The Street Survivors (The Guild Wars Book 12) Ian Malone (the false prince series txt) đ
- Author: Ian Malone
Book online «The Street Survivors (The Guild Wars Book 12) Ian Malone (the false prince series txt) đ». Author Ian Malone
âBut you got the degree, right?â
âBet your ass.â Stan straightened. âYouâre lookinâ at the proud owner of a bachelor of arts from the T.J. Martins School of Psychology at Ole Miss University, class of â99. Go Rebs.â
Taylor smiled and sipped his water, now fully versed in the origins of the old manâs Rebel call sign. âWhere âbouts did you meet Jack? In the Corps?â
âYep,â Stan said. âIt was my second year in. We were both stationed at Camp Lejeune in North CarolinaâJack as a staff sergeant with the 24th Expeditionary Unit, while I served as an MP on post.â
âI take it you met on base,â Taylor said.
âIronically, no. We met at a bar.â Stan crossed his legs. âMe and a few buddies were on a weekend pass in Wilmington when we happened into a Podunk dive bar just off Grace Street. The night was rollinâ along great until some smartass punk in a cowboy hat bit off more than he could chew with one of the barâs huskier regulars. Everything was fine, until the big guyâs friends got involved. Thatâs when me and mine decided to do likewise. Fast-forward 32 years and a shit-ton of deployments, and that crazy old nut and me are still watchinâ each otherâs backs.â
Taylor chuckled under his breath, all the while pondering the myriad parallels between the story heâd just heard and his own first encounter with Blackjack Bowyer and Mississippi Stan.
âI owe a lot to the Marine Corps,â Stan added. âMy degree. My skills. My start in the merc business. Mostly, though, I reckon I owe it for Jack. I mean, letâs face it. If we hadnât met, who in their right mind wouldâve put up with me all these years?â
âYou couldâve gotten married,â Taylor said.
âWho says I didnât?â The old man flashed a grin and a trio of fingers. After that, his expression turned slightly pensive. âAh, they were all good girls in their own rights. I guess Iâm just one of those ramblinâ old souls that ainât meant to be tied down in one place for too long at a time.â
Taylor arched an eyebrow. âJacksonville seems to suit you all right.â
The Mississippian chuckled. âYeah, Chief. I suppose it does.â
A comm alert flashed in Taylorâs visual field with the name Lisa Kouvaris. âHey Lisa. Whatâs up?â
âWhere are you?â Her voice was broken like she was on the run.
âTraininâ room three on campus,â Taylor said. âWhy?â
âI just got a call from an old coworker at the Times,â Lisa said. âYou know that Billsâ frigate that left Karma Station last month with Paul Torrio and his people? It just returned to orbit. Whatâs left of it, anyway.â
Taylor felt a chill. âWhat happened?â
âNo idea,â Lisa said. âI just know itâs bad. Iâm headed to Jax Memorial now. Theyâve got wounded incoming.â
Taylor jumped to his feet and ran to the exit, with Stan in tow. âIâm on my way.â
* * * * *
Chapter 6: Wounded
Frank was waiting with a flyer on tarmac three when Taylor and Stan emerged from the Eaglesâ training complex on the run.
âYou two go on ahead and catch up with Miss Kouvaris!â Stan shouted past the engines. âIâll brief Jack on whatâs happened, then weâll be standinâ by in the clubhouse if you need us. Just holler.â
âThanks, Stan,â Taylor said. âIâll be in touch.â
The old man nodded, then slammed the flyer door to seal in its passengers and stepped back on the tarmac, holding his fedora down while the craft ascended. Eight minutes later, a female voice crackled the flyerâs comm.
âEagles flyer, this is Jax Memorial Dispatch,â the voice said. âYou are cleared to land on helipad five.â
âCopy that, Dispatch.â Frank adjusted the mic on his headset. âWeâre starting our approach now. ETA to touchdown, 60 seconds.â
âAcknowledged,â the dispatcher said.
Frank glided the flyer over the steel and asphalt expanse of the cityâs downtown below, then dropped to the deck and swooped hard to port as the sprawling campus of Jacksonville Memorial Hospital entered the windshield ahead.
âAnd we are down,â Frank said, killing the engine.
Taylor flung open the flyer door and sprinted across the pavement toward the stairwell entrance on the far side of the helipad. Not long after, his nostrils filled with the pungent scents of alcohol and sterilizing agents, and he skidded to a halt amid the bustling nurses, chattering patient families, and scrub-clad personnel who filled the hospitalâs triage wing.
âTaylor, over here.â Lisa waved the duo over to a small waiting area beside the nurseâs station. Apparently, sheâd been on her daily jog when sheâd gotten the call about Torrioâs crew. She was still dressed in her runnerâs gear.
âYou gotten any clarity yet on what exactly went down with the River Hawks?â Taylor asked.
âOnly bits and pieces, but yeah. A little,â Lisa said. âRemember Sharon McCorvey who used to work our acquisitions office? Her husband, Kez, is a sergeant on Torrioâs crew. Per my understanding, he was among the first of their troops to set foot on Emza three weeks ago.â
âIs he okay?â Frank asked.
âHeâs in surgery now, but they think heâll pull through,â Lisa said.
âWhat happened?â Taylor asked.
Lisa shook her head. âI didnât get much in the way of specifics, but apparently the Bills and Hawks crews got jumped by something on the planet not a week off the boat. According to the report I got, they were hit hard, too.â
âHow hard?â Frank asked.
âOf the 653 troops who touched down on Emza, 211 made it back to the ship, and about two-thirds of those were injured,â Lisa said. âAccording to the Billsâ lead medic, most of the wounds were minor or modest in nature, so they could be treated with nanites during the transition back to Earth.
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