A chill slips down Koda’s spine, and the sense of something indefinably other—otherkind, otherwhere, otherwhen—follows after. Something of the same feeling, no more than a frisson, had slid through her mind, half-memory, half-not, while she had watched the ravens making their way into the forest as the sun brushed the horizon in its steepening fall toward night. Time has gone awry, the earth tilted off its accustomed axis, past and future irrupting into the present like steam rising in a geyser.
“I can’t hear you!” Maggie’s voice brings her back from her split-second drift into the time stream. Again, metallic and magnified almost beyond recognition, all its Southern softness gone: “I CAN’T HEAR YOU!” Gun tucked back into the waistband of her trousers, Maggie points at a red-faced man in a plaid hunting jacket at the front of the crowd. “You! Talk to me! What the hell’s going on here!”
The man shouts something back, inaudible. “Say again!” Maggie shouts.
Gradually the crowd quiets, and the unexpected spokesperson steps a little away from the others, moving cautiously with his eyes on the line of MP’s just behind the truck that has suddenly become a podium. His hand moves to the brim of his Stetson in reflexive good manners, hesitates, and tilts the hat back on his head at a jauntier angle instead. His step takes on the suggestion of a strut. Unimpressed, Koda suppresses a snort: a banty rooster, this one, all crow and no balls. She catches the roll of Kirsten’s eyes and almost winks in response; it’s as bad a case of testosterone poisoning as she’s ever seen. Unobtrusively, Koda thumbs the safety off her gun. Covering one hand with the other almost demurely, Kirsten does the same, staring at the man and the crowd behind him with eyes bright and cold and hard as green diamonds.
“Who the hell are you?” the Stetson roars.
“Margaret Allen, United States Air Force. Who the fuck are you?”
A murmur runs through the crowd, and the truculent expression drops off several faces in the front. Word of the battle of the Cheyenne has apparently gotten out to at least some of the remaining civilian population. Further back, a couple of rifle barrels slip from view. Sensing the change behind him, the man’s voice loses a fraction of its edge. “I’m Bill Dietrich, and I’m a law-abiding citizen. You want to explain to me why U. S. citizens can’t come onto a Base their taxes paid for?”
Far back in the crowd, someone yells, “You tell ‘er, Bill,” and another, sharply female, snaps, “Shut up, you idiot!”
“Pleased to meet you, Mr. Dietrich,” Maggie responds evenly. “Suppose you tell me why you and the good folks behind you are attempting to trespass on a restricted government installation.”
“What guvmint? There ain’t no guvmint! We got a right to what we paid for.”
At that Kirsten steps forward, moving to where Asi stands at the alert at the edge of the tailgate. The glare of the searchlights leaches color from her, turning her hair silver, her face ghost-pale. Her voice, when she speaks, is as chill as her face. “Allow me to introduce myself, Mr. Dietrich. I’m Kirsten King, and I’m the only surviving member of the Cabinet we know of.” She pauses, letting the effect filter through the crowd for a moment. “And much as I would hate to do it, I’m prepared to ask these law enforcement officers to enforce the law by firing on you if necessary. Whether it’s necessary or not is up to you.” She steps back toward the cab of the truck, her gun now in plain sight.
A second man detaches himself from the crowd, unceremoniously elbowing Dietrich aside. He is tall and lanky and grey, with creases carved deep around his eyes and at the corners of his mouth. “Ma’am, I’m Jim Henderson. I’ve got a ranch up the road a bit, or did have. Had a family, too. Now I’ve just got one daughter, and her only because she was out riding fence with me when the droids took or killed the rest. All I want is a safe place for her. That’s what we all want, Ms. Secretary, Colonel Allen—just a place to be safe.”
“I understand,” Maggie answers. “But you have to understand that the Base is not safe. It’s already been a target twice; we’re likely to be attacked again.”
“You beat the droids!” That from somewhere about halfway back. “They’re gone!”
“We beat one contingent of the droids,” she corrects the speaker. “There are more where they came from, believe me.”
“Then you gotta protect us! Let us in!” Dietrich swaggers to the fore again.
Koda hears Maggie’s sharply indrawn breath, magnified by the bullhorn. Her voice, though, remains patient. “Mr Dietrich, tell me something. How do I know you’re not a droid? How can we tell you’re not a spy trying to force your way in here?”
“Why that’s the damnedest stupidest thing I ever heard of! Listen to me, you---” He breaks off abruptly. “Look, lady, that uniform don’t make you god!”
“I know one way to tell if he’s a droid,” Kirsten remarks almost casually. “Droids don’t bleed.”
“Look,” Maggie says, “We can’t insure your security unless we can insure the security of the Base and our assets. You folks can try to fight your way in, and lose. You can lose even more of your people. You can kill some of these soldiers who have already bled for you at the Cheyenne.”
She pauses, allowing that to sink in. Koda is pleased to see more guns disappear from view.
“Go home. If it will make you feel more secure, you can move into some of the vacant houses closer to the Base. But don’t expect us to support you; we can’t do it. You’ll have to find ways to feed yourselves and protect yourselves from everything but armed attack. That’s your job as citizens. Ours is to defend you from enemies foreign and domestic—and android. You can obstruct us, or you can help us serve you. Your choice.”
“Who’s in charge?” The voice comes from somewhere in the middle of the crowd, unidentifiable by age or gender.
Which is the sixty-four million dollar question, isn’t it? Koda’s eyes flick sideways to Kirsten, only to find that the other woman is looking directly at her. With a small shake of her head, Koda averts her glance and returns to watching the crowd. For the first time since the uprising, she is truly and personally afraid of what may come. Because the question is not just who’s in charge now but who will be in charge if human society somehow beats the odds and manages to survive.
And the only viable answer is that it will be someone entirely different, something entirely different, than anything that has gone before.
Maggie shouts into the bullhorn. “General Hart is the Commanding Officer of this Base. Dr. King is the highest surviving civilian authority that we know about. Like it or not, we have to assume that the new capital of the United States is now Ellsworth Air Force Base. And that’s going to mean the kind of security restrictions we had before, only more so.” She pauses. “But you’re free people. You need to choose yourselves a mayor or manager or whatever you want to call it. You need to pick law officers. Because as far as I’m concerned the Constitution is still in effect, and the American military does not police American civilians. Anybody got any problems with that?”
The crowd begins to mill, movement coalescing somewhere around its center. Some of them clearly do have problems with that, and have come here in hopes of finding someone to tell them what to do. Others, their faces clearly relieved even in the flat glare of the floodlights, have heard what they needed to hear. Slowly, infinitely slowly, its members begin to bleed off, backing out of the gate on foot, others getting into their vehicles to inch away in reverse. The MP’s begin to pace them, moving in line, shields locked in a solid wall.
Kirsten raps out, “Hold! Let them go voluntarily.”
The line halts as if frozen, and as the last of the would-be mob filters out, the duty guards roll the second panel of the gate into place. It locks with a soul-satisfying clang.
Maggie jumps down from the top of the cab, stumbling a little on her right leg.
Koda slips a hand under her arm to steady her. “You okay?”
A smile plays for a moment about Maggie’s mouth. “Rapists, mobs, oh yeah, just a day in the freakin’ life.” To the MP Captain, she says, “I want half a dozen more guards on this gate and as many on the side entrance. I want staggered patrols all around the perimeter. M-60s’. We’re in lockdown. Nobody gets in and nobody gets out until we know precisely who’s on Base and who has what useful skill.”
“Yes, Ma’am.” The Captain salutes and turns to sort his troops out into patrols.
“And Captain,” Kirsten adds. “If anybody comes over the fence, shoot to kill. This Base was a restricted area before; it’s a restricted area now.”
“Ma’am.” Again, he salutes. “I’m on it.”
Asi, standing down from red alert with an ease granted to none of the humans, begins to wave the plume of his tail. Whining, he paws at Koda’s leg, then noses at her pocket, looking for treats..
Kirsten reaches down to ruffle his fur. “He’s right,” she says. “It’s past suppertime. Let’s go home.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
FOR THE THIRD time in less than an hour, Dakota looks toward the window, then frowns distractedly before returning to her duties. The base vet might have been an excellent diagnostician, but his office skills were decidedly lacking. She has had to send two sets of volunteers on trips to the nearby towns to raid the vet facilities there and return with any usable supplies they can, and it still isn’t close to being enough. As groups of people continue to stream onto the base, they bring their pets with them; pets who have often-times suffered as much, if not more, than their owners. The clinic is bursting at the seams; full of frostbitten dogs, half-mauled cats, dehydrated turtles, constipated snakes, sick birds of all kinds, and a number of more exotic species, along with several army canines who are slowly recovering from injuries suffered during the initial battle with the androids.
With a soft grunt, she tosses the pencil down and pushes away from the desk, running weary fingers through her disordered hair. She checks the window again, then the clock. Something is nagging at her, and has been for the past hour or so, but she can’t put a finger on what it is, and that fact is driving her just shy of nuts.
“What?” she barks in response to a light tap on her office door.
The door slowly opens and a curly-mopped young woman pokes her head in, expression slightly nervous. “You asked me to let you know when I walked Condor, Doctor.” Condor is one of the army dogs who had taken several bullet wounds to the belly and flank. It has been touch and go with him for the past weeks but he appears now well on the road to recovery. “He did fine. I think he can be discharged in a day or two.”
Nodding, Koda forces a smile to her face. “Thank you, Shannon. You’ve done very well with him.”
The young woman blushes under the quiet praise, then calms, her eyes concerned. “Are you…okay?”
“Mm?” Koda drags her gaze away from the window yet again. “I’m sorry. What did you say?”
“I asked if you were alright. You seem…distracted?”
“Oh.” She shakes her head slightly, clearing it. “No. Just,” one hand waves toward the paper-strewn desktop, “trying to deal with this mess. I never was all that fond of paperwork.”
Shannon brightens. “Well, I might have a solution for that.” At Dakota’s raised eyebrow, she continues. “I have a friend, Melissa, who used to be an Admin Assistant for Kuyger-Barren-Micholvski, the law firm? She’s been going crazy with nothing to do. I’m sure she’d be happy to pitch in, if you like.”
This time, Koda’s smile is more genuine. “I could use all the help I can get.”
“Great! I’ll let her know tonight.”
“Fair enough.” Dakota rises from the chair with fluid grace and grabs her Stetson from the coat rack and settles it on her head, sweeping her hair behind her broad shoulders. “I’m going for a walk. Hold down the fort, will ya?”
“With pleasure, Doc—Dakota.”
*
Maggie sorts through the folders in her briefcase as she waits for the clock on the wall to tick officially around to 11:00. Like the conference room, like everything else in the Headquarters building, the walls and floors are grey with occasional Air Force blue accents. A silk ficus to one side of the General’s door and a faux pothos ivy under the window offer the only relief. At her workstation, the General’s secretary bites her lip and dabs at a drop of sweat rounding up under her heretofore perfect mascara. Kimberley has always seemed to Maggie to be forty-going-on-twenty-five, with her acrylic nails and seamless make-up, short skirts and years-out-of-fashion high heels. Now her heart-shaped face is pinched with effort as she struggles with an old-fashioned manual typewriter, resurrected from God-knows-what basement or storage building. An equally antiquated adding machine perches on the edge of her desk, the kind with a handle that is pulled after each entry to crank up a sum or tax percentage. Maggie recognizes it only because her accountant grandfather kept one of the things on top of the barristers’ bookcase in his office, part of a collection that included such other relics as a slide rule and a solid-black metal telephone with a rotary dial that clicked satisfyingly when she stuck her finger into the perforated disk, pulled it around to the stop and watched it spin back..
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