Read StarCraft II: Devils' Due Online
Authors: Christie Golden
Tags: #Video & Electronic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Games, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In
name—had an eye for finding and removing not only
bel igerent and possibly violent customers, but
morose and melancholy ones as wel . Wayne, for
whom the place was named, once said a sad drunk
was just as bad as a mad one, and neither would be
tolerated in his establishment.
“Evenin’, Mr. Raynor, Mr. Findlay,” Big Eddie said.
Every bit as large as Tychus, he was much better
weathered, lacking scars or a broken nose.
“Welcome back.”
“Hey, Eddie,” Raynor said, and slipped him a
handful of credits. “When you’re off duty, enjoy yourself
on me.”
Eddie chuckled. “I wil at that, Mr. Raynor. Thank
you.”
“Daisy working tonight?” asked Tychus.
Eddie’s smile, wide as the sky, widened further,
showing he stil had al his teeth. “She most certainly
is, but if she wasn’t, I’m sure she’d come in special for
you.”
Tychus grinned.
Lots of people did things special for Jim and
Tychus. They always spent their money freely and with
good cheer, and Wayne, Eddie, Daisy, and the others
looked out for them. Many a time had Butler and his
deputies tried to surprise the two, and each time their
plans had been foiled. Wicked Wayne’s looked after
two of its best clients in every way.
The music was loud, with a heavy thudding boom
that Jim could feel in his bones. The air was thick and
gray with smoke, and the laughter was raucous and
frequent. Tychus took a deep breath.
“That’s the smel of pleasure, Jim,” he said. “Only a
couple scents missing: the sweat of the man who’s
losing to you, and the perfume of the girl you’re
slamming.”
“You’re a poet, Tychus.”
“Heh. Don’t I know it. Ah, there’s my girl.”
The stage was in the center of the place, with the
bar on the left side and a VRcade off to the right.
Several gambling tables were set up in the back, near
an easy exit. On the stage now, wearing luminescent
jewelry and enough scanty pieces of clothing so that
they’d actual y have something to remove for the
customers, were the girls—and boys—of Wicked
Wayne’s.
Tychus went right up to the chairs closest to the
stage. He glared at the man currently seated within
groping reach of the dancers. “You’re in my seat,”
Tychus rumbled.
The man looked up at him. “Don’t have your name
on it.”
“This does.” Tychus made a fist with his left hand
and brought it close enough to the man’s face so that
he could read the letters P-A-I-N—a letter tattooed on
each finger.
Jim chuckled at just how fast the blood drained
from the man’s face as his eyes flickered from the
word to Tychus’s implacable expression. Without a
word, he and his buddies picked up their drinks and
relocated. Tychus settled into the chair, plopped his
booted feet on another one, and grinned up at one of
the gyrating dancers. Tal , red-haired, with legs up to
here
and breasts out to
there
, she wore infinitesimal
scraps of fabric that barely concealed the gifts that
nature and, Raynor always suspected, technology had
given her. This was Daisy, Tychus’s favorite of al the
girls at Wicked Wayne’s, and she gave him a big
smile, a wink, and a shake of her finely curved behind
as she continued to dance in heels so high and so
spiked that Jim always thought they could be used as
weapons.
Jim grinned and headed for the bar on the left.
Misty was tending tonight, and he was delighted.
While the dancers of both genders were permitted
and, frankly, expected to give “private performances,”
the bartenders were under no such instructions. But
Misty liked Jim, and he liked her, and if her shift
ended on time, sometimes she’d serve him a drink
upstairs.
“Jim!” Misty was adorable. Petite, impish, with pale
blond hair, hazel eyes, and a body that had none of
the outrageous curves of the dancers but was
decidedly attractive, she was much more appealing,
Jim thought, than any of the actual performers. “How
you been? I see Tychus has found his usual seat.”
Jim laughed. “Some things never change.”
“Let’s see, Scotty Bolger’s Old No. 8 for the both of
you, and beer chasers?”
“That doesn’t change, either.”
She winked. “Coming right up.”
She moved to get two shot glasses and two beer
steins. He watched her appreciatively for a moment,
then turned his attention back to the dancers.
They were certainly worth paying attention to. One
particularly striking “performer” removed what was left
of her costume and tossed it at Tychus, then turned
her dark head slightly to catch Jim’s eye. He was glad
he’d ordered drinks because his mouth was suddenly
dry. The brunette beauty gave him a sultry wink and
mimed a kiss, then continued performing.
“Her name’s Evangelina,” said a voice behind him,
and he jumped, turning guiltily to Misty as she shoved
the beverages at him. “She’s new. Very popular.”
Her voice held no trace of jealousy. Evangelina. Jim
had to smile a little. The unit to which he and Tychus
had once belonged had gotten the nickname
Heaven’s Devils. Evangelina was an angelic name,
and her face was indeed as lovely as any angel’s he’d
ever seen painted. But that body certainly promised
devilish things.
“She busy tonight?”
Misty gave him an annoyed look. “Jim, I just take
drink orders. Wayne handles everything else.”
Properly chastened, Jim nodded. He leaned over
and gave her a kiss on the cheek. She gave him a
look. He gave her credits.
“That’s better. Go have fun. I’m off later tonight if
Evangelina’s got no time for you.”
He smiled at her and returned to the table, carrying
al four drinks careful y, and set them down. Tychus
handed him the stil -warm brassiere Evangelina had
removed. “Here.”
“Uh, thanks,” Jim said. He placed it down on the
table slightly awkwardly and took a sip of Scotty
Bolger’s whiskey. He smiled at the familiar burn and
looked around. This was home, such as it was, and
had been for almost five years now. Wayne ran a
good establishment: his dancers, bartenders, and
dealers were paid wel and liked working here. He
and Tychus were always made welcome, and even
though he suspected it was more because they
usual y showed up with fistfuls of credits rather than
because they were just so inherently likable, it was a
good feeling.
There had been camaraderie among the Heaven’s
Devils that Raynor found himself missing. He had
some of it stil with Tychus, but most of the Devils—
red-haired, fire-tempered Hank Harnack; kindhearted
Max Zander and Connor Ward; Tychus’s onetime
girlfriend Lisa “Doc” Cassidy—were dead now. Dead
because of the treachery of their commanding officer,
Colonel Javier Vanderspool—the one person they
should have been able to trust. Ryk Kydd, the sniper
who’d saved their asses more times than Raynor
wanted to admit, had gone off on his own. They hadn’t
kept in touch. Most of the memories of those times
were piecemeal and vague; Jim hadn’t wanted to
remember much about it.
But here, while this was hardly a familial
establishment, there was a sense of family. Of
belonging.
“It’s good to feel …” Tychus frowned. “What’s the
word I’m looking for? That word when you don’t have
no more stress and tension and danger breathin’
down your neck.”
“Relaxed?” Jim offered.
“Yeah, that’s it. It’s good to feel relaxed for a while.”
“You better not be spending al my credits. You stil
owe me from that time you pocketed more than your
fair share of the deal.”
Tychus placed a huge hand to his heart, looking
offended. “James Raynor, I ain’t never done no such
thing.”
“Sure you didn’t.” Most of the time, this was just
banter, as it was tonight. But sometimes Jim
wondered. Tychus Findlay could be counted on to
always look out for himself.
Jim took another sip and leaned back in his chair.
His eyes wandered to sloe-eyed, red-lipped
Evangelina. Again Jim swal owed hard.
“Tychus,” he said, “I got a problem.”
“Ain’t never seen a problem enough creds can’t fix,
and we got ourselves a fekkload of creds,” Tychus
said, downing the whiskey in one quick motion and
reaching for the beer. He gave Raynor an amused
glance. “So, what’s yours?”
“Evangelina,” Jim said, nodding at the goddess
parading about on the stage.
“I wouldn’t cal that a problem.”
“Wel , see…. Usual y Misty and I sheet dance if
she’s free. And she’s free tonight. But … Evangelina
…”
“Is smoking hot,” Tychus supplied helpful y. “Stil
ain’t a problem.” He winked at Jim and took a long
pul on the dark amber beverage. “Have ’em both.
Problem solved.”
Jim supposed it was.
The fone had the most horrible noise in the world.
Especial y if you were dreadful y, agonizingly, and
profoundly hungover.
Beep. Beep. Beep.
Raynor felt as if his eyes were
glued shut and his limbs weighed a thousand pounds
each. Fifteen angry elephants were stampeding
inside his skul . “Just shut up,” he told the fone. What
came out of his dry, foul-tasting mouth was
“Uuhhnnggg …”
The girl lying beside him murmured something,
shoved at his chest weakly, rol ed over, and covered
her head with a pil ow. For a terrible moment, Raynor
couldn’t recal which one he had decided to take to
bed. He wrested one eye open. Judging by the length
of the female body under the covers, it was Misty.
Beep. Beep. Beep.
“Turn it off,” snapped Misty, her voice slightly
muffled. Jim moved his heavy-as-lead body toward
the table and made an attempt to get the fone. He
encountered his Colt first—as he should have—and
shoved it aside. His fingers closed on the fone for an
instant, fumbled, and succeeded only in knocking it off
the table. He swore and leaned over to get it.
The blood rushing to his head only exacerbated
what was vying for the Worst Hangover in the
Universe title, and he almost threw up. With a heroic
effort, his hand closed over the fone. He heaved
himself back onto the bed and looked at the
message, rubbing his bleary eyes with his free hand.
It was from one Myles Hammond. The message
consisted only of a handful of coordinates.
Jim tossed the fone back onto the table. It made an
incredibly loud clatter.
“Shit,” Raynor said, and covered his face with the
pil ow.
PITT TOWN, NEW SYDNEY
The terrain was al but lifeless. Not quite the
unforgiving emptiness of the badlands: there, people
had never quite dwelt comfortably. Here, they once
had thrived. And that made it feel al the more empty.
Once-hospitable land had been bombed into
aridity. No grass, no trees. The only sign that life had
once flourished here were the skeletons—though
merciful y not of humans, not anymore. The skeletons
that loomed on the horizons were those of bombed
buildings. A wal here and there, or a pile of tumbled
plascrete—sometimes an entire house missing only
the roof and people to live in it—stood silent,
accusatory sentinel over the area. These were stark
reminders of what human beings could do to each
other when one faction decided it didn’t like another.
The Guild Wars, the wars in which Raynor and Findlay
and their other friends had fought, had seen to it that
this was al that was left of Pitt Town. Jim would like to
think that people wouldn’t forget, that they would learn
from it, but he knew better than that. There would be
other bombed-out skeletons in other places, in other
planets of the Confederacy. The only difference
between wars was how long the lul s between them
lasted. Once, he had been naïve enough to believe in
things like a “cause” and “justice.” And then he’d
fought in the Guild Wars and seen, up close and very
personal, that the only “causes,” real y, were those of
the individual. With good people, there were good