Almost Maggie takes pity on him, but she cannot afford to. “Shoved his gun, Lieutenant””

“Uh, up our, uh backsides, Ma’am. And blow our lousy yellow guts to hell.” The blush deepens to crimson, spreads down the young man’s neck. “Ma’am.”

“Answer me carefully, Lieutenant. Did you see or otherwise perceive any indication that Mr. Dietrich was impaired in any way?”

“Do you mean, like was he drunk, Ma’am?”

“Was he?”

“Not that I could tell, Ma’am. He didn’t have any liquor on him, and I couldn’t smell any.”

“Rivers?”

“No, Ma’am. No smell and nothing found on him, uh—later.”

“Who shot him?” Maggie leans back on her heels, sweeping the line with her eyes.

“I did, Ma’am,” Manny answers.

“Why?”

“He threatened us with his rifle, Ma’am.”

“Before or after his verbal threat?”

“After, Ma’am. He pointed the weapon directly at Lieutenant Andrews.”

“Why did you have a gun? Did you expect to encounter someone?”

“We had two guns, Ma’am, a handgun with me and a rifle in the truck. We took them for personal safety and because we feared we might find animals who could not be helped.”

“You shot Dietrich with the handgun?”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

“As a direct response to a threat to the life and well-being of Lieutenant Andrews?”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

“Are you prepared to testify to that under oath in a military court?”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

”Andrews?”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

Finally, she turns her attention to Tacoma. “Sergeant Rivers.”

“Ma’am.”

“Really simple—what did you know, and when did you know it?”

Unlike his cousin’s, Tacoma’s eyes are cold with anger. “I knew that Lieutenants Rivers and Andrews were going out to check for other traps and other animals, Ma’am. I did not know that they had encountered anyone or that anyone had been shot until they returned.”

“But you feared something might have happened, did you not? You reacted rather strongly when you were told Lieutenant Rivers had returned, isn’t that so?”

“Yes, Ma’am. As you know, Ma’am, leg-hold traps and trapping are illegal.”

“But ingrained in the local culture?”

“In parts of it, Ma’am.”

“In the light of which—does any of you gentlemen have any idea how difficult this is going to make our relations with the locals? We have had two near riots in the last week and a half. Now two Air Force officers stationed on this Base have killed a civilian. Unfortunately, you also killed him with no other witnesses present.”

“We have a witness, Ma’am.”

That is Tacoma. Maggie turns slowly on her heel, facing him. “What? Are you telling me that there was someone else present that YOU HAVEN’T BOTHERED TO TELL ME ABOUT?” Maggie’s roar hurts her throat and threatens to shake the window pane. She hopes, very sincerely, that it hurts these three men’s ears. Andrews, she is gratified to see, actually flinches.

Tacoma continues to stare straight ahead. ‘We have the body of Igmu Tanka Kte, Ma’am. The wolf caught in the trap. Lieutenant Rivers brought it back. It’s in the freezer at the veterinary clinic.”

“And how,” she asks more quietly, “does this establish that Lieutenant Rivers fired in self-defense or the defense of Lieutenant Andrews?”

“It doesn’t, Ma’am. It does establish that Dietrich was a criminal, and an extremely vicious one. It establishes that he would have a reason to harm someone who could connect him to his criminal activity. In my opinion, Ma’am.”

“Well,” Maggie at last allows her voice to soften slightly. “It’s certainly good public relations from our perspective. Good thinking to bring back the wolf’s body.” A thought strikes her. “Does your sister know it’s in the clinic?”

“Not yet, Ma’am. The freezer is locked. There are two keys. Both are in my pocket.”

“Good. For God’s sake, don’t let her find out the hard way.”

“No, Ma’am. I won’t.”

For the first time, Maggie steps behind her desk, giving her three stiff-spined wooden soldiers room to breathe. “I am going to recommend a formal hearing, at which you will be asked to restate what you have told me here, under oath. For now—get out of my sight. And keep your goddammed noses clean. Dismissed.”

“Ma’am.”

They stiffen even further, if that is possible. Then they are gone, leaving her to write her recommendations, by hand, in triplicate. It is going to be a long afternoon.

Maggie reaches for her pen, and her bottle of aspirin, and begins.


*

Numbers. Numbers. There is some quotation from her Sunday school days that the phrase half recalls, but Kirsten cannot quite bring it to mind. Something about someone’s feast. Something about the hand writing on the wall—doom and destruction and more doom. The partial code string that she fed into the miniature transponder Dakota had carried in her raid on the birthing center seems a long-ago triumph, insignificant when laid alongside the measure of their true need.

Numbers. More numbers.

Numbered, that was it. Weighed and. . . something else. It is not just the seeming snipe hunt her quest for the code has become. Her concentration is off, her mind and body restless with thoughts she has never entertained before, her emotions a hopeless knot of desire and disbelief, She does not have time to untangle them; even if she achieved the perfect clarity of the enlightened this instant, understanding thudding its way into her head like Newton’s apple, it will not matter in the least if she cannot find a means to destroy the androids before they can destroy the remainder of humanity.

She rises, stretches and rubs at her eyes. Stiffly, because she has scarcely moved for the last two hours, she makes her way into the kitchen and sets water to boil for tea. Asi follows her hopefully, making first for his dish, and, when Kirsten fails to respond with a scoop of kibble, for the door, pawing at it gently. She hates keeping him confined, but will not let him out unsupervised. Not where there are idiots with rifles who use wolves and other creatures for target practice. “Later, boy,” she says. “I promise.”

Tea made, Kirsten drifts reluctantly back to her worktable. More than once the thought has come to her that the answer is not in the materials she has salvaged from Minot after all, that her frozen trek across the Northern Plains might as well have been cut short at Shiloh, might as well never have been ventured at all.

Except that, had she not pressed on, not made the attempt, she never would have come to this place, where Dakota is. And with that thought comes a feeling of unease, clear and present as her earlier conviction that Koda had returned safely from her raid. It has been there at the back of her mind for hours, unformed, unacknowledged, no more than half-conscious, inescapable. Kirsten has never credited the idea of intuition—a matter, clearly, of unconsciously processed subliminal clues—much less admitted to having any herself. Yet the certainty that something wrong has been worming its way inexorably into her attention all morning. A forboding.

She makes a determined effort to set it away from her. Shades of the banshees, King. Next you’ll be conjuring up your great-great-great-to-the-twenty-third grandma-the- druidess and prattling about the Sight.

Or worse, you’ll be paying attention to run-off-at-the-mouth raccoons who think they’re the freaking Oracle of Deliphi.

The rationalizing does no good. The feeling persists, focuses. Something to do with Dakota. Not physical danger, not violence, but a threat nonetheless.

Kirsten does not know which is more unsettling; that the feeling exists or that she cannot quite pin it down. She toggles the data files up onto the plasma screen again, attempting to lose her unease in the inexorable march of figures scrolling down from the top into useless oblivion.

Numbers, numbers. All of them useless.

Halfway through a set, Asimov whines and levers himself up from the residual warmth of the hearth, making for the front door at a trot. His high, sharp bark comes at the same instant as the knock. Kirsten follows him into the hall, sudden fear drying her mouth. She flings open the door before the knocker can descend a second time.

“Dakota?” She blurts the name before she can think, knowing full well that, like herself, Dakota has a key. Knowing that, bred to country hospitality as she is, the veterinarian-cum-rancher seems to regard the front door as the ‘company’ entrance.

“Is Koda here?” The words stumble over her own, echoing her own anxiety.

Kisten stares up at Tacoma, whose face registers confusion as well as apprehension. Her voice sounds high and strained in her own ears. “What’s wrong?”

“I can’t find Koda.” Tacoma says. “I was hoping she was here.”

Kirsten opens the door wide, inviting him in. ‘What is it?” she repeats. “What’s happened.?”

Tacoma moves past he, into the living room, Asi on his heels. “Nothing, yet. But I need to talk to her.”

“She’s not at the clinic?”

“I’ve just come from there. She’s not with the Colonel, she’s not at the Base hospital, she’s not at the Judge Advocate’s Office. I thought she might be with you.”

“Oh.” I thought she might be with you. For some reason, she cannot quite get past that assumption to ask the obvious questions. It makes a small warm spot somewhere around her solar plexus; spreads, rising into her face. Hastily, before he can see, she says, “I’ll get you something to drink.”

When she comes back with a second cup of tea a moment later, Tacoma has taken off his jacket and is sitting on the couch. His head is bowed, the cool light picking out his profile against the pale sky framed in the window. Asi, as comfortable with him as with his sister, sprawls at his feet, one big hand absently ruffling the fur on the dog’s neck. For some reason, that strikes her with a force greater than anything Tacoma has said. She has never seen him with an animal before when he was not entirely present, his attention as fully engaged as with a human. The chill is back.

He hardly notices her when she sets the cup down in front of him, forcing her voice to calm. “What is it? Tell me.”

Tacoma picks up the cup in both hands but does not drink. “I need to talk to her,” he repeats. “I’ve done something she—” He breaks off, and for a moment Kirsten thinks has said all he will. Then, “It’s something I had to do. But it’s going to hurt her.”

For a moment, the image of the woman asleep with the wolves flashes across Kirsten’s mind. She knows that Dakota had gone to them for healing; but she knows, too—no, dammit, she feels—the pain that had driven her to it. “I’ll help if I can,” she says carefully. “But I can’t help with what I don’t know.”

Tacoma shakes his head, his hair coming lose from its thong at the nape of his neck and spreading across his shoulders like a mane. After a moment he says, “You were with her when she found Igmu Tanka Kte.”

“Who?”

“The wolf. The one caught in the trap.”

“The pup’s father.”

“The pup’s father. You’ve probably heard that a lot of Native American people have special relationships with certain four-legs or winged ones.”

Try a raccoon with an attitude problem. But this isn’t about her, and aloud she says, “I’ve heard about it.”

“Most people call them totems.” A wave of his hand dismisses the word and the idea. “Sometimes they just come to us in dreams, or visions. Sometimes there’s a living animal that is the embodiment of that dream spirit.”

“And that wolf was—“

“Koda’s friend. Not a spirit, not Wolf-with-a-capital-W, but a living companion as individual as you are. A person.” He takes a sip of the tea. “Most whites wouldn’t understand that. I think you do.”

Running her own hand over Asi’s ruff, she speaks around the lump in her throat. “Yes. I think I do.”

“So you see, what I did—what Manny and Andrews and I did—we brought his body back when we went out to check the traps.”

“But what’s—” She breaks off. “Dakota doesn’t know that.”

“She doesn’t know that.” Tacoma confirms. “She doesn’t know he’s in the freezer at the clinic, either.”

A shiver passes over Kirsten’s skin. She knows, having lost her first shepherd to dysplasia and her second to a drunken bastard speeding down the street at Thirty-Nine Palms, that veterinarians routinely freeze the bodies of their deceased patients if the owner wants to bury the animal at home. She had helped carry the cold, cold box containing the body of Flandry into the small garden behind the family house at the Marine base the year after she lost her hearing, the silence as dead in her heart as in her ears. “You brought him back to bury?” But she knows that is wrong as soon as the words leave her lips.

“No.” Again a shake of his head, and again it strikes Kirsten how much he reminds her of a big cat. “I brought him back because he—his body—is witness to what Dietrich was.”

“To save Manny’s butt,” she says bluntly.

“To save Manny’s butt,” he confirms. “And to show exactly why we have to keep enforcing the laws against the trapping and indiscriminate killing of other living nations, even when we’re in the middle of a crisis that could wind up destroying us all. It’s about how we survive, not just if we survive.”

“Look,” Kirsten says sharply. “I understand what you did. I understand why you need to tell Dakota before she forgodsake opens up the freezer and finds him without warning. But you’re sounding like someone who’s going to be shot at dawn. Give me some help here. What’s the real problem?”

“The real problem—the real problem is that it’s a desecration. A desecration of the body of someone my sister loves.” He pauses, glancing at her face to see if she is following him at all.

She is not, not entirely, but she says, “Go on.”

“It’s how we Lakota deal with our dead,” he says. “You’ve seen pictures, maybe in movies, of our traditional burial platforms?”

“Like scaffolds? Out in the open?”

“Like that. It’s illegal to bury humans that way, now, because of health regulations. At least, it was.” A ghost of a smile touches his face, so like his sister’s except for the dark eyes. “But traditional people have always seemed to find a way to get around the law. You’d be surprised how many empty coffins you’d find if you dug up a cemetery on one of the old reservations.”

“But doesn’t that leave the body unprotected?”

Tacoma nods. “The whole idea is to leave the body unprotected. To give it back to the earth and the creatures it sustains.”

“Just as—“

“Just as other creatures have sustained our lives by their deaths. The body goes back to mitakuye oyasin—to all our relations.”

Kirsten tries to imagine leaving Flandry’s body in the street where he lay bleeding in the street, or even in the open where crows and weasels and other scavengers could tear at it. She cannot. Because what I did for him was right—for me For someone whose beliefs and customs were different, giving a beloved friend to a hole in the earth would seem as wrong as leaving his body in the open would to her. Just as painful. Aloud she says, “You have to tell her.”

“I have to tell her. But first I have to find her.”

“I’ll help. Let me get my jacket, and—“

She is not halfway to her feet when the front door slams open against the wall of the entryway. Boots echo sharply on the floorboards. Dakota Rivers stands in the archway that opens into the room, her hair loose about her face, her chest heaving. Her blue eyes are as cold as the dark between the stars. “There you are,” she says in a voice colder still. “Goddam you , what have you done?”

CHAPTER TWENTY THREE

DAKOTA ABRUPTLY AWAKENS to the sound of a low, but purposeful, growl, and the feel of a tense body all but vibrating along her left side. Her eyes quickly open to see Shannon plastered against the far wall next to the door, eyes wide as saucers, face white as cream.

“Relax,” Koda orders in a calm, even tone. “She’s not strong enough to come after you, and if you stay that way much longer, you’re gonna pass out.”

The Vet Tech’s dark, staring gaze darts, unseeing, around the room as if seeking an escape that is literally one step away.

“I mean it, Shannon. Calm down. Now.”

Instinctively responding to Dakota’s tone, Shannon relaxes, slumping against the wall and breathing deeply, as if she’s just come out of a trance.

“Good,” Dakota replied, rolling up to a seated position in time to cushion the fall of the she-wolf, whose energy has been completely drained by her protective display. Stroking the wolf’s head, she cradles the slowly awakening pup in her free hand, smiling slightly as tiny teeth and a curled pink tongue are displayed in a puppy-sized yawn. “Do me a favor and mix up some formula for this one. I made up some mash for the others, it’s in the refrigerator. Just take it out to warm and I’ll feed them when I’m done here.”

Nodding, Shannon keeps to the walls as she circles the room toward the counter where the formula ingredients are kept. Moments later, she approaches the tall woman, bottle in hand. Her posture is deliberately relaxed, but Dakota can smell the fear radiating from her in waves. The she-wolf scents it as well, and growls low in her throat, causing Shannon to drop the bottle into Dakota’s lap and back away, hands raised. “I—I’m sorry,” she mumbles. “My brother was attacked by a wolf when we were kids. It’d been shot and just left there to die. He just wanted to help, but…. I—I don’t think I’ve ever gotten past that.”

Nodding in understanding, Koda curls the pup next to his mother while supporting his head. He latches on as soon as the nipple enters his mouth, sucking vigorously and making little squeaking noises that cause Shannon to smile past her fear.

“G’wan out and see to the rest of our patients,” Koda says without looking up from her task “I’ll take care of things here.”

“Alright,” Shannon answers softly, somewhat embarrassed at her fearful display. “I’ll…um…be just down the hall if you need me.”

Without waiting for an answer, she darts outside and into the hall, leaning back against the cool wall with a definite sense of relief. Even so, the embarrassment still suffuses her face with a rosy glow. She’s old and honest enough to admit to the healthy crush she has on the tall, beautiful vet. The thought of doing something to upset her is….

“Alright,” she says, pushing herself away from the wall. “There are still a lot of animals that need care, Shannon, so start doing what they’re not paying you for and forget about this mess.”


*

Two hours later, all of the animals in the isolation ward have been examined, fed, watered, and placed back within their cleaned kennels. The she-wolf is sleeping soundly, her pup curled tight against her. Rising up from the kennel, Koda goes to the sink and washes her hands, then pulls off the gown she’s used to care for the animals in her charge. With one last look around, assuring herself that all is fine, she steps from the room, allowing the door to hiss softly closed behind her. She comes upon Shannon in the hallway as the young tech is attempting to convince a large, furry dog of indeterminate parentage that he really does want to go into the exam room and get his ears looked at.

The dog takes one look at Koda coming up behind Shannon and obediently walks into the room, leaving the young tech stumbling and almost falling into Dakota’s arms.

“Oh!” She jumps forward, spinning to look at the woman behind her, and immediately colors. “I’m sorry. You startled me.”

Koda steadies her with a touch to her arm, then passes, taking a brief look into the exam room, where the dog stands wagging his tail at her. “The Iso ward is buttoned up. Check in on them every fifteen minutes or so, and if there’s anything amiss, get ahold of Tacoma or Manny. I won’t be gone long.”

“Ok,” Shannon replies. “I’ll keep watch.”

“Good.” With a final smile, Koda continues her trek down the well-lit hallway and slips through the door.

The air is warm and smells of a spring that has finally come as she opens the final door and steps outside. She takes in a deep breath to cleanse her sinuses of the smell of bleach and alcohol and sickness, then lets it out a bit at a time, feeling some of the tension wash away from her body. With an added energy to her step, she crosses the short walk, and rounds the battered “company truck”, pulling open the back doors and peering inside. A cased hunting rifle, a .22 and perfect for her needs, sits near the front, the black leather of its case gleaming mellowly in the sunlight streaming through the truck’s bed. She lays a hand on it, then draws it away as a thought enters her mind. With a short nod, she leaves the rifle where it lies and backs out, slamming the doors securely shut.

Breaking into a light jog that warms and soothes her muscles, she heads back to the house. The house is, as expected, empty, and she enters quickly and quietly, as is her custom. In deference to the beauty of the day, most of the windows are open. The slight breeze flutters the curtains and brings with it the freshness of the outside air, tingeing the faint lingering smell of woodsmoke with the scent of newly budding life. A fist lightly clenches her heart, then releases as she thinks of her own beloved home, shuttered and abandoned these long, bleak months.

On the heels of that thought, quiet unbidden, comes a mental picture of Kirsten stepping into that space for the first time. An unconscious smile bows her lips as she plays the image through in her mind. And on the heels of that image comes another; the memory—so very vivid—of the kiss she shared with Kirsten in the very spot where she now stands. She can feel her pulse quicken as little sparks skitter down her limbs and belly, coiling together to form a gentle warmth that she is coming more and more to associate with the young scientist.

A moment later, she shakes her head, dispelling her thoughts, though not the feelings accompanying them, and walks into a spare room where most of her gear is stored. There, sitting behind her largest knapsack is a finely detailed leather case. Lifting it, she unhooks the rawhide loops from the bone buttons and slips out her bow. It is a beautiful piece, made for her by her uncle, Manny’s father, and a master craftsman. Made from the wood of the Osage Orange tree, it is strong, limber, and Traditional. Her quiver and arrows, these steel-tipped, lay next to the bowcase, and she picks up the quiver and slips it over her shoulder so that it rests easily, familiarly, against her back.

Bow in hand, she exits the house as quickly and as quietly as she had entered, leaving nothing to mark her passing behind.


*

The guards open the gate for her without complaint, and she slips into the freedom of open spaces, taking in the beauty of the day and letting the sun work its customary magic on her as she breaks into a trot, headed for the high crest ahead, where she’d found the she-wolf nights before.

She spies several sets of rabbit tracks straight away and smiles. The meat will be perfect to mix with the mash she’s already prepared, enabling the injured animals to regain their strength more quickly on food they’re accustomed to eating.

She notices that the tracks lead in the direction of the lone tree directly ahead; the tree whose bark litters the ground and whose trunk provides a living monument to the friend she’s lost. With a soft sigh, she continues in the direction of the tree, stepping around the huge trunk as the tracks veer off, and stopping, bow hanging slackly from a suddenly limp hand.

Wa Uspewicakiyapi is gone. Only the blood swirling in the rapidly melting snow remains. There are no bits of fur, no drag marks that would indicate a large predator coming upon his corpse. She blinks, and then stares. There, in the fresh muck and gore, lie a fresh set of bootprints of a size and a pattern she knows all too well.

Her lips peel back from her teeth, exposing a snarl more feral than any wolf ever born.

“TACOMA!!!!!”


*

The man who slowly rises to his feet is her brother. That thought is clear in the part of her mind that remains in the human world. Tacoma, her twin in all but the day of his birth, close as if they had shared the floating darkness of their mother’s womb.

It is all that stops Dakota from launching herself across the room at him. Her vision holds him in the bright center of encroaching darkness, the hunter-sight that narrows until it focuses on the prey and the prey alone. Vaguely she is aware of another presence in the room, shifting form as the light pulses with every slam of her heart against her breastbone, now human, now not. Her blood howls in her veins, adrenaline sending shock after shock through nerves that she wills not to respond. Dry as old cotton, her mouth struggles to shape human speech. She says again, laying the words down like stones, “What have you done with him?”

In all their lives, Tacoma has never spoken less than truth to her. At some level, she knows that the shadow in his eyes is not a lie but uncertainty not over what to tell her but how. She waits in frozen silence, her anger gone all to ice within her. After a moment he says, “I brought him back to the clinic, Dakota.”

The cold within her goes more frigid still. There is only one place in the clinic he can be. Just to make certain, she asks. “In the freezer? Is that why the keys weren’t on the hook this morning?”

“Yes,” he answers quietly, “to both questions.”

“I scolded Shannon for losing them..” She makes a small, futile gesture with one hand. It seems to move on its own volition, apart from her will. “I should have believed her when she said she hadn’t been careless.”

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean for her to be blamed. I was looking for you just now to tell you.”

Slowly color fades back into the edges of her vision, expanding the space around Tacoma to include the rust-red bricks of hearth behind him; the puzzled face of Asimov, head canted to one side; Kirsten, her eyes wide with something that is part fear, part pain. Some of her anger goes out of her then, leaving emptiness behind. And yet, she knows that the fear is for her, not of her; the pain endured for her. She lets some of the anger flow out of her on a sigh. “Why, Tacoma? For gods’ sake, why?”

Tacoma pauses, and Koda realizes that he is choosing his words carefully. Then he says, “To be a witness, tanksi. Partly to show that Manny shot a man who was violent and dangerous and had earned his death. And more importantly, to show what we—we humans, all of us—can fall back to all too easily.”

“We’ve already begun to slip, Dakota.” That is Kirsten, speaking softly. “Think about that mob at the gate. The bastards who shot the mother wolf for sheer cruelty. We—all of us, the scraps of our society—can go back to living as we did a hundred years ago. Or we can make something different.”

Stepping softly, Tacoma crosses the space between them, holding out his hand to her. “The buffalo can come back, Koda. Igmu Tanka Kte’s son and his grandsons can run free on the plains again. Puma can come down from the mountain and out of the desert where she has been driven by too many guns, too little care for life.”

Tacoma is not a shaman. But Koda can see the vision clear in his eyes and does not doubt its truth. A shiver ghosts over her skin. The prophecy is an ancient one, brought to the Lakota people along with the sacred pipe and the seven ceremonies. In an age long past, Ptecincala Ska Wakan Winan, White Buffalo Calf Woman, had foretold the restoration of the Earth and all her children, the return of nations long since passed over to walk the Blue Road of spirit. Their father’s great grandfather had danced the Ghost Dance to bring that restoration nearer. His father and mother had danced, too, and had died in a hail of U. S. Cavalry bullets for it. Wanblee Wakpa. himself wore the hummingbird shirt and stamped the measure of the dance into the dry earth of Pine Ridge during the uprising of ’73. “The time of the white buffalo is coming,” Dakota says. “You see it.”

“I see it. I see it as clearly as I see you, tanski.”

“And was it necessary to desecrate Igmu Tanka Kte’s body for your vision, thiblo?’ The edge is back in Koda’s voice. “Do you think Ina Maka can’t do it without you? That is pride speaking.”

“And that is pain speaking, Dakota.” The soft voice is Kirsten’s. The young woman’s face is pale as moon shadow on snow, but her eyes are resolute. “He was your teacher, wasn’t he? Let him teach others, too.”

“Don’t let his death go for nothing, tanksi.” Tacoma reaches for her hand, and this time Dakota allows him to enfold it in his own. “Neither you nor I nor Kirsten can say anything that will speak as clearly as his suffering.”

“You know there will be attempts to excuse Dietrich, Dakota,” Kirsten says. “People will tell themselves and each other that he was only trying to make a little extra money for his family, if he had one. They will say that we need fur now to keep us warm. That he was doing a service and that the uprising has made all our environmental protections obsolete. If we are to keep those laws, as we must, abstract arguments won’t work. What happened to your wolf will.”

Trapped.

Koda is pinned like a display specimen between their love and their logic, nowhere to go. Salt stings her eyes, tears she will not permit herself. She lowers her face so that they cannot see and says quietly around the cold that still burns raw in along her nerves. “He taught and protected me, and there was nothing I could do when he needed me.” Suddenly her rage tears through the wall she has built around it, ripping through her like a terrible birth. “I didn’t even know, goddamit. I should have known. I should have.”

Should have known he was in trouble. Should have known he was dying.

Should have known better than to leave him lying in the melting snow, no matter how burying him would have gone against tradition and her own deeply held conviction of the interdependence of all life.

He never failed me, and I have failed him when it counted most.

Gently she removes her hand from Tacoma’s. “Wicate,” she says.

Stepping away, she lets herself out into the spring morning, her feet carrying her blindly where they will.


*

The door closes behind Dakota with a snap like a spine breaking. Without volition, Kirsten takes a step forward to follow her, then checks herself abruptly. The jolt of it goes through her body as sharply as if she had walked into plate glass; the barrier transparent, invisible, strong. Over her shoulder, she looks up at Tacoma, whose eyes are as wide and dark with pain as his sister’s. He turns back to the fireplace, supporting himself against the mantel with both hands, his head bowed. “Christ,” he says, between his teeth. “Jesus. Fucking. Christ. Is there any way I could possibly have done it any worse than that?”

Kirsten steps up behind him and silently lays a hand on his shoulder. “Is there any way you could have done it that would have been less painful? No matter what you did or said, it was going to hurt her.” After a moment, she says, “You’re right, you know.”

“Oh, I know that.” He shakes his head, the dark hair spreading across his shoulders like a lion’s mane. “She knows it; you know it, everybody and his bastard brother knows it. And it doesn’t really matter a damn.”

“What we make of our world from now on matters. She knows that, too.”

“She knows that better than most of us.” Tacoma pushes himself away from the fireplace, turns again to face her. “Give her a while, then go after her. She’s going to need you.”

Kirsten feels the heat spread up her throat and into her face. Is it as obvious as that? Aloud she says, “Shouldn’t you—?”

“No. Not now.” From his pocket, he produces a pair of silver keys on a ring. “Give her these. I’ve got to get a team together to try to move a couple of generators from the wind farm. I’ll see her before I go.”

For long moments after the door shuts for a second time, Kirsten stands starting at the two small pieces of metal in her palm. From somewhere deep in her memory comes the image of a blue butterfly, fluttering its wings; the flutter starting a breeze; the breeze becoming a wind; the wind feeding a hurricane. Not even in Minot, with her fingers on the keys of the one computer whose codes could set the world to rights, did she feel the future so light in her hand.

She can hide the keys. She can take them back to the clinic and hang them in their accustomed place on the board.

Or she can take them to Dakota and trust her to make the right choice through her anger and her pain.

For a moment she turns the keys over in her fingers. They take the light from the window, glinting in the strengthening sun. Truth or dare. Truth or risk the loss of something she has never dared hope for, in all her life, for whatever life there may be left.

No choice at all, really. She slips the keys into her pocket and goes in search of her windbreaker.

Half an hour later she stands beneath the sycamore tree where the land falls away toward the woods. The snow has melted from the pavement; elsewhere it lies in meager patches, cupped in tangles of root and the blue shadow of the hollow slope. There is nothing to hold the print of a foot, only the smooth surface of the cement and the remains of last summer’s grass, the faintest hint of green just visible through the matted stalks. A gust of air ghosts over the dry meadow, further obliterating any sign of passage. Dakota might be able to track her quarry down a sidewalk or over dead grass, but Kirsten has no such skill, and she has left Asi at home.

Now what?

The veterinary clinic is a possibility. The memory of Dakota sleeping beside the widowed she-wolf and her pup comes to Kirsten as intensely as if she still stood at the door of the isolation ward. Koda might go there again in search of comfort, but the clinic also houses the body of her beloved companion. A shiver passes over Kirsten’s skin at the thought: the clinic seems haunted now, not so much by the wolf’s spirit as by the human memory of his death. Or Dakota may have left the base altogether, gone out into the solitude of the surrounding hills.

Kirsten does not know her way through the countryside here. If she is to leave the Base, she will have to return for Asi, possibly requisition a vehicle. The idea of tracking Dakota cross country with a dog, even Asi who clearly regards Koda as his second human, revolts her. Shading her eyes with her hand, she squints into the sun, standing down now halfway from noon. A ray catches the handful of snow still lingering in the fork of a limb directly above her, and it shatters into rainbows, light spiraling outward in all the shades of the spectrum. Perched on the branch, just visible within the spinning brilliance, sits a dark shape with a masked face and golden eyes. “Lost, are you?”

Kirsten cannot tell whether the voice speaks in the lifting breeze or only in her head. “You again,” she snaps. “Go away. I don’t have time for hallucinations right now.”

“Don’t you want to know what I can tell you?”

“I want to know where Dakota Rivers is. Can you tell me that?”

A grin splits Wika Tegalega’s face. “Of course I can. Ask me nicely, and I might even answer.”

Kirsten’s patience, what there is of it, snaps. “Then tell me, goddammit! You’re nothing but a figment of my unconscious mind, anyway!”

“Tch,” says Tega mournfully, shaking his head. “Was that nice?” His image seems to recede behind the shifting light, itself fading back into the deep blue of the sky.

“Wait!” she cries, reaching out toward the branch above her head. “Please! Tell me.”

“Go fish,” he says, and is gone. When Kirsten lowers her hand, blinking against the sun, there is only the empty sky and the branch, the last handful of snow trickling down the channels of its pale bark.

Kirsten shakes her head in disgust. She needs desperately to find Dakota; she has no idea where to look; and the most constructive thing she can do is stand bemused, conversing with an imaginary raccoon with a warped sense of humor. It occurs to her that she may well have lost her mind, or at least a significant portion of it.

And not a shrink within a thousand miles, maybe more.

Go fish.

Fish. A small silver fish wriggling in a furry, long-fingered hand. A stream and a tree arching over it.

As certainly as she had known of Dakota’s return from her solo raid on the birthing center, Kirsten knows where she can find the other woman. It is an unaccustomed sort of knowledge, rooted somewhere beyond the borders of rationality, direct and unmediated. It does not even occur to her to question it. Deliberately at first, then almost running across the uneven ground, Kirsten sets off toward the woods.

Once in the trees, she slows her pace. She does not have the habit of silent movement that she has seen in Dakota, but she can avoid crunching dead bark underfoot or tangling herself in the tough, dry stems of trailing vines. The afternoon light filters through the woven branches overhead, laying a sheen of gold and copper over the brown stalks of last summer’s undergrowth, striking the sycamores’ skin to silver. A red squirrel, its coat glinting like russet velvet in the sun, scampers among the slender twigs of the canopy. From deep in the trees comes the trip-hammer drumming of a early woodpecker, his rhythm making point counterpoint to the beating of her own heart. Here and there the branches bear the first swellings of burgeoning leaves. The ground beneath her carries the musty odor of mold, mixed with the green life to come.

Though she has been here twice, Kirsten does not know the woods, and she lets her feet and her instinct carry her unerringly to the streamside where she first encountered Wika Tegalega. A deep quiet descends upon her as she moves deeper into the trees, slowing her pulse, stilling the rustling of the dead leaves and the small life that inhabits them. The birds and the squirrels’ feet grow silent. The feeling is not unfamiliar; she has known its among the standing stones at Amesbury, in the angled light and lingering incense of Notre Dame. The sacredness of the place prickles along her skin.

Kirsten hears the stream before she can see it. The water, swollen with snow melt, makes a soft rushing sound as it pours over the low cataracts of its limestone bed and swirls around the roots of the centuries-old sycamores that march along its banks. When she emerges, still soundlessly, from the screen of the trees, Kirsten can see that its speed casts a fine spume into the air, misting the surface of the water and the slopes leading down to it. One tree, larger than the others, looms over the breadth of the stream, its roots, thick as a man’s body, woven into the living rock at its base. Dakota sits among them, her feet braced against a humped root. Her elbows rest on her bent knees, her chin on her folded hands. For a moment it seems to Kirsten that the other woman has been weeping; but fine droplets spangle her dark hair as well as her cheeks. And then Kirsten catches sight of Dakota’s eyes, dry and grey and empty as a winter sky.

The sight stops Kirsten in her tracks, her breath catching in her throat. Christ. Now what? I don’t know what to say to a face like that.

A month ago, a week ago, she would have turned away, retreating behind the barricades of her mind, into the silence a mere touch behind her ear could bring. Even now, her first impulse is flight, the long muscles in her legs spasming in her urgency to be gone.

Her fear has no place in this clearing. The power of earth and air and water here is an almost palpable thing, holding her fast. For a long moment she stands and watches the motionless form beside the swirling water. There is no acknowledgement, nothing that signals acceptance or even consciousness of her presence.

What can I say to her?

But that is the wrong question.

Silently as a shadow, she crosses the small open space beneath the sycamores. Half a dozen steps bring her close enough to see the minute rise and fall of the dark blue and green plaid flannel across Dakota’s shoulders, and the relief that washes through her tells her just how much she has feared. A few more steps carry her to the tangle of roots that spread out almost as widely as the crown of the tree. Koda still gives no sign that she is aware of Kirsten’s presence.

What if—?

She has heard that it is dangerous to touch a person who is in a trance state. An out-of-body soul might lose its lifeline and never come home, wandering forever in the grey interstices between worlds.

And that, she thinks with the certainty of recognition, is what I am. Have been. A homeless soul.

And here, here at last, is my home.

Very carefully, so as to make no sudden noise, Kirsten steps among the roots, placing her feet among the gnarled spirals, steadying herself against the trunk with an outstretched hand. Near the base of the tree, beneath a hollow large enough to hold a grown woman, a knot juts out at waist level, its blunt wedge shape suggestive of the head of a great serpent rising above the coiled roots. A jolt of recognition goes through Kirsten.

Snake Mother, Earth Mother. Keeper of the Tree of Knowledge. Grant me wisdom.

She closes the space between herself and Koda, dropping silently to her knees. Very gently, she slips her arms around Dakota’s waist, leaning her head against the other woman’s strong shoulder. For an instant, Koda’s back stiffens against her, then relaxes, settling to her own shape as if their bodies had been molded one for the other. After a moment, Dakota’s hand covers both of hers where they rest against her waist. It is chill as death.

Time passes. The sun slips lower in the sky, angling through the trunks of the trees, turning them to columns of gold and silver. Finally, her hand warm now, Dakota stirs.

“You found me,” she says.

Rubbing her cheek lightly against Dakota’s shoulder, she answers. “I followed. Where you go, I will go.”

Dakota’s hand enfolds Kirsten’s own, raises it to her lips. The kiss is light as a breath of air. “My people will be your people. My home is your home.”

From somewhere deep in her memory, archaic words rise to Kirsten’s tongue. “Faith and truth will I bear to you, to live or die.”

In this life, in the next. For all time.

When the shadows begin to thicken about them, Koda lets her breath go on a long sigh. “We should go back..”

Reluctantly, Kirsten lets her arms fall from Dakota’s waist. “I suppose we should.”

Koda stands, extending a hand to help Kirsten up. It is not until they are once again at the door of the house and she must find her keys that she lets go.


*

The house is cool and quiet as they enter. The trees outside the windows cast moving shadows across the opposite wall like the outspread arms of dancers swaying to a beat only they can hear. The sound of nails clicking across the polished floor heralds the entrance of Asi, who comes over to greet them, taking healthy sniffs of their clothing before presenting his head and body to be scratched.

Koda notices a folded sheet of paper ruffling in the breeze and walks over to the kitchen table, sliding it out from under the salt-shaker-cum-paperweight and bringing it closer to her face in deference to the swiftly fading light. The page is covered with Maggie’s bold, flowing script.

Dakota, Kirsten:

I’m gathering up some of my men and setting up a census-taking crew for the base. I think it’s about time we figure out who and what we have here, and what skills we might be able to use both in the short and long term.

I’d like to do the same thing with the outlying cities, just to see where we stand. Kirsten, if you don’t mind, I’d like to have you accompany me to Rapid City tomorrow so we can get a first-hand look at what we’ve got left—resource and humanity wise. Finding a judge is one of our first priorities. If we can’t find one, any half-way competent lawyer will have to do. I’m not optimistic about either of those chances, but it’s a pressing need we have to fill.

Don’t expect me home tonight. I’ll bunk in the barracks and see you at 0800.

Maggie

“Looks like you’ve got a full day tomorrow,” Koda remarks, handing the note over. Kirsten’s quick eyes scan the writing and she frowns.

“Well, it wasn’t something I was planning on, but I suppose….” Her voice trails off as she scans the note again. She knows the value and desperate need of the census; it was she, in fact, who had suggested it to Maggie in the first place. But she had hoped, truly and dearly, that she would be allowed to play ‘grunt’ and sit behind a table with pencil and pad in hand, taking names.

The subtext of the note she holds dashes those hopes like bone china beneath a bull’s hoof. “Crap,” she half-whispers as she crumples the note into a ball and tosses it into the trash. “Just…crap. I hate being used as a figurehead.”

“You could always say no,” is Koda’s practical advice, delivered with a faint smirk and a lift of her eyebrow.

Kirsten thinks about it for a moment, then shakes her head. “No,” she sighs, “Maggie’s right. If we want to get this done the right way, and that takes me marching at the head of this little parade, than I’ll just have to suck it up and get it done. Hopefully, it won’t take very long.”

“Mm.”

“So,” Kirsten says in a deliberately bright tone, needing the subject turned away for now, “are you hungry?”

“Not really.” In truth, since Wa Uspewicakiyapi’s death, grief has placed a leaden ball in her belly; a ball that does not share its space with food well at all.

Kirsten catches the dimming of those brilliant eyes and holds back a sigh. “There’s some soup left over from last night,” she continues as if Koda had answered in the affirmative. “If you’ll do me the favor of taking Asi out, I’ll heat it up.”

A quick glance from Koda lets Kirsten know her plan has been discovered, but, with a shrug of her broad shoulders, the vet signals Asi and crosses the kitchen, opening the door as the large dog bolts outside, bellowing like a calf over his sudden, and welcome, freedom.

As she puts the pot on to simmer, Kirsten’s eyes are drawn to the scene outside the small kitchen window. Asi, sides heaving with exertion, trots back to Dakota, bringing back a ‘stick’ the size of a tree branch and dropping it at her feet. He then sits, his body shaking in canine ecstasy, eyes rolling, jaws quivering, and tail wagging so rapidly that the tall grass around him all but leaps out of the way.

Kirsten can’t help but smile, hearing the delightful sound of Koda’s laughter as she picks up the slimy stick and flings it far across the lawn, farther than Kirsten could ever throw, even on her best day. Asi bolts after it as if his tail’s aflame, barking joyfully all the while. The setting sun glints sparks of red from Koda’s glossy black hair in a way that Kirsten finds extremely appealing.

As if sensing the attention, Koda turns, and their eyes lock for a timeless moment. Which is, unfortunately, broken much too soon by an insistent German Shepard and his stick. Shaking her head ruefully, Kirsten turns back to her task, taking a wooden spoon from the drawer and stirring the soup as Asi’s yaps and barks soothe the air around her.


*

Koda looks up from her book as Kirsten rounds the couch and sets down a tray holding two steaming bowls and a loaf of French bread down on the coffee table. The fire is blazing cheerfully, chasing off the evening chill, and Asi jumps up from his place beside it, sniffing with great interest. His ears and tail soon droop, however, as he is banished to Kirsten’s bedroom with a pointed look from his Mistress.

Dakota lays aside the book she’s been reading just in time to receive the warm bowl that is thrust into her hands.

Ignoring the look she’s receiving, Kirsten digs into her soup with gusto, enjoying both the warmth and the hearty flavor. A moment later, and with a sigh, Koda does the same, grudgingly admitting, if only to herself, that this simple meal does indeed hit the spot.

They are both quickly done, sopping the last of the soup with the thick, crusty bread and laying their bowls down on the table. Asi has wormed his way back into the room and lies once again next to the fire, head on his massive paws, snoring away.

Kirsten and Koda sit in companionable silence, looking into the cheery flames as if messages can be divined there. After a moment, Kirsten speaks, “It’s so quiet, you know? I mean, yeah, we’re in the middle of God’s Country and all that, but even so, I keep expecting to hear car horns and televisions and telephones and things that we all took for granted. And now….” She slumps back into the couch’s warm comfort, still staring into the flames.

“Do you miss those things?” Koda asks softly.

“Sometimes,” Kirsten answers honestly. “Technology was a big part of who I was…who I am. Sometimes I wonder how I’ll cope without it. How we’ll all cope.”

“We’ll be fine.” Dakota’s voice is filled with a certainty that Kirsten envies. “Technology, or at least bits and pieces of it, will be around for a long time to come. I just think we’ll come to rely on it a good deal less than we once did.”

“Considering the fact that technology did all this, I suppose that won’t really be a bad thing.”

The two exchange smiles.

Kirsten yawns, then blushes. “Sorry.”

“Don’t be. It’s been a long day. And an even longer one tomorrow.”

“Don’t remind me,” Kirsten groans.

Laughing softly, Koda rises from the couch and holds out a hand. Kirsten grasps it willingly and allows herself to be pulled gently to her feet. She looks toward the dirty dishes.

“Leave ‘em. I’ll take care of washing tonight. I need to go back to the clinic and check on Mama Wolf and her pup anyway.”

“But—.”

“Go to sleep.”

With a small sigh, Kirsten gives in, nodding. “Goodnight, then.”

Koda smiles. “Goodnight.”

Their eyes meet again, and this time, there is no hesitation. Both step forward. Kirsten’s chin raises and Koda’s lowers and their lips meet softly, gently. The kiss lingers, then deepens, and Kirsten can’t help the soft moan that sounds as Koda’s tongue brushes tenderly against her lips before withdrawing.

Both are breathing heavily as they part. They stand there with shining eyes and goofy grins on their faces. Reaching up, Koda trails the back of her knuckles against Kirsten’s soft cheek, then steps back, her expression one of quiet joy. “Goodnight, Kirsten.”

With that, Koda gathers up the bowls, sets them on the tray, turns, and heads for the kitchen, leaving Kirsten to, once again, stare after her, fingers to her lips and a look of absolute wonder on her face.

CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR

THE MOTORCYCLE COMES to a purring halt just outside of a well maintained house set well back in the woods. The windows facing the gravel driveway are opened to their fullest and the warm breeze causes the homely checked curtains to rustle pleasantly. Jeans-clad legs come down to rest easily on either side of the bike, balancing it comfortably as the engine is turned off.

A male voice, elderly but still strong, floats out from the house. “I suppose I should warn you that at this very moment there are seven weapons of various gauges pointed directly at you, and wired to all go off at once. If you’re an android, that might not kill you, but I believe it would make your job just a bit harder. And if you’re a human….”

Long, strong hands reach up and remove the black helmet, causing equally black hair to come cascading down in shining waves. “Nice welcome you’ve got there, Judge,” the sultry voice intones. “You have it in needlepoint hanging over your mantelpiece too?”

A moment of shocked silence. Then, “Is it time to get my prescription changed, or is that really Dakota Rivers darkening my doorstep?”

Koda laughs as she hooks her helmet over the motorcycle’s handlebar. “I dunno. Which answer won’t get me ventilated?”

“Ahh,” comes the dry reply. “Your wit, like a poor vintage, goes to vinegar with age, Ms. Rivers.”

“So do your manners, you old curmudgeon,” Dakota mutters, not-quite under her breath.

“I heard that!”

“You were meant to.”

A moment later, “Well? Don’t just stand there propping up that two-wheeled death machine! I haven’t seen a human face in a goodly number of weeks. Yours will, I suppose, be suitable enough.”

“That’s what I like about you, Judge,” Dakota replies, swinging her leg over the cycle and leaning it down on its kickstand. “You’re all charm.”

“Thank you,” comes the prim reply. “I do try.”

Striding down the neatly tended walk, Dakota grasps the doorknob and twists. The door opens easily, and she steps inside, eyeing the impressive armory of shotguns and rifles, all pointing toward the windows. “You weren’t kidding,” she remarks, whistling softly.

“Have you ever known me to kid?”

Without bothering to reply, Koda moves her gaze from the weapons in a casual sweep around the house. It’s the same as she remembered it; the domain of a single, proud man, a lifelong bachelor with only two passions in life: the law—evidenced by the rows and rows of leather-bound tomes that take up residence on the huge floor-to-ceiling bookshelves covering three of the four walls, and birds—or, more accurately, the watching, cataloguing, and photographing of them. Evidence of this passion can be seen on the remaining wall. Beautiful framed photos fill the huge space over the stone fireplace’s mantle.

Drawn to them, as always, her eyes scan the photos, appreciating their beauty, when she notices one sitting on the corner of the mantelpiece itself, and she finds herself smiling. It is a picture she knows well, especially since she is one of the main subjects of it.

It shows a winter field, blanketed in heavy snow. One lone tree stands in the background, adding perspective. In the foreground, Dakota, clad in leather, holds a gauntleted fist out as a swooping Wiyo, massive wings spread out to their widest point, comes to land.

“I remember that day,” the Judge reflects, drawing a finger across a weathered cheek. Fenton Harcourt is a tall man, still strapping despite his advanced age, with a shock of snow-white hair and a face filled with stern lines that only the occasional twinkle in his deep brown eyes seems to belie. “It was colder than a witches’ mammary and twice as harsh.”

Chuckling, Koda draws her finger lightly across the picture, not quite touching the glass that protects the paper from the elements. It was the first time Wiyo had come at her call and landed on her wrist. She can almost feel the deadly strength of those talons on her arm now; a grip so strong, and yet somehow so tender, that she knew at the time that even if she hadn’t been wearing the gauntlet, her skin would not have been pierced.

Dakota turns from the photo finally, meeting the older man’s deep-set eyes. They share a moment of perfect understanding. Judge Harcourt loves Wiyo almost as fiercely as she does. Just as he had loved, and cared for, Wiyo’s brother, who was brought down by a drunken idiot with a penchant for shooting birds. That man would have been dead by Harcourt’s own hand, judge or no judge, if he hadn’t jumped into his pickup truck and promptly driven it into a tree, turning himself into hamburger flambé.

The Judge had mourned the loss of the bird, mourned as he never would for a fellow human. It was as if he had lost a part of himself in the death of the wild one he had helped to raise from a hatchling. And that loss changed him, profoundly and permanently.

“So,” he says finally, breaking the silence between them, “I assume there’s a purpose for this visit beyond assuring yourself of my current state of liveliness?”

Koda snorts. “You’re too evil to die, old man.”

Harcourt tries to look offended, but the glitter in his eyes once again belies the stern, craggy lines of his face. “Alas, you’ve discovered my secret. Whatever will the Society of Crazed and Evil Immortals (you’ll notice the particular emphasis on certain words there) think? We’re the only group to have survived this latest human debacle intact, you know,” he adds in a mockingly conspiratorial stage whisper.

Koda rolls her eyes, then turns serious. “I need your help.”

The Judge’s bushy eyebrows raise, like two white caterpillars perched atop his glasses. “My help? Whatever for? In case you haven’t noticed, Ms. Rivers, I’m rapidly approaching 80. I’m afraid my days of heroic derring-do are long over.”

“I’m not asking for heroism, I’m asking for help,” Koda bites off as she breaks his gaze and looks out into the springtime day. “Look. I’ve moved down to the base to try and help take care of this mess. Women are being kept in prisons all over this country, raped repeatedly, and forced to bear children for reasons we haven’t figured out yet. We’ve managed to survive another android skirmish, and the survivors are coming through the gates in a never-ending stream.” She sighs, slipping her hands into her pockets. “At first, we just had the usual ‘settling in’ problems, but lately things have been getting worse, in a big way.”

“Yea, verily, I say unto you,” Harcourt’s dry voice intrudes, “wherever two or more are gathered, they’ll spend their time bashing the stuffing out of one another.”

Koda’s smile is faint, and disappears quickly. “That’s becoming the size of it, yeah.”

“I’m failing to see the problem here,” Harcourt remarks. “Surely there are enough military types still alive on that base to adjudicate their own affairs with reasonable swiftness and accuracy.” He holds up one arthritis humped finger. “You’ll notice my use of the word ‘reasonable’, here. I, myself, wouldn’t trust a military court to judge whether my shoes were tied or not. However, it is their domain, is it not?”

Cutting her gaze from the window, she eyes him evenly. His eyebrows go up again. “I’m missing something, I presume.”

“Did you ever hear a state of war or emergency declared?” she asks simply.

He ponders for a moment. “I don’t believe so, no.”

She continues to stare at him until his eyes finally widen in comprehension. “No. No, my dear, and no again. I will not be a party to a pitiful and doomed attempt to prolong the last gasp of a species who should have become extinct before they were allowed to breed. Humankind has finally heard the Judgement Trumpet blown, and I say it’s about damn time.”

“Judge…”

“No, Dakota. No. The body of Man is getting exactly what it deserves. And I, for one, fully intend to enjoy what is left of my life here on this planet in a state of peaceful relaxation, free from the petty concerns of a dying society. I have my books. I have my birds—I spotted a Cassin’s Sparrow just yesterday, by the way. Only the second sighting in this area, I’ll have you know. Too bad there’s no longer anyone around who gives a whit. No, I’m quite afraid you’ll have to find someone else to aid you with the postmortem. I’ve retired from the species.”

Dakota’s gaze goes far away, and Harcourt feels a sense of disquiet niggling its way into his hardened heart.

“Wa Uspewicakiyapi is dead. He was caught in an illegal trap, and attacked by predators. I noticed his mate first. She was looking for help and a couple of drunk assholes were taking potshots at her for shits and giggles. I was able to rescue her. She was starving, bleeding, and had obviously dropped an early litter. When I found the pups, all were dead save one. Wiyo led me to Wa Uspewicakiyapi. There was…nothing I could do for him. His life was….” Pulling her hands out of her pockets, she stares at them as if they are foreign objects. “I killed him.”

Harcourt’s eyes close in sympathy, his face set and grim.

Koda’s jaw clenches, the muscles in her face pronounced. “And now he’s locked up in a freezer on the base…for evidence.” The word comes out like evacuated poison.

“Evidence? For what?”

“Manny and a friend killed the trapper. He’d snared several other animals in his illegal traps. They were rescuing them when he found them and drew a bead on them. They acted in self-defense, and Tacoma believes that Wa Uspewicakiyapi’s body is needed to prove their innocence.”

Such is her state of agitation that she doesn’t see or hear the Judge move, and stiffens slightly as a large, warm hand is placed on her shoulder in a gesture of support. “I need your help, Fenton. Humanity might be dying out, but it’s taking a lot of others as it goes. Innocents who don’t deserve what’s being done to them. I need someone I can respect and trust, and that someone is you.” She turns fully to him, feeling his hand slide away. “Please. Help me.”

Harcourt’s eyes are sad. “Dakota….”

“You won’t have to move there, Fenton. We’ll set something up so it’ll be like the old west. Have all the cases lumped together once or twice a month. I’ll even have a driver come down and pick you up and drop you off back home.” She’s perfectly aware that she’s begging, but knows as well that this is much more important than her pride.

The sudden silence is long and sharp as a shadow-blade dividing the space between them. Dakota relaxes, knowing she’s done the best she can and can only accept his decision, whatever it might be.

His hands clench in tightly made fists, but a reluctant nod is pulled from him, like a confession pulled from a lawbreaker when he realizes the consequences of remaining silent.

“I have conditions,” he remarks in a soft voice.

“Name them.”

“I’ll reserve that right until I set my eyes upon this new Xanadu, if you don’t mind.”

“Fine.”

He nods again. “Store that death trap of yours behind the house. We’ll leave in my truck.”

“Thank you, Fenton,” she says with real emotion.

“Save those for my final decision. Now let’s go.”


*

“It reminds me of the Warsaw ghetto.”

Maggie, sitting beside her in the back of the APC, raises a quizzical eyebrow, and Kirsten falls silent. The convoy of armored vehicles moves slowly through the streets of Rapid City, strung out the length of a city block to allow maneuvering room in the event of attack. Their shadows, spiked with the bristling shapes of automatic weapons, glide along the asphalt beside the trucks, sharp-edged as spilled paint in the noon sun. After a moment Kirsten adds, “I don’t mean the buildings are similar. I mean. . .” she pauses again, searching for the precise word. “They feel. . .robbed.”

Maggie, her hand resting on the M-16 in her lap, does not reply immediately. Then she says, “It’s not just the emptiness. It’s the devastation.”

“Exactly.”

The weeks she has spent on the Base have spoiled her, Kirsten reflects. Even in the first days of the uprising, with bodies frozen or rotting where they lay at the whim of the weather, she has seen nothing like the urban landscape that scrolls across the small rectangle of the vehicle’s armored glass. Houses still stand, for the most part, though here and there blackened beams thrust up out of yet-unmelted snow covering the burnt- out rubble. Some, their windows boarded up, might have been purposefully abandoned when the inhabitants fled. Like others suddenly emptied, though, their doors stand open on broken hinges, odd bits of furniture and clothing scattered across dead lawns sodden with snowmelt. Brightly painted ceramic shards litter the sidewalk where the convoy pauses to turn, the wire frame of a lampshade jammed into the hollow of a tree root; the remains of sofa cushions tumble across a porch where a washing machine lies toppled beside them. Shards of glass cling to the frame of broken-out windows. Here and there a line of holes in splintered siding or gouged brick testifies to automatic weapons fire. There is no way to tell how much of the damage has been done by androids, how much by the looters and two-footed predators who have followed in their wake.

As they move toward the center of the city, signs of life begin to appear. In the abandoned parking lot of an apartment complex, a pair of ten-year-old boys and a cocker spaniel are chasing a Frisbee under the watchful eye of a grey-haired woman with pistol strapped to her hip. Above them, laundry festoons a cobweb of ropes strung between balconies, children’s sweaters in bright pink and yellow, work shirts, a woman’s nightgown in faded black satin and lace. Across the side of one of the buildings, red paint proclaims, JESUS IS COMING BACK!! under a crudely drawn image of a bearded man in a robe. The figure brandishes a sword with one hand, an open book in the other.

“You know, the fanatics scare me as badly as the androids,” Maggie says softly. “The damned metalheads might push us back to the Middle Ages, but it’ll be the schizos who hear God talking to them from the toaster that’ll keep us there.”

“They’re beginning to dig in. We may have to fight them, too.”

“Ironic, isn’t it? First we put down the slave rebellion; next we’re going to have to feed the fanatics and the self-appointed prophets to the lions.”

“Poor lions.” Kirsten’s mouth quirks up in an involuntary smile. “You know Dakota would never let us do that to innocent animals.”

“Or Tacoma. He’s the one with the affinity for cats.” Maggie leans forward and taps the driver on the shoulder. “We’re getting to people. Start the tape.”

Kirsten knows what to expect, but the sound of her own amplified voice is still a shock. The truck’s external speakers sputter and crackle for a moment, then boom out, “Attention! Attention please! This is Kirsten King, speaking for the United States Government. A census will be taken today and tomorrow at the City Auditorium. All citizens are asked to cooperate in determining the needs of the civilian population and in the re-establishment of civil institutions. Thank you for your assistance.” The recording plays over and over again.

As they approach the intersection of suburbia and the business district, signs of habitation become more common. Here and there they pass a pedestrian or a bicyclist. A man on a mule, a double pannier of winter apples suspended across its withers, becomes an unofficial roadblock when his mount halts suddenly in the middle of an intersection, apparently frightened by the strange, square metal things bearing down on it. The lead driver manages to swerve in time, and for an instant Kirsten finds herself face to face with a wall-eyed, bucking beast, its braying clearly audible even through the bulletproof glass and steel walls of the APC. Then her convoy sweeps past, leaving the rider tugging frantically at the creature’s reins.

“There’s a prophecy for you,” Maggie observes wryly. “The Jeep of the future.”

Their route carries them past the block-long remains of a Wal-Mart. The store itself stands back from the street, its massive bulk dark through the steel frames of shattered doors. Its parking lot, though, has been transformed into an open marketplace, with a hundred or so booths of timber studs and plywood crowded onto the asphalt. Many of them stand empty, and Kirsten takes that as a hopeful sign that the proprietors have reported as requested to the City Auditorium to be counted and identified. Others are still open for business. A pen on one side holds animal with long, shaggy coats, whether sheep or wool goats she cannot be sure. Another offers stacks of canned goods, looted from the Wal-Mart itself or other grocery chains; still a third displays a double rank of bicycles, a heavy chain run through their rear wheels into a staple pounded into the pavement at each end of the line. Under a sign that proclaims the occupant a “Taylor,” a woman sits at an old-fashioned treadle sewing machine, steadily feeding a garment of plaid flannel under the needle while a man, evidently her customer, stands by in his pants and undershirt. He holds a chicken firmly tucked under one arm. No prices are posted anywhere.

Kirsten has seen marketplaces like this in North Africa and in parts of Latin America.

Most were at least in part tourist traps, designed to bring in American dollars and German d-marks, attracting local business only incidentally and in small volume. And here, in a deserted parking lot, is the wealthiest, most vigorous economy in the history of the world, reduced to trading eggs for a stolen blanket or the mending of a torn sleeve.

A cold lump of fear congeals in her stomach. With it comes the realization that until now she has acknowledged only two possibilities: either they would all die, which has seemed by far the more likely outcome; or they would survive, pass through a rough patch of perhaps a year or so, until society could be restored to something like normality. Of course, some things would be different, with the numbers of men drastically reduced for a generation or two. Power balances would shift. But she has never truly doubted that enough technology, and the technicians to run it, could survive to make the world a reasonably comfortable place once again.

Until now.

And the cold grows more frigid still, a burning inside her. She—she, Kirsten King— is the duly constituted governor of these people, responsible for their safety and welfare in a world where safety is nonexistent and welfare is sufficient firewood to cook a bartered chicken or keep a family from freezing to death overnight. She may not have atomic warheads under her hand, but the burden of others’ lives is no less for that.

My God, how did Clinton do it? Or Kennedy? How did any of them do it who had any sense of obligation to their people?

In the last few blocks before the Auditorium, they encounter actual traffic, and the convoy slows to a crawl. There are pickups from the country side; more bicycles; horses; a wagon or two. Salvaged from the recesses of a barn or an historic home, a nineteenth-century buggy with a folded-down leather top passes them at a smart clip, followed by a teenager on a skateboard. Most folk, though, travel on foot, some carrying small children, almost all carrying a long gun or pistol strapped to a hip or under an arm. All must run a gauntlet of heavily armed and armored MP’s stationed at a temporary gate of pipe and hurricane fencing. They wave through the personal weapons, for the most part, though no one passes without baring his throat or submitting to a metal scan.

The line of APC’s passes through one vehicle at a time, troops and drivers checked as thoroughly as the civilians. Kirsten had argued at length with the Light Colonel commanding the MP’s over that, and finally had had to order him to treat her convoy exactly as he would civilian transport. If she was to lead these people—and the thought of it had kept her awake most of the night—she had to lead by example. She had to be the first and most visible to honor the law. Maggie, sitting beside her, had sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States, and had laid her life at hazard to do it. It had never occurred to Kirsten when she took the same oath as the most junior member of Hilary Clinton’s Cabinet, that she would ever be asked to do the same.

An ironic smile touches her mouth. Last and least, and the only one left alive that can do what must be done.

At the doors, her escort form a cordon around her, rifles at the ready, eyes scanning the crowd that turns to stare. Maggie, walking just behind, keeps her own weapon at her side, not openly threatening, but prepared nonetheless. Odd, how that might make her uncomfortable if it were anyone but Maggie. She has never before in her life poached anyone’s lover—has hardly thought of having one of her own, much less taking someone else’s—but she trusts Maggie literally with her life, and not just for Dakota’s sake.

The crowd murmurs as they pass through, and she catches fleeting snatches of their comments:

“. . .Look, son, that’s the commander from the Cheyenne. . .”

“. . .our President now. . .”

“. . . cyborg egghead . . .”

“. . . I thought she’d be taller. . .”

From the door comes a snatch of song, and Kirsten puts up a hand to halt her entourage. A man sits beside the entrance on a folding stool, a guitar propped across his knees and a fold of denim where the rest of his left leg should be. His long, graying hair is tied at the nape with a thong of leather; sunglasses hide his eyes. The melody is an old one, a ballad from the feud-ridden Anglo-Scottish border in the days of the first Elizabeth, but the words are new:

All along the bridge she ranSwifter than any deer;A grenade launcher in her hand,And in her heart no fear.All along the bridge she ran,Swifter than any doe;Behind her her two fastest friends,Great-hearted, ran also.

There are several more stanzas, detailing the destruction of the android army on the far bank of the Cheyenne, praising Dakota’s valor, Maggie’s, Tacoma’s, her own. The cold around her heart is back, glacial cold, and with it panic. Only the prospect of disgrace in Maggie’s eyes and Dakota’s keeps her rooted to the concrete floor of the auditorium, a smile on her face that seems to her as rigid as a corpse’s.

God help me, these people think I’m a hero. A real one, like Dakota and Maggie. What will I do? How can I ever measure up to that?

After what seems like an eternity, the song comes to an end.

God prosper now our President,Our lives and safeties all.And her companions in the fightLet honor bright befall.

Kirsten claps with the rest of the crowd, her face burning. “Harry,” someone cries, “do you know who you’re singin’ to?”

“I’m singin’ to you, you bastard!” the musician rejoins; “Only you’re too cheap to stand me to a beer, Todd Rico!”

“This should stand you to a beer or two.” The soft voice is Maggie’s, behind her, and Kirsten watches as she removes the bobcat earcuff and drops it into the hat on the floor beside Harry. Kirsten’s heart clinches; she has no jewelry, and money is useless. The only thing she has of value is the gun she is wearing underneath her jacket. Slowly she unstraps it and lays it, too, at the singer’s feet. “Thank you for a fine song, Harry,” she says. “Perhaps you can sing it again when Dakota Rivers can hear it, too.”

The singer’s head comes sharply round. “Wait. I know your voice.”

She makes a small, deprecatory gesture, halted abruptly. What was not evident before is now; the man cannot see. “Probably not,” she says quietly.

“You’re King,” he says, equally quietly. “I’ve heard you on the TV.”

She nods, then, feeling foolish, “You have a good ear. That must have been months ago.”

“Nah, I remember voices. I lost my sight back in ’03, in Baghdad, along with my leg. Implants wouldn’t take.”

She wants to stop and talk to him, to ask whether he has always been a singer and how he survived the uprising, but the Captain at her elbow is urging her forward, into the huge emptiness of the auditorium. “Ma’am. The people are lining up.”

Instead she thanks Harry again, shaking his hand, and moves on. Behind her she hears the sound of small items dropping into his hat; he has earned his beer and more this afternoon. She says, “That was generous of you, Maggie. I know that cuff means a lot to you.”

Maggie just shrugs. “I have another; I never wear the pair. That gun, though, should feed him for a month or more—way more, if he throws in the story of how he got it. You’re becoming a legend.”

“You, too,” Kirsten retorts. “And I don’t think you like it any better than I do. Dakota will be—“ She pauses, searching for a word. “Embarrassed,” she finishes lamely.

“Try ‘really pissed’,” says Maggie.

Inside, the room has been cordoned into aisles with rope and stanchions. Huge signs with letters march across the walls: A-B, C-E, all the way to XYZ at the opposite side. Uniformed soldiers, all officers from the bean-counting division, sit behind long tables with stacks of legal pads and note cards. Slowly the people sifting in find their initials and form into lines, all talking at once, many pointing at Kirsten where she stands with Maggie and Boudreaux, back in his normal incarnation, at the front of the room. There must be, she estimates, a couple thousand actually on the floor, with more outside.

“Are you going to talk to them?” Boudreaux asks.

“No, I hadn’t planned—“

“You really should, you know.” Maggie says. “Call it winning hearts and minds. We’ll get a lot better cooperation if the folks think they’re doing their President a personal favor.”

She shoots Maggie a withering glare, but accepts the bullhorn from Boudreaux. “All right. Clear me a spot on the table. They all thought I’d be taller.”

Slowly the crowd quiets. From her perch on the center table, Kirsten can make out faces watchful, eager, annoyed. One young mother bounces her crying baby; a man with a bored expression slaps his hat impatiently against his thigh. Hearts and minds.

“Good afternoon,” she says, her voice echoing from the high walls, distorted and tinny in her own ears. “As most of you know, I’m Kirsten King, and as far as we know, I’m the only survivor from the President’s Cabinet in Washington.

“I need your help. We’ve fought off a major attack by the androids and their allies, but we haven’t defeated them yet. There’s lots more out there where those came from, and there’s humans cooperating with them. We still don’t know what they want or who is responsible for the uprising. Those are things we’re going to have to deal with.

“The people of Rapid City and the troops of Ellsworth Air Base shed their blood at the Cheyenne to keep us alive and free. Our duty now is to keep our laws and our Constitution alive and free, too, to make sure we don’t fall into anarchy or the rule of force. That means we need to do such things as have elections for Mayor and Council of Rapid City. It means we need lawyers and judges. We need free commerce, with fair prices, and we need peace officers to make sure that it doesn’t become profiteering. If you have special skills, if you’d like to serve in office, please let the census-takers know.”

Kirsten pauses, and the quiet lies thick about her. Not a word, not a shuffling foot breaks the silence. The faces turned to her are serious, some clearly worried, all resolute. Hearts and minds.

“You are the free people of the United States. You live in a country founded on law and the idea that every person is valuable. The need for law has never been greater; each person has never been more valuable. I ask today for your help in restoring our nation. We can never go back to what we had; too much has been lost. Too many have been lost.

But we can begin today to reaffirm our Constitution and our laws. And with them, we can be a nation again that can stand against any enemy.

“I ask for your help in that work. Long live freedom! And long live the free people of the United States!”

She lowers the bullhorn, looking out over the sea of faces, dazed. My God, where did that come from? She barely has time for the thought before the wave of sound breaks over her, shouts of “Free-dom! Free-dom! FREE-DOM!” mixed with “Kir-sten!” and “Ells-worth!” tumbling over her in a roar. Then, from amid the shouting, she hears the clear chords of blind Harry’s twelve-string, strumming out a rhythm. Gradually the crowd quiets, and he begins to sing.

As I was walking that ribbon of highway,I saw above me the endless skyway.I saw below me a golden valley.This land was made for you and me.

As he goes into the chorus, the crowd joins him, clapping and stomping.

This land is your land, this land is my land,From California to the New York Island,From the redwood forest, to the Gulf Stream water,This land was made for you and me.

The verses go on and on, to end with:

Nobody living can ever stop meAs I go walking my Freedom Highway.Nobody living can make me turn back,This land was made for you and me.

The last chorus ends with a crescendo of whoops and rebel yells, the pounding of hands and feet shaking the floor like an earthquake. As the music fades Kirsten stands for a moment silent, then turns to step down. Her knees shake so hard she nearly falls as she escapes the crowd of admiring officers, all talking at once. It is too much. The noise of the cheering crowd batters at her, at her ears, at her mind.

Too much.

Brushing past the officers and her startled guard, she makes for the emergency exit and the privacy of the open air.

CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE

SOUTH DAKOTA SPRING has come decked out in her Sunday finest, seemingly overnight. Between the setting of one day and the dawning of the next, trees which had previously shown the sky their brittle bones are budded out in verdant greens and purples and pinks and whites. The air is a perfumed delicacy and the breeze bears the warm promise of summer on its breath.

Sitting on the small porch in front of Maggie’s house, Kirsten takes it all in with peaceful pleasure, thanking any god currently in residence that she’s finally free—if only for the moment—of the dreadful Atlas-weight of her position within this newly ripening society. The trip back from Rapid City had been a silent one, and Kirsten extends her silent thanks to Maggie, who knew enough to know that Kirsten needed the silence to decompress.

The trip had been a mixed blessing. As far as the census went, they had succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. Unfortunately, however, they hadn’t encountered a judge or lawyer in the bunch. Or at least that anyone wanted to admit, anyway. Three paralegals had been the best they could come up with, and Kirsten was seriously considering promoting them to a judgeship, Bar Association be damned.

“Someone’s coming,” Maggie remarks from her place on the lawn, directing Kirsten’s attention toward a perfectly maintained—if decades old—truck currently headed in their direction. Squinting, the young scientist can just make out Dakota’s dark form riding shotgun, and her heart accelerates of its own accord, spreading a warm, welcoming tingle throughout her body. A smile curves her lips, though she dutifully ignores the smirk thrown her way by the watching Air Force colonel.

The driver appears to be an elderly male with a hawk-like profile and eyes to match, from what she can see behind the reflection of the setting sun on his thick glasses. She briefly wonders if this man is Dakota’s father, or even grandfather, but dismisses the notion out of hand when the truck turns up the short driveway. His features, hawk-like though they may be, scream Anglo-Saxon from a mile away.

“I’ll be damned,” Maggie half-whispers as she gets a good look at the driver.

“What?” Kirsten asks, startled.

An unwilling grin crosses Maggie’s face. “If that’s not ‘Hang-em High’ Harcourt, I’ll eat my service ribbons.”

Kirsten looks at her askance. “’Hang-em who?”

The man in question brings the truck to a stop, turns off the ignition, and slips out through the door he’s just opened. Quite tall, and, like his truck, well-maintained despite his advanced years, he cuts an imposing figure as he looks down at Kirsten through clear, piercing eyes. After a moment, he gives a quick, if stiff, bow of his head. “Madame President.”

Kirsten simply stares.

With a quirk of his lips that could almost pass for a smile, he turns his gaze to the woman standing, hands on hips, to Kirsten’s left. “Major Allen,” he says by way of greeting.

Maggie manages to conceal her surprise and straightens. “It’s ‘Colonel’ now.”

That quirk of his lips comes again. “Indeed.” His eyes flick over her body almost dismissively. “I do hope that the increase in rank brought with it a concomitant increase in the ability to, I believe the phrase is ‘keep tabs’ on the men and women under your care?”

Maggie’s dark skin hides her flush, but Kirsten believes she can feel the heat of it from where she’s standing nonetheless. She experiences a flash of anger move through her; an emotion that dissolves into puzzlement as Maggie throws her head back and laughs, loud and long.

“You actually know this gnarled old oak?” Maggie shouts to Dakota between bursts of mirth.

“I’ll take that as the compliment it was no-doubt intended to be,” Harcourt replies primly as Koda, grinning, rounds the truck and comes to stand with the group.

Taking pity on Kirsten, she lays a soft hand on the smaller woman’s shoulder. “Kirsten, I’d like you to meet Judge Fenton Harcourt.”

“Retired, Madame President,” Harcourt murmurs. “Quite retired.”

The name tickles her memories. She sifts through them quickly, then looks up, jaw nearly dropping. “Aren’t you—you’re the one who turned down a seat on the Supreme Court!”

“Pah,” he comments sourly. “Doddering fools the lot of them. I’m surprised they were able put their robes on without a map, let alone find their way to the bench—unless, of course, it was surrounded by an oaken bar and plenty of swizzle sticks.”

Kirsten continues to stare at him, gape-jawed, unable for the life of her to tell whether he is in fact serious, or simply the world’s greatest ‘straight’ man. His gaze, utterly cool, utterly calm, helps her not at all.

Koda once again comes to the rescue, squeezing Kirsten’s shoulder and drawing the Judge’s attention to herself. “If you’re quite through making your first impression, Fenton, maybe we could go inside?”

Harcourt straightens and puts his arms behind his back, clasping his wrists as he takes in a deep breath of spring-scented air. “I think not. I believe I’ll take a walk around the grounds.” He eyes Dakota significantly. “Alone.”

“Suit yourself. Just meet us back here when you’re through, ok?”

“Mm.” He looks down at the three of them, face as expressionless as a granite mountain. “Ladies. Madame President.”

When she’s judged the man has gone far enough on his walk to be out of comfortable earshot, Kirsten screws up her face like she’s just bitten into a lemon. “I’m beginning to hate that title.”

“That’s exactly why the old coot’s using it,” Maggie replies laughing. “Look up the meaning of the phrase ‘burr under the saddleblanket’ and you’ll see his picture staring you in the face.” She looks on with appreciation as Koda returns to the truck and hauls out Harcourt’s overnight bag and old-fashioned leather briefcase. “He can find a person’s weak spots without even looking. It makes him a formidable opponent.”

“He’s a judge!” Kirsten counters forcefully, ignoring the flash of jealousy that flares when she discovers exactly where the Colonel’s eyes are presently fixed. “Judges are supposed to be impartial, not opponents.”

“On the bench,” Koda replies, returning to them laden with Harcourt’s luggage, “he’s the most impartial person I know. Just don’t screw up in his courtroom, and never get into a debate with him when he’s not wearing his robes.” She smirks. “Unless you’re wearing a full suit of armor.”

The others follow as she heads for the house, juggling the luggage as she unlatches the door, and nearly stumbling backwards as Asi takes the opportunity presented to leap on her, pressing against her chest with his large forepaws. “Get down, you…mangy…furball!” She pushes forward with implacable strength, causing him to dance back on his hind legs until his feet slide and he tumbles away. He stares up at her as she pushes by, expression truly pitiful.

“You deserved it, you big dope,” Kirsten mutters when he turns the hurt look on her. “Now go lay down and behave.”

Ears and tail drooping, he slinks his way to the fireplace, where he lays down with a sigh worthy of the greatest of martyred heroes.

“So, how do you know Judge Harcourt?” Kirsten asks Koda as she watches the tall woman stack the luggage near the couch.

Straightening, Koda smiles and heads back into the kitchen. Reaching into the oven, she pulls out the frybread that she had made this morning, and with a few preparations, she begins dinner for them all. “I’ve known him since I was an infant, actually,” she begins, voice low and mellow and soothing. “He and my grandfather were good friends—well, as good a friend as any human being could be to Fenton.” She slips a look toward her two companions. “He’s not exactly known for his love of the species.”

Kirsten contemplates that for a moment. From what she knows of the man based on short acquaintance, she can’t say she’s a bit surprised at the revelation. “How did your grandfather come to know him?”

“When he was a young man,” Koda replies, turning back to the supper she’s preparing, “Fenton was known as a champion of civil rights.”

“But you said he hates people,” Kirsten counters, confused.

“That may be,” Koda returns evenly. “But he loves the Constitution and what it stands for.” She smiles fondly, though neither woman can see it. “He was one of the chief warriors in my peoples’ fight to gain back all of our ancestral lands.”

“I remember reading about that.” Kirsten’s expression is thoughtful. “I don’t recall seeing his name mentioned in any of the history discs I’ve seen, though.”

Koda snorts. “If there’s anything he hates more than people, it’s publicity. He didn’t need or want the credit. He did what he did because it was the right thing to do, and when he had won that battle, he moved onto other things.”

“Like gay marriage,” Maggie replies knowingly.

Koda turns, grinning. “Exactly. And a lot more over the years. He’s a brilliant thinker with a love of the law, and probably the most honest man outside my family that I’ve ever met. He might not be much of a people person, but he’s a good friend, and I’m lucky to have him in my live.”

“We’re lucky to have him,” Kirsten gently corrects. “Thanks for…talking him into this,” she adds, instinctively knowing that without Koda’s intervention, he would never have come.

“He hasn’t said yes yet.”

“Details, details,” Kirsten replies, blithely waving the concerns away. She turns her gaze to Maggie. “And how do you know him?”

The young scientist doesn’t need to see Maggie’s flush to know it’s there. “A much less pleasant tale, to be sure,” the Colonel replies, grinning weakly.

“We’re all ears.”

Sighing, Maggie drops down onto one of the worn kitchen chairs, legs splayed, one arm draped across the table. “Fine. It was…quite a few years back. We’d been away on maneuvers for months. Almost a year, in fact, and had just gotten back to home base. Most of my crew had a lot of leave time saved up and they were raring to take it, but the shit with Syria was stirring up again, and all leaves were indefinitely cancelled.” She grimaces. “So I asked for, and received, a weekend’s liberty for my men.”

“And they took it,” Kirsten observes.

“Oh yeah. They took it alright. About four o’clock Monday morning, I get woken up by a phone call from Rapid City PD.”

“Oh boy.”

Maggie tosses Kirsten a smirk. “Apparently, seven of my men had taken up residence in the city lockup. Seven counts of drunk and disorderly, four assaults, and one assault with a deadly weapon. A pool cue,” she explains in response to Kirsten’s unasked question. “It…wasn’t pretty.”

“Damn.”

“Yeah. Damn.” Clearing her throat, she looks down at hands which are now clasped together on her lap. “I figured…you know…I’d go to the courthouse and get them to release them to me pending a trial. If I was lucky, I could have the charges shifted to a military court and take care of it from there.” She sighs, still looking down at her hands. “No such luck. Harcourt had pretty much retired by then and was slumming, filling in part time in the city courts. I took one look at his face during the bond hearing and I knew I had no chance.”

“Tim D’Mello.” Koda’s soft voice floats back from the stove.

Kirsten looks perplexed. Maggie nods. “Yeah.” To Kirsten, “Tim D’Mello was an airman stationed at our base. He raped three women in Rapid City, and the JAG made a deal with the civilian authorities, promising to prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law, yadda, yadda, yadda, if they’d release him to the MP’s. They agreed, and he was convicted, but he escaped from the brig, and raped again. Twice in one night.” She swallows hard. “He killed the last one. She was only twelve.”

“Jesus,” Kirsten hisses.

“Harcourt was as hard as a rock,” Maggie continues. “He wouldn’t budge. My men were going to receive their day in court; a civilian court for the damage they’d done to civilians, and that was that.”

“What happened?”

“They pled guilty.” She laughs. It’s a mirthless sound. “Why not? They were. He threw the book at them, as they say. Maximum sentence allowed by law, which, for the D and D’s wasn’t all that much, but the ADW . . . .” Her hands clench and unclench in her lap. “The worst part, I think, was the way he looked at me when he learned I was their commanding officer. It was pity, and anger, all wrapped up in a putrid little ball, and I felt like I was seven again and my father had caught me playing ‘doctor’ with the girl next door.” She laughs again. “It was a lesson well learned that day. And then I learned another one. We were going to war. Again. I needed those men, desperately. So, I swallowed my pride and went to him and laid out another deal. Which was, basically, anything in exchange for them.”

“Did he go for it?” Kirsten asks, though she already knows the answer.

“Yeah. Surprisingly, he did. He knew that the citizens of this country would be much better served with these convicts fighting for their freedoms rather than rotting in some jail somewhere.” She smiles. “But that wasn’t the end of it. Oh no. Not nearly. He demanded restitution. A portion of each paycheck they received would go to those they’d wronged, and then, when they came back from fighting, if they came back, they would serve out their sentences in community service of his choosing. And if he found that they stepped out of line again, even the tiniest inch, he’d toss them back in jail and throw away the key. And, he informed me, I’d be there rotting right along side of them.” She laughs again, shaking her head. “I believed him. I still do.”

“Did they come back from the war? Did they serve out their sentences?”

“Only two,” Maggie intones, her voice infinitely sad. “But they did as he ordered, and as far as I know, they never got so much as a speeding ticket since.” Her face clears then, and she looks up at her audience. “And there you have it. How I know Fenton Harcourt in five thousand words or less.”

“Perfect timing,” Koda replies, turning from the stove with laden plates. “Dinner is served.”


*

Stepping out of the clinic, Dakota breathes deep of the warm spring night. Her nostrils flare as she picks up the familiar scent of pipe tobacco. The fragrance brings with it a wave of memories together with a brief, but almost overwhelming feeling of longing—a longing for the past, for the way things had been; a longing for the ability to shift back time just enough so she could find herself on the porch of her family’s ranch house on a deep summer night, her grandfather on one side of her, her father on the other, and bask in the sense of peace and safety and contentment she fears she’ll never experience again.

Letting the feelings wash over and through her, she continues forward to where she can sense her watcher hidden in the moonshadow of a towering oak. He steps out as she approaches, face wreathed in fragrant pipe-smoke. “Good evening.”

“Fenton.”

He peers past her to the building she’s just left. “I see you’ve kept to your calling despite the recent…difficulties.”

“It’s who I am.”

“Mm.” He removes the pipe from his mouth, gesturing toward the open space behind the guarded gates. “I’ve also heard some fascinating—if rather overdone— tales about a certain Veterinarian leading a charge across a crumbled bridge over the Cheyenne. Very noble, if foolhardy, that woman.”

“It’s who I am,” she answers again, succinctly, truthfully.

“Indeed. I think—and this is pure speculation, mind you—that your grandfather would have been quite proud of your accomplishments.”

Dakota can feel the flush building, warming her skin.

Luckily, or perhaps deliberately, Harcourt has chosen to examine the star-dazzled sky, giving her time to regain the balance his words so effortlessly stripped away.

“So,” she says when she finally finds her voice, “will you stay?”

His eyes come back to meet hers, glittering and wise. “For the nonce.”

“Thank you.”

His head inclines the barest fraction of an inch in response.

She hears a slight rustling from above, and a smile breaks over her face. Uncomprehending, his eyebrow raises in silent question. In answer, she puts her finger to her mouth and utters her three-note calling whistle. A brief second later, Wiyo silently alights on her fist, tucking her wings into place and appearing to study the man standing directly across from her.

“Blessed mercy,” he whispers, his implacable calm instantly shattered. This is a Fenton Harcourt that no one but Dakota knows exists. “Is this….?”

“It is,” Koda answers, holding out her fist in invitation.

She can see his arm tremble as he lifts it and hear the soft intake of breath that is not quite a gasp as Wiyo steps easily onto his wrist. “Hello, old friend,” he says in a voice not-quite steady. “I had never thought to see you again.”

Stepping away to give the Judge some privacy, she rounds the large tree until its towering branches no longer obscure her view of the sky. The firmament is shot through with a trillion sparkling diamonds cast in display by a careless hand.

Would you have been proud of me, thunkashila?

The cold stars give no answer, but that doesn’t matter. She’s pretty sure she knows it anyway.


*

“For the last time, Colonel, the answer is no. There is a perfectly serviceable cot in the Judges’ chambers, and I fully intend to make what little use of it I must. Your hospitality, though polite, is unneeded and unwanted.”

“Begging your pardon, Judge Harcourt,” Kirsten intervenes, “but I’ve seen that ‘perfectly serviceable cot’, and it’s got more lumps in it than my mother’s gravy.”

Straightening to his fullest height, Harcourt turns to her, staring down at her through his glasses, eyes sharp as diamonds. “Madame President….”

Kirsten winces. “Kirsten. Please?” Nothing. “Ms. King?”

“Doctor King, I assume your eyesight is adequate enough to confirm to you that which you know is true. I am an old man. And as an old man, I will have an eternity’s worth of sleep when my decomposing corpse fertilizes the ground around my eternal resting place. Until then, I will sleep when I choose, and where I choose. I will brook no compromise on this issue. Am I clearly understood?”

Jaw clenched, Kirsten finally nods.

“Good.” Turning, he next pins Maggie with his gaze. “Colonel, am I to assume that you have the case files assembled?”

“I do.”

“Then perhaps you would escort me to my chambers and hand over the materials. I believe I have a bit of light reading to do this evening.”

Maggie shoulders the overnight case and hands Harcourt his briefcase. “Fine. Let’s go then.”

After nodding to both Kirsten and Dakota, he turns and leaves the house, Maggie following after him like a faithful puppy.

“Well,” Kirsten observes as the door quietly closes, “wasn’t that just a barrel of laughs.”


*

“It’s a good turnout.”

Nudging Maggie aside and peering through the half-inch or so space between the open door of the Judge’s Advocate’s Chambers and the jamb, Kirsten amends, “It’s a damn good turnout, considering our sampling methods.”

The other woman gives a soft snort of derisive agreement. “Talk about ‘needs must.’ I think we’ve got what we need here, though.”

What they have got is a jury pool of close to three hundred people. At the other end of the courtroom, a pair of military bailiffs in dress uniforms and braid stand with clipboards, checking off names as the prospective jurors file in and take their assigned seats. Maggie is right. It is a good turnout by any standard, especially considering the sampling methods and the hand-carried notifications to the sometimes dubious addresses. It is a phenomenal turnout considering that many of these folk have walked for miles to reach the Base, while others have biked, SegWayed, ridden mule- or horseback. For the first time since the departure of the mounted cavalry regiments, a South Dakota military post has found it necessary to install hitching posts.

Getting the jury pool together has cost a week’s hard work and ingenuity. Maggie is right. Needs must when the devil drives. Hand it to Old Scratch, Kirsten reflects, he’s had his foot flat on the floorboard for the last several months. But the census of Rapid City, taken over two days, has yielded a heartening three thousand plus surviving adult citizens, many of them residents who have only come out of hiding since the defeat of the android force at the Cheyenne. As many more have recently moved into the more populated city, or what is left of it, from outlying ranches and hamlets.

They took the census the old fashioned way, by hand, names and addresses penciled on legal pads and index cards. On Andrews’ inspired notion, a team scoured the city’s churches for bingo machines. The three working models had been pressed into service as randomizing devices, leaving time and computer capacity free for more urgent military applications. Hurriedly repainted with ID numbers, the whirling balls tossed out a selection that is, mirabile dictu, a reasonably accurate microcosm of Rapid City. The citizens slowly jostling their way into their appointed places on the dark oak benches include Anglos in jeans and Stetsons; African Americans in business suits; Lakota and Cheyenne in ribbon shirts; men and women of every color in sweats and Sunday best and everything in between. The only striking difference between this crowd and a pre-uprising gathering is the ratio of women to men. For every man in the courtroom, for every man on the list, three women have survived.

Kirsten closes the door softly and turns back into the room. Unlike the other official spaces she has seen, the Judge Advocate’s chambers have been spared the ubiquitous grey-and-Air-Force-blue décor. The dark wood and forest green walls, the tartan carpet woven in deep reds and greens, give it an air of almost Victorian formality. The lingering smell of pipe tobacco reinforces the impression, as does the well-worn but not yet shabby assortment of leather armchairs and ottomans. The chamber reminds Kirsten of a traditional library, a University reading room. One could curl up in one of those chairs with a book or hand-held and lose oneself for hours.

The few pictures on the walls are idiosyncratic, too, not the official art of fighter planes and bombers. One shows grain fields stretching golden to the horizon, another a forest glade where a stag bends to drink, his antlers struck to gold like a crown by a shaft of sunlight. The third, a photograph, catches a pair of eagles in the midst of their courtship flight, talons locked with talons, wings spread wide against the receding sky. The image is stunning in its clarity, and paradoxically, its untrammeled sense of motion, as if the two birds might come tumbling out of the frame and into the room at the viewer’s feet.

Behind the big desk by window, Fenton Harcourt gives his newly pressed robe a twitch, and its folds fall into perfect place. He seems curiously at home in this room that seems to have slipped out of its proper time and place. As he taps the ash out of his pipe and refills its bowl from a cordovan pouch, his eyes stray again and again to the eagles, a small, secret smile curving his mouth. It suddenly occurs to Kirsten to check the photographer’s signature when she gets a chance. Or she could just ask.

“That’s one of your pictures, isn’t it, Judge? It’s beautiful.”

Harcourt glances sharply up at her over the tops of his old-fashioned half-glasses. For a moment it seems he will not answer her, but he says, “Why, yes. That’s very perceptive of you, Dr. King.”

“Our Judge Advocate was a birdwatcher—I’m sorry, a birder, too,” Maggie says quietly. “We haven’t seen or heard from her since before the uprising.”

“A shame, that. I would have enjoyed telling her about the Cassin’s Sparrow I saw two weeks ago.” Harcourt clamps the stem of the cold pipe between his teeth, picking up the gavel from the desk, together with the bulging portfolio containing the charges against the defendants. “Now,” he says abruptly, “let us see whether we have twelve persons who are at all capable of rendering a disinterested verdict in these appalling cases.”

“Everyone in that room has an interest of some sort in this case, Judge,” Kirsten observes evenly. “Bias and disinterest are not the same thing.”

Kirsten is almost sure she sees a glint of warmth, perhaps even surprise, in the Judge’s eye, but it may as easily be a reflection from the green-shaded banker’s lamp on the desk. “Indeed they are not. But I doubt you will find more than half a dozen folk out there who have not been personally and traumatically injured by the androids. This case has not even begun, but it is already rife with grounds for appeal.”

“Let’s see if we can get these men convicted first, shall we?” Maggie says dryly. “We’ll worry about appeals later, assuming anyone can find the staff to convene and appellate court.”

Kirsten knows what Harcourt will say before he opens his mouth and suppresses urge to kick Maggie’s ankle. “Colonel Allen,” he says mildly, “a court is not needed. You are aware, I am sure, of the prerogative of Presidential pardon?”

With that he steps between them, tucking the unlit pipe back into his pocket, and knocks on the inside of the door. Pausing a moment for the bailiff to shout “All rise!” and for the rustles and thumps that accompany three hundred people getting to their feet, he sweeps behind the witness stand and up the three steps to the bench. Kirsten and Maggie slip out much less dramatically in his wake, to take their places in the observers’ area behind the prosecution table next to the jury box. Again the bailiff gives tongue, rolling out the words one after another on a single pitch: “Oyez! Oyez! The Court of the Fifth Circuit of the State of South Dakota is now in session, the Honorable Fenton Harcourt presiding. God bless the United States and this honorable Court!”

For a long moment, Harcourt stands behind the bench, inspecting the occupants of the courtroom. It is a glance very much like the eagles’ in the photograph, bright and implacable. In a rush for the door that morning, a scrambled egg wrapped in fry bread in her hand, Dakota had referred to the old gentleman as “Hangin’ Harcourt,” a stickler for the law, letter and spirit. It seems to Kirsten that the epithet is not, perhaps, a joking matter. Despite the man’s respect for his fellow bird enthusiasts or his obvious pleasure in a rare sighting, the lean planes of the his face, cut sharply to the bone under his shock of white hair, would not be out of place on an Old Testament prophet—Jeremiah, bewailing the whoredom of the Daughter of Zion, John the Baptizer munching locusts and wild honey—or a Huguenot martyr bearing his Calvinism like a banner to the stake. Kirsten trusts him to be fair. She is not sure there is any mercy in him at all, or whether she thinks there should be.

A chill passes over her as she stands, waiting like the rest for Harcourt to be seated. The Judge will sign a death verdict, if one is rendered, read the sentence, set the date. But she, Kirsten King, must sign the execution warrant when the time comes.

It is a long way home to Twenty-Nine Palms. A long way home and circles upon circles of hell yet to pass through. To Harcourt’s right, the national flag drapes in soft spirals of red and white around its stanchion, and Kirsten wonders how many stars will be left when the insurrection is over. If it is ever over. If anyone survives. To his left, South Dakota’s flag proclaims, “Under God the People Rule.” Kirsten has no interest in presiding over a theocracy, but restoring the government of the people, by the people, is something she would do in a heartbeat if she could.

A heartbeat that would allow her to go back to being a scientist, not a political figure.

Or, more aptly, a figurehead. A figurehead with life and death in her hand, and no way to open her fingers and cast herself free of them.

Finally Harcourt sits, and the rest of the room follows suit. The crowd remains silent as he opens the folder in front of him and studies it briefly. Then he closes it and folds his hands on its cover. Pitching his voice so that it carries to every corner of the high-ceilinged room, he says, “Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for coming here today despite what must be considerable hardship for some of you. I commend you on your sense of duty even in the present crisis and for your willingness to undertake perhaps the most solemn responsibility of a citizen of this state and this nation. You are here to administer justice. Justice under the law.”

He glances around the room. “The circumstances are extraordinary. For one, this court is of necessity a hybrid of military and civilian practice, even though the defendants are civilians and no state of war has been formally declared by the Congress of the United States. So, even though you will see both the defense counsel and the prosecutor in the uniform of their service, the charges laid against these defendants are those allowable in the criminal law of the State of South Dakota. They are not federal charges. They are not war crimes, even though it seems, in logic, that they should be.

“You will be asked, if you are chosen for this jury, to sift a body of evidence that you will find disturbing in the extreme. And you will be asked to render a verdict, bearing in mind that men’s lives will be in your hands, on that basis of that evidence alone. In a moment, the Clerk of the Court will ask for exemptions, which may be granted for several reasons under the law of this state. If you have formed an opinion on any of these cases, or if you do not believe you are capable of rendering a just and true verdict, you will have an opportunity to inform the Court at that time. Madame Clerk.”

The Clerk, a trim redhead with Sergeant’s stripes on her sleeve, begins to read out the list of persons exempt from jury service. Kirsten leans slightly toward Maggie and whispers, “My God, he really is a classic, isn’t he?”

“He almost makes me believe in reincarnation,” Maggie answers sotto voce. “He’d be right at home in a toga, stabbing Caesar in the gut for the good of the Republic.”

A sharp glance from the bench quiets them both as the Clerk drones on, “. . .Persons over sixty-five years of age . . . full time student . . . care of children under six . . . minister of religion . . . .persons unable to read and write the English language. . . .”

Surprisingly few members of the pool choose to opt out. One young woman with an infant in arms sounds almost disappointed that she can find no one else to care for her baby; a young man with watery eyes and a bad cough is hustled out before he can make a gift of his cold to anyone else. Kirsten steals a glance at the defendants where they sit at the table across the room. The four of them are to be tried together, and they provide a study in contrasts. One, Kazen, seems scarcely out of his teens, his eyes wide with obvious fear. McCallum sprawls in his chair; Buxton slumps in his. The fourth, Petrovich, stares at something in the corner of the ceiling which apparently only he can see. Shackles, unobtrusive, clink each time one of them moves. The chains are not where the jury can see them, but any escape attempt will have to drag the defense table along with it.

Half-hidden behind piles of briefs, Boudreaux’s own face is as pale as his clients’. A fine shimmer of wet at his receding hairline betrays his nerves. He is not a defense lawyer by trade, and despite his uniform, not a lawyer. The responsibility for others’ life and death sits no easier on him than it does on Kirsten herself, and it seems to her that his is the one job even less appealing than her own. He must save these thugs’ lives if he can, and he must save them knowing that if they are found innocent they must be released. Knowing that they have been spared the firing squad only to be handed a more subtle death sentence, and a more brutal one, at the hands of their victims.

“Are counsel prepared to proceed with the voire dire?” Harcourt asks after the exemptions have been dealt with. ‘Major Alderson?”

Major Alderson, appointed prosecutor because of his experience as a paralegal and two years as a Senate aide in Washington, rises and turns to face the public benches. He runs rapidly through the standard questions, hardly pausing when he asks whether the prospective jurors have every been victims of a crime, and every hand in the room goes up. Finally he comes to the end. “Are you able, in the event of a guilty verdict, to assess the death sentence against these defendants? Raise your hand if you do not believe you can do so, please.”

“Boudreaux surges to his feet. “Objection, Your Honor! Rape is not a capital crime in the State of South Dakota.”

“Major Alderson?” Harcourt’s voice is deceptively mild as he taps the manila folder in front of him. “You wrote these charges, did you not? I do not believe I recall any assertion of murder among them.”

Alderson turns to face the bench. “May it please the court, Your Honor. It’s true that these defendants are not directly charged with murder. However, testimony from victims shows that women held in the Rapid City corrections facility were killed, and testimony to be offered here will show that these four men co-operated with the killers. They partake of the crime under the law of parties, Your Honor.”

“Even though the killers were androids and not persons under the law? We would not try an android for a crime, Major. We would simply turn it off, you know, or send it to the scapyard.”

“Even so, Your Honor. That the perpetrators were androids does not change the nature of the crime, or the nature of these defendants’ participation.”

Kirsten spares a glance at Maggie, whose lips twitch in a scarcely suppressed smile. “He’s good,” she mouths, not wanting to draw Harcourt’s attention again, and Maggie nods almost imperceptibly.

“Nothing like a few years negotiating budgets on the Hill each you to argue.”

“Very well,” Harcourt says after a moment’s thought. “I will allow you to proceed along these lines, Counsel, and develop your case if you can. But I will charge the jury as I see fit when the time comes. Understood?”

“Understood, Your Honor.”

Alderson puts the question to the jury pool again, briefly explaining that the law of parties is designed to prevent accomplices from escaping on lesser charges than a killer who pulls the trigger or wields the knife himself. “And the evidence will show, ladies and gentlemen, that these four men”—he points to them as he numbers them off: “Kazen, McCallum, Buxton, Petrovich—bought their own lives at the price of the degradation and suffering of dozens of innocent women. Though I use the term advisedly. Some of their victims were no more than twelve or thirteen.”

A hissing snakes its way through the courtroom, and Harcourt brings his gavel down hard. “Ladies and gentlemen, I caution you now that I will not tolerate emotional displays in this courtroom.” The sound subsides abruptly, and Harcourt lays the gavel down again. “Major Boudreax, if you please.”

Boudreaux rises and faces the jury pool. Peering over her shoulder, Kirsten can see that many faces are openly hostile. His opening remarks are conciliatory, designed to overcome as much of that feeling as he can. “Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for coming here today. I know it has been very difficult for all of you, but I also know that you take your duties as citizens seriously. I helped to take the census in Rapid City, and saw there how much you love your country and how eager you are for the rule of law to be reestablished.

“Part of that rule of law is our justice system. Note that I say ‘justice system,’ not ‘legal system.’ Our laws do not exist for their own sake, just to give police and uniformed services like mine something useful to do. They exist to establish and mete out justice, fairly and impartially. And they do that through citizens like yourselves. You are the government, the true law enforcers of our society.

“My question to you, therefore, is a bit different from that asked by the prosecution. It is this: can you, with all you have suffered in the android uprising, all you have lost, including friends and members of your families, hear the evidence in this case and make your determination of guilt or innocence on that basis alone?”

The room is silent for a space, each of the prospective jurors given time to question his or her own conscience. Then, as the Bailiff begins to call them forward one by one for individual questioning, Kirsten rises and slips unobtrusively from the room. Tacoma is due to leave for the wind farm in half an hour, and Dakota may—no, she is not quite ready to say that Dakota may need her—but she wants to be there all the same. It is where she needs to be.

CHAPTER TWENTY SIX

VERY GENTLY DAKOTA peels back the last of the bandaging under the soft cast, exposing the bobcat’s paw. The jagged scar of the wound still shows an angry scarlet, the paired dots of the suture pricks running parallel to it on either side like an abstruse pottery design. The skin around the injury, though, is healthy pink. A soft down of new fur, golden ground and umber whorls, covers it up to the edge of the scar. She feels the cat tense against her as she flexes the joint. “Easy, Igmú. Easy, girl,” she croons into one tufted ear, tightening her hold to press the cat’s body close to her own. “Still a bit stiff, there, aren’t you?”

Raising her voice, she calls, “Shannon, would you come here a moment, please?”

The thud of jogging footsteps in the hall precedes the tech into the examining room, and the bobcat starts at the sound. It is hardly the first time that Koda has been the object of a crush-cum-hero-worship, but the young woman’s eagerness to impress is beginning to get a bit overwhelming. When Shannon opens the door, though, she is all professional calm. “Dr. Rivers?”

“Set up the X-ray, would you? I need a radiograph of Igmú’s right forefoot; it’s still tight. I can’t feel anything out of alignment, but let’s be sure.”

“She’s about ready for release, isn’t she?”

“Almost. But she’s got to have everything working. She’s a runner and a pouncer, and without that ‘spring’ in all four feet she can’t hunt effectively.”

Shannon steps out of the room to ready the machine, and Koda returns to her examination. Other than the torn tendons, now almost fully healed, the cat is in excellent condition, better than if she had spent the last lean months of winter in the wild. The fur under her hand is soft and sleek, rich with oils from the fish Koda has added to her diet of red meat and fowl. Firm muscles ripple beneath it. She is up to a solid twenty pounds, not bad at all for a young female with her full growth yet to come.

Every ounce of that twenty pounds balks, though, when Koda reaches for the syringe lying ready on the counter. “Easy, girl. Easy . . . easy. . . . Shit . . .”

The slick surface of the examination table works with her reluctant patient as she squirms and slides backward out of Koda’s one-handed hold. “Come on, girl, this is the last one, I promise . . ..”

” Funny, I never believed the doctor when he said that, either.” Koda looks up to find Tacoma standing in the doorway. He has changed his fatigues for jeans and flannel shirt, his belt festooned with tools, a hard hat dangling from one loop. “Let me help.”

Koda nods, and he crosses the space between the door and the table at a single stride. At the first touch of his hands, the struggle stops cold. From deep in Igmú’s chest comes a rumble like low thunder, and she butts her head against his chest, her great golden eyes half-closed in pleasure. He scratches her gently under the chin while Dakota lifts her scruff and administers her third and last feleuk vaccination. The purr never falters.

Koda strokes her now complacent patient’s ears as she pitches the empty hypodermic into the red biohazard pail hung under the table. “Do you have time to help with the radiograph? It’ll only take a moment.”

“Sure.”

Scooping the bobcat up, Tacoma follows her into the tiny X-ray room. A click and a couple whirrs later, he carries her back to hospital, leaving Koda to develop the film. When he returns, she has it up on the light box, staring intently at the bone where the torn tendons anchor. There is no abnormality, and she breathes a small sigh of relief. “Have a look,” she says. “Everything’s in place; she just needs a bit of exercise to strengthen the paw. I’ll move her out into one of the outdoor kennel runs during the day, and—”

“Dakota.”

“—she’ll be ready for release in a week or so.”

“Tanksi.”

“I know you’ll want to be there.” Very deliberately Koda unties her lead-lined apron and hangs it up. “Do you think you’ll be gone long?”

Tacoma’s hand moves in a small half-circle that Dakota knows means frustration, but he answers evenly, “Five or six days, depending on how much we can do on this first trip. Melly Cho is going with us to determine whether we can get Rapid City hooked back up to the grid.”

“She’s that electrical engineer the census turned up?”

“Yeah. We may have one of the electric company linemen, too. They’ll be a big help.” There is a small, strained silence, then he says, “Harcourt wants to hold an informal inquest on Dietrich when we get back. As soon as it’s over we can do what is right for Igmú Tanka Kte.”

“Where’s Dietrich? Is he in a freezer somewhere, too?” Koda cannot keep the bitterness out of her voice; she does not try.

“Yes. At the morgue. His family want to bury him now that the ground has thawed.”

“Well,” she says shortly. “That’s understandable.” She turns away from him and begins to arrange ampoules of antibiotics and vaccines on the shelf above the counter.

There is a long silence. Then, softly. “Look— Damn, Koda, I know I’ve done this all wrong— I’m sorry. I don’t know anything else to say, though. I’m sorry.”

Dakota turns to face her brother. “I know you’re sorry. I accept that. What I can’t accept is—” Her voice catches for a moment, then steadies. “How would you feel if it were your teacher? If it were Igmú Tanka in there?” She gestures toward the back of the clinic where the freezer holds the wolf’s body.

“It would tear my heart out,” he says simply. “But I would be glad to bring her killer to justice. I would be glad her children would live. And I think she would be, too.”

An old story tells that the black marks at the corners of a puma’s eyes are the tracks of tears shed long ago, in the time before time, in mourning for her stolen young. And that, she knows, is the heart of the matter. It is the one thing she has not allowed herself to consider.

It is not only the bobcat who will be ready for release in a little time. Day by day, the she-wolf grows stronger, grows closer to the time when she will be able to hunt and provide for her young. The pup, whose blunt features hold the promise of his sire’s features and coloring to come, waddles about the run on stubby legs, splashing through the water bowl in pursuit of drifting paintbrush petals blown in on the spring winds. If law is allowed to lapse, if the trapping of wolves and bobcats and coyotes becomes a normal part of life again, then the pup could die the same way his father did. And no one would be there to spare his suffering or claim justice for him.

What would his father want? Her friend?

Salt stings Dakota’s eyes, and she turns abruptly away. After a moment, soft footfalls cross the small distance, and Tacoma lays his hands on her shoulders. She stands stiffly for a moment, then allows herself to lean against him, accepting his grief, his comfort, his strength. Her rage has not gone out of her, but it has found its true mark, Dietrich and those like him who give no honor to other nations and prize none for their own.

After a long moment, she raises a hand to cover her brother’s. She says, “Take care of yourself, thiblo. The wind farm is an obvious place for an ambush.”

“Don’t worry. We’re taking plenty of firepower.”

“Is Manny going?”

“He wants to. Allen won’t let him.” A hint of laughter runs under his words. “He knows she’s not going to throw him to the dogs. She just wants him to think she might.”

A light pressure of his fingers, and he is gone. She remains standing by the counter, her eyes wide and unfocused. Time has slipped again, in a way she knows long since. She sees not an array of bottles and ampoules and pill bottles, but a summer hill where a litter of wolf cubs tumbles squealing over each other, over their long-suffering parents. The female, almost entirely white except for grey about her ruff and on her ears, she does not recognize. The male, the alpha, who dozes in the overhang of the den behind them, is the pup now in her care, the other adults who sprawl on the rocks, their bellies bulging with fresh elk, his grown sons and daughters. A sycamore stands against the sky beside the den, and a hawk wheels against the high blue.

The vision fades, leaving behind only the certainty of its truth. With a heart lighter than it has been in days, Dakota heads back to the ward to check on a coyote with a short, absurd tail.


*

Kirsten finds herself moving toward the clinic at a clip that could technically, she supposes, be called a jog. With a flush of embarrassment, she slows to a walk, then quickly ducks behind a large tree as the clinic door opens, its glass sending out bright flashes of light as it catches the sun. Tacoma slips outside, well-muscled arms swinging easily with his movements. His head turns briefly in her direction, and Kirsten fancies he spies her, though she’s pretty sure she’s adequately hidden.

After a second, he turns away and Kirsten sags against the tree in relief, not at all wanting to tell Tacoma something she doesn’t even know the answer to herself. She watches him walk away. The ease of his stride and the proud tilt of his head reassures her. It is a one hundred eighty degree change from the sorrow-filled man she’s seen the past couple of days. This can only bode well for Dakota’s state of spirit as well.

Which, of course, renders pretty much useless her need to be here in the first place.

“Alright, smarty,” she mutters to herself. “What now?”

Back to the jury selection? Home? A quick jog around the perimeter?

Her feet answer the question for her as they step around the tree and continue in her intended direction, toward the clinic. She looks down at them, traitorous things that they are, and frantically casts about for plausible excuses, discarding one after another the way a baseball player discards the shells of sunflower seeds he’s consumed.

“Shit!” The door’s to hand, and her mind is a complete blank. A tabula rosa, as her mother used to say when into her wine. The warm memory brings a brief grin to her face as she slips inside the cool, antiseptic scented clinic.

Shannon, from her position behind the reception desk, greets her with a warm, welcoming grin. “Hi, Doctor King!”

“Kirsten, remember?”

Shannon blushes. “Ok, Kirsten.” Her smile returns. “Dakota’s in the back finishing up with mama wolf and her baby. You can go back if you like.”

“That’s ok,” Kirsten demurs, still feeling a bit the idiot for having come all the way over here without a suitable excuse. “I’ll just wait…out here.”

“Okay, then. She shouldn’t be long. Do you want some coffee? I just made some fresh.”

“No. Thanks.”

She shrugs as if to say ‘suit yourself, then’ and returns to her paperwork.

Several quite uncomfortable moments later, the door opens, and Dakota steps through, wiping her hands on a white towel. The smile she sports upon seeing Kirsten wipes every bit of embarrassment and self recrimination from the young scientist’s mind. She rises to her feet quickly, grinning herself as Shannon looks between them like a spectator watching a tennis match from the front row.

Kirsten casts about for something to break the silence. “I…um…I was in the neighborhood and figured I’d drop by.” God, Kirsten, could you possibly sound any more lame?

Taking the comment in stride, Koda tosses the towel into the laundry chute. “How are the selections going?”

“Boring as hell,” Kirsten answers truthfully. “Plus, I think I was making the potential jurors nervous. Nothing like having the de facto President around to make it damned difficult to try and squirm out of jury duty.”

Both Shannon and Koda chuckle at her feeble attempt at witticism, and Kirsten feels unaccountably warmed for it.

“So,” Kirsten casts again, “have you had lunch yet?”

Koda shrugs. “I was planning on going over to the mess. Our cupboards are pretty bare.”

“Mind some company?”

Once again, that smile comes; a smile that knocks all rational thought from Kirsten’s head and leaves her reeling in a whirlwind of pure emotion. The hand suddenly clasping her own grounds her like a lifeline, and she willingly follows wherever Dakota may lead.


*

“How about some fish for supper?”

Kirsten looks sharply up at Dakota. Long lashes veil her improbable blue eyes, but even in the gathering dusk, the small smile twitching at her mouth is unmistakable. She is not sure where the joke lies, but she knows better than she cares to that there is no fish in the refrigerator at home. For days, there has been no protein except for dried beans, eggs produced by a neighbor’s hens and the disgustingly spongy “cheese food” salvaged a month ago from the local USDA surplus station. The trouble with being a geek, she reflects, is that you become every Tom, Dick and Harriet’s straight woman. “Okay,” she says, “I’ll bite. Yes, I’d like some fish for supper.”

The twitch almost becomes a smile, and Koda says, “We don’t have any.”

“So why are we talking about it?”

“Because if we take a couple rods down to the water in the morning, we might have some tomorrow. Do you fish?”

“No. I just bite.”

Koda bursts into laughter, and Kirsten joins her, incredulous. I made a joke. And someone’s actually laughing at it. Love does weird things to people. It’s doing very weird things to me.

Above the flounced silhouette of a larch tree, a single star flares into visibility against the rapidly darkening eastern sky. In the west, the red glow of sunset lingers along the horizon. Kirsten stares up at pinprick ofbrightnesst. Star light, star bright—do I dare wish for what I wish tonight? Aloud she says, “When I was a child, I thought the stars were the eyes of great owls flying across the night sky. I was always afraid one would swoop down and catch me.”

The taller woman tilts her head back and gazes at the sky for a long moment. “We Lakota have always believed that Ina Maka brought us forth from her womb here in the Paha Sapa. We were created here; we have lived and died here. Take us away, and we lose our souls. When Tali and I went to University, we were home to each other.”

“That must have been lonely.”

“It was. Some Nations believe we came from the stars, though, and will eventually return. That must be lonelier still, to have no land at all, anywhere, that is your own.”

‘Home was never a place for me,” Kirsten says softly. “We moved around too much. It was always my parents. For a long time now, it’s been Asi.”

Dakota takes her eyes from the sky and looks down at Kirsten. “That must have been lonely,” she echoes.

“It—”

From the street behind them comes the sound of squealing tires and the blare of a horn. “Doc! Thank God, there you are!”

Koda looks up sharply, and Kirsten, swiveling, swears under her breath. A battered red Dodge pickup skids to a stop beside them, a Tech Sergeant still in uniform at the wheel. His buzz cut and neatly clipped blond mustache belie the agitation in his face. “Doctor Rivers,” he says, “can you come? My daughter’s cat has been trying to have her kittens since this morning, and can’t. She’s crying and won’t stop.”

Light as an evening breeze, Dakota’s hand brushes hers as she steps up to the passenger window. “Who’s crying, your daughter or the cat?”

“Both of them. Can you come? Please?”

“Later,” Dakota says softly, and again there is the soft brush of her hand. Then she climbs up into the truck and is gone, the tires squealing again as the driver hangs a hard U-turn and speeds off.

Kirsten turns back toward the house, making her way slowly through the growing dark. When she pushes the door open, Asi tumbles out past her, makes a couple circuits of the yard at a trot, then pauses to anoint his favorite fencepost. He halts again at the gate, ears up, tail poised but not quite wagging. From inside the house comes the fragrant aroma of coffee and something rich with basil and tomatoes, and she is suddenly as hungry as she is tired. “Sorry, guy,” she says. “Maybe after supper, okay?”

An hour later, Asi sprawls on the hearth, head between his paws, oblivious to the world. Kirsten, her legs tucked under her, balances her laptop carefully on the overstuffed arm of her chair and tells herself she should get back to work. But the figures that stream across the screen blur even with her glasses, and she closes the top. Soft footfalls cross the room from the kitchen in the rear: Maggie, carefully balancing two mugs that steam with something herbal mixed with honey. She sets one down by Kirsten. “Chamomile. It’ll help relax you.”

Kirsten glances up sharply. Maggie is out of uniform for once, in a pair of slim-legged black slacks and a pullover that emphasizes her slenderness and elegant height. Its dark wine hue picks up the undertones of her skin. The bobcat cuff glints on the curve of her ear. She looks like Cleopatra, damn her. Aloud she says, “Thanks.”

Maggie settles comfortably on the couch, sipping at her own drink. Its aroma is different than the tea in her own cup, something with cinnamon. After a moment she says, “I brought you a gun from the armory. It was very generous of you to give yours to Harry that day at the census, but you really shouldn’t be without.” A smile, half ironic, touches her mouth. “I probably should put a bodyguard on you, too, but I don’t think you’d like that very much.”

“I wouldn’t like that at all.” Kirsten hears the irritation in her voice and with an effort hauls herself back to civility. “You made him a handsome gift yourself, you know.”

Maggie touches the cuff on her right ear briefly. “Maybe more than you realize. I had these made years ago, when I first qualified on the Tomcat and joined the squadron here.”

“The Bobcats?”

“The Bobcats.” She pauses. “I had them made because I was the new girl and the odd woman out. All the other flyers were men. Most of them didn’t take me seriously, and I wanted some sign of—not loyalty, exactly, not quite allegiance—some sign of my commitment to the life I’d chosen. Like a wedding ring, only not as obvious.”

“Andrews and Manny wear them, too.”

Maggie nods. “It became a fashion when I was named squadron commander. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and all that.” She sets her cup down and leans forward. “But it’s a little more personal than that for me, Kirsten. I meant it when I said it’s like a wedding ring for me. My first love is flying. Always has been, always will be. There’s something about the freedom of the sky . . . something about that solitary, high blue with nothing but the canopy between you and infinity. . .” She makes a small, dismissive gesture, but her eyes are bright, an a smile hovers at her mouth. “It’s like the poet said once, you touch something that’s at the bare edges of perception, not of earth at all.”

Kirsten’s heart slams hard against her ribs. She begins to know, or thinks she does, what the other woman is saying, and she is not at all sure she dares to believes it. She tries to say something appropriately profound, but no words will come to her dry mouth.

After a moment, Maggie says quietly, “No human can compete with that, Kirsten. My heart was given long ago, and I can’t take it back. I don’t want to.”

She forces her mouth to form the sounds. “Not even Dakota?”

“Not even Dakota. I won’t try to tell you I don’t care for her, but that’s not what either of us really needs.” She smiles and gets to her feet. “I’ve got to go back to HQ for awhile. I may not make it back at all tonight.”

“Maggie—” Kirsten stops, not sure what to say. Nothing seems quite adequate. But she says, “Thank you. I—”

Maggie brushes her cheek lightly with a long finger, a gesture so like Dakota’s that for a moment Kirsten is stunned. She says, “No thanks necessary, my dear. I’ll dance at your wedding when the time comes. Sleep well.”

Long after she is gone, Kirsten sits staring into the empty fireplace. Dakota does not come home, and eventually Kirsten rises and turns the latch on the front door. She calls Asi softly to her, and goes to bed. She sleeps dreamlessly.


*

It’s black as pitch when Kirsten is pulled from her sleep, courtesy of a gentle knock on the door. With a soft ‘wuff’, Asi clambers out of the bed and trots to the door, then sits and wags his tail, whining softly.

The knock comes again, accompanied this time by a voice she would…does…know in her dreams. The sheets conspire to trap her as she struggles to sit up. She tosses them away, then quickly snatches them back when she realizes that she’d be putting on a show she’s not yet comfortable enough to star in. When all pertinent bits are covered to her satisfaction, she runs a hand through her hair and clears the huskiness from her throat. “C-come in.”

The door opens, and Dakota pokes her head through, grinning as she notices Kirsten’s sleep-tousled form still tucked in bed. The rest of her body follows, causing Kirsten’s heart to leap into her mouth and flutter there, drooling. Koda is wearing a raggedy pair of cut-off jeans that display a heart-stopping length of tanned, muscled leg, and a hooded, sleeveless sweatshirt that displays her arms to the same effect. Kirsten tries to swallow, and fails. “Morning,” she croaks, knowing that she’s staring and unable to stop herself.

Dakota is by no means oblivious to the look she’s getting. On the contrary, she feels it with every molecule in her body, and her skin warms and tingles as hormones are released into her bloodstream and busily tango their way hither and yon. She also knows that if she were anyone other than who she is, gone would be any thought of any morning activity she had originally planned. Kirsten, looking tired, and rumpled, vulnerable and devastatingly sexy, pulls to her like steel to a magnet. It is only because she is the woman she is that she resists, and gifts the young scientist with a broader grin. “Rise and shine, lazybones! The fish aren’t gonna catch themselves, ya know.”

That breaks the spell, and Kirsten flops onto her back, making sure to take the sheet with her. “God,” she groans. “You sound just like my father.”

Koda raises an unseen eyebrow. Sounds like, maybe, but the thoughts she’s entertaining while looking at those suddenly displayed legs are anything but paternal. “You said you were up for fishing this morning,” she replies, pleased that her voice sounds relatively normal.

“The operative word here, Dakota, is ‘morning.’. This,” she swings an arm in a large arc, “is oh-God thirty. Even the fish are asleep.”

“Wanna bet?”

The arm collapses across Kirsten’s eyes. “I knew you’d say that.” Her sigh is worthy of the most scene-chewing actor ever to take the stage. “Do I have time for a shower, at least?” Not that the showers offer much. With the natural gas having petered completely out, the water is cold, bitter cold, or icicles. Then again, a cold shower sounds just the ticket right about now.

“Sure,” Koda replies, thinking much the same thing. “I’ll give you ten minutes.”

“So very generous of you,” is the dry retort, causing Dakota to chuckle.

With that, she backs out of the room, taking Asi with her.

After the door has safely closed, Kirsten removes her arm and expels a great gust of air from her lungs. “Sweet…Jesus!”

Her head is spinning. Her heart is pounding. Even her damn palms are sweaty.

“Either I’m way deep in love, or I’m getting ready to have a stroke,” she whispers to the uncaring ceiling. “Worst part is, I don’t know which one would be easier on me.”


*

Exactly eleven minutes and one very cold shower later, Kirsten appears in the living room, dressed casually in a pair of well worn jeans, a simple navy blue T-shirt and hiking boots that have seen better decades. She appears appealingly rumpled, and even younger than she normally looks. Koda smiles at her from her place in the kitchen, and hefts the basket she’s packed from the table. “Breakfast. C’mon, the truck’s packed, Asi’s aboard, and the fish are waiting.”

Rubbing the sleep from her eyes, Kirsten mumbles something unintelligible and follows behind like a little kid going to the mall with Mom when she’d rather be in bed sleeping. She finally manages to waken fully once she’s belted into the truck—borrowed from Judge Harcourt—and Koda is starting the engine. “Wait a minute. I thought we were just going down to the stream at the edge of the property. I’ve seen fish in there.” She’s not…quite…ready to tell the circumstances behind seeing said fish, however.

Koda shrugs. “Too many people.”

Kirsten nods in understanding. Though incredibly generous and giving, Dakota Rivers is an intensely private person, just as she herself is. A private person with an innate need to escape into that privacy at any given time.

Her eyes widen as she realizes the honor she’s being given.

“Is that okay?” Dakota asks, unsure of the reason behind Kirsten’s prolonged silence.

“It’s more than okay,” Kirsten replies, grinning. Reaching out, she lays a hand on Dakota’s wrist, squeezing it in thanks. “Much more.”

Returning the smile, Koda slips on her sunglasses, throws the truck into gear, and starts off, not minding in the least that Kirsten hasn’t yet seen fit to remove her hand.


*

Less than a half hour later, Dakota pulls the truck into a dense grove of trees and kills the engine. Kirsten looks around through the windshield as Koda opens the door and slips out, Asi at her heels. The big dog spies something off to his left and goes pelting off, barking fit to raise the dead. A second later, a flock of pheasants rises up with a ratting whirr, and Asi reappears, proudly wagging his tail.

Laughing at her dog’s antics, Kirsten slips out of the truck and takes in a deep breath of spring scented air. She then walks around to the bed of the truck, where Dakota is busy unloading their equipment. “Need some help?”

“Yeah. Grab this for me, will ya?”

Kirsten’s shoulder is nearly pulled from its socket as she grabs hold of the handled basket Koda hands her. “Jesus! What’s in here? Bricks?”

“You’ll see,” Koda replies, smirking, and handing her several thick blankets. “I can get the rest.”

Kirsten looks around again as Koda continues to unload the gear, taking in the seeming quiet of the place. Her mind, of its own accord, slips back a pace to a time when she had been in a similar place after the failed business at the android factory. The droids had come from nowhere and surrounded her truck. She shivers with the memories.

“You ok?”

Kirsten frowns, knowing it’s a stupid question, but needing to ask anyway. “Is it…safe here?”

Koda smiles. “It should be. And if it isn’t, we have Asi, and I have this.” She hefts an oblong object that can only be a cased rifle. “We’ve got it covered.”

Kirsten nods, saddened by the need to carry a rifle on a simple fishing trip. “Things are never going to be the same, are they.”

Laying her gear down on the ground, Koda straightens, reaches out, and brushes the tips of her fingers against Kirsten’s spine, between the smaller woman’s shoulder blades. “I have faith in you,” she begins, voice very soft. “And in the rest of us, to get rid of the androids and help make this land a good place to live in again.”

“I wish I had your faith in me,” Kirsten replies, sighing deeply.

“You do.” Ignoring Kirsten’s questioning look, Koda retrieves the rest of their gear and heads off into the woods, Asi happily at her heels.

Fetching another sigh, Kirsten tromps in after her.


*

“This is beautiful,” Kirsten whispers, as if giving full voice to her thoughts will break the enchantment of the area around her. A faerie ring of fantastically colored flowering trees surrounds an almost perfectly circular pond whose calm surface reflects the slowly lightening sky like a mirror made of smoked glass.

Fine, feathery grass grows along the shore, heads bent like Narcissus looking at his reflection in the cool water below. Frogs sing for mates across the expanse, their calls echoing and mixing with the chirp of crickets and the somnolent buzzing of a hundred other, as yet hidden, insects.

There is an almost sacred sense of peace to this hidden glen, and the calm seeps into Kirsten, soothing over edges made jagged by worry and strain.

“Thank you,” she says, still whispering. “For bringing me here. I know this place must mean a lot to you.”

Koda favors her with a smile that is, curiously, half-shy, half-defensive. Then she relaxes. “I used to come here when I needed to think.” Her smile becomes more genuine. “Or be alone.”

“You mean, you never…?” Kirsten asks, surprised.

“No. Never.”

Kirsten feels her breath catch. “Wow.” She shakes her head, trying to clear it. “I…uh…I don’t…” She looks up, startled, as a blanket is snatched from her arms.

“C’mon,” Koda invites, grinning. “Let’s get this spread out and do some fishing.”


*

“Oh God that was good!” Kirsten groans as she flops back onto her elbows. She wiggles a little; her jeans seem to have shrunk in the waist since she put them on this morning. The top button strains heroically with the effort of holding the fabric together.

“I’m glad you enjoyed,” Koda replies, watching her companion’s body movements with interest—and a fairly accelerated heart-rate.

“Oh, I did more than enjoy, believe me.” She laughs. “It’s strange. I never liked venison before.”

“That’s because I never cooked it for you,” Koda teases, grinning. “Here, try this.” She hands over a wine glass filled with a Pinot Noir.

“Why Ms. Rivers,” Kirsten questions over the rim of the glass, affecting a cultured accent, and batting her eyes, “wine before noon? Whatever will the neighbors think?”

“Screw the neighbors,” Koda growls, taking a healthy sip of the vintage and thoroughly enjoying it. “Let ‘em get their own wine.”

They settle into companionable silence for a time, both content to watch the sun play over the tiny wavelets in the pond, creating a colorful light show that neither tires of viewing. Their poles are side by side, held up by simple sticks, the bobbers riding along the tiny waves like toy boats in a gigantic bathtub.

The fishing has been good, with Kirsten proving herself an apt angler, catching more than her fair share of bass, perch and crappie. It will make a welcome change from the gruel that has started to pass for food back at the base, and Kirsten licks her lips, already thinking of sautéed fresh bass over early spring greens, completely unaware of the searing blue gaze tracking the movements of her tongue and mouth.

Blinking, Dakota deliberately turns her head toward the water and finishes the last of her wine in an untasting gulp, glad for the moisture it gives a mouth gone dry as desert sand.

“Thank you.” Kirsten’s soft voice floats along on the flower-scented breeze. “I don’t think—no, I know I’ve never had such a nice morning. I…um….” Looking shyly down at her hands clasped across her belly, she continues, “I never was much for sitting down and smelling the roses. It was pretty much all work and no play, and it made me kind of a dull girl.”

“Not dull,” Koda responds matter-of-factly. “Just overworked.” She smiles a little. “And underplayed.”

Chuckling at the poor joke, Kirsten rolls her head and sees the sun peering fully over the ring of tall trees surrounding the pond. “Speaking of work….”

“I noticed.” Placing her wine glass on the blanket, Koda begins packing the remains of their brunch into the basket. “Fenton’s coming to the clinic in a couple hours to look at Dietrich’s handiwork.”

Realizing what that means, Kirsten hurriedly sits up, her face drawn and sad. “Oh, Dakota, I’m so sorry.”

Koda tries to shrug it off. “’salright. It was going to happen sooner or later. Sooner’s just as well, I suppose.”

Green eyes flash. “It’s not alright. It’s not alright and it’s not fair. Damnit, you shouldn’t have to go through this again!”

“If I don’t, who will? Who can speak for him other than me?” Her smile is sad. “Life isn’t fair. Death isn’t either.”

Though her eyes, faraway, don’t register movement, she feels a warm, slight body press against her from the back and two well-made arms wrap around her waist as a chin rests on her shoulder. “You shouldn’t have to go through this alone, Dakota. Hell, you shouldn’t have to go through it at all.” A brief pause. Kirsten’s gentle breathing tickles against Koda’s ear and cheek. “What can I do to help?”

Dakota smiles and turns her head so that their faces are on a level. “Just be you,” she whispers. “That’s all I need.”

“I will,” Kirsten murmurs, sealing the vow with a kiss that quickly deepens. When she feels Koda’s tongue gently trace across her lips, she opens them, bidding welcome. With a groan, Koda pulls Kirsten’s arms away, then twists the smaller woman so that they are now face to face. Her own hands come up, sinking themselves into the thick, soft mass of Kirsten’s golden hair, stroking and tugging as their mouths move together sensually, urgently. Kirsten’s hands find their way onto Dakota’s broad shoulders, squeezing and releasing in time to her panting breaths. She is quickly becoming overwhelmed by everything—the emotions, the sensations, the taste of Koda’s lips and breath—and when she feels one hand leave her hair and trail, ever so gently, against the side of her breast, she moans and pulls away.

Slumped over, she breathes in deep, trying to catch her air and calm a heart lunging itself against her ribs with passionate force. A brief touch to her shoulder, and she looks up into Koda’s concerned eyes. “I’m…I’m….ok,” she pants. “Just gotta….woah.”

“What’s wrong? Are you alright?” Koda’s voice carries an edge to it, and that edge gets through to Kirsten on some level.

Taking in a deep breath, she straightens, and lets it out slowly. “Yes, I’m fine. It just…caught me by surprise.”

Koda cocks her head in question.

In response, Kirsten lifts a slightly trembling hand and lays it against Dakota’s silken cheek. “I have never, ever felt like this before. Never. Physically, emotionally, it’s like…it’s like dangling over the edge of a cliff and the bottom’s nowhere in sight.” She meets Koda’s gaze directly, willing her to understand. “It scared me for a moment.”

Dakota smiles, and turns her head just slightly so that her lips rest against Kirsten’s palm. “I understand,” she murmurs, kissing the hand on her face.

“You do?”

The smile broadens. “I do.” Moving forward, she places the tenderest of kisses on Kirsten’s reddened lips, then pulls away. “C’mon. Let’s get ready for work.”

Grasping Kirsten’s hands, Koda pulls them both up to their feet. The young scientist steps forward and wraps her arms around Dakota’s firm body and holds tight for several moments. “Thank you,” she finally murmurs against the cloth covering Koda’s chest. She pulls back slightly, looking up at the tall woman. “Do you think that maybe…we would come back here again sometime?”

“Count on it,” Koda replies, kissing the crown of Kirsten’s hair. “Count on it.”

CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN

KODA RUNS HER hands over the small cat’s body, pressing gently against her sides and abdomen. Despite her ordeal of the evening before, Sister Matilda’s black fur is glossy as a raven’s wing, her white bib and muzzle pristine. She has hardly stopped purring since delivering her kittens last night, and all her bones vibrate with the rumbling. Koda has given up on the stethoscope, resorting to the old fashioned method of counting her respirations and the beats of her heart by compressions of her ribs. She is pleased to find them close to normal; there is no real sign of trouble in the belly, either. The new mother’s uterus is a bit loose, but nursing her litter of six should help to firm it up without further intervention.

“All right, girl. Let’s get another dose of good old Penicillin in you, just as a precaution.” Koda leaves her lying on the exam table, small paws kneading the empty air, to fill a syringe from the vial in the countertop fridge. Compared to the bobcat, Sister Matilda is an ideal patient, content to stay where she is put and to accept human attempts at help with aplomb. Koda rubs her ears, then lifts her scruff and slips the needle in. The purr never misses a beat.

The evening before, she had cried with her distress, and so had little Daphne Burgess. Koda had accompanied the Sergeant to his home, made her initial examination, and brought cat and human family all back to the clinic. Sister Matilda’s labor had arrested several hours before, but there had been no blockage of the birth canal. Despite her small frame and enormous belly, so round she could hardly turn herself over without all four feet leaving the exam table, Koda had found no reason why she could not deliver normally. An injection of Oxytocin had started contractions again almost immediately, and within two hours she had become the happy mother of sextuplets.

Emphasis on the sex part: not one kitten looks like any other. One yellow longhair, one calico shorthair, one solid smoky grey, one black with white paws like his mother, one all white with a stubby Manx tail and one that looks suspiciously like a Maine Coon Cat. “Got around a bit there, didn’t you girl?” Koda remarks as she lays her back among her brood.

Briefly Koda inspects her other patients in the ward. A flop-eared rabbit with an infected eye is responding to treatment; a Scotty, survivor of an unfortunate encounter with a porcupine, looks morosely up at her over his still-swollen nose. She gives him a scratch between the ears. “Curiosity’s not just bad for cats, bro,” she admonishes him. At least it hadn’t been a skunk.

A tap sounds at the door of the ward. “Dr. Rivers? There’s an elderly gentleman here to see you. A civilian.”

“Tell him half a minute, Shannon. I’m coming.” Stepping in and out of the bleach basin without thinking, Koda pauses to run her hands under the tap. She has a fair notion who the elderly civilian is and an even better notion why he’s here. From the file cabinet by her desk in the cubbyhole designated as her office, she takes two file folders and a small, silver key. Fingering it gingerly, she drops it into her pocket. She has known for days that this moment would come. She hates it no less for being forewarned.

Judge Harcourt stands in the middle of the reception area. He fills the small space to overflowing, standing with spine straight as a plumbline in pinstriped suit and burgundy tie, his salt-white hair combed into waves that brush at his collar. “Doctor Rivers,” he says gravely as she pushes open the door. “I wonder if I might have a moment of your time.”

“Come on back,” she says, gesturing with the files.

Koda drags the chair from the examination room into the postage-stamp size space beside her own in front of her desk. “Have a seat, Fenton.”

He remains standing, silent, until she sits, then follows suit, taking his tobacco pouch from his pocket. Without speaking he loads the pipe, reaches for the lighter and pauses, his eyes darting around the room. “Go ahead,” Dakota says. “The nearest oxygen tank is two rooms over.”

He gives her a grateful look, and it is only when the fragrant smoke begins to curl up from the bowl that he says, “We have a problem.”

Koda snorts. “Just one? Thank you. What did you do with all the others?”

“We have a judicial problem,” he amends, giving her a sharp look beneath bushy brows. “To wit, the Dietrich family, specifically his son.”

“Let me guess. They want charges pressed.”

“The son certainly does. The wife is a mousy little creature who scarcely uttered a word. Either she’s the submissive fundamentalist sort, or she really doesn’t mind being a widow.” He shrugs. “Or both, of course.”

“Domestic violence?”

“It’s possible. Certainly the son seems very sure of his manly place in the universe, and at the moment he sees that place as his father’s avenger. The MP at the gate relieved him of a knife and pistol on his way into the Base. I spoke to him”—he grimaces as smoke streams out about the stem of the pipe, giving him the aura of an oddly domesticated dragon—“at rather unpleasant length. We are going to have to have what amounts to a preliminary hearing-cum-inquest, at the very least. If there were any such available, I would advise that impetuous cousin of yours to get himself lawyered up. Where is he, by the way?”

“He says the Colonel’s made him PLO for life—that’s Permanent Latrine Officer—but he’s actually working maintenance out on the flightline. She’s got Andrews, the other pilot involved, doing the same. Here.”

Koda pushes the files across the desk. “These are the Polaroids I took before and after I treated the two surviving victims of the leghold traps. You can see the results of the treatment in person.”

The Judge opens the folders, studying the harshly-lit, slightly overexposed color pictures. His expression does not change, but Koda marks the sudden clenching of his teeth on the pipe stem as he inspects the photos of the bobcat’s torn and bloody flesh, the tendons hanging loose though the bones beneath had remained, by some fluke, unbroken. Beside it is a second Polaroid, this one showing the wound cleanly shaved and stitched. The coyote’s involuntarily bobbed tail looks less serious, and the Judge cannot quite suppress a twitch at the corner of his mouth. “The Trickster tricked,” he observes, “and escaping with nothing but wounded dignity in the end. Appropriate.”

“Not quite nothing,” Dakota says quietly. “That wound was nastily infected. He could have gone septic and died.”

“You’re right, of course.” The Judge sets the folders down. “Are there other photographs?”

Of the wolf, Wa Uspewicakiyapi, he means. “No. Come out to the kennels, then we’ll open the freezer.”

Outside, Harcourt comes close to smiling again. The coyote lies on his back, forepaws crossed over his ribs in classic mummy fashion, snoring in the sun. His abbreviated tail twitches with his dreams, the wound healed over, leaving only a bare tip of skin to testify to his ordeal. The bobcat lies invisible inside the concrete block shelter at one end of her run, favoring shade for her siesta. But signs of her improvement are obvious. A much scuffed rubber ball testifies to her growing ease at chasing and pouncing; except for a few crumbs and a feather or two, her food bowl is empty. Harcourt shoots Koda a reproving glance, and she says, “She caught a pigeon.”

“Rock dove,” he corrects her absently. “At least that’s a good sign she can begin to fend for herself.”

“With luck I should be able to release both of them in a week or so. I’m going to wait for Tacoma to come back from the wind farm so he can help with her. She’s getting pretty feisty now that she’s doing better.”

“You mean uncooperative.”

Dakota grins at him. “With everyone but Tacoma, I mean she barely tolerates us. She’s picky.”

“And these—?” Harcourt gestures toward the run where the mother wolf lies sunning herself on the concrete, while her pup repeatedly flings himself up the incline of her shoulders and as repeatedly slides downward to bump his stubby tail on the hard surface. A sharp yap announces his frustration, but his mother barely twitches. Finally he trots around her, taking the long way at last, and settles down to nurse, nuzzling at her belly. She rouses, licks him absently, and resumes her nap.

“Wa Uspewicakiyapi’s mate and surviving pup. They’re almost ready for release, too.”

“Excellent,” he says, quietly. “Shall we go in?”

Shall we open the freezer, he means.

Koda feels a chill pass down her spine. She has not unlocked the unit since Kirsten brought her the keys, that day by the streamside. She knows what she will see and knows that, gash for gash and shattered bone for bone, she has seen far worse. The shock was in discovering what Tacoma had done; it is long past and keeps no hold over her. Stiffly her fingers close about the small bit of metal in her pocket. “All right,” she says shortly, and turns toward the door.

Her hands are steady as she turns the key in the lock. As the lid comes up, a cloud of frosty air rises up to meet them like fog, obscuring the contents of the freezer. With it, faint with the cold, comes the sick-sweet odor of death. When the condensate clears, a bundle perhaps a meter long, wrapped in heavy plastic, lies visible at the bottom. Koda bends down to grasp it at the middle, but Harcourt says, “Allow me,” and takes hold of one end, leaving Koda to lift the other. Together they carry it to the metal worktable normal used for such chores as mixing plaster casts or clipping fur from the cuts and scratches of recalcitrant patients. They set it down gently.

A moment’s inspection reveals that the plastic is not wound about the body but folded over it in several layers. As gently as if she were smoothing the bedcovers of a child, she loosens the tape and lays back the heavy, transparent plastic, frosted with the cold. At the last, the outlines of the wolf’s form clearly visible through it, she hesitates for a breath. Then, firmly, she folds it back.

Though Manny and Tacoma had been quick, rigor had apparently come and gone by the time they found the wolf’s remains, and temperatures had been just high enough not to freeze them where they lay. There can be no illusion that Wa Uspewicakiyapi seems only sleeping, yet he is decently laid out, his spine slightly curved, his head on his paws, his tail curled over his flank to expose the terrible wound in his leg.

Harcourt rounds the table for a closer look. Even frozen solid, it is clear that the teeth of the trap have torn the flesh down to the bone, abrading tendons and muscle and nerves over time enough for the edges to become dried and bloodless. Fragments of bone show through the shredded flesh. The fur, mingled grey and white, remains clotted with crimson. On his belly, the blood is frozen in a thin, smooth sheet, only the edges of skin showing white where the torn organs have been replaced. The position of the head hides the worst of the wounds to the neck, but streaks of blood stain the ruff, a necklace of deep garnet. As Harcourt leans closer to look, his face becomes as still as the wolf’s own, and as cold. But he says only, “Dakota, would you please bring the camera? We need to have a permanent record.”

In the examination room, Koda checks the camera for film and is grateful for the few minutes necessary to find and slip a new packet into place. Her hands are numb from the cold, and she fumbles twice as she closes the back. The numbness about her heart has begun to shift, the first cracks appearing in the blue ice that has crept through her veins since the moment she found Wa Uspewicakiyapi bleeding his life out into the snow. In its place anger rises, a rage as white and searing as sheet lightning. She fumbles again as she turns toward the door, knocking a box of gauze sponges to the floor. As she stoops to pick them up her vision narrows, centering only on the small circle of light that contains her hand, lifting the box, meticulously setting it back down on the counter. Hunter sight.

But her prey is dead already, lying frozen and cold as his victim in the hospital morgue. You should have left him for me, cousin. If she cannot have him, she can at least make sure that others do not follow him.

Never. Never again. I swear it.

Gradually light invades the darkness that has gathered around her, and her field of view returns to normal. Carefully she steps around the examination table and returns to the workroom where Harcourt waits for the camera. Wordlessly she hands it to him, allowing him to record the evidence of brutal death. When he has done, the photos slipped into a pocket, he says quietly, “I need to ask you a question, Dakota. It’s one I will need to ask you again, at the inquest.”

She nods, waiting.

“In your professional judgement, and strictly in your professional judgement, were these injuries sufficient to cause death?”

Shutting out the sight of the dead before her, shutting out the memory of her friend struggling in the trap, she nods. “When I found him, he was shocking from blood loss and exposure. Infection and frostbite had destroyed muscle and organ tissue. The left tibia and fibula, as you can see, were both shattered past the point where they could have been pinned.”

“Had you found him earlier, could surgery have saved his life?”

She answers, not quite able to keep the anger from her voice. ” If I had found him much earlier, before he was attacked by whatever tore him open—yes. His life, yes. But not his life, Fenton. Even if the other wounds could be repaired or had never happened, even if the infection could be fought down, the leg was unsalvageable. Only a sadist would have condemned him to that.”

The judge raises one hand, palm outward. “Bear with me a moment longer, please. Quality of life aside, why did you not bring him back and attempt the operation?”

“Because his respiration was depressed and his blood loss so heavy that, in my professional judgement,” she bites the words off, “he would not have survived transportation, much less anaesthesia.”

‘Thank you. Now allow me to help.”

Together they fold the plastic back into place, taping it firmly. Gently they lay Wa Uspewicakiyapi back into his chill resting place. Her hand lingers for a moment on the bundle. Only for a while, old friend, she promises silently. Only until justice has been done.

We will not fail you again.

In the silence of her mind, a wolf howl rises to the floating moon.


*

The witness room, four generically off-white walls topped by a yellowing acoustic–tile ceiling, fits only a bit less snugly than a coffin. Three paces long, three paces wide, its furnishings consist of one small table, one spine-cracking folding chair of undetermined but ancient vintage and one 60-watt light bulb further dimmed by a frosted glass globe. It bears a decided resemblance to the classic police interrogation room. According to her watch, Koda has been here for almost an hour, apparently going on all morning.

Good thing I’m not claustrophobic. Yet.

A jury for the trial of the Rapid City jail rapists was seated yesterday, with final selection in the morning and opening statements after lunch. The prosecution has begun its case this morning with accounts of the raid from the participants, to be followed by testimony from the victims in the afternoon. She has reviewed her testimony twice with Alderson, the last time before the opening gavel more than two hours ago. Larke and Martinez have already given their accounts; Andrews is up now, with Koda held back for last. The strategy may be transparent, but its effectiveness is undisputed. As the hero of the Cheyenne, she is the pièce de resistance. She is also mortally bored with the tedium of waiting.

Checking her watch one last time—Damn, he said we’d be out of here by eleven.—Koda sinks crosslegged to the relative comfort of the floor, opens Spengler at her bookmark, and begins to read.

She had snatched this particular book up on her way out her house all those months ago, not sure why then, not really sure why now. Then it had seemed a token of the past, a link to connect her to the spacious library that occupies a third of her home, something to remind her of—and call her back to—the comfortable life she and Tali had built between them. An incomplete farewell.

But now—she lets the book fall open on her knees, propping her chin on her fists. Spengler had been the great heretic of early twentieth century history, a prophet of doom floating loose on the riptide of social and industrial progressivism. History, he had said, moved not in ever-ascending lines but in cycles: birth, rise, maturity, decline and fall. He had fallen in and out of academic fashion, spiking in the late thirties when he had predicted that the Thousand Year Reich would last less than ten and thereafter relegated to the “crank science” midden along with von Daniken and other psuedoscholarly nutjobs.

Come the early 2000’s, Spengler had been rescued from the refuse heap and dusted off by Stan Uribe, then of Baylor. Uribe had argued that the United States at that time was in a phase corresponding to Europe’s Reformation, complete with religious wars—mostly fought in the political arena rather than on the battlefield—and imploding corporate feudalism. His theories had cost him his job, but he had moved on to U Penn’s infinitely more prestigious department. There he had gone on to extrapolate the theory to encompass the rise of American Empire, built like others before it on the three G’s of colonialism and conversion: God, Gold and Glory. He had nearly gotten fired again in 2003, when he published the capstone of his theory, the inevitable fall of the Empire to those it, like Rome two millennia before, had labeled barbarians: women, Muslims, pagans, African Americans, gays and lesbians, Hispanics, the Indigenous Nations.

While battle raged in the boardroom, Koda and Tali had sat in his lectures spellbound. They had spent hours in his office, talking, questioning, then gone on to use their scarce elective hours for his seminars, sitting up until four in the morning with friends arguing the consequences if Uribe were right.

If he were right. . . And it seems he is, though not in the way he expected.

What now? How do we rebuild, but on a different model that can break the cycle? Can we break the cycle? For the first time in nearly four hundred years, the Nations have the opportunity to develop something different from the European pattern. We need to begin to make contact with other communities that have survived, like the commune Kirsten stayed at in Minnesota. Assuming that we survive, we need—not an exit strategy, a way in to a different world. How will a technological people, most of whom will be former white, middle-class Americans, fit into the Time of the White Buffalo?

And gods, how am I going to bring a white girl home to Mother?

A sharp rap brings her suddenly to her feet. The Bailiff’s face, florid under its blond buzz cut, appears in the door. “Doctor Rivers, you’ve been called to the stand.”

Setting her book down, she follows the uniformed Sergeant out of the witness room and through the double doors of the court. Spectators fill two-thirds of the seats on the public’s side of the rail, a respectable crowd for all but the most notorious cases even in the time before the uprising. Some she recognizes as women liberated from the prison; one is Millie Buxton, her thin face drawn and pale with sleeplessness. Her fingers, clasped in her lap, writhe incessantly. She sits somewhat apart from the rest, toward the back. Also toward the back, Koda notes a large man wearing dark glasses, one foot on the floor and a fold of his jeans over the stump above his knee. His crutches lean against the back of the bench. She casts him a sharp glance, trying to place him, though she is certain she does not recognize him.

The second bailiff swings the gate open for her, and she approaches the dais with the judge’s bench and the witness stand. Harcourt fills his high seat as though he has grown there, inseparable from the black robe of his office or the gavel laid ready to his hand. He gives no sign of recognition—no fear, no favor from this one, ever—and says simply, “Madam Clerk, swear the witness.”

The Clerk steps from behind her desk, raising the Bible there slightly with an inquiring look. Koda shakes her head and lays her hand on the medicine bundle around her neck instead. In a low but clear voice, she swears to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, “so help me, Ina Maka.”

Alderson leads her steadily, step by step, though the events of the raid on the Rapid City jail. At his prompting, she recounts the initial attack on the facility, the wounding of Larke and the deaths of Johnson and Reese. The hush in the courtroom deepens as she tells of leading her squad through the crawlspace above the cells; grows deeper still as she recalls, keeping all emotion from her voice, the joy of the released prisoners, their anger and hatred for their captors, their grief. From where she sits, she can see that even Millie Buxton’s fingers have fallen quiet, caught up as she perhaps is in the recollection of her own and her daughter’s ordeal.

Not so the man in the sunglasses. His lips move constantly, as though praying or conversing earnestly with himself, and his fingers curl and uncurl, sliding up and down the invisible length of some unseen measure.

As if playing something. . . . An image tickles at her memory. . . .a guitar. That’s it! That’s him, the blind singer Kirsten and Maggie met at the census. My god, he’s the press!

When her narrative is at an end, a bare armature of facts, no more, Alderson turns back to the prosecution’s table. “Pass the witness, Your Honor.”

As Bourdreaux rises to take his place in the well of the court, Koda studies the defendants. McCallum has tipped his chair back on its hind legs so that it rests almost on the rail separating the defense table from the audience. Kazen studies the papers before him, as if searching for some unrecognized word of release; beside him, Petrovich stares at the jury, his hostility palpable. Buxton, though, sits with his elbows propped on the table, his forehead against his folded hands, apparently oblivious to the proceedings around him. His skin, pale when Koda saw him first at the jail, has grown grey and lusterless.

Like a mushroom, something that lives in the dark. Like a corpse. A man dead inside, too numb even to lie down.

Boudreaux clasps his hands in front of him, then looses them and clasps them behind his back instead. His nervousness shows in other ways, too, in the lines between his brows, just visible over the rims of his glasses; in the faint sheen of sweat slicking his scalp below his thinning hair. His job is an appalling one; to defend, and if he can, save the lives of, four men who are guilty far beyond a reasonable doubt, knowing that he may have a chance of success with only one of them. Knowing, too, that that chance hangs by a thread thin as spider silk.

“Dr. Rivers,” he begins, “do you recognize the four men seated at the defense table?”

She nods. “Yes, Major. I do.”

“You have already told the Court how you found these four men imprisoned in the Rapid City facility operated by Corrections Corporation of America. You found each in a separate cell, is that correct?”

Alderson is on his feet. “Objection, Your Honor! Leading the witness.”

Harcourt regards the prosecutor for a moment over the rims of his half-glasses. “Leading Dr. Rivers, is he?” He lets the pause speak for the absurdity of the idea, then says, “Sustained. Rephrase your question, Counsel.”

“Of course, Your Honor.” The flush of embarrassment spreads over Boudreaux’s neck above his tie and into his face. “Dr. Rivers, can you tell us how you found the four defendants housed in the CCA facility?”

“Each was in an individual cell.”

“Were they in contiguous cells within the same block?”

“They were in the same block, but not in adjoining cells.”

“When you entered those cells, did you observe any means by which an occupant might communicate with the occupants of other cells or with prison personnel?”

Silently, Koda gives him full marks despite his initial blunder. He is creeping up slowly on the conspiracy charge, obviously hoping at least to reduce the charges to rape with no conjoined felony or “special circumstances” that will trigger the death penalty. “Each cell contained a metal cot, a latrine and one stool. No communications devices of any kind were visible.”

“Any writing materials?”

“None.”

“Did subsequent search of the defendants turn up, say, cell phones, beepers, walkie talkies, notes or notepaper, anything of that nature?”

“None.”

“Did you ever, at any point, observe the prisoners to communicate with each other?”

“I did not.”

“Did you ever, at any point, observe the prisoners to communicate with any of the androids at the CCA facility?”

“I did not.”

Boudreaux gives a satisfied nod, then steps back behind the defense table. He shuffles several sheets of closely written yellow paper. “Tell me, Dr. Rivers, did the defendants come with you willingly when you opened their cells?”

Alderson pops up again. “Objection! Calls for a conclusion, Your Honor.”

The stare over the tops of his glasses is prolonged this time. At length Harcourt says dryly, “Sustained.”

“Let me rephrase: Did any of the prisoners refuse, or attempt to refuse, to leave his cell when your squad opened their doors?”

“One did.”

“Which one? Can you point him out to the court?”

“Mr. Buxton indicated that he did not wish to leave his cell.”

“And how did he do that?”

“We found him on his cot in the fetal position. He did not answer us at first when we spoke to him, then begged us to leave him.”

“What was his physical condition, Dr. Rivers?”

Movement to one side catches her eye, as Alderson pushes back his chair and begins to rise. He pauses for a moment, his backside canted awkwardly at the audience, then flushes and sits down abruptly. One juror covers her mouth with her hand, her black eyes sparkling. Koda glances down at her hands, making a note to ask Harcourt exactly how he has intimidated the prosecutor out of his objection. Then she says, “He was dehydrated and thin bordering on emaciation. When he stood, his feet were unsteady, and he had to be assisted to walk.”

Boudreax gives a clearly satisfied nod, then asks, “Dr. Rivers, have you ever attended human beings as well as your more accustomed four-footed and winged patients?”

“I have.”

“Under what circumstances?”

Briefly Koda recounts her service as unofficial Air Force medic to the Bobcats and their allies, both before and after their return to the Base. “I’ve also set the odd bone or two on my ranch or my parents,’ and given a good many insulin and B-12 shots to older folks in the neighborhood.”

“I see. So you could be trusted to know that when someone’s ribs are showing, he’s underweight, even though he’s not a horse?”

With an effort, Koda keeps her face straight. “I do believe so, Major.”

“No further questions.”

“You may step down,” Harcourt says, bringing his gavel down resoundingly on its holder. “Court adjourned until two o’clock.”

On her way out, Koda pauses at the rear bench where the blind man sits. She says, “You’re Harry the singer, aren’t you?”

“I am.” His face turns toward her, his head angled to hear more clearly. “You just testified. You’re Dakota Rivers.”

“Yes. I understand you sang a fine song at the census.”

Harry grins hugely. “I had some good material. Good story, good tune. Maybe you’ll let me sing it for you, sometime.”

“Maybe. Meanwhile, thanks.” Koda gives his hand a squeeze, unobtrusively palming a a folded piece of paper. “This will get you onto the Base and to the infirmary if you ever need anything. Don’t be shy about using it.”

Not waiting for thanks, she slips quietly from the room. Outside, she checks her watch and turns down the path that leads to the officers’ housing. If she hurries, she can make a brief lunch with Kirsten before returning to the clinic. She smiles at the thought, and quickens her pace.

CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT

TACOMA SNEAKS A LOOK in his rearview mirror as the caravan snakes its way back toward the base. Two armored patrol carriers are followed by two flatbed eighteen wheelers which carry two gigantic fans they have appropriated from OverDale Windfarm, Inc. All seems clear, but something is niggling at the back of his neck, making the hairs there stand up stiffly. The road they’re traveling on is little used, and there are no trees or other sightline obstructions to block the view.

He catches Manny out of the corner of his eye. The younger man is grinning like a kid playing hooky—which in a way is exactly what he’s doing. “’sup, cuz?”

Tacoma takes another quick look in the rearview mirror before turning to his cousin, pushing his concerns, for the moment, to the back of his mind.

“You’d better think about getting back in touch with the floorboards, Manny. We’ll be nearing the base pretty soon.”

Manny rolls his eyes, grinning at his cousin. “Stop being such a wuss, cuz. The Colonel’s in court all day, and if she steps outside to take a whiz, Anderson’s covering for me. We’ve got it knocked, so stop worrying about it.”

“I am worried about it,” Tacoma replies, staring at the younger man until Manny pales slightly and turns away.

His eyes widen and his skin goes a shocky white as he just catches something he can’t identify—though it looks frighteningly human—standing in the exact center of the road. “Watch out!!”

Tacoma looks forward just in time to feel the truck impact with whatever it is he’s hit. The object is borne under the vehicle and the driver’s side tires rise and fall with sick thuds. He slams on the brakes, bringing the truck to a skidding halt, and slumps back against the seat, face greasy with sudden sweat. “Please tell me that was a deer.”

“I don’t think so, cuz,” Manny replies in a small voice. He’s about to say more when a sound like a sharp, muffled cough is heard behind them. “Holy fuck! What was that??”

Tacoma, who’s heard that sound too many times to count, is already reacting, snapping open his harness and lunging out the door, his gun already to hand.

The APC that had been behind them is a smoking wreck from which injured men continue to emerge, their clothes and exposed skin covered with smoke, soot, and blood.

“Is there anybody still inside?” Tacoma demands, pulling a soot-covered, violently coughing soldier out by one singed and smoking arm.

“Donaldson, sir!” the airman chokes out. “He…was the…driver! Got…hurt bad, sir!”

Fire blooms up in the truck as Tacoma pushes the injured man out of the way. He jumps back himself as flames shoot out of the shattered windows, feeling his eyebrows singe and the skin on his face and hands grow hot and tight with the great heat. With a soft cry, he races around the front of the burning vehicle toward the drivers’ side where flames pour from the shattered frame like water from an open hydrant. He feels a hand grab his arm and he shakes it off savagely, only to have it grabbed again.

“Are you crazy, man?!?” Manny screams into his ear. “This thing’s about to blow sky high!”

“Get back! I’m getting Donaldson out!”

Manny’s face blooms before his streaming eyes. “He’s dead, thanhanshi! He’s already dead!”


*

Ripping open his shirt, Tacoma peels it off and uses it to beat back the flames. They die down enough for him to get a glimpse inside the smoke-shrouded interior. The young man inside is fully conscious; startlingly pale green eyes stare out from a face blackened by soot and burns, beseeching. Fire blooms upward again, forcing Tacoma back a step. He beats down the flames a second time, and reaches inside, grabbing the injured man under his armpit and pulling backward, muscles straining against Donaldson’s dead weight.

The young man screams as the bones in his shattered legs grind against one another, trapped beneath the remains of the console. Tacoma eases up as another man, one he can’t recognize through the smoky haze, shoots a chemical extinguisher into the damaged compartment, covering everything with a thin layer of white foam. He feels a body brush by him and, looking down, he sees Manny reaching beneath the still smoking and twisted metal, attempting to free the trapped man’s crushed legs.

The man screams again, though it has a breathless, wheezing quality to it that Tacoma doesn’t like at all. “Hurry!” he commands, earning only a glare from his cousin as Manny returns to his task.

The metal is scorching hot, burning his palms and fingers and arms with every touch. He ignores the pain, concentrating only on the desperate need to free Donaldson before the remains of the APC blow to heaven.

The flames rise again, undaunted by the chemical trying to kill them.

“The gastank’s ready to blow, sir!” comes an unknown voice screaming down on them from the outside, from safety. “Goddamnit, get out of there, sirs! Now!”

The cousins’ gazes meet; each gives a grim nod, and in concerted effort, struggle to free their injured comrade before they’re all blown to bits. Manny is finally able to slip his shoulder—the injured one, but there can be no help for it—under the wrecked console, and with a loud grunt, pushes upward with all of his strength. The twisted metal squeals its intense displeasure, but, grudgingly, it gives, lifting by the slightest of fractions. “NOW!!”

His grip as secure as he can make it, Tacoma uses the large muscles in his back, shoulders and legs to pull the screaming airman from the mangled compartment. It’s not a textbook extraction, but it gets the job done. Manny’s shoulder gives out just as Tacoma manages to pull the airman’s legs completely free of the wreckage.

Handing Donaldson quickly off to the three men standing behind him, he then reaches down, grabs Manny by his collar, and bodily tosses him away from the mangled APC.

A split-second later, the truck goes up in a blooming ball of smoke and fire. Tacoma finds himself lifted, almost tenderly, from his feet, and driven backward by the force of the explosion. Curiously, there is no pain whatsoever.

Maybe I already walk the Spirit Path, he thinks as he watches the ground race beneath him with almost clinical detachment. His landing, upon his back, is equally painless, as if he’s fallen into a cloud, and he is able to watch, with that same detachment, as flames eagerly lick up his pant legs. He feels…giddy almost…like a boy with a wonderful secret that no one else knows.

The pain comes back suddenly like air entering a vacuum. Waves of agony spike through his body and he reacts instantly, instinctively tossing the men who are manhandling him away like flies.

“Cut it out, damnit!” Manny bellows, holding him down with his one good arm. “You’re on fucking fire, Tacoma! Now lay still or I’ll put you out! I swear I will!”

Some of that gets through, and Tacoma lets his muscles deliberately relax. He can smell burning clothes and singed flesh that he assumes belongs to him. His stomach rolls once, then is steady.

Manny’s face swims back into his vision, sweat-covered, and with eyes the size of full moons. “That’s better. Shit, cuz, I thought you crapped out on us for sure! Don’t be goin’ all Crazy Horse on me again, ok?”

Groaning, Tacoma pushes himself up to a sitting position and surveys the damage, starting with his own body. His fatigues have been burned almost totally away, but the skin beneath, though reddened, seems little the worse for wear. Blisters are already starting to from on the palms of both hands and on his right cheek, just below his eye, which waters constantly and feels as if it’s leaking battery acid.

Blinking rapidly, he looks across the grounds at the smoking remains of the APC. The injured, five in all including Donaldson, lay among the wreckage like broken dolls on a garbage heap. Pale-faced young men and women tend the injured as best they can while casting furtive and pleading looks in the direction of Manny and Tacoma—the leaders of the mission. Manny looks back, contemplating, and Tacoma uses this second of inattention to drag himself to his feet by main strength. Manny turns back in time to see his cousin wobble as if standing at the epicenter of a mild earthquake.

Just about to administer a good old fashioned ass chewing, he ducks as a bullet passes close enough to crease what little there is of his hair.

Tacoma totters, but manages to keep his balance. Ignoring the agony that is his body, he breaks into a shambling run, yelling for his men to take cover even as he helps two corpsmen lift Donaldson and hurry him around to the back of the one remaining APC. He can sense the confusion; smell the fear in those around him—young men and women all. Taking a deep breath, he wills the pain to the back of his mind, making it unimportant, making it gone.

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