
“Next time we’re out drinking, I’m going to pay you to do that. Of course the old man will show up
behind you.”
“This ain’t funny…” His sober expression dampened my smile. Thankfully, the hatchcomm beeped
again, distracting us from feeling any more sorry for ourselves. I checked the monitor. It was our
Accelerated Assimilation Trainer, Captain Kristi Breckinridge, who, with short, dark hair gelled back and
a body conditioned to machinelike precision, could steal some officers’ breaths with a salacious glance or
a chokehold, depending upon her mood or how obviously they had gawked at her. I opened the hatch.
“Captain,” she said, then didn’t wait for an invitation and pushed past me. “Shut the door.” She regarded
Halitov with a curt nod, turned her clandestine expression back on me. “He has to leave.”
“He stays.”
A dangerous realization lit her gaze. “You haven’t told him, have you? You understand that information
is highly classified…”
“Told me what?” said Halitov, feigning ignorance.
“Sit down, shut up,” I said, then faced Breckinridge, trembling with the realization that I would stand up
to her, be honest with her—even reveal that I had done some research on her past and discovered things
that made me distrust her even more. If she wanted me to play her game, I’d play—but by my rules. “He
knows everything. And you’re going to help him, too.”
She swore under her breath, closed her eyes. “Scott, that wasn’t the deal. He hasn’t been invited to
become a Warden.”
I looked at her, grew rigid. “You came in here, said the Colonial Wardens—the most powerful and elite
group in the Seventeen System Guard Corps—wants to recruit me. Turns out you guys are running a little
coup to motivate the new government and want me to help. Then you tell me you know something about
my brother, get me thinking that maybe he’s not dead, and finally, you promise me that I can meet a
woman on Kennedy-Centauri who has epineuropathy just like me, only her conditioning process is
perfect, and she’s got three times the strength and endurance of the average conditioned soldier. You say
you can fix me, make me like her, ’cause the Wardens have found a second conditioning facility on Aire
Wu, when everyone thinks there’s just one, on Exeter, currently occupied by Alliance troops. If I ever do
get reconditioned, if there is a cure to this rapid aging, then I’mnot going to keep that information
classified. Every conditioned solider deserves to know about and receive that cure, and the first one in
line is going to be him.” I pointed at Halitov.
“You’ll do what we tell you—or you’ll get nothing,” she snapped.
“I’m not sure I want anything from people like you. I know what happened at the academy, the hazing
and the cheating—”
She snickered. “Don’t you have better things to do than pry into my life?”
“Not when mine’s on the line. They cleared you, but you were guilty, I bet. Then you graduate, try to get
into the Wardens, but the request is denied five times—until the CO who’s been denying the request
suddenly changes his mind. I talked to an old buddy of yours, Grimwald. He told me just how you got
that CO to change his mind.”