The Unbroken C. Clark (best books to read for self development .txt) š
- Author: C. Clark
Book online Ā«The Unbroken C. Clark (best books to read for self development .txt) šĀ». Author C. Clark
Touraine was the first to recover. Without thought, she shoved the rebel toward the rail. Sharp pain, dangerous pain in her ribs where her first captor had kicked her.
Touraine registered the wet suck of the bayonet as it lurched from Ćmelineās body, and the other womanās yelp of pain and surprise. Then the snap of the railing. It gave almost instantly under the rebelās momentum. Finally, the sick thud as the rebel hit the stone floor below.
āSky-falling fuck.ā
Though Touraineās brain hadnāt caught up, her body knew the motions. She ripped off her coat and pressed it against Ćmelineās wound.
ā Ćmeline?ā Touraine murmured. ā Ćmeline, youāre all right. Iāve got you.ā Even though a voice in her head whispered You arenāt safe here over and over.
Touraineās heart buzzed in her chest as she did the sums. It wasnāt safe for them to stay, to get a medic to Ćmeline here, but running away would only run her closer to death. Ćmelineās blood smelled earthy and metallicāshit was mixing with her blood. The bastard rebel had gotten her in the bowels.
They were saved by the last person Touraine wanted to see as she tried to press Ćmelineās guts whole. Tibeau stormed up the stairs, holding his rifle across his chest as he scanned for fallen Sands. He saw them.
āTour, you bastard.ā In an instant, he scooped Ćmeline into his arms, cradled against his chest. āWe have to get her help,ā he growled, setting off at a lope.
āBeau, if we move herāā
Touraine let her protests drop. Here or there, now or later. What did it matter? Grief settled over her. They were too used to hopeās quick flicker to spare the words for arguments or questions when each second could mean the difference between life and death, but Touraine still had one, more important than everythingā
āWhereās Pru?ā
āHeld sniper. She cleared them, so I sent her back.ā
āNot clear enough, Beau,ā she growled back.
Tibeau looked stricken, and Touraine wished sheād kept her mouth shut. Heād never forgive himself for this. She wouldnāt forgive herself, either.
The night went quiet except for their desperate huffing breaths as she followed him back to rue de la PetiĆØre.
Ćmeline was dead before they reached the guardhouse. Tibeau had run silently with her in his arms, but Touraine knew theyād shared at least some of the same thoughts.
Donāt die. Of course sheāll die. Please donāt die. This is my fault. Fuck the rebels. Fuck Balladaire. Fuck me. Please donāt die.
It was hopeless, as sheād known it would be. Ćmeline and Thierry lay in the courtyard on blankets someone had sacrificed for their bodies. She didnāt even know when or how Thierry had fallen.
Touraine let the cold night air cool her flushed body. Her jacket was stiff and stinking with blood and waste. She balled the collar into her fist and let the hem drag through the dirt. Her hands were bloody to the wrists. She waited for everyone to bring in a cup of beer from the Sandsā common room. (Had they been there all together just a day or two ago?) Tibeau looked to the corners of the courtyard, avoiding everyoneās eyes, but especially hers. Pruett stood next to him, a quiet hand on his elbow.
The night had turned cold, but some soldiers stood with their coats unbuttoned, pale undershirts spotted with sweat. Some still had them buttoned to the throat.
Touraine took her usual place at the feet of the dead, and the rest of her squad circled off her. She hated this part of battle, of course. No one but a sadist could like this. Still, it reminded her why she did fight. As long as the Sands went into battle, she would go beside them.
She imagined that some of her soldiers prayed, forbidden as it was. Touraine didnāt, but she had an old QazÄli song she remembered, and the hum of it in her throat. As she stared at the bloody hole in Ćmelineās stomach, Touraine thought about her promotion. Theyād died coming after her. Being their captain wouldnāt stop moments like this.
A jostling at the guardhouse entranceātipsy carousing, a bawdy jokeāinterrupted the vigil. Captain Rogan and a couple of other off-duty captains swaggered into the courtyard. Rogan might even have been sober. He stopped at the edge of the circle. Stared right at her.
āLieutenant!ā Roganās voice was bright and cheery. āSo glad to see youāve been retrieved.ā
Touraine let him take in the scene behind her, the circle of friends around their fallen.
He tsked. āSacrifices must be made. A pity.ā
āWill they be burned, Captain?ā
Rogan flicked his eyes to the bodies, lips pursed in false concern. āI donāt think General Cantic will spend the little wood we have. Youāll have to do with a field burial, Iām afraid.ā
Cantic wouldnāt waste the wood on a couple of Sands is what he really meant. Never mind that they could fire horseshit to burn the bodies. Never mind that the desert was dry and packed so dense that a shovel would bounce back up.
Rogan went to his rooms, his friends chortling behind him like geese. She wanted to scream at him, but she bit her tongue on the words, blinked away the burning fury in her eyes, and took a deep, shuddering breath.
A finer person, like Tibeau, would feel some pure selfless grief. Or like Pruett, a tender empathy for the grieving. She would know how to comfort them. Touraine felt only rage.
As long as Rogan was in charge, this was their lot. Nothing but humiliation. Tibeauās dreams of revolt wereāthe product of a weak mind? Uncivilized thinking? She couldnāt bring herself to blame him, but the dreams were flimsy, in any case. The Sands, the QazÄli, wouldnāt win that battle, and no one in their right mind chose
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