Chapter three, Sasha the drone gun rotated on its axis and brought a new, slightly different chunk of city scape into view. The world was a dull gray green color through the lens of the weapon's camera. Once again, there were no humans in sight. That was the norm, but Sasha still logged in for her scheduled gun time every day.
Her parents would have been mortified if they'd known how she was spending her few hours of free time, but she had a good VPN, or at least it was good enough to hide her activity from her non tech savvy elders. She doubted they'd ever suspect her of something
like this. Sasha was a good student. Her grades guaranteed her admission to the American University in d C. At one point, she'd had a shot at being her high school's valedictorian and maybe of gaining admission to Stanford, But then she discovered the True Gospel and given herself to Christ. Her grades were still good, but probably not good enough to earn her an educational visa to the californ in
your Republic. The extra time the old heir had dedicated to school was now spent glued to a gun camp browsing live feeds from various Christian militias and reading everything she could from the few pastors brave enough to preach the word the New Herd. Didn't want to go to school near San Francisco, capital of what Pastor Mike had called the world's most sinful nation. Sasha didn't even really want to go to college in d C. What was the point, Sash her dad called from the kitchen, dinners
on cheese Enchilada's. There was still nothing in her line of sight. For the eleventh month in a row. She was spending sixty five am fed dollars for the privilege of staring through a camera at nothing for a half hour a day. Sasha had been warned about this when she'd signed up to support the Woodlands Martyrs Brigade. Their drone guns didn't see much action. The front had been stable for the last year. Rumors said the number of backers had even gotten to fire during their turn was
under a dozen. Sasha had hoped she'd be a special case. Something moved. Just as she thought about killing the app and going downstairs, something moved across her drones field of vision. It happened again, and Sasha realized that the somethings were armored soldiers sprinting past her weapon. She locked the drone on one and for the first time ever, selected the fire approval button. A second went by, then another, and then a red box replaced her firing redicule. Target declined.
Friendly fire, Sasha, her mother called up in that grating voice that miant. She was almost frustrated enough to start yelling get down here. She stared at the box for another long moment. Friendly fire. That made sense as she belatedly realized the men had been rushing out of territory occupied by the martyrs. Good thing they check up on us before we pulled the trigger. Her heart pounded a little at the thought of killing the wrong soldier, But
at the same time she noticed something odd. The men were still coming. They rushed past the drone camera in waves ten ft apart, ducking low and hefting heavy weapons. She must have watched at least a hundred of them ass before she realized what this meant. A new offensive. Oh God, dial Alexander, she told her deck. A calm window popped up about six inches in front of her hand, to the left of the large drone control screen. That
hovered above her. Anyone without a deck would have just seen a seventeen year old girl lying on her bed and poking at the air. But Sasha saw the space in front of her as a giant screen curved around her body. She opened another window and flung it up on her right side. It was populated with links to the camera feeds of all the personality she followed. Most of them were located somewhere in the Republic of Texas,
and more than half of the feeds were dark. It was hard to tell just what was happening on the others. Sasha decided she'd get a faster update on the situation through her news aggregator. She reduced the other windows and shifted them to her periphery. Then she opened a new window and waited a half second for her curated news feed to populate. Her deck kept ringing Alexander while she scanned the headlines reports of expo oceans across the Dallas Front,
Texas extremist advance into SDF Republic territory. Reports from Dallas suggest a new offensive by Heavenly Kingdom. A half dozen rings later, Alexander picked up Sasha. He asked his voice sounded distant. There was noise on the line. After a second or so, Sasha heard a boom and then a strange, crackling sound that had to be gunfire. It didn't sound like it did in the movies, or even in the
few VR shooters she'd played. Sasha's heart had started to pound by the time she responded, Yes, Alexander, I was just on my drone and it looks like something's happening. The media saying it's another offensive. They're right for once, said Alexander, and they're still wrong at the same time. This is something new, Sasha. I'm sorry I couldn't tell you before, but it'll all be clear soon. Is this just the Martyr's Brigade? He smiled, and Sasha's face went red. No, Sasha,
something wonderful is Are you near the front? Are you part of the fighting? Sasha interrupted, She'd never have done that normally, but she could hear what's funded like gunfire over his line, and Sasha was scared. I'm with the second wave, he said the tracks. I'm moving us into position now. I'll probably have to Whatever else he'd been about to say was cut short as all of Sasha's deck apps closed at once. Her digital world was replaced by a red box that read parental lockdown. Come to dinner,
Sasha mom. She screamed down the stairs as her eyes welled up with tears at the unfairness of it all. Alexander, the man she was pretty sure she loved, was going into battle for the first time. He was fighting right now to re establish the rule of God on earth. I should have read him a poem, or said something beautiful and stirring, something about how my love for him
was as everlasting as God's own love. It should have been a powerful moment, but her heretic horror of a mother had ruined it for Inchillada's Sasha stormed downstairs, ripe with fury, but unable to vent it. Her parents couldn't know she'd been giving money to a militant group. They wouldn't have to drop in on her talking to Alexander to know what she had planned. Six kids from her high school had already left for the Republic of Texas
to fight in one militia or another. It was a problem across the American Federation, but here in Virginia, parents were particularly wary. The border of the United Christian States was just an hour's drive from her front door. Ratlines in the UCS brought thousands of young volunteers yearly from the heart of corporate America to the various militia groups that battled across Texas. Sasha Marian, what did we interrupt that was so important? You had to yell? I was praying, mother.
It wasn't really a lie. Pastor Mike had said that every deed done in support of the heavenly Kingdom was an act of prayer. Gwendolen Marian frowned back at her daughter. She was a stern woman with a broad Germanic face and dirty blonde hair pulled back into a severe bun. Faint crow's feet trickled out from her eyes, but those were from choice rather than times formerly inevitable march. Gwendolen was the chief of surgery at Annapolis General Hospital, had
been taking juven treatment since she was twenty. She had only decided to let the crows feed through once Sasha had turned seventeen. You can pray as much as you want, honey, but right now it's dinner time, and this is something we do as a family. Sasha thought juven was unnatural heretical God had created each human to age a certain way. Using science to disrupt that natural process was an act of blasphemy. She yearned to say something cutting hurtful in response,
but she fought it down. You don't have to obey your father and mother if they try to keep you out of the Kingdom of Heaven, words from one of Pastor Mike's weekly casts rang in her ears. But the Lord God still calls on us to respect our parents, He'd added that well behaved kids were the ones who caused the least suspicion and had the best chance of successful escape. Yes, ma'am, was all she said as the families settled into their chairs. Her brother, Ian was just
five and unusually quiet for his age. He smiled at her as their father told him out an enchilada sash. Who's Alexander? He asked, and Sasha felt the blood run out of her face. Their father, Tony, smiled wrily at the remark as he spooned a proportionately larger serving onto his own plate. Alexander, Huh, maybe this means another boyfriend. It's been what four years? Tony had opted for fewer cosmetic juven treatments than his wife. Sasha loved her father's
receding hairline, his slight jowls, his graying hair. He was still a heretic, but at least he wasn't a vain one. He's not my boyfriend, Dad, just a boy I talk with sometimes. We pray together. Gwendolen rolled her eyes a little. Such an exciting adolescence you're having, she said. Sarcasm swelled every word. Sasha didn't rise to the bait. Her self control was iron now. She wouldn't give them any cause
to worry or call the authorities. It was better even for them to think Alexander was some boy from school. If they thought her principles were thawing, they'd be less likely to suspect what he had planned. The Mary and family ate companionably for several minutes. Tony talked about some cock eyed nut who'd come into his office at Deutsche Bank looking for a loan. He wanted three million to get this build a blimp to take tourists from the
am Fed to Louisiana without crossing UCS territory. And I'm like, first of all, I can name a hundred boat charters to do the same thing, And second Sasha tuned most of it out and tried to focus on eating, But knowing Alexander was out there facing death for his faith killed any appetite she otherwise might have had. She ate mechanically without really tasting it until her plate was almost clean. Sasha was planning her exit when her mother spoke up
by the way. The school called today and said, you still haven't been by to get sized for your graduation robes. They need at least forty eight hours to print them out. You're running out of time. Sorry, mom, she said, I know that's important. I've just had a lot on my mind lately. The f s T s were last week. Sasha had gotten very good at telling her parents what
they needed to hear without actually lying. The Federation Standardized Test had been last week, and she'd certainly had a lot on her mind lately, but the f s T hadn't been keeping her up at night. It was little more than a rubber stamp for a student like Sasha. That's okay, sweetie, Gwendolen said, I know how important your school work is to you. I just want you to
have a fun graduation experience. That's important. There's a war going on a few hundred miles from your door, men are dying for God's kingdom, and you think school matters to me. But Sasha just smiled, told her mom she loved her, and went back upstairs to her room. As soon as it was politic to do so, she reactivated her VPN and popped her deck into stealth mode, which displayed a curated selection of websites and chat apps for
her mom and dad in case they came by. She drew a new private window about two feet in front of her face and split it in half between a face calm with Alexander and a news feed full of her favorite militia press offices. Her jaw dropped voice of the Prophet's main headline was Republic of tex His forces
clashed with martyrs. Judgment day is here, she read in a social media post from one of her favorite sources in the area, a twenty something mechanic who lived on the fringe of the Republic and supported the Heavenly Kingdom. He'd posted a picture of the Governor's mansion in Plano. It was burnt around several of the windows and riddled with holes. Gone was the Republic's flag, replaced by a white banner with a burning black cross in the center.
Sasha sent out another call request to Alexander and switched over to Al Jazeera's feed to learn more. It galled her to use a new source run by Muslims, but she had learned from experience that Al Jazeera had the best reporters on the ground in the Republic. They negotiated coverage deals with several of the militia groups, including Alexander's.
The first thing she noticed was that their last article had gone up over an hour ago, but the titles of the foremost recent articles painted a vivid picture Republic capital in Galveston, burning, military coup, Republic media feeds go dark, SDF under attack. In Dallas. Pastor Mike Donnegan announces new offensive for Heavenly Kingdom. How could there possibly be a new offensive against the secular forces in Dallas? The Richardson line had been locked in a stalemate for the last year.
Alexander had told her often, how outnumbered and outgunned the martyrs of the Heavenly Kingdom were we hold in our own But only by the grace of God, was his usual refrain. The idea of them advancing again on the stf seemed impossible. Nothing is impossible with God. She could almost hear Alexander's voice echo in her mind's ear. She glanced over at his chat screen, but it was still just showed the standard dialing symbol. Frustrated, Sasha brought up
her militia news feed. This was one of her most cherished possessions. It had taken months for her to sort out the most influential Christian militias in the area, find their official spokes feeds, and cross index them based on which groups agreed with the strict neo Calvinist doctrine. She Alexander and Pastor Mike all new to be the one true Word of God, and for the first time since she had started the feed, each and every militia she followed had posted the exact same message, The first Battle
of Armageddon has begun. Sasha was confused for a minute. She'd done her homework. She knew the final battle of the en Times was supposed to occur at Mount Meghito in Israel, but she thought back to Pastor Mike's sermons. He had talked about the battles of Armageddon many times, the coming end Times and the central place of the heavenly Kingdom in the world's last battles were constant refrains in his sermons. Sasha had always believed the battles of
Armageddon would come. She just thought they had more time. Sasha was frustrated and a little hurt. Alexander must have known this was in the offing and kept it from her, She understood, of course, but she was furious at herself for being so far away from the action that he had been forced to hide this from her. The first battle of Armageddon was beginning just a few hours south of her bedroom. She could either stay here and rot in the American Federation, or prove God with her devotion
and move there. It didn't even seem like a choice. Really. If goodmen were fighting and dying to restore the Kingdom of God on earth, it fell to her to travel there and support those men. She thought of Alexander, his liquid green eyes, his scraggly beard, the way his still boyish voice broke in excitement when he lost himself in the spirit of the Lord. Her beloved was out there right now, fighting and maybe bleeding, to bring the truth back to the world. The least she could do was
join him. Weeks ago, Alexander had given her the contact information for a man named Brother Andrew. He called the other man a deliverer. Sasha knew her parents and the AMFID authorities would have described Brother Andrew as a people smuggler. She hadn't reached out to Brother Andrew yet. In her fantasy, she had always waited to graduate before escaping to the Heavenly Kingdom. She was still a few weeks shy of her eighteenth birthday and had hoped to at least spin
that with her parents before setting off. But right now, as she scrolled through articles about the martyr's breakthrough and immersed herself and snap bids of cheering soldiers raising cross banners over newly captured neighborhoods, Sasha felt a powerful anxiety overtake her. She needed to be there. There was no other option. Sasha flicked open a window on the left side of her viewspace, typed in the address she'd memorized for Brother Andrew, and sent him a message, I am
ready to go. Chapter four. Manny Manny woke up needing to piss, and also to the sound of explosions. You couldn't quite tell which was more to blame for his sudden, unwelcome consciousness. His lizard brain woke up and shouted, get the funk out of their you asshole. A second later, Manny got to his feet, grabbed his gear bag, and looked around for the journalist. Reggie still seemed asleep, but he stirred just as Manny started towards him, and another
thundering boom shook the world. Christ who's that, Reggie asked, in a slurred voice heavy with sleep. Mortars, Manny explained, I think I heard rockets too. Shit, the Britick sailed sharply. Is this bad? Many shrugged. Those sound like small mortars, very short range, but we're miles behind the line. So a deafening explosion shook the world. It was loud enough that Manny didn't even properly hear it. He felt it
hard and hot against his skin. The sheer, impossible noise of it pulled the air from his lungs and the thoughts from his head. The next instant, he was flat on the ground. His eyes darted left and right for cover. He spotted something, an artificial cave built into a corner of the main room, perhaps a hundred feet away. It looked like some sort of shrine or temple. Manny could see the walls were thick with melted candles, colorful drawings in a variety of brass cymbals. He grabbed Reggie by
the shoulder and shook hard. The other man jerked, locked eyes with Manny and mouthed what the fixture pointed towards the shrine, pulled himself up and sprinted towards it. The journalists followed, and soon both men were huddled in the little substructure, staring out at the devastation that had overtaken the Richardson Autonomous Project. They could see two holes in the roof. The huge circular kitchen bar looked like it
had taken a direct hit. Beer spurted from shattered taps, and many could see what looked like blood staining the white oak of the bar. Counter Flames licked somewhere off in the distance on the other side of the vast structure. The air smelled of smoke and burning grass. More blasts sounded in the distance, including a few that were just too loud to be mortar fire. Now that he focused, Manny could also hear the chatter of machine guns. It was distant, but not nearly as distant as it should
have been. Many dug into his pocket, found where the deck was clipped inside, and thumbed the power button. Static flashed at the edge of his vision as his implants started up. He nearly always ran in minimalist mode, which gave him access to his maps in his communications, sweet and nothing else. He selected his address book and sub vocalized his cousin's name, Alejandro. It dialed and dialed and dialed. Amen. Reggie said, his voice oddly, calm, I think we might
need to get the funk out of here. Reggie looked over at the brit and then towards the flames. They were bigger now and closer. He could see a dozen or so men and women fighting the fire with hoses and extinguishers. They didn't seem to be winning. Elsewhere, he saw small groups breaking cover to run for the exits. The sound of alarm bells echoed across the big structure. Alejandro hadn't responded, which meant he was fighting or dead. Either way, Manny and Reggie would need to find their
own ride out of this mess. It had been a while since the last mortar had landed on the complex, and the small arms fire still sounded distant. This seemed as good a time to make a break for it as they were likely to get, so they ran until they hit the nearest exit doors, shoved them open, and staggered outside into the balmy Texas night. The asphalt parking lot outside was filled with newly minted refugees, perhaps two hundred of them, most carried at least to go bag.
A few had managed to drag out more. They were ringed by a widening cordon of armed men and women, fifty at the most. The militia clutched antique weapons, mostly small arms, and stuck like glue to the Hescoe barriers that ringed the old parking lot. Here and there, Manny caught sight of a man with an RPG or a light machine gun. It was a force mint for scaring off bandits. The rockets still thudding in the distance told Mannie these men and women faced considerably more than their match.
A green blink of light caught his attention. Reggie had engaged his lapel camera. The brit fixed him with a look that said, dude, what did you expect me to do? Most of the survivors were probably recording to their decks too, But Reggie's little camera could do considerably more. It scanned the world around him in a three hundred and sixty degree arc. It also recorded the journalist's own physical data, his heart rate, his respiration, his adrenal levels. Everything he
saw and felt was being recorded for later consumption. The brit was carving out a little slice of the war for safer parts of the world to Binge Watch vehicle started to arrive. The project's motor pool included three tracks built to carry large groups of people in semi armored semi safety. The commune's rapid reaction force set to work, loading children and wounded up first. There was no panic, no hysteria, just an exhausted efficiency that spoke of long practice.
Manny saw glassy eyes and clenched jaws, but very little open rage. They're so very used to it, he realized. Scattered throughout the crowd, Manny saw people whose bodies rattled with the sort of palsied shock that artillery leaves in its wake. Reggie just stared out at them, mouth slack. His left knee twitched, the foot below it pumped against the ground. Many guessed he was caught between the urge to step out and talk to some of them and the voice of sanity in the back of his head
that knew how tone deaf that would be. Manny put a hand on the journalist's shoulder. We need to get the funk out of here, and our ride is off calms, he said. I'm going to suggest we hitch with the R A P where their guests. They'll make room for us, but if you'd rather drag ass I know a safe neighborhood about six miles into the city. We could probably
hire a ride there. It looks like they're a bit short of room, as is said the brit Those tracks can't hold more than twenty or thirty people each, he smiled, a little twenty four, but that's just if you're attached to things like seats. Ten minutes later, Reggie and Manny clung to the hood of the track as it barreled down the broken streets of Ciadad de Muerta, bound for a staging area in deep Ellument. The fighting sounded much
closer by the time they left. Manny guessed the small arms fire couldn't be more than a couple of blocks away. He and the journalist held on with white knuckles and tried not to linger long on what would happen if they lost their grip. The martyrs had passed the command post the bridge, shouted in sudden realization, his voice strained to be audible over the roar of the engines. Holy shit, they have to be right. Many thought about the geography
for a moment. It was possible that the martyrs had only broken through in a few chunks of the line, but that would mean to Shaun and the others were alive and surrounded or fleeing. Those were the best case scenarios. I think we might be fucked, Manny said, stunned by the realization. For the last year, Major Clark had been his most reliable source in the SDF. That post had seemed to move double impregnable for its significance in his little chunk of the world. The tracks slowed to a stop.
Parked facing them were too smaller armored SDF tracks with swiveling cannons on their roofs soldiers scurried around them. They pulled sections of thin, frosted gray still glass barricades off the vehicles and started setting them up to form a new defensive line. Many watched two militia women wrestle with a large olive green case covered in boxy cyrillic script. They pried it open, and Manny saw a huge metal tube and what looked like a lot of antique optical equipment.
It was probably an old wire guided missile launcher, something that had been antique before the revolution. He'd never seen the SDF use anything that old. They had drones half this size that carried even more firepower, had them yesterday, at least, he thought. The tracks slowed to a cautious stop and hanked. Manny glanced back at the driver. She had her hands in the air in a universal please
don't shoot us gesture. Two of the soldiers peeled off from their efforts and approached weapons in hand, but noted. The driver opened her door and shouted something down at them. One of the men responded and gestured vaguely downtown. Manny couldn't make out exactly what was being said, but the driver's face contorted in a fury that was impossible to miss. Something's fucked. Manny said to the journalist, I think we're
about to lose our ride. Look. He pointed to the makeshift barricade and the dozen or so soldiers who filtered past it and towards the track. The driver yelled and one of the other passengers near the front started to shout. The soldier's face remained impassive, but he put a hand on his side arm and repeated a command. Manny didn't
even need to hear. A few seconds later, a soldier with a megaphone arrived and addressed Manny, Reggie and the new refugees citizens, your vehicle has been requisitioned for medical use by the SDF. Please dismount on an orderly fashion. Injureduce pregnant individuals may stay aboard. The man repeated the order, this time in Spanish. Reggie's jaw clinched man he could see fear in his eyes, but the other man just nodded and started to climb down off the track. Manny
did the same. Not all of the tracks passengers were as compliant. There was a lot of shouting and even a few shoving matches between the militiamen and the passengers, but in the end the SDF got their way. Many gathered fairly quickly that they planned to send the civilians a mile or so back to a holding area behind the new line. That was the last fucking place in the world he wanted to be, so he approached the
officer who had been arguing with their driver. The man had no rank in signiya on his uniform, but that wasn't unusual for militia. His fatigues were old U S Army issue. His arm band identified him as part of the Citizens Front. Manny found that odd Most of the militia at this barricade were with Raza Front or the p p A. This much intermixing wasn't normal. It pointed to a lot of casualties among the SDF discope. Signor Manny started, Chico, no ramismo. I don't have time to debate,
no Signor. My cousin Alajandra was with Citizens Front, ninth Battalion. He was our ride. We were taking this journalist. Manny jerked his head towards Reggie, who stood a few feetback, and we got caught up in the attack. The officer nodded, then grunted. Manny studied his face for a moment. The man was middle aged, with a weak chin and enough extra meat on his bones to suggest this was his
first front line duty in a while. His eyes were bloodshot, his hands clenched, his attitude softened a bit at Alejandro's name, Alejandro Hernandez. Yeah, he's a good man, or was, the officer said darkly. All our front line units were wiped out or near enough. The whole STF has been pushed all the way back to Sida de Muerta. If he's alive, he's a prisoner. The man shook his head. Sorry, Chico, there's not much I can do for you or your friend. We need to get to Waco. I know there's a
hospital there that must be where you're sending the serious injuries. Right, Dallas doesn't have anything left with a fully are the officer nodded. These tracks are headed to the Field Hospital in Oak Lawn, but we've got a couple of deuce and a half sloading up at firebas Jiamenez. If you can get there on your own, all radio ahead and ask Major Peron if he's got space. I know Peron Manny almost shouted, I went to school with his nephew, Hector.
He couldn't stop himself from wincing, as he said, if you'd give him my name, that might help the other man's eye cocked up in a really motherfucker. Look. But then the soldier asked, and your name is Manny Sanchez. He nodded, good luck. Then Manny, all radio ahead. You and your friend get to the firebase. Rapido Combrende. Many nodded and turned to Reggie. We've got a ride, but it's going to be a bit of a hike. It was less a hike and more of a panicked jog.
The streets around them were filled with dozens of people carrying their possessions and bags and rusted old shopping carts. Manny had never seen Dallas this crowded. Less than a million people still lived in the old Metroplex, but most of them seemed to be out in the streets to watch the world end. Sirens sounded, courtesy of the city's old civil defense system, mixed every few seconds with the distorted voice of a woman reminding them that all motor
vehicle use was prohibited. Any civilian vehicles on the road will be assumed hostile and targeted. The road traff was all military. There was less of it than Manny would have hoped to see. In the space of a few seconds, he watched three pairs of cougar assault vehicles race up towards the front, carrying squads of armored troopers in their open beds. He also saw one convoy of five anti tank drones. Each was the size of a four door sedan with two linked chain guns on a turret that
scanned the sky in fast, jerky arcs. There was a troubling amount of dead space on the road between the two units. By the sound of it, the fighting had only grown more intense throughout the morning. The crack of small arms fire had been nearly drowned out by the all consuming roar of close support drones in the sky above them. The only noises to rise above that din were the stipling bangs of mortar fire and the pop pop popping of cluster bombs fire. Bass Jimenez was about
two miles back from the new front. It was mainly a staging area for the STFs Autonomous Artillery Division. The a a D was made up of men and mostly drones from all the secular militia groups active in the Dallas area. The firebase itself wasn't well fortified. The only physical defense was a fence topped with razor wire to keep civilians out that wouldn't be much of a barrier for a determined assault until a couple of hours ago. Yemenez had been far enough from the front that an
assault wasn't considered possible. After an hour of mixed jogging and running, Manny and Reggie took a left onto park Lane and the fire base came into view. It had been built in the bones of an old apartment complex. Several buildings had been converted into offices and the rest left as barrack space. The apartments were situated across the road from a tall, very thin, parenthesies shaped building that looked out over a large field dotted with landing pads.
The name Top Golf driving Range was still visible on the side of the building. Several hundred militiamen were hard at work throwing up defenses. Still, glass sheets had been set up to screen a dozen machine gun nests. Further back, soldiers piled sandbags in front of two howitzers. Manny and Reggie weren't the only civilians trying to gain entrance. Fifty or so people clustered by a checkpoint in the middle of the road, a hundred yards ahead of the construction efforts.
The checkpoint was new just a sandbag machine gun emplacement, manned by six fighters empowered body armor. They were over watched by a pair of ancient Abrams tanks positioned on either side of the road. The soldiers in the middle checked the documents and let the occasional civilian through. They turned most people back. There were a lot of shouts and violent gestures on the part of the civilians. While
Manny watched. One of the guards raised their rifle up and fired it just to the left of a screaming man's face. He recoiled in pain and fear, clutched his ears, and staggered away from the checkpoint. The weight was only about ten minutes, but with the thudding artillery at their back, each of those minutes felt like an hour. But soon they stood face to face with one of the armored militia folks. Reggie went stiff at once, his pupils the size of dinner plates. He had never seen powered armor
up close before. Manny couldn't blame the man for being unnerved. The reflective bug eyed, ballistic glass of the helmets and humanly broad shoulder armor made the wearers look like cronein Bergie and guerrilla mantis hybrids. The shortest armored soldier was well over seven feet tall and almost as broad as two men. Their gender was impossible to discern, but a feminine voice leapt from the speakers. State your business, she said, If you're looking for shelter, you'll have to head to
North Park Center. We don't have room for you. Am Emmanuel Sanchez Major Perune, should have my friend and I on your list. The woman was silent for a little while. As she called up the list, she clucked her tongue between her teeth, and the high fidelity mike in her suit made it sound like she'd done it next to his ear. Well, hell, there you are. Her helmeted head bobbed at them. All right, you're in, come through quick. You stop being my fucking problem. As soon as you're inside.
They made their way towards the actual front gate of the fire base, passing squads of militias struggling with hescoes and setting up firing positions behind the still glass palisade. Manny and Reggie walked past it all and to the firebases front gate. They were let in without any fuss, which surprised Manny a bit, but he wasn't about to question it. On the other side of the gate, they
found themselves adrift, unescorted, and surrounded by pure chaos. There were other civilians inside the walls, huddled in small groups around piles of backpacks. They sat wide eyed and shaking, and waited for whatever deliverance the STF could provide. Soldiers rushed through the clots of humanity in groups of two or three. Often their arms were filled with machinery or paper, or even crates of munitions. Everyone's eyes were wide and
full of fear. For a while, Reggie and Manny milled around with no real aim, unable to enter any of the buildings. Manny found them an unclaimed place to sit that looked like it would be easy for Mr. Perune to find, and then they just sat there. At one point, Reggie offered him a protein bar. Manny tried to eat it, but three bites in he accepted that his appetite just
wasn't there. What do I do if Dallas falls? He ran through his finances over and over again, mulling over which European visas he could afford and how long he'd be able to survive in each country. I could make it a year maybe eighteen months in Croatia. He'd been studying German for the last year, though I can learn Croatian any year, he tried to convince himself. He also tried to ignore what he'd been evening behind. If he
hopped the next flight from Austin to the EU. He didn't want to think about Oscar's wife and child, how they'd get by without their dad's income. He didn't want to think about his own father or the rest of his family and how they'd fare if Austin fell. You can only afford to take care of you here, Manny. It was two hours before Major Perne found them. The older man's skin was a deep sunsharred brown that seemed at odds with his narrow face and thin wire glasses.
He had the look of a high school history teacher who had been transplanted into a war zone. There was something drawn and strained in his expression that spoke of deep exhaustion. His eyes were bloodshot, and his nose was swollen slightly red. Manny could remember seeing that same face a bit younger and wearing a T shirt rather than digiKam at a hundred different slumber parties. Mister Perrone was
Hector's dad. Mr. Perrone made them kettle corn and let them watch violent movies on the family projector Major Perone. Manny had to remind himself he's Major Perone. The Major favored Manny with a sad smile. Madre di dio, Simmanuel, It's fucking good to see you. Have you seen your cousin Alejandro? He was with us last night, Manny said, before the attack. A pained look crossed the Major's face. O kay, he nodded, and forced to smile back across
his lips. I hear you boys need a ride, yes, Manny said, if you could get us back to Waco. I have enough connections in the area to get him. Manny nodded back to the journalist. Into Austin and what is your name, sir? Major Perrone asked the journalist as he extended his hand. Reggie the brit responded, thank you so much for helping us. I'm afraid there's not much I can do right now. The situation is still very fluid. We've set a new defensive line running from the Lakewood
Crater to love Field. With any luck, the martyrs have spent the bulk of their strength and will hold them there, and if not, Reggie asked, mister Perrone laughed and scratched his head. Well, if the line breaks, then i'd guess our collective booch is screwed. We'll begin the evacuation if it gets much worse. But now we're still waiting for convoys of wounded to get back through the lines. He gestured out at the considerable amount of fenced off open
space in the fire base. This whole place is about to be a big, open air hospital. He gave Reggie a severe look. I won't tell you not to record them, because quite frankly, everyone here is too busy to police that. But I will ask that you showed tact in respect in your documentation, of course, said Reggie, with enough sincerity that Manny believed him. All right. He clapped Manny on the shoulder, and after a second's pause, embraced him. Hold on out here for a while. I'll try to send
some food in a little bit. Manny and Reggie both thanked Major Braun, and he trundled off into the old top golf building to do his part in coordinating the defense. So what now, Reggie asked, We wait, said Manny. Three hours passed. More and more wounded men streamed into the base, carried on stretchers and an ambulances, and in several cases
stacked like firewood on flatbed trucks. The wounded were set up on cots and piles of blankets in the grass and wherever possible, and paved sections of the driving ranger's old parking lot. Medics, far too few medics hustled from soldier to soldier at a frantic, manic, unsustainable pace. For a while, there was nothing to do but follow Reggie around while he interviewed the wounded men and women who were stable enough to talk. They all reported shock at
the speed and ferocity of the attack. Their testimonies drove home the fact that this was something new. Tendrils of fear crept up Manny's spine. It was all he could do to keep moving with his journalist Amen. Reggie said, look at that fellow. He pointed to a soldier with the top half of his head wrapped in blood soaked bandages. Something about the man's broad and square chin looked familiar. Isn't that one of the men we met yesterday? Reggie asked?
The major? Holy sh it, Reggie was right. That had to be to Shaun Clark. Manny ran over to him. As he drew closer, it became clear that Deshaun was an even worse shape than he looked at a distance. His shirt had been ripped open, exposing a muscular chest drenched in blood. Three white lugs of harden Sealock's wound spray were visible across his abdomen. He'd been shot repeatedly and had what looked like a shrapnel wound on the
side of his head. At least he's breathing, Manny thought, Major Clark, he said, and to manny surprise, the warrior poet stirred. Manny, sweet Jesus, is that you, Deshaun asked in a slured voice. Yes, Sir, Manny said, you know, I was damn sure you'd been killed. Haven't had all that much time to think about you in the last few hours, of course, what with everyone dying and all. I'm glad you're alive, Manny said, and he was. Major Clark had always been good to him. Do you know
what happened to him? Eid and Colonel Milgram, Manny asked, before the thought had fully crystallized in his mind. Major Clark tried to lift his head and almost cried out from the sheer agony of the movement. He didn't speak for a few seconds. He just took deep, slow breaths, but he started to whisper. The last sunbeam lightly falls from the finished Sabbath on the pavement here and there beyond it is looking down a new maid double rave.
What Manny asked, confused, Walt Actually, Major Clark laughed, winced, and then explained, Walt, Whitman, That is sorry, imminent death makes me go for the deep cuts. So they're dead. Then Manny asked, Major Clark coughed, and again his lips curled up in an agonized cringe. I think, so, he managed to say. I think everyone from the command post is dead. I was out grabbing a smoke when they hit us. Came in a nowhere drone artillery, heavy stuff.
Whole place lit up like Christmas. Two booms sounded in the distance. Major Clark tensed up. Reggie cringed to Manny the whole situation seemed almost too unreal to justify a reaction like that. Major Clark said, after I grabbed who I could and tried to save as many men as possible fighting retreat. You know, we linked up with as many fighters as we could, but every time we'd set a line, they'd break through. They had so many damn drones.
I've never seen martyrs use drones like that. What do you mean, Reggie asked, Well, they've always had drones, but usually just as defensive aids for when we'd make a push. We've got enough jammers that their hardware was no use in our territory since none of their ship goes autonomous. So what, the journalist asked, as he drew in a bit closer. Do you think they've changed their minds on autonomous drones? Or is this something else? Major Clark rolled his head just a little. It seemed to be the
only gesture he could make without hurting himself. I dun'no, kid, he said, whatever's happening, it's totally new, and it's totally fucked us. Major Clark was taken by another coughing fit. This one lasted a long time. Blood bubbled up and out from the corners of his mouth. Mannie wanted to call for a medic, but he couldn't see any of them who weren't dealing with patients who were even worse off. Eventually, the coughing subsided and Major Clark drifted off into unconsciousness.
They sat with him until the night fell and mister Perrone finally came to get them. He looked exhausted and somehow broken. His skin was sallow and so pale it was almost yellow. His uniform was soaked with old sweat stains, and he had two lit cigarettes in his mouth. When he found Manny and Reggie. Manny wasn't sure he'd ever seen the older man's smoke. Mr Perrone noted his surprise. I've taken up smoking again, he said, with a hollow laugh since her tone, expect to survive to the end
of the week. That bad Manny asked worse He shook his head and then seemed to notice the Major Is that d Shawn Clark? Yes, sir, Manny said, is he? He's alive and he seems to be stable for now. Major Perrone looked relieved. That's one spot a mercy. Then hopefully we'll get him out in time. On that note, I've confirmed that we've got a convoy of wounded heading out tomorrow am. As soon as our scouts clear the root, you'll both have a seat in that convoy. Thank you
so much, sir, Reggie started. Mr Perrone cut him off. It's no problem, son, do your job and tell people what's happened here. What are you going to do, Sir Manny asked? Mr Perrone looked into his eyes. He'd always had an intense stare. His edge had been evident, even when he'd been driving the boy is to soccer practice or taking them out for pizza. Now his eyes bored into Manny's heart so deeply that the fixer finally understood
what that phrase meant. I'm going to die here, Emmanuel, he said, I'm going to die here like your cousin Alajandro died here, because it's the only thing I can do that might protect our home. Manny felt an intense urge to look away, to cast his eyes down, but he didn't. He held mister Perrone's gaze and braced himself for what came next. What about you, Mr Pearron asked, what will you do if they reach Austin? Wait? Is that on the bloody table? Reggie interrupted. Mr Perrone paused
for a moment and considered his words. I don't know, he said, No one does. But the martyrs just broke through it. Lakewood. We won't hold Dallas for another day. He pulled Manny into a hug and kissed him on the cheek. When he pulled back, he kept his hands on many shoulders. I've always been proud of you, Emmanuel. I think that what you do here, he nodded to Reggie has value. But there are times when our homelands require more of us. What are you prepared to give
for Austin? Manny clinched his jaw. I planned to be on a plane out of here in the next twelve hours, if possible, But I don't know, sir as all, he said. It was hard to meet mister Perrone's eyes. When he did, he was sure the older man saw the guilt in them. Mister Perrone didn't say anything, though, He just led Manny and Reggie over to where the convoy was assembling and slipped them a pair of m R. E's in some bottled water. The best I can do, he said, apologetically.
He left them at the disembarkation point. Manny's last clear sight of the man who had helped raise him was of his slumped, sweat stained shoulders trudging back to the firebase's command center. They sat there for hours, neither of them talked much. One by one, the wounded men were loaded carefully into the assortment of old half tracks, buses, and trailers that made up the convoy. Once they were seated, there was another two hours of white time before the
convoy got moving. Both Reggie and Manny found time to nap, but neither of them were really arrested, and the dawn broke and the convoy set forward. By the time the ramshackle assortment of trucks and broken soldiers started on its way to wake O, the sound of mortar fire was so constant it had almost become white noise. The small arms fire wasn't as loud, but it was also clearly much closer than it had been when they'd arrived at
firebas Umnez. As the convoy rolled out onto the old access road that led eventually to Waco, a flight of drones roared past them and towards the new front line. Those aren't SDF drones, are they, Reggie asked, without actually looking at Manny. His gaze was focused on the two medics in the back of the truck. As they moved from soldier to soldier. No, Manny confirmed those are Austin
Civil Defense forces. The brit whistled through his teeth. So you think this means the SDF ran through their drones could be as all, Manny said. The track and its escort lumbered through the cracked remnants of the old highway system. The accumulated hangers on civilian vehicles piled high with refugees as they rolled along. The civilians stayed back, leary of the convoy's guns but trusting in its presence for protection. By the time the convoy finally left the Dallas Sprawl,
their tail stretched back to the horizon line. Manny had seen similar sights before, when his parents had fled the d f W area for Austin's relative safety. Here and there on and in the cars behind them, he saw small figures that had to be children, kids like he'd been fleeing the same city he'd had to flee for the same basic reason. Manny's stand out memory from that time wasn't the terror of seeing a mortar land for the first time, or anything about their flight out of
the city at all. It was from the next day at their first refugee camp, when he saw his father in line for their daily ration of food. A journalist had passed by, taking the sort of pictures Reggie's lapel camera now snapped mindlessly. Mannye's dad had been crying, ashamed that he'd needed charity, and even more ashamed to have fled the family home. More than anything about that time, Manny remembered how his father had hidden his face from
the photographer. The gesture had told Manny more about their new status in the world than anything an adult had actually said. Behind him now were cars full of mothers and fathers and children who were about to have their own searing experiences. Manny hated how familiar this felt to him. He hated that for Reggie had counted as the adventure of a lifetime. Many looked at the journalist, at the awe and innocent excitement in his eyes, and tried to
imagine Reggie's life back home. None of the individual pieces of that life would be new to Manny. His world also had bars and parties, and apartment leases and term papers. The thing he couldn't imagine was the sense of security, living life without the constant threat of war. He'd been so close to securing that life for himself. If they only waited six months. But they hadn't, and now Manny had a choice to make stand and fight or run
with what he had and hoped for the best. Manny leaned back as much as his care a seat allowed and stared out at the burning city that had once been Dallas. Goddamn, he muttered to himself, I gotta get the funk out of Texas. Chapter five, Rowland. Twenty years ago, Camelback Mountain had towered over a wealthy suburb of Phoenix, Arizona. Then had come the Civil War. Power, food, and water shortages made the cities hundred and thirty degrees summers insufferable
for all but the hardiest or most chromed. Millions fled for less vicious climates or simply died from exposure and starvation. Now Phoenix was a louted, crumbling ghost, but Camelback Mountain still hosted a version of human civilization. Cameltoe was a city of roughly five thousand. The name had started because the settlements founders, homeless teens, thought it was funny. A few hundred orphaned or abandoned kids had settled in the
McMansions clustered around the mountains. Western edge and foothills. They'd scrounged grow lamps and engines and weaponry, and today the denizens of the tow had the strongest city state between California and the Kingdom of Albuquerque. Rowland was their guardian. Mind you, they'd never asked him to guard them. The police had been doing quite well, thank you very much. When he'd shown up and built his shack in the
middle of their only park. A delegation of armed Towins had showed up to politely evict Rowland, and he'd been forced to carve off their foreskins as a show of dominance. They'd sent a single negotiator next and worked out a thoroughly beneficial arrangement. Rowland would aid in the city's defense in exchange for his now departed shack, and twice a year all the narcotics he could carry home from their harvest.
It was an arrangement Rowland had enjoyed. He was frustrated that Jim's men had forced him to destroy his beloved hovel, but it was hard for him to be angry all the same. The sun was out now, and it was early enough that the day's heat had yet to set in the great red desert and the carcass of Phoenix stretched out around them, and to Rowland's eye, it was all beautiful. Once Jim had called the fight, a pair of boxy armored Hella transports had flown in another squad
of his men. The assembled a brunch spread, complete with a table and two wicker chairs. Roland hoped his old friend was doing this to show off and not planning an actual meal. The acid twisted Roland's guts into knots and effectively killed his appetite. He was still high enough that the familiar boulders around his home seemed to flex and wobble like great mounds of red jelly. Jim's face, however, was rock solid. Roland focused on it while the rest
of the world blurred. A towel came into his hands, and he realized a moment later that Jim had handed it to him. Roland wiped the crusted gore from around his shoulder, where the tiny robots in his blood had finished reattaching his arm. It was a messy process that involved a lot of shuffling bad blood out of the skin and sludgy red globs. The gloves looked a bit
like the boulders. Now that he thought about it, Jim's marks were over by one of the aircraft getting worked over by a medical team that must have been waiting in the wings this whole time him. The acrylic stink of fear wafted off them from thirty feet away. Once the table was up and the spread was set, Rolland and Jim sat down to watch the last rays of sunrise turned into boring old daylight. A lackey handed them both steaming mugs of coffee. Rolland took his black and
Turkish so thick it was almost putting. Most humans made it too weak for his taste, but this cup was perfect. He sipped deeply, and the warbly acid lines straightened and grew just a little bit thicker. Took for Eva to teach him how to make it right, Jim said, having human orderlies is a bit of a trial. I think there's something about us that breaks their brains just a bit. Jim sipped his coffee and added, I gotta theory about that. By the way, Roland let out a harsh, flimmy exhalation
that meant I don't care. Jim continued all the same, sipping his coffee, and then launching into a spiel. My theory is that Homo sapiens just don't built to acknowledge a higher form of life, not one that's flesh and blood and staring him in the face demanded service. I think deep in the human brain there's the race memory of running up against neander Tolls. They were bigger and stronger and faster than humans, but we they still wipe
the neander Tolls out. I think humans look at us the same way the Ansestus looked at nean A Tolls. Roland grunted because that was easier than talking, and because he really wasn't listening. His eyes were focused on the shimmering surface of the coffee. Sober his brain kept his thermal vision on a different mental track from his color and infrared vision. But while he was tripping, they all just sort of blended together into one multi tone massive information.
So he stared and thralled as red heat bled off into the white air around them. The math of it all was rendered as a beautiful swatch of colors, some of which weren't even visible to human eyes. Roland lost himself for a moment. If you any other man, I'd prick you with a sober stick right now, Jim said, clearly irked. It's been a long time since someone's ignored me. Not ignoring, Roland managed to say. The words came out wet and mushy. He'd taken a round to the lung, apparently,
and the repair efforts played hell on his throat. His eyes were still locked on the psychedelic sprawl of color lifting off from his coffee. He had to force himself to take another sip. The mild stimulant surge helped him break off his perseveration, and he met Jim still weirdly solid gaze. Sorry, this coffee is more interesting than your bullshit, Roland explained. Blame the acid, Jim laughed. The snake tattoos on his torso curled and corkscrewed and simulated excitement. You know,
he said. There's a new movement in the posthuman community started up in Idaho, one of the Intentional communes. They took a pretty strong anti narcotic policy. Apparently it distracts us from the impoltant work we should be doing. Fuck that, Roland said, and spat on the ground for emphasis. I don't disagree. Jim nodded and produced an enormous and very phallic blunt. He lit it, pulled deep, and passed it over.
Roland took a long drag and eased into a slump as the t h C did it's slow work, So Jim, Roland said, after a few more passes, once the acid and weed had time to push his brain into a hazy new equilibrium, why are you here? Jim gave an eloquent shrug, popped the blunt out of his mouth, and stared at the curling smoke. Roland stared too. In his eyes was wreathed in a chartruse black halo of heat that seemed to almost vibrate near the cherry tip. To catch up, Jim said, and to offer you a job. Job,
Roland snorted, I need not your filthy lucre. Look at this wealth that surrounds me, and made a broad gesture that encompassed the remains of his hovel. What could you possibly offer, well, Jim said, so startus. I can replace your hot plate. I think Bigsby broke it with his body, so I'll steal another one. Roland said, what do you really have? I'm gonna guess a few million won't pique your interest. Roland blew a fat, wet raspberry. I don't
even care what currency you're talking about. What good will money do me? Not even Cascadian script, uh, Jim, with a grin Cascadia. Roland had heard the name, of course. Last he remembered, the Pacific Northwest's premier independence movement had been agitating to seceed from the coastal packed. Is is that a thing now as of six years ago? Jim said. He took a deep pull on the blunt, handed it back to Roland and exhaled a thick white cloud as he spoke. And they just finished their own civil war.
So the value skyrocketing. You really don't get out much these days, do you. Roland's response was another deep gulp of his coffee. Anyway, Jim continued, I know you don't care for cash, but there is something I think you might want, and I can buy it back for you if you'll help me out. Wait, buy it back by what back? Roland recognized the snake man's smile on Jim's face. He had the vague sense that he'd seen it before enough that the sight of it set his hackles arise
and sparked an itch in his left trigger finger. He took a deep hit from the blunt and handed it over to Jim. The other man took the blunt with his left hand and made a gun shape with the fingers of his right hand. He pantomimed a shot to the head. His lips made a barely audible pow memories. Jim said, I know he's only playing with half a deck.
Maybe less surprised you remember my mug. To be honest, Jim took a final drag from the blunt, which was barely the length of a thumbnail now, and passed it off to Roland. But science sah, she's kept right on lurching forward the last ten years. There's a neurow team up at m I a t They reckoned. They've made a breakthrough al Zama's research initially, but they think they figured out how to straight up recover memories from damaged brain tissue. The attack has reversed a lot of injuries
the old science said was permanent. Roland felt a painful, tugging sensation in his chest. He thought back to the woman from his dreams with a damascene teeth. He saw her every few weeks, trapped in some foggy memory or another. Her name felt like it was always on the tip of his tongue. He didn't know what she'd meant to him, but the thought of her twisted his heart into knots. It was maddening, not even knowing what she'd been him
or he to her. Roland frowned, turned his head and locked eyes with Jim, you think a bunch of fed funded school scientists are gonna help me? Rolland asked, I get a strong feeling none of the governments on this continent or fans of me. Jim waved a careless hand less the issue, he said, those am fed motherfucker's at pragmatists. I've been in and out of the Northeast half a dozen times just this year. You do work they value and they ignore a little terrorism memories, hazy Roland said,
but I know little is inaccurate. I think we killed a skyscraper. Ha, you don't remember that the Diamond building and photo one A hundred and twenty flows a rich pigs wallowing in ship. We slipped a bomb, and during an all Steretius summit led by the CEOs of the Big Fall, bugged the conference room so we could hear him scream when that first blast cut the support beams. It was better than sex. There was a peculiar joy in Jim's eyes. His chest snakes writhed in orgiastic glee.
Roland felt queasy. Rowland, Jim added, the sons of bitches had it coming, maybe, Roland said, but I know we didn't just kill CEOs. I remember other times. Kids not kids, Jim insisted, as young enough to take full advantage of juven the future undying lords of capital, they had to go. Roland shivered. Even if they did, I'm sort of glad I don't remember it. Jim shrugged, swirled his coffee cup
and stared into it for a minute. If he'd been anyone else, Roland would have been able to read his emotions by the sense coming off of him and the micro expressions on his face. Most post humans were just as easy to read as regular humans. It took a mix of very specific surgeries and a hell of a lot of time spent in practice to hide anything from Roland.
It said a lot that Jim had considered the expense worthwhile violence is the coin that buys the future, Jim said, there was a time when you explained that to me. I don't remember that conversation, Roland said, but it's been years since I've taken a life. Yeah, a couple of four skins one guy's hand. Sure, sometimes a point needs making. I haven't killed anyone in a long time, though, That's why all the folks you sent to my door are still alive. And I mean to stay on the wagon.
Killing's not wanted on this mission, Jim assured him, just property destruction. I need two or three days of your unrivaled ship up fucking expertise. Roland flicked a suspicious eyebrow at his old friend property. He asked. Jim nodded. A couple of guys might need crippling along the way, but no killing. So what's this gig? Roland was interested now, in spite of himself sabotage, Jim's lips curled up in
a feral grin. Over the last few months, we've noticed a substantial build up among the radical Christian militias in North and central Texas. We Roland asked, my own organization, and the AM fed the Central Intelligence Agency. Roland couldn't help but laugh. I remember enough of the old days to appreciate the irony of you working with the sea i A. Jim's head cocked just a little to the left. He grimaced. Roland wasn't sure, but he thought his friend
might be a little embarrassed and defensive. Anyone who lives long enough becomes a hypocrite, Jim said with a shrug. I'd hope to hold out longer, but their satellite coverage is fucking phenomenal. I'll send you the intel. He made a flicking gesture towards Rowland with his right index finger, and then frowned in annoyance. You might be the last dark brain on this continent, you know that. Roland wasn't sure why he'd disconnected himself from the Internet. It seemed
to annoy other people, but he rather enjoyed it. His hind brain had absorbed peda bites of data before he'd severed the link, so he never found himself needing to consult a Wicki to remember the equations behind the Coriolis effect or a bullet's trajectory. You could have walked from Canada to Venezuela without encountering a plant or animal, his distributed mechanical brain couldn't name. The only downside to his situation was that He couldn't keep up with politics or
bleeding edge military technology. He only gleaned that sort of information by experience or conversation, and being a creepy godlike being who sometimes circumcised trespassers, Roland didn't have many conversations. One of Jim's aids ran up and handed Roland a paper thin tablet. Jim directed him through a dozen satellite images of what looked like vehicle and ammunition depots. Roland's hindbrain recognized the Dallas road systems immediately. A surge of
since memory hit him. Fire so much fire, the smell of it only drowned out by the intense stink of thirty thousand people panicking. At the same time, Roland felt bullets dig into his flesh. He saw hate in the eyes of the advancing cops, and he felt a corresponding surge of glee. As his brain started to pump out battle drugs. He squeezed his trigger. Roland shook his head, pulled his mind back into the present moment. Jim frowned but didn't say anything. He just pointed back at the tablet.
Roland focused again. It appeared to be a satellite image of a defensive line in Dallas. He noted a large number of military vehicles piled into several parking garages. What's going on here, he asked. Suit carriers said, a couple of dozen of them. Roland shook his head. Impossible that'd be enough to support what six D power armored fighters. Those are nation state numbers and other Republic of Texas
as a ship show. But there's no way they'd let someone surge and militia build an army like that in their borders. Maybe not, Jim said, maybe so. Truth told, I don't care what's parked in those garages. You blow them up. I get paid and you get your fancy surgery. Roland felt uneasy. The job itself seemed too simple. That killed team Jim had sent to wake Roland up, probably could have done this job with a few reinforcements. It seemed weird that some nutbar extremists could get their hands
on that many suits. Roland just didn't trust the whole situation. Jim, he asked, can you promise me this memory thing will work? Fuck? No, Jim scoffed, I can't even promise you'll survive. This is a bleeding edge mad science operation. The infant is willing to break in a national law to work on a wanted terrorist. I'm half sure they just want to see
what happens when they stopped poking around a skull. You might be making the worst mistake of your life here, but at least you'll die after blowing up a bunch of gear owned by crystal fascist assholes. Roland considered for a long moment, then nod at his assent. All right, then you've convinced me. I'm in as long as this stay is a sabotage mission. No killing, no killing. Jim agreed. They both stared out at the vacant desert for some time.
Roland found himself humming along to a song he couldn't name or even remember hearing. Jim hummed along with him. He put a hand on Roland's shoulder. That felt good. There was something about human contact that none of the machines in his head could replicate. They sat for a while longer, then Jim squeezed Roland's shoulder and stood come for another peaceful wall. Then, hey, everybody, Robert Evans here. I hope you just enjoyed the chapter you listen to.
I hope you enjoyed the chapters to come. If you would like to read the text, vers and of this book either on the web or on your e reader as an e pub, you can find those on the website a t r book dot com. So again, the free ad free e pub and the text of every chapter will be on a t r book dot com. Thanks
