Ringo John - Cally's War 02 - Sister Time.pdf

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Sister Time-ARC
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifeteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Epilogue
SISTER TIME-ARC
John Ringo &
Julie Cochrane
Advance Reader Copy
Unproofed
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2007 by John Ringo & Julie Cochrane
60259817.001.png
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN 10: 1-4165-4232-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-4165-4232-2
Cover art by Clyde Caldwell
First printing, December 2007
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
tk
Pages by Joy Freeman (www.pagesbyjoy.com)
Printed in the United States of America
For Miriam
And, as always:
For Captain Tamara Long, USAF
Born: May 12, 1979
Died: March 23, 2003, Afghanistan
You fly with the angels now.
Baen Books by John Ringo
The Legacy of Aldenata Series
A Hymn Before Battle by John Ringo
Gust Front by John Ringo
When the Devil Dances by John Ringo
Hell's Faire by John Ringo
The Hero by John Ringo & Michael Z. Williamson
Cally's War by John Ringo & Julie Cochrane
Watch on the Rhine by John Ringo & Tom Kratman
Yellow Eyes by John Ringo & Tom Kratman
Sister Time by John Ringo & Julie Cochrane
 
There Will Be Dragons
Emerald Sea
Against the Tide
East of the Sun, West of the Moon
Ghost
Kildar
Choosers of the Slain
Unto the Breach
A Deeper Blue
Princess of Wands
Into the Looking Glass
The Vorpal Blade with Travis S. Taylor
Manxome Foe with Travis S. Taylor (forthcoming)
Von Neumann's War with Travis S. Taylor
The Road to Damascus with Linda Evans
with David Weber:
March Upcountry
March to the Sea
March to the Stars
We Few
Chapter One
Tuesday 10/12/54
Chicago, USA, Sol III
 
The dark figure dropping over the edge of the building could have given lessons in camouflage to a
Himmit. Well, almost. Actually, the bodysuit and balaclava she was wearing owed rather more of their
stealth abilities to the Himmit than the reverse. The rappelling rope was more conventional, as were the
multivision goggles. A clever observer, had she been observed, would have noticed that the better gear
was old, and the cheaper gear new, suggesting that the agent or her employer had seen better days.
She stopped at the thirteenth floor, fourth window from the North end. The tool she pulled from a clip
on her web gear was something like a monomolecular boxcutter. Working with a fluidity that belied the
complexity of the task, she clipped a line to the rope above her, deftly secured the two suction cups of
the complicated apparatus to the window, tightened them down, and excised a wide oval of the thick
glass. She pulled the glass piece free and allowed it to dangle, swinging her feet through the hole and
slipping inside.
The room she entered was dusty from extreme disuse, and she wouldn't have braved it at all if the
threadbare carpeting hadn't been there—perfect for hiding footprints that otherwise would have been
glaringly obvious. The carpeted cubicle walls, now a moth-eaten, mottled gray, had the occasional rusty
bolt showing through the cracked plastic. The dusty, crumbling particle board contraptions that used to
pass for "desks" for corporate underlings dated the room as being part of the post-war surplus office
space. The phenomenon made the middle floors of skyscrapers in most major cities very convenient for
people in her profession but, despite its drabness, it did tend to trigger a certain wistfulness for a world
she'd never really gotten to know. Still, it was eerily silent, beyond the muted traffic sounds coming
through the hole in the window, and that was creepy enough that she'd be glad to leave it. She was
careful to touch as little as possible as she shrugged off her gear and went rummaging through for the
props for the next stage of her mission.
If the stealth suit was high-tech and inconspicuous, the little black dress she pulled from her back pouch
was neither. The only modern convenience was the very light anti-wrinkle coating that enabled the
minimal silk sheath, with its skirt that flared out below her hips, to look as perfect as if it had just been
pressed. Still, the dress was tight and she had to wiggle a bit to shimmy into it and get her ample cleavage
positioned for maximum effect. She frowned down at her chest, grumbling a bit about the
over-endowment she'd gotten stuck with when they'd lost the slab in the Bane Sidhe split..
Her employers had steadfastly refused to surgically alter them, pointing out the futility as it was
hard-coded in her body nannites and they would only grow back inside a month. Besides, the doctors
were unwilling to afflict her with the scars such primitive field surgery would undoubtedly leave. She
harrumphed at them silently as she pinned her silver-blonde hair into a smooth chignon at the nape of her
neck and spritzed it with good old-fashioned hair spray. She slipped a gold and diamond torq-style
watch, which was unusual in having a digital instead of an analog readout, around her wrist. Damn, gotta
hurry. Not quite a minute until the guard reaches this floor again.
In the past few years, rejuv had gone from being a mark of social shame to an outlet for conspicuous
consumption among the glitterati. Hence, all but minimal makeup was out of fashion. Chances were very
good that she would be taken for an authentic twenty year old. Most black market jobs were incomplete,
missing at least the individual fine-tuning that was necessary for the full effect. They left subtle signs that
the gossips were quick to notice and comment on. Her rejuv, done in better times, was perfect. A light
 
coating of lip gloss, a pair of clear galplas high-heeled sandals that looked like cut crystal and felt like a
medieval torture device and she was ready to go. Well, almost. She tucked a small egg-shaped device
with a pull ring into her cleavage. The body her own DNA originally built never would have been able to
hide it. I swear I could hide a truck in there. Geez. Not like I really need to be able to blend in with a
crowd or anything, not like sticking out like a sore thumb with this attention-getting look isn't a
mortal hazard for an assassin. And thank God my "real" work has been light enough since I came
back to work that they can divert me more often to fluff missions like this one.
Her rappelling gear and other nonessentials got bundled into the pack and clipped onto the line outside
the window. She looked down, and down, and down to the street below and shuddered. And Tommy
wanted me to exfiltrate the same way? Hell, no! Crawling around outside some skyscraper like a
freaking fly was bad enough once, I'm not doing it twice in one night. She pulled her eyes away
from the dizzying downward view. God, that's a long drop. Besides, who tries to catch party-crashers
leaving the party? And this way I spend about half as much time slinking around places in the
building where a party guest, even a lost and tipsy one, has no business being. Okay, and I don't
get out much. Sad, Cally, really sad. Maybe I ought to make time next month to take the girls up
to Knoxville to the zoo. Maybe I ought to get back into character and get my mind on the job. She
shook herself slightly and got back to work.
Two sharp yanks to the line and the pack began ascending out of sight—now it was Harrison's problem.
Once she got the glass oval seated back in the window, she took a ballpoint pen out of her evening bag.
The pen extruded a thin line of silicon-based adhesive and nannites around the cut piece. The window
would heal in about a day. After that, it would take a very sophisticated forensic analysis to tell that there
had ever been any damage. Well, okay, there was a slightly larger bead of goo where she'd had to shake
the pen. Damn thing was almost empty. Still, it was the next best thing to untraceable. When she was
done, the pen went back into the tiny evening bag with her lip gloss, a pack of Kleenex, a comb, an
assorted handful of fedcreds, and the ubiquitous slimline PDA that nobody who was anybody went
anywhere without. The decoy nano-generator code keys were in a hidden pocket. It wouldn't pass close
scrutiny, but then, as she wasn't on the guest list tonight, neither would she.
She'd chosen this office because the suite had an internal stairwell access, and the door was right outside
this one. The office door was ajar, and she ghosted through the opening without needing to lay a finger on
it. The door to the stairs was another matter. She opened it with a tissue, crumpling it and tucking it back
in her purse. As she climbed the stairs to the 32nd floor, she glanced briefly at her watch and sighed,
slipping off her shoes so she could pick up the pace without sounding like a herd of elephants.
The last half flight of stairs, she froze, foot halfway down onto the next stair. Talking in the hall. The
Darhel was late leaving his room. The sound was muffled enough that without her enhanced hearing she
wouldn't have heard it at all through the heavy stairwell door. With enhancement she still couldn't make
out the words. Just that it sounded like a command, followed by the shrill, piping acknowledgment of an
Indowy servant. After a few moments she heard the bell of the arriving elevator, and she strained to hear
the opening of the doors, and their closing.
Cally glanced at her watch, Damn. Time's gonna be tight. She crept the rest of the way up the stairs,
pausing to slip her shoes back on before opening the door and stepping out into the hallway. This part of
the building was immaculately maintained. The carpet was new, and the walls smelled of fresh paint. She
 
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