blew his dark bangs over his eyes as he stood on the
small rise five hundred yards south of Catlow and surveyed the column on
the road below. Was the chill air a harbinger of a winter storm sweeping
in from the northwest, or a portent of events to come as they continued
their invasion of the Civilized Zone?
Loud shouts and laughter rose from the town. The residents of Catlow
were celebrating their newfound freedom with a vengeance. They had
returned the evening before and assisted in the cleanup. Afterwards, they
had conducted a town meeting in the square, held a vote, and formally
elected to align themselves with the alliance being forged by the Freedom
Federation.
The SEAL was parked on the highway below the rise. Mounted and
raring to depart were 484 Cavalrymen, lined up five abreast across the
road between the transport and the town. Next came the troop transports
bearing the contingent of Moles, then the trucks containing the force from
the Clan.
He stared at the rising sun and saw a flock of birds silhouetted on the
far horizon, winging their way south. Whimsically, he found himself
envying those birds and their carefree existence, and he wished his own
life could return to a simple level again. But would it? Could it? Oh, to
enjoy a quiet day at the Home, secure within those four walls, frolicking
hand in hand with Jenny!
He glanced to the north, wondering how many miles Hickok had logged
since leaving Catlow. There had been no other recourse. Bertha and
Joshua were both critical, and Catlow lacked the facilities to treat them
properly. Transporting them to Denver was completely out of the
question; a battlefront was hardly the ideal location for rest and
recuperation. At Hickok's insistence, and because there was no other
viable option, he had sent the gunman, a recovered Geronimo, Bertha,
Joshua, and a Cavalryman somewhat skilled in medicine back to the
Home in a troop transport. They could easily spare the vehicle, and the
Family Healers were extremely proficient at their craft; if anyone could
save Bertha and Joshua, it would be the Healers.