The Battle for Terra Two

The Battle for Terra Two Read Free

Book: The Battle for Terra Two Read Free
Author: Stephen Ames Berry
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction
Ads: Link
desk pad. When it ended, the shield was back up and the brandy half gone.
    "So," said D'Trelna, setting down his pen, "if this is all true, we need Harrison."
    "If it's true," said L'Wrona, "yes."
    "We'll have to brief the Terrans," said D'Trelna.
    "And our ambassador?"
    "After the Terrans," said D'Trelna firmly.
    "He'll scream," said L'Wrona.
    "Let him. Security of the Confederation—military priority."
    "Communications," said the commodore into the commlink, "get me the American Central Intelligence Director, Bill Sutherland." He ganced at the time readout, doing a quick conversion. "He's probably at home, asleep. Get him up. Tell him we've one last world to win."

2
    "Hear from Zahava?" asked McShane, helping himself to another cup of John's coffee.
    "Early yesterday." Using a fork, he slid the waffles from the little electric oven onto the two plastic microwave plates. "There's a seven-hour time difference between here and Israel."
    "How's her sister doing?"
    "Better. Cardiac's a tricky thing, though. "Syrup?" he asked, putting a plate in front of McShane.
    They faced each other across the breakfast bar; McShane stolid, white-bearded, with red suspenders stretching from the top of his corduroys over his blue flannel shirt; John, thirty years his junior, in faded jeans and a red cardigan.
    "No, thank you. No waffle, either." He pushed the food back, thumb and forefinger to the plate edge. "TV-dinner plates, pop-up breakfasts. You're living on this swill?"
    "Not worth cooking for one," said John, squeezing a layer of cold syrup across the waffle. The sunlight flood-
    ing the kitchen lent the topping the look of thick, yellowed varnish.
    "When's she coming home?" asked McShane, adding milk to his coffee.
    "It could be a few months. Natie's got two kids and there's no one else to help.
    "What brings you to the Hill so early in the day, Bob?"
    "Checkup." He tapped his chest. "Iron-poor blood or something. I'm not twenty-nine anymore, but I shouldn't need a four-hour nap every afternoon."
    The phone rang. John reached out, taking the receiver from the wall. He listened for a few seconds, then hung up.
    "Wrong number?" asked Bob, sipping his coffee. John shook his head. "My former employer, I think."
    "You think?"
    "A voice I've never heard hit me with a hot-shit authenticator and the words 'Gather at the river. Thirty minutes.' "
    "What, the Potomac?"
    "Yes. I know where—it's a stretch along the canal in Georgetown."
    "When I was a boy," said McShane, "back in the Pleistocene, kids used to run off to join the circus. Your crowd ran off to join the CIA." He set his cup down. "Are you driving?"
    "No." John rose, taking the dishes to the sink. "Car's in the shop for a brake job."
    "I can drop you at Foggy Bottom." He tucked in the bar stool. "Wear your mitties—it's cold out there."
    "You need a what?" Harrison stared at Sutherland. "A hero," said the CIA Director. "We need a hero."
    "A hero's a sandwich, Bill." He watched as a sudden gust sent a yellow-red cloud of maple leaves swirling into the canal. "Or a word in a eulogy."
    A chill October wind had driven all but the hardiest joggers from the towpath. More would venture out later, after work, but for now the two men had the Georgetown riverfront to themselves.
    "Guan-Sharick can get you there," said Sutherland, thrusting his hands into the pockets of his camel-hair topcoat. "You have to get yourself back."
    "By taking the other end of this Shalan's portal?"
    "Yes."
    "Why me? Why not a transmute?" As they walked, he turned the collar of his parka against the wind. "Our old buddy Guan-Sharick could just rip out some poor bastard's mind, imitate him, turn this resistance movement against Shalan-Actal and his base." Stooping, he picked up a flat stone. "Find another hero, Bill. I've retired." He skimmed the weathered shale across the brackish canal surface, one-two-three. It sank midchannel.
    "There's no one else," said Sutherland. "And Guan-Sharick can't steal a dead man's

Similar Books

Mr. Eternity

Aaron Thier

A Passion Rekindled

Rontora Nolan

Tanked: TANKED

Cheri Lewis

Heat and Dust

Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

Onyx

Jacqueline; Briskin

The Lodestone

Charlene Keel

Deadly Decision

Regina Smeltzer