He was miles below The Eye. Far off limits for any non-Company employee.
Down there, if he was uncovered by Security or any Sociopatrolman, the Company would probably find it simpler just to cycle him through the nearest food plant than go through the formalities of deportation.
Mahoney had put himself into the field quite deliberately. He'd been somewhat less than successful in recruiting local agents. Stuck in The Eye, all he had access to were obvious provocateurs and Migs so terrified they weren't worth the bother. At any rate, going operational was possibly less hazardous than red-lighting his mission and heading back for Prime World.
The Emperor, he felt, would be less than impressed with Mahoney's progress to date:
1. Thoresen was, indeed, in a conspiracy up to the top of his shaved head, and letting no one, including his own board of directors, in on the operation. Big deal. That the Emperor knew a year ago, back on Prime World.
2. Thoresen was working a gray and black propaganda campaign against the Empire, specifically directed at the Migs. But since he was using Counselors as the line-out, and had so many cutouts between himself and the campaign, he was still untouchable. Mahoney figured that operation had been going on, and all he'd been able to get was specifics and intensity.
Mahoney snorted to himself. Any buck private in Mantis Section's rear rank would have come up with that much or gone back to being a slime-pounder.
3. Off world security systems were being beefed up and there were persistent rumors of some of the Company's production facilities being diverted to arms production. Unprovable, so far. And even if Mahoney could prove the allegations correct, the Company could always blandly claim to be planning expansion in Pioneer Sector.
"Zip-slant nothin' is what I got," Mahoney muttered. And then froze. Far ahead, down the slideway, he could see a cordon of Sociopatrolmen checking cards with a portable computer. Mahoney's forgery wasn't that good. He quickly stepped off the slideway, onto a cross-passage. The slide-passage creaked along, into a large dome. On the other side, there was a second ID-check block.
Mahoney rabbited up a side-passage. Basics. Walk slow. Breathe slow. Look happy. A little zipped. You've just come off shift and are headed for your apartment. He went up a narrower corridor, then slanted off on still a third. Turned at the entrance then giant-stepped around the next curve.
Stopped. Waited. Listening.
Of course. Footsteps behind him.
Mahoney was being steered. But he didn't have a lot of options. Moving as slowly as he could, he let the ferrets push him deeper into the abandoned sectors of Vulcan.
The first man made the mistake of trying to blindside Mahoney from a dead-end passageway. Mahoney went in under the blackjack, and put an elbow through the thug's epiglottis. Mahoney side-kicked the riot gun out of the second tough's hands, one-handed the gun out of the air and hauled in on the powerpack cord. The Sociopatrolman top-spun. Mahoney backpunched knuckles into the base of the man's skull.
Two. He turned, realizing that they were just the blocking element. Three more were coming around the corner. One had a gun up. Aiming.
A stun rod, spear-lashed to a rod, lashed out of the upper vent, burying itself in the gunman's eye. He screamed and went down.
Mahoney drove forward, knowing he wasn't close enough to the others, when a young man dropped out of the vent, right hand blurring back and forth.
Mahoney blinked as the second man's head bounced free, blood fountaining up to paint the overhead. The young man crouched, continuing his spin, and brought the knife completely through a circle, lunging up from the ground.
Mahoney noticed the young man kept his free hand on top of his wrist as a guide. Knows what —
And the third man whimpered at the knife deep in his chest. He toppled. The young man bent, pulled the knife out, and wiped it on the corpse's uniform. Young. Good. A bravo.
Mahoney stood very still and let the young man walk up on him. Another young man—no, a girl—dropped from the vent. She retrieved her spear.
About nineteen, fairly short, say sixty kilos. Second evaluation: nineteen going on forty. He looked like any street kid on any gutter world, except he didn't cringe, Mahoney figured he hadn't done a lot of crawling. A Delinq. Mahoney almost smiled.
Sten eyed Mahoney, then the two corpses behind him. Not bad for an old man. Looked to be in his mid-forties, and big. Sten couldn't place him, in spite of Mahoney's Mig coveralls. Not surprising, since Sten had only known three classes, and only face-to-faced two of them.
"There'll be more of 'em along directly, my friend," Mahoney said. "Let's keep the introductions short."
"There's no hurry. For us. Never seen five patrolmen after one man. What'd you do?"
"It's a bit complicated—"
"Sten. Look."
Sten didn't take his eyes off Mahoney. Bet stood up from the corpses and held three cards out to Sten. "Those weren't patrolmen. They've got Exec cards!"
"Thoresen's security," Mahoney said. "They must've tracked me from The Eye."
"You're not. . .you're offworld!"
"I am that."
Sten made a decision. "Strip."
Mahpney bristled, then caught himself and swore. The kid had it. He tore off the coveralls, then pulled off his boots. Hefted one experimentally, then slammed it against the wall. The heel shattered, and bits of the tiny transmitter scattered across the deck.
Sten nodded. "That's how they followed you. You can put the coveralls back on."
He stirruped his hands, and launched Bet back into the vent. She reached down, gave him a hand, and he slithered up.
Turned, inside the vent, as Mahoney flat-leaped up, caught the edges of the vent with both hands and levered himself into the airduct.
"A bit tight for someone my age."
"It isn't your age," Bet said.
"We'll not be making light of our elders and their pot-guts."
"Follow us," Sten said shortly. "And no talking."
Mahoney blinked again as Sten put his knife away. . .seemingly into his arm. Then he ran after Bet and Sten, down the twisting duct.
"NO, FADAL. FOR some reason I. . .remember what an empire is," Oron said.
Mahoney started to ask. Sten shook his head.
"Intelligence?"
"Eyes."
"Ah. And you will then want my people. . .and myself to be your eyes?"
"No," Mahoney said, "I'm too close to being blown."
Oron looked inquiringly at Fadal. She was blank.
"Thoresen wouldn't have top Security men on me unless he was pretty sure who I was."
"Thoresen. . .head of the Company. Your enemy," Fadal whispered.
"You want?"
"I must have confirmation of Thoresen's plan. I've blue-boxed into the Exec and the central computers, and there vas nothing on Bravo Project except inquiry-warning triggers."
"This. . .Thoresen. He must have it personally."
"Probability ninety percent plus."
Sten broke in. "What happens if it's there? And you're right?"
"We'll send in the Guard. The Emperor will set up some kind of caretaker government. Things will change. For the Migs. For everyone."
"Not good enough," Bet said.
"We'll be dead by the time your clottin' Empire arrives. Or don't you know? Us Delinqs don't live to get old," Sten said.
"Sten is right. A runner from another gang passed the word. . .when?"
"Two shifts ago," Fadal said.
"He saw patrolmen at the warehouses. They were drilling with. . .riot guns," Oron said, and smiled at his successful memory. "They will be conducting an extermination drive soon. And we are now too many to evade them."
"How many in your gang?"
"Fifteen now," Fadal answered.
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