Johnson has the pack. She answers, listens for perhaps five seconds and says, “Ma’am, it’s the Colonel.”

Koda takes the handset. “Rivers. What is it?”

Allen’s voice comes through blurred by distance and thirty feet of earth and concrete. “Abort mission immediately. Return to base.”

“We’re almost into the compound yard, Colonel.”

“I don’t care where you are, Rivers. Get yourself and your people out. Now.”

“I can’t do that, Colonel,” she says quietly. “There’s something or someone here I have to find. We’ve been over this.”

“Goddammit—“ Maggie pauses, and when she speaks again, her voice is even. “There are half a dozen F-18’s on their way to bomb Minot right now. I couldn’t talk the Base Commander out of it. The planes were in the air before I knew; they’ve been up for fifteen minutes. Get out. Get out now.”

“Understood. Over and out.” Koda clicks off and hands the set back to Johnson. She turns to the soldiers behind her, their faces in semi-shadow or starkly lit by their torches. “The Colonel informs me that the General at Ellsworth has called an immediate strike on this facility. I intend to go on. The rest of you get topside and prepare to leave the area. If I don’t come back within twenty minutes, or you see or hear the planes coming, get out.”

There is no movement behind her. “Turn around,” she yells. “Go!”

“I volunteer to accompany you Ma’am.” It is Andrews, but his offer is drowned almost immediately in the shouting. “Yeah!” “Right on!” “Me too!”

Oh Christ. There is no time for this. She cannot stop to argue with them. “All right, count off by ones and twos.” They obey her, reluctantly, knowing what she intends. “Now. Ones come with me. Twos prepare vehicles for departure. Make sure you strap MRE in good and tight. Eighteen minutes. Now, let’s go!”

This time they do as ordered, and the thunder of feet in the tunnel carries to her even as she storms up the staircase to the roof of the command center and its hatch. She silently thanks all the gods when the handle turns beneath her hand and she pushes it open onto moonlit snow. Her vision, already dark-adapted, sharpens. She is in an open yard between buildings, punctuated here and there by shadowed hummocks that she realizes must be the frozen corpses of the installation’s human workers. Above, its feathers bleached by the cold light, an owl drifts by on soundless wings.

“Stay here while I scout,” she says, and steps out into the empty space.

7

After a seeming eternity, her bladder is finally emptied and she yanks her jeans back up over flesh as warm and as feeling as the inside of a metal freezer door. Taking several careful and agonizing steps away from her midden, she stoops on frozen knees, scoops up a handful of snow, and shoves it into her mouth, sucking and chewing as fast as she is able.

A brilliant spike of pain knifes into her brain, almost toppling her to the ground, but she continues feeding the snow into her mouth, her body desperate for the moisture it offers.

Then she freezes as her implants detect a sound almost directly in front of her.

8

Just as she shuts the door behind her , Dakota senses something and looks to her left. There, crouched against the building, is a figure. It is short and female-shaped, with pale hair that falls over a high forehead. Moonlight glints off the dark optics and titanium throat-band of an android.

“Bastard!” Koda spits, and raises her gun to fire, setting the sight just between those wide, limpid eyes.

CHAPTER EIGHT

“Run run run run run away.”

PERHAPS IT IS the way those dark eyes widen at the sight of her—an action quite “undroid” like. Or perhaps it is a sense of familiarity that steals over her senses and makes her hesitate. Whatever the reason, the hesitation costs her dearly as something heavy and blunt connects with the junction of her neck and shoulder, paralyzing her arm and dropping her into the snow as if pole axed.

She fights to keep her eyes open, needing to meet her death head on.

The droid, male this time, looks down at her, its eyes doll-like and expressionless. With a smooth economy of motion, it lifts the uzi it’s holding and points it directly between her own eyes.

“Hold!”

The voice is female, that much she can tell, but whether issued through living or manufactured vocal cords is another question entirely. One she’s amazed that she even has time to contemplate. The gun’s muzzle never wavers, but the finger doesn’t tighten on the trigger either, and Koda lets out a small breath, not daring to drag her eyes away from her imminent demise.

Kirsten strides purposefully across the short span separating herself from the action. Simple deduction tells her that the fallen figure is human. It is the only reason the android would have attacked, after all. Reaching them both, she stops and looks down just as the moon sails from behind a lowering cloud.

Pale blue eyes look back at her, and she freezes for a moment as a queer sense of déjà vu settles over her.

Those eyes.

Forcing herself to look away, she meets the dispassionate gaze of the android and says the first thing that comes to mind. “Human female.”

Taking another look, the android nods in a very human gesture of acknowledgement. “It will be of use to us.”

As the droid bends at the waist, preparing to lift the woman, Kirsten again stops it. “I will take this one to the facility. There may be others. She entered from that direction.”

“Acknowledged.”

After the android is swallowed by the blackness, Kirsten lowers herself into a painful crouch, staring down at the woman in the snow. “Are you crazy?” she hisses. “This place is crawling with androids! What were you thinking?”

Glittering, too-familiar eyes center themselves on her neck, and Kirsten feels an unaccountable blush warm her frozen cheeks. “I’m human,” she whispers, her hand drifting up of its own accord to brush against the droid collar at her throat.

“Seems I’m not the only crazy one, then.”

The voice is low and melodious, and it hums pleasantly in Kirsten’s ears. Her sensitive hearing picks up another sound, and she reaches out, clamping down onto an arm. “Hurry, they’re coming back. We need to get you inside. I’ll figure out what to do with you after we’re there.”

“No time,” Koda replies, shaking off the arm and rolling to her feet. “We need to get out of here. Now.”

Dark eyes widen in amazement. “You are crazy. Do you have any idea that you’re in the middle of one of the largest android factories in the world?”

“It’s also gonna be one of the flattest android factories in the world in about eight minutes. We need to move.”

Kirsten freezes. A feeling very akin to dread pours into her belly. “What? What are you saying?”

Dakota sighs, impatient. “Look, there’s a squadron of F-18’s headed up here from Ellsworth to turn this place into a smoking crater.”

“Military! You’re with the Army?!?”

“No, I’m….”

“Great! Do you have any idea what you’ve just done?? Jesus Christ!”

“Listen, I don’t make the orders here. I just…”

Once again her words are cut off by an irate Kirsten. “Of all the stupid….Jesus! I’ve got to get back inside before it’s too late!”

She makes ready to run back into the building, only to be halted in her tracks by a very strong hand clamped around her bicep. “You don’t understand. It’s already too late.”

Kirsten whirls around, eyes blazing behind her contacts. “You’re the one who doesn’t understand! Your damn planes are going to ruin everything!”

“They’re not my—damnit!” Dakota runs after the woman who has so adroitly slipped her grip. Her long legs easily eat up the distance between them, and she lowers a hard hand onto the fleeing woman’s shoulder. “Wait a minute! Please!”

They both stop as both heads cock in identical listening postures.

“They’re early,” Dakota softly intones, her eyes searching the as yet empty sky.

“No!” Kirsten shouts, once again shaking off Koda’s strong grip. “I need to….”

“You need to go!” Koda replies, grabbing her again. “Now!” Spinning, she all but tosses the woman back the way they’ve come, then sprints after her, gun at the ready. “Don’t stop! Keep moving!” Her voice is raised in a shout to be heard over the ever increasing roar of the planes.

Kirsten stumbles and only avoids making a snow angel by the strong grip to the back of her sweater which tears the fabric and almost lifts her off of her feet. “Keep running! Go! Go! Go!”

The door looms in front of her, growing larger with every step she takes. She nearly screams as something that can only be a bullet whines past her ear close enough to make her hair flutter. Then she finds herself face first in the snow as bullets erupt from everywhere at once.

Hearing the firestorm, Andrews flings open the door and rushes out, followed by his compatriots. Bracketing Dakota on either side, they empty their weapons into the darkness as the roar of the planes becomes almost overwhelming.

“We need to leave now, Ma’am!” Andrews shouts over the din.

Koda nods to signal her understanding, and, with a final burst of gunfire, turns and heads for the door, the others in tow.

Kirsten turns herself over in the snow just in time to see the barrel of a gun shoved in her face by a very angry looking woman.

“No!” Koda shouts, knocking Johnson’s weapon away just in time. The bullet pierces the ground not more than a foot to the left of Kirsten’s arm. “She’s human!”

Johnson looks stunned, then pales as she realizes what she almost did. Koda shoves her in the direction of the door, then grabs Kirsten and hauls her to her feet. “Move! Now!!”