Okay, now that I've managed to get ~5500 words out of this in the last four days(!), it's time to get the rough draft out
before I do my usual trick of nitpicking and editing myself into inaction for the next six months.

I post this in hope of opinions, insights, detailed feedback, and comments, so if you have anything to say, I very eagerly want to hear it!
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Unit #3, Waikato Sun Club
North-West of Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand
02:20, Tuesday 14 December, 1993
Taz's eyes snapped open, darting about the bedroom for immediate threats. One instant, she'd been asleep and as close to 'peaceful' as she ever got; the next, she was wide awake,
danger making her every nerve sing like a plucked guitar-string. Sitting up sidelong in the bed, she reached over a little and shook her now-boyfriend's shoulder, gently but urgently. She barely breathed his name. "Misha."
The response was a plaintive groan, slightly louder than her voice. "Taz, I love you, but please: I can't do justice to
either of us unless I get some
rest!" he grumbled.
In a lighter moment, she would've rolled her eyes; instead, she lightly poked his shoulder-blade with the pommel of her Ka-Bar. "Get dressed. Something's wrong."
That snapped his eyes open, and he rolled flat onto his back, looking up and over at her. The light from the near-full-moon blasting in through their bedroom window made a spectacular show of her gloriously bare body, silver illumination and dark shadows highlighting her pale skin, and normally he would've stopped to be awestruck by that sight, as he had been every
other time he'd seen her since they arrived here three days beforehand... but the urgency in her voice and eyes, and the gleaming knife in her hand, blasted all thoughts of once again worshipping his goddess straight from his mind before they even finished forming. Instead, he reached onto the bedside table and came up with his own US Army web-belt, bringing his own Ka-Bar to hand. "Any idea
what?" he asked, his own voice matching her intent undertone.
"Not yet, but..." Then a memory resurfaced, and she wanted to smack her own head. "
Blyad — that Panther earlier! Megan, the camp-staffer, she said Stormhawk choppers go buzzing around these hills all the time, right? Practicing inserting and extracting their troops?"
"You think one of those insertions tonight was for-real?" he muttered, rolling out of bed and reaching for the coat-hanger holding his clothes. Such as they were.
The only set of clothes left to either
of us right now, thanks to Mama's little 'prank'! Taz noted absently, slithering across the bed herself to sit on its edge and reach for her socks and sandshoes. "Well, there's
something coming, and it had to get up here
somehow," she noted.
Especially with a river between us and 'Camp Waikato', AKA 'Stormhawk HQ', AKA 'Gribblies 'R' Us'.
"And here's us, within nothing but what we stand up in," he muttered, hastily buttoning his white dress shirt and tucking it into his denim shorts. "Against hostiles of unknown type coming from an unknown direction in unknown numbers with unknown capabilities and armament. And the only things between the dozen or so people in this naturist resort, and them, is
us."
With her footwear on, Taz growled in vexation, resheathed her Ka-Bar on her web-belt, then buckled it on, thus donning everything available to her except her backpack.
A Ka-Bar and two canteens — drinking water right, holy water left. Oh yeah: both of us are dressed to the nines and armed to the teeth! Sukin syn
, I wish I knew where Mama stashed the 'coffin' we packed with our 'emergency kit'! "Think we should give 'em a chance to surrender? We've got 'em outnumbered
and outgunned!"
"They won't take the deal. They're never that smart," he sighed resignedly, buckling on his own web-belt. "What's the plan, O My Slayer?"
"Well, Watcher Mine,
I'm gonna go out and take a dekko, figure out what we're dealing with.
You wait at the north gate, make sure nothing gets through before I come back."
Misha opened his mouth to object... then thought better of wasting his breath. "Stay heads-up, all right?"
"Always." She saw no reason to deny the impulse to grab a handful of her lover's shirt and drag him close for a long, deep kiss. (Not that the 'dragging' took much effort; even if he'd been inclined to resist, or she hadn't been the Slayer, she stood five-foot-ten and massed sixty-five kilos, whereas he was half-a-year younger than her and far from full-grown, so she could pretty much manhandle him at will. Though letting him do the reverse for the last couple of days had been well worth it.) He looked slightly dazed when she finally, reluctantly pulled back again, and to be fair she was feeling a little muzzy herself. "For luck."
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It had been raining heavily on-and-off since they arrived — though after their first afternoon, they hadn't really noticed much outside the four walls of their bedroom — and the first thing Taz did was find the biggest patch of mud going and roll around in it, slathering on a good, thick, head-to-toe coating of improvised concealment.
With the moon so bright, skin like mine would probably be visible from orbit
without this. Our camo-cream was in the coffin with the rest of our kit, so I get to pull Arnie's trick from Predator
. On the bright side, the cam-cream's hideously greasy, so at least this stuff won't really
cause problems — full-body acne would be a wonderful
capper for how stuffed-up this 'holiday' is about to get!
Getting over the compound's double-layered, two-metre-tall wooden fence probably wouldn't have been much obstacle to her even a year ago, before she was Called; now, it was simplicity itself to crouch, coil, and spring up onto the roof of the pool-area storage shed that butted up to that fence, then take a flying leap out into the open grass beyond. Landing with barely less than a
thump, she took off uphill at a quick-but-silent jog, peering into the bush ahead, keeping off the tramping track so its gravel wouldn't give her away by crunching underfoot. After the first couple of hundred metres, the gravel gave way to simple packed-earth with wooden framing to create low steps every few metres.
There's what, seven switchbacks between here and the lookout on Hill 106? Four rights and three lefts, going uphill? I just hope whatever's out there is lazy enough to use the track! The land beyond the hill where the presumed hostiles must have deplaned was Crown-held bushland, never cleared by farmers and devoid of paths, hardly easy to traverse quietly. Even the off-path areas of this property had been left more-or-less untouched, so she had cover and (hopefully!) time. With the path's layout fresh in mind from their tramp up the trail just yesterday, Taz headed straight uphill, her thighs protesting the grade as she weaved through the undergrowth. With the lookout being some thirty metres above the Sun Club, those switchbacks had made for a leisurely click-and-a-half walk; the direct route was an unpleasant two-hundred-metre climb here-and-now.
She'd just reached the hill's crest-line, maybe fifty metres from the lookout and ten or twelve metres into the bush beyond the last stretch of track, when she started hearing the tramp of boots and the faint jingle of equipment — rattling rifle-slings and the jiggling of loaded webgear. Turning to look back downhill and quickly flattening herself into the leaf-litter to lower her profile and better her camouflage, she watched as the first of the newcomers started down the path from the lookout, which they'd seemingly used as a rally-point.
Seven of them in all, at fifteen-metre spacings, she noted.
They look
human enough — all adult males, Māori and Pākehā both, camo fatigues and military-grade firepower — but they don't move
right. Vampires would be smoother and faster; these jokers are stilted
somehow, a little too stiff. They're just trouping along in column, too, eyes front; no-one's alert or paying much attention to their surroundings, no looking to their flanks or rear. She almost shook her head in disapproval.
Sloppy. Poor vigilance kills, lads!
She needed to call them
something, and the way they were trudging along made the names obvious.
'Hi-ho, hi-ho, it's off to kill they go! With ChiCom AKs and frag-grenades, hi-ho, hi-ho!' Well then Umnik
, Vorchun
, Sonya
, Skromnik
, Vesel'chak
, Chikhun
, and Prostachok
, I think you'll find this
particular 'Belosnezkha
' does quite enough
housekeeping already
, without unwelcome guests imposing themselves!
Still: they have a distinct
firepower advantage. I need to pare that down before finding out if they can use it properly.
All this had taken her perhaps five seconds of observation and planning. Now, she simply hunkered down in her mud-and-leaf camo and
waited.
Three went past. Four. Five. Six. Then the arse-end Charlie, 'Jolly', the one carrying a Type-81 LMG. She let him get a few more steps down the trail... then silently rose to a crouch, slithered down onto the track itself, drew her Ka-Bar, and dashed up behind him, like a panther leaping on a deer.
Just like Uncle Andrushka taught me. One arm flashed around 'Jolly's' front, her left hand clamping down over his mouth to silence any outcry; her right hand drove the Ka-Bar into the nape of his neck, instantly severing his brain-stem.
As her victim collapsed, like a puppet with the strings cut, Taz gently lowered the corpse to the ground to minimise the noise, gritting her teeth against the pain of the frostburn.
Ye Gods, I've built snowmen
that felt warmer than him! She wrenched her knife free, grimacing in disgust to see it covered not with blood but ice-blue ichor, almost flourescent in shade and already crusting with frost. A glance to her left arm and breast, where she'd touched the bastard, showed her camouflaging mud frozen to patches of brown ice, parts of it cracking and falling away to reveal the skin beneath already clammy and bluing.
Grappling with these blokes would be a bad plan
, she judged, quickly stripping off the man(?)'s weapon and the Chinese-made chest-rig full of banana-mags and grenades that went with it. Leaving the corpse where it lay, she hastily swung-on and buckled on the '
lifchik' for transport — the dry idea
Three full days without a stitch of clothing, and the first thing I put on again is a 'bra'! flickered across her mind and was gone — then gathered the machine-gun in her arms and hastily judged the pace of the hostile party's advance. Aiming to cross the trail behind them, where she would go unseen, she waited a few moments more for them to get to the right place... and set off downhill at a run, as fast as she dared without risking her balance or any noise to alert the bastards.
As he'd been told, Misha was waiting just inside the gate that opened onto the track when, never breaking stride, she coiled mid-step and leapt over the fence again, landing on the shed roof and slithering down into the grounds next to him, all with a silence cats would envy. When she landed and turned around to face him, he glanced over her mud-camo — and the patches of frostnipped skin where her dash had shaken off the ice — with a number of questions in his expression.
{ Hostiles coming down the trail. One down, six left, } she told him in their mix of NZSL and tactical handsigns. { Man-shaped, demons or undead of some kind. They're cold-based — touching the one I killed was worse than skinny-dipping in the Neva in high winter. I'll try to cut the odds down some more. } She unslung the Type-81 from her back and handed it to him, then shrugged off the
lifchik as well. { Mixed weapons: one shotgun, one SKS, SMGs and AKs for the others. Find a high-spot and cover the uphill slope, especially the trail and gate. If any of them get past me, don't 'go loud' unless they breach the compound — we still might get away from this without alerting the civilians. If they do get inside, kill 'em if you can, but keep their focus on
you so they don't go after the innocents. }
Pale but grimly resolved, the way he
always got when it dropped in the pot like this, Misha buckled on the chest-rig, retrieved the LMG, stripped the seventy-five-round drum from the breech, and ran a quick function check. The
Avtomat Kalashnikova family were no strangers to them, not even this chunky Chinese cousin. He glanced back to her and 'spoke' again as she hastily daubed fresh mud over the clear patches. { You being empty-handed makes this far too close to 'fair', OK? Do something about that. Quick. }
She shot him a wink and a blown kiss, then was back over the fence again.
That outwardly cocky show was as much for her own benefit as his, because this was going to be a
lot harder than it could have been.
Fuck, I wish we still had our gear! 'When in doubt, improvise' is nice, but trying to do it quietly
and unseen
is going to make it challenging
, she mused, eyeing the length of the column once more; by the time she'd got back to them, they were rounding the second-to-last turn. Most of them were wearing
stahlhelms, mostly East German surplus by the looks (though 'Grumpy', the shotgunner near the lead, had the older WW2 version)... but the last 'man' in line, 'Dopey', wore only a soft 'j-hat'.
Oops on him!
A glance to her feet turned up a rock about the size of a Cadbury Creme Egg.
Perfect. Now the trick will be obeying the TV ad: 'Don't. Get. Caught!'
She waited a breath for the others to clear the way... then took careful aim and
threw.
Sidearmed by a tall woman with the impeccable aim and prodigious strength of a Slayer, the stone crashed into Dopey's right temple like a thunderbolt from the hand of Zeus himself, caving in his skull and pitching him sideways, where a small bush half-caught him, muffling his fall. His companions didn't look around, clearly hearing nothing. Scrambling up the slope to his body, she ignored his fallen SMG —
Too soon to be so loud! — and instead reached for the US Army-issue machete sheathed at his left hip. Slowly easing it free with barely a whisper of sound, she turned and padded down the track to find the new 'arse-end Charlie', machete in one hand, Ka-Bar in the other.
'Doc' seemed oblivious to her coming up behind him, and Taz
knew her sandshoed feet were all but silent on the packed-earth path... but as she got within ten metres' distance of him, he whipped around to face her, his eyes flaring electric-blue, his Kalashiklone starting to swing up.
Shit! The Ka-Bar was out of her hand before she finished thinking the curse, spinning end-for-end before driving itself hilt-deep in Doc's left eye.
Can't take chances, not now. Taz covered the intervening distance at a dash. A spinning backhand blow of the machete. Doc's head leapt from his shoulders to roll one way, his body toppled the other, ice-blue ichor leaking from both. She took two steps to field the loose head like a football striker taking a cross and stooped to retrieve her knife, pulling it free with a grunt of effort and wiping it off on Doc's fatigues before sheathing it again.
Pounding feet ahead of her as the remaining four bad guys ran down the track.
I don't know how the hell he sensed me, but dammit, they're alerted now! She cut straight down the hill towards the last leg of the track, hoping to cut them off. Three had already passed when she got there; 'Sleepy' was stopping, turning to bring his AK up towards her, when she took a flying leap off a small log and came down on him like the spear of Athena, bringing her machete down in both hands. Swung with Slayer strength, it tore down through
Stahlhelm, skull, and neck before grinding to a halt against his collarbone and sternum, as mangled as the monster it had cloven.
A single sweeping glance told her the machete was hopelessly embedded and wrecked besides —
Might've put a little too much on that one! she noted ruefully — even as her hands snatched up Sleepy's rifle and automatically half-racked the bolt in a brass-check.
Fuck it. Subtlety is overrated.
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The main lodge probably would've been the best place for Misha to set up his LMG nest, but it was locked up tight for the night and he didn't have his lockpicks, or time for the explanations the staff would demand if they heard him kicking in the glass of the French doors at two in the morning! Instead, he'd scaled the renovators' scaffolding around Unit #7, the two-storey 'bach' almost directly downhill from their own single-level Unit #3. The layout matched that of the Grondahls' quarters; the (unfinished) spa-bath area at the north end of its first-floor/rooftop balcony had originally looked appealing, with its waist-high walls offering good concealment, but the field-of-fire wasn't good enough, so he'd clambered up further and made his sniper's perch atop the 'cake-tin' at the south end, which contained the (unfinished) upstairs bedroom and the stairwell down to the ground-floor.
He'd laid out two spare banana-mags on the roof next to his 'acquired' weapon, then given it a couple of surface lookovers, mostly to help manage his nerves; with trouble so close, he hadn't dared do anything more involved.
Whoever the previous owner was, they put some serious money into this Type-81. The factory-original furniture was white beechwood, if memory serves, but this one's replaced that with black fibreglass — makes it immune to humidity and insects. Though I'm not quite sure why they changed out the 'clubfoot' shoulder-stock to a Dragunov-style thumbhole setup, unless they were deliberately
going for the 'Arnie in Commando
' look, he noted sardonically.
The side-rail scope-mount with the Israeli red-dot sight is a nice bonus. That being said, Elbit charge an arm and leg for the things, so these jokers must have serious
connections and backing!
The distant
crunch of gravel under running boots brought his attention back to the here-and-now — and the track down from the lookout. Three figures in camo and cloth-covered helmets, running near full-tilt down the hill, weapons at the low-ready.
A lot better odds than seven
to two! he noted, shouldering his LMG.
You always did do good work, Taz.
The three hostiles disappeared behind the property's back fence, and Misha set the red-dot on the gate, finger on the trigger...
... then he blinked in a half-second of astonishment.
Is that frost
forming over the gate!?
Sure enough, a circle of white was spreading out from the centre of the gate, washing up and down its full length like a spreading ripple in a pond, then getting whiter and brighter.
Shit. Well, Taz did
think they were ice-demons of some kind!
Once the gate was completely covered in a white sheath, it shivered under kicks from the outside once, twice... then
shattered, like a sheet calving off an iceberg. The white chunks scattered across the inside of the compound, and three dark figures were standing in the resulting gap.
In the split-second it took his finger to close the trigger, a random thought flickered across his mind. The first movie Taz had ever seen in the West had been
Aliens, and to this day only the
Terminator duology had come within a bull's roar of dethroning it as her favourite film of all time. When they'd met back at Marewa Primary, lo almost half a lifetime ago, the teachers had semi-drafted him as her translator/English-tutor, and once he'd struck upon using the movie as a teaching aid she'd been the most diligent and attentive student he'd ever met. There were occasions when Misha ruefully thought she modeled herself a little
too closely on Ellen Ripley, even the worse parts of her, but she'd hugged him fit to pulverise his ribs when she'd opened his present last Christmas to find a copy of the Special Edition. Even before their relationship had crossed the Rubicon a few days ago, she had always firmly maintained — in proof that friendship-now-love was blind, to his mind — that he vividly reminded her of a young Corporal Hicks.
And now, he needed to prove her right.
Like the man says: "it's game time."
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The popping crackle ahead of her, the unmistakable yellow flare of the muzzle-blast from a rooftop answered by the throaty
booms of a shotgun and the single
pops of an SKS, made Taz shift her course of her run. Five paces from the fence, she shifted her grip on her purloined Kalashniklone and tossed it up and over, broadways, aiming it for the waist-high planter boxes surrounding the far edge of the pool area, then sprang after it, landing with one foot atop the fence to aim herself into a dive that took her straight into the deep end of the Club's Olympic-standard swimming pool. She covered most of its width underwater, leaving a trail of slowly-sinking dirt behind her as the mud washed away, to burst up through the surface, take the last two strokes to the far side, and all but hurl herself back up into the open air and onto the pool's concrete surrounds with a single push of her powerful arms. Her sodden socks and sandshoes squelched around her feet as she retrieved her rifle from the potplants, thrust it up over her head broadways so Misha could see and recognise her, and whipped it back down to her shoulder as she turned to assess the situation.
Misha had caught Bashful and Grumpy in the open just inside the main lodge, and judging by the blue ichor oozing from them like thick golden syrup as they doggedly slogged forward, firing from the hip, he'd hit both multiple times, but they were just blithely
standing out in the open, blazing away, heedless of cover and unfazed even as fresh hits ripped into their bodies. Even as her sight-picture landed on the pair, Grumpy's shotgun ran dry, and he looked down to reload. Always happy to take an engraved invitation, Taz pivoted slightly, set her aim on Bashful's left temple, and cracked off two rounds. The hostile pitched sideways, the far side of his head coming away in a spray of ichor and worse. From his perch, Misha had seen and seized the same opportunity, and before Grumpy could look up, another five-round burst punched down through his helmet, the steel-cored rounds striking up sparks and another spray of blue.
The Slayer lowered her rifle a hair, glancing to her Watcher's sniper-perch. Misha came to a kneeling position, right hand slinging his LMG over his back even as his bladed left hand slash-pointed down at Unit #2 — and a ripping burst of SMG fire and shattering glass reached their ears.
The Grondahls! Misha was already making for the scaffolding again as she broke into a fresh run.
Three more bursts were fired before she got there, muffled within the bach's insulated steel walls, and her heart sank even as her lips whitened. Blyad
!
As she skidded to a halt on the edge of the bach's brick patio, Sneezy was emerging from the downstairs bedroom into the formerly-glass-fronted reception and stairwell area, heedless of how he was stepping over Anders Grondahl's naked, bullet-riddled body. Even as he ejected the spent magazine from his sub-gun, his electric-blue eyes fell on her and seemed to widen. Taz fired, rapid single shots as her rifle rose from hip to shoulder, four-five-six-seven rounds ripping through the thing's body, starting viscous trickles of ice-blue but apparently causing no real damage —
— then Sneezy's eyes
flared, like an electric-blue flashbulb, and the entire front half of her rifle was suddenly covered with frost.
Shit! She let the now-useless weapon fall free — the iced-over section
shattered, like the T-1000 dunked in liquid nitrogen — and the human-looking thing before her
smirked as it reached for a fresh magazine.
Her eyes fell on his
lifchik.
Sneezy had just slammed home the fresh magazine, started to lower the SMG again, when Taz reached him at a dash. A spinning back-heel kick smashed the SMG aside again, sending it flying off the patio to skitter across the camp grounds. Continuing the move, both her hands darted forward, reaching the pockets at each end of his chest-rig, her forefingers snatching the pins from the 'lemon' grenades within. If this had been a Hollywood movie, she would have yanked them with her middle fingers and shown them to the villain with a one-liner, but she was already turning away.
"
TAZ, DOWN!" Misha barked from off to one side.
The back of her mind still counting down the fuses, she flung herself full-length to the grass, skidding and picking up mud and scrapes and green patches and bruises, before rolling up and coming to one knee. Her eyes found Sneezy just in time to see a brilliant red streak flash in from one side and drive into Sneezy's belly.
Sneezy
shrieked like a damned soul, flailing about helplessly as his whole body instantly lit up like he'd been doused in petrol. Taz had just enough time to note
That's the first actual sound
I've heard from any
of these bastards! before the grenades blew.
The
svoloch' didn't so much
explode as
splash, like a balloon filled with burning napalm that spattered most of the patio and the front of Unit #2.
Panting a little, she glanced up at Misha as he offered her a hand, one eyebrow arched.
What was that?
He hefted the pencil-flare launcher he'd taken from Jolly's
lifchik. "Cold-based, right? I played a hunch."
"Nice thinking," she nodded, before looking back to Unit #2, a little dazed at how quickly the skirmish had ended.
You'd think I'd be used to it by now. "That got a little hairy."
And unnecessarily
so, at that!
"The Grondahls?" he asked tersely.
"Forget it," she said, shaking her head. "Anders bought it in the doorway, and that fucker fired half a mag into the master bedroom. Karin would be screaming if she was still alive."
"Ingrid?"
Shit! Her eyes flew wide in alarm as she looked to the upstairs bedroom. The fire was already taking hold of the lower level, the stairwell covered in blazing pseudo-napalm. Worse yet, the noise of the battle had woken most of the other residents, and people were emerging from their units, baffled expressions turning to alarm as they saw the fire.
"I'll get her — you manage the crowd!" Misha blurted, handing off his LMG and chest-rig before darting around the back of the bach. Taz nodded in half-relief as she redonned the acquired 'bra'; the two-storey units had metal stairways welded to the outside backs of the former containers.
Thank heavens for architects who plan for emergencies!
One of the first people to approach her was, of course, her own mother, peering at her without fear of the firepower she was cradling. She'd slept out tonight; she hadn't mentioned why when she left, but a glance past her showed fellow guests Eric MacDougall and his girlfriend Melissa trailing by a metre or two. Taz was very much not a prude, but
that occasioned a momentary
graunch from her mental gearbox. Chyort
, Mama, really
? Eric the quarter-metre peacock and a brunette Jenny McCarthy? I know you've held your looks far better than most women your age, but that doesn't change that reaching your half-ton means you're older than both of them put together
!
« Tatyana, what's going on? » Elena Zyrianova demanded, very much looking askance of both the fire and the
avtomat in her daughter's arms.
Taz shrugged, giving her mother a look whose tiredness had very little to do with physical fatigue. « What I
told you was going to happen when I confronted you about hiding our 'emergency kit'.
I'm The Slayer: I can't get away from this. They were human-looking, mostly armed like this » her left hand slapped the Type-81's forearm « and because of your little 'prank', Misha and I had to deal with them from a
bare-handed start. We had suppressed carbines in that coffin, radios, web-gear, night-vision goggles, swords... if we'd had even
half that stuff, we could've knocked off all seven of these assholes before they ever
reached the fence without anybody here even
waking up, much less being in danger. »
« You couldn't have
known this would happen! » her mother protested.
« We had to be prepared for the chance
something would, which is
exactly why we
brought the damned thing! » Taz returned in a voice like a frozen sword-blade, glancing over as Misha guided Ingrid Grondahl out front of the unit, like most of the other residents bare-skinned as the proverbial. At seventeen, the blonde was a year older and only slightly shorter than herself, with a chest even more impressive than her own 36C 'twin peaks', and she'd made it
entirely clear on first meeting with Misha that she would be
more than happy to let him 'explore the Scandinavian Alps and Fjords'. Thankfully, once she'd realised what was going on between him and Taz — somewhat ahead of
Taz herself twigging, funnily enough — she'd limited her disappointment to a few theatrical pouts and become something like a friend.
Now, though, she was still a little sleep-groggy and looking around, her visible confusion starting to mix with alarm. "
Mamma? Pappa? Var är min mamma och pappa?"
Misha caught Taz's eye over the blonde's shoulder and shook his head in grim confirmation. He'd gotten a look through the master-bedroom window before he climbed up to retrieve Ingrid, and Karin Grondahl had been just as bullet-torn as her husband.
Dammit. I liked
those two! Some fucking 'holiday' this has been for her
! "Ingrid, I'm so sorry," Taz said gently. "There's no chance — they're already gone."
"
Vad? Nej. Nej!" the blonde shrieked, denial and grief warring across her face. She turned to run back towards the bach, now well aflame, and Misha had to wind his arms tightly around her and throw his full weight the other way to keep her from getting any closer.
"What the hell's going
on?" demanded the leader of a party of pyjama-clad new arrivals, coming down from the main lodge: Beatrice, the seniormost camp attendant, with her two off-siders in tow. "Why are you all standing around
watching? Where the
fuck did that girl get a
gun!? Angela, Megan, open up the shed and get some buckets, we can use the pool to —!"
"No point," Misha said bleakly, amber eyes reflecting the fire as he glanced the bach over again. "That unit's already a write-off, and the Grondahls are dead. You might as well let it burn. And don't touch anything else — once I make a call, there'll be people coming to do forensic work."
"What the —
you're not in charge here!" was the incredulous protest. "We need to do
something until the fire brigade arrives!"
"They're not coming, even if you've called them." Misha's eyes went to the south-east, where the faint whine of a Panther helicopter was getting louder, before he tipped his head at Taz. "But you're right:
I'm not in charge.
She is."
"Yeah, that sounds like a
great idea —!" Beatrice began, supported by the rising mutters of several onlookers.
Taz pointedly half-racked the Type-81 in another brass-check, drawing all eyes and silencing the crowd instantly. Her voice had once again taken that frozen sword-blade tone as she misquoted a certain S-Mart worker. "'Good; bad; like you said,
I'm the woman with the gun.' Misha and I will handle everything from here. Everyone else,
go back to bed and try to forget anything happened. The less you see, the safer you'll all be. We'll tell you when it's safe." Once people started scurrying away towards their units again, Elena not amongst them, she switched to Russian. « That's a Stormhawk chopper, isn't it. » It was not a question.
« It's the right direction, » he nodded, peering at the oncoming searchlight. « It's certainly their kind of script: have someone else make a mess, swoop in to clean it up, then play the hero and take credit for things not being a lot worse. »
« Grab that loose rifle and some ammo. Let's make it clear they aren't wanted. »
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