Sword of Minerva (The Guild Wars Book 10) Mark Wandrey (e novels to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Mark Wandrey
Book online «Sword of Minerva (The Guild Wars Book 10) Mark Wandrey (e novels to read .TXT) đ». Author Mark Wandrey
âThey might look like cute octopi, but their biochemistry is quite astounding, and theyâre completely amoral. Any morality they have, they learned from others. All the Wrogul we know of came from the planet Azure, where a little colony lives side by side with a Human colony. Nemo left a long time ago and apparently didnât absorb as much humanity as his siblings.â
Rick didnât know whether he was grateful to Nemo for resurrecting him, or not. It was good to be alive, there was no doubt; however, his present situation was far from ideal. His brain wasnât damaged, as it had been at the moment of his âsampling,â but the impression Nemo had taken of Rickâs brain at the time was missing his more recent memories. Rick could feel emotions, but he still had the memory loss.
âNemo said it might fall into place; he wouldnât know without more experimentation. I didnât think that was a good idea.â Rick had to agree.
So he wasnât quite himself as he walked along the promenade, pretending to be interested in the shops. He didnât have a Yack, so none of the advertisements could key in on him based on past purchases. Instead, he was assailed with random Tri-V projected enticements. A simple scanner could tell there was a Human under the spacesuit, so he was offered everything from cocaine grown on a Human colony, to sexual favors from a robot that was âguaranteed to provide favorable sexual organ stimulation or your credits back!â
Rick wasnât interested in having his sexual organ stimulated by a robot, even if it was guaranteed to be favorable. He reached a glideway and took it up to the next higher level, where gravity was a third lighter. The ring was full of commercial offices and light industrial concerns. He rode a conventional elevator up one building and walked to an office entrance. As he approached, it flashed, âAvailable For Rent! Contact C1199-Karma Beta 2 For Details.â
âHuh,â he said and stared at the display. Behind the glowing Tri-V he could see where a name had been painted, then removed. âWinged HussarsâPersonnel.â Rick ran his hands across the chipped paint. The name had been removed months ago, or longer. Heâd been here only weeks previously; heâd sat in a waiting room full of prospective hires, including a pair of overly loud Oogar, andâŠ
He cocked his head and squinted. Another alien had been there. The memory was like looking through fog. It made his tongue itch. He shook his head and turned away. There was nothing for him here. Rick headed back down to the ring where his hotel was. As he rode the glideway, he berated himself.
What did you think you would find? Even if the Hussarsâ office was still there, you couldnât just walk in. Youâre here for Sato. Despite some of the things his benefactor had said, Rick couldnât shake the feeling that heâd somehow been rescued from Nemo. He looked down at the spacesuit over his hands, turning them over, then making a fist. With a sigh, he got off the glideway back on the promenade where heâd startedâwhere it had all seemingly started. His journey wasnât over. Not yet, anyway.
* * *
Working out his next step proved more complicated than Sato had expected. Heâd harvested nine one-million-credit chits from the lockbox off Citation, a lot more than heâd been expecting. Heâd been trying to estimate how much his salary with the Hussars had been, largely without success. He knew it was less than 100,000 a year, and heâd been with the Hussars for 19 years before heâd left. He also knew all the money heâd earned had been deposited on his Yack, which was back in New Warsaw.
Heâd never even considered taking the identity/account card with him. The Winged Hussarsâ intelligence network, coupled with the Golden Hordeâs information gathering service, was second to none. Sure, theyâd completely missed the coming war against the Mercenary Guild, but so had everyone else. He knew they wouldnât miss him spending credits from that card. So, on his own at Karma Station, with no ID and no electronic assets, his first step was obvious.
Theyâd been on the station for four days when Sato decided he couldnât put it off any longer. Once heâd woken up, had a shower, and had gotten some breakfast from the roomâs autochef, he found Rick in his own room of the suite. As usual, Rick was sitting in the only Human-formed chair in the room, apparently asleep or deep in thought.
âRick?â
âYes, sir?â Rick answered immediately.
âYou donât have to call me sir. Sato is fine.â
âYes, sir.â
Sato sighed. âI have to go out andâŠdo a few things. Will you be okay?â
âIâm going with you, sir.â
âThat isnât necessary.â
âYes, sir, it is.â Rick stood and went to the roomâs sole storage closet. From inside, he took what Sato could only describe as a classic black monkâs robe. He flipped it over his metallic shoulders, settled it into place with a silver clasp around the neck, then put the hood up. When he was done, all that could be seen of him were his armored feet and hands. The face was hidden as well, though a subdued blue glow emanated even in the dim interior hotel lights.
âWhere did you get that?â Sato wondered. He hadnât given Rick any money yet. In fact, he still only had the nine million-credit chits, which you couldnât exactly pop into a vending machine.
âFound it lying
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