“These units are connected to the secondary computer at the pedal terminus.”

Accepting the cord, Kirsten looks down and notices that the androids, twenty five in all and lined up in neat rows of five, are all standing on a metal strip. The cord she’s holding trails out from the far left side of that strip. “Acknowledged,” she comments finally, placing her laptop on the computer desk and connecting the wire to its back.

“Is there anything further that you require?”

“Neg—Affirmative.”

The droid looks at her. She’s sure if it was within its programming to lift an eyebrow, it would be doing so right about now.

“I’ll be appropriating one of these units for a field trail when I leave.”

The pain hits again, like a high-speed dental drill being slowly shoved into her ear canal. Mercifully it stops before she decides to slit her own wrists just to stop the torment.

“Affirmative,” the droid remarks. “If there is nothing else you require, I will leave you to your tasks.”

“That’ll be all.”

*

As Kirsten pushes her way through the last of the trees, she finds herself face to muzzle with an automatic weapon. Even though she recognizes the man who wields the weapon, instinct stops her strides, and her hands go up, palms out.

“It’s alright, Ma’am,” Jackson says, meeting her eyes quickly before returning his gaze to the man in back of her. “Just step to my right. I’ve got the asshole covered.”

Instead of stepping away, Kirsten instead steps forward. Raising a hand, she gently pushes the muzzle of the weapon to the left and holds the Lieutenant’s startled gaze. “Relax, Darius. He’s one of the good guys.”

“Good guys, Ma’am? You mean there were humans there?”

“He’s not human, Lieutenant.”

The weapon comes back up, a long dark finger tightening on the trigger. Once again, Kirsten pushes it away. “Stand down, Lieutenant. That’s an order.”

She’s serious. He can tell that from the blazing emeralds all but soldering him to the ground at his feet. Deeply ingrained respect for a superior officer wars with his absolute need to keep said officer safe and whole.

“Do it, Lieutenant, or I’ll have my buddy Max here take that gun and twist it into a pretzel.”

“Max?”

“Unit MA-233142176-X-83,” the android helpfully supplies.

“Max.”

“You got it,” Kirsten replies, smiling slightly. “Now, are you gonna lower your weapon? I’d kinda like to get out of here.”

“Are we taking him…it…whatever, back with us to the base?” Jackson asks, disbelief plain in his voice.

“Not…exactly,” Kirsten smirks. “Let’s just say we’re gonna play a little game of hide and seek. We hide. He seeks.”

“And what is he going to be seeking, if you don’t mind my asking, Ma’am?”

Kirsten’s smile becomes positively predatory. “Androids.”

*

“Hey, soldier, how far is it to Minot?”

As the sentry turns, Koda steps in to wedge her thumbs in his elbows, going for the nerves. His rifle drops to dangle against his belly, and she deftly relieves him of it before it can hit the ground. Behind the guard, only the glint of his eyes visible by the quarter moon, Tacoma raises both fists and brings them down on the unprotected back of the man’s neck with a dull thud. He slumps, folding in on himself with a soft “Uhhhhh….”

Dakota breaks his fall, laying him out face down in the grass while Tacoma pulls his hands behind him, slipping a length of self-locking plastic into place around his wrists. “That’ll hold him for a while,” he breathes. “Let’s go.”

“Right behind you, thiblo.”

Tacoma slips into the tall grass before her, bending low to minimize the rippling wake in the purple spikes above him, black now in the moonlight except for the dangling chaff. Their shimmering silver echoes the moonsheen on Tacoma’s form, and Koda’s sight shifts almost imperceptibly to show her not a man but the lean, muscularity of a stalking cougar, his fur silver-gilt in the pale light. With that shift her own hearing becomes more acute, bringing her the small rustlings of mice and kangaroo rats as they go about their business under the shelter of the grass, bringing her the high-pitched whir of moth wings, the frequency so high it almost hurts her ears even now. Her feet go lightly among the tangled stems and roots, yet it seems to her that if she looks down she will see the rectangular print of wolf pads, the indentations of claws.

She does not look down.

This has happened to her before, but never with this intensity. Her vision in the sweat lodge has changed her in ways she does not yet understand. She does not look at her hands, either, as she holds the grass apart from her passage.

A faint, pale smudge to her left, seen intermittently as she slips along like a shadow, tells her that they are moving parallel to the ranch road, moving toward whoever or whatever the sentry has been set to guard. After a time the ground beneath her feet begins to slope and the grass to thin. It gives way to shorter plants, sidas and clover, bluebells with their dark cups, columbine with tails like shooting stars, white as ghosts under the moon. The ground opens up and flattens, and Tacoma crouches, making for a line of trees at a shambling run that only reinforces the unfocussed image of a tawny cat that overlays his own shape. Koda follows, her feet making no sound on crumbling earth and gravel. Great wings drift by overhead, and she shivers.

Owl. There is a death waiting in the night. She feels it in the chill of her blood, the touch of ice on her skin.

Not hers. Not Tacoma’s.

Dakota drops to her belly beside her brother where he lies among the trees, looking intently down at the ranch house and outbuildings a hundred yards ahead. Yellow light shows in the windows, soft and haloed. Kerosene lamps or candles, then, not electric. The space between the house and the barns is crowded close with vehicles: Jeeps in Air Force blue, desert camo Humvees, a pair of 60 millimeter guns on their own carriages. One barn also shows lights; the other stands dark. Barracks and ammo dump, most likely. There is no sign of droids. On the long, low porch of the house, an orange glimmer betrays a burning cigarette. Guard, probably.

Tacoma whistles almost soundlessly. “Got a bomb or two in your pocket, sis?”

“Left ‘em back in the APC. Sorry.”

“We don’t have the firepower to take them, not even with the whole team.”

Koda’s blood stirs, hot and hungry and not entirely human. Her tongue runs along her lips. “Maybe,” she says. “Maybe there’s another way.”

“Such as?”

“We don’t need to take the weapons. Just the men.”

Tacoma’s finger jabs the darkness, counting the shapes in the farmyard. “There’s a dozen and a half transports and guns down there. Count three or four men for each one, and we’re outnumbered even without their firepower. The odds are still bad. We’ll have to skirt around them.”

“One on one is even odds.”

*

“Unit grouping detected six-point-two-seven kilometers west-northwest of this position.”

From her place in the passenger’s seat, Kirsten looks over her shoulder at the android smushed in the tiny space in the back. “How many? Have they spotted us yet?”

“Fourteen. Negative. These units are equipped with line of sight technology only.”

“Ok, how close can we get to them before they spot us?”

“Two point three kilometers to the west of this position is a small ridge. Should you drive to the bottom of that ridge, you would be safe from their sensors. The pathway down is rather rutted and washed out, but I believe this vehicle is quite capable of making the descent with no untoward difficulties.”

“Thank you, Max. Jackson, you heard the droid. Let’s find that ridge and make tracks!”

The set of Jackson’s jaw lets Kirsten know just how much he likes the order he’s been given, but he follows it anyway, going, once again, against every single instinct that has kept him alive for the last of his twenty seven years.

“Darius,” she whispers, knowing the young man will hear her. “Please, trust me.”

After a moment, the stiff bundle of muscles at his jaw loosens just slightly. “I do trust you, Ma’am. It’s—.” His eyes flick to the rearview mirror, then back to the road in eloquent explanation.

“Trust me,” Kirsten repeats before hanging on for dear life as the truck pounds its way down the pitted, potholed road wannabe.

Several bone shaking moments later, they are at the bottom of the ridge, though Kirsten wonders if perhaps her stomach and kidneys are lying, quivering, back up at the top. “Wonder if you could call that an ‘untoward difficulty’”, she mutters, half to herself, earning a half grin from her driver and a purposefully blank stare from the android in the back.

Opening the door, she heaves her hurting carcass out of the truck, then eases the seatback over so that Max can extricate himself, which the android does with easy grace.

Too easy, Jackson thinks as he grabs his weapon. Exiting the truck, he places himself between his President and the android, taking no chances. Kirsten notices the move, but says nothing, satisfied for the moment that at least he’s not trying to ventilate their temporary ally.

They make their way up the rocky, vine-covered ridge until their heads are just below the lip. Max stops them there. “If you take care to keep hidden, you will be able to see the units just ahead.”

Jackson takes the lead, and peers over the very edge of the ravine. When his eyes clear the lip, he can see the westering sun glinting off of the plastic and metal casings of the androids. Kirsten quickly scrambles up beside him and likewise looks over the top. “Any idea what they’re doing?” she asks Max who hunkers down beside her—if, in fact, an android can ‘hunker’.