“Move. Now. Don’t stop until you’re in the helicopter.”

She can hear them now, all around, offering no attempt at stealth. Her pulse quickens and her legs move into a trot, and then an all-out sprint before she’s even aware she’s running.

Manny is leaning out the side of the helicopter, his SA58 Mini FAL laying down bursts of covering fire. Stopping for a split-second, he reaches out and pulls Kirsten inside before returning to his task, covering his sprinting cousin.

Leaping, Koda dives head first into the chopper, tosses down her spent Uzi, and grabs Manny’s weapon, firing into the thick brush that surrounds the van as Manny jumps into the pilot’s seat and wrestles the BlackHawk skyward. The androids break out of cover by the dozens, all firing their weapons at the swiftly rising chopper. It is only Manny’s excellent skill that keeps them alive and one piece as he dips and dodges in an aerial ballet worthy of Baryshnikov.

Once they’re fully airborne and away from the androids’ deadly menace, only then does Koda allow a small, silent sigh of relief escape from between her lips.

The rest of the trip is made in complete silence.

3

Kirsten jumps from the helicopter before it has even fully touched down, her laptop swinging by her side with each step she takes. Asimov, hackles raised by his mistress’ obvious anger, follows along directly at her heel.

Manny makes as if to take off after the strange, though admittedly attractive, woman, but is stopped by a hand on his shoulder. Looking up at his cousin in question, he notices a familiar little twinkle in her eyes—the same twinkle she’d sport when they were kids, daring him to go on an adventure he knew he’d get his hide tanned for. He’d never been able to resist it then, and becoming an adult hasn’t changed that any.

Relaxing, he follows her lead as they make their way through the knots of soldiers and civilians toward a large, empty hangar.

Kirsten bulls her way through the same throng, her eyes fixed steadily on one person alone. Sebastian Hart, obviously the commander of this base, stands in the middle of a crowd, towering above them all. His uniform is immaculately pressed; the brass polished to a blinding shine. His smile is part politician, part kindly grandfather, and all fake.

She’s met him before, at one or another of the myriad of insufferable cabinet meetings she’d been forced to attend as Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Robotics, Bionics and Android Sciences. To her, he was just another military blowhard, willing to do anything with anyone just to get the funding he desired. She trusted him and his cohorts about as far as she could throw a tank.

As she continues to push through a crowd filled with happy pilots celebrating their successful mission, a small part of her recognizes that what she is about to do will likely significantly dampen ebullient spirits. Happiness is an emotion hard to come by lately, and part of her is loathe to put an end to it. Her father’s voice, as it often does now, soothes into her mind, reminding her that winning small battles is nothing if the war itself is lost. And it is that which spurs her on until she is standing in front of the General, eyes flashing.

“General Hart?”

The general looks down at the small, bedraggled woman standing before him. “Yes?”

The smack of palm against flesh is loud in the suddenly silent square. Blinking owlishly, Hart lifts a hand to his lips. It comes away tinged with blood. Asimov growls low in his throat, a warning to the soldiers who are staring at Kirsten as if at a viper poised to strike.

“Do you have any idea what you’ve just done?”

Silence answers her.

“You don’t recognize me, do you.”

After a moment, horrified comprehension dawns, and the general pales as his eyes widen still further. “M-Madame Chairman!”

A murmur goes through the crowd.

Kirsten smiles. It’s not a very pleasant one.

“But how…where…when…?”

“I’m curious, General. Did you check to see if there were any human beings left alive in Minot before you decided to blow the base to kingdom come?”

Hart’s face reddens. “Impossible,” he declares flatly. “Minot was an android factory. They would have left no one alive.”

“Mm. That sure, were you? Were you even aware that there were at least a dozen of your own soldiers on that base when you sent those planes up?”

“They were ordered to turn back!”

“And if they refused to obey your orders because, unlike you, they weren’t positive that everyone was dead?”

“Impossible.”

“Oh, very possible, General. I was on that base when you sent your planes in, General Hart. And I would have been blown to bits if your soldiers hadn’t risked their own lives rescuing me.”

The redness drains from the man’s face like water through sand. His normally ruddy cheeks turn a color best suited to curdling milk and his Adams Apple bobs as he takes a hard swallow. “I—didn’t… .”

Kirsten smiles again. “But that’s not even the worst part,” she continues in a conversational tone. “Do you want to guess what the worst part is, General?”

Hart slowly shakes his head.

“The worst part is that in your zeal to destroy a couple of thousand androids, you also destroyed what might have been our only hope to deactivate the several million still left.” She pauses a moment, watching as he lifts a slightly shaking hand to his brow. “The deactivation codes were in the computers on that base, General Hart. Computers which are now in billions of tiny little pieces so small that not all the General’s horses nor the General’s men will ever have the hope of putting back together again.”

“I—I didn’t—think….”

“No, you didn’t did you. You might want to start trying to in the future.”

And with that, Kirsten turns and walks away, leaving the stunned crowd behind.

Manny looks up at his cousin, an almost awed smile on his face. “Wow.”

Koda chuckles in agreement.

“I thought I recognized her. Kirsten King, isn’t it? The robotics guru?” At Koda’s nod, he continues. “Sure looks different without those damned contacts in, that’s for sure.” Then he grins. “The Colonel’s gonna prang when she finds out the good Doctor’s here. They think the same way about those metalheads.” He scratches his head. “Too bad she’s not here.”

“Where is she?” Koda asks, surprised.

“Got called out to escort some civvies in. A couple of them were hurt, from what we heard. She should be back this evening some time.”

Both look on as Kirsten exits the hangar, the crowd easily parting before her as if she bears the Staff of Moses. Koda eyes her cousin. “Looks like I’m pulling some escort duty of my own. Catch you later, huh?”

“I’m headed for the mess. Stop by if you’ve got time later.”

“Will do.”

4

“Dr. King!”

Kirsten stops and whirls, fully prepared to confront this latest interruption of her royal blue funk. She hesitates as she realizes the intruder is the woman who saved her several times already this day. If for no other reason than that, she swallows her temper and even manages to try a smile out for size.

It fits rather poorly.

“Yes….” Kirsten pauses, looking at the insignia on the uniform covering the woman’s rather well-maintained form. “…Lieutenant?”

Koda gives an easy grin. “Just Dakota, or Koda if you prefer. I’m a Vet.”

“Ex-lieutenant, then,” Kirsten replies, smirking.

Koda rolls her eyes. “A Vet as in Veterinarian. I’m not military, ex or otherwise.”

Kirsten’s eyebrows climb into her hairline. “You’re a civilian? Then how…why…?”

Koda sobers. “Let’s just say it was something I had to do.” She looks the smaller woman over carefully, a frown creasing her striking features. “I think maybe a trip to the hospital would be in order. We’ve got a good one on base here and you’ve been out in sub-optimal conditions without adequate clothing for far too long.”

This smile is more genuine, though sorrowfully brief. “You have a gift for understatement.”

“So I’ve been told,” Koda replies in kind.

“Well, I thank you for your generous offer, but I’ll pass right now. My chest is clear and I’m regaining feeling in my limbs, so I think I’m alright for now.”

“Well, then, how about if I get you to a place where you can dry off and warm up?”

Kirsten eyes the tall Vet carefully, her ingrained distrust once again springing to the fore. For Christ’s sweet sake, K, a small corner of her mind clamors, this woman just saved your life, almost at the cost of her own. I really think you can trust her, don’t you?

It’s a bit of a struggle, but she finally gives in to that insistent inner voice and manages a nod at her benefactor. “That’s an offer I’ll be happy to accept.”

“Good,” Koda replies, smiling. “If you’ll follow me?”

5

Kirsten steps into the small, but cozy, house with a sigh of profound relief. Warmth from the heater immediately seeps into limbs just now waking from their frozen sleep. The tingling starts immediately, and she knows that knifing pain is soon to follow, but she keeps her reactions pushed down deep inside, as is her custom when in the presence of others.

Dakota disappears for a moment, returning with a neat stack of dry clothing in her hands. “Bathroom’s right behind that door there,” she gestures as she transfers the small bundle to Kirsten’s arms. “Fresh towels are in the closet, and the shower should even have some hot water left, if you’re so inclined.”

Dakota turns away before Kirsten can say a word, and disappears back into what Kirsten can see from her current vantage point is the bedroom. The door closes softly, leaving Kirsten alone in the short hallway, clothes in her hands and a perplexed look on her face. After a moment, she shrugs and heads into the bathroom.