to be evasive without flat-out lying. "He knows where we are, al right."
Paylor laughs. "I bet he does. You been trained in these?" She slaps the stock of her gun.
"I have. In Thirteen," says Gale. "But I'd rather use my own weapons."
"Yes, we've got our bows." I hold mine up, then realize how decorative it must seem. "It's more deadly than it looks."
"It would have to be," says Paylor. "Al right. We expect at least three more waves. They have to drop their sight shields before they release the bombs. That's our chance. Stay low!" I position myself to shoot from one knee.
"Better start with fire," says Gale.
I nod and pul an arrow from my right sheath. If we miss our targets, these arrows wil land somewhere--
probably the warehouses across the street. A fire can be put out, but the damage an explosive can do may be irreparable.
Suddenly, they appear in the sky, two blocks down, maybe a hundred yards above us. Seven smal bombers in a V formation. "Geese!" I yel at Gale. He'l know exactly what I mean. During migration season, when we hunt fowl, we've developed a system of dividing the birds so we don't both target the same ones. I get the far side of the V, Gale takes the near, and we alternate shots at the front bird. There's no time for further discussion. I estimate the lead time on the hoverplanes and let my arrow fly. I catch the inside wing of one, causing it to burst into flames. Gale just misses the point plane. A fire blooms on an empty warehouse roof across from us. He swears under his breath.
The hoverplane I hit swerves out of formation, but stil releases its bombs. It doesn't disappear, though.
Neither does one other I assume was hit by gunfire. The damage must prevent the sight shield from reactivating.
"Good shot," says Gale.
"I wasn't even aiming for that one," I mutter. I'd set my sights on the plane in front of it. "They're faster than we think."
"Positions!" Paylor shouts. The next wave of hoverplanes is appearing already.
"Fire's no good," Gale says. I nod and we both load explosive-tipped arrows. Those warehouses across the way look deserted anyway.
As the planes sweep silently in, I make another decision. "I'm standing!" I shout to Gale, and rise to my feet.
This is the position I get the best accuracy from. I lead earlier and score a direct hit on the point plane, blasting a hole in its bel y. Gale blows the tail off a second. It flips and crashes into the street, setting off a series of explosions as its cargo goes off.
Without warning, a third V formation unveils. This time, Gale squarely hits the point plane. I take the wing off the second bomber, causing it to spin into the one behind it. Together they col ide into the roof of the warehouse across from the hospital. A fourth goes down from gunfire.
"Al right, that's it," Paylor says.
Flames and heavy black smoke from the wreckage obscure our view. "Did they hit the hospital?"
"Must have," she says grimly.
As I hurry toward the ladders at the far end of the warehouse, the sight of Messal a and one of the insects emerging from behind an air duct surprises me. I thought they'd stil be hunkered down in the al ey.
"They're growing on me," says Gale.
I scramble down a ladder. When my feet hit the ground, I find a bodyguard, Cressida, and the other insect waiting. I expect resistance, but Cressida just waves me toward the hospital. She's yel ing, "I don't care, Plutarch!
Just give me five more minutes!" Not one to question a free pass, I take off into the street.
"Oh, no," I whisper as I catch sight of the hospital. What used to be the hospital. I move past the wounded, past the burning plane wrecks, fixated on the disaster ahead of me. People screaming, running about frantical y, but unable to help. The bombs have col apsed the hospital roof and set the building on fire, effectively trapping the patients within. A group of rescuers has assembled, trying to clear a path to the inside. But I already know what they wil find. If the
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