Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
quite literal y blow the door off the vault itself. Ash
stood by, his eyes flickering from Rafe and Win—they
were affixing the explosives and working up the wiring
—to Tychus. A frown was deepening on Ash’s face.
“This is too risky, damn it,” he muttered.
Jim stepped over to him. He and the others could
move freely without fear of spider repercussion. Each
man either wore or had stashed in a pocket one of
Jennifer and Gustav’s stylish-looking watches that
emitted a signal that made the spiders regard them
as “friendly.” The Umojan couple was proving to be an
amazing team; Tychus had told Jim the spiders, as
wel as the vest, were Jennifer’s creations, whereas
Gustav had crafted both the pocket watch and its
ability to trigger an EMP.
“None of us wanted to go early,” Jim said.
“Everything else is in place, isn’t it? Our end of it is
going perfectly.”
“Yeah, yeah, it’s al in place. Our guy won’t be there
to help us haul the creds, but things should be set up
at the suite.” Ash wiped his damp face.
“Wel , then, nothing to worry about. Just have to
make a couple extra trips to get it al up there. We got
time.” They had a ful hour before the spiders self-
destructed. That was one of the things Tychus and
Jim had insisted on. Ash had wanted them to just kil
everyone immediately rather than hold them hostage.
“No witnesses,” he had said as they sat plotting in
Jack’s Spot. “Nice and clean.”
“Yeah, no witnesses, but a couple dozen bodies
and a couple dozen counts of first-degree murder,”
Jim had said. “And that certainly ain’t clean.”
“No one’s gonna find us,” Ash had retorted.
“Maybe not. But we stil ain’t doing it. My source
who makes the spiders don’t work that way,” Tychus
had replied. “Besides, if the spiders self-destruct, they
can’t be traced. And that, my friend, is operating
clean.”
Ash had rol ed his eyes, muttered something about
“soft,” but had agreed. He’d real y had no choice.
“I’d prefer to use that time to get out of here,” Ash
said, bringing Jim back to the present, “but we gotta
run with this.”
Rafe and Win rose and nodded. “Al set,” they said.
They hurried out of the vault room and closed the door
so that they would al be protected from the blast
within.
A few seconds later, there was a huge but muffled
boom. The five men exchanged grins despite the
tension of the situation.
“That never gets old,” Tychus said.
“Let’s go, let’s go!” Ash ordered, his grin fading as
he became al business again. The vault lock had
been wel and properly blown, and they pul ed open
the door.
Inside were dozens of safety deposit boxes, each
containing hundreds of thousand-credit coins. It was
an almost overwhelming moment, and it was ful y
three seconds before Jim stepped forward and
quickly began manual y unlocking the boxes. Ash’s
men sprang into action as soon as the boxes were
open. Tucked into the lining of their jackets were
several bags made of material thin enough to fold
easily and strong enough to support the weight of al
those liberated credits. Jim fol owed, removing his
own sacks and starting to fil them. A smile curved his
lips as he did so.
Tychus had been right. The gamblers whose money
this doubtless was would never miss it. However, it
would give him the fresh new start he found himself
yearning for more with every passing day.
“I have to say, Mr. Raynor,” came Woodley’s voice,
“I’m right disappointed in you and Mr. Findlay.”
Ash sneered and reached for his weapon. Jim put
a firm hand on his arm and shook his head. “Don’t.
We don’t need to add murder to this.”
The blond man grimaced but lowered his weapon,
impaling George Woodley with an angry stare.
“You should probably be quiet, Mr. Woodley,” Jim
said.
“Wel , I’m afraid I do have to say it. I’m mighty
disappointed in you. I wasn’t mad at you when I was
reassigned after you robbed that train. I was happy to
get a new job here. I understand you need to, uh, do
what you do and al , but from Farm Aid? I thought you
was a better class of criminal than that.”
Jim froze.
Then, deliberately, he moved over to where
Woodley stood stock-stil , his hand stil halfway to his
comm, his eyes fixed on the tiny mechanical spider at
his feet.
“What did you say?”
“I said I am surprised you would be stealing money
from Farm Aid. That money goes to help people who
need it. It doesn’t belong to wealthy gamblers or Old
Families. Wel , it did—I mean, they were the ones
who donated it—but it goes to—”
“I know who it goes to,” Jim growled, turning to look
at Tychus. “I just didn’t know where it came from. But
you
did, didn’t you, Tychus?”
“Jimmy, just listen up a moment …,” said Tychus,
lifting a hand in a placating manner.
“Fekk that. You
knew
! And you didn’t tel me
because you knew I wouldn’t go along with it! That
money
helps
people.
My
people.”
“It’s a goddamned tax break for folks who have way
too much money—that’s what it is,” Tychus retorted.
“Jimmy, the only reason this Farm Aid was even
created was to help the rich out. Help them feel good
about themselves and their empty but very wealthy
lives. Come on, I know you know that!”
“That doesn’t matter! That money lets people stay
in their homes, Tychus. It means they got enough to
eat. It means their
kids
got enough to eat. And you
didn’t tel me!”
“That’s because sometimes you’re too stubborn
and stupid for your own good,” Tychus said, his brows
drawing together. “Shut up and take the damned
credits, Jim. Then you can be a rich big baby and
indulge your morals al you want to. So help me, if we
get out of this alive, I’m gonna kick your ass so hard
—”
There came a sudden high-pitched whine. Out of
the corner of his eye, Jim saw movement. Faster than
he would have believed possible, he whirled and
brought his foot crashing down on the tiny spider that
was scuttling toward Woodley’s feet, smashing it to
bits before it could inject its venom into the terrified
agent.
“Th-thank you kindly, Mr. Raynor,” Woodley
managed in a weak voice.
“Aw, shit,” Tychus muttered. “Why the fekk did you
have to go and do that, Ash?”
Jim looked around, aghast at what he saw.
Dead. They were al dead. The tel ers, the guards,
the poor saps who had done nothing but come into a
bank to make a deposit or withdraw some cash—they
lay slumped where they had fal en. At least they didn’t
look like it had hurt. While he could imagine the lovely
Jennifer putting a lethal toxin into the spiders for
emergency purposes, he couldn’t see her choosing
one that would cause undue pain.
He turned slowly around to face Ash. “You activated
the spiders, you son of a bitch. These people did
nothing. Why did you do that?”
“To get you to shut up and focus,” Ash said. “Get
your ass in here and get back to loading up the
money. At least we don’t have a stupid hour time limit
now.”
Something snapped, cold and final, inside of
Raynor. He looked down at the two sacks of creds he
held, then opened his hands. They dropped to the
floor, spil ing their contents. Jim lifted his gaze.
“I’m done,” was al he said. He turned around and
strode to the door.
“Don’t you touch that door,” snarled Ash. “Raynor!
Raynor!
”
Jim kept moving.
And the bul et ripped through him.
Jim grunted as the bul et seared his right
shoulder and heard Tychus bel ow in fury. Jim whirled,
gun in hand, to face Ash. But Tychus had beaten him
to it.
Tychus hadn’t bothered with a weapon. He
was
one.
He grasped Ash by the lapels as if the other man
weighed nothing at al and slammed him hard into the
wal . Ash went limp as a puppet when the strings were
cut. Tychus dropped him at once. Ash lay where he
had fal en, his head at an impossible angle.
Rafe and Win had been so surprised by the speed
of this turn of events that they were only now just
drawing their own weapons. Jim, gritting his teeth
against the pain of his wounded shoulder, lifted his
gun and fired. His arm was unsteady due to the injury
and wavered slightly. The bul et took Win in the upper
chest instead of the head, and the man grunted and
dropped his weapon.
Jim started to fire again, but Tychus was there. He
had Rafe’s throat in one powerful hand and crunched
down hard even as he sprang onto the wounded Win.
“You … don’t … shoot … my …
friend
!” he grunted,
punctuating each word with a solid punch into Win’s
thin, ratty-looking face. By the time he had reached
the word “shoot” Win’s face was a bloody mess, and
by the time he reached “friend,” it was obvious the
man was dead.
But Rafe wasn’t. He was stil struggling. Jim lifted
his gun, steadied his arm with his other hand, and
fired into Rafe’s chest.
There was silence in the bank as Jim and Tychus
caught their breath. Tychus was spattered in blood.
He turned to Jim with a large grin.
“It stopped bein’ about the money,” was al he said.
“Let’s take a look at that shoulder.”
They had gotten very good at field medicine, and
within a few moments Tychus had packed the wound
with antibiotics from a smal kit he’d brought with him
and bound it tightly. “You’re a lucky son of a bitch.
Bul et went clean through.”
“Search Ash,” Jim said. “Make sure we got
everything we need.”
Tychus went to the broken body and quickly went
through Ash’s pockets. “Good cal ,” he said. “He’s got
the key to the penthouse.” He relieved the corpse of
everything else of value as wel .
A thin whimper reached their ears. “Woodley,” Jim
said remorseful y. He’d forgotten al about the man.
“Don’t worry. If we weren’t gonna shoot you on the
train, we sure as hel ain’t gonna shoot you now. But
I’m afraid we gotta disable you for a bit.”
Woodley looked relieved. “Of course you do,” he
said. “I certainly understand. Are you gonna, um,
knock me out?”
Jim glanced around. His eye fel on the lifeless
bodies of their former cohorts. “Nah. Just going to
truss you up a bit. Tychus, get their ties?”
Three minutes later, George Woodley beamed up
at them as Tychus bound Woodley’s hands and feet
with Ash’s and Rafe’s ties. Tychus let a big hand fal
almost affectionately on Wood-ley’s head.
“You are one lucky devil, George Woodley. You
should write your memoirs:
How I Survived Two
Robberies by Tychus Findlay and James Raynor
.”
“Be kind to us in the retel ing, wil ya?” Jim said,
grinning.
“Of course, sirs, you know I wil !”
“I believe you,” Jim said, and he did. “And … I’m
glad you told me where the money came from.”
Woodley gave him an oddly sweet smile. “You’re
mighty welcome, Mr. Raynor. I knew something had to
be wrong. You just wasn’t the type to steal from poor
people who needed that money so bad.”
A lump rose in Jim’s throat. “No. No, I ain’t. Thanks
for stopping me from doing that.”
“I hate to break up this sweet scene, but time is
ticking by, and we did announce our presence by
blowing a safe and firing weapons,” Tychus said.
“Let’s get a move on.”
The elevator had been one of the casualties of the
EMP, and they didn’t dare risk the stairs. Tychus had
been right: once the safe had been blown, the
residents and employees of various businesses
located in the Covington Bank building had been
tipped off to something more than just a pesky power
outage. The luxury suite was fourteen stories up. In
their planning, they had intended to make sure that the
elevator car would be on the same floor as the bank
when the EMP hit. It was there now, too—either that’s
where it spent most of its time, or they had just been