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“Ow!” She looked at a disbelieving Reefer blearily as Janet came hustling out of the bedroom. “I bumped my head!”

“Get off me, you stupid cow!” The first guard was swearing viciously. Cally shifted slightly on her shoulder blades and the woman jerked a bit and swore some more. She had clearly fallen on top of her own shock baton. The second woman lay on the floor, unmoving, as Janet, in a pink T-shirt, rushed across the room with a gray plastic pack in her hand and yanked the first guard’s slacks away from one hip, jabbing her quickly with a hypodermic. She went limp. The dealer checked for a pulse on the second guard before breathing a sigh of relief and injecting her with another hypo from the pack.

“God, you were lucky. To knock someone out, you have to damn near kill them,” she glanced up and down the empty corridor outside the apartment and shook her head slightly, closing the door.

“Ow,” Cally repeated plaintively, holding a hand to her head as she got up off of the now unconscious guard and stumbled shakily to the bed.

“What in the hell happened?” Janet demanded, looking from Reefer to Cally and back at the guards on the floor.

“Um… I just heard a noise, and it startled me, and I tried to get up, but, well, I tripped. Ow.”

“You tripped?” she echoed.

“Like, wow. That was the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen in my life.” Reefer was rubbing his chin. “Yeah, Janny, I swear to god she tripped. It was, like, she was trying to keep her balance, and, like, there’s no room with the futon opened out and all, and they just all went over. Like… wow, just wow.”

“Do you have some Tylenol? I think I might have twisted my ankle, too.”

“Wait a sec, lemme see your eyes.” She held Cally’s chin with one hand and tilted it up to the light, looking in each eye in turn. “Well, you don’t look like you’ve got a concussion, I guess. Hell, your eyes look better than mine ever do after a night of partying. I think I’m jealous.”

“Uh… what about them?” Reefer had stood up and hoisted his boxers a bit, obviously torn between looking at the guards and looking for his jeans.

“Uh… Tylenol’s in the medicine cabinet in the bathroom, go ahead.” Janet gestured Cally off before looking back down at the bodies. “Well, they were obviously alone, or we’d all be unconscious and on our way to being locked up now. It’s Greer and Walton. They’re greedy enough. I think they just wanted to either shake us down or steal the stash outright. Um… lemme think a minute.”

As Cally left for the bathroom, out of the corner of her eye she saw the other woman walk over to the kitchen-desk, pop something in her mouth, and pour herself a glass of water to wash it down with. She shut the door and used the facilities, flushing a couple of Tylenol down the toilet for good measure, scrunched her hair a bit to look more slept in, and went back to the living room to find Thad and Janet wide awake, if a little less straight than more. Reefer was helping Thad undress the women while Janet was spreading out a couple of blankets on the floor.

“Like, are you sure this is gonna work, Janny?” he bleared, tugging a shirt loose from one arm, then the other.

“Best I can think of. These bitches won’t remember a thing, probably since lunch. Dump ’em sixty-nine in a corridor, douse ’em with beer, dump their clothes in the incinerator, the force’ll be too busy covering up to ask too many questions. If they’d had the brains to tell anybody where they were going, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.” She shrugged helplessly and set a couple of cheap beers on the floor next to the blankets. “Just don’t douse ’em until we get ’em there, okay, Reef? I don’t want my apartment smelling like spilled beer for the next week.”

Cally backed against the futon muzzily, bumping the backs of her knees and sitting down, hard, still holding her head.

“Um, can I go back to sleep?” she muttered.

“Uh… sure.” Janet blinked at her a couple of times, but seemed to dismiss her from her mind as Cally rolled back into bed and pulled the other pillow over her eyes.

Nevis and St. Kitts, Thursday, May 16

Without tourist money to sustain them, many Caribbean island nations had suffered something of a population crash and a certain consequent degradation of environmental assets, to put it kindly, during and after the Posleen war. Nevis and St. Kitts had been fortunate. Or wise, depending on your opinion. A strict policy that allowed immigration before and during the war only in exchange for FedCreds or large sums of dollars had enabled it to stock enough mainland food and Hiberzine to maintain both the original citizens and the select few new ones.

Regrettably, a hurricane that had struck the island had destroyed one of the facilities of Hiberzined patients. It was believed that not even Hiberzine would save a person who had been swept out to sea. Certainly not after the sharks had gotten through with them. The authorities had thus been left with large amounts in hard-currency deposits in the local banks with no next of kin to claim them. Under the circumstances, neither the locals nor the revived patients from the other two Hiberzine facilities had objected too strenuously when the government had poured the largess into postwar capital improvements designed to revive the island’s tourist industry. There might not be much tourism in the post-Posleen world, but what there was of it Nevis and St. Kitts wanted, and largely got.

None of this was on the mind of the trim and balding, but otherwise young-looking, man in a speedo, lying under a beach umbrella, enjoying the salt air and a mai tai with one of those little paper umbrellas in it. His mind was instead occupied, as it frequently was, if truth be told, with money. Specifically, with the challenges of acquiring more of it while simultaneously keeping his primary employer safely ignorant of both the source and very existence of his extra funds.

His present location had a lot to do with meeting those challenges. He liked fast cars, big houses, and designer clothes as much as anyone, but those would have been a dead giveaway in his daily life. Instead, he had worked out a compromise that allowed him to use some of his moonlighting income while continuing with other little luxuries he’d come to enjoy. Breathing, for example. So in his daily workaday life, he lived on his inadequate, in his opinion, salary. Then, once or twice a year on his vacations, he dropped off the map. As far as work was concerned, he was a hiking buff who enjoyed roughing it in out-of-the-way places. Actually, of course, he would end up in places much like this one, where he could wear expensive clothes, eat expensive foods, stay in expensive hotels, fuck expensive women, and generally live in the style he preferred. At the end of his vacation, the clothes had to go in some charity bin, which bothered him not a little bit, but it was one of the temporary sacrifices he would just have to make until he could afford to retire. Very anonymously, of course.

A pair of very definitely male legs suddenly blocked his previously entirely satisfactory view of a slim brunette in a monokini. She didn’t have much in the way of assets, but what she had was attractively distributed. He squinted up in annoyance at his unwelcome visitor.

“Mr… Jones. Fancy meeting you here,” the other man said. He was slightly built and dressed in swim trunks, but something about his haircut and bearing suggested either a law enforcement or military background. With dark hair and eyes, he looked almost like a late teenaged or early twenty-something kid, but the old eyes marked him as a fellow juv.