More or less. Formalizing their relationship is something she and Kirsten have not talked about yet, cannot talk about at least until they are past the coming battle. When she had married Tali, fresh out of graduate school, they had gone away to Greece for their honeymoon and had been spared the grins and the elbow jabs of friends and kin. Odd, that her life should have taken a turn for normal in this one small thing amid the wreckage of a world.

She says, “How far out you think we should meet them?”

“Far enough out to give us some maneuvering room between there and the Base.” He glances back at Maggie. “Colonel?”

“Fifteen miles. Twenty would be better. There’s a place up past the bridge where the land falls away. They’ll have to come along that stretch strung out on a narrow front. We can control their approach there easier than just about anywhere else.”

A shiver passes over Koda’s skin, despite the warmth of the sun. “I know the place you mean. Anything on wheels will have to keep to the highway there.”

“Their armor won’t, though.”

Koda frowns, an idea forming slowly as the convoy negotiates yet another narrow passage between lines of wrecked vehicles. “We can block them, if we have time,” she says. “Or at least slow them down. How many heavy dozers can we get working?”

“Two or three,” Tacoma answers. “What d’you have in—oh.”

“Exactly.” She grins at him.

“Care to share?” Maggie asks, her voice dry.

Tacoma says, “Tracked vehicles can climb just about anything that’s not vertical, but if we ram a pile of these wrecks into a defensive berm, we can stop the enemy’s wheeled transport cold wherever we want to.”

“Or funnel them where we want them,” Dakota adds.

Tacoma shoots her a glance warm with appreciation. ” And we can direct the tanks, too. Colonel?”

“Sounds good to me. You’re the dirt soldiers.”

Koda notices the plural, and it makes a small warm glow somewhere under her sternum. There is a familiarity to the acknowledgement, and a certainty. It fits her, the same way her scalpel fits the shape of her hand, or the tortoiseshell rattle that had been her grandfather’s last gift to her.

The lower west fork of the Cheyenne passes beneath them, the highway curving away from the bridge to pass along the spine of a ridge that falls sharply to the bank of a stream on one side. The water runs parallel to the road for perhaps a mile, with a broad meadow spread out between it and another rise to the south. Koda lays a hand on Tacoma’s arm. “Stop. Stop here.”

Tacoma waves to the Humvee gunner ahead of them, then pulls the Jeep over to the side of the road. Koda climbs out and goes to stand by the guardrail, shielding her eyes as she looks over the level space between Highway 90 and the lift of earth not quite a mile away. A line of trees marches along it, and it seems to Koda that something moves in the laddered shadows that spill down its slope, but she cannot be certain.

The Interstate here is almost clear of wrecks, an open stretch between Rapid City and the small towns linked to it by farm-to-market roads. The air above the tarmac seems to shimmer in the sun, and through the rippling heat Dakota catches the glare sun off the metal hides of military droids, the sudden glint of light striking the silver collars of androids marching in uniformed ranks, the tireless crunch of their boots on asphalt a constant grinding that blends with the whine of tanks and the ponderous crawl of big guns. Then time slips back into place, and the vision fades. The road runs empty through the spring fields, overgrown now with grass and self-seeded crops, sprinkled here and there with patches of bright yellow and blue, rose and lavender.

“Tanski?” Tacoma touches her arm. “You okay?”

“Here.” Dakota says. “The battle will be here.”

“It’s a good place for it,” Maggie says, thoughtfully. “We can block this road at two or three places to slow them down and control their options once they get here.”

“We need to prevent them from fanning out on the north side of the road,” Tacoma says. “Or spilling down over the stream.”

“We’ll mine the north side,” Koda answers. “Maybe dig some ditches. How wide do they need to be to stop the tanks, thiblo?”

“Maybe ten feet. If we can dig them that deep, with straight sides, they’ll have to go around.”

Maggie nods assent. “Get the backhoes out here the minute we get back. Bury the dead as quickly as you can, then start to work on those trenches.”

“Spike the bottoms,” Dakota says suddenly. “Cut enough brush to camouflage the digging until the enemy is too close to turn back. What have we got besides fuel that will burn?”

“Asphalt. Tar. We repaved the runways just a few months ago, and there were supplies left over.”

Tacoma grins. “Thank the gods for government waste. What d’you have in mind, tanksi? Fire the ditches?”

Koda grins in return. “Between the spikes and the fire, we can immobilize anything that tries to cross them. Then we can use shoulder fired anti-tank missiles to explode their fuel and ammo once they’re stuck.”

“I like it,” says Maggie. “What about the ones that get through?”

“Use the wrecks to funnel them back behind our lines. Surround them, cut them off, and destroy them.”

“A strategic retreat could draw them in,” Tacoma adds, his dark eyes far away on a battle not yet joined. “Half our armor could fall back maybe five miles toward the Base through the open country. Then the other half could come in behind.” He raises his hands and brings them together. “Squeeze ‘em like a python.”

“What about this open space here on our right?” Maggie gestures toward the meadow and the treeline in the distance.

“Spike the slope, too,” Koda answers. “Tacoma, could we dam up this stream and muddy the ground enough to mire their trucks if they try to leave the road?”

Tacoma leans over the guardrail, staring up and down the narrow watercourse for a long moment. Then he says, “We could dam it, no problem. The question is whether there’s enough water volume. We could probably get a hundred-meter strip nice and wet, though.”

“Do it,” says Maggie.

Movement behind the trees to the south catches Koda’s eye again. Something is there, pacing, the long shadows rippling with its passage. “But leave it passable on foot,” she says, as the image forms in her mind. “For the force we’ll hide behind that rise over there.” She turns to meet Tacoma’s gaze, half startled, half admiring. “We’ll block them, draw them in on the left, turn their line, and roll them up from the right and behind. Piece of cake.”

“Fuckin’ A better-than-sex cake,” Tacoma laughs. Then, as Koda and Maggie both stare at him repressively, “Figuratively speaking, of course.”

“Themunga makes a chocolate better-than-sex cake that’ll melt in your mouth,” Dakota elaborates, noting Maggie’s puzzled frown. “Only she calls it a not-quite-as-good-as-sex cake.” She pauses a moment. Then, careful to keep her face straight, “We’re a big family.”

“I noticed,” her friend says wryly. Then, “What about the ground over there? How big a flanking force can we put behind that rise?”

Again the movement catches her eye, and Koda says, “I’ll go scout it.”

Tacoma motions to one of the gunners from the lead Humvee. “Take an escort.”

She shakes her head. “No need. Back in a flash.”

With that she is gone down the slope, jogging over the matted grasses that spring under her feet. At the base, she leaps the stream easily as a deer, landing lightly on the far bank and sprinting across the meadow. Grasshoppers whirr out of her way; once she starts a young rabbit from its form, and ground squirrels, chittering, dive into their holes as she flies past them. Her feet seem to brush the ground only briefly; she is lighter than air, barely ruffling the grass as she passes. The sense of presence grows stronger as she approaches the fold of land with its crown of trees, stillness settling over her even as she reaches the foot of the rise and begins the ascent, leaping from rock to rock up its stony side.

At the top, she pauses, looking around her. The top of the knoll is perhaps a hundred feet wide, dropping down perhaps a third of the distance on the other side to a broad meadow. Sycamore and cottonwoods grow thickly along the spine, once, perhaps, planted as a windbreak before so many family farms failed in the second half of the past century and the Dakotas’ population bled away to the cities. In their cover, and on the field below, it should be possible to hide several hundred lightly armed fighters, far more than she will have at her disposal. And where, she wonders, does that come from? Who’s decided I’m the one to lead the ambush battalion?

Why, you have, of course.

Dakota wheels around, scanning the trees and the underbrush that grows thick beneath their branches, but there is no one. The voice is everywhere and nowhere, a ripple of laughter in her mind. The manitu.

Drawing her own silence around her then, Koda waits for the being to make itself known.

Or herself. She can sense that it is female in the current of savage tenderness that flows about it, running above the wild abandon of the hunt, the burst of joy at the kill. With a start, she recognizes the blood hunger as her own, the savage pulse in her own veins as she fought an alpha and killed him. My band now. My pride.

For what seems an eternity, the voice does not speak to her again. She can feel eyes on her, though, from somewhere within the trees. Watching. Waiting. Testing her patience. Finally the vigilance relaxes, and the thought comes to her, Oka was right. You have the makings of a warrior.

She gives a start, at that. Oka, Singer, is Wa Uspewikakiyape’s true name, the name by which his own people knew him. The name by which only Dakota among the two-footed has ever known him. I give you his greetings, the silent voice goes on. He has taken his place at the council fire in the other side camp. He will not walk the Red Road again.