1
IT WAS A dark and quiet killing. A grunt, a gasp, a faint groan muffled by the pouring rain as the dying
man breathed his last, a thud as the body dropped to the ground. No scream, no flash and roar of a blaster,
nothing but a new corpse in the night and the splattering of raindrops.
But the man was dead for all of that.
The quiet would help. With no sound to attract attention, it could easily be hours before anyone
found the Ranger’s body. And by then, of course, it would be too late.
No one would know until it was all over.
The killer smiled, the expression on his pale face revealing a satiated blood lust, rather than
happiness. Revenge was a pleasure of a rare and delicate nature, and one that could be savored long after
the event that inspired it. But enough of his own private business. He had another job, a professional
matter, to deal with.
Ottley Bissal stepped over the body, and moved toward the light and glitter of the party at the
Governor’s Winter Residence.
The South Hall of the Winter Residence was getting more crowded, and louder. To an untutored
eye, it might well appear to be a calm and pleasant gathering, the movers and shakers of this world brought
together for a night of celebration, a recognition of solidarity and cooperation.
Sheriff Alvar Kresh, watching the proceedings from a quiet corner as far from the bandstand as
possible, did not see it that way. Not one little bit. “Well, Donald,” he said, turning toward his companion.
“What do you think?”
“Most unsatisfactory, sir,” Donald replied. Donald 111 was Kresh’s personal assistant, and one of
the more advanced robots on the planet--certainly the most advanced police robot. He was painted the sky-
blue of the Sheriffs Department, and built in a short, rounded-off approximation of the human form.
High-function, high-intelligence police robots like Donald had their Three-Law potentials adjusted
so as to allow them a large degree of independent action and that tended to put people off just a trifle. For
precisely that reason, Donald had been carefully designed to be as unimposing, unintimidating, as possible.
Donald was a robot of unassuming appearance, all rounded corners and gentle contours. “Captain Melloy’s
Settler Security Service forces have shown themselves to be even more inept than reputation would have
them,” he said. “Their main accomplishment tonight seemed to be getting in the way of the Governor’s
Rangers.”
“As if the Rangers needed help getting muddled,” Kresh growled.
“Yes, sir.”
Alvar Kresh leaned back against the wall and felt the thrumming vibration that seemed to pervade
everything on the south shore of the island. The Terraforming Center, of course, its powerful force field
generators at work, quite literally straining to turn the wind around, struggling to rechannel the planetary
airflows into new and more beneficial patterns.
He glanced out the window, seeing nothing but the driving rain. Most nights on the island of
Purgatory you could see the force fields shimmering in the far-off, high-up darkness, sheets of rippling,
flickering color that flashed across the sky. Not tonight. Ironic that a reception concerned with the politics
of terraforming was being held in the middle of a torrential downpour.
But so far as Kresh was concerned, the only question was whether the rain made the situation safer
or more dangerous. It made things tough on the perimeter guards standing out in it, of course--but then,
maybe a potential assassin would have a problem or two as well.
Alvar shook his head sadly. Things were a mess. If only he could bring his own deputies and
robots in here to provide security. But neither they nor he had any jurisdiction outside the city of Hades. He
was here merely as a member of the Governor’s entourage, part of the window dressing.
Jurisdiction! He was sick to death of even hearing the word. Still, even if he wasn’t supposed to
do anything more than smile and make polite conversation, Alvar Kresh was not the sort of man who could
stop worrying just because he was supposed to be off-duty.
Kresh was a big man, burly and determined-looking. His face was what might be politely
described as strong-featured. Whatever his expression, it always seemed as if his face revealed more of his
emotional state than he really wanted. Perhaps that was why he usually looked worried. His skin was light
in color, and his hair, once black as Space, was now a thick thatch of white that never seemed entirely
under his control. His thick eyebrows were still jet-black. They served only to make his face more