CHAPTER FOUR
Akwesasne, New York
May 18, 2123
The headless Viper hit the floor not three feet from where Mary Brant knelt, its neck stump jetting dark red. The black-edged scales that covered its naked torso and arms had a garish, lemon-yellow tint. Even through the smoke, she could smell the blood’s nauseating fish-stink.
Nav reached down and offered her a hand up, a pained, gap-toothed smile on his face. Green, watery leakage from multiple, non-fatal wounds dripped off his trouser cuffs and puddled around his heels. In the other hand he held his scimitar.
Ignoring the outstretched fingers and keeping her eyes on the blade’s bright edge, she swung the Benelli 12-gauge up in her fist, muzzle pointing under his green-grizzled chin, ready to deliver a different sort of beheading.
The wilted patriarch of the celery people had killed her father. As long as he held an unsheathed sword it didn’t matter that he had saved her life.
Yudan Nashi.
Never off-guard.
Just one of the many samurai lessons her grandfather, Giant Bear, had burned into her brain at a tender age.
The vibration from the hovering saucer’s turbines made her skin crawl. Flakes of white plaster fluttered down on her head. Then with a resounding crack, the ceiling collapsed. Sheetrock and roof joists dropped, narrowly missing her and Nav; blown-in, fiberglass insulation cascaded from the breach.
Squinting up, Mary saw a section of the casino roof was gone as well, and on the other side of the gap, a vast, grinding presence—the underside of the saucer’s spinning rim. Wind blasted through the opening, buffeting her, peppering her face with grit, blowing away the fiberglass fluff and the smoke, revealing the other two members of Nav’s contingent, a pale green man and woman, and Mary’s trio of trusted advisors.
Her general, Sagoestesi, had come up under and been a devoted follower of her father. A boulder of a man, he wore a holed-out, Royal Canadian Mountie hat cinched at the chin and pulled down low on his shaved head. Sago looked at least a decade older than his 40 years. He had pock-marked cheeks and pendulous bags under his eyes. Bandoleers of high brass, 12-gauge shotgun shells made an “X” across the front and rear of his fringed buckskin shirt. Braced at waist-height he held a Remington 1100 autoloader cut down at both ends to hogleg-pistol size.
Odi immediately moved to come to her aid, concern on his face. He held cocked, bluesteel .45 Government Colts in each hand, and a long gun—a collapsible-stock Heckler & Koch G3A4—slung across the back of his deerskin vest. Before he could take three steps, she waved him off and got to her feet. Odi turned away as if she had slapped his face.
Some things when spoken cannot be taken back.
Opening his heart to her and making his true feelings known had been a terrible mistake. It was one thing for there to be romantic tension between two lifelong, devoted friends, and another altogether for it to be put into words. Put into words it became something that had to be addressed.
Since they were small children they had been taught that their coming together in that way was impossible. The depth of their emotional connection had been obvious even then.
Mary couldn’t deny that she felt the same yearning as Odi, but it wasn’t meant to be. That part of her destiny had already been dreamed. Orenda said she would never be his, nor anyone else’s for that matter.
It foretold that she would die a virgin.
To Odi’s right was the female shaman, Kateri Tekakwitha—stocky, middle-aged, with a jowly, bulldog face, bright blue eyes, and a wet stub of unlit cigar clenched in the corner of her mouth. Kat wore a buckskin shift similar to Mary’s, and a beaded hat that looked like a swim cap; it was squashed down on her head with ear flaps and chin tie dangling—the ornate design was in fact a spell she had crafted to keep the Cloud Operatives and other harmful spirits from entering her mind and sabotaging her thoughts. The pressure of the cap made Kat’s wiry red hair mushroom out at the nape of her neck and flow over her shoulders in a wild, flopping bush. She stood with her short, thick, pale legs braced to absorb the recoil and muzzle climb of her .45 caliber Thompson submachine gun.
Twelve-gauge, .45 ACP, and .308 rifle round—the Six Nations selected calibers for the size of the holes they made. And because their range and power fit the Nations’ preferred style of combat—close-range ambush, and rapid retreat.
From the direction of the meeting room, muffled by the airship’s steady roar, came a string of single gunshots. Not a firefight—there were no back and forth reports. The attackers were already mopping-up the Alliance’s wounded.
“This way!” Mary said, waving on the others.
Sago, Odi, and Kat fell in close behind as she ran down the bunkered aisle. Her advisors would have followed her off a high clifftop without hesitation. They believed as did she that although critical details of Orenda were still missing—connections, causes and effects—the end was as certain as sunrise and sunset. Disaster, victory, stalemate all somehow led to the same indelible future.
Jarring footfalls of the all-out sprint made Mary’s sheathed katana slap wildly against her back and hip. Ahead on her right, a gap in the wall of sandbags gave access to a door, which in turn led to the casino’s underground escape route. Fifty feet short of that goal, gunshots clattered from behind and a flurry of bullets smacked into the bags on either side of the aisle and whined overhead. There was no cover between their position and the doorway.
Trapped in the long, straight corridor, with pursuit rapidly gaining, the battle-seasoned warriors—pure human and vegamen—all realized that it was either turn and fight, or be cut down in midstride. No command on her part was necessary: they skidded to a stop and spun around to face the attack. Nav and his two advisors dropped to a knee, bringing up their weapons. Sago, Odi, and Kat aimed over the leafy tops of their heads as Mary rushed back from point to find a clear firing lane for the black Benelli.
In scant seconds the attackers’ fortune had reversed 180 degrees, advantage turned to vulnerability.
Seeing seven guns lined up against them like a firing squad, the leading rank tried desperately to stop or change course in the eight-foot-wide corridor, but those running close behind crashed into their backs, driving them closer to the waiting muzzles.
Shotguns, pistols, autorifles, and submachine gun cut loose in a deafening roar, blasting apart Vipers and Hornets. Bodies fell, their forward momentum skidding them right up to where Nav and his people knelt. Gunsmoke and blood mist hung in the air as the surviving attackers turned and ran, putting up only token covering fire.
From the front of the sprawl of corpses came a sudden movement. The celery woman shrieked and jumped to her feet, clutching her cheek. Mary glimpsed the hand that had delivered the strike as it drew back into the pile of still-twitching bodies. From beneath its wrist was a dripping, black stinger.
Nav headshot the Hornet with his CAR 15, sending chitinized skull fragments skittering down the casino aisle like gory party ice.
As they looked on helplessly, the celery woman’s face ballooned; the edema sealed shut her terrified eyes. Blinded, she staggered backwards, clutching both hands at a throat likewise swollen closed. Before the poor woman could choke to death, the seams of her skull ruptured with a wet pop, releasing a gout of watery green fluid down over her shoulders and torso; then she and the sad, sagging remnant of her head dropped lifeless to the floor.
There was no time for mourning, no time to move the corpse. They had a few moments before the firefight resumed in earnest.
Nav muttered something over the body, presumably a prayer—or a dark oath—to his vile green deity.
“Grab the torches,” Mary told the others. “We’ll need them in the tunnel.”
Odi hung back as she ushered everyone else through escape route door. From his fixed expression, he intended to stay behind and help her cover their retreat. That wasn’t going to happen.
“Lead the others to safety,” she told him as she thumbed high-brass, three-inch deer slugs into her shotgun’s magazine.
“Kat and Sago can help them find the way out,” he said. “Let me back you up. At least let me do that … ”
There was more—left unsaid, but written on his sad face for her to read: “Please let me stand beside you. That way maybe I can die a virgin, too.”
Absurd. Childish, even. But wonderful, too, because she knew he meant it.
“Not this time, Odi,” Mary said. Not ever, she thought. If anyone was going to stay behind and take a risk, it had to be her. Not because she was expendable. Not because she was the Alliance commander, either. Orenda revealed that no matter what happened she alone was guaranteed to survive.
Odi stared at her lips, his eyes full of longing. He wanted to kiss her; she could feel it down to the soles of her feet. She wanted to kiss him, too—and not just goodbye—but she didn’t. Instead she said, “Close the exit after you leave, but don’t bar it. I’ll join you at the meeting place downriver. Go now.”
Odi didn’t try to argue with her. He couldn’t. She was the sachem; she was his commander.
As the tall warrior disappeared through the doorway, Mary extended the Benelli’s buttstock full length and refocused her mind. Taking cover behind the doorway’s gap in the sandbags, she shouldered the weapon and stared down its rifle sights. She didn’t have long to wait.
Once more the enemy charged down the aisle en masse, trying to overwhelm with speed and sheer numbers. The Hornets and Vipers in the lead fired wildly in her direction as they ran.
Mary punched out five quick shots, cutting across the front of the attack. Bodies dropped, causing those following too close to stumble and fall; the ones farther behind jumped the fallen, the dead, and the wounded.
Unable to slow down the assault, Mary drew back through the doorway. She slammed the door after her and bolted it—the barrier wouldn’t hold for long, but some delay was better than none.
At the far end of the storage closet, light flickered along the crack of another door. She kicked it open and raced down a flight of concrete stairs to the casino’s basement. In the light of a torch left in a wall stanchion, the silver foil backing of insulation gleamed between exposed joists of the floor overhead. At the edge of the illumination, along the back wall were shadowy, rectangular shapes: the massive metal cabinets that housed the defunct electrical system, stacks of folded gaming tables, rows of dusty video poker and slot machines. The way out was hidden behind one of the junked electronic slots, which stood flush against the concrete wall. Odi had closed the entrance as ordered.
As Mary moved toward the exit, she heard the sound of wood splintering. The hallway door was already coming down. With no time to open then close the escape entrance, she took cover on the far side of the oil furnace’s housing, quickly reloading three more deer slugs from the pouch on her hip. Before she could shove in a fourth shell, bodies in a blur flew headfirst down the steps.
She snapfired once, her 12-gauge booming in the enclosed space, its concussion raining down dust from the overhead joists. The slug slapped meat at
the foot of the stairs.
Meat that was already dead. The attackers were throwing down corpses to draw fire.
As limp bodies continued to slide down the steps, piling in a heap at the bottom, she thumbed in more rounds and reshouldered her gun.
When they ran out of corpses, live Hornets and Vipers began leaping from the top stairs to the basement floor. Before they could bring their weapons to bear, she blasted them off their feet, swinging the Benelli in a tight arc from left to right. But there were too many; she couldn’t nail them all. Their charge forced her to retreat from cover. Backing away, she fired her last two rounds from the hip, hitting a pair of Vipers point-blank center chest.
No time to reload.
While she was occupied with the first wave, even more attackers had swarmed down the steps. The far side of the basement was packed with quasi-humans and helmeted Vikings. The quasi-humans aimed their guns at her.
Outnumbered twelve-to-one, Mary slowly, carefully set the empty Benelli on the floor and raised her hands in the air.
Her people had been fighting the Vipers and Hornets for over a century, but the Vikings were something new. They didn’t appear to be in command, and they weren’t carrying firearms, just broadswords and battle axes.
She could hear the Vipers and Hornets whispering excitedly back and forth: “It’s her. It’s her. It’s the Iroquois Ninja Princess.” Because of the chitin in their faces, Hornets were incapable of changing expression, but the Vipers beamed with delight. Under their beards the Norsemen were grinning, too. Not necessarily because they knew who she was, but because she was young, nubile, and apparently trapped and defenseless.
In other words, it was one-sided playtime.
To prolong the fun, the quasi-humans set down their guns, and came at her with their natural weapons—fang and stinger.
In the time it took for them to cross the narrow span of concrete floor, Mary Brant surrendered herself to Orenda. After sixteen years of rigorous training, it was like breathing in and out.
Then she dropped both hands to the sword’s sharkskin grip. Faster than the eye could follow, in a single, blinding flash of steel, the katana leapt from its sheath and struck. A perfectly-executed quick-draw, just as Giant Bear had taught. The sword’s sweet spot, the third of blade back from the tip three or four inches, cut completely through the closest Hornet’s arm at the elbow. The creature let out a piercing shriek and clutched the spurting stump to its chest.
“What Fate decrees, Fate brings to life.” That was the first thing her grandfather had taught her. The power of the shared, prescient dream was inevitability. And she was that power’s chosen instrument.
Moving like water rushing downhill, Mary flowed around enemies whose bootsoles seemed rooted to earth. She backslashed across the front of a Viper’s throat, whirled and with a pair of successive strokes hacked away huge chunks of thigh muscle from two others, exposing red bone from hip to knee, dropping them to the floor in gushers of their own blood.
The efficiency and power of her strikes depended not on main strength, but on kirima, on maintaining the proper distance to target, and steadiness of the hands—minimizing blade quiver as it passed through the target. As the katana sliced air it sang its glee in a shrill, humming tone.
When the sword’s brief song ended, there was no applause, only screaming.
Four blinding strokes, four attackers down.
Hand-to-hand combat no longer seemed such an appealing idea. The surviving pair of Hornets looked to their guns, but before they could reach them, with sweeping forehand and backhand slashes that severed hamstrings just below the buttocks, Mary cut their legs out from under them.
As the last quasi-humans fell, the Vikings entered the fray. They towered over her, and their swords were much longer and much heavier than hers. The low basement ceiling limited them to sidearm strokes and straight thrusts. And all six couldn’t attack her at once without getting hit by a backswing, blocking someone else’s stroke, or chopping off a friendly limb.
Mary jumped back from a sizzling, waist-high slash that would have cut her in half and countered with a down-angled slice along the side of the attacker’s exposed torso, opening his body cavity crossways from armpit to opposite hip. She continued her turn as gray coils of guts spilled forth, bringing the katana’s bright edge across the gullet of the man trying to rush her from behind. The strike cut off his long auburn beard just below the chin, and as the scraggly strands of hair dropped away, a second mouth yawned four inches below the first, vomiting a torrent of red down his chest.
Her next stroke, which should have severed her opponent’s left kidney, did nothing of the kind. To her surprise, the katana slid off the side of the Viking’s woven metal shirt with a screeching sound, leaving no cut, not even a mark behind. She barely dodged the down-sweeping edge of the counterblow. Sparks showered from the broadsword’s point as it crashed into the concrete.
Mary darted around the slickened floor, making her four attackers collide, block, and otherwise confound each other. She knew if she tried to parry a broadsword’s sweep, her katana would shatter. It was clear the sword couldn’t slice through chain mail. And the mesh was too tight for a straight thrust to penetrate deeply.
When one of the unarmored Vikings slipped on the blood, she stepped in behind him and struck the back of his neck. The up-angle stroke was wrong for a clean beheading, but it came close. After the blade passed through his spinal cord, it stuck in bone for an instant; the katana came free as the man toppled forward onto his face.
As Mary continued to duck and dodge, the heat began to build up inside her buckskin shift. Her cheeks flushed rosepink in their centers. Beads of perspiration broke free of her hairline and peeled down the sides of her face; inside the leather garment it dripped down her ribcage, belly, and back.
Wary of stepping into range of her blade, wary of the uncertain footing, the Vikings kept well back, relying on their reach advantage. After five more minutes of all-out exertion, two of the Norsemen withdrew to block the exit and gather breath while the man in the armor shirt did the chasing.
As Mary evaded him, sweat trickled along the insides of her thighs and ran down the small of her back, lubricating her body’s every friction point. It was time to end the stalemate. She knew her strength wouldn’t last, not when her adversaries could take turns running her around the basement.
It only took a second for her to shrug out of the sleeves of her dress and jerk the beaded bodice down to the curve of her hips, exposing upthrust breasts that gleamed with bodily oils and perspiration. The air hit her overheated flesh in a rush of coolness. And the pair of soft bullseyes, pale pink against tawny skin, instantly contracted, hardening into skyward-jutting points.
The unexpected maneuever stunned—and delighted—the three Vikings. Leering, rejuvenated, the resting pair shouted encouragement to their champion.
The man in chain mail shot her a wide smile, displaying snaggle-teeth that alternated between yellowish-brown and tar-black. Clearly, he relished the game’s added spice.
As Mary moved, feinting this way and that with the katana, her firm mounds lazily josticulated, aureolas swooping here, swooping there—wherever the pink points went, so went the Viking’s focus. The erratic, oscillating motion had a profound effect on him: his eyes widened, nostrils flared, his breathing came harder, and his ruddy face turned a darker shade of red. On top of that, he began to drool profusely; slobber matted his beard in glistening snail trails. His greasy brow furrowed and he bit his lower lip as he continued pursuit. Clearly torn between lust and dread, he was trying to concentrate on the immediate task.
Mary pretended not to notice his distraction. She feigned exhaustion, her steps faltered, her arms drooped, she gasped for air.
With a savage growl, the Viking launched himself at her, broadsword cocked back over his shoulder to deliver a flatside blow to her skull—he didn’t want her dead, yet. Not by a long shot. As he lunged forward, he wasn’t staring down at her chest, but the effort required to not look at it divided his attention.
Mary seized the opening, rushing to meet him halfway. Her weapon was designed as a slicing not a stabbing tool, but in this instance, slicing was impossible. With the katana poised in a two-handed grip at shoulder-height, edge up, she thrust straight into his right eyesocket. The blade slid all the way to the back of his skull, where the chisel point came to a jarring stop.
Her attacker let out a sharp bleat of pain; his broadsword clattered to the floor as he tried to grab hold of the impaling blade. Mary half-turned, and with a quick, double-handed twist cored the inside of his head, then jerked the katana back out. It was like she’d pulled a cork from a bottle under pressure—spray followed the retreating spine of the sword, spattering hot gore across her throat, down over her breasts and stomach.
The other Vikings looked on horrorstruck as their comrade’s knees buckled and he fell at her feet—a beautiful slip of a half-naked girl, drenched in blood, surrounded by the bodies of the dying and the dead. Horror turned to panic, and they abandoned the fight. They ran back up the stairs yelling at the tops of their lungs.
She only recognized one word: “Hell.”
Mary performed chiburi: a snap of her wrists flicked the slender blade clean of blood before she resheathed it. Shoulder-slinging the Benelli, she opened the secret passage, entered it, then closed and barred the door behind her. By the time the enemies found the tunnel—if they ever found it—the survivors of the attack would have vanished.
After pulling up her shift, she grabbed a torch from a stanchion and broke into a dead run. It was all downhill to the river. When she saw daylight at the end of the timbered passage she paused to reload her shotgun.
Mary stepped from the tunnel into sunlight filtered through a swirling haze of smoke. She couldn’t see the saucer hovering overhead, but she could hear its grinding engines, and she could feel the wind it made; wind that flattened the smoke from the burning casino, driving it under the trees that lined the river bank.
She took advantage of the smoke screen, dashing under the trees. After a half-mile jog she reached what appeared to be a faint deer trail leading uphill, away from the river. The winding, narrow track took her past unmanned ambush sites, to the meeting place—a canopied glen with a limestone outcrop at one end, a small waterfall that spilled into a creek, and multiple exits into adjoining caves and the heart of the forest.
The fifteen, mostly male survivors, Six Nations and Alliance who had managed to escape the compound, all turned as she stepped into view. Odi looked very relieved to see her safe. Nav Licim and the others stood in silence, awaiting her orders.
They were going to have to wait a little longer.
Kneeling by the waterfall pool on a wide, flat rock, Mary once again shrugged out of the top of her dress. She cupped her hands in the water and carefully washed the dried blood off her bare breasts, stomach, and arms. When she finished rinsing herself, she found she had a slackjawed audience.
Odi was staring, too, and blushing to the tips of his ears.
Kat just rolled her eyes and shook her head.
Men are so predictable, Mary thought as she pulled up her shift.
Continue to Chapter 5