Calton gestures with his gun. “Go back to your people. Tell ‘em no deal. We stay here and protect what we’ve got.”

“You men!” Koda shouts. “What do you think about that? Are you going to sit here on your butts and miss the chance to get your world back? Or are you coming south with me?”

“I’m going.” One trooper, a bit older than most of the others, steps out of the ring of men. Another follows, then three more.

The roar of Calton’s gun splits the night. “The hell you are! Get back in your quarters, all of you! This is my command! As for you—” He lowers the pistol he has fired into the air to aim at Koda. “Get the hell out. While you can.”

Carefully Koda raises the gunstrap over her head and lays the AK aside. It seems to her that she hears the breath of every man around her, harsh and rushing like winter wind. She smells their sweat, the fear in some, arousal in others. The flesh of Calton’s face lies lightly on the bone, so that she can almost see through it to the white skull beneath. See his death. “I’ll fight you for them,” she says.

“What?” Fear flickers in his eyes, is gone.

“I’ll fight you for your command. You win, you keep your men. I win, they go with me.” Her words fall into silence.

“Fight you?” Calton glances at his pistol. “How?”

For answer, Koda bends and draws the knife from her boot-top. The light catches its ten-inch blade, runs along it like quicksilver. “Like this.”

He is trapped, and knows it. His eyes widen, then narrow again. He cannot afford hesitation. “All right,” he says. Setting the pistol on a windowsill behind him, he draws the knife from his own belt. “Don’t expect me to go easy on you because you’re a woman, though.”

Dakota laughs, tossing her blade end for end and catching it again. The men shift to form a ring around them in the open space between the farmhouse and the parked vehicles. Someone brings a kerosene lamp to set at the perimeter of the circle, then another. Their light throws Calton’s shadow and her own huge on the ground, distorted, creatures with impossibly long legs and arms sprouting from attenuated bodies. Slowly they circle each other, Koda keeping her eyes on Calton’s face. His blade glints in her peripheral vision, shines like a beacon to her heightened vision.

He feints, cutting low for the belly, and Koda steps lightly out of his reach, spinning wide to her left. He turns with her, but too slowly, and she whips toward him, her blade opening a gash on his upper arm. His blood runs black in the dim light.

Voices come to her on the wind of her passing, but she does not heed them. “Surrender,” she says.

For answer he attempts to close with her again, this time coming on straight at her. She blocks his upward stab with a sweep of her left arm, whirling again out of his reach. Her wrist is cold and wet, but the cut is shallow. It stings, barely perceptible. The blood from Caltons cut, though, falls on the earth in dark spurts. She need only avoid injury, wear him down.

He knows it, too. Fear flickers across his face, is gone. With a yell, he comes in low and fast, butting at her with his head while his knife goes for the tendons in her left leg. She rolls with the blow, planting a foot in his gut to carry him up and over, to land hard on his back behind her. Koda scrambles to her feet, stepping hard on the wrist of his knife hand with the heel of her boot. His fingers open, and she kicks the blade away.

Behind her a cheer starts up, to be abruptly broken off as Calton grabs at her ankle, turning it hard to bring her down with him. She falls halfway across his body, rolls as he surges off his back to pin her, reaching for her throat with both hands. His fingers close around her neck, bearing on her windpipe and the great veins in her neck. Pressing down and back, seeking the leverage that will break her neck, his grip tightens as she gasps for breath, her chest grown suddenly tight. Calton’s face is a grinning skull mask above her. A shadow passes over her eyes, and she brings her knife up between their straining bodies, finds the soft spot just beneath the join of the rib cage. She thrusts straight up, the blade grating on bone, then making easy passage through the soft tissue of liver and lung, cutting upward. For a moment Calton remains above her, his hands tightening convulsively about her throat, bringing on the darkness. Then he collapses across her, blood running from his mouth in a black torrent, and is dead.

Silence holds her. Then she pushes Calton off her to stagger to her feet. His blood stains her hands, her face, her shirt, dark and wet in the dim light.

Then the sound begins, softly at first, the men chanting her name. “Koda. Koda.” The murmur becomes a shout, swells, grows to a roar. “Koda! Ko-da! Ko-da!”

She lets it wash over her, drawing strength from it. She raises her head to search the faces around her, mouths straining, eyes wide. These are her men, now. Won in battle, paid for in blood. The thought sends a shiver down her spine, and she throws her head back, howling wordlessly with them.

“Koda! Koda!” It goes on and on, the rhythm carried on stamping feet. Finally she raises an arm to silence them. They quiet gradually, as her senses contract about her, and she is one human woman again, standing in a circle of men who are not entirely sure what has happened to them. “All right,” she says quietly. “Get your gear. We’re pulling out now.”

They move to obey, all but one. Tacoma stands before her, his eyes dark. “Are you all right?” he says. “The blood—”

“Not mine.” She glances down at her ruined shirt. “Not most of it, anyway.”

“What happened? For a moment there, I didn’t know you.”

She meets his gaze steadily, seeing herself though his eyes. The fight, and the kill. “You saw it all?”

He nods.

“For a moment there, I didn’t know myself,” she says slowly. “It’s as though something—slipped. It’s happened a couple times since—since—”

“Since your vision?”

“Yeah. I feel—different. Inside. Things look different. My hearing is different.”

“You talked to Ate?”

Her hand makes a small arc in the darkness. “About some of it. This was almost like that time on the bridge. I felt—out of myself, somehow.”

Some of the rigidity goes out her brother’s shoulders, and he says,” It’s the warrior-gift growing in you. It can be hard to live with.” He glances down at Calton’s body. “Did you mean to challenge him all along?”

She shakes her head. “That just happened. But it was so—familiar. Like I’d done it before. Like the knife was part of my arm. It knew what to do. I never thought.”

Tacoma gives her shoulders a quick squeeze, stepping away from her as the first of the troopers steps out of the barn, his pack on his back, his rifle slung about his neck. The others follow, coming to stand beside the Jeeps and Humvees. Tacoma’s presence does not seem to surprise them. Like Calton, they must have assumed that Koda had men all around them. Let them continue to assume.

Tacoma steps toward one of the Jeeps, glances at the ignition. “Keys?” he asks the man nearest him.

“In the glove compartment, Sir.”

Tacoma fishes for them, finds them. Koda comes to stand by the passenger door and shouts, “All right! We’re moving out! Follow me!”

They cheer again, and again she feels their energy surge within her, obliterating the pain of her cut, the bruises on her throat. She slips into her seat, and Tacoma steers the Jeep out onto the road.

Behind them the rest follow, raising a cloud of luminous dust in the moonlight.

*

The convoy moves swiftly through the night. The full moon rides high in a blaze of stars, bright enough to cast shadows in a world where the glare of civilization no longer rimlights the horizon. Koda dozes fitfully in the lead Jeep, the APC’s from Ellsworth dispersed at regular intervals down the line to ride herd on their new recruits and guard against second thoughts. The tide of adrenaline that carried her through the duel has spent itself, leaving a strange restlessness behind. Her dreams, when she sleeps, are full of drifting voices.

Dawn comes on a chilled breeze as the gates of Ellsworth roll open to receive them. The startled MP salutes as Koda passes, Tacoma returning the gesture with a snap of his own wrist. In the rearview mirror, Dakota can see him counting off the vehicles that follow her in, an easy dozen more than followed her out. The men in the Jeeps and APC’s cheer as they pass the sentry box, honking and waving their rifles in the air.

“Better see the Colonel first,” Tacoma says quietly.

Koda rolls her head back, attempting to work the knots out of her shoulders and upper back. “They’re not exactly the supplies we meant to pick up, are they? Try her office first.”

They catch Maggie just as she closes the door behind her, probably on her way from her cramped work space cum living quarters to the mess hall for breakfast. Koda watches her back straighten, then stiffen, as she spots the caravan sweeping up the length of the runway toward her, taking in its length and the unfamiliar Minot ID codes on the. Her fists settle on her hips as Tacoma pulls up directly in front of her, her eyebrows rising halfway to her hairline while a smile pulls at her mouth. “Well, now,” she says. “Look what the cat dragged in.”

Tacoma grins at her as he climbs out of the Jeep. “Thought you’d like ‘em.” Turning to the line of Jeeps and troop carriers, he bellows, “Pile out! Form up!”

As the men scramble out of their trucks and prepare to stand the Colonel’s inspection, Dakota levers herself up and out the passenger door, feeling the blood rush into her tingling feet, the ache as the sinews of her joints stretch and flex. The bruises on her neck throb with her pulse.