The Bloodline Feud (Merchant Princes Omnibus 1)

The Bloodline Feud (Merchant Princes Omnibus 1) by Stross Charles

Book: The Bloodline Feud (Merchant Princes Omnibus 1) by Stross Charles Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stross Charles
Ads: Link
‘Drop it, lady!’
    Miriam fumbled her finger into the trigger guard –
    ‘Drop it!’ The light came closer, right in her face. ‘Now!’
    Something like a freight locomotive came out of the darkness and slammed into the side of her right arm.
    Someone said ‘Shee-it’ with heartfelt feeling, and a huge weight landed on her belly. Miriam gathered breath to scream, but she couldn’t feel her right arm and something was
pressing on her face. She was choking: The air was acrid and sweet-smelling and thick, a cloying flowery laboratory stink. She kicked out hard, legs tangled in the comforter, gasping and screaming
deep in her throat, but they were muffling her with the stench and everything was fuzzy at the edges.
    She couldn’t move. ‘Not funny,’ someone a long way away at the end of a black tunnel tried to say. The lights were on now, but everything was dark. Figures moved around her and
her arm hurt – distantly. She couldn’t move.
Tired
. There was something in her mouth.
Is this an ambulance?
she wondered.
Lights out.
    The dogpile on the bed slowly shifted, standing up. Specialist A worked on the subject with tongue depressor and tubes, readying her for assisted ventilation.
    The chloroform pad sitting on the pillow was an acrid nuisance: For the journey ahead, something safer and more reliable was necessary. Specialist B worked on her at the same time, sliding the
collapsible gurney under her and strapping her to it at legs, hips, wrists, and shoulders.
    ‘That was a fucking mess,’ snarled Control, picking up the little snub-nosed revolver in one black-gloved hand. ‘Double action: she could have shot someone. Who screwed up on
the landing?’
    ‘Sir.’ It was Point B. ‘There was a book. On the stairs.’
    ‘Bitchin’. Okay, get little Miss Lethal here loaded and ready to move. Bravo, start the cleanup. I want her personal files, wherever she keeps them. And her computer, and all the
disks. Whoever the hell was with her this evening, I want to know who they are too. And everything else. Charlie, pack her bags like she’s going on vacation – a long vacation. Clothing,
bathroom stuff. Don’t make a mess of it. I want to be ready to evacuate in twenty minutes.’
    ‘Sir. Yes, sir.’ Control nodded. Point B was going to pull a shitwork detail when they got home, but you didn’t discipline people in the field unless they’d fucked up bad
enough to pull a nine-millimeter discharge. And Point B hadn’t. A month cleaning the latrines would give him time to think on how close he’d come to getting plugged by a sleepy woman
with a thirty-eight revolver.
    Spec A was nearly done; he and Spec B grunted as they lifted the coffin-shaped framework off the bed. Miriam was unconscious and trussed like a turkey inside it. ‘Is she going to be
okay?’ Control asked idly.
    ‘I think so,’ said Spec A. ‘Bad bruising on her right arm, and probably concussed, but I don’t expect anything major. Worst risk is she pukes in her sleep and aspirates
her own vomit, and we can deal with that.’ He spoke confidently. He’d done paramedic training and Van Two was equipped like an ambulance.
    ‘Then take her away. We’ll be along in half an hour when we’re through sanitizing.’
    ‘Yes, my lord. We’ll get her home.’
    Control looked at the dressing table, strewn with underwear, month-old magazines, and half-used toiletries. His expression turned to disgust at the thought of searching through piles of dirty
clothing. ‘Sky Father, what a mess.’
    *
    There was an office not far from Miriam’s cell. The office was quiet, and its dark oak paneling and rich Persian carpets gave it something of the ambiance of a very
exclusive Victorian gentlemen’s club. A wide walnut desk occupied the floor next to the window bay. The top of the desk was inlaid with a Moroccan leather blotter, upon which lay a
banker’s box full of papers and other evidence.
    The occupant of the office sat at the desk,

Similar Books

Absolutely, Positively

Jayne Ann Krentz

Blazing Bodices

Robert T. Jeschonek

Harm's Way

Celia Walden

Down Solo

Earl Javorsky

Lilla's Feast

Frances Osborne

The Sun Also Rises

Ernest Hemingway

Edward M. Lerner

A New Order of Things

Proof of Heaven

Mary Curran Hackett