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queen
OF blades
a a r o n r o s e n b e r g
POCKET STAR BOOKS
New York London TorontoSydney
queen
OF blades
queen
OF blades
a a r o n r o s e n b e r g
POCKET STAR BOOKS
New York London TorontoSydney
An Original Publication of POCKET BOOKS
A Pocket Star Book published by
POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and inci-
dents are products of the author’s imagination or are used
fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons,
living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
STARCRAFT2006 Blizzard Entertainment, Inc. All Rights
Reserved. StarCraft and Blizzard Entertainment, Inc. are trademarks
or registered trademarks of Blizzard Entertainment, Inc. in the U.S.
and/or other countries. All trademarks are the property of their
respective owners.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce
this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue
of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
ISBN: 1-4165-6005-X
POCKET STAR BOOKS and colophon are registered trademarks of
Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com
To Jenifer, my Queen,
and to Adara and Arthur,
our own wonderful brood.
Acknowledgments
Thanks to Luke for the introductions, Chris for his input
and enthusiasm, and Marco for running the show. I’d
also like to thank the people at Blizzard, who built this
great setting and these cool characters, and the StarCraft
fans, who help bring it all to life.
historical note
The events of this book take place roughly six weeks
after the events described in the StarCraft novel Liberty’s
Crusade.
queen
OF blades
PROLOGUE
THE WORLD WENT DARK.
Not just a darkened sky—no mere nightfall could
produce such utter darkness. No, this was the dark of
captivity, confinement, blindness. Nothing visible, no
light, no shadow, only a smothering visual shroud. A
stark contrast to the blinding lights and sudden bursts
of color from just before.
I struggle to make sense of my surroundings. Where
am I?
Nothing but blankness answers, and an instant later
a far larger question looms up, erasing the first. Who
am I?
A wave of panic rises deep within, bile carried along
its edge, threatening to drown me as I realize I cannot
remember. I do not know who I am!
Calm, I tell myself. Calm. I force the panic down,
pushing it back by sheer will, refusing to let it envelop
me. What do you remember, then?
Nothing. No, brief flashes. A battle. A war. Horrid,
2A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
horrible foes, great monstrous beings surrounding me,
dwarfing me. Betrayal—though I cannot recall the act
itself I can still taste the bitter realization of it. Abandon-
ment. Desperation, a last frenzied struggle. The feel of
sinewy flesh pinning me, choking me, killing me. The
light fading around me as the numbness creeps in.
And now this.
Where am I? I stretch my senses to their limit, prob-
ing my surroundings. The results, though hazy and
disjointed, form a single conclusion.
I am being carried.
I can feel the movement, the gentle rocking motion.
Not directly—something cushions me, envelops me,
holds me all around. But that cushioning is moving,
and me with it.
I try lashing out, but my limbs will not cooperate. I
feel sluggish, drained—drugged. Senses dulled, body
leaden, but nerves oddly on fire. I am burning from
within! My flesh crawls, creeps, melts, morphs—I have
no control over my own form anymore. I am changing.
Around me I can feel others shifting. They are not
confined as I am—they are free to move, though their
minds are oddly blunted. They are my captors, con-
veying me in my confinement.
I can hear their thoughts, slithering across me,
through me. A part of me recoils but another part—a
newer part—welcomes their intrusion. Vibrates in
tune with their gibbering, allowing the patterns to res-
onate through me. Changing me further, bringing me
closer to those waiting just beyond.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 3
The part that is still me, the old me, recoils in horror.
I cannot, I will not become one of these! I must escape!
I must be free! My body is captive but my mind soars,
reaching out for help, any help. I scream, desperate for
anyone to hear.
And, far away, I know that my pleas have been
heard.
Help me!
Rubble lay everywhere, evidence of a city in flames,
a world in demise. Buildings had fallen, vehicles were
crashed and crushed, bodies littered the ground. A sign
still stood near the edge of the destruction, its scorched
surface reading “Welcome to”—the name New Gettys-
burg only a jagged hole with blackened edges. All
manner of bodies, from the pale flesh of the Terrans to
the smooth hides of the protoss to the sinewy blades of
the zerg. People, those not yet dead and unable to
evacuate, ran screaming, wailing for help. Some bran-
dished weapons, crazed beyond rational thought, des-
perate to defend themselves and their families. Others
cowered, weeping, unable to face the end of their
world. A few hid or ran, hoping to escape their fate.
The Swarm ignored them. It had a higher agenda.
The battle had not gone as expected. The Terrans had
put up a strong fight but with fewer soldiers than antic-
ipated. The protoss, the hated protoss, had appeared as
always, gleaming in their battle suits and glowing in
their arrogance, but had rapidly lost focus, dividing
their attentions as if facing not one but two opponents.
4A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
In some places the Swarm had sighted Terrans battling
protoss, a strange but welcome sight. Yes, it had been a
strange battlefield, the sides constantly shifting. But
that was for the Overmind to consider and digest. For
now, the conflict was over, the battle won. The remain-
ing Terrans posed little threat and the protoss had van-
ished once the outcome was clear. For some reason
they had not razed the planet, a fact which had allowed
the Swarm to discover and claim a previously unex-
pected prize.
Now, their linked minds already turned from this
conflict to those stretching out before them, the zerg
marshaled their forces and prepared for their victori-
ous departure.
One brood cleared a path, removing any obstruc-
tions, whether flesh or stone or metal. A second brood
followed close behind, its ranks protectively closed
around its prize. Near the center several ultralisks
moved in close formation, their back-spikes almost
touching. Between them were four hydralisks, thick
arms linked to support the large oblong they held.
Through its rough, sticky shell the cocoon pulsed with
light, though its faint glow was lost amid the fires and
flares and explosions that had once been this city.
“Carefully,” warned the brood’s cerebrate, observ-
ing their progress through the overlord floating just
above the sphere. Because the celebrant itself could
not move, the airborne overlords served as its eyes,
ears, and mouth. “The Chrysalis must not be harmed!”
Obedient to its will, the ultralisks shifted slightly
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 5
closer and slowed their pace, allowing more time for the
brood before them to open the way. Their heavy feet
crushed bone and metal and wood without thought or
pause as they lumbered on, shielding the Chrysalis from
attack.
“We have it, Master,” the cerebrate announced in
the depths of its own mind. “We have your prize.”
“Good.” The reply echoed from within, rising from
the deep well of the zerg hive-mind. “You must watch
over the Chrysalis, and ensure that no harm comes to
the creature within it. Go now and keep safe my
prize.”
Accepting the Overmind’s orders as always, the cer-
ebrate redoubled its efforts, making sure its brood’s
defenses were secure. The Chrysalis would be pro-
tected at all costs.
On the zerg marched, the city burning around
them. At last the Swarm had gathered itself within a
vast crater where once the city’s vaunted lake had
stretched. Now the surface was glass-smooth, seared
by the force of the protoss’s landing ships and
unmarred by the heavy feet that had trekked across
toward the city under siege.
“We are ready, Master,” the cerebrate declared,
arraying its brood around the Chrysalis.
“I am well pleased, young Cerebrate,” the Overmind
answered, the warm glow of its benediction washing
over the cerebrate and through it all the members of its
Swarm. “And so long as my prize remains intact, I shall
remain pleased. Thus, its life and yours shall be made as
6 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
one. As it prospers, so shall you. For you are part of the
Swarm. If ever your flesh should fail, that flesh shall be
made anew. That is my covenant with all cerebrates.”
As the cerebrate swelled with pride, a great dark-
ness descended upon the crater, a shadow of the mass
that drifted into view high above them. Beyond the
upper reaches of the planet’s dying atmosphere hung a
massive storm, a swirl of orange and violet gases that
spun around strange flickering lights. They moved
faster and faster, the colors merging in their fury, until
the center of the storm collapsed in upon itself, light
and color giving way to a shadowy circle far darker
than even the space hovering beyond.
“Now you have grown strong enough to bear the
rigors of warp travel with the Swarm,” the Overmind
stated, its words sending a thrum of power through the
Swarm. “Thus we shall make our exit from this blasted
world and secure the Chrysalis within the Hive Cluster
upon the planet Char.”
As one the first brood rose, soaring high above the
ruined city. They broke free of the planet’s weak, fad-
ing grasp and approached the storm above, pulled into
that yawning, beckoning darkness at its center, and
vanished. The cerebrate felt their transit through the
hive-mind link all zerg shared and allowed a spark of
contentment to linger within its own mind. Then the
Overmind summoned it as well, and the cerebrate
called its brood together, linking them tightly for travel
through the warp. They rose from the crater, letting
the power of the Swarm fill them as they ascended,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S7
and soon the darkness had drowned out all thought,
all sense, as it carried them across the vastness of space
to their destination.
And within the Chrysalis, faintly visible through its
thick skin and viscous contents, a body writhed in
pain. Though not conscious the figure within shifted,
stirred, unable to lie still as the zerg virus penetrated
every cell, changing DNA to match their own. Soon
the Chrysalis would open and the new zerg would
emerge. All the Swarm exulted with the Overmind.
And, as they departed and Tarsonis died behind
them, the mind trapped within the Chrysalis screamed.
CHAPTER 1
Jimmy!
“Aaahh!”
“. . . but of course Mengsk—pardon me, Emperor
Arcturus the First—claims this was all necessary.
According to his spokesperson, the new Terran
Dominion is doing everything necessary to remove the
alien threat and make the colonies safe once more. It
has been almost two months, however. In this
reporter’s opinion . . .”
Jim Raynor lay back down, eyes staring up at the
steel-gray ceiling. He ran one hand over the sweat-
drenched stubble atop his head and felt himself smile
despite the adrenaline still coursing through him. A
quick glance showed a hologram playing on his con-
sole, the tall, slender man captured within conveying
his report with style despite or perhaps because of the
battered leather trench coat and slouch hat he wore.
Mike Liberty. One of the few people left Jim
called friend. Still reporting on Mengsk, even now.
10 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Still trying to get the truth to people who didn’t
want to hear it.
“. . . still reeling from the loss of the Dylarian ship-
yards,” Mike was saying now, and Raynor cocked his
head to listen.
“Arrest warrants have been issued for James Raynor,”
his friend was reporting, “though it is still unclear what
happened. Why would the hero of Antiga Prime sud-
denly turn rogue? And why, after so many months sav-
ing lives, would he unleash such destruction on the
Dylarian shipyards? According to the Dominion Raynor’s
attack could have crippled the fleet, putting everyone at
risk in the case of another alien attack.” He could hear
Mike’s voice dropping and knew what he would see if he
glanced up—his friend was leaning forward slightly, a
faint smile on his face, suddenly a friend confiding
instead of a journalist reporting. “Perhaps Emperor Arc-
turus is simply enraged at the thought that anyone could
walk away from his new rule, particularly one of his
most prized associates. And perhaps these charges have
been manufactured as an excuse to pursue Raynor,
rather than letting the public realize that perhaps the
Emperor’s mandate is not as universal as he might
claim.”
“Heh!” He couldn’t help laughing at that one. Go get
’em, Mike! But the hero of Antiga Prime? Where did
he come up with this stuff? The accolade was as phony
as most of Mengsk’s charges against him.
Of course, the charges were true this time. He had
struck the shipyards. He’d had to. When he’d belted
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S11
Duke, Mengsk’s favorite lackey, and stormed off the
ship after Tarsonis, Raynor had expected to be on his
own again or perhaps down to a handful of his troop-
ers. He’d been unprepared for the wave of support
he’d received from his men. All but a handful had
walked with him, and he’d found himself the head of
a small army. But they were an army without trans-
port, and he knew that Mengsk would never let them
leave so easily. So they’d needed ships, and quickly. It
had seemed safer to go after the shipyards and the ves-
sels housed there than to try stealing active ships from
those still loyal to Mengsk.
It hadn’t been that simple, of course. Mengsk had
guessed his move—whatever else he could say about
the man, the self-styled emperor was an excellent
strategist—and had dispatched Duke in his own flag-
ship, the Hyperion, to head them off. That had been a
mistake.
Knowing he wouldn’t get any more sleep now,
Raynor sat up and rubbed at his jaw under his short
beard, grinning at the memory. Duke was a capable
ship commander, perhaps, and a good general for all
his faults. But he was used to fighting on level ground,
going up against fleets and scoutships. He hadn’t been
prepared to wage a battle through the shipyards,
where his own men couldn’t shoot for fear of hitting
each other or a ship. Raynor had had no such com-
punctions. If a ship was holed they moved on to steal-
ing the next one. He’d lured Duke in close, then used
the shipyard’s own machines to grapple the Hyperion
12 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
and lock her in place. Then he and his boys had over-
run it.
Still laughing, Raynor stood up and crossed the
room, heading for the handsomely appointed bath-
room. Duke’s short fuse had cost him the Hyperion, and
Mengsk had received the first public defeat of his new
Terran Dominion before he’d even declared its forma-
tion. Raynor had left with the Hyperion and a dozen
other ships, his own private fleet, leaving Duke bound
and gagged behind him.
Of course, it had gone downhill from there.
His smile dropping away, Raynor wrenched open
the polished wooden door and glared at the room
beyond. Marble sinktops, porcelain tiles, handsome
faucets and fixtures—this place looked more like a
fancy hotel than a ship captain’s quarters. But they had
been Mengsk’s, and the big man did like his comforts.
Raynor had been tempted to rip them all out, but it
would have taken too long. He’d considered taking a
simpler room for himself, but his crew had insisted. He
was the captain now and these were his quarters. So
he put up with the luxury and did his best to concen-
trate on other things.
Unfortunately, there wasn’t much else to concen-
trate on. Since taking the ships Raynor had become
Public Enemy Number One. Every soldier in the
Dominion was hunting for him, and his face was plas-
tered on every colony. Not that it bothered him—he
knew better than most what Mengsk was capable of
and what he did to those loyal to him, and had no
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 13
desire to go back. Being the law didn’t change any-
thing. You stood by your people or you weren’t worth
standing by. Raynor honestly believed that, and
Mengsk’s betrayal had made his own desertion easy.
The question, however, was what to do after he
deserted. He hadn’t thought much about it at the time,
since he’d planned to go off alone. But having others
with him changed that. They looked up to him,
depended upon him, sat patiently waiting for his
orders. And he didn’t have any. Oh, they’d stolen the
ships, of course. And they’d hit a few outposts, singed
a few patrols. But he didn’t know what to do next. He
didn’t know where he was going. It had been six
weeks and he still had no idea.
All those years as a marshal, Raynor had told him-
self he was independent, self-sufficient. It had been
true, at least in part. He’d survived on his own
resources, acted on his own judgment. His mandate
had been loose enough and broad enough to give him
a lot of freedom. But there had been a mandate: to
protect the people of Mar Sara. After he’d joined
Mengsk he’d gotten a new mandate: to protect the
people from the Confederacy and from the aliens.
What was his mandate now?
He’d quit out of rage, he knew. Rage at Mengsk for
what he’d done. For whom he’d betrayed.
Rage over Kerrigan.
He could still taste the fury he’d unleashed at Mengsk
for deserting her like that, leaving her to the zerg and
whatever else was crawling across the planet’s remains.
14 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Hell, he could still feel the tender new skin across his
knuckles where he’d punched Duke after the iron-
haired general had ordered him to stand down. He was
still angry.
But being angry wasn’t getting him anywhere. And
after that initial fury had faded he found he didn’t
know how to lead the way his people expected. They’d
become rebels, but what were they really rebelling
against? And how?
Mike was a more effective rebel, in his own way,
sending out these rogue broadcasts from hidden sta-
tions. Reporting on what Mengsk was really doing to
consolidate his power and telling people what had
really happened with the zerg and the protoss and the
Psi-Emitters.
The zerg and the protoss. Hell, half the time Raynor
thought he sounded raving mad talking about this stuff,
or even thinking it. Alien races battling over humanity,
acting out some ancient feud, with the colonies caught
in the middle? It was insane.
But it was too real. He’d seen too much of it to ever
think otherwise.
Still, perhaps he was cracking up. That would at
least explain the dreams.
They’d been ambushing him since Tarsonis, lying
in wait for the instant he closed his eyes each night.
As soon as he laid his head down and drifted off, the
dreams began.
Nightmares, really. Each was the same. He was
trapped, confined, bound somehow without rope or
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 15
shackles, unable to move or resist. Shadowy figures
hovered over him, pressing in on every side as he lay
helpless, wanting to scream but unable to open his
mouth. That was the dream.
Until last night.
This time it had been different. He had not been
bound at all, and had retained control of his limbs,
though they felt heavy and slow and oddly numb. He
was standing on a pale ground, soft grayish-white like
old teeth or bleached bone, and every movement
kicked up small puffs of it, which drifted across his feet
and brushed against his ankles. The material was oddly
dry, neither cool nor warm, and disintegrated upon
contact.
Ash. He was standing on a field of ash. It stretched
as far as the eye could see, coating every surface, even
the rocky black hills that rose off to the sides. Clouds of
it swirled through the air, obscuring his view of two
small purplish moons and a ringed red planet that hung
overhead. He could taste the ash when he breathed, feel
it coating his lungs. The entire planet was ash, as if it
had been razed once and never recovered.
But he had more pressing matters than studying the
landscape. As he stood, getting his bearings and trying
to shake his limbs back to some semblance of activity,
dark figures appeared in the distance, closing the gap
between them and him with frightening speed. Soon
they towered over him, their sulfurous breath hot on
his skin. He tried to keep them all in sight and not look
at them at the same time, knowing somehow that star-
16 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
ing at them would drive him beyond the brink. The
quick glimpses he caught in his peripheral vision
reminded him of zerg—tough skin and stretched
frames exuding tentacles and spikes and spines. But
these were larger than any zerg he had faced, darker,
distorted. They terrified him, and he could feel his
heart racing in his chest, his breath coming short, his
skin breaking out in a clammy sweat. A small whimper
escaped him and he clenched his jaw, trying to prevent
similar sounds from emerging.
Though they were all but brushing against him he
found he could somehow slip past these shadowy fig-
ures, and in a moment he was shambling across the
ash-buried ground, trying not to stumble as he forced
his legs to their maximum speed. The hills stood
beyond, the distance to them uncertain because the
ash hid telltale shadows, but he knew if he could only
reach them he could find cover. Plumes of fire and
smoke rose behind them—volcanoes, judging from the
ash—and he knew the soot and smoke would help
hide him from view. If he could make it over the ridge
he could vanish into the haze. He could escape. He
urged his limbs to cooperate, to move, and ran as fast
as he could.
It was not enough.
The figures were closing in, spines wriggling in antic-
ipation, tentacles lashing the air, and he could hear
them hissing their excitement. He could hear their flesh
dragging across the ground, sending clouds of ash
everywhere. He could even hear the drool dripping
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 17
from their lips. Soon they would have him surrounded,
cut off. Their long limbs would wrap around him, bind-
ing him, and the chase would be over. Then the real
torment would begin.
Desperate, he wheeled about, searching for a way
out, a weapon, anything. He needed help!
But nothing was there. Only the ash and the mon-
sters and him.
One of the creatures oozed forward, its hard, slick
flesh protruding long spines like a crop of hair, and
reached for him with spike-studded limbs. His flesh
burned where it touched him, acid shooting through
his veins as the spikes broke his skin, and he thrashed
uncontrollably. His head jerked about, red hair tan-
gling and temporarily obscuring the sight of what was
waiting. Then the tentacles tightened and, as his lungs
were squeezed dry, a single cry escaped him.
“Jimmy!”
That was when he woke up.
“It can’t be,” Raynor mused as shucked his pants
and stepped into the shower. A twist of the silver-
inlaid handle activated the needle-sharp spray—real
water; nothing but the best for Mengsk!—and the
shock of ice-cold water removed any last vestige of
sleep along with the dirt and sweat and dried blood. He
stubbornly shut the shower off after the regulation
thirty seconds and waited patiently for the hot air that
followed, leaving him dry and awake and slightly
flushed as he exited and grabbed a cleaner shirt and
pants from his closet. All the time his mind was still
18A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
spinning, trying to make sense of the dream, trying to
ignore the clues it had received.
“It just can’t be,” he told himself again, tugging on
his boots and then sliding into his jacket. The gun belt
went around his waist automatically, his blaster settled
comfortably at his thigh, and he was heading for the
door, snatching up his hat on the way out.
The Hyperion was a big ship, a full-sized battle
cruiser, and it had ample space for weapons, supplies,
and small scoutships. But it had also been Mengsk’s
flagship, and the former terrorist wasn’t about to creep
down narrow gangways or shuffle up cramped steel-
railed ladders. Raynor shook his head yet again as he
walked along a broad, carpeted hallway, soft lighting
rising from the tasteful wall sconces spaced evenly
down both sides. Between the doors, paintings hung.
It all resembled a stately mansion rather than a space-
ship, let alone a warship. He wondered if Mengsk was
more upset about losing the ship’s weapons or about
losing the scotch, cigars, and other treats he’d kept
onboard.
Skipping up the wide curving staircase, Raynor
finally reached the command level and, tugging open
the heavy door, entered the control room. His control
room. It was as ostentatious as ever, a grand ballroom
festooned with monitors and consoles, a dining room
filled with operating stations, a helm fashioned from
wood and tile and blanketed in velvet and silk.
“Sir!” Matt Horner saluted from the command chair
and made to vacate it, but Raynor waved him back
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 19
down. Horner was a good man, if a bit young and ide-
alistic—he had actually joined the Sons of Korhal to
make a difference and still believed in such things as
patriotism and justice. He’d learn someday, though
Raynor regretted the fact. For now he was a good
second-in-command and an excellent ship captain.
“All’s quiet, sir,” Horner told him, and Raynor nod-
ded, leaning against a console midway between the
command chair and the navigation controls.
“What are your orders, sir?” Horner asked, and
Raynor shrugged.
“As you were, son.” He saw the disappointment
etched across the younger man’s face and felt the guilt
wash over him again. He’d seen that same look many
times, on Horner and others, in the past few weeks.
They had all been so eager to follow him, so convinced
he would lead them to do the right thing. And instead
he’d led them here. Here where they sat waiting, doing
nothing but fending off the occasional stray ship, bid-
ing their time until Mengsk learned their whereabouts
and sent the fleet after them.
Why weren’t they doing more? Raynor knew they
wondered that. Every morning Horner asked for
orders, and every morning he had none to give. He
had lost his sense of direction. Breaking from Mengsk
had been the right thing, Raynor was sure of that, but
he wasn’t ready to attack the Dominion outright and
he just couldn’t seem to find a good middle ground
between inactivity and all-out war.
As Horner sank back into the command chair,
20A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Raynor let his mind drift again, and once again it
returned to the dreams. Particularly to this most recent
one. It refused to leave him. It had been different from
all the others, and not just because of the details and
his freedom of movement. It had been more intense—
the edges sharper, the colors brighter, the air charged
with something that had crackled about him, raising
his hair on end. Excitement? Fear?
Anticipation. Something was going to happen. And
soon.
“I need a planet, Matt,” he said finally, causing the
younger man to look up.
“Sir?” For an instant Matt’s face was blank, his eyes
puzzled, and then he lit up. “Yessir! A new base of
operations! A launching point for the revolution! A
rallying ground for the—”
“No, just a planet,” Raynor interrupted, knowing he
had to shut his subordinate down quickly. “One that
matches a particular description.”
Stepping up beside Horner, he began inputting
details into the navigational system. “Warm,” he mut-
tered to himself as he typed, “though not unbearably
so. Air a bit sticky and filled with ash. One visible sun.
Two small moons. Red ringed planet nearby. Covered
in ash, pale gray, at least an inch thick. Some hills and
small mountains, black rock rather than dirt. Fire and
smoke all around. Probably volcanoes everywhere. No
vegetation or animal life.” The terms came back to him
easily, a holdover from his days as a marshal on Chau
Sara describing plots for potential colony use. He fin-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S21
ished typing in the description and stepped back as he
let the computer search its files for a match, staring off
into space through the wide portholes that lined the
front of the room.
It couldn’t be her.
She was dead. He knew it. He hadn’t seen her die,
admittedly, and if anyone could survive such odds it
would be her, but still . . .
Tarsonis has been overrun. The zerg had taken the
entire planet. It had been six weeks.
And if she had survived she would have contacted
him. Hell, she would have shown up in his room at
night, without anyone seeing her slip onboard.
Then again, maybe she had. Just not in the way he
would have expected.
She was a telepath, after all.
Sarah Kerrigan. She of the flaming red hair, the
emerald-green eyes, and the wide smile. The girl with
the knowing look and the deadly grace. Former Ghost,
former assassin, formerly Mengsk’s most trusted lieu-
tenant.
Kerrigan. His friend. Almost his lover. Certainly the
attraction had been there on both sides—they had
both felt it. And had almost acted on it more than
once. But the timing had never been right. That was
the way with wars—they got in the way of other
things.
She had called him a pig the first time they’d met.
She’d been right—he couldn’t help the thoughts that
rose when he first saw her, glorious and dangerous and
22A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
crowned with that mane of firelit hair. But they’d got-
ten past that. They’d become friends. She and Mike
were the only two he’d really trusted out of Mengsk’s
inner circle, and the three of them had been tighter
than brothers, tighter than spouses, experiencing the
close bond that only forms when death is the price of
failure.
Kerrigan. Mengsk had left her to die on Tarsonis,
amid the zerg Swarm. And she was calling to him now.
In his dreams. It had to be her. No one else called him
Jimmy, not since he’d learned to talk.
“Sir?” Horner was gesturing toward the console,
and Raynor set aside his reverie to study the readout.
NO MATCHES FOUND IN SYSTEM
“Damn.” He’d hoped Mengsk’s maps would have it.
At least then he’d know that the place itself was real, if
not the dreams about it.
“Sir?” Horner was watching him.
“Yeah?”
“Sir, we could still find it.”
Raynor thought about it for a second, then shook
his head. “Nah. Probably doesn’t exist.”
This time Horner frowned. “Sir, may I?” He gestured
at the console, and Raynor nodded. Swiveling it over
to the command chair, Horner began typing, his fin-
gers flying across the keys. “Size of moons?” he asked
without looking up, and Raynor searched his memory
of the dream.
“Small,” he replied. “Half those of Mar Sara. Pur-
plish in color.”
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 23
The younger man nodded and typed in something
else. “Size of ringed planet?”
Raynor shut his eyes, trying to recall the brief
glimpse he’d had of it. “Say the size of Tarsonis,” he
said finally.
“Gravity?”
He recalled the feel of his feet on the ground, of the
ash swirling about him. “Normal. Full Terran gravity.”
Then he remembered something else. “High sulfur
content in the air. High oxygen count, too.” He had felt
almost light-headed when breathing, despite the ash’s
almost choking him.
“Yes, sir.” Horner finished typing and entered the
search. A moment later three locations sprang up on
the map that dominated the central screen. “Three
potential matches, sir.”
Raynor just stared at him. “How’d you do that?”
This time Horner grinned, flushing slightly. “Used
an algorithm, sir. Input the details for the system and
cross-referenced them with star maps.” He indicated
the three glowing dots on the screen. “None of them
explored, sir. That’s why they weren’t in the nav sys-
tem. But based on their suns and planets and moons,
these three could fit.”
“Hunh.” Raynor shook his head, impressed. Horner
was so eager to please, so quick to obey any order, he
sometimes forgot the kid had been helming a starship
before joining up.
He studied the three locations on the map. The first
one was the closest by far. But as he stared at it he
24A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
felt . . . wrong, somehow. Not bad, not good, just cold,
disconnected.
He glanced at the second dot. Same feeling.
Then he looked at the third dot—and almost fell
over from the wave of fear and tension that hit him.
He broke out in a sweat just staring at it, and some-
how it seemed to flare brighter, though he knew it
hadn’t.
“That’s it,” he whispered, gesturing toward the third
dot, and Horner realigned the screen, centering on the
dot and focusing in upon it.
“Got it, sir,” he said as a string of numbers appeared
beside it. “Set course?”
For a moment Raynor hesitated. That was the world
he’d seen in his dreams. He was sure of it. That was
where Kerrigan was.
His first impulse was to grab a scoutship and head
out alone, at maximum burn. But that wouldn’t have
been smart. Tarsonis had fallen to the Swarm, and Ker-
rigan with it. She couldn’t have escaped them. That
meant they had her. It would explain the nightmarish
figures in his dreams—zerg, but more so, somehow
more powerful and more terrifying than the creatures
he had already faced.
Subtlety wasn’t the issue here. Speed was. Speed
and firepower.
Something else, as well. For the first time since
they’d hit the shipyards, Raynor felt energized, alive.
He had a purpose again. It might not last, but for now
it was enough. And his people needed that same pur-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S25
pose. They wanted him to lead them? All right, now he
had someplace to lead toward.
Stepping over to the command chair, he claimed the
mike and switched it to open broadcast through his
ships. “Attention, all units,” he announced. “This is
James Raynor. We are about to mount a rescue mission.
I believe some of our people from Tarsonis were taken
captive by the zerg. I have coordinates for a planet
where I think they were taken.” His hands tightened on
the mike as he remembered the feel of those creatures
closing in. “We’re not gonna stand by and let those
filthy critters run off with our friends. We’re going out
there, guns blazing, and we’re gonna take them back.
And we’ll blast every zerg that gets in our way.” He took
a deep breath, then continued. “We depart in two
hours. Anyone who doesn’t want to go can leave now.
I won’t hold you to anything. This could be a fool’s
errand we’re off on. It could be our deaths. So don’t go
if you’re not ready for that.” He glanced at the screen
again, and at the dot that seemed to wink at him. “If any
of our people are there, I’ll tear the place apart to find
them. And we won’t leave without them.”
He switched the mike back off and tossed it to
Horner. “Matt, set a course, maximum burn.”
“Yes, sir!” Horner began typing in commands enthu-
siastically, but paused to look back up at him. “Sir, do
you really think so? That some of our people are there?
Being held by the zerg?”
“I hope so, Matt,” Raynor answered, turning away
to study the dot again. “I certainly hope so.”
26 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Two hours later the Hyperion prepared to jump, the
rest of Raynor’s rebellious little fleet trailing behind it.
Ten people had left before the ships could depart, out
of over four hundred. The rest had signed on for the
mission and whatever came out of it. Most had been
excited, jittery, and he knew only part of that was the
thought of rescuing fallen comrades. They were all
just pleased he had taken decisive action. He was
leading, and they were ready to follow. He just hoped
they weren’t following to their dooms.
Sitting in the captain’s chair on the Hyperion, Raynor
watched as space folded around them, letting the mas-
sive ship glide from normal reality and accelerate rap-
idly toward the ash-covered world of his dreams.
We’re coming, Kerrigan, he called in his head. I hope
you’re still there, because we’re coming to get you.
CHAPTER 2
TWO WEEKS LATER RAYNOR STOOD ON THE BRIDGE
and looked down upon the world he had dubbed
Char. Even before Horner jockeyed the Hyperion into
orbit he could see the smoke rising from several spots
around the dull gray world, and the flares of orange and
gold that often preceded them. Judging from their pre-
liminary scans the entire planet was caught in the throes
of constant volcanic activity and in places it looked as if
the ground itself might be unstable, still fluid from the
repeated superheating beneath it. They had maneuvered
past a larger red planet on their way in, dodging its wide
golden rings, and spied two small moons as they braked
just beyond Char’s atmosphere.
This was definitely it. The world in his dreams. The
dreams that still haunted him every night, and some-
times during the day.
Yes, they had gotten worse. He was having them
more frequently now. Warp travel was exhausting—
something about the body not being designed for mov-
28A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
ing at that speed and the mind not being able to
process the information around it. Because of that he,
like the rest of his people, had found himself dozing off
several times a day, anywhere for a few minutes to an
hour. And each time the dreams had returned when
he closed his eyes.
Nor had they remained the same. The dream of
those horrific zerglike monstrosities looming over him
had continued, but with each dream he had less space
to run, less room to move, less chance of escape. Less
and less hope, as the monsters loomed larger and
larger until they blotted out the sky.
His body had been altered as well within the
dreams. It had stretched and contorted, shifting out of
control, twisting and turning as if given a mind of its
own and an urgent need to escape his consciousness.
At first he had thought it was merely bad luck of the
kind that filled bad dreams—tripping over a loose rock,
twisting an ankle on uneven ground, fingers slipping
from the haft of a gun. But slowly Raynor had realized
that these were not accidents. In the dreams his own
body was turning against him. It was siding with the
monsters, working toward his capture and destruction.
His cries had become weaker as well. The calls of
“Jimmy!” had faded to whispers, then to gurgles, then
to mere gasps, as his throat tightened against him. Even
his voice was no longer his. During the last dream
Raynor had stood stock-still as the monsters descended,
waiting until they had surrounded him. Then he had
dropped to his knees and flung his arms wide, head
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S29
back, waiting to receive them. He had woken from that
dream with a laugh bubbling up his throat, a laugh of
joy and victory and exaltation. And something else. A
phrase that had wafted through him just as the dream
ended, something that reverberated through every cell
of his body and set his hairs on end.
“Behold the power of that which is yet unborn!”
It chilled him to the bone, those words. Because even
though he could not identify the speaker, he knew they
were talking about him. About her. About Kerrigan.
What were they doing to her? Hold on, Raynor had
thought desperately that morning as he’d staggered into
his bathroom and ducked his head under the faucet to
chase the last vestiges away. Hold on, Kerrigan. We’re
almost there.
And now he was. Here he stood on the Hyperion’s
bridge, looking down upon Char itself. Knowing that
Kerrigan was down there somewhere.
If the dreams were right, the zerg were there too.
Raynor didn’t see any sign of them but he knew that
meant nothing. The deadly Swarm was capable of hid-
ing all traces from even the strongest scans. Hell, he’d
walked, slept, and rode right above them on Mar Sara,
maybe for months, without ever realizing it. Some-
times he still wondered what would have happened if
he hadn’t put down near that first outpost, or run into
Mike and that bodyguard of his. Would he have been
another one of the casualties, his corpse obliterated by
the protoss like everything else on the planet? Or had
he been destined to get off that world before it died, to
30 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
leave his home behind and take to the stars on some
larger mission?
“Sir!” Horner’s shout brought Raynor back to the
present, and he jerked around. But something caught
his eye as he turned, and he stopped, focusing on the
speck floating off to one side of Char. The speck that
quickly resolved itself into the shape of a Terran
Dominion warship.
“I see it,” Raynor assured his second, shifting to get
a better look. “Can we identify it from here?”
“Yes, sir.” Horner’s fingers danced on the keyboard
again, and after a second he had an answer. The audible
gulp beforehand gave it away. “It’s the Norad III, sir.”
The Norad III. General Duke’s ship. “Great.” Keeping
his eyes on the ship, Raynor backed across the room
until he was next to the control chair. “Any signs of
support?”
“Two carrier ships and a science vessel, plus one
cargo hauler,” Horner confirmed. Now Raynor could
see the smaller smudges beside the first one.
“No other battleships?”
Horner frowned at his screen and tapped it again, as
if he couldn’t believe what he was seeing. “No sir,” he
finally replied. “The Norad III’s by herself.”
“Hunh.” Raynor rubbed his chin, thinking. The
Norad III wasn’t really by itself, of course—it had four
other ships with it, making up a small fleet. But Matt
was thinking in terms of a space battle, where the only
important ships were the battleships and their fighter
complements. If this were war Duke would be here
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 31
with a half-dozen warships behind him. That meant
this wasn’t an all-out attack, on either Char or his little
rebellion. Not that Duke could have predicted his
arrival here—even if Mengsk had a spy onboard, as
Raynor knew was possible, he hadn’t given anyone
but Horner the coordinates for this place. And he knew
Horner was too idealistic to betray him. So if Duke
wasn’t here for him, why was he here? And without
backup? Though then again, the Norad III was a heavy
warship, one of the Behemoth class, and could carry
more than a thousand soldiers and two dozen star
fighters, so he wasn’t exactly defenseless. Plus he had
those carriers, which meant he had ample ground
forces on hand. But you only used ground forces when
you didn’t want to damage the area. What was there
on Char to damage?
“Only one way to find out,” Raynor decided, and
nodded to Horner. Taking the hint, the younger man
stood and stepped aside, letting Raynor take the chair.
“Matt,” he said as he sank into the plush seat, “give the
Norad III a holler. No reason not to be neighborly.”
The younger man stared at him as if he’d gone mad,
but did as instructed. A moment later the front screen’s
expanded view of Char vanished, replaced by a famil-
iar face with a square jaw, a heavy brow, and a head of
neatly chopped steel-gray hair.
“Raynor!” General Edmund Duke spat at him
before the connection had even stabilized. “You’ve got
a lot of nerve showing your face, you mangy dog! I
oughta put you down right now!”
32A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“Give it your best shot,” Raynor replied, feeling his
temper rise despite himself. Damn, but Duke always
managed to rile him! He steepled his fingers, a gesture
he’d seen Mengsk use more than once, to keep from
clenching his hands into fists. “You don’t have the
firepower to take us,” he pointed out brusquely. “The
Norad III might take out the Hyperion but we’ve got
ten more ships and you’ve got only four, and none of
them any good in a firefight.” He saw the muscle
twitch in Duke’s jaw and knew he was only saying
what the older man already knew. They stared at each
other for a minute without speaking.
Duke broke the silence. “What do you want here,
anyway? Looking to set up your own little kingdom
now that you’ve cut loose?”
“I could ask you the same thing,” Raynor replied,
leaning forward. “Why so far from home? Doesn’t the
Dominion need you anymore?”
“I’m here on a special mission,” the general replied
pompously. “The Emperor asked me to handle it per-
sonally.”
“Really? Must be important,” Raynor said. He tried
to keep his face blank, failed, and wound up grinning.
“You bringing him a drink? Maybe shining his shoes?”
He saw the older man’s eyes narrow and knew he’d
scored a hit. Duke was such an easy target.
His adversary didn’t break down, though. Duke
was made of stronger stuff than that, and despite his
other faults he wasn’t stupid. “Wouldn’t you like
to know?” he replied with a laugh. “Oh, I bet you
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 33
would. In fact, I bet you’re here for the same reason.”
Had Duke had the dreams too? No, that was impos-
sible—Kerrigan had despised him as much as Raynor
did. But why else would he be here? Maybe Mengsk
had dreamed, though. Despite the betrayal that had
led to Kerrigan’s death the two had been close, and
Kerrigan had been one of the former terrorist’s most
trusted lieutenants. Had she reached out to him,
prompting him to send Duke on his behalf? Raynor
didn’t let any of that show on his face or in his voice
when he replied, “Oh? What reason?”
“Don’t play coy with me, boy,” Duke snapped. “I
know what’s going on here. A lot more than you do, in
fact.” He looked smug, far too smug for a man who was
only bluffing.
“You don’t know anything,” Raynor countered,
though he wasn’t so sure. He wasn’t used to bantering
like this, and wished Mike were here. Liberty had a
definite gift for talk and probably would have had
Duke spouting secrets about his mother by now.
“Oh, don’t I?” This time it was Duke who grinned.
“How’re you sleeping, boy?”
He knows! Raynor sat back in shock. Why else
would he have asked that? Mengsk must have had the
same dreams!
“Yeah, gotcha,” Duke chortled, and Raynor realized
he’d let his surprise show. “Like I said, I know what’s
going on here. Just stay out of my way, boy. If you
want to live, that is.”
“Keep talking, old man,” Raynor snapped back.
34A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Keep talking and stay in that shiny ship of yours and
don’t cross me. I’m not in the mood.”
The older man’s face had paled and his eyes were
almost hidden under his brow now. His voice was little
more than a rasp as he growled, “Listen, punk! I sure
as hell don’t take orders from no jumped-up beat cop
who thinks he’s a rebel!” The muscle in his jaw was
practically dancing now, and Raynor thought he could
hear the scrape of teeth grinding together. “Only rea-
son I’m not taking you apart right now is I’ve got other
fish to fry! But you give me any more of your lip and
I’ll storm over there and drown you like the dog you
are! I’ll personally tear a hole in that fancy ship of
yours and plant my boot so far up your—”
Raynor cut the signal mid-rant and sat back in his
chair. Something wasn’t right here; he could feel it.
Perhaps because of the time he’d spent with Kerrigan,
he had learned to trust his instincts.
Something about that whole exchange had been
off. Oh, Duke hated him, he knew that; the feeling was
certainly mutual. And the older man’s antagonism
hadn’t been faked, especially that last outburst. Nor
had the taunts been a lie—Duke did think he knew
something Raynor didn’t. He was almost certain
Mengsk had also had dreams from Kerrigan and had
sent Duke to check them out. So what was wrong?
It was Duke’s hesitance to fight, he finally decided.
The man was practically a rabid dog, and Mengsk had
been forced to leash him several times during the war
to keep the general from overstepping his bounds and
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S35
destroying Mengsk’s plans with a mindless charge.
Even if the Norad III was alone, Duke still would have
come after them, at least enough to fire a warning shot
or two. Plus he could always send his soldiers and
attempt to board—if those carriers were even half-full
he’d have enough men to swamp them easily. Why
hadn’t he?
“Matt,” Raynor called, and Horner was standing at
his elbow an instant later. He almost laughed but knew
it would offend the younger man. “You sure the Norad
III’s the only warship nearby?”
“Absolutely, sir.” Horner’s head bobbed up and
down. “I did a full sweep, then another two to be sure.
She’s got nobody.”
“Hm.” That could just mean Mengsk couldn’t spare
any other ships. And the Norad III was a capable vessel.
“How’s she look?”
Horner understood him. It was one of the reasons
he liked his second—the young man was able to make
sense of his verbal shorthand. “Weapons ports open,
sir, and shields up. She’s definitely in combat mode.”
He frowned. “I did get two strange things, sir.” Raynor
waited for him to continue. “Those carriers are reading
as more than half-empty. And I got a signal off Char’s
surface. From the Norad III.”
“A second reading?” Raynor glanced at the screen,
which had reverted to its view of Char. Norad III hov-
ered off to one side, still little more than a smudgy out-
line. But she was clearly there.
Ah, but perhaps not all of her.
36 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Get me Duke again,” he ordered, and Horner
hopped to obey. A moment later Duke’s face was once
again on the screen. Raynor was amused to see that
the older man’s jaw was still just as clenched.
“You went down there, didn’t you?” he asked imme-
diately, not giving the general a chance to start shouting
at him again. “You’ve already been to the surface. Your
carriers are mostly empty. Plus we’re getting a reading
from your ship down there—one of your shuttles. And
it’s still there.” He watched Duke’s face as he spoke, and
was pleased to see the other man’s eyes narrow farther
and his jaw become so rigid it was a wonder he could
breathe. “You lost most of your men and at least one
shuttle checking the place out.” He leaned forward
again. “What happened, Duke? Natives too much for
you? Already get your butt handed to you?”
“Shut your mouth, punk!” Duke finally shouted,
losing his temper completely. “You try it, you’re so
tough! Those zerg’ll eat you alive!”
“So you did encounter them,” Raynor mused aloud.
“Too hot for you, eh?” He laughed. “Mengsk won’t be
happy. Sends you to do a simple task and you botch it
royally.”
“Shut up!” Duke roared. “I didn’t fail! She’s not
here! Or if she is she’s got the entire Swarm here with
her! Nobody could get her out of that! Nobody!” Then
his mouth clamped shut as he realized what he’d said.
“I can get her,” Raynor assured him, and cut the
connection again. He sank back into his seat, excited
and chilled at the same time.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 37
Kerrigan was here! Duke’s ranting had confirmed it.
Or at least Mengsk had been convinced she was, which
meant Raynor wasn’t crazy. Even if this was all some
zerg trick, it was better than him just imagining things.
That was the excitement. Kerrigan had sent the
dreams, and she had meant for him to come here. This
was the place. And, despite everything, she might still
be alive.
Then came the chills. Because this was the world
from his dreams, the world of zerg more monstrous
than any he’d seen before. And the zerg were defi-
nitely here. They’d already defeated Duke and driven
him back off the surface. And one thing he had to
admit was that Duke was a good man in a fight. The
Norad III was a top-of-the-line battle cruiser, fully
loaded. And he’d brought two carriers, each filled with
ground troops, most likely the best Mengsk had to
offer. But they hadn’t been able to hold the surface, or
even their drop point. Which meant the zerg were
here in force.
He had to go down there. He knew that. He’d come
this far; he’d never forgive himself if he didn’t go. Nei-
ther would Kerrigan, for that matter. But what about
his people? Could a bunch of ragtag rebels stand where
Duke’s army had fled?
Once again he was assailed with doubts. Did he
have the right to risk all of them for one woman who
might not even still be alive? Could he ask them to risk
their own lives for hers? And what kind of leader
would ask them to make that choice?
38A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Sir?” Horner stood nearby. “What are your orders?”
Raynor rubbed his palms into his eyes, hoping to
drive some sense into his brain. He started to tell his
second that he didn’t know, that he was having ques-
tions, but quashed that impulse quickly. That wasn’t
what Horner wanted to hear. It wasn’t what anyone
wanted to hear. One thing he had learned from
Mengsk was the importance of appearances. Even if
you were tearing yourself up inside, you couldn’t let it
show. Not the leader, anyway. You had to present a
calm face, a reassuring voice, and a clear purpose. Oth-
erwise your people lost faith in you. And that was
worse than making a mistake, even worse then costing
some lives, because once they lost faith they’d be just
as lost as you were.
“We’re going down,” he announced, sitting and tap-
ping in the commands for open broadcast. “Make sure
the Norad III doesn’t pick this up,” he instructed, and
as Horner hopped back to his station Raynor grabbed
the mike. “Attention, all ships,” he announced. “This is
Raynor. We are going down. I repeat, we are going
down. All ships prepare landing parties, heavy gear,
full combat mode. Expect opposition. It’s gonna get
hot down there.”
He had already clicked off the mike and stood up
when Horner stiffened at his console. “Sir!”
“What’s wrong, Matt?” He was standing at the
younger man’s side in an instant.
“The Norad III’s opened her bay, sir!”
“What?” Raynor leaned in closer, studying the read-
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 39
out on Horner’s screen. Had he finally pushed Duke far
enough to force an attack?
“One shuttle and three star fighters,” Horner
announced a second later, deciphering the scrolling
information. “Heading toward the surface, sir.”
Raynor leaned back, nodding. He could hear the
relief in Horner’s voice. It wasn’t an attack after all. At
least, not one on them. He had pushed Duke into
action, but not into coming after them—Duke was
going planetside again to search for Kerrigan once
more. Or to rescue survivors form his earlier attempt.
Well, that was fine. Maybe they’d distract the zerg long
enough for his people to get in and out safely.
“Matt, you’ve got the ship,” he told the younger
man, clapping him on the back. “Make sure she’s still
here when I get back, eh?” The younger man nodded,
his face lit with pride, and Raynor knew Horner would
give his life to keep the Hyperion safe. Hopefully it
wouldn’t come to that.
Well, we’re here, he told himself as he exited the
bridge and headed for the shuttle bay. Time to get down
there and take a look.
CHAPTER 3
CHAR WAS EVERY BIT AS UGLY IN REALITY AS IT
had been in his dreams, Raynor decided as he hopped
down from the shuttle. His boots crunched into the
surface, sending small puffs of ash swirling up around
his ankles, and he was glad for the rebreather cover-
ing his nose and mouth and the attached goggles cov-
ering his eyes. He’d considered wearing his combat
armor but had decided against it—though the suit
would have given him strength and protected him
against minor damage, it wasn’t good in tight spaces and
had only a limited power supply. Besides, he’d seen zerg
cut right through armor. He was better off relying on
agility, especially since he didn’t have his bike handy.
Squinting against the setting sun, he studied the
landscape. Bleak; that was the word for it. Ash and rock
as far as the eye could see, topped by smoke and more
ash and some flame. No plants, no animals, nothing
moving but him and his people, who were all off the
shuttles now and clustering around them, forming dis-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 41
crete units within the whole. That was exactly what
he’d instructed before they touched down. He didn’t
want an army down here—too easy to attract attention.
Better to split into small groups and scout around, figure
out what was where. Hopefully one of them would spot
the Swarm and find Kerrigan without getting noticed.
“All right,” he called over the command channel.
“All crews, stay frosty, and keep your eyes peeled for
our target. Remember, not only are we up against the
zerg here, but our old pal General Duke may be creepin’
around too.” He bit back a sigh, the harsh landscape
already depressing him. “Let’s hope this trip wasn’t a big
mistake,” he muttered, then hoped they hadn’t heard
that part.
Shaking it off, Raynor shouldered his rifle and
motioned his crew closer. If someone had tailored a
planet to be inhospitable they couldn’t have done a
better job. He’d felt the futility of this place through
Kerrigan’s dreams, and it was worse now. But he had
two things going for him that he hadn’t had in those
nightmares.
First off, he was awake and alert and armed.
Second, he wasn’t alone.
He planned to use both advantages to their fullest.
“I want a sweep of the area to our northwest,” he
told Lisa Mannix, the sergeant he’d picked as his second
here. “Quiet and careful. We don’t know where they’re
hiding.”
“Yessir.” She snapped off a quick salute and began
organizing the others into pairs, then assigning them
42 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
sections on the grid. Calm and efficient, Mannix never
seemed to get riled, which Raynor appreciated. He’d
worked with her a few times under Mengsk and had
been pleased when she’d joined his revolt, saying she
couldn’t stomach what had happened on Tarsonis. On
the Hyperion she was easygoing, friendly, almost play-
ful, but down here she was all business, and only min-
utes after they’d landed she had everyone moving out,
canvassing the ground for any trace of their foes—or
the woman they’d come to rescue.
“Sir, you need to see this!” It was one of his troopers,
Chuck Ayers, a short older man who’d been a career sol-
dier under Duke and had followed him to Mengsk and
then walked away. He was one of Raynor’s top choices
for a mole, and he kept the man close to keep an eye on
him, but so far Ayers had proven to be nothing but an
asset. Now he was standing with his partner, Ari Patel,
on either side of a small crevice, guns out and at the
ready. Raynor stepped up beside them, Mannix right
behind him.
“Check it out.” Ayers gestured toward the crevice,
and Raynor studied it. It was small, barely three feet
across, and perfectly circular, with a raised lip around a
deep hole. It wasn’t so much a crevice as a sinkhole or
a crater—or an entrance. The ash was thinner here,
exposing the black rock beneath, and the inside was
rough and lumpy. But the edge was razor-sharp.
“Small volcano,” Mannix suggested, crouching to
get a better look. “Planet’s probably riddled with them.
We’ll have to watch our step.”
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 43
“Hm.” Raynor squatted as well, still staring at the
hole. “Could lead to caverns, though,” he suggested.
They all knew what that meant. The zerg had shown a
clear affinity for the underground. If this hole did lead
to tunnels beneath the surface, it probably also led
straight to the Swarm.
Mannix eyed the hole. “Too small for us,” she decided
finally. “Too easy to get stuck.” She frowned. “Too small
for most zerg, too.”
Raynor nodded and stood up, absently brushing ash
from his pants. She was right—only zerglings could fit
through that. The hole might lead to the Swarm but it
wasn’t going to provide Raynor and his crew with access,
or be a way for the zerg to sneak up behind them.
“Drop a sensor,” he told Ayers, moving away from the
crater. “We’ll keep an ear on it. Good catch, though.” The
soldier saluted, already reaching for the pack at his side.
Each of the troopers had at least one sensor, and they
were all keyed into everyone’s else’s comm unit. If the
zerg crept past this crater they’d all hear it.
They kept moving, Mannix making sure the pairs
were spread out across the grid. Raynor stayed beside
her, rifle at the ready, but most of his attention was
taken up listening to the other squad reports.
“Got a hole!” one announced. “Too small,” they
called back a moment later. “Dropping a sensor.” Others
had the same results. This area had seen strong volcanic
activity not too long ago and the ground was still
pocked with the resulting craters. That pattern of dis-
covery and dismissal lasted for a full ten minutes.
44 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“I’ve got zerg!” someone shouted. Raynor immedi-
ately pinpointed the individual. It was Lance Messner,
from the Nemesis. Raynor was running toward Mess-
ner’s location even as he shouted for Mannix and the
others to follow.
The Nemesis shuttle had been next to theirs, and
their teams were not far apart. It took Raynor only ten
more minutes, running full out, to reach Messner. He
was afraid he’d be too late, but the young trooper was
still standing when he skidded to a halt.
“Where?” Raynor demanded, searching all around,
his rifle barrel following his eyes. Messner pointed
down, and Raynor realized there was a crevice
between them. This was not a crater like the others but
a narrow split in the ground, and he could see deep
into the earth below it. And, somewhere down there,
something was moving.
“You’re sure it’s zerg?” he demanded, and Messner
nodded fervently.
“Sir, yes sir!” the trooper replied. “I heard them, sir!
That chittering sound they make, like giant beetles in a
feeding frenzy!” It was an apt description, and not one
likely to be confused with anything else on this world.
Mannix was beside him by now, with the rest of
their squad falling in behind her. Raynor dropped to
his haunches to peer into the crevice. Yes, he could
hear what Messner had described. It was definitely
zerg. Not close, and perhaps not even aware of them,
but definitely there.
“All right, we’ve got zerg,” he announced, standing
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 45
up again. “They’re not coming up through here but
we know they’re below us. We’ve got to assume they
know we’re here, too. I want the squads to double
up,” he told Mannix, who nodded. “Defensive forma-
tion. Continue the scouting, though. We need to find
a way in.”
While Mannix organized the men, Raynor squeezed
the bridge of his nose between thumb and forefinger,
trying to will away the headache he felt forming. He
shut his eyes—
—and found himself alone, the sky turned darker,
the sun vanished but the moons high. His rifle was
gone, as was his pistol and even his boots. He stood
there, the ash drifting between his toes, and watched
the horizon darken further, but not from the onset of
night. This was a more organic darkness, a wave of crea-
tures moving toward him, their dusky hides drowning
the light as they came.
In what seemed an instant they were around him,
and he spun, searching for a way out. He had none.
They were everywhere, surrounding him and then
pressing in upon him, his flesh taking numerous cuts
from the spikes and blades and claws on every side.
They towered over him, trapping him in their shad-
ows, and he shuddered even as a wave of relief rippled
through him. Not just relief, but pleasure, excite-
ment—he was happy to see them! He was glad they
had found him, glad they were so close, glad they were
touching him. Their limbs tangled about him, making
it difficult to tell where one ended and another began,
46A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
and he was glad of that as well. Glad he was one with
them. One of them.
“Sir?”
The touch on his arm startled him, and Raynor
fought back the reflex to fire, shoving his rifle point
away from a surprised Mannix. The men were arrayed
behind her, waiting. Messner, who had been crouch-
ing beside him at the crevice edge, was still straighten-
ing up, as he had been when Raynor had shut his eyes.
A second, maybe two, he realized; that’s how long I
was out. It seemed so much longer. Long enough for
the dream to reach me. Was I asleep? Or is it just that
much stronger planetside?
“Let’s go,” he told Mannix, and she nodded, what-
ever concerns she’d had vanishing before the task at
hand. They set out again, their squad and the Nemesis
team combined, men circling the center, never leaving
a quadrant unwatched or uncovered. It was slower
this way but much safer, especially now that they
knew the zerg were below them. Raynor wasn’t taking
any chances.
“Sir, we’ve got a problem.” It was Horner, calling
on his private link, and Raynor responded, making
sure the command circuit was off so the conversation
wouldn’t be broadcast.
“What’s wrong, Matt?” he asked. It had been sev-
eral hours now. They hadn’t found a single entrance
they could use, though they’d seen plenty of craters
and several more crevices. The zerg were still down
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S47
there, visible through some of the cracks, but if the
Swarm had detected their presence they weren’t
attacking yet. Either they didn’t know or they had
something more important to do, Raynor thought.
“We’ve got readings, sir,” Horner continued. “Incom-
ing ships.”
“Duke’s reinforcements?”
“No sir,” Horner replied, and the fact that he didn’t
sound pleased made Raynor uneasy. Whatever was
coming, his second would have preferred Terran
Dominion warships. This couldn’t be good. “It’s protoss,
sir,” Horner explained, and Raynor resisted the urge to
shoot something, anything.
Protoss. Here. Now.
It made sense, in a way. Everywhere he’d seen zerg,
the protoss had arrived as well. Often the tall, graceful
aliens had appeared after the zerg had infested a world
and had then wiped the planet clean—not just of zerg
but of everything: all higher life-forms, all traces of civ-
ilization. That’s what they’d done to Mar Sara, his
homeworld. He already knew that zerg and protoss
were bitter enemies and fought at every turn. The pro-
toss seemed determined to eliminate all traces of zerg
and followed them around like cosmic exterminators,
cauterizing whole worlds to prevent the Swarm from
spreading. If the zerg were here on Char, of course the
protoss were as well. Or would be soon.
“Keep me posted,” he told Horner, but he was
already thinking through the possibilities. They’d
teamed with the protoss several times before to elimi-
48 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
nate zerg—the zerg wanted to corrupt and absorb Ter-
ran life while the protoss just wanted to stop the zerg,
so it was an easy choice of allies. Could he strike a deal
with the protoss again? The last time he’d seen them
had been on Tarsonis, when Mengsk had ordered his
men to engage the alien race despite their common
enemy. Mengsk had wanted the Psi-Emitter’s to do
their job and summon the zerg in force so they would
destroy the Confederacy’s Capital World. He hadn’t
wanted the protoss to interfere and stop the process. It
had been part of the reason Raynor had walked out—
but would the protoss know that? Or care?
“How did they find this place?” he wondered aloud,
ignoring Mannix’s questioning glance. Every other
time the protoss had followed the zerg to a Terran
world, but in many cases they hadn’t arrived fast
enough to have been tailing the Swarm. On Chau Sara
and Mar Sara, for example, the zerg had been there for
weeks or even months before showing any signs, and
the protoss had only arrived after the damage was
done. So what were they doing here now? Had the
zerg been here on Char that long? If so, they’d have
the entire planet mined and mapped—and Raynor had
brought his men into a killing ground.
But what if the protoss had come here for another
reason? What if, this time, it wasn’t the zerg they had
tracked? The zerg were telepathic, Raynor knew—the
entire Swarm was linked together and members could
communicate instantly across entire planets. He sus-
pected that the protoss were also telepathic, though
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S49
their warriors seemed to have more autonomy than did
the zerg. He didn’t think the protoss were a hive-mind,
but what if they were psionic? Kerrigan had to be
incredibly powerful to reach across space to both him
and Mengsk. What if she’d reached out to the protoss as
well? Or what if they’d simply received the dreams
unbidden, the signal so strong it had struck them on its
way to him? The dreams definitely involved zerg, and
that might have been enough to attract the protoss.
Of course, that didn’t mean their presence was a
good thing. Not given their tendency to annihilate any
planet the zerg had tainted. And Char was definitely
tainted.
“Listen up, people,” Raynor announced on the com-
mand channel. “We’ve got protoss incoming as well. We
don’t know whose side they’re on. Don’t shoot first, but
don’t let down your guard.”
If they were lucky, he thought as he beckoned to
Mannix, the protoss would keep the zerg busy for him.
Maybe they’d even blast open a way down to the zerg
tunnels, and he could simply follow them in. It wasn’t
likely, though.
“I want to know where they land,” he told Mannix.
“They might lead us in. But be ready to fall back to the
shuttles if I give the word. If they start lighting this
place up we’ll hightail it back to the Hyperion and wait
for the smoke to clear.”
“Yessir.” She glanced around. “We haven’t found a
way down yet, sir. If the protoss don’t show us one,
how much longer you want to look?”
50A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Raynor thought about his dreams, and the woman
sending them. “As long as it takes, Sergeant. As long as
it takes.”
Part of him, however, knew it wouldn’t be that
long. The dreams were getting more frantic and more
distorted. He could feel Kerrigan’s urgency. Whatever
was going to happen, it was going to be soon.
“We got a hole!” someone shouted, and Raynor
shook off the foreboding to scramble toward the
trooper. It was Deke Cavez, the youngest member of
his team, tall and slight and fast enough to run down a
hoverbike on foot. Cavez was standing by a crater with
his partner, Melinda Squire, and Raynor could already
see that this one was larger than the holes they’d
found before. It was at least five feet across and its lip
rose a full three feet from the ground, creating a short
cone. The sides were rough and ash-covered, but the
interior glittered a glossy black.
“It’s big enough,” Mannix confirmed, peering into
the crater. “Looks like it runs all the way down, too.
We should be able to—” The rest of her sentence was
cut off as she stumbled back, barely avoiding a scythe
blade that lashed out and up from inside the crater.
Raynor caught her as she fell, shoving her farther back
as he brought his rifle to bear, its barrel rising along
with the snakelike creature that sprang up from the
hole, flared head darting about to study them, scythe-
arms already twitching for a second attack.
A hydralisk. Raynor had seen them before—hell, it
had been a hydralisk and some zerglings that had
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S51
caused his encounter with Mike Liberty, the same
encounter that had led to his meeting Mengsk and
Kerrigan. The same encounter that had ultimately led
him here. He owed the hydralisk for making him who
he was today.
He repaid the favor by opening up with his gauss
rifle, firing a row of metal spikes deep into the snake-
like zerg’s head. It toppled to one side, the impact driv-
ing it to the ground, the glow already fading from its
eyes. It hadn’t seen Raynor yet and he hoped it had
died before revealing their location to the rest of the
Swarm.
“Right.” He glanced over at Mannix, already back on
her feet. She nodded. “All teams, converge. We got us a
hole. We’re going in, but be warned—the zerg’re already
down there, and they know about this entrance. Let’s
just hope they don’t know we’re coming.”
But somebody does, he thought as he watched
Cavez and Squire leap into the crater, followed by
Ayers and Patel. Kerrigan must know we’re here. I’m
coming, darlin’. I’m coming. Then it was his and Man-
nix’s turn, and, shouldering his rifle, Raynor jumped
feetfirst into the darkness.
CHAPTER 4
THE CRATER TURNED OUT TO BE THE TOP OF A
long, straight chute. The sides had cooled long ago,
but the lava that had erupted through it had been hot
enough to melt the rock to glass, and the walls were
water-slick and perfectly smooth. Raynor plummeted
like a stone, bruising arms and legs whenever he
bumped against the sides, careful to keep his head
tucked in and his limbs wrapped around his rifle. The
fall felt endless but it was probably less than a minute
before he spied a glow below him, and then he was
curling into a ball and striking the floor hard enough
to leave him dizzy and gasping.
“All right, sir?” Cavez offered him a hand, and after
a minute he took it. The youngster looked unfazed, but
then he’d jumped in first and so he’d had a minute to
recover. Raynor did his best not to show just how wob-
bly he was—wouldn’t do to let his men see him col-
lapse like a little girl.
“Fine, thanks,” he rasped, clambering to his feet and
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 53
leaning back against the wall while he waited for his
vision to clear. Behind him he heard a thud and a
groan that could only be Mannix, following him
down. Ayers was there to help her up and move her
out of the way and suddenly Raynor knew he didn’t
need to worry about looking weak. They’d all need a
minute to recover. It was one hell of a drop.
He glanced around, squinting to see better. Two
glowsticks lay on the ground nearby, producing the
light he’d seen, and he realized they’d been lit to pro-
vide a clue to the sudden stop at the end. It was a smart
move, and he wondered which of the four troopers
had thought of it.
The glow wasn’t much, but as his eyes adjusted he
could make out more of the space where they’d
landed. It was broad and high, at least four feet above
his head and wide enough for four men abreast. He’d
have preferred something narrower, since that would
have kept the zerg from mobbing them, but it couldn’t
be helped. The rough corridor extended in both direc-
tions without branches, and he noticed it had a slight
incline. The lower end pointed back the way they had
come.
“Which way, sir?” Mannix asked, wincing slightly
as she popped her neck and worked her right shoulder
back into joint. Two more pairs had arrived, one-
fourth their crew, with the others and the full Nemesis
squad still topside.
“Not sure yet,” he admitted, pushing off from the
wall and walking a little ways down the corridor. If the
54A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
zerg were in this tunnel they hadn’t noticed them yet
or were too far away to be detected. He had a feeling
they weren’t here—the chute had been long enough
to get them down here but that didn’t mean it ran all
the way to whatever level the Swarm was using. He
knew they liked it deep. But the lava had flowed up
from here, which meant there had to be a way down
from this point. He just had to find it.
“All right, Kerrigan,” he muttered. “I’m here. Now
where the hell are you?”
Closing his eyes, he was instantly thrust back into
the nightmare version of this world. This time the
monster-zerg already had him surrounded, and as he
lifted his hands to shield himself he saw that his skin
had darkened, but unevenly, his flesh now blotchy and
gray, almost green, clearly unhealthy. Yet his body felt
strong, capable, powerful. Energy thrummed through
him, invigorating him, setting his hair on end—
Raynor forced his eyes open again, cutting the
dream off abruptly. It had been waiting there for him
behind his eyelids, ready to spring the instant he fell
into darkness. He was almost afraid to blink, in case it
came back into that space and pulled him away. But
his gamble had worked. The dream was stronger here
than it had been on the surface. Kerrigan was closer.
Walking past his curious troopers, he stalked a dozen
paces in the opposite direction and closed his eyes again.
One of the zerg was touching him, its scythelike
limbs poking into his mottled flesh, but it was not
attacking. There was no force behind the thrust, no
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 55
aggression—it was merely a way of making contact.
And through that contact came a voice, deep and cold,
a voice that resounded through his bones and sent
chills up his spine. Yet for all that, it felt strangely com-
forting.
“Welcome,” it said to him. “The Swarm embraces
you.”
The shock of that message popped his eyes back
open and Raynor stood there a moment, gasping,
before turning back to his crew. “This way,” he told
them, barely able to spit the words out. The dream had
been stronger this time than before. Part of that was
the urgency, he knew, some impending event that
Kerrigan was desperate to avoid. Part of it was simply
that the dreams were getting worse, their story playing
out to an unpleasant end he desperately tried not to
acknowledge. But part of it was proximity. He was sure
he was right. Kerrigan felt closer this way. He was lead-
ing his men in the right direction.
The corridor dead-ended a hundred paces farther
down, but just before that point Cavez spotted a
branching. A narrow passage split off to one side, its
sharply angled walls and irregular path evidence that it
was a natural fissure. The rock here was slate gray
rather than black and they could see a darker patch at
the far end, either volcanic rock or an opening. Either
way it was their best option, and they headed toward
it, creeping along single file. Ayers took the lead, with
Patel right behind him.
56 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“It’sanotherpassage,” Ayerscalledback,and
sounded like he was about to elaborate when he let out
a wheeze and then a short gasp. Patel’s rifle sounded,
the report deafening in that narrow space, and Raynor
cursed from his spot four men back. It had to be zerg!
And here they were, unable to retreat, unable to form
ranks, emerging one by one like peas popped loose from
a pod. This was likely to be a slaughter.
He had to do something fast to even the odds, and
he did it. Grasping a heavy sphere from his belt, he
primed it and lobbed it overhand. The grenade flew
past him, over Mannix and Cavez and Squire, and dis-
appeared into that darkness where Patel had ventured
after Ayers.
“Grenade!” Raynor shouted, dropping to a crouch,
and Messner behind him and Mannix before him did
the same. He hoped Patel had heard.
Then the grenade went off, sending a shock wave
back through the passage. The walls shook and slivers
of rock fell, slicing flesh and canvas and leather,
bouncing off metal. But the ceiling held, the floor
didn’t crack open, and an instant later Patel called out,
“All clear!”
They hustled then, stealth forgotten, wading into
the smoke and dust, and a minute later Raynor was
out of that narrow fissure and into a much wider cor-
ridor, his back against the wall, rifle at the ready. Patel
had a nasty cut along one arm and looked like he’d
been worked over by a dozen large drunks, but he was
still standing and still had a grip on his rifle. Ayers
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 57
hadn’t been so lucky. The veteran trooper lay on the
ground just beyond the fissure’s exit, blood pooling
beneath him from the gaping hole in his chest and
from the places where his arms had been. The
hydralisk had stopped him from shooting by shearing
both arms off at the elbow, then it had gutted him.
They hadn’t even heard the first blow. Fortunately the
hydralisk hadn’t been expecting a grenade. Judging
from the body it had taken the impact full force in the
chest and head, and had been squashed like a bug
against the far wall. Raynor hoped it had been painful
but knew it probably hadn’t.
“Well, they know we’re here,” he said, shaking his
head. “Nothin’ for it, then. Leastways we don’t have to
be quiet anymore.” He clicked his rifle over to full
auto, and heard many of the troopers doing the same.
“Get hold of the other crews,” he told Mannix. “Relay
it back if you can’t get a signal to them from down
here. Get everyone down here. We’re gonna need
‘em.” Mannix nodded and called Messner to her, pre-
sumably to coordinate the process of reaching the
other teams. Raynor knew he could trust her to take
care of it. Soon they’d have everyone down here with
them, roughly three hundred troopers. He hoped it
would be enough.
He watched for another minute as the rest of the
two teams made their way through the fissure. Squire
and Cavez moved Ayers’ remains off to one side. Gina
Elani, one of Messner’s team, bandaged Patel’s arm.
Everyone was ready. Then, because this tunnel ran in
58 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
two directions and he could see several branches
already, Raynor gritted his teeth and closed his eyes.
More of the monster-zerg were touching him now,
their claws and spines jabbing but not penetrating his
skin, and the voices had amplified, creating a ringing
echo behind his eyes and between his ears. The words
were the same, though.
“Welcome. The Swarm embraces you.”
Shuddering, Raynor opened his eyes, reassuring
himself that it was just a dream. Then he walked to the
other side of the fissure and let the dream take him
again. It took all his willpower to come out of it, to step
away from that cold, clammy, smothering greeting,
but he had his answer. He gestured in that direction.
“This way,” he told his people.
As they followed him down the natural hallway, he
hoped Kerrigan was worth it. And he hoped the scene
in his dream was only an interpretation of her fear, not
a peek at what was really going on inside her head.
Because if it was accurate, they might all be doomed.
And Raynor knew it would be his fault for bringing
them here, to this world, to these caverns, to this mess.
The tunnels continued, one leading to another.
Raynor used the dreams to find his way through each
intersection, following the stronger path each time.
And each time he had to force himself back to the pres-
ent, back to his own flesh and blood, wrenching his
mind from that stifling welcome that awaited him in
the darkness. The urge to scream welled up within him
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 59
and he fought it back, tightening his grip on his rifle
until he was surprised the barrel and stock didn’t have
his fingerprints squeezed into the hardened plastic.
They encountered several more zerg. Each time it
was only a small group of the aliens and each time
Raynor’s troopers made short work of them, though
not without cost. Patel had survived that first attack
with a wound to one arm and made it through a sec-
ond unscathed, only to have his face bitten off by a zer-
gling that leaped from a small hole in the ceiling and
tore into him on the way down. Gina Elani, the petite
trooper who had bandaged Patel’s first wound, was
sliced in half by a hydralisk when she stopped to give
one of her fallen teammates a hand up. That teammate
died as well, his chest ripped open even as Messner
fired a full clip into the zerg’s back. Others also fell,
many Raynor knew only a little and some he didn’t
even recognize except as names on a list. He vowed to
look up every last one of them if he made it out of this
alive. They deserved that much.
The small zerg groupings were probably due to the
narrow passages and crooked tunnels. Once or twice
they found themselves in wide corridors like the first
one below the chute, but those never lasted. These
caverns were natural, never altered by zerg or any
other, and they started and stopped, twisted and
turned, dove and rose at random, going from avenue-
wide to stairwell-narrow in a heartbeat and doubling
around razor-edged corners or ribboning off out of
sight. Cracks in the floor led to other levels, as did
60 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
holes in the ceiling, but some of those gaps led to tiny
pockets instead, and it was impossible to guess what
lay beyond each opening. One trooper died because he
dropped down through a crack and fell into a magma
pool, burning to ash in an instant. Another thrust his
head up through a hole above and cracked his skull
against the rocky ceiling of the two-foot-high space.
He might have survived if he hadn’t broken his neck
when he fell back to the tunnel below.
Raynor’s dreams—they were more like waking
visions now, always threatening to overlap reality and
overwhelm his sense of self—were all that kept them
going. He heard several troopers muttering behind
him, wondering how he could possibly know where to
go in this maze, but Mannix and the other sergeants
shushed them quickly. No one really wanted to believe
he didn’t know the way, anyway. That would only
make this worse.
Finally Raynor led them down a short, almost
straight tunnel, high enough for him to carry another
trooper upright on his shoulders and wide enough for
him to fling his arms out without scraping the sides. At
the other end was a wide arch, its surface stone but
covered by a pulsing gray-black matter that looked less
like the fungus it was than exposed brains. It was the
zerg ooze, the creep that had showed their presence on
several planets as it crept across the surface, matching
their spread beneath. It meant that Raynor and his
people had finally reached a place here on Char where
the zerg had made themselves at home.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S61
“Sir!” Cavez pointed, and Raynor followed his ges-
ture, catching his breath as he saw the shape sus-
pended near the center of the arch. It was an eye, a
human eye, or at least it would have been if humans
grew twenty feet tall. A cluster of thick tendrils trailed
behind it and were wrapped around what looked like
massive web strands crisscrossing the arch. The eye
hung from them like a horribly altered spider, wrig-
gling as they approached its web.
“Somebody blind that ugly sucker!” Raynor shouted,
and Squire took aim and fired. A single spike plunged
deep into the eye, dead-center on its massive pupil, and
with a grating squawk the eye burst, showering them
with bits of jellied goo. The tendrils still clung to the
web, twitching slightly.
“Guess there’s no sense knocking,” Raynor mut-
tered to Mannix beside him, and she mustered a weak
smile in return. The eye had obviously been a sentry,
and it had seen them approaching this whole time. The
Swarm knew they were here.
“Get ready!” Raynor shouted over his shoulder,
knowing Mannix would relay his message to the squads
too far back to hear him. “We’re about to have com-
pany!”
As if his words had been the trigger, a flutter of
shapes appeared on the far side of the arch, casting
shadows upon the web there. Then the strands burst
and the Swarm was upon them.
Earlier, in that fissure, Raynor had wished for more
room. Now he would have killed for less. The tunnel
62 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
here was broad enough for three men to stand together,
and the archway filled that width. That meant the zerg
had enough space to charge in a cluster, spilling through
the arch and threatening to engulf his troopers by num-
bers alone. A narrower space would have forced the
zerg to trickle through instead of flood and they could
have held them off more easily. Still, the goal wasn’t to
hold them but to get past them. Raynor didn’t need to
close his eyes to know that Kerrigan must be on the
other side of that arch.
Getting through was going to be a problem, though.
He shot a hydralisk through the head with his rifle and
then drew his pistol and shot another that had been
about to gut Mannix from behind. Steadying his pistol
barrel atop and across his rifle, he fired one and
then the other, blasting anything in his way. Zerglings
were everywhere, leaping at men’s heads or chewing
through their arms or clamping those massive jaws
around their ankles, tangling limbs and guns and leav-
ing them vulnerable. The hydralisks were right behind
them, as were the mutalisks, both using their spikes
and blades to carve through the human forces. Raynor
saw Squire go down, scythes from two different
hydralisks meeting in her chest, her rifle shoved down
by the blows and discharging at her feet, kicking up
rock shards as the spikes struck the ground. Messner
fell beneath a pack of zerglings and was literally ripped
apart—Mannix saw it as well and was kind enough
to put a bullet through the young trooper’s head
before he could register the pain. Raynor’s troops
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 63
were good, well-armed and well-trained and well-
motivated, but they were drastically outnumbered.
The tight quarters—wide enough for them to be sur-
rounded but not wide enough for them to back
away—didn’t help. The zerg were all linked together,
speaking to each other’s minds, and that let them
move as a single body. Raynor’s people weren’t so
lucky. They stumbled against one another, blocked one
another’s shots, and sometimes even shot each other.
That didn’t help.
“We need to get inside!” he shouted to Mannix.
They were back-to-back, firing at anything that came
too close—more than once he’d had to jerk his gun
away to avoid shooting a trooper. “We don’t have time
for this!”
“Let’s go!” she shouted back. “Everyone, form up on
me! Cover fire!” Not everyone heard her through the
tumult, but enough did and some twenty men and
women grouped around them, all facing outward.
They began walking as a clump, locking step to avoid
stumbling, firing in all directions at once. Every time
someone emptied a clip the neighbor took over, cover-
ing that angle until they had reloaded. The zerg
couldn’t get to them, couldn’t breach that wall of steel
and plastic and powder. They made it under the arch,
and then they were inside. The rest of the troopers
were still in the tunnel, and they waited until Raynor
and Mannix were past the arch before unleashing a
rain of bullets. The zerg were forced to turn their
attention to the larger threat again and swarmed down
64 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
the tunnel, leaving the handful around Raynor with a
moment to breathe and look around.
“What is this place?” one of them, a young man
named Fedders, whispered. He was shaking slightly,
and Raynor couldn’t blame him. What they’d just
been through, and what they were seeing now, was
enough to shake anyone.
This chamber was far larger than the tunnel beyond
it, wide enough for a shuttle to fit within and tall
enough for one to stand upright without grazing the
domed ceiling. The walls were covered in creep, which
shed a faint light that pulsed all around them, leaving
Raynor slightly nauseous. Zerg moved here and there
in the room, smaller zerglings like giant maggots
writhing through mounds of creep piled at intervals
upon the floor while hydralisks and others stood
guard.
“It’s a breeding ground,” Raynor told the others,
remembering what Mike and Kerrigan had told him
once about an encounter on Antiga Prime. “It’s where
the zerg are born.” At the center of the room was a clus-
ter of zerg, at least forty of them, including hydralisks,
ultralisks, and even the airborne mutalisks. Off to the
side he spotted two massive, sluglike creatures, their
sides pulsating as if lit from within, perched on mounds
of creep and festooned with streamers of similar organic
material—Raynor remembered they were called cere-
brates and were essentially zerg commanders. He could
see several zerg eggs, pulsing green and red upon their
mounds of creep. But between the zerg at the center he
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 65
saw something far larger, something that glowed and
gave off sparks like small lightning. He knew immedi-
ately that was his target.
“Everyone, on me!” he shouted, raising his rifle and
slamming home a fresh clip. “We need to breach that
thing!”
The zerg heard him coming, or sensed him, or sim-
ply anticipated his attack. “Cerebrate!” one of the cer-
ebrates shouted, its voice an odd rasp that cut at
Raynor’s ears and produced a dull throb behind his
eyes. “The Chrysalis is opening! Do not allow any Ter-
rans near it!”
The second cerebrate lifted its front end toward the
archway and, responding to its mental commands, the
lesser zerg pulled away from the cocoon and charged
toward the Terrans. The other cerebrate hunched
closer to the strange pulsing oblong, like a protective
mother warily circling her prize egg.
Raynor and his team braced themselves for the
moment of contact. Just before the zerg reached them,
however, Mannix pulled a grenade from her vest,
primed it, and lobbed it at the approaching creatures. It
struck just before a hydralisk and blew the creature
apart as it detonated, the blast taking several others
with it and battering a dozen more aside. Raynor
quickly fired into those dazed zerg, killing them before
they could recover. Then the rest were upon them and
he was back to firing pistol over rifle and rifle under
pistol, swiveling the barrels left and right to keep his
front covered.
66A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Get going, sir!” Mannix shouted at him, nodding
her chin toward the cocoon. “Take care of that thing!
We’ve got this!”
Raynor hesitated only a second, then nodded. “Stay
frosty!” he hollered, then fired both guns on full auto
in a semicircle before him. The zerg there were blasted
to bits, and before any others could fill the gap he had
charged through and was past them. Behind him he
heard another grenade go off, and the sound of gunfire
increased. Mannix and the others were covering his
charge. He knew, deep down, that it would probably
mean their deaths. They knew it too. But this was the
job. This was why they’d come.
The creep underfoot clung to his boots and Raynor’s
outright run turned into a stumbling jog, but he still
covered the distance to the cocoon before any other
zerg could come after him. He ejected the spent clips
from each gun and reloaded as he slowed to avoid
crashing into the thing. He targeted the approaching
cerebrate, but it paused and swiveled away, inching
back until it had vanished into the haze of creep
strands that hung in tatters from the ceiling. Now it
was just Raynor and the cocoon.
The thing was easily twice his size, he realized as he
examined it more closely. Its surface was pocked and
pitted, lumpy like thick porridge, and it writhed as he
watched. The thing, that shell itself, was alive! It was
still giving off sparks, and his hair stood on end as he
approached it. But Raynor didn’t back away.
“Kerrigan?” Reaching out, he set one hand upon
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 67
the thing, feeling the jolt as his fingers touched it
through his gloves. He could just make out a shape
within, twisting, limbs flailing against the cocoon’s
pulpy shell. But this couldn’t be Kerrigan—even
though he could see only a hazy outline, the figure
within had too many limbs.
Perhaps it was the touch of his hand against it, or
the sense of his proximity. Perhaps it was simply a mat-
ter of timing. But whatever the reason, as he watched
Raynor saw first one limb lash out, then another, strik-
ing the cocoon near the top—and slicing through, a
wicked spike drilling its way out. The cocoon stretched
as the rest of the spike tried to tear free, its sticky sur-
face pushed to the limit. Another hard thrust came
from within, a second spike appearing, the cocoon’s
upper edge distended farther—and then it burst like a
rotten melon, the skin peeling away and the interior
spurting forth. Without the surface tension the rest of
the skin fell away limp, pooling on the ground, and
Raynor stepped back to avoid suffocating within its
slick folds. Thick, oily liquid followed it down, washing
across his boots and spreading a thin sheet across the
chamber floor. The creep absorbed it and thickened,
growing darker, and its pulse became stronger. But
Raynor didn’t notice that. He was too busy gaping at
the figure that stood revealed as the cocoon—what he
now remembered the zerg calling a Chrysalis—fell
away.
Kerrigan was a tall, powerfully built woman with a
fine, full figure that had sparked the thoughts that had
68 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
led to her calling him a pig when they first met. She
had pale skin turned almost tan by her travels, piercing
green eyes, a lush mouth a little too wide for her heart-
shaped face, and a glorious mane of fiery red hair she
kept tied back when she worked. With her intelli-
gence, her combat skills, and her telepathy, she was a
fascinating, graceful, deadly woman. She was the most
stunning and infuriating woman Raynor had ever met.
This was not Kerrigan. This was some winged hor-
ror from his worst nightmares. It was nothing like the
woman he had loved.
Or, rather, it was. But it wasn’t. Raynor still stared,
his weapons forgotten, the battle behind him forgot-
ten. Nothing mattered, nothing even entered his
head but the woman—the creature—before him. It
had Kerrigan’s stature, her build, even her face. The
skin was wrong, though, a mottled green that looked
slick somehow, like the flesh of a dolphin or a seal. In
many places it was hard and glossy, a protective shell,
though he could see no pattern to the protection’s
placement. The armor extended to spikes over one
shoulder, at the elbows, along the back of her hands,
and along her legs. The eyes were still the same shape
but yellow instead of green, a bright yellow with
strangely shifting pupils. The hair, that wonderful red
hair, was now stalks, somewhere between tentacles
and spikes, sharp and cylindrical but limp around her
face and segmented like an insect’s legs—or a
human’s bones. The part that threw him the most,
however, the part that had made him think it could
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S69
not be her, was what had torn through the Chrysalis,
what he had seen flailing within the cocoon just
before that.
The wings.
This figure had wings, great majestic wings, the
wings of a giant bird or a bat—if that creature were
armored like an insect and had no fur or feathers or
skin for covering. For the wings were nothing more
than pairs of elongated, segmented spikes, great
hooked claws protruding from her back and reaching
down to her knees. Even as he watched they flexed,
their tips dripping ichor like a spider’s fangs, and he
somehow knew they were seeking prey.
This figure was not human. Yet its face, its fea-
tures—they were Kerrigan. Or at least they still bore
traces of the woman she had been. It was Kerrigan if
she had been twisted, remade as a parody of herself.
Kerrigan, transformed. Into zerg.
Now the dreams made sense. It had all been real,
not just a cry but a warning and a message. She had
shown him what was happening to her, bit by bit. He
remembered the welcome again, and that sense of
both loathing and acceptance that followed it. All of
that had come from her.
As if to cement his understanding he heard a voice
now, both in and out of his head. It was so deep it
echoed and so cold it made his teeth ache. And it was
a voice he had heard twice before. Once when it wel-
comed him in his dreams and once when it announced
the “power of that which is yet unborn!” Now that
70A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
voice spoke a third time, its words slithering up and
down along his spine.
“Arise, my daughter,” it cried, and there was no mis-
taking its exultation. “Arise . . . Kerrigan,” it crowed,
and all the zerg in the chamber bowed their heads. All
except one.
“By your will, father,” the figure in the Chrysalis
remains said proudly, head raised high. Her voice was
deeper, more resonant, and it echoed in his ears and in
his head as if each word carried layers of meaning and
emotion, too much for him to catch all at once. The
words rolled across and through him, sending shivers
down his spine. “I live to serve.” She stepped down,
gracefully exiting the bits of shell and fluid, standing
tall in the chamber. Kerrigan had been an imposing
woman, her head up to Raynor’s shoulder. This new
figure could have looked him in the eye, if she had
deigned to notice him. She did not, and he couldn’t
decide if he was relieved or disappointed by that.
Despite her radical transformation, he could still see
Kerrigan’s strength, the vibrancy and purpose that had
attracted him in the first place. In some ways he was
even more drawn to her now, mesmerized by her new
form and the new power he sensed within her. He
knew he should be repulsed, sickened, but he was fas-
cinated instead. A part of him wondered if that was
also part of her change, if this overwhelming attraction
was a chemical or mental assault, but he couldn’t
believe that, especially since she had not even seen
him yet.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S71
What the figure did see, however, was the fight near
the archway. Mannix and a few of the other troopers
were still alive and still battling the zerg, and Raynor
watched as the woman’s brow furrowed and her eyes
blazed with anger.
“Let all who oppose the Overmind feel the wrath of
the Swarm,” she announced, her wings flaring out
behind her, and at her words the zerg increased their
attack, biting and stabbing and slicing with renewed
frenzy. Mannix fell to a vicious blow from a hydralisk,
her head toppling several meters from her body, and
the blow severed another trooper’s arm as well. Others
fell right behind her, and in a moment Raynor was the
only one left alive.
The zerg had not survived unscathed, but they
didn’t seem to notice their losses as the remaining
creatures regrouped and turned back toward the cen-
ter of the chamber, their cerebrate still directing them
from its corner of the chamber.
“Well done, Cerebrate!” that same strange cold
voice boomed again. “What I have wrought this day
shall be the undoing of my enemies!” Then every zerg
turned toward Raynor, and he felt the wave of their
hatred wash over him. “Let not a Terran survive. . . .”
the voice commanded.
Raynor struggled to raise his rifle. Though he knew
the odds were hopeless, he planned to go down fight-
ing. But his rifle wouldn’t move. Glancing down, he
saw a hand on the barrel, a speckled green hand with
bladelike nails effortlessly stopping him from bringing
72 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
the weapon to bear. Looking back up, Raynor found
himself meeting the gaze of the creature from the
Chrysalis. It was a cold stare, the eyes bright but emo-
tionless, and the pupils danced independently, leaving
glittering trails in their wake. It was the look of an
alien, with no trace of the woman he had known.
“Mother of God,” Raynor gasped, unable to stop
himself. “Kerrigan, what have they done to you?”
CHAPTER 5
THE OTHER ZERG SLOWED TO A STOP, SEVERAL
only an arm’s reach away. They froze then, unmov-
ing, and Raynor listened dully to the conversation
taking place around him, numb despite the fact that
his fate hinged upon the outcome.
“Destroy the Terran,” the cerebrate demanded. “The
Overmind commands it.”
“This Terran is mine,” the former Kerrigan stated,
her tone leaving no room for argument. “I will dispose
of him in my own fashion. Leave us.” The other zerg
remained there, not approaching but not retreating,
and she bristled, quite literally, as the spikes that had
been her hair rose above her head and her wings arced
upward, vibrating with her rage. “Leave us!” she
repeated, and the other zerg bowed.
“As you command, o Queen,” the cerebrate acknowl-
edged. It did not move but somehow it seemed to dim,
the pulsing along its sides fading slightly, and Raynor
knew it had focused its attention elsewhere. The lesser
74 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
zerg passed through the arch and vanished from view.
Even the giant maggots had disappeared, Raynor real-
ized as he glanced around. The chamber was completely
empty save for the two of them and the inactive cere-
brate—and the remains of his soldiers here and beyond,
mingled with those zerg they had slain.
With the Swarm out of sight, Raynor stopped trying
to raise his rifle, and she released her grip as well, let-
ting the weapon fall back to his side. He stepped away
to stare at her more easily and she met his gaze calmly,
her hair settling back down around her face, though
the tips angled toward him, looking uncomfortably
like animate weapons. Her wings also dropped back
down to drape around her, but rustled slightly, giving
Raynor the uncomfortable sense that they could act
without her conscious control.
“Sarah,” he asked finally, reaching one hand toward
her face but stopping it just short of touching her, fas-
cinated and repulsed by her altered appearance. “Is
that really you?”
“To an extent,” she replied, the commanding echo
fading from her voice and leaving her sounding more
like the woman he remembered. She looked down at
her hands, turning them this way and that, flexing the
long fingers, extending the vicious claws. The tips of
her wings echoed the movement. “I’m far more than I
once was, Jim.” At the sound of his name he started,
and she glanced back up at him, her hands clenching
into fists. “You shouldn’t have come here,” she warned
him. He thought he heard sorrow, perhaps even pity,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 75
in her voice, and that shook him. Sorrow she’d known
in plenty, but Kerrigan hadn’t been one for pity.
Her words also confused him. He shouldn’t have
come? “But the dreams,” he argued. “I dreamed you
were still alive . . . that somehow . . . you were calling
to me.” Had he been wrong? Had this all been a mis-
take? A trick of his own mind? But how could he have
known what was happening to her then? How could
he have heard that voice inside his head if not through
her? She must have been sending those dreams!
“I was,” she admitted. She seemed to dwindle
slightly, the patches on her skin fading, the wings fold-
ing in upon themselves, and her hair turning softer
and more pliant, until she resembled the Kerrigan of
old once more. She turned her face from him, but he
could hear the pain in her voice and imagine the look
upon her face. It was the same face he’d imagined
when she had called to him for help back on Tarsonis,
when Mengsk had left her to die. “While I was in the
Chrysalis,” she explained, “I instinctively reached out
to you and Arcturus telepathically. Apparently, Arc-
turus sent Duke here to reclaim me. . . .” Raynor could
hear the bitterness behind that last remark, and in the
soft bark of laughter that followed.
“Yeah, he’s a little busy building an empire,” he said,
“so he sent his lapdog to stand in.” He laughed. “You
shoulda seen his face when I showed up.”
She smiled, a sad smile but a familiar one. “I can
imagine.”
“I’m here now, though,” Raynor pointed out. “And
76A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
so are you. We can get you outta here, Kerrigan. We can
get you someplace safe.” We can undo what they did to
you, he wanted to say, but couldn’t. Not that he needed
to—Kerrigan had been able to answer his thoughts
even before, and now she seemed far more powerful.
She was already shaking her head, and the mottling was
resurfacing, as if reflecting the turmoil within.
“But that was then, Jim,” she told him, turning to face
him again. “I’m one of the zerg now. And I like what I
am.” She raised her arms high, the shell-like spots shift-
ing across her limbs and torso as she moved, creating a
moving layer of protection. Her hair rose and reached
for the roof as well, yearning upward, and her wings
rose to their full extension, flaring out behind her. Even
in the dim light of the creep, he could see her eyes flash-
ing. “You can’t imagine how this feels . . . ,” she told him
finally, lowering her arms again, and somehow he
knew she was talking about more than just the physical
changes. The wings remained up, as if determined to
remind him how much she had changed.
“I am one with the zerg now,” she said, smiling. “It
is wonderful, Jimmy. It envelops me. It makes me
whole. I can never be alone again.”
“They called you a queen,” Raynor said, remember-
ing the cerebrate’s comment as he left, and her smile
grew wider.
“Yes, I am. The Queen of Blades.” She raised her
right hand, fingers spread wide, and the blades sprout-
ing from her fingertips rippled in response. So did the
spikes on her head and the wings at her back.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 77
“Guess you’re not gonna give up bein’ royalty,” he
said, shaking his head. She didn’t bother to reply; she
didn’t need to. He could read her reply in her smile.
“So what?” Raynor asked, backing a step away and
shifting the grip on his rifle in case he needed to raise
it suddenly. “Are you goin’ to kill me now, darlin’?”
“It is certainly within my power,” she told him, and he
knew she was right. Even before her transformation
Kerrigan had been the deadliest fighter he’d ever seen.
Her skill with a gun was amazing, but her prowess with
knives was nothing short of phenomenal. He could only
guess what she could do now with the blades part of her
own body and her stature and speed enhanced by the
change. Mike had told him once about Kerrigan’s killing
an entire roomful of soldiers single-handedly, in a mat-
ter of minutes, without ever being touched. She proba-
bly could have handled all the troopers by the archway
on her own now. A part of him wanted to see her in
action, to admire her new talents. The rest of him
wanted to run screaming. Instead he stood very still and
waited to see what she decided. The ball was definitely
in her court.
Kerrigan flexed her finger-blades again, waving
them menacingly in his direction, and for an instant
Raynor thought he was dead. She was still smiling that
sad smile from her past, however, and she did not
move to close the distance between them. “But you’re
not a threat to me, Jim,” she told him finally, stepping
away and widening the gap. “Be smart,” she warned
him, that echo creeping back into her voice. “Leave
78A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
here now, and never seek to confront the zerg again.”
That last statement was issued like a command, and he
felt the force of her words and of her personality bear-
ing down on him, compelling him to submit.
“Doesn’t look like I have much choice,” he mut-
tered, hoping that would be enough to placate her. For
a moment they stood there, both armed but neither
attacking, the tension almost visible between them,
like a flicker of light. Then the moment passed and
Kerrigan turned, dismissing him utterly.
For a second he considered raising the rifle after all,
shooting her from behind. At this range he couldn’t
miss, and for all her powers and organic armor and
mottled skin and scary hair, a clipful of iron spikes
would still finish her. He was sure of it. Well, almost
sure.
But he never got the chance to test that theory. As
Kerrigan turned away her skin paled, then became
transparent. In an eyeblink she had vanished com-
pletely, fading from the edges in until finally nothing
remained. Raynor was alone.
Kerrigan was still nearby, he knew. She had gone
invisible, just as she had done when she’d been a
Ghost. He’d thought the process required a specialized
suit of combat armor. Apparently he’d been wrong.
Or perhaps the Queen of Blades simply no longer
required such props.
The Queen of Blades. The name sent a chill racing
through him. By adopting that title, she had made it
clear that the transformation had been a full success.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 79
Sarah Kerrigan was gone. Only the Queen of Blades
remained. And she was not inclined to be friendly.
Still, she had let him live, and Raynor certainly
wasn’t complaining about that.
Holstering his pistol but keeping the rifle ready, he
staggered back to the archway and through it, forcing
himself to examine the remains of his team as he
passed them. They’d earned the right to hold his gaze,
and it would be insulting for him to look away just
because it made him uncomfortable. He made sure he
knew each face, each name, before turning away and
passing through the arch again. There were more
troopers on the far side, most of them stretched out on
the floor. But a few still stood, leaning against the tun-
nel walls, and these gave a ragged cheer when he
appeared.
“Sir!” It was Cavez, bandaged and battered but still
alive. The tall young man limped over to Raynor as he
carefully stepped through the pile of bodies littering
the ground. “Are you all right?”
“I’ll live,” Raynor admitted, embarrassed to realize
that he had not been wounded beyond a few scrapes
and cuts. Cavez was far worse off, but here was the
trooper asking about his health instead of the other
way around. Still, he knew it was more than just his
wound status that Cavez was checking on. The trooper
wanted to know whether Raynor was prepared to take
charge again.
I’m not fit to lead, Raynor thought as he studied the
handful of survivors. It’s my fault you’re hurt, my fault
80 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
your friends are dead, my fault we’re here. I dragged
us across the galaxy and sacrificed a hundred or more
men just to chase down a woman who doesn’t even
want me around. Put that way it sounded ridiculous,
and he had to stop himself from laughing—he could
feel the laughter bubbling up inside, fueled by near-
hysteria, and he knew that if he started laughing he
might not stop. Instead he forced himself to concen-
trate. Cavez was hurt, as were most of the others. He
needed to get them to a medic, and that meant getting
topside again.
“Right,” he called out, “find a partner and form up!
We’ve got to retrace our steps as best we can. There
might be faster ways out, so keep your eyes peeled for
those, too. Let’s go.”
He motioned Cavez to fall in with him and together
they marched back down the corridor, checking the
sides and up above for any sign of the zerg. But they
saw only rock and bits of creep. Whatever zerg had
survived the recent battle were gone. Raynor tried not
to think about where they might be now.
It took hours for the battered band to reach the sur-
face. They saw no zerg along the way but still had
to contend with confounding directions, irregular pas-
sages, unstable tunnels, boiling magma pits, and other
dangers. Most of the surviving troopers were wounded,
no one not well enough to walk back but several not fit
enough to be of much use after so much hiking, and
they moved slowly even in the wide, straight tunnels.
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S81
Raynor had one of the men out front as a scout and
another in back as a rear guard, the two soldiers
instructed to stay as far away from the rest as was safe,
as quiet as possible, and as observant as anything. Nei-
ther of them called in any problems, not that he’d
expected any. Kerrigan—he still couldn’t manage to call
her “the Queen of Blades,” even to himself—had been
awakened now as part of some larger plan, judging
from what that voice had said. The zerg they’d seen so
far on Char were probably all scurrying to be part of
whatever she intended. That would definitely keep
them all busy while Raynor and his people escaped onto
the surface once more. He’d figure out their next move
once they were all back aboveground where they
belonged. “If man was meant to live in caves,” he mut-
tered, “he’d have much thicker skin, much weaker
eyes, a thick fur coat, and a serious slouch. That’s why
we invented lifts, lights, and lasers.”
“What was that, sir?” the nearest trooper asked, tilt-
ing a bandaged head in his direction.
“Nothin’, son,” Raynor replied. “Nothin’ at all.”
They followed the same path back that they’d taken
down, at least as far as they could. In several places they
had to deviate—at one point a cave-in had apparently
occurred after they’d left, perhaps triggered by the fight-
ing down below, and a narrow path was sealed tight
with rubble, the air around it thick with dust. A tunnel
they’d used before was still there, but whereas it had
been a steep slope down, now it was a steep climb up,
with nothing but glass-slick walls on either side, and
82 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Raynor didn’t think any of them could make that trip in
their current state, including him. Both times they
scouted the area and eventually found an alternate
route that took them away from their original entrance
point but kept them heading upward. That was the
most important thing, Raynor felt; to keep moving up,
toward the surface and the sky and the ships. Popping
up a mile away from their starting point wouldn’t mat-
ter as long as they did eventually pop back up. The idea
of staying down here forever was far too depressing to
consider for very long, and he shoved the thought away
every time it surfaced.
Finally Cavez, who had taken the role of lead scout,
came running back down a corridor, a big grin plas-
tered across his dirty, blood-smeared face. “I can see
daylight, sir!” he announced happily, and the others
cheered and laughed and shouted. A few even cried,
and no one razzed them for it.
“Good man,” Raynor said, blinking back tears him-
self. “Lead the way.” He followed close behind the
young trooper, and sure enough he soon stood at the
base of a short, wide chute that showed sunlight at the
top. The distance was too far to jump but they gave
one of the troopers, a thick-bodied man named Non, a
boost up into the chute. He pressed his back against
one wall and thrust his legs straight out in front of him,
his feet solidly against the wall opposite. Then, his
arms spread wide for balance, he began walking his
way slowly up the chute. It took half an hour, but
eventually he was able to peek over the rim.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S83
“All clear, sir,” he called back down, and everyone
breathed a sigh of relief. Raynor had been afraid of
another Ayers tragedy and was glad this time was dif-
ferent.
“Over the edge, soldier,” he called up. “This is no time
for sightseeing.” Non chuckled, saluted, and shoved hard
with his back and legs, swinging his arms up and forward
at the same time. His back left the wall just as his hands
caught the opposing lip, and he levered himself over the
edge and out of the chute altogether. A moment later his
face reappeared, and he dropped a rope to the others
waiting below. Raynor handed it to Cavez, who was fast
and light, and the trooper walked up it quickly until Non
was able to reach down and help him the rest of the way.
Then the two of them began hauling everyone else up
out of the tunnels.
When it was finally his turn Raynor tried his best to
help them, bracing himself against the chute wall with
his back and his feet, but he was exhausted and still a bit
numb and finally he gave up and let them pull him up,
doing little to aid their efforts. At last one of the troop-
ers, Ling, reached down and clasped his hand, and
Raynor used the added leverage to pull himself over the
chute’s lip and back onto solid ground. He collapsed,
ignoring the ash that rose about him and turned him
chalk-white from its debris, and simply lay there for a
moment, staring up at the sky. Then the day’s events
caught up with him and, without intending it, he closed
his eyes.
CHAPTER 6
THIS TIME THE DREAM WAS DIFFERENT, IF DREAM
it was. He was standing in a thick, rough-walled tun-
nel, able to see the stone walls and floor clearly despite
the lack of light. He could feel the rock beneath his
bare feet, taste the hint of sulfur in the air, scent a tan-
talizing trace of blood and flesh in the still, stale air. His
senses were alive, his body tingling with energy. He
felt amazing.
The zerg were all around him, as they had been in so
many of his dreams, but they weren’t frightening any-
more. They had shrunk, for one thing, or he had
grown—either way, the creatures no longer towered
above him but were at eye level or lower. They were not
crowding him, either, merely standing nearby. And the
air of unfamiliarity, of strangeness, of distance, had
faded, only a hint remaining around the edges. Before
these had been monsters, horrifying creatures whose
very forms he could not comprehend, let alone their
minds and motives. Now he understood them all too
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S85
easily, and that lack of mystery stripped away his fear.
How could he be afraid of these creatures when he
knew their names and could speak to them as an equal
or even a superior?
In fact, he was speaking to them now, he realized.
But the words pouring from his mouth were not in fact
his. They were Kerrigan’s.
She was addressing the enormous sluglike creature,
the one that resembled a flesh-cannon, the cerebrate.
“Cerebrate,” she told him, “you watched over me dur-
ing my ‘incubation,’ and I am grateful to you.” It flut-
tered slightly, and he was surprised to realize it was
pleased and proud. It had never occurred to him that
zerg might possess such emotions, and a part of his
mind wondered if he was simply assigning human traits
in an effort to understand them better. That felt right,
and he suddenly realized he was not the only one hav-
ing this thought. Kerrigan had thought much the same
thing and reached the same conclusion. The mind
sought to apply familiar patterns when facing unfamil-
iar events or beings, and despite her recent transforma-
tion a large portion of Kerrigan’s mind was still human.
“It is my wish that you continue your vigil,” she was
saying now, “so that I might strengthen my powers to
better aid the Swarm.”
No! Raynor wanted to shout. Don’t play along with
them! You’re not one of them! Don’t help them,
they’re the enemy! He struggled to beat his hands
against his head, to tug at his hair, to do something,
anything, to derail those thoughts of duty and involve-
86 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
ment. But unlike in the other dreams, he was not in
control here, not even of his own body. He was merely
an observer, with no power to affect Kerrigan’s actions
or the events that flowed from them.
He had missed the last thing she said while he was
mentally flailing, and now the second cerebrate, the
one that had stayed near her Chrysalis during her
emergence, was speaking. It horrified Raynor that he
could tell the creatures apart so easily.
“Though you be the favored servant of the Over-
mind,” this cerebrate snapped, and Raynor could hear
the anger in its voice, “you would do well to remember
that you are just a servant. You know of our grand mis-
sion, Kerrigan. Would you put your personal whims
before the will of the Overmind?”
The other zerg backed away, feeling the tension
stretched between their two commanders and antici-
pating a fight. Raynor expected it as well, knowing Ker-
rigan’s temper better than most, and so he was surprised
when she did not attack the cerebrate, which appeared
to have no physical defenses. Instead she simply
straightened and gave him a single hard, haughty
glance. Her bone-wings stirred, however, and flexed
toward the cerebrate, eager to carve the slug to shreds.
Raynor could sense Kerrigan’s response to that as well:
part horror that a part of her new body could be so dis-
obedient and willful, and part delight that her new form
possessed such protective instincts of its own.
“Do not cross me, Zasz,” she warned him, chin high,
eyes narrowed. “I will do as I see fit.” Then deliber-
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 87
ately, insultingly, she turned her back on him. “And
not you or any other cerebrate shall stand in my way.”
Zasz bristled at her tone and her clear snub. The
organic cannon body tensed and its inner light began
pulsing more rapidly until the entire body was aglow
with quick flashes of light. Several of the surrounding
zerg edged closer, chittering their leader’s rage, claws
and spines and scythes raised to strike on the cere-
brate’s behalf. The fool was going to attack! Raynor
could feel it, and a surge of excitement shot through
him, a surge he knew immediately was not his own.
Kerrigan had known what she was doing when she
spoke. She had deliberately pushed the cerebrate
beyond his breaking point. She wanted Zasz to order
an attack so she could destroy him and claim his brood
as her own. And she would destroy him, Raynor knew.
The cerebrate was a leader, a strategist, not a fighter.
Kerrigan was both, especially in this new incarnation.
The cerebrate was immobile, vulnerable, and relied
upon its brood to fight for it, while Kerrigan could out-
fight any of them. She would carve her way through
the other zerg and then destroy Zasz himself.
But before the cerebrate’s brood could attack a voice
cut across them all, paralyzing them with its deep tim-
bre and rolling pronunciation, a wave of sound that
washed over them and left them stunned and speech-
less. It was a voice Raynor had heard before, though he
had fervently hoped not to hear it again.
“Let her go, Zasz,” the voice intoned. “The greatness
of her spirit has been left to her that the Swarm might
88A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
benefit from her fierce example. Fear not her designs,
for she is bound to me as intimately as any cerebrate.”
The voice chuckled, the sound leaving Raynor feeling
dirty somehow, as if it demonstrated a humor beyond
his ability to understand and one that found amuse-
ment with concepts and actions he would find repug-
nant. “Truly,” it explained, “no zerg can stray from my
will, for all that you are lies wholly within me. Kerri-
gan is free to do as she desires.” The voice faded, leav-
ing Raynor weak in the knees and short of breath, and
he knew he was not the only one reacting so strongly.
Kerrigan had been overwhelmed by the voice as well,
and so had Zasz and the others.
The cerebrate quickly untensed. Its brood members
backed away as well, lowering their limbs to show
they meant no more harm.
“By your will, Overmind,” he acknowledged. Raynor
knew the creature had hoped for a different decision,
but he also knew that they would not have to worry
about this cerebrate, unless and until the situation
changed. No zerg would dare stand against the Over-
mind’s orders, he realized. Until that voice spoke, Zasz
had been determined to convince Kerrigan to do things
his way, by force if necessary. Now the Overmind had
instructed otherwise, and the cerebrate would carry out
those directives to the best of its ability.
“Cerebrate,” Zasz said, apparently to the second cer-
ebrate. “You must see that she comes to no harm. My
brood will remain behind to protect the incubation
chamber from further desecration.”
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 89
“My brood will die to protect her,” the other cere-
brate replied.
“As it should,” Kerrigan stated simply.
Raynor felt her turn and walk away, taking it for
granted that the second cerebrate’s brood would fol-
low. And they did. Raynor knew now, through Kerri-
gan’s thoughts, that the cerebrates themselves did not
travel—they were too large and bulky to move.
Instead they led their troops mentally, particularly
through their overlords. Thus both of these cerebrates
could remain in the incubation chamber, but Zasz
would be focused upon events here while the other
cerebrate’s mind would be following the activities of its
brood, which would accompany Kerrigan.
Another cerebrate sat in one corner of the chamber.
Raynor had not noticed it there before; it had somehow
masked its presence before this. Now he saw it plainly,
however, and somehow knew that this cerebrate was
older and more powerful even than Zasz. Indeed, this
third cerebrate, Daggoth, was the Overmind’s right
hand. Daggoth’s brood was clustered about it, and now
several hydralisks detached themselves from this cluster
and approached Kerrigan. “Cerebrate, take these, the
deadliest of my minions,” said Daggoth. “They shall aid
you in your search.”
“They shall be put to good use,” Kerrigan assured
him, and the zerg fell in with the others behind her.
Daggoth retreated mentally, intent upon his own
tasks, and Zasz had gone silent, leaving only Kerrigan
and her new followers.
90A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“We must attack at once,” she told the second cere-
brate. It occurred to Raynor that this one had no name,
and as soon as he thought it he knew why. Among the
zerg, names were a matter of recognition, only given
to those who had served the Overmind long and faith-
fully. Both Zasz and Daggoth had won that honor. This
cerebrate was young and had not yet distinguished
itself. Kerrigan, of course, was a special case, which
might explain Zasz’s resentment—she had retained
her original name and had been given another upon
her rebirth. But she was still speaking to the cerebrate,
and Raynor struggled to focus on her words. “Once I
have—”
“Sir?”
It took Raynor a moment to separate himself from
the last vestiges of the dream, to realize that he was not
stalking through an underground chamber with a zerg
brood anymore but lying upon the planet’s surface.
Cavez was leaning over him.
“Sir, everyone is clear,” the trooper reported.
Raynor nodded and accepted the younger man’s hand
up, shaking his head both to disperse the ash that
clung to his hair and rebreather and to clear the
dream-traces from his mind. What had Kerrigan been
about to say? he wondered. Where was she attacking?
Much as he hated the dreams, hated this last one par-
ticularly because it showed him how comfortable Ker-
rigan was in her new role, he wished Cavez had waited
an instant longer to wake him. That lost information
might prove immensely important.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 91
Too late to do anything about it now, however.
Brushing the more stubborn bits of ash from his gog-
gle lenses, he glanced around and took stock of their
situation. Twenty-three soldiers. That was all he had
left of the three hundred or so who had followed him
down. And many of the survivors were wounded,
some badly. They had weapons and plenty of ammo—
several of the more experienced troopers had been
alert enough to scavenge clips from the bodies of their
fallen friends. No food to speak of, of course; they
hadn’t planned to be down here that long. Everyone
carried a canteen of water and a few emergency
rations, but most of that had been consumed on the
trek down, or given to the injured to give them
strength for the return march.
“Back to the shuttles,” he announced finally, patting
one soldier’s shoulder where she sat, head between
her raised knees, arms limp at her sides. “Let’s go,
trooper,” he told her as gently as he could. “Plenty of
time to rest when we’re back off this rock.” He gave
her a hand up.
That was it then, he admitted to himself as they
gathered their gear, helped the injured to their feet,
and began walking toward the shuttle beacons indi-
cated on their comm units. The mission was over. He
had failed. He’d come here to find Kerrigan, which he
had, and to save her, which he couldn’t. She didn’t
want to be saved, and even if he’d had the means to
undo whatever the zerg had done to her, he didn’t
have the manpower to take her from them. Hell, he
92 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
wasn’t sure Mengsk did, even with the Dominion at
his beck and call. The only thing he could do now was
get the hell out of Dodge, mourn Kerrigan, and move
on. And hope to hell she didn’t come after him.
They were a long way from the shuttles, both
because they’d walked a good distance before finding
the chute down and because they’d wound up taking a
different route back to the surface. Fortunately this part
of Char was easy going, only a few low hills and shallow
valleys, and they plotted a direct line back to the shut-
tles from their current location. Raynor led the way,
with Cavez and Non right behind him, and the troopers
settled into their pace quickly, falling into the lockstep
rhythm of a forced march. Raynor matched it as well,
and the steady beat and monotonous scenery soon
lulled him into a half-sleep, leaving him still awake
enough to walk but not really conscious.
Apparently, that was enough to trigger the dreams
again.
He was on a ship now, and for a second he thought
this was just a normal dream, or even a memory of
something. Then a shadow moved in the corner of his
vision and he saw a limb, long and sinewy, brush the
corridor wall. The limb ended in a massive scythe of
jagged bone, and he knew at once that he was back in
Kerrigan’s head. There were zerg beside her, and now
he realized he could hear more of them behind,
rustling and scraping and hissing as they moved down
the steel-gray hall.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S93
The zerg were inside a ship somewhere.
How? was his first thought. Zerg couldn’t operate
vessels—they traveled through some sort of organic
space tunnel; one of Mengsk’s men had tried to explain
it to him once, but all he’d gotten was that they could
open warps between worlds without using any tech.
And, judging from most of the zerg he’d seen, they
wouldn’t have the manual dexterity to operate a Terran
ship anyway. Normally the zerg left ships alone, target-
ing the people, or they sent their massive mutalisks and
tiny, explosive scourge up to attack the vessels from the
outside. How could they be in one now? And it was def-
initely a Terran ship. He recognized the standard plastic
wall panels, the utilitarian gray carpet, the recessed
lighting along the juncture between walls and ceiling.
He’d spent far too much time on ships like this in the
past year.
And, it occurred to him, of course Kerrigan would
be able to operate a ship. Which meant the zerg could
now as well.
Why? was the second question that popped into his
head. If they could travel in space unaided, why would
the Swarm want a ship at all? What were they doing
there? But then he remembered the last words he’d
heard Kerrigan speak in his previous dream. “We must
attack at once,” she’d said. Did the attack have some-
thing to do with a Terran ship? And whose ship was it?
His were in orbit, he knew, but so were Duke’s. Despite
a slight pang of guilt, he hoped it was one of Duke’s
ships she had invaded. Maybe, if he was really lucky, it
94A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
was the Norad III herself. Let the old bastard deal with
her face-to-face!
As Kerrigan moved farther along the hall, however,
Raynor noticed more details, and his heart sank. The
blank, brushed metal walls, the dull carpet covering
the floor, the recessed lighting, everything functional
but not quite bare-bones military—this wasn’t a war-
ship. It definitely wasn’t the Hyperion, but it wasn’t the
Norad III either, or one of the carriers. It could be one
of his smaller ships, or Duke’s science ship or cargo
ship. Then a handful of people emerged from a door up
ahead and Raynor knew he’d been right. These were
civilians, techies and researchers. Regardless of whom
they worked for, they were defenseless against the zerg
now racing down the corridor toward them.
One woman screamed as she looked up and spotted
the aliens for the first time. She fell, her legs giving
way from shock, and just lay there sobbing as they
approached. A hydralisk made quick work of her, and
the sobbing stopped abruptly. Another woman had
backed away, clawing at the door she had just exited,
so panicked she forgot how to use the door panel. A
zerg speared her from behind, his claw passing
through her chest and denting the door. Then it shook
its arm and her body was tossed aside, blood spraying
the halls and everyone present. Several drops struck
Kerrigan and she brushed them away with one hand,
then absently licked her fingers.
Two of the civilians, a man and a woman, had been
near the back of the group and had not yet been
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 95
attacked. The man saw Kerrigan’s motion and gasped,
his eyes traveling up and down her form and his skin
paling as the sight registered fully.
“She’s infested!” he gasped. He threw an arm up in
front of the woman, a ludicrous gesture given the zerg
rapidly surrounding them. “Stay away from her!” he
shouted, though whether it was a plea to the approach-
ing aliens or a warning to the woman Raynor couldn’t
tell.
“Call for help!” the woman cried, and hearing her
shook the man from his daze. He punched a button on
the door panel, the Emergency Call button, and blue
lights began flashing all along the corridor. A siren
sounded as well, and now more people appeared in
the hall from other doors and intersections, screaming
and cursing as they saw the zerg. The man’s heroism
cost him his life, a zerg tearing his head from his shoul-
ders, and the woman followed, her chest split in half
and her organs torn free before the scream had died on
her lips.
Raynor was forced to watch, unable to wake up or
turn away, as the zerg continued their march through
the ship, slaughtering everyone in their path. A squad
of armed soldiers appeared finally, still buckling on
their armor, and Raynor was only a little cheered to
notice the Terran Dominion insignia. Whatever Kerri-
gan was up to, she had invaded one of Duke’s ships.
“You’ll never make it out of here alive, bitch!” one
of the troopers shouted, firing his gauss rifle on full
auto into the approaching brood. Several zerg were
96 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
hit, and two fell with steel spikes through their throat
and eyes.
“See?” another trooper bellowed, laughing as he
swung his weapon around to fire upon them. “They
ain’t so tough!” He let loose a barrage and more zerg
died. “These critters bleed just like anybody else!” he
shouted, and several of his comrades cheered.
Kerrigan had not been hit, however. A chill raced
up his spine as he saw why. One of the troopers aimed
at her and fired, a cluster of iron spikes racing toward
her. She raised one hand and the spikes simply
stopped in midair, slamming to a quivering halt as if
they’d run into a wall. A second gesture and the
spikes spun about and leaped toward the trooper,
punching him into a wall from the impact. The spikes
pierced not only the man but the wall behind him,
and his body was left hanging there as the rifle slipped
from his dead hands.
Kerrigan stalked forward, blocking and sometimes
reversing the attacks aimed at her. Behind her zerg
fell, but Raynor knew she didn’t care. They were
expendable. Only she mattered—her and her mission
here.
One of the troopers spotted her through the zerg
swarming around and past her. “We got company!”
he shouted, then gasped as he saw her more clearly.
He started to back away, and his eyes bulged as he
stopped, frozen in place. Kerrigan held him there,
paralyzed, as she stepped up behind him and rammed
her finger-blades through his back, slicing his spine to
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S97
ribbons. Before his body had toppled she was gone
again, moving to the next man, her wings writhing
with impatience, every barb angling toward her next
target. A single glance fried that trooper’s mind, and
she was already looking for a third as he swayed and
fell, blood leaking from his eyes and ears.
It took mere seconds for Kerrigan to move through
the opposition, and even from behind her eyes
Raynor had trouble following her movements. He had
always known, from the moment he first saw her,
that she was fast and deadly. His experiences with her
in the field had verified that, and Mike had told him
about the incident on Antiga Prime, when she had
dispatched an entire room of armed men with noth-
ing but a knife and a pistol. She was even faster now,
however, and she no longer needed any weapons but
the body the zerg had given her and the mind-powers
she had always possessed but had been unwilling or
unable to use. Men died quickly, too fast to scream,
and then the corridor was clear of her foes again and
the remaining brood members were climbing over the
bodies.
“This way,” Kerrigan commanded, turning toward
a stairwell, and the zerg followed her obediently.
Several more people died, both civilians and soldiers,
as she descended the narrow metal stairs—many of
the zerg had been forced to wait above, unable to
navigate the tight space, and judging by the sounds
they were killing anyone who ventured too close.
Kerrigan did not pause or deviate but headed to the
98A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
very bottom and then down a long, narrow, unre-
markable gray hall. She obviously knew where she
was going. It was definitely a science vessel she was
on, not a cargo ship—it was too small for cargo. But
why would she go after a ship like this? Why not take
out the Norad III instead? That was definitely the big-
ger threat.
“Here,” she said finally, stopping at the heavy blast-
door at the far end. The keypad lock was much more
complicated than any of the others on the ship, and
Raynor realized that he had never seen this door
before. Nor did he know what lay beyond it. But Ker-
rigan clearly did.
She didn’t bother trying the lock. Instead she grasped
the handle with one hand, plunged the fingers of her
other into the thin seam between the door and the wall,
braced herself with her feet wide apart, and twisted
from the waist. The door groaned, shuddered, and tore
loose, and she tossed it aside. The room beyond was
dark and smelled of stale air, but small lights blinked
somewhere within, and Kerrigan smiled.
“Good,” she said. “What I seek is within. Soon—”
Beep.
“What the f—?”
The beep woke Raynor from his walking slumber, as
did the curse that followed. The sound had come from
his comm unit, though he realized hazily that he had
heard it echoed behind him as well. The curse had
been from Non.
Glancing at his wrist, he saw the screen still dis-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 99
playing the terrain grid he’d selected at the start of
their march, their path traced along it and ending at—
nothing.
The dot that should have been there was gone.
The dot that marked the location of the shuttle’s
beacon.
“Sir,” Cavez started, “we just—”
“I know, I know!” Raynor snapped, still staring at
his screen. What had happened? Where was the bea-
con? For that matter, where were the beacons for the
other shuttles, which had been displayed as well, but
dimmed, to distinguish them from the Hyperion’s?
Glancing behind him, he saw everyone looking at
their wrists, shaking them, pushing buttons. Everyone’s
displays were the same, all equally blank. A quick check
confirmed that the comm unit had just refreshed its
information, as it did periodically. The beacons had
shown clearly before, but when it scanned for them this
time they were gone. Something had happened in
between. Something to the shuttles.
The troopers had covered most of the distance back
already, and Raynor charged up the hill before him,
glancing at his screen to confirm what he had already
seen. The shuttles were just over this rise. Panting
from the exertion, using his hands to wave away the
ash that rose about him, he reached the top of the hill
and stared down into the valley below. The valley
where they had left the shuttles.
The valley that was empty save several wide swathes
where the ash had been scattered or burned away, dark
100A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
rock and dull soil showing through. That, and the bod-
ies he saw crumpled here and there near those swathes.
“No!” he shouted, barreling down the hill, rifle
ready though he could already tell he wouldn’t need it.
Whatever had happened here was long over. The shut-
tles were gone.
CHAPTER 7
“DEAD, SIR,” SAID ONE TROOPER, THE YOUNG
woman he had helped up before, moving away from
the body she had been examining. “Zerg, looks like.”
“Same here,” a second soldier confirmed, straight-
ening up from another body. Raynor nodded. It was
the same with the body he’d examined, a man named
Sanchez who’d piloted the Hyperion’s shuttle. Sanchez
had been torn to shreds, and the damage certainly
matched what Raynor had seen from the zerg—hell, it
matched what he’d witnessed just hours ago in the
tunnels.
The zerg had clearly been here. And they had killed
all his shuttle pilots and taken his shuttles. But why?
The zerg had never needed shuttles before—their
overlords could move through space unaided. Why
would they want his shuttles?
His comm unit beeped again, registering an incom-
ing signal, and Raynor accepted it and opened the
channel, still glancing around, his mind still struggling
102 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
with what had happened here. The voice that reached
him quickly demanded his full attention, however.
“Mayday, Mayday!” It was a woman’s voice and
didn’t sound familiar. “Can anyone hear this?”
He was about to reply when another voice cut in.
“Roger that,” it answered, and Raynor recognized
Duke’s gravelly snarl. “This is the Norad III. Go ahead.”
He was surprised to hear Duke answering a call per-
sonally, and decided to eavesdrop as long as he could.
Perhaps he’d learn something useful. Like maybe what
had happened to his shuttles.
“Sir!” Raynor could hear the relief in her voice.
“Sandler, sir, from the Amerigo. We’re under attack, sir!”
“Who’s firing on you?” Duke demanded, and
Raynor knew the general had assumed he was behind
this. Which was fair—if their situations had been
reversed he would have accused the vindictive little
ass in a heartbeat.
“It’s not an outside attack, sir,” Sandler replied
quickly. “It’s an invasion. They’re on the ship!” Raynor
thought he could hear gunfire behind her, and screams.
“Who’s on the ship, Captain?” Duke demanded.
“Who are you fighting?”
“Zerg, sir,” she said. “It’s the zerg! They’re here!” At
first Raynor thought the last statement was meant just
to reiterate the Amerigo’s plight, but then he heard
more gunfire, followed by a loud scream, a short hiss,
and then silence.
“Sandler? Sandler!” Duke shouted. There was no
reply. Raynor checked his comm and saw that the line
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S103
was still open, the channel active. But no one responded.
“Damn!” He turned to Cavez, about to say something,
when his comm beeped again. It was a different call, and
this time it was one of his own ships.
“Sir, this is Warriton on the Chandler. We’re being
attacked by zerg, sir—-from inside the ship!”
Another call followed right behind it. “Sir, Lieu-
tenant Physon reporting from the Harper. We’ve been
breached! The captain is down, and we’re taking
heavy casualties!”
As a fourth caller, Ragay from Duke’s carrier ship
Trillium, called to report the same conditions, Raynor
finally realized what had happened. The zerg had
taken his shuttles, and probably any Duke had sent
down as well, but not because they needed them for
travel. Travel wasn’t the point. The shuttles gave them
access to ships, which meant the zerg could get inside
easily and then kill everyone onboard. Unlike Terran
boarding parties, the zerg weren’t worried about their
own safety, or about keeping the ship intact—they
would survive even if the ships crashed. Not that the
Swarm cared about losing a few soldiers. It was the
perfect way to bypass all defenses, especially since Ker-
rigan could steal the access codes from the shuttle
pilots’ minds before killing them. She’d invaded
Duke’s ships the same way, using his shuttles or more
of Raynor’s, and had probably reached out mentally to
get the codes from someone on each ship as the shut-
tles were about to dock. Which meant the zerg were
infiltrating each of his and Duke’s ships right now.
104 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Including the Hyperion.
Quickly he punched in the codes for his command
ship.
“Matt!” he shouted as soon as the channel opened.
“Matt, can you read me?”
“Sir?” Horner sounded the same as ever, and Raynor
breathed a sigh of relief. His second wouldn’t sound so
calm if there were fighting taking place onboard.
“Listen, Matt, there’s not much time,” he said
quickly. “The zerg are about to attack. Get everyone
ready. And get people to the lifeboats—you may need
them. I want you to—”
“What do you mean, sir?” Horner interrupted. “We
haven’t seen anything on the scopes except the shut-
tles returning. No sign of zerg at all. But we can talk
about this in person when you get up here.”
“When I—?” Raynor closed his eyes. For once the
dreams did not come. “Matt, where is my shuttle
now?”
“About to dock, sir.” He could hear Horner’s confu-
sion. “But you know that already.”
“No, I don’t,” Raynor explained slowly. “I’m not on
that shuttle. Listen to me, Matt. Lock down the shut-
tle. Seal the shuttle bay, lock it all down, don’t let any-
one in or out.”
“But sir, I—all right.” Though he obviously didn’t
understand, Horner obeyed as always. Raynor heard
the sound of typing, then a small “Hunh.” “That’s
odd,” Horner said finally.
“What? What’s wrong?”
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 105
“There’s an override,” Horner told him, still typing.
“I can’t lock it down. It’s your code, sir. What’s going
on?”
Raynor cursed, wishing there were something he
could do. But there wasn’t. He was trapped here on
Char while the zerg swarmed through his ships, and
now they were about to take the Hyperion as well.
“Can you override the override?” he asked.
“No sir,” came the reply. “That would defeat the
purpose.” Despite the situation Horner chuckled at the
thought, and the sound tore at Raynor. He was just a
kid!
“There’s got to be some way to stop them!” he
demanded. He pictured the Hyperion’s layout and
cursed Mengsk’s ego. Those wide, impressive stairways
didn’t have any doors on them, no way to seal off the
levels. The zerg would have free rein once they exited
the shuttle bay. “Whatever you do, don’t let that shut-
tle dock!”
“Well,” Horner started, then hesitated. Obviously
he’d thought of something but didn’t want to say
what. He still sounded calm, a lot calmer than Raynor,
though from the way his voice rose Raynor could tell
the kid was scared. He had every right to be.
“What, Matt? There’s no time!”
“I could perform an emergency warp-jump,”
Horner explained.
Raynor understood at once. Pilots and navigators
planned warp-jumps very carefully, often for hours
beforehand. That was because a single mistake could
106 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
send a ship millions of light-years off course, turn it
inside out, or worse. Plus the warp engines usually
needed a few hours to warm up. Jumping without
preparation or planning was sheer madness.
“Do it,” he said, pleased to realize he wasn’t even
shouting. “That’s an order, Matt.”
“Yes sir.” He could hear Matt typing furiously and
knew he was entering the commands for the warp-
jump. Raynor keyed in his own personal code to over-
ride the safety measures that would normally stop the
Hyperion from jumping so abruptly. That was all he
could do.
At last he heard a chime in the background, indicat-
ing the ship was ready to move. “Good luck, Matt,” he
whispered.
“Same to you,” Horner replied. “Jim.” And then he
was gone.
Raynor felt a mild surge of relief. At least the Hyper-
ion wouldn’t be overrun. Even if they impacted a star,
or warped through a black hole, it would be better
than being killed by zerg aboard their own ship.
He just wished there were something he could do
for his other ships. The Hyperion was the only one that
had powerful enough engines to tear open a warp that
quickly. None of the others could move that fast, and
with an emergency jump his command ship hadn’t
been able to take any of the others with her. They were
stuck up there, dealing with the zerg, and he was stuck
down here with no way to reach them.
But there was one possibility.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S107
Raynor quickly keyed his comm unit to a different
frequency. Almost immediately he got another voice.
“Who is this?” someone, a young man, demanded.
“This is Jim Raynor,” he replied. “Get me General
Duke right now.”
Duke’s voice came through a second later. “What
the hell are you playin’ at now, punk?”
Raynor swallowed his irritation. There wasn’t time.
“Listen, Duke,” he said desperately. “I know we don’t
like each other much but I need help.” He ignored the
general’s laugh and plowed on. “My ships are overrun
by zerg,” he explained quickly. “And my shuttles were
all stolen. I need you to send men to clean my ships
out, or at least rescue my people. I know they’re on
your ships too, but you’ve got the firepower to deal
with them. I don’t.”
There was a pause.
“Duke, do you hear me?” Raynor demanded.
“They’re killing everyone on my ships! Your soldiers
are the only ones who can help them now. Please!”
Another brief pause, and then Duke finally replied.
He laughed.
“You want me to save your people?” he said after
his laughter subsided. “You thumb your nose at me,
turn your back on Mengsk and the Dominion, steal
our ships, make me look like a damn fool, and then
you want me to help you? To rescue the same people
who walked out on me at your say-so? Boy, you got
some big brass ones, that’s for sure, but not a lot for
brains.”
108 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Look, blame me if you want, that’s fine,” Raynor
offered. “Come down here and arrest me, I’ll go qui-
etly. You can try me, execute me, whatever. But don’t
blame my people for this. Don’t kill them for my mis-
takes. Please, Duke, I’m begging you.”
“Well,” Duke said slowly, “that you are. And that’s a
thought that’ll keep me warm on many a cold winter
night.” He chuckled again before his voice turned to
gravel. “But you dug this ditch, boy, and now you’re
lying in it. And all those deaths, they’re on your head.
Hope that helps you sleep at night.” And with that he
broke the connection. A moment later Raynor saw a
dark shadow cross the sky, dwindling as it went, and
he knew the Norad III had left Char and headed back to
the Dominion, at least one of its ships trailing behind
it. Duke had turned tail and fled. Raynor couldn’t
blame him for wanting to steer well clear of the zerg,
especially after those same zerg had taken down at
least one of his own ships from the inside, but he
swore if he survived all this he’d hunt Duke down and
make him pay for leaving his people to die up there.
“What do we do now, sir?” Cavez asked him.
Raynor shook his head.
“I don’t know,” he admitted. He glanced skyward
again, squinting to make out the shapes that were his
ships hovering just beyond the atmosphere. He kept
expecting to see them come crashing down, and told
himself that at least there might be some survivors.
He had thought it couldn’t get any worse.
Suddenly a blinding light lanced across the sky, forc-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S109
ing him to shield his eyes. The light struck one of his
ships and enveloped it, creating a glow that was visible
even amid the sun’s rays. The ship was clearly lit, a
nimbus playing about it, and then that aura collapsed
inward and the ship crumpled like a paper ball. When
the light faded the ship was gone, not even a trace left
behind.
“What?” Raynor gaped at the empty space. One of
his ships had just been destroyed, completely obliter-
ated. What could do something like that?
But he knew the answer immediately: the protoss.
Scanning the sky, he saw one of their lovely, delicate-
looking ships hovering not far from his little fleet. Now
he remembered Matt’s telling him, just before he came
planetside, that a protoss ship was about to exit warp
in their immediate vicinity. Obviously this was that
ship.
But why had it destroyed one of his vessels?
Again the answer came right away: because of the
zerg. The protoss were fanatical about destroying all
zerg and even all traces of their existence. And now
the zerg were on his ships. So the protoss were going to
destroy them there, and his people along with them.
The beam burst forth a second time, illuminating,
enveloping, and then obliterating another of his ships.
Then it struck once more. Raynor’s comm unit pinged
again just as the third ship ceased to exist, and he
glanced down hurriedly. Then he stared. A new dot
had appeared on his screen, which had shifted from
the local grid to a wider planetary one. The new dot
110 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
was right beside one of his ships but was heading
toward Char. A lifepod! Or perhaps one of the other
shuttles! That meant survivors!
His hopes were dashed, however, as the protoss
fired again, this time on the escape vessel. All Raynor
saw with his eyes was the beam itself—as the new dot
vanished from his comm unit.
Other dots appeared, each originating from one of
his ships and heading toward Char’s surface. And each
time the protoss shot it down. One of the shuttles must
have evaded the beam, however, or at least avoided
the full brunt of the weapon—it wobbled on his tiny
screen, clearly damaged but still descending in a long,
loose spiral. Raynor quickly marshaled his troops.
“We got survivors!” he shouted, waving his rifle
over his head. “Let’s go, let’s go!” The soldiers fell in
behind him and began running toward the projected
crash site. Meanwhile Raynor monitored communica-
tions in case anyone made it out alive, or one of his
remaining ships managed to cleanse itself of zerg, or
the protoss contacted him directly about a temporary
cease-fire.
Two other shuttles made it down to Char’s atmos-
phere, taking damage from the protoss but not enough
to disable them. But up above the protoss were
destroying the rest of Raynor’s ships.
“Sir?” It was Leanda Bluth, captain of the Harrison.
“Yes, Leanda?” She was short and rounded and
had bobbed blond hair streaked with brown. She
smoked cigars and drank some horrible homebrew of
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 111
her own invention and cheated outrageously at
poker. He liked her.
“The zerg have overrun the ship, sir. Everything
except the bridge, and they’re at the doors now. I’m
sorry, sir.”
“Don’t be,” Raynor told her gruffly. “You did a good
job, Leanda. Thanks.”
“Yes, sir,” she replied. “Good luck, sir.” Then she
deliberately closed the channel.
A minute later, the protoss beam sliced into the
Harrison. The ship was too large to be enveloped com-
pletely but the beam struck section after section, dis-
integrating whatever it touched. Raynor couldn’t tell
which areas had already been hit and which were
being hit now. He did notice, however, when the
Harrison went off-line. And he watched through the
clouds of ash and smoke as, bit by bit, the ship was
carved into nothingness. Finally the beam vanished,
leaving nothing but a gap in the sky where his ship
had been.
The Harrison had been the last one. All of his ships
were gone now, and all his people save those with him,
the handful on the Hyperion if Matt had kept the ship
intact, and whoever had survived in those downed
escape pods. All those people who had followed him,
believed in him, trusted him. All dead. Dead because of
him.
He shoved the thought from his mind, though he
knew it would haunt him forever after. Time for that
later. Right now he had survivors to find.
112 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
They reached the closest of the three signals forty
minutes later. It was a shuttle rather than a lifepod,
and they saw the smoke from its damaged engines and
singed fuselage before they spotted the ship itself. The
protoss beam had caught it a glancing blow, incinerat-
ing one wing and ruining most of the engines, but the
pilot had managed to coast the damaged craft down in
one piece. As Raynor and his men topped the rise they
saw that the shuttle had its doors open and that several
people were standing beside it. Despite their small
numbers, the sight lifted his heart, and abandoning all
caution, he ran toward them.
“Sir!” One of the figures stepped forward, left arm
cradled protectively against her body, head bare to let
her long hair drift in the mild breeze, ash giving her a
faint streak across the blond. “Lieutenant Abernathy,
sir, from the Chandler.” Other than the wounded arm,
she looked unharmed.
“Lieutenant, it’s damn good to see you,” Raynor
told her. He did a quick head count. She had twenty-
three people with her, roughly half the shuttle’s capac-
ity. Four of them were civilians but the rest were
soldiers, and fully armed. No one seemed to have suf-
fered anything worse than cuts, scrapes, bruises, or
broken limbs.
“Sir, the Chandler—,” one of the soldiers started to
ask. Raynor just shook his head.
“We’ve got two other escape pods,” he told them. “I
need to round up whoever’s in them.” He beckoned
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 113
Cavez over—he’d discovered during the return trek
through the tunnels that the young trooper was smart,
resourceful, and very reliable. “Cavez, Abernathy,” he
made the quick introductions. “Stay here, patch peo-
ple up as necessary, and inventory anything we can
use.” He selected five troopers at random. “You, you,
you, you, and you. Come with me.” Then he was off
and running again, heading for the second location.
The five troopers kept up easily. Behind him he could
hear Abernathy and Cavez organizing the shuttle and
the remaining soldiers. It would be as good a place as
any to set up camp for the night.
The second craft was also a shuttle, though more
badly damaged—the protoss beam had sheared through
its middle and the ship had broken in two upon enter-
ing the atmosphere. The beacon was in the front half
and from a nearby hill they spotted the back half a
valley away. Four soldiers, including the pilot, had
survived in the front half. No one was alive in the rear
section, though the pilot said he’d had almost the full
forty packed inside it. Bodies were strewn between
the two halves, and Raynor insisted that the soldiers
with him gather the corpses and place all of them in
the shuttle’s front section, which they stripped of its
supplies and other useful bits. One of the four sur-
vivors had a leg injury, and Raynor ordered her to
stay with the others by the wreckage. Then he and
the three healthier soldiers from that shuttle moved
on to the third and final location. He would have liked
to keep everyone together but knew that if anyone
114A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
was alive but injured, time might be of the essence.
This one was a mere escape pod, barely large
enough to house six people. It had apparently evaded
the protoss beam entirely, or perhaps been too small to
be noticed. Unfortunately whoever had piloted the
pod was unskilled and had skimmed it off a nearby
cliff, judging by the scrape across the rocks there and
the matching furrow in the pod’s underbelly. It lay on
its side in a small crater, and Raynor suspected the
crater’s lip was all that had kept the pod from rolling
farther.
For a second Raynor hesitated. None of his ships
had carried escape pods. This had come from one of
Duke’s ships, either the cargo ship or the science ves-
sel. Which meant that anyone within it worked for
the Terran Dominion, and might shoot him on sight.
He considered walking away, but couldn’t bring him-
self to do it. Char wasn’t that friendly a place, at least
not what he’d seen of it so far. He couldn’t leave any
survivors to fend for themselves. Hell, he’d probably
even have offered Duke a chance to join forces. Prob-
ably. Still, he loosened his pistol in its holster, just in
case.
“Hello?” Raynor called as he approached the pod.
Its hatch was partially open, though it looked less like
a deliberate action than a result of the damage it had
sustained. “Anyone in there?”
Listening closely, he thought he heard a faint reply.
“We’re coming in,” he warned in case they were
armed. The hatch was badly crumpled and it took all
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 115
four of them to pry it open enough for entrance.
Finally it yielded to their efforts and peeled back
enough for Raynor to slip through.
The pod’s interior was a mess. Basic supplies were
normally bolted to the walls or held in mesh pouches,
but these had all come loose upon impact and were
scattered everywhere. The pod had six harnesses, all
spaced evenly around the walls, and two of them were
empty. The other three held people, two men and a
woman. One of the men was clearly dead, an emer-
gency prybar embedded in his skull. The woman’s
head hung at a bad angle and as Raynor edged around
he saw that her eyes were open and glazed. The other
man had what looked like a shard from a structural
support piercing his abdomen, but he groaned and
shifted as Raynor’s shadow fell across him.
“Help . . . me,” the man gasped, and Raynor
looked around desperately for the pod’s med-kit.
There! He scooped it up and moved to the injured
man’s side, then opened the kit and began rummag-
ing through it.
“I’ll do what I can,” he said bluntly. He could
already tell from the amount of blood pooled at the
man’s feet that the wound was fatal. But he wasn’t
about to say that. Finding the painkillers, he injected
the man with enough to numb him. “Which ship are
you from?” he asked. He didn’t recognize any of the
people, who were clearly civilians rather than sol-
diers.
“The Amerigo,” the man said softly, his eyes already
116 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
losing focus and his words slurring slightly as the
painkillers did their work. “We got out when that . . .
monster appeared. Had to . . . warn someone.”
“Monster? What do you mean?” Raynor leaned
against the wall beside the man, his pulse quickening.
He suspected the answer but needed to be certain. The
Amerigo had been Duke’s science vessel, he remem-
bered. He’d heard its Mayday.
“Not . . . zerg,” the man explained, shaking his head
and wincing from the motion. “Not one . . . I’d seen
before . . . anyway. Like a woman . . . but one of them.”
Kerrigan! Raynor tried to keep his voice even, know-
ing he shouldn’t excite the man too much but deter-
mined to find out as much as he could.
“She was on the Amerigo, this zerg woman?” The
man nodded, the painkillers now apparently in full
force, because the movement didn’t seem to bother
him. “What was she doing there?” His dream, or
vision, of her had been real! And she’d been on the
Amerigo. Which meant that strange door on the bottom
level had been there as well.
“Searching . . . the files,” the man replied. “Old . . .
logs.”
“Old logs?” Raynor frowned. “She was there for old
travel data?”
Again the man shook his head. “No, not travel.”
He smiled grimly. “Doesn’t . . . matter . . . now. No . . .
secrets . . . left.” He took a deep breath before contin-
uing. Raynor tried to ignore the bubbling sound that
made, or the froth that appeared at the man’s lips. He
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 117
knew this questioning wasn’t helping the man any, but
the guy was already dead. And he needed to know
why Kerrigan had attacked.
“Amerigo . . . was a Terran science vessel,” the man
explained. “Every science vessel . . . had the same
secure room on the bottom level. Files. Ghost Pro-
gram.”
Raynor felt the chill grip him. “Amerigo was part of
the Ghost Program?”
The other man shook his head. “No. We just . . . car-
ried . . . the files. Every science vessel did . . . in case
Ghost . . . operatives needed help or . . . repair.” By the
way he said “repair,” Raynor could tell he didn’t mean
first aid, and he remembered Kerrigan talking bitterly
about the training she’d received as a Ghost, and the
conditioning they’d forced upon her.
“She wanted the files,” he muttered. “That’s why
she attacked.”
“Won’t . . . do her . . . any good,” the man man-
aged, the words creating pink bubbles around his
mouth and his eyes dimming. “All . . . encrypted.” He
coughed up the last word, along with blood, and
gasped, his eyes opening wide. Then a rattle emerged
from his throat and the man went limp.
Raynor climbed back out of the pod, barely aware of
his actions. He told the soldiers to gather anything they
could use and then stood off to one side, waiting as
they searched the tiny vessel. He was too busy think-
ing about what he’d just learned, and what it meant.
Kerrigan had been a Ghost, a telepathic assassin for
118A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
the Confederacy. She and the others had been heavily
conditioned, with strong psychological and chemical
blocks to keep them from misusing their abilities.
She’d told him once that Mengsk had rescued her from
all that and helped remove many of those blocks.
That’s why she’d been so loyal to him.
But some of those blocks had remained. Despite
what he’d seen her do, Kerrigan had not had access to
her full potential.
And those files contained the key to unlocking
them. If a Ghost’s conditioning weakened, the files
would instruct the scientists on how to reinstate them.
But that meant they could also be used to remove the
blocks by working backward.
Now Kerrigan had those files. No wonder she’d tar-
geted the Amerigo personally—as a former Ghost she
knew what it would contain. And she’d used those
memories, and her skills, to gain access to that room.
He had no doubt she’d managed to decrypt the files,
probably pulling the necessary codes from one of the
scientists who hadn’t made it out in time. Now she
would be able to unlock her own mind, destroy any
lingering conditioning, and rid herself of those
restraints. Her full power would be unleashed.
Raynor shuddered. What had the zerg just un-
leashed upon them all?
CHAPTER 8
BY THE TIME RAYNOR LEFT THE LIFEPOD AND ITS
dead trio behind, collected the other survivors from
the second shuttle, and brought everyone he’d found
alive back to the first, Cavez and Abernathy had put
everything there in order and set up a base camp.
They’d erected several large tents to house most of the
men, flanked by smaller tents to handle the runoff.
Operations and mess were set up within the shuttle
itself, making use of its power cells.
“We total fifty-two, sir,” Cavez reported as Raynor
dropped onto the shuttle’s surviving wing, using it as a
makeshift seat. “We have enough rations to last us two
weeks, more if we can find something to supplement
them.” He tactfully didn’t mention that they’d seen
nothing living on Char but zerg, and Raynor didn’t
think they’d get hungry enough to try eating the dis-
gusting aliens. “Plenty of weapons,” Cavez continued,
“and a decent supply of ammo.” He grinned. “We’ve
even got powered armor, twenty-four suits in all—a
120A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
few took damage from the shuttle crashes but we can
probably cobble them back together, or use them for
parts.”
Abernathy took over. “We’re okay where we are,”
she confirmed. “No extra-atmospheric communication,
though. We’ve got the comm units patched through the
shuttle, so we can maintain links among ourselves, but
it doesn’t have enough power to breach atmosphere.”
She shrugged. “The shuttle does have an emergency
beacon, and I’ve activated it—it’s self-contained and can
run continuously for up to three years.” None of them
commented on the notion that they could be trapped
here that long, though Raynor wasn’t really worried
about it. Hell, between starvation and the zerg he could
probably arrange to die sooner and save himself the
awkward waiting. Of course, someone might pick up
the distress call and come rescue them. Even though
they were on the far side of the galaxy, and the only
people who knew they had come out this way were
now dead as well, or hated their guts.
Still, stranger things had happened.
“Good work,” Raynor told the two troopers. “Set
some guys to stand watch and tell the rest to get some
sleep. We’ll sort out what to do in the morning.” He lay
back on the wing and was asleep within seconds.
Their situation didn’t look any better the next
morning. Everyone had needed the sleep—they had
all gone through a rough time the previous day,
whether they’d been underground or up in space—
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S121
and so in that regard they were better. But all those
recent events, so catastrophic and so sudden, seemed
surreal, and yesterday everyone had moved in a daze.
Now, waking up to Char’s cold little sun and the layer
of ash that coated their tents (someone had erected a
small tent over the wing while Raynor slept, for
which he was grateful—it wouldn’t have looked good
if he’d suffocated in his sleep), it was difficult to deny
the reality. They were really stranded here.
“We can repair the shuttle,” one of the troopers,
Deslan, suggested. They were all gathered around a
fire Abernathy had built on the far side of the shuttle,
using its bulk to shield the flames. Despite the constant
volcanic activity it was cold, though Raynor knew it
would warm up and become almost stifling later when
the sun’s rays and the constant flames and steam had
mingled to cook the surface.
“With what?” Raynor asked, sipping from his cup
and grimacing. Instant self-heating, self-rehydrating
coffee did its job, forcing enough caffeine down your
throat that you were awake and alert for hours even if
you normally suffered from narcolepsy, but it tasted
like moldy cardboard reduced to liquid and heated to
somewhere between a boil and the center of the sun.
He took another sip. “We don’t have any spare parts,”
he pointed out. “Sure, we can scavenge a bit from the
other shuttle and the lifepod, but what we need is an
intact engine. Neither of them has one.”
“Even if we did have the parts,” Abernathy added,
“we’d need the tools and facilities to effect repairs.
122A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
That means a full ship’s cradle, a crane, a few arc-
welders, and several other things we don’t have.”
“And what if we did get the shuttle working again?”
Raynor asked them. “It’s only good for short hops, you
know that. The nearest inhabitable planet is—” He
frowned, trying to remember what he’d seen on the
charts coming in.
“—three days’ travel,” Non supplied. He shrugged,
looking slightly embarrassed when several other troop-
ers glanced at him. “I like to know where we are,” he
admitted.
“The protoss are still in orbit,” a man named
McMurty pointed out. “We could repair our communi-
cations system and contact them, ask them for help.”
Raynor laughed. “And you think they’d say, ‘Sure,
want a lift home?’ Not bloody likely. Protoss only care
about one thing, and that’s killing zerg. Either they’d
ignore us or they’d kill us in case we’d been infected.”
He didn’t bother to explain that the protoss had been
the ones destroying their ships. The soldiers from the
Chandler and the Graceful Wing, former home of that
second shuttle, didn’t know anything about that part
of yesterday’s disaster. Raynor had considered telling
them but had decided it wouldn’t do any good. They
didn’t need to know that humanity apparently had a
second enemy to worry about, the very aliens who had
seemed to be allies so recently. Perhaps it was all a mis-
understanding, and if so that might come out later, in
which case telling the others what had happened
would only make it harder to overlook. But if it had
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S123
been a deliberate act against them, it was one more
complication, and telling these soldiers who had really
destroyed their homes and their friends would only
make matters worse.
“So what are we going to do?” Abernathy asked.
Everyone else quieted to hear Raynor’s answer.
“Well,” he said slowly, “I reckon we’re stuck on this
rock for a while. Weeks, most likely. Could be longer
than that, months or even years. We need to make
preparations in case that’s true.” He glanced around.
“We need to explore this planet thoroughly, make sure
there aren’t any dangers besides the ones we already
know. Keep your eyes open for traces of animals,
plants—anything at all. If we’re lucky we’ll find a new
source of food so we can save the rations for emergen-
cies. Clean water would be nice too.” He drained his
cup. “Watch out for zerg. We know a lot of them were
here and belowground. They might still be there, and
we could walk right past a tunnel entrance before real-
izing it was there.” He didn’t say anything about Kerri-
gan—again, his team didn’t need to know about it yet.
Bad enough the planet was infested with zerg; if they
ever found out these zerg were led by a woman, a
Ghost turned zerg assassin, it would almost certainly
create a panic. Raynor needed everyone to stay sharp
and keep hoping, and he wasn’t going to tell them
anything that might distract them from that.
“We’ll start local,” he announced, setting his cup on
the ground, standing up, and stretching. “Grid out our
surroundings, say a distance of ten miles. Cover it care-
124A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
fully, in teams, like we did yesterday. Look for tracks,
tunnels, streams, anything at all. We’re watching for
two things, mainly—dangers and useful items.” He
gestured to Cavez and Abernathy. “You two are my
lieutenants now.” Both nodded, and Cavez puffed
up his chest unconsciously, pleased at the field-
promotion. “Each of you takes half this sorry lot,” he
said, hitching a thumb at the other soldiers, earning a
few chuckles. “Assign sergeants if you want, that’s up
to you. Set a detail to keep this place while the rest of
us search.” He thought about it. “Might want to send a
few back to the other shuttle, too—we cleaned out
what we could but there might be some stuff we
missed.”
“Yessir!” Both of them saluted, and he nodded and
moved away, leaning against the nose of the shuttle
while they selected their teams—he knew from bitter
experience that the worst thing you could do to subor-
dinates was stand over their shoulders while they
talked to their own subordinates. He needed these
troopers to accept Cavez’s and Abernathy’s orders even
when he wasn’t around, and to realize that he trusted
them to make their own decisions. That meant staying
out of their way.
The two had been good choices, and in less than an
hour people were assigned, equipped, and on the
move. Cavez had put Non in powered armor and set
him and five others to watch the camp—he’d deliber-
ately chosen the five most wounded troopers, and
Raynor admired the logic of giving them an important
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S125
task that didn’t require them to move around at all. He
and Abernathy had then split the grid in half, Cavez
taking one side and Abernathy the other. They’d given
each squad a region to cover, and within those squads
the sergeants set men to handle specific quadrants. It
was all very organized. Raynor had slipped through
the cracks, however—he wasn’t in either unit so he
hadn’t been assigned a coordinate or a partner. Per-
haps his lieutenants had assumed he would stay by the
shuttle, but he was too restless to sit still. Instead he
began walking aimlessly, not paying attention to his
direction. Whenever he passed within sight of troopers
he nodded, making it look like he was simply inspect-
ing their progress, but in reality he was just moving to
keep himself from thinking too much about their
predicament.
As he walked, barely registering where he was
going or his surroundings, Raynor let his mind wander
as well. Not surprisingly, it went straight to Kerrigan.
Instead of another dream, however, he flashed back to
the first time they’d met.
It had been on Antiga Prime. He and his men had
just landed there, with orders from Mengsk to take out
the Alpha squadron guarding the colony’s main road.
Mike Liberty had gone with them to help rouse the
people to rebellion, and they were conferring when
she appeared.
She had seemed to appear out of nowhere—they had
been dropped off on a low plateau and there was no
cover anywhere, just flat rock and a strong wind. Yet
126A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
one second they had been alone and the next a woman
was standing beside them. And what a woman!
Kerrigan had been wearing her Ghost armor at the
time, the gleaming, form-fitting suit accentuating her
curves. Her long red hair had floated about her like an
open flame. And Raynor had felt himself drawn to that
flame like the proverbial moth.
Her features were not beautiful—they were too
strong for that. Her eyes were too sharp and too vividly
green, her mouth too wide and full, her nose too long.
Her cheekbones and jaw were strong, proud, and
unrelenting. Yet she was striking, all those features
combining to create a face that fit her perfectly—proud
and strong and utterly captivating. He had wondered
what it would be like to kiss those lips, and what her
body was like beneath that armor.
And she had heard him. She had just begun report-
ing on scouting when her eyes widened and she took a
quick step back. “You pig!” she’d shouted at him.
“What?” he’d protested, though he knew the rea-
son for her outburst and could feel his face turning red.
He’d assumed she’d simply caught him staring. “I
haven’t even said anything to you yet!” he’d defended
himself lamely.
She’d sneered at him then. “Yeah, but you were
thinking it,” she’d snapped, and his embarrassment had
turned to anger. She was a telepath! He’d glared at
Mike, who’d looked guiltily away, confirming his sus-
picions. The reporter had known! And hadn’t told
him! Not that telling him would have changed any-
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S127
thing—he still would have reacted to Kerrigan the
same way. But maybe he could have masked it some-
how if he’d known she might read his mind.
That had been the start of their relationship, such as
it was. He’d been attracted to her, definitely, but her
being a telepath had cooled his lust considerably. He’d
seen too many things, heard too many stories, and
thinking about telepaths brought his own personal
ghosts back to him all too clearly, Johnny and Liddy
looming before him in mute testimony of the damage
being gifted could do to ordinary people. He’d been
short with Kerrigan for a while as a result, and had
been surprised when Mike had stood up for her and
told him to back off. He’d come to like the lanky
reporter, and to trust his instincts, and Mike’s obvious
high opinion of her had probably been the start of his
conversion. Plus, the more he saw of Kerrigan the
more she impressed him, not just physically but men-
tally. She was a tough cookie, that was for sure, but she
was also assertive and independent and brutally hon-
est. Kind of like him. He’d been particularly amused
when she’d flat-out told Mengsk he was crazy, after
the terrorist leader had ordered them to rescue Gen-
eral Duke from the downed Norad II. And look what
had come of that. Still, he—
Raynor’s reverie was interrupted by a shadow. It fell
across him, lengthening until it covered not just his
own shadow but his immediate surroundings, and he
heard a strange, almost musical hum in the air. Not
wasting the time to look up, he dove to the side, rolling
128 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
as he hit the ground, one hand going to his pistol.
Finally he came to a stop, slamming up against a small
spur that was probably a steam vent, and drew his gun,
brushing away the ash he’d acquired in his roll and
squinting toward the source of the shadow.
What he saw took his breath away.
He had seen protoss ships before, over Mar Sara and
Tarsonis. But never in person. And never close enough
to reach out and touch.
His first thought was that it was less a ship than a
sculpture, and a beautiful one at that, all golden swirls
and loops and stylized barbs. Next he thought of a
moth or a butterfly, with long graceful wings hovering
above a short, stubby body—but he quickly corrected
that thought, because this was more like a hornet than
a moth, its wings more angled, its body segmented and
streamlined. Everything about it spoke of style and
grace and speed. The hum he’d heard must have been
its engines, he thought as the ship settled lightly to the
ground mere feet from him, lightning playing about it
and concentrated at the rear and along the base and
the wings. Then the lightning dwindled, becoming
infrequent flashes of light rather than a continuous
arcing display, and the hum faded. The ship was pow-
ering down.
Raynor righted himself, wincing at the bruise his
backside had taken from that spur, and clambered to
his feet, pistol still in his hand. As he watched, a sweep
of the ship unfurled, swinging out and down, reveal-
ing an oblong portal along one side and creating a gen-
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S129
tle slope from that point to the ground. The portal
irised open and a figure appeared, silhouetted against
the glow from within the ship. Then the figure stalked
slowly down the walkway, followed by another, and
another.
The protoss had landed.
The first dozen to disembark were clearly warriors,
wearing something that Raynor guessed was combat
armor but which resembled his own armor the same
way a classic painting resembled a crude sketch. The
protoss were towering figures, easily seven feet tall,
and in their armor they resembled great deadly insects,
their bodies protected by shiny segmented shells
whose pieces overlapped perfectly but slid about easily,
allowing both flexibility and protection. Portions of the
armor swept up from the chest, high over the flared
shoulder-pieces and down to the back, resembling
stylized wings. A gleaming light was embedded at the
center of their chest, just below those arcs, and Raynor
couldn’t tell if the light was functional, decorative, or
both. The protoss wore no helmets, their armor ending
in a high collar that protected the neck alongside and
in back but left the throat bare for full movement, and
their long, peaked heads peered out from the welter of
protective metal, glowing yellow orbs staring out from
an almost featureless expanse of tough gray hide. They
had no mouths and no noses, and Raynor wondered
idly how they breathed—or talked. He didn’t see any
rifles or blasters, but each warrior’s forearms were cov-
ered in unusually thick bracers, the armor flaring out
130A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
over the wrist instead of sloping back from the hand.
On the back of each bracer was a raised unit topped
with a glowing dome, and he suspected they had inte-
gral blasters there.
The warriors spread out in a semicircle around the
gangplank, and then a final figure appeared at the por-
tal and began his descent. If the others were soldiers
this was definitely their commander. His armor was at
once more spare and more elaborate than theirs, the
bracers smaller and more elegant and lacking the bulge
Raynor took for weaponry, the shoulder-pieces wider,
the breastplate replaced with a heavy collar, a pair of
thick crisscrossed straps with a gleaming gem set
where they intersected, and a wide segmented belt.
The pieces gleamed platinum rather than bronze and
were suffused with a faint golden glow. Over his shoul-
ders and around his waist he wore long strips of fabric
that created the sense of a loose open robe and a sym-
bolic loincloth. They were made from some shimmer-
ing fabric, dark blue but with highlights that shifted
from blue to gold to green as it caught the light. The
commander’s eyes glowed blue, a vivid blue like a
strong flame, and Raynor found his own eyes turning
again and again to that electric gaze.
As the leader reached the ground and his armored
boots settled into the ash, barely raising a puff of
white, Raynor recognized him. He had seen this pro-
toss once before, on the screens of the Hyperion. They
had been on Antiga Prime and the protoss had
acknowledged their presence before descending to
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 131
cleanse the planet. This was the Executor Tassadar, the
High Templar, one of the protoss high commanders.
Knowing his name and knowing they had met
before, even at a distance, made everything worse.
This same alien, the very one who had destroyed his
ships and killed his people mere days ago, had called
those people allies only a few months before! Raynor’s
rage bubbled up within him and he had a sudden urge
to charge forward and confront the protoss Executor.
His legs refused to cooperate, however.
He had seen the protoss leader before, it was true.
And he had spotted protoss—what they called Zealots,
warriors—on Tarsonis as well. But only from a dis-
tance, and only in the heat of battle. He’d been busy
then, distracted, unable to fully register their presence.
He had no such blinders now, and staring at the tall,
proud, graceful aliens arrayed before him, Raynor felt
something he wasn’t sure he’d really experienced
before.
Awe.
The zerg were horrifying, terrible, enough to make
even the bravest man quake with fear. But this was
different. It was more than that, and less at the same
time. He wasn’t afraid of the protoss, or at least that
wasn’t all of it. He was afraid, but only because they
were so much more than him. Raynor had learned
confidence the hard way, by being forced to rely on
himself and his own abilities to stay alive. He knew he
was a capable fighter, a good tracker, a decent com-
mander. He knew he could take most men in a fair
132A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
fight. But facing these aliens he felt like a little boy
again, clinging to his mother’s skirts. For the first time
he understood, really understood deep in his bones,
that these were aliens, beings from another planet,
another race, another culture. And that they were
ancient compared to him. Humanity was a mere child
beside the protoss, and not a particularly promising
one at that.
As he stood there, fighting the desire to run away or
duck and hide, Raynor saw the Executor’s head swivel
about, those glowing blue eyes searching for some-
thing. Then their gaze settled upon him, and he knew
how a moth felt when it was pinned to a display by
razor-sharp pins. Tassadar’s gaze pierced him, rooting
him to the ground, and baring his very soul.
“Come.”
That was all the Executor said, but the word
resounded through Raynor’s head despite the distance
between them. They don’t talk, he realized abruptly.
Not out loud. The protoss spoke mind-to-mind instead,
and just now their commander had spoken to him. His
voice was deep and soft and rolled over Raynor. If the
zerg sounded like metal grating upon itself, or insects
buzzing in rage, the protoss sounded like ocean waves
or the rumble of thunder in the distance.
Raynor felt his right foot lift off the ground and his
body shift forward to complete the step. The left fol-
lowed. He had no control over his limbs, but obeyed
the protoss’s command like a sleepwalker, trapped
within his own flesh. The protoss warriors stepped
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 133
aside without a sound and he continued forward until
he was inches from the Executor, staring up at him.
Behind them the portal slid shut and the walkway
coiled back upward, sealing the ship, but Raynor didn’t
care. His attention was locked on the towering, capti-
vating figure standing before him.
Those blue eyes had never left him, maintaining
their intense gaze, and now the Executor tipped his
head to one side to better consider this strange guest.
“James Raynor,” the protoss acknowledged. “You were
allied with Arcturus Mengsk during our prior encoun-
ters.” Tassadar’s eyes narrowed slightly. “You are no
longer an associate of his?”
Raynor remembered, then, one of the other reasons
he had walked out on Mengsk. On Tarsonis the protoss
had landed ground forces, warriors much like these,
and had fought the zerg hand-to-hand. And between
them and the Terran forces they had been winning.
The zerg were being driven back.
But that wasn’t what Mengsk wanted. He wanted
the Confederacy’s Capital World to fall so that he could
sweep in and create a new order, his Terran Dominion.
The protoss were jeopardizing that plan, risking his
revenge and his ambition. He couldn’t allow that.
So he’d ordered his men to attack the protoss.
Raynor had refused. The protoss were their allies
against the zerg! Raynor wasn’t going to fight them,
especially when the protoss had never attacked them
directly. They had targeted Terran colonies only after
the zerg had already corrupted them.
134 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“No,” he managed, dragging the word from deep
within. The Executor’s brow lifted slightly, and sud-
denly Raynor found he could move again. His words
came more freely. “I don’t work for him anymore,”
Raynor admitted. “I left after Tarsonis, after he turned
on you. That wasn’t right.”
The Executor nodded, a mere dip of his long,
tapered chin, but to Raynor it felt like a benediction,
and a great weight lifted from his shoulders. He hadn’t
even realized how bad he had felt about that betrayal
all these months, on the guilty thought that somehow
he should have stopped it.
“You feel anger, and loss,” the protoss leader
commented then, and the sudden remark drove
Raynor’s mind back to the rage he had felt so
recently. Rage directed at Tassadar himself. This time
the protoss had turned on him, destroying his ships!
He couldn’t bring himself to voice the accusations,
but apparently that wasn’t necessary. The Executor
heard them anyway, and looked away as if embar-
rassed.
“The Terran ships orbiting this world were yours?”
Raynor nodded angrily, and Tassadar nodded in
return, still not meeting his eyes. “Yes, they were
destroyed by our hand,” he confirmed.
Raynor couldn’t hear a single trace of guilt in the
alien’s voice. “Those were my people up there!” he
meant to shout, but the words come out in a whisper
instead. “You killed them.”
“Their deaths were caused by the zerg,” Tassadar
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S135
countered, his gaze swiveling toward Raynor again.
“Your ships had become infested by the Swarm. We
were forced to take action.” His mental voice was calm,
patient, that of a parent soothing an upset child.
Raynor resented being patronized, but couldn’t shake
the sense that, for once, perhaps it was deserved.
“The zerg invaded, yeah,” he agreed. “But my peo-
ple were fighting them! We could have rescued them!
Instead you killed them all, and stranded us here!”
Tassadar stared down at him, those glowing blue
orbs not angry but understanding, their light bathing
Raynor in a sense of profound compassion. He knew
that the Executor understood his frustration, his grief,
and that he sympathized with him, and somehow that
sympathy eased his pain. “Such was not our intent,”
the Executor told Raynor gently. “Yet your ships were
lost to you. The zerg had overrun them. We detected
little human life left on those vessels.” His eyes nar-
rowed, though not at Raynor. “Better it is to die a
clean death, a warrior’s death, than to become one
with the zerg, as your people would have had they
been allowed to continue.”
Raynor shuddered, thinking of Kerrigan. Could
they have done that to his remaining crew? Yes, that
was the zerg way—they absorbed their fallen foes into
the Swarm. So perhaps the protoss had saved his peo-
ple from a fate worse than death.
“But you didn’t have to destroy the ships,” he man-
aged, though much of his anger had faded in the face
of the Executor’s logic. “Now we’re stuck on this rock.”
136 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Tassadar nodded. “Such was not our intent,” he said
again. Then, apparently judging the conversation over,
he turned to his warriors, who had waited unmoving
during the discussion. “Seek out the Queen of Blades,”
he instructed them.
“You know about Kerrigan?” Raynor was amazed.
“Her screams echoed across the void,” the Execu-
tor replied, “the clarion of a new terror birthed upon
the cosmos.” Raynor thought he heard a hint of awe
and perhaps even fear in the alien’s voice. “Her mind
is powerful, even now, and the danger she presents
cannot be overestimated.” He glanced at Raynor
again. “I must ascertain her strength.” His voice hard-
ened somehow, the thunder behind it increasing.
“She shall not threaten my people while I stand.”
With that he turned back to his warriors. “Seek her
out,” he repeated, “and her forces. Do not oppose
them directly, however. Merely find her and instruct
me as to her location.” Raynor was surprised that he
could “hear,” much less understand, Tassader’s order,
and realized a second later that the Executor had
deliberately included him. In fact, the protoss leader
had apparently done more than that, and Raynor
found he could understand the protoss mental lan-
guage as if he had been born to it. Right now, how-
ever, his mind was on something else.
“You’re not gonna fight her?” he demanded, his
surprise overwhelming his hesitance to speak so
abruptly to the towering alien. “You just said she’s a
threat—a terror!” And, thinking back on what he’d
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 137
seen her do since her transformation, and what he’d
learned from that dying scientist, he had to agree.
“She poses a significant danger,” Tassadar confirmed.
“I must watch her carefully, that I might understand her
capabilities.”
“I can tell you her capabilities,” Raynor muttered.
“She’s Hell unleashed.”
CHAPTER 9
THE PROTOSS SCATTERED, EACH MOVING OFF IN
a different direction. Tassadar, however, waited by his
ship, standing as still as a statue. Though Raynor was
right in front of the alien, he could tell the Executor
no longer registered his presence.
One part of Raynor hoped the protoss got their butts
kicked by Kerrigan and her brood. It would serve them
right, the arrogant bastards. But that was only a small
portion of his mind, the jealous, illogical part he tried
to keep locked away. The rest of him knew it was in his
own best interests for Tassadar to find and destroy Ker-
rigan once and for all.
Meanwhile, he had another concern. The protoss
were wandering around Char, and so were his own
people. He didn’t want them mixing it up, especially
when the protoss might still be their allies. Tassadar’s
explanation had made sense to him and he was no
longer angry at the Executor for destroying his ships.
Upset about the loss of them and his people, sure, and
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S139
still mad, but now he was just mad at the zerg for forc-
ing such a drastic response. In the protoss’s place he
would have done the same thing, and he knew it,
especially since the Executor had told him there were
few signs of human life left on the ships, and the alien
had no reason to lie to him.
Walking away from the protoss ship and resisting
the urge to glance back repeatedly to make sure the
towering Templar wasn’t sneaking up behind him,
Raynor topped a small rise. He hadn’t realized he’d
walked quite so far, but from here he could see the sec-
ond shuttle, and that gave him an idea of their camp’s
location. Quickly he raised his comm unit and set it to
broadcast on the all-purpose frequency Cavez and
Abernathy had selected.
“All units,” he said into the comm, “all units, this is
Raynor. The protoss have landed on Char. I repeat,
we’ve got protoss here on Char. They’re wandering on
foot but they’re after zerg, not us. Don’t shoot at them.
Repeat, don’t shoot at them!”
Almost immediately his comm chimed with an
incoming signal. “This is Ling,” one of Cavez’s sergeants
reported. “We just spotted one of them, maybe half a
mile away. Look like walking ants! He saw us but kept
moving.”
“Good,” Raynor replied. “Leave ’em alone and they’ll
leave us alone.”
Several other troopers called in to report protoss
sightings, but the protoss did not attack them and the
two forces slid past each other without incident.
140 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
McMurty, who had been over at the second shuttle,
actually came out of the back half to find himself face-
to-face with one of the protoss warriors, but said that
after they stared at each other for a minute the warrior
simply nodded and moved around him. “Nearly wet
myself,” the trooper added, laughing at his own fear,
“but he couldn’t’ve cared less!”
Raynor debated what to do next. His men were han-
dling themselves fine and the scouting was continuing.
Already one team reported a small stream and another
had found a stagnant pond, which would be fine once
they’d boiled the water or used detox pills from the
shuttle’s supply. Another team had discovered a cluster
of large flat mushrooms around one crater and others
were looking in similar places for more—there was no
guarantee they were edible but it was the first plant life
they’d found and it was certainly worth experimenting.
Deslan claimed he’d seen something small and rodent-
like darting into a vent as he approached—he hadn’t
been able to catch it, but if he hadn’t been seeing things
it meant there were at least small mammals here, and
they could hunt them for meat.
No one had found any sign of the zerg, however. Had
the monsters vanished somehow? Raynor doubted
that—he knew they were capable of going off-planet
without ships but assumed it would require massive
energy. Something like that wouldn’t be subtle and
they’d have seen signs. So would the protoss, and Tas-
sadar was still doing his impression of a boulder. No, the
zerg were here somewhere. Most likely back under-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 141
ground. Then Raynor remembered he had a way to
check. Taking one last quick look at the motionless Tem-
plar, he sat down and closed his eyes.
And nothing happened except that the world went
dark.
Opening his eyes again, he frowned. Ever since
they’d landed he’d had trouble keeping the visions
away. But now that he wanted them they were gone?
What gives? He tried again, squeezing his eyes tight
and concentrating on Kerrigan.
And then he saw her.
But not Kerrigan as she was now, not the mesmer-
izing, terrifying Queen of Blades. No, the Sarah Kerri-
gan that appeared before him was the one he had
known on Antiga Prime and several other planets
since then, the same Kerrigan he’d talked to shortly
before they’d all landed on Tarsonis during that last
fateful mission. It was Kerrigan fully human.
She wasn’t wearing armor, a rarity for her. Instead
she was decked out in worn cotton pants, a soft work
shirt, high leather boots, and a dusty leather jacket.
Her hair was pulled back in a loose ponytail, strands of
it escaping to frame her face, and other than the long
knife strapped provocatively to one thigh she was
unarmed.
And she was smiling.
Not her usual smile, either, which spoke of pain and
towering self-control. No, this was a look he’d seen on
her face only a few times, when he or Mike had man-
aged to startle her into laughter. It was an unfeigned
142A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
smile of genuine pleasure, causing crinkles around her
eyes and a faint dimple in one cheek.
She was happy.
Raynor forced his eyes open again, dispelling the
image. He leaned forward, arms across his legs, and
took a deep breath, vaguely thankful for the
rebreather that kept his lungs from filling with ash.
He tried not to gulp air, knowing that would only
make him feel worse, but he needed to slow his racing
heart. What had that been? It wasn’t a vision, a peek
into Kerrigan’s head as he’d been expecting. And it
wasn’t a memory—he’d never seen her wearing those
clothes before. Was it simply a dream? It was certainly
Kerrigan the way he’d always hoped to see her, with-
out her constant defensiveness. But he hadn’t really
been asleep and it had been far too vivid to have been
just a daydream.
Lifting his head, he glanced down the hill toward
the protoss ship—and leaped to his feet, waving his
hands to block the inevitable flurry of ash. Tassadar
was gone! Looking around, Raynor spotted the Execu-
tor stalking to the top of another hill nearby, heading
away from him. Without stopping to think about it, he
ran after the alien.
Tassadar had long, quick strides, but he didn’t seem
to be in much of a hurry and Raynor closed the dis-
tance between them rapidly. He slowed when he was
still about twenty feet away, then fell in behind the
Executor. They must have spotted Kerrigan, he real-
ized. Tassadar had told his warriors to inform him of
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 143
her location. He must be going to confront her now.
Raynor knew he had to go along. Not to lend sup-
port—he suspected even the lesser protoss warriors
were far more capable than he was at combat, and
their race had years of experience against the zerg. No,
he was going to watch. He wanted to see what hap-
pened when these two, Kerrigan and Tassadar, met
face-to-face. It might tell him more about both of
them, about their strengths and weaknesses. And it
promised to be a matchup he didn’t want to miss.
As they walked, Tassadar giving no indication that
he had even noticed Raynor behind him, Raynor
thought about the situation once more, and about his
options. The protoss had landed and had been if not
friendly, at least not hostile. That was a good sign and
took one weight off his mind—he had only one enemy
here on Char, not two. And the Executor had not
intended to strand Raynor and his men on this world.
Would the protoss actually consider helping them get
off-planet, then? He’d thought the idea ridiculous
when McMurty had suggested it, but now it didn’t
sound quite so preposterous. It would be worth asking,
at least—he knew now that the protoss wouldn’t kill
him for daring to speak to them, so he really didn’t
have anything to lose.
He started to say something about it, then stopped.
Better to wait until after the upcoming encounter, he
decided. Besides, the protoss might not be in any posi-
tion to aid them once they’d met Kerrigan. He won-
dered if he could figure out how to operate their ship.
144 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Even if the protoss wouldn’t give them a lift, their
situation was looking up. They’d found some water
and possibly some food, so survival here wouldn’t be
as awful as it might have been. And perhaps the pro-
toss would at least carry a message for them, a distress
call. Who would he send it to, though? They had left a
handful of people behind before coming to Char—per-
haps they would be willing and able to bring a ship and
pick them up. Or perhaps one of the worlds nearby
could mount a rescue mission. There were only fifty of
them—a single small spaceship would be large enough
to hold them all.
He considered the notion of contacting Mengsk
directly. Yes, the emperor had named him a criminal.
Would he send someone here to arrest him? Raynor
had offered that solution to Duke and the sadist had
laughed and left him here. But Mengsk would see the
political value of capturing and trying Raynor. It would
make him look strong and capable, and show what
happened to those who opposed him. He might even
order Duke back here, and the general couldn’t refuse
a direct order. The notion tickled Raynor. Sure, it
would mean his death, but Mengsk might be willing to
pardon the rest of his team if they swore not to oppose
him again. That was worth something.
They had crossed several hills now, and walked
through several small valleys. Raynor could feel an
ache in his legs, and his feet were throbbing in his
boots. He’d already drained what little water he’d had
left in his canteen, and eaten the one ration he’d still
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S145
had in his belt pouch, and his throat was dry, and his
stomach was gnawing at him. But Tassadar showed no
sign of weariness or discomfort and Raynor was forced
to keep going as well.
Just how far were they going? Where was Kerrigan?
More than an hour, later Tassadar stopped abruptly.
Raynor stumbled to a halt behind him and collapsed
on the ground, not caring if the Executor moved on
without him. He had to rest!
They were at the base of another hill, this one taller
and steeper than most, and as Raynor studied it he
realized the difference. The slope was not only steep
but oddly textured, clearly rock but lumpy rather than
smooth or faceted. The hill also curved around on both
sides, and it was a more regular sweep than that of
most mounds or protrusions. The final clue was a
clump of mushrooms at the hill’s base, not five feet
from where Raynor had dropped. Each mushroom
was easily a foot in diameter, with a wide flat head and
a short stubby stalk, and they were brown and gray
and speckled with white that matched the ever-
present ash.
This was no hill. It was a crater. One of the largest
he’d seen so far. And judging from the way Tassadar was
looking toward the upper lip, Kerrigan was inside it.
It made sense, Raynor admitted as he leaned back.
The zerg favored the underground, and a volcano would
provide ready access from the surface world to the
caverns beneath. He rested his head against the slope
behind him and closed his eyes, just for a second—
146A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
—and he was inside the volcano, standing on the
shallow bowl-shaped floor, admiring the dark glassy
sides that rose around them. The rest of his brood clus-
tered around him, and his wing-tips fluttered in antic-
ipation.
He was inside Kerrigan’s head again. And like her
he was suddenly awash with excitement.
“Do you feel that, Cerebrate?” he heard Kerrigan
asking the massive zerg through its overlord, which
hovered slightly behind her. “The protoss are here, on
Char. . . .” She paused, and Raynor had an odd swoop-
ing sensation, as if he had been flung across the room
or been caught up by a strong wind. He knew Kerrigan
had used her telepathy; he had felt it through their
connection. “They have been here for some time,” she
announced, sampling the mental landscape as a dog
would sample the air with its nose, tasting for scents
and reading the information they carried. “Hiding,”
she finished gleefully.
“We must destroy them,” the cerebrate suggested,
though it did so diffidently. Clearly it had learned from
watching her confrontation with Zasz. That had been
Kerrigan against a named cerebrate, one of the Over-
mind’s elect, whereas it was still nameless and unim-
portant. It had to be careful to avoid inciting her wrath.
“The protoss are our ancient foe,” it pointed out.
“Yes, yes,” Kerrigan agreed impatiently, her wings
clacking together. “We will destroy them, never fear.
But first I want to know why they are here.” She
smiled. “And that is easy to discover, as they are wait-
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 147
ing just over the rise.” She took to the air, leaping up to
the crater’s lip, her wings spreading out behind her as
if they could hold her aloft. From there she could see
protoss ringing the crater, one of them possessing the
golden glow that marked a full Templar. It was toward
that figure that she jumped, landing lightly perhaps
twenty feet from him and furling her wings around
her like a barbed cloak. Behind the Executor and far-
ther down the slope she saw a figure hunched on the
ground, this one not wearing the protoss’s glittering
armor but ash-smeared fatigues and a worn leather
jacket. A rebreather covered his face, but she recog-
nized him nonetheless, and her smile grew at the
thought of such an audience.
“Jim,” she called softly, and Raynor heard her voice
both in and out of his head. “Wake up.”
And his eyes leaped open.
Kerrigan was standing before him, just as he’d seen
in his vision. Her attention was fixed on the majestic
protoss before her, but Raynor thought he saw her
direct a quick glance his way—and wink. Then she
was focused upon Tassadar again.
“Protoss commander,” she called to him, her voice
ringing across the landscape and causing Raynor’s
teeth to ache from the echo. “It was folly of you to
come here.” She stood proud and tall, not caring that
her zerg were still climbing the crater’s inner walls and
had not yet topped the rise. Nor did she seem to care
that the other protoss warriors were moving in from
148 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
either side of the hill, massing behind Tassadar and
behind her. Instead her wings unfurled, sweeping out
behind her like a cloak, and she lifted her chin. “For I
am Kerrigan,” she announced, “and—”
“I know of you well, o Queen of the Zerg,” Tassadar
replied, cutting her off, “for we have met before.” He
executed a stately bow, bending at the waist until his
torso was almost parallel to the ground, though his eyes
never left hers. “I am Tassadar of the Templar,” he
informed her, humbly omitting his full title, his words
rolling across them and enveloping Raynor in a tide of
deep echoing warmth. Kerrigan smiled slightly, though
whether she was acknowledging his introduction or
showing that she had felt his vocal effects Raynor had
no idea. “I remember your selfless exploits, defending
humanity from the zerg,” the Executor continued.
“Unfortunate it is, to see that one who was once so hon-
orable and full of life would succumb to the twisted
wiles of the Overmind.” To Raynor the alien sounded
genuinely disappointed, as if Kerrigan had failed him
personally and that failure was a great loss.
Kerrigan did not appreciate the sentiment. “Do not
presume to judge me, Templar,” she snapped, her
wings rearing up and back, their tips jabbing toward
him. “You’ll find my powers to be more than a match
for yours.” She smiled again, though this was the
humorless smile of a predator. “In fact,” she said
softly, her words driving ash before her as if they were
carried on a strong wind, “I sense that your vaunted
power has diminished since last we met. . . .”
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 149
Raynor wasn’t sure what happened next. He saw
Kerrigan leap forward, wings outstretched, claws ex-
tended, to swipe at Tassadar. But the Executor shifted to
one side, sidestepping her attack. At the same time his
forearms, now encased in a soft blue glow, rose and
knocked her wings aside so that she slid past him with-
out even grazing him.
That was what Raynor saw. Or thought he saw.
Because both Templar and zerg were fuzzy around the
edges, as if viewed through thick glass. Their bodies
glowed faintly, his blue and hers a yellowish green,
and they left strange afterimages as they moved.
Raynor blinked and looked again. Tassadar and Ker-
rigan were still standing as before, and a part of him
knew they had not moved at all. But he was sure the
attack he’d witnessed had just happened.
Now the Executor nodded slightly, as if acknowl-
edging Kerrigan’s statement. Or perhaps this was its
response to her attack. “Mayhap, o Queen,” he
intoned. There was a trace of something in his voice,
something that sounded suspiciously like humor. “Or,”
he continued, “is it only that I need not flaunt my
power in such an infantile test of will?”
As the words left his lips Tassadar did the last thing
Raynor would have expected—he ran. The Executor
turned on his heel and did a graceful sideways leap,
spinning down the hill in a smooth cartwheel motion
and landing erect a good hundred feet from the base of
the hill. The other protoss had apparently responded to
some silent command because during the exchange
150A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
they had crept silently down the hill as well, and now
they were all grouped around their High Templar
leader. Without another word Tassadar turned and led
his Zealots at a full run around the hill and into the
higher mountains that loomed beyond. The protoss
moved so quickly that Raynor barely had time to reg-
ister their departure before they had vanished from
view.
Kerrigan watched them go, her wings twitching
with rage. Her zerg had finally crested the lip and now
surrounded her, though they kept a respectful distance
from their enraged queen. Despite himself, Raynor
couldn’t help admiring her. She was magnificent.
“Foolish Templar,” Kerrigan whispered, her words
carrying easily to Raynor on the still air. “Prepare your
defenses! I will come for you soon.”
“Seek out the cowardly protoss,” she instructed her
brood. “Slaughter them all, but leave the High Tem-
plar, the so-called Executor, to me. Now go!” Her
wings flared and the zerg fled, racing down the hillside
and following the same path the protoss had taken.
Only one overlord remained, fluttering slightly before
her, and Raynor realized it was not one of hers.
“Kerrigan,” the overlord said, and Raynor recog-
nized the voice as that of Zasz the cerebrate, “I sense
something strange about this Templar. Perhaps you
should reconsider your attack.”
She turned on the overlord, her wings snapping up
to pierce its side and then slicing down and back to
carve it open. “For the last time, Zasz,” she hissed as
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S151
the dying zerg fell to the ground at her feet, spraying
ichor everywhere, “you question my motives and
authority at your own peril.”
“You dare threaten a cerebrate?” Zasz gasped,
though his voice was fading as his emissary died. “You
will be the doom of us all,” he warned. Then the over-
lord shuddered and went still, the ichor that flowed
from its wounds slowing to a trickle.
“My doom,” Kerrigan told the unhearing zerg, “is a
thing not of your making, and far beyond your
power.” Then she stalked past it, down the hill. As she
came to Raynor she glanced at him, but this time she
did not wink and her eyes, looking much like the vivid
green he remembered, contained such sadness it took
his breath away. The look vanished quickly, and she
gave no other sign that she had seen him.
This time that was definitely a relief, he thought as
he watched her go. He had seen Kerrigan angry before,
of course, and it had always impressed him as the
human equivalent of a tornado, violent and unpre-
dictable and incredibly destructive. Now she was even
worse, and he suspected her emotions were more
unbalanced as well. Becoming zerg had reduced her
self-control but increased her power, a dangerous
combination. He was glad it was Tassadar and not him
on the receiving end of her fury.
He understood the Executor’s actions now as well.
Tassadar was clearly a wise commander and had told
Raynor he wanted to see Kerrigan’s abilities for him-
self to determine whether she was a real threat. The
152 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Executor knew that the best way to do that was to pro-
voke her. But she had a lot more zerg than he had pro-
toss, and in a fair fight they’d simply swarm him under.
So he’d egged her on, ticked her off, and then run
away. Making her chase him. Smart. This way Kerri-
gan was in hot pursuit and Tassadar could pick the bat-
tlefields. He’d probably stop a few times, let her get
close, and see how she reacted, then take off again
before her full brood could assemble and overwhelm
him. It was a good tactic, the type of thing Mengsk
might have done, though there wasn’t anything
underhanded about it, just a sensible approach to a
new enemy of unknown capabilities.
“Well,” Raynor muttered to himself as he stood up
and dusted himself off, “I suppose I can’t sit around
here all day.” Picking a few of the mushrooms to bring
back, he headed off toward his base, though he
glanced over his shoulder once in the direction both
Tassadar and Kerrigan had taken. He wished he could
follow them to see the outcome of this battle. No mat-
ter who won it was sure to be an impressive sight, and
he hated to miss it.
CHAPTER 10
“WE’RE NOT IN BAD SHAPE, SIR,” ABERNATHY
reported the day after Raynor’s first encounter with
Tassadar. She and Cavez were meeting with Raynor
inside the shuttle to discuss their situation. “We have
several sources of water now—none of it particularly
pure but all drinkable. The mushrooms are safe to eat
and we’ve confirmed the presence of rodents and
other small critters. We’re rigging traps for them now.
Hopefully we’ll have fresh meat within a few days.”
“That’s good—too many of these rations and your
stomach starts hankering for your boots,” Raynor
joked. “Did we manage to get anything else from the
other shuttle or the lifepod?” He’d finally told his lieu-
tenants about the lifepod, and they’d sent a team to
examine it and to bury the bodies.
“Not much,” Abernathy admitted. “A few more
rations, an extra blanket, and one more pack of detox
pills.” She shrugged. “We pulled every part that looked
154A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
intact, too, but the biggest thing we need to fix is the
engines, and those weren’t any better than these.”
“Yeah. Well, we’ll figure something out.” He turned
to Cavez. “That’s the useful items—how about the
dangers?”
The trooper shrugged. “Not much here, actually.
Zerg, of course, though they haven’t bothered us
yet—we think the protoss are keeping them busy.”
That they were, and Raynor had already told his lieu-
tenants a little about that. “No other large animals or
even insects, and the small ones we’ve seen don’t
look poisonous. We do have to watch the terrain,” he
warned. “One of my men got scalded from stepping
too close to one of those damn steam vents and Ling
almost fell into a small crater—he caught himself just
in time but his helmet came off.” Cavez looked grim.
“That crater was still hot. Cooked the helmet to slag in
an instant. We’ve marked it so we don’t step there by
mistake, but any crater could still be live.”
“Can’t we just avoid the ones that’re smoking and
coughing up lava?” Raynor asked.
Cavez shook his head. “It’s not that simple. Most
of these things are dormant—they’re not spitting
anything up anymore. But they’re still hot. The prob-
lem is, when the lava sits for a while it apparently
develops a thin skin over it, just like soup does. And
the ash settles on that skin, blending it with the rest
of the landscape. So it looks just like the ground
everywhere else, but it’s actually lava right under the
surface.”
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 155
Raynor thought about it. “Don’t we have infrared
goggles? We can use those to check for hot spots.”
His lieutenants looked a little embarrassed. “Yes,
sir,” Cavez replied. “We’ve already got men doing that.
But it’ll take a while to mark all the spots nearby, let
alone all the ones within that ten-mile radius.”
“Oh, right.” Raynor felt stupid, and laughed at him-
self. “Guess that’s what I get for thinking I’d turned
clever,” he admitted ruefully. “Okay, so we got zerg
and we got steam and we got lava. Anything else try-
ing to get us?”
Both lieutenants shook their heads. “There might
be unstable rock formations in the mountains,” Aber-
nathy pointed out, “but we aren’t going there at the
moment so it’s not an issue.”
“Okay.” Raynor scrubbed a hand over his face and
then through his hair. “Well, looking around kept
everyone busy for a day. What’re we gonna do tomor-
row?” He looked to his two lieutenants for suggestions.
“We can take apart the shuttle systems,” Abernathy
pointed out. “Put every man with electronics know-
how on shuttle detail, try to figure out what’s been
broken and what we can do to replace it.”
Raynor nodded. “That’s good. But we can probably
only get a few people working on this crate at a time.
Say five at once?” The other two nodded. “Okay, put
together three teams of five and get them on this.
Rotate them around. What else?”
“We’re setting traps,” Cavez reminded him. “For
food.”
156A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“Right, right.” He shrugged. “How many know how
to trap and hunt?”
“Only ten of us, sir.” Cavez looked a little embar-
rassed. “I used to hunt with my uncle back home,” he
explained.
“Nothing to be ashamed of,” Raynor assured him.
“Did a little of that myself, and I can probably still set a
decent snare.” He thought about it. “Okay, get those
nine on trapping detail. You’re in charge of that.
Maybe we can set up a rotating detail to collect mush-
rooms and water and look for anything else edible.”
“We’ve got ten men checking the craters and mark-
ing the dangerous ones,” Abernathy volunteered,
guessing his next question. He gave her a smile in
return.
“Okay, that’s a start, but let’s put another ten on that
if we’ve got enough IR goggles to go around.” She nod-
ded. “So that’s what? Forty-five out of forty-nine?”
They confirmed his math. “Set the last four to guard
the camp, a roving patrol, and we’re good. That’ll keep
everyone from panicking for another week at least.”
“What about the protoss, sir?” Abernathy asked.
“Shouldn’t we keep an eye on them, especially if
they’re fighting the zerg?”
Raynor grinned at her. “Just leave that to me.”
It took him two days to track the protoss warriors.
They had abandoned their ship where it had landed
and had retreated into the mountains, hiding among
the glittering spires and hollow cones. The mountains
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S157
were more active than the flatlands in terms of volca-
noes, and smoke and ash billowed from several peaks
and leaked from smaller vents throughout the region.
It made for excellent cover and the protoss were put-
ting it to good use, especially since their glossy armor
blended well with the obsidian that littered the area
and their eyes apparently saw through smoke and
soot without a problem.
Raynor had packed a week’s worth of rations and
ventured up among the peaks, determined to locate
and spy on Tassadar and his troops. Cavez and
Abernathy had the camp well in hand and everyone
there had something to keep them busy for the rest of
the week, if not longer. He wasn’t really needed there.
But someone had to keep track of the protoss, and of
their battles with the zerg. It might as well be him.
Besides, he knew both groups’ leaders personally,
which meant he might be able to predict their loca-
tions and activities.
Not that it had worked with Tassadar, at least at first.
The protoss had proven adept at hiding their tracks, or
perhaps simply left no impression in the loose ash of
the mountaintops. He searched for two days, to no
avail. Finally, however, he realized that he was going
about things all wrong.
“Don’t try to find where an animal’s been,” his
grandpa had taught him when he was a youngster just
learning to hunt and shoot. “Find where it needs to go
and wait for it to show.” That was what he should be
doing here. The mountains were large enough that he
158 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
could wander for weeks and never come across a sin-
gle protoss. And the aliens had no mouths, which
meant he had to assume they didn’t eat or drink. So
watering holes were out. But they were up here scout-
ing and spying, and that meant finding good vantage
points. The mountains had a lot of sharp spires of nar-
row cliffs, but how many provided cover as well as a
good view of the landscape below? Especially in the
direction of the zerg incubation chamber—he was
assuming the Executor had some way of detecting zerg
gathering spots, since protoss attacks had always con-
centrated on those locations, which meant they would
know about the Swarm’s hideout underground. So he
searched until he found a gap facing the right way, a
narrow cleft in the rock that led back to a space large
enough for a small squad to hunker down. After refill-
ing his canteen from a nearby pool, Raynor selected a
good vantage point on a rock spur overhanging the
nook, deliberately piled ash around and over himself
for concealment, and settled down to wait.
He must have dozed off while lying there, because
he dreamed of Kerrigan again. And once again it
wasn’t Kerrigan as she was or as she had been but Ker-
rigan as he’d wished her to be. She was wearing the
same outfit as before, the shirt’s top two buttons open
to reveal a tantalizing hint of cleavage, and more of her
hair had worked free of the ponytail, creating a loose
cap around her face. The wind was blowing the hair
about and she was laughing, brushing strands from her
eyes and cheeks. Her hands were long and slender,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S159
strong, artistic hands, and the nails were painted a
faint shade of green that complemented but couldn’t
compete with the green fire of her eyes. She was
lovely.
Now he saw himself in the dream, a him to match
her: Jim Raynor as he might have been in happier
times. His hair was longer than the stubble he had
now, still short enough to keep out of his eyes but just
long enough to be tugged this way and that by the
breeze, and long enough in back to brush his shirt col-
lar. He was wearing familiar clothing, the same buck-
skin pants and denim shirt he’d worn as a marshal, but
the combat vest was gone, replaced by a loose leather
one. His gun belt still hung across his hips, but the hol-
ster was empty. He had no weapon. And he found he
didn’t care.
Approaching Kerrigan, he held out one hand, palm
up. She smiled, blushing, and placed her hand atop
his. Then he led her a few steps away and she turned
to face him. He bowed, she curtsied, and they came
together, their hands still clasped and extended to the
side and their other arm around each other’s waist.
And they began to dance.
Then something stirred nearby, and Raynor woke up.
For a second he couldn’t remember where he was
or why he should care. All he wanted was to close his
eyes again and return to the dance. But the sound
came again, something hard and possibly metallic
brushing against stone very close by, and he shifted,
feeling rock beneath him and ash all around. Ah,
160 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
right—he was waiting by a spyhole and hoping the
protoss found it.
Apparently they had.
Peering over the edge of the overhang, he spotted a
protoss warrior by the gap, looking out upon the valley
below. The warrior had levered himself up and had his
legs wedged into the gap to support his weight. His
armor rubbing against the rock had been the noise
Raynor had heard. A second protoss stood behind the
first, arms raised across its chest but facing away,
clearly standing guard.
Raynor waited patiently as the first protoss studied
the scene below, then traded places with his compan-
ion. When both of them had looked their fill and then
slipped away through the narrow passage leading back
to the peaks, he rose, quietly, disturbing the ash
around him as little as possible, and dropped into the
gap. He didn’t hear anyone running back so he waited
a few seconds before following the same path the pro-
toss had taken. He spotted the second warrior’s head
just as it disappeared around a boulder up ahead.
Now that he knew where they were Raynor was
able to keep them in sight. He was careful not to get
too close—Tassadar had apparently decided he wasn’t
a threat, at least when they’d met down below, but he
didn’t want to provoke the warriors and find out if that
protection still held. Better to stay out of sight. Besides,
right now he didn’t need to speak to them, he just
wanted to figure out where they were and what they
were doing.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S161
An hour later he located their camp. Their ship must
have held more than he’d thought and the rest must
have emerged later, because Tassadar had at least a hun-
dred warriors crouching in a deep cleft between two
peaks. The Executor himself sat cross-legged upon a
short, wide boulder, and from where Raynor peeked
around a rock the alien’s eyes seemed to be closed. Was
he sleeping? Or meditating? Or perhaps tracking Kerri-
gan through dreams, the way Raynor had a few times?
There was no way to tell. But it didn’t matter, really—
he’d found them, and now he could watch them.
For the next day Raynor did exactly that. He located
several good vantage points and alternated between
them to keep from falling asleep or stiffening up. Each
one gave him good cover and a decent view of the val-
ley below. He’d also marked the three places where the
protoss could exit the valley, and made sure to keep
those in sight at all times. If they started moving he’d
know about it.
Nothing happened for a while, however. The war-
riors below didn’t mill about the way humans would,
which Raynor found disconcerting. No walking in cir-
cles, no whittling stray sticks or carving small rocks, no
chatting. No eating or drinking, either, which meant
his first guess had been correct—they didn’t need food
the same way he did. They simply crouched and
remained that way, not moving at all for hours on end.
Then suddenly one would stand and stretch, perform-
ing a series of gymnastics before returning to his
crouch in the exact same spot. It was eerie.
162 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
All of a sudden they were up and moving. Raynor
had just raised his canteen to his lips to take a quick
swallow when the protoss stood and began filing
through the pass on the opposite side. Damn, he
thought, quickly capping the canteen and getting to
his feet. He sprinted around the valley and got to the
pass before the last warrior had disappeared from view.
Then he paused a second to catch his breath before
creeping along behind them.
Tassadar led his warriors down and then through a
second pass, emerging just above a small plateau. He
ushered his troops out onto the clearing, and they
marshaled there, clearly preparing for battle. But
where were the zerg?
Raynor got his answer a moment later. First he
heard faint clicks and hisses, and then suddenly the
zerg came into view. They were marching—if he could
describe their crawling and gliding and stalking that
way—up the side of an old volcano not far below. The
ground all around the cone had fallen away and this
was the quickest way through the area.
Tassadar’s warriors crouched and began creeping to
the edge of the plateau. Then, in twos, they dropped
over the edge, landing soundlessly on a small ledge
below. From there they leaped across to the crater
itself, using the flaring edges of their armor to cling to
the rock. The plateau faced the side of the volcano, and
the zerg were marching from front to back—they had
not seen the protoss yet, and the Zealots were all safely
hidden by the crater’s lip.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 163
After the last of the protoss had made the jump
Raynor lowered himself onto the plateau and moved
closer to the edge. He wasn’t about to attempt that
jump, though. Besides, he had a great view from right
here.
He watched as the zerg continued their progress,
climbing over the cone’s lip and down into the crater
itself. The surface looked solid, though Raynor
remembered what Cavez had said. Certainly if it was
just a skin the zerg would have crashed through, par-
ticularly the lumbering ultralisks, but they didn’t have
any trouble crossing. They probably had ways to detect
the hot spots, he realized, much like IR goggles
enabled his team to do.
After the zerg were all in the basin Tassadar ges-
tured, and his warriors hauled themselves around the
crater’s edge, hand over hand, until they were evenly
spaced about the lip. Then, at some signal Raynor
couldn’t see, they all heaved themselves up onto the
lip in a single motion and dove down into the crater.
As he watched, glowing spikes appeared from their
forearms, extending over their fists, and he realized
these energy blades were their primary weapons. The
Executor himself perched on the crater’s edge but did
not participate in the conflict—instead he sat and
watched, just as Raynor was doing.
The zerg were taken completely by surprise. The
brood had been concentrating on getting across the
crater and was unprepared for the sudden attack from
above. Protoss were among them in an instant, carving
164 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
through the zerg’s tough skin with their energy blades,
and a dozen or more zerg had fallen before the rest had
time to react. Raynor saw four warriors close in on an
ultralisk, each targeting a leg, and slice the massive
zerg to pieces before it could bring its large scythe-
tusks to bear.
One of the hydralisks reared up and hissed loudly
as it turned and slashed at a protoss warrior, leaving a
visible gash across his armored chest. The sound car-
ried across the plains, and to Raynor it had a clear
note of desperation. The zerg was calling for help! The
protoss stabbed forward with one hand and swept the
other in a wide outward arc, severing the hydralisk’s
limb and then impaling it through the head, and the
hydralisk’s cry faded, but Raynor could still hear the
grating voice echoing and knew its warning had gone
out.
Kerrigan must have been nearby because a moment
later Raynor heard a strange rustling, scraping sound,
like a bird’s flight mixed with the sound of bones
grinding together, and then she was there. She leaped
down into the crater, her wings flared behind her and
beating at the air, and landed atop a protoss warrior,
her wing-tips cutting him in two even before her feet
had touched the ground. Her zerg quickly rallied
around her and began pushing the protoss back while
Kerrigan herself glared about her, evidently seeking
her adversary.
“Where are you, Tassadar?” she shouted, her voice
making the nearby cliffs shake and causing rocks to
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S165
tumble free. Raynor felt the vibrations through the
plateau beneath him, and hoped it would hold. “Do
your underlings always do your fighting for you?”
She glanced up and spotted the Executor, still sitting
on the opposite lip, but before she could do more than
sneer at him he leaned backward and fell from sight.
Raynor, watching from above and behind, saw the
High Templar fall in a graceful dive, arms spreading
outward, then flip over and land on his feet in a small
ravine far below. Somehow he had signaled to his war-
riors at the same time, and they turned and bolted
from the crater, leaping over the edge and tumbling
down after their leader. Most of them lacked his grace
and precision, but they still managed to regroup in the
ravine without major injury and marched quickly
away, disappearing into the rocks.
Kerrigan had not hesitated either, and a powerful
jump carried her to the lip a moment behind the pro-
toss, her wings widespread to maintain her balance.
But by the time she had reached that perch her ene-
mies were gone, vanished into the warren of rock and
lava that lay all about them.
“Run and hide, little protoss,” she sneered after
searching for a moment. “You cannot evade me for-
ever. And when I find you”—her wings curled in like
hands forming fists—“I will rend you into bits!”
Turning back to her brood, she assessed the dam-
ages. So did Raynor. Two protoss had been killed but
their fellows had carried the bodies with them, leaving
behind only a few drops of blood upon the ash and
166A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
rock. Fully a third of the zerg brood had been killed or
maimed, however.
“Eliminate the wounded,” Kerrigan ordered, stand-
ing and walking around the crater, moving easily
across the narrow lip as if it were a wide road. The
unharmed zerg, obeying her command, quickly
turned on their injured fellows, and the air was filled
with blood and ichor until only the undamaged zerg
remained standing. The wounded did not put up a
fight.
Kerrigan had reached the far side of the volcano
now, and leaped down, gesturing for her surviving
zerg to follow her. They swarmed obediently up and
over the lip and then down onto the narrow ledge
below, and she led them in the same general direction
Tassadar had taken, clearly intent upon finding him.
Raynor doubted she’d succeed—despite her skills and
whatever mental powers she now possessed, he had a
feeling the Executor was ready for her. She wouldn’t
find the protoss until he wanted to be found.
The question, Raynor realized as he shifted his legs
to sit on the plateau with his back against the cliff, was
what to do now. Tassadar had disappeared. They might
return to the same valley, and he would check it out,
but the protoss would be foolish to use the same hid-
ing place twice, and the Executor was clearly no fool.
So he’d have to find them all over again. And right
now, with them on the move and the fact that they
had a head start and could run faster than he could,
there was no way he could catch up. He’d have to wait
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S167
until they went to ground and then find them all over
again.
As he was levering himself back to his feet he heard
a strange humming sound behind him. It was familiar,
and after a second he recognized it. It was the sound of
the protoss ship.
“Oh, now what?” Raynor asked as he twisted
around and dropped onto his stomach. He peered over
the edge of the plateau and stared down at the crater
below.
The protoss ship was landing.
His first thought was that the zerg had attacked the
ship and that was why it had relocated. It looked as if
it had been in a fight—gone was the glittering gold and
many of the majestic sweeps, and the hull was black-
ened instead. But then he looked again and realized
that the configuration was different—this ship was
smaller in general, stubbier, and lacked the elegance of
Tassadar’s. The hull was black, but not from damage—
instead it had a black finish that was smooth without
being glossy, reminding him of granite or black marble.
Where it was not black the ship gleamed a dull bronze,
weathered but still strong, and gave off a sense of
immense age and endurance.
This was a different ship entirely. A second protoss
vessel. What were two protoss ships doing here?
He watched, hunkered down, as the ship settled in,
its base resting amid the ichor and blood of the slain
zerg. The side irised open and the bottom lip elon-
gated, creating a walkway. After a few seconds several
168A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
protoss emerged and made their way down the gang-
plank and onto the crater floor.
At least Raynor thought they were protoss.
Just as the ship was slightly different, so these fig-
ures did not match the warriors he had seen before.
They were of a similar height and moved with equal
grace, but their armor was heavier, blockier, less
streamlined and less elegant. It had the same matte
finish as their ship, and seemed almost to absorb the
light around it, so that the figures below were standing
in shadow even though Char’s small sun stood almost
directly overhead. They had heavier brows, longer,
sharper chins, and ridged plates at the temple and
cheek that suggested horns, making them resemble
armored lizards rather than insects. Their bracers,
which had strange coils and wires running along their
length, were thick enough to house the same energy
blades, but they were darker than the rest of the
armor, as if the shadows were coalescing around the
figures’ hands and wrists.
Then their leader emerged.
He was tall, as tall as Tassadar, but more hunched.
Raynor had no idea how long protoss lived or how old
any of the ones he’d seen were, but something about
this new figure suggested great age. Despite that this
leader moved gracefully, his feet making no sound as
he stepped from the walkway to the ground. His face
was longer than that of his warriors, his chin curling
back up at its tip and flattening out, as if he had a
majestic beard. His skin seemed almost purple, partic-
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 169
ularly just below the deep-set pale green eyes, but
faded to white that shaded to ivory along his chin, and
he had bone ridges atop his head and small barbs along
his cheeks, like a great fanged lizard. Like Tassadar he
wore long strips of cloth across his chest and shoulders
and over his groin, but these were a soft black that glit-
tered slightly like stars in the nighttime sky. Beneath
those he had long robes with full, flaring sleeves, the
fabric a rich red-brown like dried blood, cuffed in a
softer brown like fur with strange sigils stretched all
around. Massive epaulets covered his shoulders, over-
lapping plates of metal or perhaps bone scored with
swirls and sweeps and pinned together by a gleaming
crystal dome the deep purple of a twilight sky. A
shadow traveled with this new protoss, shrouding him
despite the sunlight, and Raynor shivered, feeling a
chill emanating from the alien and his troops.
Who were these guys? he wondered. And what
were they doing here on Char?
CHAPTER 11
RAYNOR WATCHED AS THESE NEW DARK PRO-
toss gathered together and bowed their heads in
either communion or prayer. Then they moved to the
lip of the crater and effortlessly vaulted it to land
lightly on the far side of the slope—the way the zerg
had come, Raynor noticed. Intrigued, he abandoned
his hiding place and cut down from the plateau, tak-
ing a narrow path that led him along the cliff and to
the ground not far from the crater’s base. He moved
carefully, knowing the rocks there were not stable,
but as quickly as he dared, and he still arrived in time
to see the warriors descending into a wide cavern
nearby.
“Underground again,” he muttered to himself as he
jogged to the entrance and peered inside. “Great.” It
was too dark to see much, but the cavern did extend
backward and showed no sign of narrowing. At least
he wouldn’t be cramped. With a sigh he ducked
beneath the low arch of the entrance and headed
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 171
down, following the faint footsteps he heard some-
where ahead of him.
He didn’t have to worry about getting lost, as it
turned out. The cavern swept down, becoming a wide
tunnel, and then opened into an even larger chamber.
The curving roof here was easily a hundred feet above
the rough stone floor and the walls were surprisingly
smooth—where they weren’t covered in creep.
Because this chamber was infested by zerg and showed
the signs of their presence. Not the least of which being
the zerg themselves, who were massed down below. In
their center was one of the massive sluglike creatures,
the cerebrates. Raynor recognized this one as Zasz, the
cerebrate who had defied Kerrigan. Apparently her
response—killing his overlord—had not improved his
attitude toward her.
“The Queen of Blades is not worthy of our support,”
Zasz was whispering as Raynor flattened himself
behind a protrusion in the wall, hoping to escape
notice. “She risks us all with her impatience and her
temper. She is not zerg!”
If he was waiting for a reply from the Overmind he
did not get one, and the cerebrate’s muttering contin-
ued. “Her incompetence must be demonstrated! Her
leadership is suspect. It must not continue!”
While Zasz ranted, Raynor risked a quick glance
around. Where were those protoss? The tunnel had
led straight here—no branches or nooks or ante-
rooms—which meant they had come this way. But
how could they have gotten past this many zerg with-
172A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
out a fight? He looked around again, and almost
jumped when he saw a section of the wall move a
short ways below him. The patch of wall had looked
normal until it shifted, and then he saw a tall, slender
outline. Protoss! They could go invisible like Kerrigan,
or at least partially—now that he looked carefully he
could see the warrior standing there, and slowly he
distinguished several others beside the first. Why
hadn’t he noticed them before?
The answer became obvious as he saw the first war-
rior turn sideways—and vanish. In a second Raynor
was able to spot the protoss again, but the alien’s
armor had taken on the color and patterning of the
wall behind him. Protective camouflage.
Now that he knew what to look for Raynor spotted
several more protoss, all up against the same wall and
taking on the wall’s coloring and texture. But where
was their leader?
As if his thought had been a cue, the leader
appeared—near the center of the zerg brood, opposite
Zasz and perhaps a hundred feet from the cerebrate.
When he became visible his warriors went into motion
as well, abandoning their posts along the wall and glid-
ing down to the chamber floor, their footsteps almost
inaudible and their forms still little more than shifting
shadows.
The Swarm’s response was instantaneous. The
ultralisks stepped forward, locking their scythe-tusks
together to form a protective barrier around their
leader. The overlords and mutalisks took to the air, as
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 173
did the tiny scourge, while hydralisks and zerglings
ringed the ultralisks, facing outward. Every zerg
writhed with anticipation, flexing claws and tails and
baring teeth. They instinctively moved closer together
as the protoss leader stepped forward, a pace ahead of
his warriors—
—and held both massive, clawed hands up, palm
outward, in the universal sign for peace.
“I am Zeratul, Praetor of the Dark Templar,” he
announced, speaking to the cerebrate. His voice was
cold and dry, like old leaves, but a thrum behind the
shaky surface suggested depths best left untapped. “I
would speak with you, o Zasz of the cerebrate.”
The cerebrate wriggled slightly. “Why would I speak
with one such as you?” Zasz asked, though it seemed
he did not expect a reply. “You are an enemy of the
Swarm, and must be destroyed.”
“Without a doubt you can destroy us,” Zeratul
agreed. “For we are few and you are many. But what
then? Still you must contend with the Executor and
his warriors. Still you must block the Queen from con-
solidating her power—by destroying you and claiming
your duties and your brood for her own.”
“What know you of our queen?” Zasz demanded.
“Only her greatest weakness.” Though the Praetor’s
reply was spoken softly, every zerg stopped whatever it
had been doing to listen to this conversation, sensing
its potential to destroy a hated enemy and perhaps
exact revenge for the drops that had been spilled.
“Would you know it?” His words lacked Kerrigan’s
174 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
power but had another quality to them, a depth that
spoke of great age and perhaps even wisdom.
Zasz was evidently swayed as well. “I would hear
more of this weakness,” he admitted.
“We shall speak together as equals,” Zeratul offered.
“I enter your brood unarmed to show my faith in the
process.” His arms had remained up this entire time,
but now he gestured with them to make it even more
obvious that he was unarmed. “Come meet with me
and we shall discuss such matters.”
For a moment no one moved. Raynor, watching
from his safe perch along the tunnel, was sure the zerg
would simply fall upon this Zeratul and tear him to
shreds. Even with his warriors nearby, and with the
power Raynor sensed around him, the strange protoss
would be no match for a full zerg brood. Yet they didn’t
attack. Zasz simply swayed, as if debating, and his
brood waited, twitching eagerly but not advancing.
“We will speak,” Zasz finally confirmed. At its words
the zerg around it pulled back, though reluctantly. The
overlords, mutalisks, and scourge parted, to hover off in
the chamber’s corners, while the ultralisks backpedaled
and the hydralisks and zerglings moved aside. Now
there was an empty ring around the cerebrate. Zeratul
stepped forward and walked slowly to the center of the
room. The other protoss—the other Dark Templar,
Raynor assumed—stepped back a few paces as well,
until they were arrayed before the end of the tunnel. It
looked almost like an elaborate dance.
“Speak, then,” Zasz urged when he and Zeratul
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S175
were mere feet apart. Raynor could see strange shapes
and flashes of color shifting beneath the cerebrate’s
skin and knew Zasz was eager, and growing impatient.
“Tell us of this weakness.”
“And so I shall,” the protoss confirmed, leaning in
slightly. His head tilted down, his body crouching a lit-
tle to put him closer to the cerebrate’s level. Raynor
wondered how the protoss could stand being so close
to the foul zerg, but Zeratul showed no hint of discom-
fort or even dislike. He looked as if he were relaying
secrets to a close friend.
“Your queen,” he informed the cerebrate, his voice
little more than a dry whisper, “has one great weak-
ness, as I said. A flaw that could easily prove fatal.”
“Tell us!” Zasz demanded, the spots on his front
flashing more brightly.
“Very well.” Zeratul nodded, and with one arm ges-
tured behind him. “The flaw is this: the same as the
rest of your kind. The same that shall be your death!”
With these last words a blade appeared above the out-
stretched hand, jutting from his wrist. It was much like
the weapons Raynor had seen on Tassadar’s warriors,
an energy spike that glittered and glowed, but those
had been a smooth, gleaming blue-white. This was a
sparking hissing yellowish green, the same shade as his
eyes, wisps of vapor rising from its edges. Beneath the
hiss Raynor could feel a deep thrum through his bones
and his teeth, and the room grew noticeably colder.
Then Zeratul pivoted, his cocked arm jabbing for-
ward, and the blade struck deep into the cerebrate.
176A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Zasz screamed, a horrible rending sound that tore
Raynor’s throat in sympathy. Despite his hatred for the
zerg he felt pity for the creature. More than anything
he wanted that horrible sound to stop. The Dark Tem-
plar remained where he was, his blade embedded in
the cerebrate’s flesh as Zasz convulsed in agony. The
lights within him were spasming as well, colors and
shapes appearing suddenly and without pattern, and
the rest of the zerg writhed in shared pain. None of
them attacked, however—evidently they were too
shocked to move without a direct order, and Zasz was
in no shape to give one.
After what seemed like minutes Zeratul leaned in,
forcing his blade even deeper, and twisted his arm,
causing the blade to widen the hole it had made. The
screaming stopped abruptly and Zasz collapsed, his
massive body limp.
Then Raynor saw a strange thing. A glow gathered
from deep within the cerebrate’s body, coalescing as it
moved forward, until it passed through the gaping
hole in its head and floated just above, a ball of yel-
lowish light that wriggled and extruded small glowing
tentacles in every direction. Somehow Raynor knew
that this, and not that awkward shell, was the true
Zasz. The ball rose, hovering there as if waiting for
instructions or direction.
Then the Dark Templar struck. His blade lashed out,
a great sweeping gesture, and the ball was sliced in
two. The brilliant energy spike left trails of light and
shadow behind it as it moved, and the ball’s glow was
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 177
smothered by the shadows, its own light absorbed
even as it fell, its form collapsing until it was just a scat-
tering of faint light and then nothing at all.
And the brood went wild.
They had not moved while Zeratul attacked Zasz,
but when his blade carved open that glowing sphere a
thrum went through the chamber, somewhere bet-
ween a snap and a sigh, like a taut wire breaking. The
zerg evidently heard it as well, and the sound drove
them mad. Suddenly they were moving, but not as
they had before. This was a true “swarm,” with no
coordination or purpose, and as Raynor watched an
ultralisk stomped on a zergling, squashing it flat. Two
hydralisks turned on each other, each of their scythes
lashing out to slice deep into the other’s flesh.
Mutalisks dove into the crowd, spewing their acid on
their fellow zerg, and scourge exploded against over-
lords and ultralisks alike, their suicidal detonations
destroying the larger zerg and spreading ichor and
blood and flesh everywhere.
In the midst of all this, Zeratul stood unmoving. The
blade at his wrist had vanished, and now he merely
watched as the brood turned upon itself. After a
moment he nodded, then stalked back toward the tun-
nel. His warriors moved to flank him as he passed, and
together they walked back up the tunnel and out of
the cavern. Raynor hugged the wall as they passed, but
if they saw him they did not acknowledge his pres-
ence. A moment later their footsteps had faded and he
was alone with the zerg.
178 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Not that they noticed him either. They were too
busy killing each other. It wasn’t murderous rage,
though, he realized. He’d seen the zerg fight often
enough to know how efficient they could be at killing.
This was too careless, too sloppy. An ultralisk stormed
across the chamber, its head swiveling this way and
that as it moved, its scythe-tusks impaling smaller zerg.
But it missed as many as it hit and it didn’t finish off
the zerg it wounded—instead it ran on, ignoring the
damage it caused, until it reached the far wall. Then, as
Raynor watched amazed, the ultralisk charged full
force into the cavern, its tusks shattering with a sick-
ening crunch. It reared back, clearly dazed, and
repeated the attack, again and again, each time injur-
ing itself more, until finally its head collided with a
rocky spur, producing a loud crack, and the ultralisk
fell to the ground, its skull caved in.
This was insane, Raynor thought as he watched the
chaos below him. They weren’t angry—they had gone
mad!
He thought about that. Maybe they had gone mad.
Or mindless, at least. This was Zasz’s brood. The cere-
brate had controlled them utterly. Raynor had noticed
before that individual zerg had little autonomy—even
the cerebrates were bound to the Overmind’s will. Ker-
rigan was apparently an exception. She’d been allowed
to retain her free will, and was loyal to the Swarm but
could act independently. The other zerg were more
tightly controlled. So, if Zasz had done all the thinking
for his brood, and Zeratul had just killed him, where did
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 179
that leave these zerg? Without a controlling thought.
No wonder they were going berserk—they were mind-
less killers and all their restraints had just fallen away,
but without a direction they simply lashed out around
themselves.
A chill crept through Raynor as he retreated hastily
toward the surface, keeping an eye on the carnage
behind him. Fortunately the zerg were too distracted
to notice him. The zerg’s greatest strengths were their
sheer numbers and their ability to act as one, he
thought as he exited the cavern and took a deep
breath, relieved to be back in the sunlight and open air
again. Zeratul had found a way to sever the connection
between individual zerg—he had killed one zerg, the
cerebrate, and had effectively dispatched an entire
brood. If he and his people could learn to do that, to
target the cerebrates, they could end this war! They
could destroy the zerg for good!
“It can’t be that easy,” he admitted as he walked
away, heading back toward his camp. The Dark Tem-
plar had vanished, as had the other protoss, and he
was too weary and too shaken by what he’d seen to go
after them again. Besides, he had a lot to think about.
If all it took to destroy a brood was killing the cere-
brate, why hadn’t Tassadar done the same? Sure, the
Executor had said he was here to study Kerrigan, but
he’d fought the zerg before. Why not just target their
cerebrates, render the broods helpless, and then mop
them up? In that way the protoss would never lose a war
against the Swarm, and the Swarm probably wouldn’t
180A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
have ever made it to Mar Sara and the other human
worlds.
There was more to it than that. There had to be. Tas-
sadar hadn’t used that tactic because he didn’t know it.
But the protoss must have known about the cerebrates.
And if they had, why hadn’t they targeted them? It
couldn’t be that simple. Zeratul knew something he
didn’t, something even Tassadar didn’t.
His mind flashed back to Zasz’s death, and to the
strange light show that had followed. It was the second
time he’d seen a protoss battle a zerg commander, and
the second time he’d seen something that didn’t look
quite real. What was he really seeing when Kerrigan
and Tassadar fought, and when Zeratul destroyed that
glowing sphere that came from Zasz? He didn’t know,
but whatever it was, that was the key to all this. Zer-
atul’s killing the cerebrate hadn’t been enough—the
brood had been frozen during the attack, but they
hadn’t gone berserk until later.
Not until Zeratul had destroyed that ball of light.
Somehow that light was the key. And Raynor was
pretty sure he couldn’t hit something like that with a
gauss rifle. Hell, he wasn’t even sure he’d have seen it
if not for Zeratul. So maybe it was only the Dark
Templar who could do something like that. He won-
dered if they’d consider allying with him to wipe out
the rest of the Swarm. Certainly Zeratul seemed less
interested in testing Kerrigan than Tassadar had—the
Praetor hadn’t even asked about her, but had instead
sought out and attacked Zasz.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 181
Raynor shook his head. “Too much too fast,” he
muttered as he clambered over a small crater, careful
not to step in its center until he’d tossed a rock there to
see if the surface was solid enough to hold. He’d come
here to rescue Kerrigan, plain and simple. Instead he
was climbing around on the rocks, spying on not one
but two groups of protoss, watching them alternately
fight and taunt the zerg. It was all a little too strange for
him, and way too complicated. Not for the first time,
he wished Mike were here. The newshound was
sharper than he was. He’d understand all this, and
then he could explain it. But Mike was nowhere near,
was off running his rebel broadcasts, which left Raynor
to figure this out on his own.
CHAPTER 12
BY THE TIME HE STUMBLED BACK INTO CAMP,
Raynor was exhausted. It was already late enough
that most of his people were asleep, leaving only the
night watch and a handful of others to notice as he
staggered to his tent, crawled into it, shucked off his
boots, and collapsed.
And, of course, he dreamed.
He and Kerrigan were still dancing, twirling and
dipping to music he recognized as the old folk tunes
he’d heard while growing up. It was music he’d heard
when visiting his grandfather, and carried happy
memories—dancing to it with Kerrigan only added to
them, leaving him warm and content. Then the music
shifted, slowing, and she stepped in close, her arms
rising to wrap loosely around his neck. His own
shifted to settle at her waist, his hands clasped at the
small of her back. They were doing little more than
swaying to the rhythm, occasionally shuffling a step
forward or back. Their eyes were locked together, and
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S183
hers twinkled with happiness, arousal, and something
else—mischief. Her hip brushed against him as they
took a step. Her chest rubbed against his as he stepped
forward, and this time she didn’t step back as quickly.
Somehow she contrived for their bodies to connect
repeatedly, though always in innocent, seemingly
accidental ways. And all the time her face bore a look
of calm enjoyment, but her eyes told the real story.
She was toying with him.
Finally he couldn’t stand it any longer. He tightened
his arms around her, preventing her from moving
away, and leaned in close. Her eyes widened slightly,
though he knew she wasn’t at all surprised. Her lips
parted and her chin tilted slightly, so that her mouth
met his. Their lips brushed, gently at first, then pressed
together more firmly as they both gave in to the pas-
sion they felt. It was their first kiss. It was worth wait-
ing for. It was gentle and sweet and demanding and a
powerful hint of what might follow, and for a second
after they pulled apart Raynor could not think, could
not blink, could barely breathe for wanting her.
Then he woke up.
“So we’ve got two kinds of protoss out there?”
Abernathy asked as the three of them gathered inside
the shuttle for their customary morning meeting.
Raynor nodded and gratefully accepted the mug of
coffee she handed him.
“That’s right.” He took a sip, ignoring the way it
scalded his tongue, and sighed in relief as he felt the
184 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
caffeine kick in, jolting his system fully awake. “This
second group calls itself the Dark Templar.” In his
memory he saw Zeratul again, with that sliver of dark-
ness protruding from his hand and that cloak of cold
and shadow wrapped around him, and shivered.
“They’re definitely dark, I’ll give them that,” he admit-
ted. “Their tech, their mind-powers, whatever, seem
drawn from cold and the dark. Like space.”
“But we don’t need to worry about them attacking
us?” Cavez asked a little nervously.
“No,” Raynor reassured him, “I don’t think they’ll
attack us. We’re not their targets here—either group’s.
The regular protoss are after Kerrigan. Near as I can
figure, the Dark Templar just want to destroy the zerg.”
“Sounds good to me,” Abernathy said, and Raynor
chuckled.
“Yeah, me too,” he said. He’d already told them
what he’d seen, including how the zerg brood had
reacted. He didn’t mention the sphere of light, how-
ever. He knew how it’d sound if he did, like he was los-
ing his mind, seeing things. So he left that part out.
“I’m hoping we can strike a deal with them,” he admit-
ted, “scratch each other’s backs. We offer some extra
firepower, they use their whatever-it-was to mess up
the zerg, then give us a ride off this rock.”
“How do we find them?” Cavez asked.
“I can find them,” Raynor told him. “I did it once, I
can do it again.” He didn’t mention that encountering
the Dark Templar had been luck the first time. But why
not let them hope a little? “I’ll track down the other
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 185
protoss too,” he decided. “I want to keep an eye on
both of them, and on the zerg, just in case anyone
starts wandering through this area or decides they
need to knock us off too.”
“Do you want to take some of the men with you,
just in case?” Abernathy asked.
Raynor shook his head. “No, I can move faster
alone, and I’m used to it. Besides, everybody’s got their
assignments. No sense switching ’em now.” He didn’t
point out the obvious—that even if every trooper went
with him they’d be no match for the first protoss group
or a zerg brood, and possibly not for the Dark Templar
either. Safety in numbers only worked when you had
the numbers on your side.
“We’ve got everything covered here,” Cavez assured
him, and Raynor clapped the young trooper on the
shoulder.
“I know you do,” he told the younger man. “You
two don’t need me hanging around all day.” He
grinned and took another slug of his coffee. “Better if I
keep myself busy and out of your way.”
The next day Raynor headed back out, looking for
signs of any of the three leaders he sought. Immedi-
ately, however, he was faced with a dilemma: should
he return to the mountains or head down into the
lowlands, where cracked earth was broken up by small
steam vents and pocked with fissures? He figured the
protoss would head back up into the mountains,
where they could find more cover and also have a bet-
186A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
ter vantage from which to spot Kerrigan. But she
wouldn’t go up there. She’d stay down low, scouring
the landscape for any sign of her foes, daring them to
come to her. He knew that both from the Kerrigan of
old and from what he’d seen of the new, awe-inspiring
Kerrigan.
Plus something about his dreams told him she was
south rather than north, low rather than high.
He had dreamed again last night, and again they
had been dancing. They kissed, just as they had before,
and then she pulled back, smirking, and twisted free of
his arms. A quick, sly look at him and she was off and
running, forcing him to chase her. He did so happily,
laughing at the sheer joy of it all, loving the feel of the
wind in his hair and the sight of her before him, her
long red hair streaming about her.
She was quick, but he was taller and his longer
strides ate up the distance, closing the gap until finally
he could reach out and snag her wrist. The sudden
shift in her balance caused her to stumble, and he
bumped into her, the two of them toppling to the
ground together. They landed on soft grass, amused
and unhurt, and Kerrigan struggled to free herself,
twisting her hand this way and that but to no avail.
She was laughing the whole time, and so was he.
At last she gave up trying to escape and, suddenly
changing tacks, shouldered him aside, causing him to
topple onto his back again. Then she rolled over onto
him, forcing the air from his lungs. He lay there, trying
to catch his breath, and she pulled her wrist loose.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S187
“Aha!” she shouted triumphantly, raising both arms to
keep them free of his grasp.
Then she turned so she was lying atop him, face-to-
face. And, grinning, she lowered her lips to his.
He woke still tasting her kiss.
Now, as he wandered through Char’s strange, sul-
furous desert, Raynor thought about his dreams again.
He had dreamed of Kerrigan before, of course, starting
back when he’d first met her—dreams of how that
encounter could have gone differently, dreams of the
two of them talking, dreams of them getting along,
even dreams Kerrigan would have wanted to shoot
him for if she had seen them in his head. But since
landing on Char he’d been dreaming about her more
and more, almost every time he closed his eyes. Was
that just because he’d thought she was dead and now
knew she was alive, if altered? Was it because he felt
drawn to her, even more now than before? Because
something about her, in her new form, was utterly
captivating?
As he stalked across the plains, stepping carefully to
avoid cracks and crevices and steam, he kept his eyes
peeled. The Kerrigan of old would have disappeared,
going Ghost on him, but somehow he didn’t think this
new Kerrigan would use that trick. She was bolder
now, more confident. Maybe that was part of what he
liked about her. He’d always felt Kerrigan’s brashness
was a mask for a lonely, self-conscious young woman.
Now she was completely sure of herself and had no
need for such tricks.
188 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
He came to the edge of a massive crevice that could
easily have been defined as a valley. Looking out over
it, shading his eyes against the glare of the hard-baked
dirt and rock, he spotted movement. The ground
seemed darker in one area, and at first he couldn’t tell
if it was actually moving or if the steam was causing
ripples in the air, playing tricks on his eyes. He
squinted, trying to get a better view, then finally gave
up and pulled the binoculars from their case on his
belt. With them raised he could see the disturbance
clearly.
It was zerg, definitely. He could make out several
overlords hovering above the ground, smaller shapes
that were probably mutalisks darting between them.
Below those were the massive ultralisks, easily distin-
guished now, and around them smaller shapes that
had to be hydralisks and zerglings. One shape walked
out in front, from this distance little more than a dark
butterfly with legs, even through the binoculars. But
he recognized the outline and the walk instantly. It
was Kerrigan.
“Gotcha,” Raynor muttered as he returned the
binoculars to their case and studied the edge of the
crevice before him. Off to one side a little ways he spot-
ted a crack that angled down. It was wide enough for
him to fit through, and if it ran all the way to the bot-
tom he’d have an easy path. The crack was also narrow
enough that levering himself back up it wouldn’t be
too hard, either, though he hoped he didn’t have to do
that with a full zerg brood in hot pursuit.
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S189
The crack petered out halfway to the valley floor but
ended in a short ledge. Raynor found a second ledge
about ten feet below the first one and jumped down,
catching himself before he stumbled forward and fell.
That ledge was only a few feet wide but another five feet
over was a longer one that angled down into a trail, and
after jumping onto it Raynor was able to continue his
descent. By the time he had reached the valley floor, an
hour or two later, he was sweaty and exhausted. And
the zerg were closer.
Taking a few quick swallows of water and munch-
ing on some rations, he eased his way into the valley
proper, hugging the wall behind him for cover. The
zerg were still a good distance away, and he inched his
way forward, being careful to stay as concealed and
quiet as possible. He wanted to spy on them, not get
killed by them.
Finally he found a small crack in the wall behind
him, creating a nook barely as wide as his shoulders,
and he tucked himself into the cramped space and
waited. The zerg were close enough for him to hear
them, and he strained to listen.
“Insufferable protoss coward!” Kerrigan was raging.
Peeking around the edge of the nook, he saw her storm-
ing across the valley floor, her wings jabbing at the air
with each step. “Tassadar cannot evade my wrath for-
ever,” she promised herself, her hands clenching into
fists and beating against her sides. “I shall find him
and—”
Her raving was interrupted by a faint rushing sound
190A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
overhead, and Raynor ducked back, glancing up as he
did. It was an overlord, and he wondered where it had
come from, since Kerrigan’s own were still behind her
with the rest of her brood.
“Kerrigan,” the overlord called out, and he recog-
nized the voice. It was the other cerebrate, Daggoth,
the one that in his dreams had given Kerrigan the use
of his warriors for her assault on the Amerigo. “Zasz is
dead!” he informed her, his overlord floating nerv-
ously just beyond her reach. For a second Raynor
wondered if Daggoth had heard how Kerrigan had
treated Zasz’s overlord back in the crater. Was he afraid
she would attack his messenger as well?
This was not unwelcome news, however, and so she
merely smiled up at it, a sharp-toothed, nasty smile.
“Oh?” she purred, her wings curling about her con-
tentedly. “Dead, you say?” Then her smile dimmed. “It
is a pity that cerebrates cannot truly be killed,” she
said, which made Raynor sit up and take notice. What
did she mean by that? “I expect,” she continued, “that
the Overmind will reincarnate him soon. . . .”
Raynor rested his head against the cool rock of his
hiding place, trying to process what she had just let slip
so casually. Cerebrates reincarnated! His first thought
was to discount that as hocus-pocus—he’d heard peo-
ple talk about reincarnation before, usually either old
folks or young kids with starry eyes and crazy ideas.
But then, this was Kerrigan talking. Even before her
transformation she’d been as hardheaded and practical
as . . . well, as him. And her becoming zerg had, if any-
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S191
thing, stripped away any lingering frivolities. If she
was talking about reincarnation, especially to a cere-
brate, she was serious. Which meant the zerg com-
manders couldn’t be killed, at least not permanently.
His heart sank. The zerg had a ridiculous number of
warriors and could always breed more. And now their
commanders couldn’t die. They were impossible to
defeat.
Apparently the zerg had thought so as well, which
explained the panic he heard in Daggoth’s voice as the
cerebrate replied, “No, he will not!” The overlord’s agi-
tation increased and Kerrigan looked up at it curiously.
So did Raynor. “The protoss have devised some new
attack,” Daggoth explained hurriedly, “an attack pow-
erful enough to nullify our reincarnation and give
pause to the Overmind itself!”
Raynor wanted to shout when he heard that, and
he had to bite down on his gloved hand to keep him-
self quiet. Zeratul! Whatever the Dark Templar had
done to Zasz, it had been permanent. And it was
throwing the zerg into complete panic!
“I had wondered,” Kerrigan admitted, almost to her-
self, “why the Overmind felt so . . . distant from me.”
“As had I,” Daggoth replied, and Raynor could hear
both surprise and sorrow in the cerebrate’s tone. “You
are a mere youngling, recently brought to the Swarm.
I have served countless lifetimes, and ever have my
mind and the Overmind’s been one. Now there is an
emptiness within me, and my cries to him fall without
reply.”
192A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“Is it so hard,” Kerrigan asked him then, her words
condescending but strangely bitter, “to manage with-
out the Overmind’s guidance? To pilot your own
course?”
“Such is not our way” was Daggoth’s only answer,
and Raynor saw Kerrigan’s face twist in what might
have been disgust. She was clearly not pleased, though
Raynor knew she was perfectly happy to see Zasz gone
for good. Still, she snarled as she digested the new
information and considered it in light of other recent
events, her wings twitching impatiently. “So,” she said
finally, the word little more than a growl. “Tassadar’s
plan was merely a diversion. I should not have under-
estimated him so.” If anything she looked even angrier
than before, and Raynor pitied the Executor when
Kerrigan found him. If there was one thing she had
always hated it was to be treated as if she didn’t matter,
and Tassadar’s taunting her had merely been a ploy to
keep her distracted. In truth, it didn’t mean she wasn’t
important—if anything it matched the protoss’s state-
ment that she was of critical importance and of the
utmost danger—but she saw it differently.
“Without its master,” Daggoth was saying, “Zasz’s
brood has run amok, and even now threatens the Hive
Cluster.” His overlord turned, spotting one of the other
overlords that still hovered over the rest of Kerrigan’s
brood. “Cerebrate,” it called, addressing the nameless
cerebrates whose brood Kerrigan now commanded,
“you must eradicate the rampaging brood and stem
any further damage it might cause.” Daggoth’s over-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S193
lord twitched in what might have been fear. “I shall
deal with the protoss myself.”
“No,” Kerrigan corrected, and the overlord froze in
the act of turning away. “The High Templar is mine.”
“We each must play our role, o Queen of Blades,”
Daggoth told her, and his words sounded suspiciously
like a reprimand. Apparently Kerrigan thought so as
well, and her wings swept up, grazing the overlord’s
sides and drawing a twitch of pain from it. “We must
do as the Overmind might bid, were it to speak
again.”
“The High Templar is mine,” she repeated softly, her
words rolling with power. “You will handle Zasz’s
brood. I will find the protoss and teach them the error of
their ways.” Then she grinned. “The Overmind would
approve this plan, were it still linked to us.” To Raynor
the last statement had the shape of a barb, reminding
the cerebrate that he had no one to back him.
For a moment no one spoke, and Raynor could
almost taste the tension. Would Daggoth prove to be
another Zasz, he wondered, and defy Kerrigan’s com-
mands?
But Daggoth was an older cerebrate, and much
wiser. “It shall be as you say,” he declared finally. “My
brood is in proximity to Zasz’s own and will dispatch
his raving subjects.”
“Good.” Kerrigan nodded. “When that is done, locate
the protoss’s craft and destroy it. I will not give him the
option of escape.” She turned away, wings furling, and
Daggoth recognized the dismissal. His overlord flew off,
194A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
presumably returning to the rest of its brood, leaving
Kerrigan alone with her loyal zerg.
“Where have you gone, little Templar?” she whis-
pered, her eyes narrowing. Raynor felt a strange pres-
sure behind his eyes, and he thought he saw Kerrigan
glance in his direction. Then the feeling moved on.
“Ah,” she sighed after a moment. “There you are.” And
she was off at a run, her wings flapping behind her and
causing her feet to glide across the ground. Her brood
moved with her, and in a moment Raynor was alone.
He waited until he was sure they had all swept past
before abandoning his hiding place and all pretenses of
stealth and running after them.
The zerg ran for hours, seemingly tireless, leaping
across small chasms and circling around larger crevices,
before finally reaching a wide plateau that resembled
the one on Antiga Prime where Raynor had first met
Kerrigan. Tailing behind the zerg, drenched in sweat
and gasping for breath, he skidded to a stop just in time
to keep from falling onto the plateau as the last of the
zerg jumped down.
The protoss were waiting for them.
This was the first group of protoss, one hundred
strong, and they were arranged around the far edge of
the plateau. Tassadar stood tall and proud before them,
close to the center of the wide flat rock. His eyes were
already locked upon Kerrigan, who had leaped down
to the plateau first and was already stalking toward
him, her wings spreading in anticipation.
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 195
“Trapped at last, little Templar,” she hissed to him as
she closed the distance. Her hands flexed, eager to
carve into flesh, and her wings mimicked the gesture.
“This shall be our battleground, o Queen,” Tassadar
replied. “Face me here, and I will defeat you myself!”
He did not step back or move at all as she closed the
distance, and his large electric-blue eyes regarded her
calmly as she paused perhaps five feet away.
“I face you now, little Templar,” Kerrigan replied,
baring her teeth at him, “and you face your doom!”
She leaped forward, spinning as she did, and her wings
spun around her, their blades whistling toward the
Executor—
—and finding nothing but empty air. Tassadar was
no longer there.
“Where?” Kerrigan wheeled about and spotted the
High Templar the same time Raynor did. The protoss
leader was now standing behind her, ten paces back,
still looking unfazed. Raynor wasn’t sure how he had
moved so quickly, and Kerrigan didn’t seem to care.
She practically skipped across the distance, bounding
up and spinning, then landing on one foot and leaping
to spin again. It was beautiful, a ballet of death, her
body transformed into a single whirling blade, and in
the time it took to blink she had closed the gap and her
blades had found flesh.
The flesh of a hydralisk, which collapsed in pieces,
its body still twitching as the image of Tassadar faded
from it.
“An illusion?” Kerrigan howled, turning back toward
196 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
the far end of the plateau, her eyes flicking across the
assembled protoss warriors as she tried to locate her foe.
Her lips pulled back in a sneer. “Are you afraid to face
me, Templar?”
“So long as you continue to be so predictable, o
Queen,” Tassadar replied, “I need not face you at all.
You are your own worst enemy.” His voice echoed all
around them but had no clear source, nor had his war-
riors moved when he spoke.
“You cannot hide from me, little protoss,” Kerrigan
warned him, her eyes narrowing. Raynor felt that
same strange pressure and realized she was reaching
out with her mind. After a few seconds she straight-
ened from her crouch, focusing on one of the Zealots.
“I know you are here,” she called out, walking toward
the warrior she had selected. “It does not matter that I
cannot find you. You are a leader, little Templar, and
you will not allow your men to come to harm.” As she
moved her wings stretched out behind her, and the
sun’s light caught upon them. Raynor thought he saw
an iridescence stretch between her wing-blades, a
sheen like a soap bubble linking the barbs and creating
a faint skin across them. When he blinked it vanished,
but after a second he saw it again.
Kerrigan had reached the warrior now, and she
smiled at him. It was not a friendly smile. The protoss
remained motionless, looking through her, arms
crossed over his chest. She turned away as if to speak
to her zerg, who waited impatiently where she had left
them, and her left wing swept around as she turned,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S197
that sheen touching the warrior’s neck. He did not
make a sound as his eyes suddenly dimmed and his
head toppled to the ground, rolling off the edge of the
plateau. The body crumpled a second later, fountain-
ing blood from its severed neck.
“Shall I kill another?” Kerrigan called out, smiling
as she turned toward the next warrior in line. Her
wings wriggled excitedly.
“Hold!” One of the warriors near the end of the line
stepped forward, his armor and clothing changed as he
moved, until Tassadar faced her. “Very well, o Queen. I
am here. Now face me in battle.”
“With pleasure,” Kerrigan snarled, and launched
herself at him.
Once again Raynor saw a strange layered image. He
saw Kerrigan leap toward Tassadar, her wings lashing
out at him, and saw the Executor dodge the blow. The
protoss leader had no weapons and made no counter-
attack but Kerrigan pivoted away as if he had.
She spun again, the tip of one wing scraping across
the Executor’s chest and causing him to stumble. He
allowed himself to fall, catching himself with one
hand, and then kicked off the ground, pivoting up
until he was upside down and supported on that hand
before flipping back over and landing on his feet again.
Tassadar stepped forward, or tried to—suddenly he
was hurled back into his warriors, who staggered but
caught him and themselves before they fell off the
plateau. This time Raynor thought he saw the Execu-
tor’s eyes widen in surprise or perhaps pain. Or both.
198 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Tassadar was suddenly tugged forward again, limbs
flailing against air, until his face was inches from Kerri-
gan’s. He swept his arms around, fists aimed for her
head, but her wings blocked the blow and pinned him in
midair like an enormous bug trapped in a spider’s web.
That was what Raynor saw. But not all he saw.
Because superimposed on that was another sequence
of events, similar but grander, more electrifying, and
more unnerving.
Kerrigan leaped toward Tassadar, her wings out,
that rainbow sheen between them. Tassadar’s body
was suddenly enveloped by a blue glow similar to the
one Raynor had seen around the protoss ship.
The Executor spun, raising one arm to block, and
sparks flew as iridescence and blue lightning collided.
His other arm lashed out and across in a solid back-
hand, blue flickers arcing behind it, and Kerrigan
stepped back, her wings floating up to avoid that glow.
She moved in again, pivoting so one wing raked
across him, and though he threw up both arms to
block the blow the impact still hurled him backward,
his glow dimming slightly.
Tassadar fell and flipped over, using Kerrigan’s blow
as momentum and one hand for support. As he
moved, his right foot lashed out toward her head, the
glow around that limb intensifying and extending out-
ward like a blade. She jerked to one side, however, and
the blow missed her.
Then her wings flexed and snapped forward, as if
tossing something, and the iridescence shot forward
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 199
like strands of a web, catching the Executor in the chest.
Kerrigan leaned back, her wings sweeping behind
her, and the strands remained, yanking Tassadar for-
ward. His glow grew weaker, particularly at the point
of contact. He tried to lash out with both hands, focus-
ing the glow there until his fists shone like twin bea-
cons, but Kerrigan’s wings blocked the attack. More
sparks flew, and iridescence from the wings wrapped
around the Executor’s wrists, binding him tightly.
Then Kerrigan raised her wings and Tassadar rose
with them like a puppet on taut strings. His glow had
faded further and was almost gone except for a faint
halo around the head.
“Now I have you, little Templar,” Kerrigan purred,
gazing up at her captive. “What shall I do with you?”
she pondered theatrically, one finger resting on her
chin, her other hand on her hip. After a moment she
nodded. “Death, I think, but not too quickly.” Then, as
if for the first time, Kerrigan noticed the other protoss,
who were still standing motionless around the
plateau’s edge. “Oh yes, I’d forgotten them,” she com-
mented. She glanced over her shoulder to her brood.
“Kill them,” she commanded. “Kill them all.”
The zerg had been pacing and shifting and fluttering,
clearly under orders and impatient to attack but unwill-
ing to disobey. Now, with their queen’s permission, they
charged, their bloodlust no longer held in check.
Raynor saw a mutalisk dive toward a protoss, its mouth
open as it flew, and then it was past the warrior and cir-
cling back around. The acid it had spit at him as it went
200A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
past ate through the warrior’s armor, though his flesh,
and apparently even through his bones, causing the
body to collapse in pieces like a loose jigsaw puzzle. A
pair of hydralisks had descended upon another and zer-
glings were everywhere, snapping and biting at limbs
and preventing the warriors from blocking any attacks.
I’ve got to help them, Raynor decided, still watching
from his safe location just above the plateau’s near
end. Otherwise Kerrigan’s brood will slaughter them
all. But what could he do? He had his pistol but no
rifle, no armor, and no backup. He cursed himself for
not taking the combat armor—it would have elimi-
nated any chance at stealth but he could have kept up
more easily and he’d have some firepower now, when
he needed it.
Raynor glanced around desperately, looking for
anything that could help, and his eyes passed along
several of Kerrigan’s brood floating a short distance
above the others. Mutalisks, overlords, and scourge
waited in the air for their queen to call them to battle.
The small, fast-moving scourge had barely enough
energy to go a few hours without sustenance, so they
were perched in rows along the backs of the three
overlords that floated in a rough line on the other side
of the square, eagerly awaiting the command to
launch themselves at the enemy.
Something about that arrangement struck Raynor
oddly, and he glanced back again, but couldn’t figure
out what was bugging him. Instead he shifted his gaze
to stare at the zerg ground forces, who were making
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S201
short work of the protoss. The protoss warriors were
taller, stronger, and much faster than the average Ter-
ran, let alone the zerg, and their armor was proof
against at least glancing blows from zerg claws while
their energy blades could cut through the tough zerg
hide with ease. In a fair fight, the protoss would win
easily. But right now they were severely outnum-
bered, the zerg using that advantage to swamp the pro-
toss, three or four zerg attacking each warrior. Almost
half the protoss were down already, and it would not
be long before the rest followed.
Raynor wished there were something he could do.
He liked the protoss—well, at least he admired and
respected them. And he needed all the allies he could
get these days. There had to be some way to even the
odds. But that would require heavy equipment, which
was back at the camp, or high explosives, which they
used sparingly, and—
At the thought of explosives Raynor whipped his
head back around to stare at the zerg fighters, particu-
larly those overlords. That was it, he realized. The cer-
ebrate who answered to Kerrigan, the new, namless
one, lacked Daggoth’s or even Zasz’s experience. This
new cerebrate hadn’t known to keep his forces well
apart, particularly the airborne ones.
Raynor drew his pistol and steadied it on a rock
before him. He took careful aim, letting his breath in
slowly and letting it out again just as slowly, lined up
the sights—
—and fired.
202 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
He let loose with three rapid bursts, not sure that
would be enough. But it was.
The first shot struck the farthest overlord, causing it
to writhe in pain. His second burst missed because of
the creature’s motion but the third hit right near the
first, widening its already gaping wound. Stunned by
the sudden attack from nowhere, the overlord reeled
back, unable to control its flight—
—and slammed into the overlord beside it.
Crushing the resting scourge between them.
The explosion threw Raynor back, his pistol slam-
ming into his cheek and leaving him with a ringing
head and a throbbing face. But the devastation on the
plateau was far worse. The scourge were the zerg’s sui-
cide bombers, bred to explode upon impact. They det-
onated with enough force to destroy a shuttle or a
fighter craft, and a handful of them could breach a
starship hull. This had been a row of them, the explo-
sion from the first adding to the impact on the others,
and there was nothing here but flesh and bone. And
the hard rock of the plateau reflected the blast back up,
causing even more damage to those stuck upon it.
The zerg caught the worst of it. There were more of
them, and they had less outward protection than the
armored protoss. Zerglings were shredded by the explo-
sion, as were the other two overlords. The mutalisks
and hydralisks and ultralisks had thicker hides, but still
those closest to the blast were torn apart, while those
farther away were battered and bruised and broken.
Not that the protoss escaped unscathed. The explo-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 203
sion caught them by surprise as well, and several of
them were hurled from the plateau, smashing into the
rocks below. Those closest to the blast center were
shredded, armor and flesh both, and all of them were
tossed about like leaves on a strong wind.
Not even Kerrigan escaped.
Her back had been to her brood, all her attention
focused on her captive, and the blast had caught her
full force, knocking her to her knees, her wings lancing
forward like a spider’s legs to keep her from being
smashed into the rock.
The movement had released Tassadar, who had also
been tossed back but had caught himself with one
hand on the plateau’s lip. He hung there a moment,
then swung the other arm up and, with an impressive
heave, flipped forward, uncoiling as he did so he
landed standing and facing the chaos.
For an instant the Executor studied the scene, his
eyes flicking up once to where Raynor had crawled
back to the ledge to watch what happened. He thought
he saw Tassadar nod at him. Then the High Templar
must have signaled his troops, because those warriors
still alive and mobile grabbed up their fallen comrades
and sprinted to the edge. For another second they
paused there, silhouetted against the rocks beyond.
Then as one the protoss dove forward, disappearing
into the gorge below.
“No!” Kerrigan howled, wings flexing and thrusting
her back to her feet. She was staring at the spot where
Tassadar had stood before he jumped. “You cannot
204A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
escape me so easily, little Templar!” And she ran to the
edge, wings flapping behind her, and leaped off, half-
gliding and half-falling as she pursued her quarry.
Her brood, those who had survived, gathered them-
selves and followed her, climbing or jumping or flying
down as necessary. In a moment they were gone, and
Raynor was left alone again, looking out on the devas-
tation he had caused.
“Not bad for a day’s work,” he admitted, grinning as
he rubbed gingerly at the bruise along his cheek. He’d
saved the Executor’s life, at least for the moment, and
several of his warriors as well. If that didn’t buy him
some points with them nothing would. He wanted to
collapse for a while—he was still exhausted from run-
ning after Kerrigan, and now he was battered from the
explosion as well. But he knew he had to keep the
brood in his sights.
“Okay, okay,” he muttered to himself, holstering his
pistol and climbing to his feet. Then, with a sigh, he
began picking his way as fast as he could down to the
plateau and to the gorge below, straining eyes and ears
for any hint of the aliens he was determined to follow.
CHAPTER 13
FORTUNATELY FOR RAYNOR, KERRIGAN WAS NOT
interested in concealing her whereabouts. Quite the
opposite, in fact—she wanted Tassadar to know she
was coming for him. Somehow she had summoned
reinforcements, most likely claiming zerg from other
broods, and her overlords and mutalisks and scourge
flew overhead like vultures circling a kill, making it
very easy to locate her.
Unfortunately, she was also moving very quickly.
Far more quickly than an unarmored Terran could
manage. Raynor again cursed himself for not wearing
powered armor, and assured himself that he wouldn’t
make that mistake twice.
As it was, he found himself chasing the brood that
was chasing the protoss, knowing he wouldn’t be able
to catch up until they stopped. Which meant he would
probably reach them after the fight was over. He
wasn’t sure what point there was to arriving so late on
the scene, but felt compelled to follow anyway. Maybe
206A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Tassadar could hold his own long enough for Raynor
to arrive, though he wasn’t sure what a single pistol
could do if a unit of protoss warriors were in trouble.
He doubted Kerrigan or her cerebrate subordinate
would fall for the same trick twice. But he knew he
had to watch what happened. Maybe it was just that,
despite everything, he still felt a need to be close to
Kerrigan and to keep an eye on her. Or maybe he felt
someone should at least witness her atrocities.
Kerrigan was fast but so were the protoss, and Tas-
sadar had apparently decided that he needed time to
regroup and to study what he’d learned so far. The
Executor and his troops had vanished, leaving Kerri-
gan to howl with rage and scrape her claws and wings
against the surrounding rocks, leaving deep gouges in
their surface. Raynor could hear her shrieks two val-
leys away, and slowed his pace. This wouldn’t be a
good time to burst in on her and her brood, not when
they were so clearly out for blood. In the absence of
their real quarry they would probably take him as an
acceptable substitute.
As he picked his way over the rocks, however, the
howls and curses suddenly stopped. Had he been spot-
ted somehow? He thought he was too far away for the
overlords and other airborne zerg to notice, but he
wasn’t exactly sure how good their vision was. He flat-
tened himself against a rock anyway, and then froze,
listening hard.
“What have we here?” It was Kerrigan, and she was
all but purring now. Damn! That had to mean she’d
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S207
spotted prey, and he didn’t think it was Tassadar.
Raynor’s hand edged toward his pistol. If the brood did
come after him he’d take down as many as he could.
Not that it would make much difference, but at least
he wouldn’t die feeling useless.
“Not the Templar, no,” Kerrigan was saying to her-
self, and the scrape of bone on rock indicated that she
was moving. Were the sounds getting louder, or was
that just his imagination? “But equally as good,” she
decided. Raynor could hear her delight.
“Come out, little one,” she purred now. “Come out
and play. My brood is hungry for blood, and yours calls
to us. Come out, little protoss. Show me why you
smell different from your kin.”
Protoss? Raynor let out a sigh. It wasn’t him after
all. But wait—smelled different? That had to be the
other protoss he’d seen, the strange one that had killed
Zasz.
Zeratul.
The scraping continued but was no longer getting
louder, and Raynor risked stepping away from the
boulder and glancing around. The zerg were still one
valley over. He crawled up the hill, cursing softly as he
put his hand too close to a steam vent, and paused near
the top, using a small boulder for cover.
Kerrigan was standing down below, in the narrow
rock basin of the valley. Her zerg were all around her,
chittering angrily about the delay and excitedly about
the prospect of new prey. He could see them clearly
from here and could easily make out Kerrigan’s wings,
208 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
which were curling and uncurling with barely con-
tained glee. She was facing a cavern at the valley’s
edge, and it seemed her words were directed toward
that dark space.
Raynor saw nothing, but after a moment Kerrigan
nodded. “Do not bother to cloak yourself, little pro-
toss,” she warned the empty air. “For I can sense you
though I cannot see you. Show yourself to me.”
Zeratul appeared before her, not forty paces away,
his Dark Templar behind him. They must have used
the same trick Raynor had seen them do before, when
they went after Zasz, blending into their surround-
ings. It hadn’t fooled Kerrigan, but the Dark Templar
didn’t look too concerned. In fact, Zeratul nodded at
her as he stepped forward, a gesture that spoke of
respect for an equal.
“Greetings, o Queen of the Zerg,” the protoss
intoned, his words echoing in Raynor’s head. Just as
before there was something dry and brittle about
them, but at the same time they hummed with
restrained power. “I am Zeratul, Praetor of the Dark
Templar.” He actually bowed to her, a deep, graceful
bow from the waist, which seemed to amuse Kerrigan.
“Your coming has been foretold.”
“Has it?” she asked, and even from here Raynor
could see the smile on her lips just as easily as he heard
it in her voice. “And what do they say of me, Praetor?”
“You are a part of the culmination,” the protoss
replied. “But not the end of it.” His eyes glowed
brightly, and Kerrigan seemed almost transfixed by
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S209
them. Her entire brood was motionless, held in thrall
by the Praetor’s gaze and words. “You shall show the
way, the path that must be taken, the realigning of old
truths no longer valid,” he intoned, and to Raynor it
sounded as if the protoss was reading from a text
somewhere, or reciting holy scripture. “Yours is not
the hand, but your very existence provides necessary
instruction.”
“The culmination,” Kerrigan repeated. She raised
her hands and stared at them, fingers fully extended,
claws glistening in the fading sunset light. “And these
are not the hands.” Then she glanced up at Zeratul and
her smile returned, widening into a predatory grin.
“But even if these are not the hands, Praetor, at least
they will be the culmination of your life.” Then she
was moving, bounding forward and swiping outward
with both hands as if tearing apart a curtain—or a
body.
Any human would have been ripped to shreds by
the oncoming attack, Raynor knew, and he shuddered.
For that matter, he suspected most protoss would have
been carved open just as easily, Kerrigan’s claws pierc-
ing their thick hide and glittering armor like tissue
paper. Zeratul’s flesh seemed no different, and no
more protected.
But he was not there when her blows arrived.
Instead he had twisted away, dancing back in a
strange shadowy blur, and from his wrists projected
those glittering green blades he had used to end Zasz.
“So be it,” he announced, his words ringing across
210 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
the rocks and making several zerg crumple to the
ground, writhing. “We shall battle.”
And then the battle began.
As with Kerrigan and Tassadar, Raynor saw two sep-
arate fights overlaid, the combatants matched in loca-
tion and position but not in their actions. He was dimly
aware that the zerg had been freed from their paralysis
when Kerrigan attacked and that they were battling
the other Dark Templar, but his eyes stayed locked on
the two leaders and their private duel. Even the other
zerg stayed clear of that conflict, respecting their mis-
tress’s wish for an undisturbed fight.
Zeratul sprang toward her, flipping over her as he
approached, his blades stabbing downward. Her wings
blocked the strike, however, fanning over her head so
their spikes caught his blades and shoved them away.
Then her wings snapped up, the tips poised to pierce
him on both sides. But Zeratul twisted, and they could
not find purchase as he sailed past. He landed behind
her, pivoting to face her, arms raised and ready.
The sun slipped just below the horizon now, and the
shadows lengthened, one of them enveloping the
Praetor. The darkness thickened around him, wrap-
ping over him protectively until only his glowing eyes
could be seen clearly. Raynor strained to pierce that
shroud and could just make out the Praetor’s blades as
patches of dim light, a marginally weaker shadow
against the whole.
If the shadows bothered Kerrigan, she gave no sign
of it. Instead she spun toward her foe, her wings lash-
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S211
ing out again, carving open the darkness as they
struck. An unwholesome yellowish glow had sprung
up around her, enveloping every spur and spike and
talon, and that glow chased away the darkness, leaving
streaks of normal twilight amid the shadow.
Zeratul was not idle, however. He skirted his oppo-
nent, edging through the darkness, but the shadows
did seem to confuse Kerrigan, who did not react to his
changed position. When he was parallel to her he
struck again, one arm sweeping down and the other
up to trap her uppermost wing-blade between them.
Kerrigan screamed with rage and pain as the blow
connected. Her wings reacted of their own accord,
flexing, and Zeratul was knocked aside. He stumbled
back, almost losing his footing, but recovered. The
wings stabbed toward him, their tips aiming for his
glowing eyes, and he barely blocked them, both blades
rising and crossing each other. He caught the lowest
wing-blade in that intersection and forced it up,
sweeping the others along with it. Then, when his
arms were fully extended and the wing high above his
head, Zeratul whipped both arms up and around, driv-
ing his blades toward Kerrigan’s unprotected torso.
He had not reckoned with her other wing, however.
Kerrigan turned to face him, her second wing curling
protectively around her, and Zeratul’s blades glanced
harmlessly off them. Then they flared outward, the
tips angling down to pierce his extended arms. Raynor
felt the Praetor shudder with pain and knew the pro-
toss had bitten back a telepathic scream.
212 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
Now Kerrigan’s other wing descended as well,
piercing the Praetor’s shoulder, and he was pinned
between her wings, unable to free his arms enough to
raise his blades. Blood dripped from the puncture
points as Kerrigan lifted him up, held securely
between her wings and stretched sideways before her.
“You fight well, little protoss,” she admitted, idly
running one finger along the wing he had struck
before and licking off the blood or ichor that coated it.
“Better than your Executor counterpart. But I am the
Queen of Blades!” She leaned in so their faces were
inches apart. “You cannot best me!”
“Battles are not fought by strength alone,” the pro-
toss told her, no longer struggling against her wings.
“You are powerful, yes, but not invincible.”
“I have beaten you,” she pointed out, and Zeratul
chuckled in reply, his body shaking slightly from the
laughter. If moving like that with her wing-tips embed-
ded in his flesh hurt, the Praetor gave no indication.
“You have won this battle, yes,” he agreed. “But this
was merely our first encounter. The next may go dif-
ferently.”
“Next?” Kerrigan regarded him curiously, and
Raynor could read her puzzlement. She had the protoss
pinned and helpless, primed for the kill. “What ‘next’?
Your life is over, little protoss,” she said, dragging one
claw across his cheek and carving a thin furrow in the
thick skin there. “I have but to move and you will be no
more.” She glanced behind her, and Raynor looked
around as well, seeing the rest of the valley for the first
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S213
time since the battle had started. The floor was littered
with zerg bodies, but here and there a protoss lay
among them as well. Zeratul had started with perhaps a
hundred Dark Templar. Now he had maybe half that
number, and they were badly outnumbered.
“Your forces are overmatched,” Kerrigan pointed
out, turning to glance at Zeratul again. “My brood will
destroy the last of them, just as I will slay you. Char
will be rid of your Dark Templar, and you with them.
Tell me, then, where and how will this next encounter
take place? The protoss equivalent of Heaven?”
Zeratul seemed unfazed by his situation, or that of
his troops. “You are overconfident,” he warned his
captor. “Such a fault is common in the young and
powerful. It leads to dangerous assumptions, however,
and in those assumptions you expose yourself.”
Now Kerrigan’s smile turned to a frown, and she
bared her teeth. “Do not lecture me!” she shouted,
spittle flying from her mouth—Raynor noticed that
several drops struck her protoss captive and burned
into his skin. “I am no weakling, no youth untrained in
the arts of war! I am the Queen of Blades! And I am
your death!”
Her wings plunged toward one another, intent
upon skewering Zeratul between them.
But just as she moved, the darkness, held at bay by
her glow and by the last glimmer of the setting sun,
descended upon them like a heavy blanket. Zeratul van-
ished within its embrace, utterly consumed by the night.
And Kerrigan’s wing-blades clattered against one
214A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
another as they collided, unimpeded by the body they
had held not an instant before.
“No!” Kerrigan’s scream was loud enough to echo
across the landscape and shrill enough to shatter stone.
Raynor clutched at his ears, sure blood was dripping
from them, but unable to look away from the scene
below. How had Zeratul done that? One second he had
been pinned like a fly by a spider; the next he was
gone.
Or was he? Raynor thought he saw a faint flicker
within the shadows next to Kerrigan, tiny specks that
might have been the Praetor’s eyes. Just below those
he thought he saw a second, longer flicker, like Zer-
atul’s energy blades, though perhaps that was just his
eyes playing tricks on him. What he did see, however,
was the rest of the Dark Templar fading back into the
shadows after their leader, leaving the zerg alone on
the battlefield, stabbing at shadows and coming up
empty. The protoss had vanished into the night. Even
their fallen warriors were gone, spirited away by the
others. It was as if the fight had never occurred, save
for the evidence of the zerg bodies piled here and there
upon the ground.
“You protoss are cowards!” Kerrigan shouted, wings
flaring up behind her. Their tips still glistened with Zer-
atul’s blood. “I have bested both of you, and both of
you have fled like frightened dogs! Stand and fight me!
Face your defeat and your death like true warriors!”
But her words received no reply. Enraged, she turned
and attacked a nearby rock, her wings slicing into it
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 215
and then wrenching free, shattering the boulder in a
cloud of dust and rock chips. Even that did not slake
her rage, however, and as she turned toward her brood
several of them shrank back, cowed by their mistress’s
bloodlust. Raynor ducked back as well, glad he was
safe up on the hilltop. Even if she spotted him he could
run and probably disappear into the next valley before
her brood could reach him. At least he hoped so.
Kerrigan continued to curse her protoss opponents,
insulting their honor and courage, but if she hoped to
incite them to attack it did not work. After railing for
several minutes and scoring the valley walls with her
claws, she gave up. As she stood there, chest heaving
from her exertions, hands clenched into fists, wings
raised behind her, Raynor thought she had never been
more beautiful. Or more deadly.
“What shall we do now, mistress?” one of the over-
lords asked, drifting closer but wisely staying beyond
the range of her wings, and Raynor knew it was the
cerebrate asking through his minion.
“We hunt,” she snarled back. “Char is ours. These
protoss cannot hide forever. We will find them and we
will kill them all. Then we will display their bodies
from the highest peak, that all might know what hap-
pens to anyone who crosses me!”
“Which shall we target first?” the overlord asked. “The
ones who just escaped or the ones we fought earlier?”
“We hunt them both,” Kerrigan replied, a small smile
touching her lips. “Summon the rest of the brood,” she
instructed, her wings curling around her again like
216 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
a cloak. “Summon them all. We will sweep across
this world and annihilate any who stand against us.”
She glanced upward, directly at Raynor, and he knew
she was talking to him. She knew he was there! And she
was telling him that he and his people were just as much
a target as the protoss.
I’ve got to get out of here, Raynor realized, shifting
back behind the boulder. I’ve got to get back to base
and warn the others. We need to get ready. Kerrigan’s
just declared war on us all.
But before he could move, he heard an unwelcome
sound. Chittering and clacking and hissing, the sound
of spikes and claws rubbing against rock and taloned
feet scrabbling on stone. The zerg were coming. And
they were coming from the next valley over, directly
toward him.
Kerrigan and her zerg were in front of him, and
reinforcements were coming at him from behind. He
was trapped!
CHAPTER 14
RAYNOR LOOKED AROUND FOR ANY SORT OF
cover. But the hill had little to offer beyond the rock he
was already using. As on most of Char, the ground
here had been subjected to countless lava flows from
the volcanoes that dotted the landscape, and the hill
was still covered by thick layers that resembled hard-
ened syrup. The material was not particularly strong—
more than once he’d put his boot through it while
trying to climb—and out of desperation he drew his
pistol and began using the butt to break a hole through
the lava right by the boulder. In a few minutes he had
carved out a small gap, exposing a slightly larger
pocket below it, and wedged himself inside. Curled
into a ball, he just fit, his head an inch below the rest
of the hill. The boulder cast its shadow down upon
him, which he hoped would help. Then there was
nothing he could do but wait, and pray to anyone he
thought might listen.
218A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
The sounds of the zerg grew louder as they
approached, and he tried to push himself farther into
the ground, sure that at any moment one of the brood
would spot him and alert the rest. Then they’d dig him
out of the ground like a carrot in his mother’s garden
and—he cut the thought off before it could explore the
gruesome possibilities.
Now the zerg were on the hill itself, and he was sure
he felt the lava around him trembling from their
weight and motion. He didn’t dare move his head and
tried to ignore the prickling at the back of his neck that
warned him he’d already been spotted.
“Cerebrate,” he heard one of the zerg hiss, and the
voice was uncomfortably close, “what is that, over
there? By the—”
“Daggoth!” The shout cut off the zerg’s question,
and Raynor recognized the voice instantly. Kerrigan.
She was still in the valley, from the way the sound
echoed. “Greetings, Cerebrate! Come and speak with
me, you and all your brood. I have strange tidings.”
“As do I, Queen of Blades,” the cerebrate replied.
There was a strange reverberation to his voice, and
Raynor realized that Daggoth was talking through an
overlord somewhere on the hill. Of course the massive
creature could not travel across Char’s surface itself. “I
and mine shall attend you.”
The chittering and hissing and clattering increased,
ringing in Raynor’s ears, and then dulled as the brood
climbed over the hill and down into the valley below.
He couldn’t believe his luck. That zerg had spotted
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S219
him, he was sure of it, and it had been about to reveal
his location to the others. Kerrigan had saved him. He
felt a strange tug at his heart as he slowly unfolded
from his hole and crept back onto the lava’s surface,
still sheltered by the boulder. Had she known he was
there? Was her timing simply a happy accident, or had
it been intentional?
He peered into the valley again. It was filled to burst-
ing with zerg now as Kerrigan’s and Daggoth’s broods
mingled. Kerrigan herself still stood near the center, and
Daggoth’s overlord hovered not far from her.
“Tassadar is not the only Templar on Char,” Kerrigan
informed Daggoth, her wings twitching as if impatient
to resume the hunt. “There is another, Zeratul.” She
paused. “He is different,” she admitted after a moment,
her brows furrowing in thought. “Different from Tas-
sadar and from any protoss I have heard of, indeed from
any the zerg have encountered before. More powerful,
but darker, much darker.” Then she grinned. “Still, he
was no match for me. Only guile saved him, and it will
not again. We need—”
“Hold, o Queen,” Daggoth interrupted, and even
from here Raynor saw Kerrigan’s eyes narrow. She’d
never liked having people cut her off and obviously
that hadn’t changed. “There are more important mat-
ters at hand than your pursuit of these protoss.”
Her wings curled slightly but Kerrigan showed no
other sign of her anger. “What matters, Daggoth?” Her
tone was barely polite, but there was more civility in it
than she had bothered to offer Zasz. It was clear she
220 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
respected this cerebrate far more than the other zerg
she had dealt with thus far.
“There is the matter of Zasz’s death,” Daggoth
pointed out. “None before have accomplished such a
feat, severing a cerebrate’s ties to the Overmind. We
must assay how this was done that we may guard
against it in future.”
Kerrigan nodded. “Yes, this matter is one of great
concern. What have we learned of the event?”
“The Overmind itself it studying the matter,” Dag-
goth replied. “Hence its recent silence. Soon it will speak
to us once again and unravel this mystery for us.” His
voice shifted, becoming more serene, even satisfied. “As
for Zasz’s brood, they are no longer a threat.”
“Good.” But Kerrigan was still focused on the pro-
toss she had been pursuing. “And what of the protoss
ship?”
“We have eliminated them,” Daggoth assured her,
earning a sharp look. Was that surprise on Kerrigan’s
face?
“‘Them’?” she asked, but then she nodded. “Ah yes,
of course. These new protoss did not arrive with Tas-
sadar, thus they had their own ship.”
“Both craft have been destroyed,” Daggoth repeated,
and Raynor fought back a stab of panic. He’d been
counting on convincing Tassadar to give them a lift off
this ashball. Now the protoss were stuck here too! And
even Zeratul was stranded—the only people who could
leave now were the zerg!
As he was pondering his drastically reduced options,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S221
Raynor heard a strange thrum fill the air. Every zerg in
the valley went utterly silent in an instant, all but the
overlords going still as well. In the calm Raynor thought
he could hear steam venting from somewhere nearby,
and the distant roar of a volcanic eruption.
Then the silence was shattered by a voice, that hor-
rible, oily voice that slid through his head and sent
shivers through his bones, the one that caused his eyes
to roll back and his throat to seize up. It was the zerg
ruler, the Overmind.
“Behold,” it called out, its words making the rocks
tremble, “my long silence is now broken, and I am
made whole once more!” Its exultation was almost
unbearable, and Raynor sank to his knees, head
clasped in his hands. “The cunning protoss have dared
strike down that which was immortal,” the Overmind
stated, each word a clear pronouncement of doom for
such audacity. “For the protoss who murdered Zasz are
unlike anything we have faced before. These Dark
Templar radiate energies that are much like my own.
And it is by these energies that they have caused me
harm.” Now Raynor understood, through his own
pain, why the Overmind sounded so outraged. The
loss of a zerg, any zerg, was inconsequential. But the
attack on Zasz had hurt the Overmind as well, and for
that it was furious.
The zerg below shared its fury, and despite their
continued stillness Raynor could feel the tension
welling up from the valley. When the Overmind
released them they would burst into a killing frenzy.
222 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
He knew he’d have to be far away by that point or risk
being their first victim.
“Yet,” the Overmind continued, and suddenly its
tone changed from rage back to joy, “yet shall their
overweening pride be their downfall!” Even Raynor
listened intently, curious but dreading to learn what
could have made the zerg leader so excited. “For when
the assassin, Zeratul, murdered Zasz,” the Overmind
announced, “his mind touched with mine, and all his
secrets were made known to me.” Now the Over-
mind’s voice soared, its sheer power driving a spike
through Raynor’s head and causing blood to run out
his ears and nose. “I have taken from his mind the
secret location of Aiur—the protoss homeworld!”
Even the zerg below seemed confused by this,
though Raynor could feel their excitement as well.
Whatever made the Overmind happy made them
happy, and right now the Overmind was ecstatic.
Fortunately the Overmind was quick to explain the
cause of its glee. “At long last, my children,” it told the
assembled zerg, “our searching is done. Soon we shall
assault Aiur directly!”
And now Raynor understood. He had known from
the first encounter on Mar Sara that the protoss hated
the zerg with a consuming passion. It had never
occurred to him that the feeling might be mutual, but
apparently it was. The zerg hated the protoss right
back, or at least the Overmind did—and all this time
he’d been hunting for the protoss homeworld so he
could attack it and destroy them once and for all. And
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 223
now, thanks to Zeratul’s attack, the Overmind knew its
location.
Raynor wasn’t quite sure how to feel about that. On
the one hand, anything that turned the zerg away
from humanity was a good thing. And the protoss had
shown themselves capable of fighting off the zerg—
what could an entire world of Tassadars and Zeratuls
accomplish, especially when fighting on their home
ground? On the other hand, the protoss would not be
expecting an attack at home, and the zerg would
appear without warning. He was sure the Overmind
would send all his broods there at once, and he
couldn’t imagine that the protoss had the numbers to
match the full Swarm. If the zerg wiped out the pro-
toss, who would stand against them then? Who would
protect humanity from their continued invasion?
Not that there was anything he could do about it.
And not like he didn’t have his own problems.
“Prepare yourself, my Swarm,” the Overmind
instructed. “We shall depart for Aiur at once.”
“I wish to remain behind, father.” It was Kerrigan
who spoke, not surprisingly, though even her own zerg
seemed startled at her insolence. “I have unfinished
business with the High Templar Tassadar, and with this
Zeratul.”
“I would have you at the forefront of this invasion,
my daughter,” the Overmind told her, and though its
words were gentle, the command behind them was
unmistakable. Still Kerrigan was not cowed.
“I am honored, father,” she replied, “and would
224A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
gladly participate in any capacity you deem appropri-
ate. But surely someone must punish these protoss for
daring to set foot upon our world, and for striking
down our brother.” She looked almost sorry about
Zasz’s death, and Raynor couldn’t help but admire her
skill. She was playing the role perfectly. “I would be
that avenging hand, father. Give me leave to finish this
matter and then join the Swarm on Aiur.”
For an instant the silence stretched across the valley,
and everyone, Raynor included, waited with bated
breath to hear the Overmind’s reply.
“Very well,” it said finally, and the tension faded at
once. “You may remain here, my daughter, to handle
this matter. Upon its conclusion, however, I will expect
you on Aiur to take over the leadership of our cam-
paign there.”
Kerrigan bowed, her wings sweeping down to brush
the ground. “It shall be as you command, father,” she
replied, her voice that of the obedient servant, though
the smile on her face showed that she had gotten
exactly what she wanted.
The thrum vanished, leaving Raynor gasping with
relief as the pressure in his head faded, and the zerg
below began moving once more.
“Will you require assistance in your quest?” Daggoth
asked Kerrigan through his overlord. Something in the
tone suggested that he already knew her answer.
“My thanks, noble Daggoth,” she replied, “but I am
more than capable of destroying these meddlesome
protoss myself.” She nodded toward his overlord. “You
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S225
may rejoin the rest of the Swarm and prepare for the
departure to Aiur.” It was an obvious dismissal.
The cerebrate did not take offense, or if he did he
concealed his emotions well. “Very well” was all he
said as his brood gathered itself behind his overlord.
Raynor crouched, ready to duck back into his hole if
necessary, but Daggoth’s zerg turned toward the oppo-
site side of the valley instead and he relaxed. “May
your hunt prove fruitful,” the cerebrate called back as
his brood disappeared into the valleys beyond. “And
may you join us quickly in our attack on the hated
protoss homeworld.”
“I do not join,” Kerrigan muttered, watching the
other brood’s departure. “I lead.” Her words were soft,
but loud enough for Raynor to hear.
“Now,” Kerrigan called out after the last of Dag-
goth’s zerg were gone from sight, “the hunt contin-
ues.” She turned, scanning the hill, and for an instant
her eyes pierced Raynor where he watched. “My prey
will never know what hit them.” Raynor had the sink-
ing feeling she wasn’t referring to the protoss.
Enough of this, he thought. Moving quickly, he
crawled backward down the hill until he was sure
he couldn’t be seen by the zerg in the valley. Then he
turned and half-ran, half-skidded the rest of the way,
hitting the ground at the hill’s base hard enough to go
tumbling. He righted himself quickly and broke out into
a dead run, heading straightaway from the zerg as fast
as he could manage. He’d seen plenty, and had learned
even more today. It was time to get the hell out of here,
226 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
before his luck ran out and they came for him as well.
All this information wouldn’t do him and his crew
much good if he got killed before he could tell them
about it.
As he ran Raynor considered everything that had
happened today. He’d seen both Tassadar and Zeratul go
up against Kerrigan—and seen both protoss lose. He’d
seen things he wasn’t sure were real but didn’t think
were hallucinations, either, things that made no sense
but felt right. He’d learned more about the zerg, their
leaders’ immortality, and their newfound weakness.
And he’d found out what the zerg wanted most: the
location and destruction of the protoss homeworld.
He’d also found out, unfortunately, that both pro-
toss ships had been destroyed. Maybe they could be
repaired. Maybe, he mused, the parts from one could
be used on the other! The zerg weren’t tech-minded—
they probably hadn’t paid much attention to parts as
they attacked the ships. They might have done only
superficial damage, or missed the vital components,
like the engines. It was worth checking out.
Of course, that meant talking to the protoss. Both
groups. And while Raynor thought Tassadar would at
least hear him out, he wasn’t sure about Zeratul. Some-
thing about the Dark Templar scared him a bit, like the
ghost stories he’d heard as a child. But then, the zerg
were worse than any horror tale, and they were plenty
real. He’d gladly work with another, lesser nightmare to
get himself and his people safely away from the Swarm.
But first, he had to find them.
CHAPTER 15
“SO ALL THE ZERG ARE GONE?”
That was the first thing Cavez asked after Raynor told
him and Abernathy what he’d seen. Which he had not
been able to do until the following evening, because by
the time he’d dragged himself back to base it was morn-
ing, and he’d collapsed in his tent. He was just glad he’d
made it inside first—the last mile or so it was all he
could do to keep placing one foot in front of the other.
Hell, it was all he could do to keep breathing. He’d slept
like the dead for the rest of the day, waking up only
once when someone set a canteen of water and a tray of
food just outside the tent flap. By the time the sun had
gone down he’d felt almost human again, and he’d
taken only enough time to splash water on his face
before finding his two lieutenants. He hadn’t even
dreamed, he’d been so tired, and he was surprised to
realize that he was disappointed. The images of him and
Kerrigan, so happy together in a life that could never
exist, were deeply frustrating, yes, but at the same time
228 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
so comforting that he hated missing an opportunity to
experience them again, however fleetingly.
“Almost all,” he corrected Cavez now. They were
inside the shuttle again and he was leaning against one
wall, a cup of steaming coffee cradled in his hands. The
smell and the warmth were as welcome as the quick
energy boost. He didn’t sit down, because he couldn’t
trust himself to get back up again. “We’ve still got one
brood to worry about,” he reminded them. “And
they’re only interested in one thing—killing every
non-zerg on this rock.”
“But they’re after the protoss, right?” Abernathy
asked from where she was perched on a seat. “That’s
what you said—they want the protoss dead.”
“They’re gunning for the protoss, sure,” Raynor
agreed. “But that doesn’t mean they’ll leave us alone.
Figure if they see both us and the protoss they’ll go for
the protoss, but if we’re all they see they’ll happily set-
tle for us.”
“We’ve got the combat armor,” Cavez pointed out.
“We can hold our own in a fight. And if it’s only one
brood we won’t have to worry about reinforcements.
We can whittle them down, wipe them out.”
“That we could,” Raynor agreed. “But what would
it cost? How many would we lose?” He shook his head.
“I’d rather get us off this ashball without a fight, if I
can.” He took a quick sip of his scalding coffee, then
grinned. “Of course, if we have to fight we’re gonna
kick some butt.”
“What do we do now, sir?” Abernathy looked wor-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S229
ried, and Raynor didn’t blame her. She was a good sol-
dier and a competent leader, but going up against
uncertainties was always tough. Raynor had seen
plenty of this before. Give a soldier a weapon and a tar-
get and he was good to go. But tell him something
vague like “Prove your worth” or “Protect this land”
and he ran into trouble. Soldiers needed specifics, who
and what and where and when. And unfortunately
Raynor didn’t have that to offer. But he hadn’t been a
soldier—he’d been a marshal. He’d had to think on his
feet and work with loose definitions and create his
own specifics. He could do that again.
“Go over all our gear, all our supplies, all our
weapons and armor,” he told them now. “Start stockpil-
ing food and water, but nothing we can’t carry. Break
down what we’ve got into small parcels and assign each
one to a trooper. I want us ready and able to ditch this
camp at a moment’s notice.” It might come to that, he
knew. If the zerg spotted the shuttle they’d converge on
it, and even with the armor he and his men couldn’t
handle an entire brood. They’d be better off leaving this
place behind and disappearing into the mountains or
the hills or the valleys, just as the protoss had.
The protoss. That was the second priority, right after
keeping his crew safe. “We need to find those protoss,”
he said, thinking out loud. “Doesn’t matter which of
them we find, though I’d rather it was Tassadar. I’ve
met him already, and maybe he’s not the friendliest
guy in the world but he didn’t shoot me, either. That
counts for something.” He grinned at Cavez and Aber-
230A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
mathy. “Can’t just steal their ships, especially not
when they outnumber us. We’ll ask for a ride instead.”
“Both of their ships were destroyed,” Cavez reminded
him.
“Maybe, maybe not,” Raynor replied. “We’ll need to
check each one out, see just how badly it’s been beat.
We might be able to salvage some parts.”
“Even if those ships are crippled,” Abernathy said,
“we might be able to jury-rig their engines to work on
our shuttle.”
They all glanced around them, considering the small
craft. It had survived the descent surprisingly well, the
hull still intact. One engine and one wing were gone,
the other engine was badly damaged, but if they could
rig a protoss engine to her she could fly. Maybe.
“It’s worth a try,” Raynor agreed. “First things first.
We look for the protoss and offer to team up.” He
noticed Cavez’s shudder. “Something wrong, son?”
“I just don’t like the thought of teaming with aliens,
sir,” the young lieutenant replied.
“Me either,” Raynor admitted. “But right now we
need help to get off this planet, and I’d sleep with a
rabid dog if I thought it would help.”
“Do you think they’ll help us?” Abernathy asked
him as they stood up and made their way back out of
the shuttle.
“Don’t know,” he admitted to her, downing the rest
of his coffee in a single long gulp. “But I plan to put on
my best manners and ask.”
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 231
It took Raynor almost a week to locate the protoss
again. They had gone to ground, both groups, evading
Kerrigan and her zerg. Several times Raynor caught a
glimpse of a protoss warrior gliding past along a moun-
tain ledge, or stalking silently past a small volcano, or
racing across the ash deserts. But each time it was only
a glimpse, and when he looked again the protoss was
gone. The zerg were apparently having as little success,
and more than once he heard Kerrigan howling with
rage, or saw score marks where she’d vented her dis-
pleasure on the rocks. He kept his men on full alert,
four men in combat armor on guard at all times.
Raynor had commandeered a suit for himself as well,
and found it much easier now to race around the
planet hunting the elusive aliens.
Finally, as he was perched atop one of the taller
mountains scanning the horizon, a small splash of
color caught Raynor’s eye. Focusing on that area, he
used the armor’s targeting system to isolate and
enhance the image. As he watched, the tiny splash
magnified, details appearing until he could see it
clearly. It was a protoss warrior, and the color he had
noticed was the blue-white gleam of the armored
shoulders. Now, though, he could see the blue color
below that, and the blue cloth covering the groin. It
was Tassadar.
“Gotcha,” Raynor whispered. He leaped down from
his peak, the armor’s servos absorbing the shock easily,
and bounded toward the Executor, who was now
locked into his targeting system. The armor allowed
232 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Raynor to race through the mountains as if he were
merely jogging easily along a beach, and within min-
utes he had closed most of the distance. Every time he
crossed a peak or ridge he glanced toward Tassadar
again, making sure the protoss leader had not moved,
and as he drew closer Raynor saw more and more of
the protoss gathered in the small valley there. He had
apparently found the current Templar camp.
He slowed his pace when he was only one ridge
away, not wanting to startle the protoss. They were
being hunted by the zerg, after all, and would probably
react to any intrusion as a threat. His armor made him
considerably more dangerous, but he wasn’t sure he
was a match for a protoss warrior, even so—certainly
not for all of them at once. Besides, he wasn’t here to
fight. He paused to give himself a minute to think
about what he was doing here. He wanted to talk. Tas-
sadar had reacted to his emotions before, he was sure
of that now, and would probably do the same here. He
still felt a little anger at the protoss for destroying his
ships but most of that had faded. He understood their
reasons, and agreed with them. He’d have done the
same thing. Now he was just determined to get his
people—those who remained—to safety. And he
needed the aliens’ help to do that.
Convinced that he was now calm and as friendly as
he was going to get, Raynor hauled himself up the last
ridge and looked down into the small valley—just in
time to see the last protoss vaulting the peak on the
opposite side. They were gone.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S233
“Aw, not again!” he muttered. leaping quickly down
into the valley and charging across it. He jumped to the
top of the far peak and saw the Zealots a short ways
ahead of him, clearly on the move. Their energy blades
were not extended and their armor looked the same as
always, but something about their posture, the way
they were moving, convinced Raynor—they were
heading for battle.
“My timing sucks,” he told himself, hurrying along
behind them. He’d wanted to talk, and obviously that
wasn’t going to happen now, not when they were in a
combat mind-set. They’d probably kill him out of
reflex before he could manage a word. He couldn’t
afford to lose sight of them, though—it might take
another week to find them again, and the zerg could
stumble upon his camp at any time. He couldn’t risk
that. So he played the shadowing game, staying just
close enough to watch and tail the protoss but keeping
far enough back that he hoped they wouldn’t notice
him.
Maybe, Raynor thought as he stalked behind them,
he could lend them a hand against the zerg. That might
convince them he was an ally and make them more
inclined to help him. Yeah. The more he thought about
that, the more he liked the idea. He’d been itching to
go up against the zerg now that he had armor again,
anyway, to pay them back for all the men he’d lost
down in the caverns, not to mention the ships. This
would be a good opportunity for that. He could vent
some of his frustrations, show the zerg humans
234A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
weren’t as helpless as they thought, and get in good
with the protoss at the same time. It was a good plan.
And, like most good plans, it didn’t survive contact
with the enemy.
In this case, it was the enemy that was the problem.
Because as Raynor clambered out of one crevice and
saw the protoss warriors slowing as they crossed a
wide plateau before and slightly above him, he also
saw their opponents for the first time.
And it wasn’t the zerg.
“Hail, Tassadar, High Templar and Executor of the
Protoss,” Zeratul called out as his Dark Templar
arrayed themselves around him—he was standing
near the back end of the plateau, facing the way the
Templar had come. The strange protoss’s mental voice
was as dry as ever, but this time it lacked much of the
power it had held when Zeratul had confronted
Kerrigan. At least it didn’t make Raynor’s head ring as
he found himself a good vantage point along the ridge
bordering the plateau and settled back to watch.
“Dark Templar,” Tassadar replied, coming to a halt
several body lengths from his counterpart. His voice
carried a strange hint of—was that disgust? It was dif-
ferent from the tone Raynor heard when Tassadar
spoke to Kerrigan or mentioned the zerg. That had
been more recognizable as hatred. This sounded less
angry but more . . . bitter? “I felt your presence,” Tas-
sadar continued as his own Zealots settled in behind
him, and Raynor noticed that their positions matched
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S235
those of the Dark Templar. He wondered if it was delib-
erate.
“I am Zeratul, Praetor of the Dark Templar,” Zeratul
announced. They were the same words he had used to
introduce himself to Zasz, Raynor remembered, but
how different they sounded now! Then it had been a
declaration of opposition, the bold proclamation of a
warrior facing sworn enemies and daring to toss his
name and rank in their faces. Now it sounded gentler,
almost apologetic. If the protoss were human Raynor
might have thought Zeratul was embarrassed but at
the same time proud of his affiliation.
“I know of your kind,” Tassadar replied, and his dis-
gust was almost palpable. “You are heretics, cast out
from our race. You are considered anathema.” His
warriors tensed behind him, preparing to spring, and
glows sprang up around several of their wrists as they
prepped their energy blades.
But Zeratul held out his hands, palms up and fingers
spread, in a clear gesture of peace. Again it mirrored his
encounter with Zasz, but its meaning seemed entirely
different. Raynor, watching the Praetor speak to Zasz,
had seen the move as a delaying tactic, a chance to find
the right moment to strike. Now it seemed genuine.
“I have no desire to fight you, my brother,” Zeratul
called across the plateau, and Tassadar flinched as if he
had been struck. “Though you despise me, we have no
quarrel. We are allied here, on this world, in this bat-
tle. Our goals are one and the same. Surely you must
see that?”
236 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“I see only another foe,” the Executor growled back,
his hands clenching at his sides. “Another who would
tarnish the legacy of the Templar and sully our honor.”
He raised one fist and his eyes blazed blue, dazzling
even in the sunlight. “Defend yourself!”
And with that the Templar attacked.
It was a strange battle. Raynor had seen the protoss
fight several times now, and from a similar distance.
He had watched Tassadar and his Zealots fight Kerrigan
and her brood and had seen Zeratul do the same. Both
times he had been impressed by the protoss’s speed,
strength, and skill. They were either warriors born or
heavily trained. Either way, he had been awed by
them. Watching the protoss battle the zerg had been
like watching a trained swordsman moving through a
raging mob—the swordsman moved smoothly, grace-
fully, and wielded his blade with precision, while all
around him the mob rampaged mindlessly, using
nothing more than brute force and vast numbers to
overwhelm.
But this time the swordsman faced another swords-
man. Or rather, two bands of swordsmen faced each
other.
It was an amazing display. Raynor was sure he
missed much of it, because the protoss simply moved
too quickly for him to follow. A Zealot would pivot for-
ward, dancing as much as attacking, and his arm
would lash out, blade crackling in the thin air, sparks
appearing as the energy ignited stray bits of ash and
soot. A Dark Templar would float forward to meet the
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S237
attack,spinningaround, one arm swingingup
smoothly, glittering blade extended, and the two ener-
gies would cross, blue and green colliding, shedding
flickers of shadow and brightness in all directions, daz-
zling the eye. Then the two combatants would pull
apart and step away, only to circle and close and strike
again. Not once, that Raynor saw, did a blade connect
with flesh. Each blow was matched by a countermove,
each blade blocked by another blade. This wasn’t
slaughter, or even bloodshed. It was a dance, a display,
a show of skill and talent and art.
It was beautiful. And for someone like Raynor, who
had grown up with harsher realities and rougher tools,
it was a brief glimpse into another world. What would it
be like to be from a race whose combat had become so
stylized, so perfect, that it was poetry to watch? A race
that could fight without wounding, win without killing,
defeat with hurting? He couldn’t even imagine it.
As their warriors battled, the two leaders had
watched, unmoving. “Your warriors are well-trained,”
Tassadar commented after several minutes, his words
halting, as if they had been dragged from him against
his will. Raynor could hear the grudging respect in
them.
“As are yours,” Zeratul replied, returning the com-
pliment more easily. He nodded at his counterpart.
“Surely you see that they move the same, fight the
same, think the same? Our ways are one.” He took a
step closer and his voice dropped, though Raynor
could still hear him clearly. It was as if the Praetor was
238A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
whispering, sharing a friendly secret. “We are but sides
of the coin,” he confided to Tassadar, “our paths differ-
ent but our goals, our very foundation one and the
same. Do you not recognize this truth?”
“Do not attempt to sway me with your lies,” the
Executor countered, taking a step back to maintain the
distance between them. “I have been taught of your
kind, of how you betrayed our race, how your broke
with our people and severed every connection from
us. You turned your back on us, on yourself, on every-
thing that is protoss! You are not one of us!”
“Think past the old tales,” Zeratul urged, taking
another step toward him. “They are but stories created
by your forefathers to explain our departure. Kernels
of truth exist within them, yes, but buried within a
field of deceptions.”
“No!” Tassadar stepped back again, then straight-
ened. “I will not listen to this! You shall not corrupt
me!” And he struck at Zeratul.
The blow was so fast Raynor couldn’t see it fully—
he saw the protoss leader’s arm slam forward in a blur,
fist leveled at the Dark Templar’s chest, but even his
armor’s targeting system couldn’t clarify the image
properly. It was simply too quick, too sudden. He
thought he felt a rush of air from the punch, even here
on his ridge, and knew that the impact would crush
the Praetor’s chest like an eggshell.
But by the time the punch landed, the Praetor was
no longer there.
If Tassadar’s move had been lightning-fast, Zeratul’s
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S239
response was as quick as thought. There was no blur,
no sense of motion—the Praetor was simply two feet
to the left of his former position. It had happened in
less than a blink, and Raynor’s eyes twitched trying to
adjust even as his brain registered the Dark Templar’s
change in position. It hadn’t been an illusion, either,
like the one Tassadar himself had used against Kerri-
gan. Raynor was sure of that, though he couldn’t say
why. He just knew that the Praetor had been facing
Tassadar an instant ago, and now he was off to one
side.
“You strike with force but no focus,” Zeratul warned
Tassadar, and something in his voice told Raynor that
if the protoss had lips and a mouth they would be
curved into a smile right now. “Do not waste yourself
on such useless expenditures. Do not throw away your
energy on uncertainties. Wait until the moment is
truly right, then marshal your strength for the attack.”
“Do not lecture me!” Tassadar roared, his words an
uncanny echo of Kerrigan’s retort to Zeratul during
their battle, shaking his head to clear it. He attacked
again, his moves even faster this time, his strikes more
furious. Not once but three times his fists moved, so
fast they seemed to punch all at once, in a neat row to
the left, to the right, and dead center on the Praetor’s
chest. Raynor understood the logic behind it. The
Executor was hoping to box his opponent in, hitting to
either side to keep him from ducking out of the way
again. He was counting on at least one punch landing.
But none of them did.
240A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Zeratul moved again, sliding to the left before Tas-
sadar’s first blow landed—a move that somehow did
not involve his legs or feet, simply his body’s suddenly
appearing two feet from its previous location. Then he
was back in his former position, as the Executor’s other
two strikes passed harmlessly alongside him.
“Still you attack without concentration,” Zeratul
said, shaking his head slightly. “You use your body
with full force, but not your mind. Why, when it is
your mightiest weapon? Do not lash out with fists
first,” he cautioned, his own hand snaking out and
latching onto Tassadar’s wrist before the Executor
could draw his hand back from his failed attack. “Tar-
get your foe with your mind first,” the Dark Templar
instructed, shadows welling up beneath his fingertips
and wrapping dark bands around Tassadar’s forearm.
“When your mind is locked upon your opponent your
fists may follow, and then they cannot fail to strike.”
The darkness was rising now, sheathing Tassadar’s
arm up to the elbow, and Raynor could almost feel
the Executor’s attempt to jerk away. A spurt of
swirling emotion burst forth from Tassadar, half pain
and half fear, perhaps the first fear the mighty protoss
had ever felt. And then that fear gave way to another
emotion—rage.
“Enough of your confusions!” he roared, the thun-
der crackling beneath his words propelling Zeratul
away from him with an almost palpable force. Tassadar
flexed, blue arcs of energy flaring from his wrists, and
the shadows fell away, shredded by the brilliant light.
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 241
“You speak in riddles to distract me,” he accused the
Praetor, taking a step back and raising both arms, high
over his head, the lightning arcing between them. “But
I will not be swayed!” As Tassadar lowered his arms,
the lightning settled around his wrists, sweeping for-
ward to form blades like those his warriors wielded,
but longer, brighter, and filled with a crackling hum
that made Raynor’s hairs stand on end. These blades
were not contained—or created—by bracers, he knew.
They were a part of Tassadar himself, an expression of
his own power. “Now we will see an end to your lies,”
Tassadar warned, taking one slow step toward his
counterpart. “Once and for all.”
The other protoss had left off their own duels,
watching their leaders battle, and Raynor’s eyes were
locked on the conflict as well. He knew somehow that
this was a match of epic proportions, one that would
become part of protoss history. Assuming any of the
witnesses survived to tell of it.
As he shifted to get a better view, Raynor caught a
speck of movement from the corner of his eye. He
twisted slightly to get a better look, and froze.
“Aw, hell,” he whispered as he registered what he
was seeing. His helmet automatically tracked and mag-
nified the image, making it impossible to ignore.
It was the zerg. Lots of them, probably the entire
brood.
And they were heading this way.
Raynor glanced back at the plateau, where Tassadar
was still stalking toward Zeratul, energy blades
242 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
extended. The protoss were all fixated upon them, too
much so to notice the approaching Swarm. They’d be
slaughtered.
“Well, this ain’t gonna be good,” Raynor muttered
to himself. He levered himself up from his crouch and
leaped forward, the suit’s servos causing him to sail
across the gap between the ridge and the plateau. He
unslung the canister rifle on his back as he moved,
swinging it around and into his hands as he landed,
bending his knees to absorb the impact and taking a
single step forward to keep his balance.
He found himself facing several dozen energy
blades, wielded by several dozen angry protoss.
“Hold on!” Raynor shouted, raising the rifle over his
head with both hands. “I ain’t your enemy! They are!”
He pointed, and many of the protoss turned to gaze
past the plateau—
—just as the first of the mutalisks, guardians, and
devourers swept down upon them.
“To arms!” Tassadar shouted, his feud with Zeratul
instantly shunted to the background. “Regroup, my
Zealots, and we will teach these zerg what it means to
confront the protoss!” His right arm swept up almost
lazily, the energy blade extending even farther as it
arced above his head and sliced the leading devourer in
two, its halves falling to the rock on either side of him.
In an instant the protoss were locked in battle, and
Raynor with them. But right from the start, he could
see how this was going to end.
“There’re too many of them!” he hollered at Tas-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 243
sadar, shooting down a trio of mutalisks that had been
poised to shred one of the protoss warriors. “We can’t
hold ’em!”
The High Templar either didn’t hear him or didn’t
care, so Raynor turned to Zeratul instead. “We’ve got
to get out of here!” he urged, firing a barrage to take
down a cluster of approaching scourge that exploded
just shy of the plateau, the shock waves almost tossing
all of them off their feet. “When the rest of the brood
gets here we’re gonna be swamped!”
The Dark Templar had not moved since stepping
away from Tassadar, and now he seemed to retreat
into himself as he considered. Finally he nodded.
“The human is correct,” he declared calmly. “This is
not the time for our battle to conclude. We must aban-
don this battlefield and seek a more opportune time to
end this conflict.”
Tassadar heard that one, at least, and turned to stare
at the Praetor, even as his hand caught another
mutalisk and throttled it. “You would flee battle?” he
asked, his eyes wide.
“You would stay and see your people needlessly
slain?” Zeratul countered, and that struck home. Tas-
sadar’s eyes narrowed and he seemed about to attack
the Dark Templar again. Before he could move, how-
ever, the Praetor leaped at him instead.
Raynor was shocked, and so, apparently, was Tas-
sadar—the High Templar froze as Zeratul flew toward
him, both arms extended, a band of writhing, searing
cold darkness forming between them. Raynor started
244A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
to bring his rifle up, but paused. He wasn’t sure why,
but some instinct told him not to interfere.
Before he could blink the Praetor had closed the dis-
tance, his shoulder colliding with Tassadar’s chest and
driving the Executor to the ground—
—as a mutalisk lashed out, its long snakelike tail
scraping acid across Zeratul’s shoulder and chest where
the Executor’s head had been an instant before. Blood
from the resulting wound spattered Praetor and
Executor both, and Zeratul twitched in obvious agony
but refused to topple. He reared up instead, sending
more blood fountaining from the whole in his side,
and pivoted to face his attacker, which had wheeled
about in midair for a second attack. Then the darkness
between the Dark Templar’s hands connected with the
mutalisk’s arcing tail and sliced clean through it as the
mutalisk jerked back, wailing in pain. The effort must
have exhausted the Praetor, however, and he dropped
to his knees in a pool of his own blood. Tassadar was
already up again, having rolled free of Zeratul and
vaulted back to his feet, and he sliced the mutalisk
apart with his blades before helping the wounded Dark
Templar to stand.
For a second the two simply eyed one another, Tem-
plar and Dark Templar, blazing blue eyes and wise
green ones. Then Tassadar’s hand jerked, tearing a long
strip from his uniform, and with it he bound the older
protoss’s wound. A surge of light welled up from his
hands as he worked, and when he removed them the
Praetor’s wound was still severe but no longer spurting
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 245
blood everywhere. Once that was done Tassadar nod-
ded, surprising Raynor.
“You are correct,” the High Templar said. “They
have the advantage of us here, and remaining will
merely lead to our own demise. We lose no honor in
regrouping.” He gestured, and his protoss gathered
around him, leaving a cluster of zerg bodies in their
wake. Zeratul’s Dark Templar grouped behind him as
well, making Raynor think of a circle divided in two
halves. And he was right at the center of it.
He had been about to wish the protoss leaders good
luck when he heard another voice, more familiar than
theirs but less welcome, drifting across the landscape.
“I am coming for you, little protoss,” came the
words, echoing toward them and simultaneously ring-
ing in his head. “Both of you, High Templar and Dark
Templar, Executor and Praetor. Linger a moment
longer and I will deliver you quickly unto death. Flee
and I will prolong your torment for hours, days, an
eternity.” He couldn’t pinpoint the location or even the
direction, with the sound bouncing against all the rock
nearby, but he knew she was close.
Tassadar still seemed tempted to remain and fight,
particularly now that Kerrigan had called him out again.
“We shall meet in battle soon, o Queen of Blades,”
Raynor heard his tight, angry thought, “and I shall slay
you for the honor and safety of my people.”
Kerrigan apparently heard him as well. “Your peo-
ple?” She laughed. “Look around you, little protoss.
These are all the people you have left!”
246 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“What riddle is this?” Tassadar demanded of the
empty air, his eyes blazing. “Though I may be outcast
for recent actions still I am protoss, and still my race
rules the stars!”
“Not for long,” Kerrigan crowed back, her voice
growing slightly louder. “The Swarm has gone to your
world,” she taunted, “to precious Aiur! By the time
another day has passed your planet will be in cinders,
and your race destroyed!”
Tassadar reeled as if he had been struck, and he
wasn’t the only one. Raynor saw the other protoss
reacting with shock as well, staggering and scowling
and shaking their heads. Zeratul and his Dark Templar
seemed equally affected.
“Impossible!” Zeratul shot back toward the hills.
“Aiur is concealed from your ilk, and its location
remains secret!”
“Not from you, little protoss,” Kerrigan answered,
and now her voice seemed to be coming from right
over the hill. “You know its location, don’t you? And
now, thanks to you, we do as well.”
This time it was the Praetor who staggered back-
ward, a wave of disbelief rising off him like steam,
even as Tassadar turned toward him, the High Tem-
plar’s eyes narrowing in rage.
“You!” His mental cry was the equivalent of a bel-
low, and Raynor winced as the telepathic shout struck
him between the eyes. “What have you done?” But
even as the tall protoss moved toward his Dark Tem-
plar counterpart, Raynor heard a distinctive whistling
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S247
noise he recognized all too well. It was the sound of
Kerrigan’s wing-spikes slicing the air. She was close.
Too close.
“Argue later!” he shouted at the protoss, stepping
between the two leaders and making a shooing gesture
with his rifle. “Let’s get out of here! Now!”
Tassadar glared down at him, then at Zeratul, then
slowly nodded, the motion clearly hard for him. “Yes,
we will settle this later,” he agreed finally, and turned
away, leading his warriors toward safety. Zeratul
matched him without a sound, and his Dark Templar
fell in behind him.
“Is this your choice then, Jimmy?” Kerrigan called,
and this time he knew the words were only inside his
head, but no less real for that. “So be it. You and yours
will suffer the same fate as your new friends.”
“Damn.” Raynor sighed, and then turned and
bounded after the protoss, who were already running
toward the far end of the plateau. “Looks like you’re
stuck with me,” he told Tassadar as he caught up to the
Executor. Then he glanced over at Zeratul, who was
keeping pace beside them. “Hell, looks like we’re all
stuck together.” The two protoss leaders looked at him,
then at each other.
“You have much to answer for, Praetor,” Tassadar
informed Zeratul, and the tone of his statement made
it clear he would personally make sure the Dark Tem-
plar paid whatever debt he owed.
Zeratul did not argue the point.
“Perhaps,” he allowed. “If such as she said is true,
248A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
the blame is mine to shoulder, and bear it I will. For
truly, guiding the Swarm to Aiur is the last thing I
would wish.”
They stared at each other for another instant, green
eyes locked with blue. Then, at the same time, they
nodded.
“You accept your responsibility,” Tassadar stated.
“This is a beginning, at least.” He gave the Praetor one
last glare. “Until I know the truth of this matter, you
shall not leave my sight.”
“Bound together,” Zeratul agreed, his words thrum-
ming with that strange power he had revealed before.
“Thus the hands of fate entwine us, different strands
woven together to create a stronger fabric for the
whole.”
Tassadar was less cryptic. “Your warning was timely,”
he told Raynor as they ran, “and we are grateful. You
and yours may accompany us as allies.”
As he opened a comm channel to call base and tell
them to evacuate, Raynor thought about that. He’d set
out looking for the protoss, either group, in the hope of
forming an alliance. And he’d gotten one. He just
hadn’t expected to get it in quite this manner.
CHAPTER 16
“JIM.”
Kerrigan was smiling, laughing, as she twisted just
out of reach. He chased after her, but she managed to
stay just beyond his grasp, her blazing mane streaming
behind her as she ran.
“Wait,” he called out, hands clutching air as he tried
again and again to catch her. “Come back!”
“No,” she said, turning to face him and skipping
nimbly backward as he dove for her again. “You made
your choice.” Her words were light and her lips still
wore that mocking smile, but her eyes were sad, so
sad. She stepped up beside him and traced a finger
along his face. “Now you’re stuck with it,” she mur-
mured, her lips drifting up toward his, her mouth part-
ing so close to his her could almost feel her skin against
him. Then a searing pain sliced across his cheek and he
reeled backward, hand lifting reflexively to cup the
wound. Her fingernail had somehow transformed into
a long, barbed claw, and she had cut him with it. He
250A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
stared as she backed away, licking the blood from her
fingertip, and shuddered at the look on her face and
the hunger he saw in her eyes.
“Time to wake up, Jimmy,” she told him breathily.
“Time to face the consequences.”
And he sat up, his cheek tender where he touched it.
It had been two weeks since they had joined the
protoss. The first few days had been the worst.
“Get everybody out of there,” he told Cavez and
Abernathy over the comm. “No waiting, just do it.”
“Yes, sir,” they both replied, and he could hear Aber-
nathy shouting orders a second later. Cavez remained on
the link, however. “Where are we going, sir?” he asked.
“That’s a damn good question,” Raynor admitted.
“Hell if I know right now.” He shook his head. “Get
everybody moving toward the mountains and let me
know when you’re en route. I’ll have a better idea
then.”
He assumed that the mountains were where they
were all going. Since fleeing Kerrigan none of the pro-
toss had said a word. It was a bit eerie running across
Char’s twisted landscape in complete silence. A few
times he’d heard odd murmurs behind him, what
sounded almost like wind through trees, and he sus-
pected it was protoss conversation he was overhear-
ing—conversations among the Zealots or the Dark
Templar, things he wasn’t included in and so couldn’t
really make out. The two groups hadn’t mixed at all,
the Zealots staying on his left and the Dark Templar on
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S251
his right, each following their respective leader, and he
kept expecting them to split off from each other at
some point. Which would leave him with a dilemma—
which group would he follow? He knew more about
Tassadar, had spoken to him directly, and felt the
Executor was the more direct of the two, but Zeratul
knew how to kill zerg, even cerebrates, and that was a
power Raynor wanted on his side. Fortunately it
hadn’t come to a decision yet—the two leaders seemed
content to move together for now, though they didn’t
speak to or even look at one another. Raynor resisted
the urge to whistle to cut the tension.
Then things took a turn for the worse, as they usu-
ally did.
“Sir, we’ve got zerg!” It was Cavez, shouting into the
comm as soon as Raynor responded to the ping.
“Where are you?” Raynor shouted back. He could
hear the retort of gauss rifles and hisses and clacks
mixed with screams in the background. He came to a
dead stop, his suit compensating for the sudden halt,
and the protoss instantly paused as well.
“We’re still at the shuttle,” Cavez admitted, sound-
ing a little embarrassed. “Took longer to gather every-
thing than we’d thought. Then the zerg showed up out
of nowhere!”
“Dig in,” Raynor ordered, using his suit’s tracking
systems to locate the camp from here. “Don’t try to
run—they’ll cut you down. Center on the shuttle, put
the armored troopers in front, and hold the fort. I’m on
my way.”
252 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
As soon as he closed the link he turned to the two
protoss commanders, who were watching him silently.
“They’re hitting my men,” he explained hurriedly.
“We need to get them out of there.”
He’d been half-expecting an argument. He didn’t
get one. “A commander’s first duty is to his troops,”
Tassadar agreed. “You must go at once.” Then, perhaps
reading the surprise on Raynor’s face, or the question
that popped into his head, the Executor tilted his head
and his brow quirked in what Raynor felt sure was
humor. “We have allied with you,” the High Templar
assured him, “and we will accompany you in this res-
cue mission.”
“Great.” Raynor let out the breath he’d been hold-
ing. He glanced over at Zeratul, who hadn’t spoken.
“What about you?”
The Praetor shrugged. “Our fates are intertwined,”
he said, as if that explained everything. And maybe it
did, because when Raynor turned and began running
full speed back toward his base, both protoss groups
ran beside him.
Even with his suit’s servos and the protoss’s natural
speed, it took almost an hour to reach the shuttle. He
could hear the fighting before he topped the last rise,
and took some comfort in the fact that at least some of
his crew were still alive and fit enough to fight. Then
he saw the shuttle. At first glance it looked as if it had
been decorated with strange bits of leather and bone,
odd spikes and horns and barbs jutting out from every
angle. Then his suit clarified the image. He was seeing
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S253
the zerg swarming over his ship, and the men sta-
tioned around it.
“We’re comin’ in!” he bellowed into his comm unit
as he barreled down the hill and across the small valley
toward the shuttle. “Careful what you’re shooting!”
He unlimbered his canister rifle as he ran.
Then he was down there, and put a volley of spikes
through an ultralisk that had raised its scythes to carve
through the shuttle’s side. The massive zerg fell, crushing
several zerglings beneath it, and the rest of the brood
turned toward Raynor, giving his troopers a momentary
respite. Of course, that didn’t help him much.
But a second later they forgot about him entirely,
because that was when both groups of protoss
descended upon them.
It was a short fight. This was only a small portion of
Kerrigan’s brood, actually, a handful of ultralisks and
guardians with a few dozen mutalisks, hydralisks, and
devourers and perhaps thirty zerglings. Those were the
ones still standing when he’d arrived, anyway—his
men had dispatched close to half the attackers already,
he was pleased to see. The protoss made short work of
the rest, energy blades carving through tough zerg
hide and slicing off those nasty scythes. Within ten
minutes the last of the attackers were dead or dying
and Raynor was climbing into the shuttle to take stock.
Cavez was waiting for him.
“Sorry, sir,” his lieutenant started, and Raynor
brushed away the apology. “We should have been
ready to move when you gave the order.”
254 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“They would have caught you out in the open,
then,” Raynor consoled him, noticing the bloody
bandage around Cavez’s upper right arm. “Better off
fighting from here. Why aren’t you in armor?”
Cavez shrugged. “I figured the others needed it
more,” he admitted.
“Wrong,” Raynor told him bluntly. “You’re in charge
of them. That means you need to be able to help them
when they need it. You need the armor most. Without
it you’re a liability to them, not an asset. Don’t do it
again.”
“Yes, sir!” The young trooper straightened and
saluted, and Raynor fought back a smile. Damn, Cavez
reminded him of Matt! The thought of the young pilot,
and the Hyperion, sobered him a little.
“All right, all right,” he said. “You’re still alive so it
wasn’t too bad a screwup. Just make sure you’ve got
armor next time.” He glanced around. “Where’s Aber-
nathy?”
Cavez couldn’t meet his eyes. “Dead, sir. She went
to help Non get two of the wounded to the shuttle and
a zerg stabbed her through the chest. I saw her drop.”
Raynor nodded, then stopped. “Wait, stabbed her
through the chest?” Cavez nodded. “Did it tear open
her suit? Rip her apart?”
“Sir?”
He reminded himself that Cavez was young, and
hadn’t seen much combat before Char, particularly
against zerg. Fortunately, he had. “Was her suit still in
one piece when she fell?” he asked again.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 255
Cavez stopped and thought about it. “Yes, sir,” he
said finally.
“Did the zerg keep on her after she dropped, or did
it move on?”
“Neither.” Cavez grinned proudly. “I took it down,
sir—got it in the throat, ripped its head clean off.”
“Good man.” Raynor activated his suit’s targeting
systems and told it to search for damaged suits. It reg-
istered eight—two in the shuttle and five just outside.
And one more a little ways beyond. “Come on.” He
was already hopping out and Cavez was right behind
him, the lanky trooper doing his best to keep up as
Raynor homed in on the signal. He was crouching
beside the suit when Cavez ran up, gasping.
Cavez’s memory had been right, he saw at once.
Abernathy had taken a hit to the chest, damaging the
suit’s motors and probably shorting out some of its
other systems. Without the servos working the entire
suit had become dead weight and had toppled over,
leaving her defenseless. Fortunately Cavez’s shot had
taken out the zerg before it could do more damage.
And the rest of the brood had apparently been more
interested in going after the still-active defenders.
Raynor couldn’t see any other damage to the suit
beyond that one gaping hole. And though it had
carved through the suit’s armor easily, slicing open
metal and plastics and wiring, he didn’t see any blood.
“Give me a hand,” he told Cavez, kneeling and fum-
bling for the suit’s emergency catches. His own suit’s
fingers could handle a rifle but had trouble with clasps,
256 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
and he’d only managed two by the time Cavez had an
entire side open. Finally he got the rest and lifted the
front of the suit off completely, tossing it to one side.
“Well, it’s about bloody time,” Abernathy said, sit-
ting up and brushing bits of metal and wiring from her
uniform. She grinned at them both, and Raynor could
feel an answering grin on his face. “Did you leave any
for me?”
“Don’t worry,” Raynor assured her, standing up and
grabbing the rest of her armor to sling it over his shoul-
der; parts might still be usable. “Next time we’ll leave
’em all to you.”
Abernathy hadn’t been the only lucky one, Raynor
realized after the three of them had returned to the
shuttle and done a quick head count. They’d lost ten
soldiers in the attack, including three of the four who
had already been wounded. Considering how many
zerg had hit them, and how quickly the attack had
occurred, they’d all been damn lucky.
“Gather your warriors,” Tassadar told him a few
minutes later. The protoss had placed themselves
around the shuttle in a wide ring, Zealots on one side
and Dark Templar on the other, facing outward to
watch for additional attacks. “We must depart.”
“I need to bury my dead,” Raynor told him, and
stood his ground when the Executor glanced down at
him, eyes wide in apparent disbelief. “I’m not just
leavin’ them to rot,” he insisted. “They deserve better
than that.”
He stared back at the protoss leader for a moment
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 257
and finally Tassadar nodded. “Very well. We will guard
you until you are ready.”
Zeratul hadn’t interfered and didn’t approach—
Raynor saw the Praetor standing with his warriors,
watching the horizon for any sign of zerg. Most likely
the Dark Templar simply figured he’d leave when Tas-
sadar did, which worked out fine.
The ground here wasn’t that hard, the first few
inches loose ash and dry, crumbling dirt below that,
and the men took turns digging. They had the ten
graves cut quickly, and then placed the bodies inside.
McMurty was a chaplain and Raynor let him say a
short prayer, then they filled the graves back in and
grabbed their gear, redistributing the ten packs.
“All right, let’s go,” Raynor told Tassadar, who nod-
ded. He heard a faint whisper again and the Zealots
closed in, forming ranks around their leader. On the far
side of the shuttle Zeratul must have heard or seen the
command, because his Dark Templar grouped around
him as well. Raynor nodded to Cavez and Abernathy,
who shouted orders, and soon everyone was moving
out, the humans forming a buffer between the two
groups of protoss.
“I hate to leave it,” Cavez admitted, pacing along-
side Raynor and glancing back once toward the empty
shuttle. “Seems like as long as we had that we had a
chance of getting off this rock.”
“Not much good to us now,” Raynor pointed out,
which was true. The zerg had done a number on the
shuttle during the attack, carving several pieces from
258A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
its wing and hull and using acid to eat large holes all
across it. Even if they’d gotten engines from the pro-
toss ships they’d have to rebuild the shuttle’s hull
before it could fly again. “And it’s too easy a target.”
“Where are we going?” Abernathy asked him from
his other side. She’d claimed one of the other suits of
powered armor, as had Cavez, and the three of them
walked in front with Deslan. McMurty, and a few oth-
ers. Ling and Non had charge of the rear, three other
suited soldiers with them, and the remaining four cov-
ered the middle, two on either side, guarding the unar-
mored troopers.
“No idea,” Raynor admitted, shaking his head. He
jogged forward to where Tassadar and Zeratul led the
way, still not speaking to each other. “Hey, where are
we going?” he asked.
“To find a secure camp,” Tassadar replied without
turning.
“Yeah, great, thanks.” Raynor glared at him but the
Executor either didn’t notice or didn’t care. “And where’s
that?”
“You shall see it when we arrive” was the cryptic
answer. Zeratul didn’t add anything and Raynor
dropped back to his lieutenants again, fuming.
“They’re being coy,” he told Cavez and Abernathy.
“I guess we’ll know when we get there.”
“Why’re we teaming up with them again?” Cavez
asked, shuddering slightly as he glanced over at the pro-
toss warriors stalking silently beside them. “Wouldn’t
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 259
we be better off going our own way and letting the zerg
go after them?”
Raynor shook his head. “I thought so at first,” he
admitted, “because the zerg were leaving us alone.
Now we’re targets too, though. We’re better off all
together.” He caught the look of revulsion on Cavez’s
face. “You don’t have to like it,” he told the young
trooper. “I’m not askin’ you to marry ‘em. Just to treat
’em as allies.” He grinned. “Hell, I’ll take protoss over
Duke any day.”
They marched for four hours, reaching the moun-
tains after two and climbing up among the sharp
peaks. Tassadar stayed in front and never paused to
look around or debate a path—Raynor couldn’t tell if
the Executor was going to a place he already knew or
just sensing the route as he went. Either way he led
them to a narrow gap between two peaks, which
widened into a small valley almost totally concealed
beneath a hanging cliff. A small stream ran down from
the opposing peak and pooled at one end.
“Here” was all the High Templar said, his warriors
already dropping into those cross-legged poses Raynor
had seen them assume before. Zeratul’s warriors did
the same, none of the protoss making a move to eat or
drink or even rid themselves of armor, and within
minutes the valley was filled with what looked like
protoss statues.
“Right,” Raynor said, shutting down his armor and
stepping out of it. “Let’s set up camp over there,” he
260A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
said, gesturing to the wall under the cliff. “We’ll set up
a watch, just in case, though I’m sure the protoss will
be keeping an eye out, too.” He glanced over at his
men, who were unshouldering packs and setting
down weapons. “I don’t know how long we’ll be using
this place,” he told them, “so don’t get too comfortable.
But break out some food, let’s refill our canteens, and I
want to know what we’ve got left in terms of ammo
and supplies.”
His men got to work, setting up tents and checking
equipment and making a quick meal, leaving Raynor
and his two lieutenants to discuss their plans. Unfortu-
nately there wasn’t a lot to discuss.
“Nice to know what they’re planning,” Cavez mut-
tered, jerking one thumb toward the motionless pro-
toss. “Are we just tagging along like little brothers for
now?”
“Yeah, something like that,” Raynor replied, taking
a swig from a full canteen Ling had just handed him.
The water was cold and sharp, with just a hint of ash.
“The good news is, we’ve got three times as many
fighters now, and they’re hell on wheels against the
zerg. Bad news is, they’re not exactly chummy with
each other, let alone us. So don’t go expecting cook-
outs or singalongs.”
“Well, are we hunting zerg or waiting for them to
find us?” Abernathy asked. All Raynor could do was
shake his head.
“No idea,” he admitted. “I don’t think either of these
guys likes sitting around waiting,” he added, nodding
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 261
toward the statue that was Tassadar, perched cross-
legged near the stream, and at the monument that was
Zeratul, standing slightly hunched not far from the
valley entrance. “So they’ll probably take the fight to
the Swarm if we go more’n a few days without getting
jumped ourselves.” He scratched his cheek, which still
itched where the dream-Kerrigan had scratched him.
“Could be a few days before it reaches that point,
though.” He slapped Cavez on the arm and Abernathy
on the back, then stood up. “Best thing to do for now
is get some rest.”
Raynor’s words proved prophetic. For two days they
sat in that valley, doing nothing. The protoss behaved
the same way they had when he had spied on the
Zealots before, sitting immobile all day except for brief
periods of stretching and exercise. Tassadar and Zeratul
seemed to be on the same cycle and went from frozen
to mobile at the same time but did not approach one
another. Tassadar seemed to be deliberately ignoring
Zeratul, though once Raynor caught the Executor star-
ing at the Praetor, his eyes wide in confusion rather
than narrowed in anger or hatred. The Praetor did
nothing to disguise his own interest, watching Tas-
sadar intently for several minutes each time they
awoke, but did not speak to him or close the gap
between them. Both groups of protoss ignored the
humans in their midst, moving around them when
necessary and not speaking to them at all.
For their part, Raynor’s crew patched their wounds,
262A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
mended their gear, played cards, carved rocks, sparred,
and otherwise did what soldiers did during downtime.
Everyone kept glancing toward the aliens around
them, and several soldiers jumped each time a protoss
blurred from rest to activity. Raynor overheard several
mutters of “Kill ’em all now, safer that way” and “Just
a matter of time before they turn on us too” and “Just
as creepy as the zerg” and other similar things. Finally
he had to say something.
“I know they’re weird,” he told his assembled troop-
ers on the second morning. “I know they’re funny-
looking with those heads and those eyes and no mouths
and all that. And yeah, they ain’t exactly friendly.” He
glanced from soldier to soldier as he spoke, making sure
he had everyone’s attention. “But they ain’t the enemy.
They ain’t zerg. If they were, we’d all be dead already.”
He took a breath. “Listen, these guys are seriously
bad-ass warriors. You’ve seen them fight. And they hate
the zerg even more’n we do. And while they aren’t
lining up to dance with us, they do see us as allies. So
let’s just ignore their oddities and accept that, okay?”
Several people nodded. “Okay?” Everyone nodded and
he heard several yeses. “Good. You don’t have to like
them,” he said, repeating what he’d told Cavez before.
“You just have to be glad they’re on our side, and stay
out of their way.”
“Easy enough when they’re just sitting still,” some-
body called out, and everybody laughed, Raynor
included.
“Yeah, they’re really good at sitting,” he agreed, but
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 263
just then a flurry of motion caught his eye and he
stopped to glance over the troopers’ heads. The protoss
were all rising from their frozen positions, Zealots and
Dark Templar alike, and moving toward the valley
entrance.
“What’s going on?” Raynor called out to Tassadar,
who was striding toward him. They met midway
between their two groups, Zeratul suddenly appearing
next to them. Raynor started at the Praetor’s presence,
but Tassadar gave no sign of being surprised.
“We must find another haven,” Tassadar explained.
“The Swarm approaches.”
“So we’re just gonna run away?” Raynor asked.
“We’re not gonna fight?”
“They have far superior numbers” was Tassadar’s
reply. “We would not survive such a confrontation.”
“We can’t just let ’em scare us off,” Raynor protested,
stepping forward to block Tassadar’s path as the Execu-
tor started to turn away. “We’ve got to take a few of
them out, at least. If we do that each time we run into
them, before long we’ll whittle ’em down to nothing.”
“The human is correct,” Zeratul stated. “While we
cannot win a direct battle this time, we can wage a
small skirmish and inflict losses upon the zerg.”
Tassadar frowned at the Dark Templar. “You would
stay and fight?” he asked. Raynor could hear the sur-
prise in his voice.
Zeratul nodded. “We can remove ourselves from the
valley and position ourselves above it instead,” he
pointed out. “By gaining such elevation we will take
264 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
the initiative and can strike quickly and then depart,
leaving them wounded and confused.”
The Executor studied his counterpart openly, blue
eyes wide with curiosity. “I was taught that Dark Tem-
plar were cowards and weaklings,” he admitted after a
moment. “You are neither.”
“Teachings come from the teacher,” Zeratul pointed
out, earning a small snort from Raynor, which he
ignored. “Thus the lesson is influenced by the lecturer,
rather than remaining unbiased truth.”
Tassadar tilted his head to one side. “Perhaps,” he said
finally, “I will reevaluate my stance toward you and
yours.”
“The wise mind seeks its own answers,” Zeratul
agreed, “rather than relying upon the information of
others.”
“Yeah, I hate to interrupt,” Raynor cut in, “but if
the zerg are on their way we’d better get our asses in
gear.”
Both protoss swiveled to look at him.
“Indeed” was all Zeratul said, but Raynor could tell
the Dark Templar was amused. Then both protoss lead-
ers were turning back to their warriors and Raynor
rushed to get his crew ready as well.
The ambush worked beautifully. They all moved up
along the valley walls, protoss and human alike, and
hid as best they could against the rocks and snow. Zer-
atul and his Dark Templar had the definite advantage
there, fading completely from view. After perhaps ten
minutes of waiting they heard the telltale clicks and
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S265
hisses and scrapes of the zerg. Raynor and his people
checked their weapons.
As with the shuttle assult, only a portion of Kerrigan’s
brood attacked, and again she was nowhere in sight her-
self. That was probably for the best. This batch of zerg
was entirely land-bound, zerglings and hydralisks and
ultralisks, and that made it easier as well—an ambush
from above might not have worked against mutalisks
and the other fliers. As it was, the zerg filed into the val-
ley, intent upon slaughtering their prey, and halted in
confusion when they found the place empty.
That was when the combined forces of Raynor, Tas-
sadar, and Zeratul fell upon them.
It was a short, ugly fight. Protoss energy blades and
human gauss rifles made short work of the zerg, who
found their escape route cut off and their supposed
prey armed and on every side. Within minutes, the
zerg were dead on the valley floor.
“The rest of the brood will arrive soon,” Tassadar
warned, standing astride a hydralisk he had snapped in
half as it reached for Non. “We must depart or face
them all.”
“Time to go,” Raynor agreed, and gathered his men.
They hadn’t lost a single soldier in the fight. Neither had
the protoss.
“That’s more like it,” Cavez said happily as they
marched out of the valley and followed Tassadar to
some new refuge.
“Not so bad working with protoss, eh?” Raynor
teased him as they walked. His lieutenant managed to
266A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
look a little embarrassed but keep grinning anyway.
“Not so bad,” he agreed.
That first encounter set the tone for the next week.
They would find a place to camp and settle in for any-
where from two hours to two days. The zerg would
find them, or would wander close by looking for them.
Tassadar, Zeratul, and Raynor would set up a trap for
the zerg, attacking all of a small force or cutting off a
portion of a larger force. They’d make short work of
the zerg, protoss and human fighting together, and
then abandon the area before Kerrigan could bring the
rest of her brood after them. They were trimming her
brood with each attack but avoiding her personally,
and Raynor knew it had to be driving her nuts.
The protoss didn’t exactly warm up to the humans.
At least, the warriors still went into statue mode at
each new campsite, and only moved to stretch or
drink. But after that first battle, in which Raynor’s men
had held their own, the warriors did show more
respect for his troopers. They also learned to work
together a bit. The protoss were fearsome warriors, as
strong and fast as a human in combat armor and
deadly with those energy blades, but they were only
effective right up close. Raynor’s men, with their gauss
rifles and targeting systems, could handle longer-range
attacks, which meant they could thin the herd first and
then provide support. The two races began figuring out
how to take advantage of their repective strengths, and
with each battle they improved their teamwork. Most
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S267
of the protoss warriors still didn’t talk to the humans,
but they would point out a zerg target, or simply move
aside to let a trooper take the shot.
For their part, Raynor’s crew began to get a little
more used to their alien allies. The protoss were still
strange and still aloof but everyone agreed they were
damn useful in a fight. And after several instances in
which the protoss stepped in to save the humans from
zerg attacks, the troopers began relaxing more around
them. After all, why bother protecting someone if you
wanted to kill him? Now they knew that the protoss
really did see them as allies, and not only wouldn’t kill
them but would actively help them survive. It made a
big difference. Troopers were able to sleep soundly
without checking on the protoss’s location every few
minutes, and could walk calmly past a frozen protoss
or even sit near one without worrying about being
attacked. Everyone finally accepted that the protoss
really weren’t their enemies, which freed people up to
worry about the zerg and only the zerg.
The Zealots and Dark Templar also formed an
uneasy alliance. The two groups still didn’t mingle,
keeping to separate sides of whatever shelter they
found and only following orders from their respective
leaders. But they did fight alongside one another now.
The Dark Templar seemed more relaxed about their
strange partnership and regarded their Templar
brethren with something like amusement and perhaps
a little condescension. The Zealots still seemed wary of
their dark kin but showed a grudging respect for their
268A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
skills and gradually came to accept the fact that the
Dark Templar were not going to attack them instead of
the zerg.
The protoss leaders were less reticent than their
warriors, and Raynor found himself spending more
time with them both, and especially with the two of
them together. Tassadar and Zeratul spent less time
meditating now than their warriors did, and often sat
near one another, communicating quietly—a concept
Raynor had never realized could apply to telepathy
before—or just sitting quietly. Raynor joined them
whenever he could, fascinated by the interaction
between the two and a bit surprised at the friendly
feelings he found himself developing for each of them.
The two protoss were very different. Tassadar was a
warrior through and through, direct and honest. He
had no guile, though he was an excellent strategist and
had no compunctions about employing feints and
ambushes. But as an individual Tassadar seemed inca-
pable of lying or deceit. He was fiercely loyal to his
warriors and to his people in general, and Raynor saw
in him the burning love of a true patriot, willing to die
for his race’s honor just as readily as for its survival.
But Tassadar cared about more than just his own
people. As they sat one day at one end of their current
camp, he turned to look at Raynor, and Raynor felt
something like shame in that gaze. Zeratul also picked
up on it.
“You feel guilt toward the humans,” the Praetor
commented softly, but after a moment’s silence he cor-
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 269
rected himself. “I mistake the source with the subject,”
he admitted. “You feel guilt because of the humans,
but the guilt is toward our own people.”
Tassadar started and stared at the older protoss, and
for a second Raynor thought the Templar was going to
attack again, though whether it was over Zeratul’s
reminder that they were the same race or his assess-
ment of Tassadar’s emotional state he wasn’t sure.
After a few seconds, however, the Executor simply
shrugged and looked away.
“Is this about my ships?” Raynor asked. He had long
since accepted what the protoss had done above Char
and why. He still mourned the loss of his men, but he
understood. In Tassadar’s shoes—if the alien had worn
any—he might have done the same thing. But Zeratul
answered instead.
“The cause is much greater,” the Praetor assured
him, “and stems less from responding to events than
from following directives.”
If Zeratul knew any more about it he didn’t say, but
Tassadar finally turned back and looked at Raynor
again. “My orders,” the Templar explained heavily,
“were to destroy those worlds already tainted by the
zerg.”
“Like you did to Mar Sara,” Raynor said, and the
Templar nodded.
“But far less taint is required to call down such a
fate,” he explained, and Raynor felt a chill wash over
him.
“How much?” he demanded, leaping to his feet.
270A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“How much contact with the zerg earns a world the
death sentence? Do the zerg even have to land there?”
He saw the reply in the protoss commander’s eyes.
“What, so you’re just supposed to kill us all off now,
just to be safe?”
“Yes,” Zeratul replied, again speaking where the
younger protoss seemed unable or unwilling. “Those
were his orders.”
“How do you know?” Raynor snapped. “It’s not like
you were involved!” He saw the two protoss glance at
each other, then Tassadar looked quickly away, seem-
ing embarassed. “What?”
“I know because the Executor has told me,” Zeratul
explained. “In these past few days we have discussed
many things.” He seemed pleased by this turn of events.
“Didn’t feel like including me, eh?” Raynor asked
Tassadar pointedly, glaring at him, then at Zeratul for
good measure.
“He is still overcome with guilt,” the Praetor replied.
“But he wished to tell you. That is why I spoke for him.”
“So you were supposed to kill us all?” Raynor asked
quietly, numbed at the thought of those protoss war-
ships hovering over each Terran world in turn.
“To eradicate your race’s worlds, and prevent the
Swarm from using them for fodder in the war between
our species, yes,” the Praetor answered. Then he eyed
Tassadar carefully, and his tone turned warm. “But he
did not obey.”
“He didn’t?” Raynor stared at the protoss, who
refused to look up.
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S271
“No,” Zeratul said. “He felt such actions were both
dishonorable and unproductive. Instead he abandoned
his post, his orders, and followed his instincts, to this
world. Here he hoped to eliminate the zerg directly,
thus ending the long conflict and sparing your people
further harm.”
Raynor didn’t know what to say. He’d been so damn
pissed at Tassadar when they’d first met, because the
protoss had destroyed a few hundred men and their
ships. Now he learned that the Executor had deliber-
ately disobeyed orders to spare millions of other
humans, and had come here looking for a way to end
the problem before anyone else got hurt. It was one of
the most selfless things he had ever heard of, and
Raynor realized that Tassadar wasn’t one of those
fanatics who put their own race’s desires above all else.
The protoss commander was one of those far rarer
beings who put their people’s honor and dignity above
even their own plans or orders, and who would do
whatever was necessary to keep theie people’s nobility
intact, even if it meant sullying their own reputation.
“Yes,” Zeratul agreed, and Raynor realized that the
Praetor had read his thoughts. “He is rare indeed, and
valuable beyond measure.” There was no hint of con-
descension or sarcasm in the statement, only truth,
pride, and perhaps a little envy.
If Tassadar was an open book, Zeratul was a tightly
bound scroll, only hinting at his depths and content.
Though a powerful fighter, the Praetor was first and
272A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
foremost a scholar and teacher. He loved to explain
things, though his preferred method was to present
questions and make the student figure out the
answers. He spoke in riddles without even realizing it
and liked to consider everything two or three times
before making a decision. Zeratul was a natural story-
teller with a spellbinding mental “voice.” He also had
a wicked sense of humor, Raynor discovered, and his
convoluted statements often contained barbs directed
at Raynor, Tassadar, and even Zeratul himself. The
first time Raynor made a joke at the Praetor’s expense
he wasn’t sure how the Dark Templar would react
and, in the silence that followed, was afraid he had
gone too far. Then Zeratul started laughing, a dry
cackle that washed over him and left him feeling as
refreshed as from a mild summer rain. Even Tassadar
had chuckled a bit, and after that Raynor and the
Dark Templar traded quips and jabs daily. They both
picked on Tassadar, who put up with their verbal
assaults good-naturedly but did not volley back.
It was a strange trio they made, and their conversa-
tions often turned to subjects Raynor didn’t really
understand. After a few days Tassadar openly admitted
that he was fascinated by Zeratul and his abilities. “You
touch something I cannot,” the High Templar said
humbly, “but I feel the contact deep within, as if it
echoed in my soul somehow.”
“What you feel is the birthright of all protoss,” Zer-
atul replied calmly, though the way he leaned forward
and the way his eyes gleamed betrayed his excitement.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 273
“I possess only those gifts native to us all. I have honed
my connection with these forces, over these long
years, but the power was there all along, as it resides
within you.”
“That’s how you killed Zasz,” Raynor commented,
and was forced to explain that he had watched the
combat between Praetor and cerebrate in that dark
cavern, earning a nod of respect from the Dark Tem-
plar. “You used those powers to kill him for good,” he
continued.
“Yes,” Zeratul agreed. “The forces we protoss pos-
sess are inimical to the zerg. By utilizing these gifts I
severed the bond between Zasz and the Overmind,
preventing his soul from being reborn.”
“You are certain this Zasz was not restored after
your attack?” Tassadar asked, and Raynor answered
for the Praetor.
“He wasn’t,” he confirmed. “He’s definitely dead.”
He thought back to the conversation he had witnessed
between Kerrigan and Daggoth. “I saw Kerrigan talk-
ing about it,” he explained, “before I ran into the two
of you. Whatever you did”—he nodded at Zeratul—“it
was the real deal.” Then he remembered the other part
of the conversation. “Damn.”
“What is it?” Tassadar demanded. “If you know
more of this, you must tell us!”
“Yeah, well, I—” Raynor couldn’t bring himself to
look at either of them, particularly Zeratul. “I guess
when you did that, killed Zasz, you touched the Over-
mind itself.”
274A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“Yes, I felt it through its link to the cerebrate,” the
old protoss confirmed.
“Well, it apparently felt you too,” Raynor explained.
“And it tapped your mind while you were busy. That’s
how it found out about Aiur.”
“No!” Zeratul shot to his feet but instantly tipped
backward, flailing to catch himself. He looked for all
the world like a drunken soldier, and his eyes alter-
nated between blazing green fire and dull, colorless
pools. “It is my fault!” His psychic cry was heart-
wrenching. The Praetor turned to Tassadar and fell to
his knees before the stunned Executor. “Truly I am to
blame!” Zeratul wailed in their minds. “I have
betrayed our people! Punish me! Take my life! End my
suffering!” He bowed his head, clearly waiting for
whatever punishment Tassadar chose to inflict.
For his part, the Executor sat unmoving for a
moment. Then, surprisingly, he reached out and rested
a hand upon Zeratul’s shoulder. “You are the cause,
yes,” the Executor confirmed, “but your intent was
pure. You sought to eliminate a foe, not expose our peo-
ple. Your own grief and guilt are punishment enough.”
Zeratul looked up at him, his eyes wide. “But
through me the Swarm will strike at Aiur! Our people
will suffer!”
“Yes,” Tassadar agreed, “but the Overmind has
sought our world obsessively. If not through your
actions he would have found Aiur some other way.
You have only hastened the inevitable.” He turned,
and his eyes blazed blue even in the daylight. “I must
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 275
warn our people, however. They must be told of the
attack—and that the cerebrates are the key.” Then he
bowed his head. “I have not the power to reach them
alone.”
“I will aid you,” Zeratul offered, rising to sit next to
Tassadar. The older protoss had apparently locked his
grief away, for it no longer showed on his face or in his
thoughts, though Raynor was sure the Praetor still felt
it keenly. “Between us we may bridge the distance and
let your warning be heard.”
Tassadar nodded, and the two clasped hands,
though not without a tiny shudder on the Executor’s
part. Raynor stayed where he was, too fascinated to
leave and not wanting to disturb them with any sud-
den movements. He saw the air shimmer between the
two protoss, taking on a rainbow sheen, and then two
other protoss appeared, their images wavering as from
a weak holograph. One was clad in the same uniform
as Tassadar, and had sky-blue eyes. The other wore
ornate robes of crimson and gold, and blue-gray eyes
peered out from beneath his heavy hood.
“En Taro Adun, Executor,” the hooded protoss was
projecting, his thought-speech faint, and at first
Raynor thought he was talking to Tassadar. But the
image’s eyes did not focus upon the High Templar, and
after a second Raynor realized he was talking to the
sky-eyed warrior instead. “Your defense of Antioch
has restored my faith in the Templar caste. I admit that
Tassadar’s desertion had shaken—”
“Indeed, Aldaris?” Tassadar cut in, his thoughts
276 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
directed sharply at the hooded figure. “I would hope
that the Judicator would put more faith in their Tem-
plar brethren. . . .”
Both of the protoss in the image whirled about,
obviously looking for the thought’s source.
“Tassadar?” the one named Aldaris queried, his eyes
finally focusing upon the High Templar. “Where. . .”
“Be silent, Judicator,” Tassadar warned. “There is no
time to waste, and I have much to tell you.” He nodded
toward the second newly arrived protoss but did not
pause to greet him otherwise. “As you know, the zerg
vanished after the fall of the Terran world of Tarsonis.
And though the Conclave bid me return home, I was
compelled to remain. A powerful psionic call drew my
attention to a remote, barren world named Char.
Apparently, the call was answered by others as well.
For upon Char, I encountered those who were once
our brethren—the Dark Templar.” Tassadar’s eyes
darted briefly toward Zeratul, hidden on the far side of
the distortion, before returning to the image.
Aldaris’s eyes had narrowed in rage. “Consorting
with the Fallen Ones is heresy!” he proclaimed, his
thoughts harsh and unforgiving.
“Enough!” Tassadar’s own eyes flared into cobalt
fire, and the Judicator fell silent. “Hear me, Executor,”
Tassadar continued, turning toward the sky-eyed pro-
toss instead, “for I have learned much from the Dark
Templar Prelate Zeratul. The Overmind controls its
minions through agents called cerebrates. Strike down
the cerebrates, and the Swarms will surely fall.”
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S277
“My thanks, noble Tassadar,” the other Executor
replied, entering the conversation for the first time.
“We will use this knowledge well.”
“I pray we can trust you, Tassadar,” Aldaris stated
softly, still projecting anger but now mingling it with
fatherly concern. “Already I can sense the taint of the
Fallen Ones’ influence on your mind. You must return
to Aiur at once!”
“My concern is for the safety of Aiur, not the judg-
ments of the Conclave,” Tassadar replied calmly. “I will
return when the time is right.” And when you have
access to a ship, Raynor thought, but he didn’t say it.
He understood that the High Templar didn’t want to
distract his people from the zerg invasion by asking for
a ride home, and he admired the protoss warrior’s ded-
ication.
Tassadar lifted his hands from Zeratul’s and swept
them before his face, shattering the strange distorted
circle and scattering the image’s remains into the weak
sunlight.
“My thanks,” he told Zeratul quietly. “Perhaps now
our people may have a chance.”
“We may hope,” the Dark Templar replied. “Though
even targeting the cerebrates may not be enough.”
“Why?” Tassadar asked. “Your attack was sufficient
to destroy one.”
Zeratul regarded him a second before answering.
“The powers you possess are formidable,” he said
finally, “but they are not your true gifts. They are
merely versions of them approved by your leaders,
278 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
diluted by their teachings and narrowed by their fears.
You must grasp the full power within you to truly
strike down the zerg.”
Tassadar did not reply. Zeratul’s suggestion hung
above them, however, and several days later Tassadar
responded.
“Tell me more about these gifts we possess” was all
he asked, but it was a major step for him and Raynor
knew it. From the first confrontation between the two
protoss he’d seen how the Dark Templar were spoken
of in normal protoss society, and how Tassadar had
been raised to consider them evil. Fighting alongside
Zeratul had convinced Tassadar otherwise, but he’d
still considered the Dark Templar’s abilities to be some-
thing foreign and perhaps tainted. To ask about them,
and especially to speak of them as something native to
all protoss, was a major step in breaking down his old
prejudices and accepting a different, wider view. Even
though Tassadar was far older than he was, Raynor felt
proud of him, as if the protoss commander were a
young man he’d just seen take his first step toward
growing up.
CHAPTER 17
THE NEXT TWO WEEKS WERE A STRANGE MIX OF
activity and leisure, study and idleness.
Zeratul had clearly been pleased when Tassadar
finally expressed interest in learning about their pro-
toss gifts, but the Praetor had hesitated before replying,
glancing significantly at Raynor.
“These gifts lie at the very core of our being,” he
warned the younger protoss, “and may only be revealed
to other members of our race, lest others gain un-
healthy insight into our souls and abuse such knowl-
edge to the detriment of our people.” The language was
convoluted, but Raynor got the gist.
“I’m outta here,” he said, standing up and dusting off
the seat of his pants. “You guys can do your little bond-
ing thing.” But Tassadar raised an arm and blocked him
from leaving.
“James Raynor is our ally,” the Executor told the
wizened Dark Templar. “He is also a”—he paused for an
instant; Raynor would have sworn he was taking a deep
280A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
breath if the protoss had possessed mouths and nostrils
and lungs—”friend,” Tassadar said finally, and that one
word carried a surprising amount of emotion. Not just
for the protoss, either—Raynor rocked back on his heels
at the statement and felt his eyes tear up. A part of him
laughed at himself for being such a sap, but it was only
a small part. The rest of him understood. The protoss
didn’t just read emotions and thoughts, they projected
them, and so Tassadar’s statement carried with it the full
weight of his thoughts and feelings upon the matter.
That was how Raynor knew it was such a significant
acknowledgment. Tassadar wasn’t just saying they were
buddies—that had been encompassed in the word
“ally.” By referring to Raynor as a “friend,” Tassadar was
admitting to a strong bond between them, a bond that
carried its own honor and required its own loyalty. The
closest Raynor could come to a comparison was by
thinking of blood brothers, men sworn to support one
another as they would their own kin. It was a stagger-
ing honor, and one he never would have expected from
the tall, taciturn alien warrior.
“Thanks,” he told Tassadar, knowing the Executor
would read into that one word all the gratitude he
really felt. He could see from the protoss’s eyes that he
had. Then Raynor glanced over at Zeratul, who looked
both amused and puzzled. “But I don’t want to get in
the way.”
“You are not in the way,” Tassadar informed him.
“You are welcome.” He dropped his arm, demonstrat-
ing that Raynor was still free to leave if he chose, and
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S281
both of them turned to face the Dark Templar. Ball’s in
your court, Raynor couldn’t help thinking.
Perhaps the Praetor heard him. Or perhaps he sim-
ply recognized that the two others were waiting for his
response. The older protoss paused for a moment, per-
haps for dramatic effect, before nodding slightly.
“You see beyond skin,” he complimented Tassadar,
“acknowledging the soul beneath and finding kinship
regardless of form. Impressive.” Something about his
tone sounded almost jealous, and Raynor had a flash
of insight. For all his learning and wisdom and coun-
sel, all his talk about an open mind, Zeratul had very
set notions about certain things. And Tassadar had just
demonstrated that he could move beyond what he’d
been taught, and think outside the box. It was a rare
gift, and one the Praetor himself did not possess.
“Much of what I will teach you can only be learned
by a joining of thoughts,” Zeratul continued, “and thus
our companion”—he nodded at Raynor—”will be
unable to participate. However, I will share what I may,
that he may learn more of us and our ways.” He nodded
again, but this was deeper, almost a bow. “Perhaps in
this you will discover the true meaning of being protoss,
and will understand us as no outsider has before.”
“And perhaps,” Tassadar added, “your perspective,
unbounded by our heritage, will provide useful insight
for us all.”
Raynor thought about it for a second, but only a sec-
ond. On the one hand, this might be pretty boring, espe-
cially when the two protoss were “joining thoughts,” as
282A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Zeratul had put it. On the other hand, the more he knew
about the protoss the more fascinating they became, and
this was a chance to learn things no other non-protoss
knew. Things even most protoss didn’t know, apparently.
But the real deciding factor was Tassadar’s calling him
“friend.” Raynor knew it was one of the most important
moments of his life, right up there with the day he first
left home and the day he met Mike Liberty and the day
he walked out on Arcturus Mengsk. The Templar had
invited him to participate in something incredibly impor-
tant, and to refuse would be to insult their new bond. So
he sank back down onto the rock he’d been using as a
seat, and nodded. “Don’t know I’ll have much to offer,”
he admitted, “but thanks.”
That apparently settled the matter. It was later that
afternoon—because the old protoss refused to do any-
thing without appropriate dramatic pauses—that Zer-
atul began their education.
As the Dark Templar had warned, Raynor wasn’t able
to follow all of it. Often the two protoss linked minds so
the Praetor could demonstrate something directly. They
had tried to include Raynor in the link but he’d wound
up with no more than several strange images, a cascade
of sounds, and a splitting headache. “Your mind is not
meant for such uses,” the Praetor pointed out afterward,
sounding slightly apologetic, “and the link works best
with only two minds, even among protoss.” So for long
stretches Raynor found himself just sitting between two
statues, or getting up and wandering away while they
were busy communing.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S283
At other times, however, Zeratul lectured them on
protoss history and theology, and Raynor listened
along with Tassadar, though he could follow only some
of the details. He learned about the Xel’Naga, the tribe
that created the protoss millennia ago and been
attacked for their troubles. He learned about the bat-
tles that tore the race apart, and about the Mystic
known as Khas who reunited the people and created
the Khala, the Path of Ascension. It was the Khala,
with its rigid rules, that still defined protoss society
today. And it was the protoss tribes who had refused to
submit to its structure who were exiled from their
homeworld and later became the Dark Templar.
“The powers you draw upon are those granted us by
the Xel’Naga themselves,” Zeratul explained, “and are
entwined with the very fiber of our being. But they
have been filtered through the Khala, restricted to a
narrow channel defined by elder generations past. Our
true powers are not limited in this fashion.”
“Yet without these limits we would lose all control,”
Tassadar countered. “As happened long ago, when
Adun failed in his duty and allowed the Tribes to
unleash their power across Aiur, nearly destroying the
world.” Waves of shock and old pain rose from Zeratul,
making Raynor flinch. “Yes, I know of these things,”
Tassadar admitted. “Rumors still exist, and when we
rise high enough in our training Templar are instructed
in the difference between lies and truth.”
“Instructed, yes,” Zeratul agreed, “but not fully. Nor
are you given full truth, only the version the Conclave
284A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
agreed upon centuries ago.” He turned away, unable to
speak further, and Raynor knew the lessons were over
for the day.
It was actually three days before they discussed pro-
toss history again. The zerg attacked on the second day,
and after beating them back the protoss and human
forces relocated to yet another hidden valley. They had
honed the process to an art by now, the protoss actually
helping to pack up the humans’ tents and gear, and
could be on the move in twenty minutes or less. With
each battle and each new camp the rapport between the
two races grew stronger, and between the two sides of
the one race. Raynor knew the time he spent with Tas-
sadar and Zeratul had something to do with that.
“They can’t be all bad,” Non said one morning over
coffee, “or you wouldn’t be sitting with them all day
on these damn rocks.” Everyone laughed.
“What’re you talking about?” Cavez asked a little while
later. “Or thinking about, or mind-talking, or whatever it
is,” he amended hastily. Most of the men still weren’t
comfortable with the notion of telepathy, and Raynor
wondered if his history with Kerrigan had helped him
accept the concept, and the practice, so easily. Not that it
didn’t still weird him out to have another’s thoughts pop
into his head, but he understood it and wasn’t so much
afraid anymore as just continually startled.
“History,” Raynor answered honestly. “I’m learning
their history.” He took a sip of his coffee and thought
about it a bit more. “It’s an honor,” he said then.
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S285
“They’ve never let another race know this much about
them. And I can see why. The more they tell me about
their past, the more I understand who they are now,
and why.”
“Is it . . . okay?” Cavez asked, a shadow of his former
xenophobia showing on his face.
“It’s fine,” Raynor assured him. “Better than that,
actually. We don’t have to worry. The one thing they’d
never do is betray us.”
He knew it was true as he said it. The notion of
honor and loyalty was at the very core of the protoss
race, even before the Khala had made it such a large
part of an individual’s reputation. The Dark Templar,
for all their rebellion and distrust, were still incredibly
honorable. And still utterly loyal to their race. Tassadar
saw that as well, and Raynor could see the Executor’s
respect for the Dark Templar, and particularly for their
Praetor, increasing every day.
Especially after Zeratul’s lessons began again. “We
did nearly destroy Aiur,” he admitted without pream-
ble when he, Tassadar, and Raynor were seated on a
small ledge by the valley’s back wall that third day.
“But it was not entirely our fault. Adun hoped to show
us the error of our ways.” His green eyes grew distant,
and Raynor knew the Praetor was remembering
ancient history—too ancient for him to have experi-
enced it firsthand, but Tassadar had explained that pro-
toss could share experience with one another so fully
you felt you had been there.
“He came to us, with orders to destroy us,” Zeratul
286A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
said softly, and turned at Tassadar’s wordless cry. “This
they did not tell you, of course. Why would they?
Admit that they sent their Templar to slaughter their
own kin, whose only crime was refusing to submit to
their codes?” He nodded. “Now you see the depth to
which you have been misled,” he added, though he
sounded sad rather than triumphant.
“But Adun refused,” the Praetor continued. “He
could not bring himself to kill his own kin. Instead he
taught us that which Khas had taught, how to tap the
power we all carried within us. He hoped our minds
would link and we would then see our folly in resist-
ing.” Zeratul stopped, and for a moment it seemed as if
he wouldn’t continue.
“It didn’t work,” Raynor ventured finally, startling
the older protoss and earning the mental equivalent of
a bitter laugh for his efforts. But the reminder of an
audience spurred Zeratul to resume his story.
“No,” he admitted. “It did not. We learned our
power, yes, but not the discipline to control it. That at
least the Khala is good for: providing discipline from
birth, teaching protoss to master their urges and
thoughts. With such training our people can use our
gifts without fear.” He shook his head. “But the Tribes
did not have this knowledge. Adun could teach us only
so much—it would have required decades to train us
in the necessary control, even if he could have. And
many of us were too old, too set in our ways, to alter
our patterns so fully.” His eyes rested on Tassadar, and
Raynor could tell what the Praetor was thinking. Here
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 287
before him was a High Templar, a high-ranking mem-
ber of the protoss society, but Tassadar was still young
enough and idealistic enough—and honest enough—
to change his patterns radically.
“Your power grew beyond your ability to contain
it,” Tassadar stated, and it was not a question.
“Yes,” Zeratul agreed. “Storms rose from our minds,
fueled by old enmities, and swept across Aiur. The
Conclave scattered the storms, but not without grave
cost.”
“Yet you would have me follow this path,” Tassadar
said softly. The way he said it, Raynor felt the Executor
knew better but still wanted to hear it.
He got his wish. “No!” Zeratul’s reply contained the
most emotion either of them had seen from the old pro-
toss. “Not in that manner!” He calmed himself with a vis-
ible effort. “That was the beginning, and showed us the
error of our ways,” he explained. “After our exile, we
continued to study the gifts Adun had shown us, and to
unlock the powers within. But we also taught ourselves
control, as strong as that granted by the Khala, but with-
out its limitations. We learned to harness the powers of
our race fully and control them completely, yet our
minds remain unfettered by narrow codes and hierar-
chies designed only to protect those in power.”
“The Khala is not a prison,” Tassadar refuted, his
thoughts quiet but the faith behind them hard and
strong. “It is the foundation of our society, the bedrock
of our people.” He leaned back, his eyes half-closed. “It
is impossible to describe fully,” he warned, and Raynor
288 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
could tell the thought was directed not only to him but
to Zeratul as well. “We are as one within the Khala,”
Tassadar stated after a moment’s silence. “Our minds
are linked. But not as when we communicate—not as
they are now. The Khala offers a deeper communion, a
true bond between protoss. In some ways you lose
yourself within that link, becoming one with all other
protoss, a single glorious being.”
Like the Swarm? Raynor couldn’t help wondering.
He didn’t say it aloud, of course. But Zeratul was not so
shy about airing his misgivings.
“This is why we refused it,” the old protoss stated
firmly. “We had no wish to lose ourselves. We are pro-
toss, yes, but we are also individuals. That is important
as well.”
“Of course it is,” Tassadar agreed, opening his eyes
to meet the Praetor’s gaze. “Never did I claim other-
wise.” He held up one hand to stop Raynor, who had
just opened his mouth to protest. “We lose ourselves,
yes, but not our identity, not who we are—just our
loneliness, our isolation. I am still Tassadar within the
Khala, but I am more than Tassadar, more than this
body and this mind. I am one with all my brethren,
part of the greater whole that is our race.” He shook his
head, releasing the mental equivalent of a sigh. “It can-
not be explained properly, not without experiencing
it.” Now his look flashed over both of them, and
Raynor saw something like pity in his eyes. “And nei-
ther of you will ever know it fully.”
Raynor frowned. “I know I can’t, because I’m not
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 289
protoss. But why can’t he?” He jerked a thumb toward
Zeratul, and saw Tassadar’s eyes grow even sadder.
“The Dark Templar have removed themselves from
our racial link,” the tall protoss explained slowly. “They
have forever severed their connection to our people,
thrown away all that we are, turned their back on us.”
“We never turned our back,” Zeratul countered
hotly, his eyes blazing. “We still keep watch over Aiur,
over all of you! We have since our exile!” Then he let
his eyelids drop, a deliberate setting aside of his anger.
“But yes, we broke that link. We thought we would be
lost within it, swallowed up by the Conclave, stripped
of our identities. Perhaps if one such as you had
explained it, we might have acted differently.”
“You would consider rejoining us?” Tassadar seemed
startled.
“Yes” was the Praetor’s reply. “If we could, we might
consider it. Not with the Conclave, for we do not trust
their motives, but with those such as yourself, certainly.”
“I am surprised to hear you discuss such a matter so
calmly,” Tassadar admitted, and Zeratul’s mental snort
made Raynor grin in reply.
“We consider all our actions, Executor. Every move
is carefully inspected, debated, deliberated. We were
not a hasty people to begin with, and we have learned
patience from our time among the stars.”
“Then you do not advocate giving in to every whim
and emotion,” Tassadar asked, and again it was clearly
not a question, though Zeratul answered anyway.
“Of course not,” the Praetor scoffed. “Those are tales
290 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
spread by the Conclave, painting us as rogues and
fiends, little more than savages, unable to think clearly
or act rationally, unable to control ourselves.” He
turned, raising his arms and sweeping them to include
the valley behind them. “Are we irrational and uncon-
trolled?” Tassadar and Raynor both looked past him,
where Dark Templar sat just as still as Templar and just
as visibly at peace. No other answer was required.
“Poor, poor Jimmy. So sad, so lonely. So doomed.”
Raynor jerked upright, sweat scattering from his
sudden motion. He took a deep breath, forcing his rac-
ing heart to slow, and wiped his forearm across his
brow, sweeping away the sweat that coated his skin.
Damn. He couldn’t remember all of the dream this
time, but he knew it had been another one about Ker-
rigan. He had been having them more and more often
ever since they’d abandoned the shuttle. But the tone
of them had changed dramatically.
The ones that he did remember lately still involved
him and Kerrigan. But they weren’t happy. Or at least
they weren’t by the end. Each time the two of them
were together, eating or running or making love or just
sitting together, talking and laughing, full of life and
love. But then something changed. Kerrigan pulled
away from him, or simply turned cold in his arms. Her
voice shifted, growing deeper, more raspy, chased by a
strange echo that sent chills through him. Her complex-
ion altered, fair skin mottling and darkening. And her
look changed from love to anger, sorrow, even hatred.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 291
“Too bad, Jimmy,” she said each time. “You could
have had it all.”
Sometimes he woke up then. Other times he found
himself running, fleeing this love gone wrong, only to
be chased down. And tortured. He suspected this last
dream had been one of the latter variety.
“I gotta stop doing this,” he told himself as he stood
up and made his way out of his tent, careful not to wake
any of the troopers asleep in tents nearby. He was get-
ting enough sleep, but it didn’t feel that way. Often he
was edgy, abrupt, antagonistic, particularly right after
he’d woken up. His eyes burned, and sometimes the
places where he’d taken wounds in the dream ached for
hours afterward. Yet each night he hoped to dream
about Kerrigan again, and each time he did he savored
the start of the dream, before it all turned ugly.
“Why is she doing this to me?” he muttered as he
knelt near the valley wall and splashed water on his
face from the puddle that collected there.
“Perhaps her reasons are as muddled as your own
thoughts.” The reply came from behind Raynor, star-
tling him enough that his handful of water splashed
against his chest instead of his face. He turned around,
already knowing whom he would find—the mental
voice was distinctive.
“Zeratul.”
The Praetor stood a few paces away, hands hidden
within the folds of his robe, green eyes watching him
carefully. “I did not mean to startle you,” the protoss
assured him.
292A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“That’s okay.” Raynor scooped up more water, actu-
ally getting it to his face this time, then clambered back
to his feet. “Just shaking off a bad dream.”
The Dark Templar nodded. “Her touch still hangs
heavy about you,” he observed, confirming something
Raynor had known but never stated out loud. The
dreams really were from Kerrigan!
“She’s torturing me,” he admitted, walking a short
ways to perch on a low rock. Zeratul sank down beside
him with the easy grace of the protoss, curling in upon
himself somehow so he resembled a ball of dark cloth
with a head perched atop it.
“Not just you,” the Praetor commented, but he didn’t
say more. His eyes bore a look Raynor remembered well
from people like his mother, his teachers, and Mengsk.
A look that said, Figure it out for yourself.
“I’m the only one getting these dreams, though,
right?” That was his first worry, that she had infected
all his men the same way. But he didn’t really think
she had, and indeed Zeratul shook his head no. “So
who else could she be hurting with them? It’s just
me—and her.” Raynor felt a chill run through him. He
stared at the protoss, barely seeing him. “That’s it, isn’t
it? She’s hurting herself by sending me these dreams!”
“How could a dream hurt the sender?” Zeratul asked,
though Raynor suspected the old protoss already knew
the answer. He worked it out himself, talking it
through, though he knew Zeratul could hear his
thoughts as easily as his words.
“It’d hurt if she’s giving up something she wants to
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S293
keep for herself,” he decided. “Or if she’s sharing some-
thing she doesn’t really want to share. Or if she’s reliv-
ing something she’d rather tuck away where she
doesn’t have to see it.” He thought about the dreams,
about their content, particularly how they started.
“She’s sending me images of how we could have been,”
he admitted, aching at the thought of it. “If we’d been
together properly.” In his mind’s eye he saw them run-
ning together, dancing, laughing. “She’s showing me
that we could have been happy together.”
He glared at Zeratul, squinting to blink away the
sudden tears. “She’s taunting me with what we could
have had.”
“Yes,” the Praetor agreed. He waited, clearly expect-
ing Raynor to continue.
“But she’s also torturing herself with something she
wants but can never have,” Raynor realized. “Part of
her still wants to be with me. That’s where the dreams
come from. She’s twisting them because she knows
she can’t have that—can’t have me. And using them
against me because it’s the only way to justify sending
them at all.”
Zeratul nodded. “You grasp truths quickly,” he told
Raynor, “once you free your mind from its constraints.”
Raynor laughed. “If you mean I’m too pigheaded to
see past my own nose half the time, you’re right.” He
sobered again. “So I know she both does and doesn’t
want to send me these dreams. They’re still torture.
They still wake me in a cold sweat.” He looked up at the
old protoss. “Can’t you stop them?”
294 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
“I?” Zeratul regarded him carefully. “They are not
my dreams, either of my making or of my receipt.”
“Yeah, but you can see them,” Raynor insisted. “You
can read them in my thoughts. Can’t you block them
somehow, so I don’t have to get them? Turn them
aside or something?” He knew he was grasping, but he
was desperate. Knowing that part of Kerrigan still
wanted him, still wished things had been different,
only made the dreams that much worse.
But the Praetor shook his head. “These dreams are
yours to bear,” he cautioned. “It is not for me to turn
them aside. You must confront them yourself, as best
you can.”
Raynor got up and was about to walk back to his tent
when he stopped. Something in Zeratul’s words, some-
thing in his look—he had a suspicion, and acted on it.
“You could stop them, though,” he said, turning back
toward the Praetor. “If you wanted to. You could.”
Zeratul met his gaze but did not reply.
“Why won’t you?” Raynor asked. He stepped a little
closer. “I’m not even asking you to, not now. But I
want to know why. The truth.”
For a moment he thought the Praetor would refuse
to answer, or say something again about fighting one’s
own battles. Then a thin sigh escaped the old protoss, a
hint of both amusement and chagrin.
“You are more like us than we know,” Zeratul said,
so quietly Raynor wasn’t sure he’d heard him. Then,
louder, he added, “You are correct. The dreams might
be blocked, though only with difficulty. The bond
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 295
between you is strong. Very strong.” He paused, then
went on. “It is clear to me, as a mottled band of light
stretched between you.”
“A band of light?” Raynor digested that. “Wait, you
can see the link from Kerrigan?” At Zeratul’s nod, he
continued, filled with sudden understanding, “Then
you know where she is!”
“I cannot see her precise location,” the Praetor cor-
rected. “But I can see from the intensity of the link
whether she is near or far, yes.”
“You’ve been using me!” Raynor snapped at him.
“You let the dreams go on so you could keep track of
her, keep us away from her!”
“Yes.”
Raynor thought about that, thought about what he
would have done in the same situation, and felt his
anger wash away. “Good,” he said finally. “It’s a tool we
can use.”
As he walked back to his tent, he heard one last
comment from Zeratul, little more than a whisper
echoed on the wind. “More like us than we know.”
CHAPTER 18
“YOU HAVE ALREADY BEGUN ALONG THE PATH,
the truth path,” Zeratul assured Tassadar a few days
later during another of their strange trainings-
lectures-discussions. Raynor sat off to the side, watch-
ing and listening as usual. “Nor did you require my
instruction to take that first step,” the Praetor contin-
ued, and Raynor thought he heard a hint of petu-
lance, as if the old protoss was disappointed he hadn’t
been more necessary.
“I do not understand,” Tassadar admitted. It was one
of the things Raynor liked about the tall protoss war-
rior—he was willing to show his ignorance, and to
own up to his mistakes.
“When we first met,” Zeratul reminded him, and
Tassadar hung his head in shame. After more than a
month together, he clearly regretted attacking the
Dark Templar during their first encounter. But the
Praetor brushed any apologies aside with one hand
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S297
and continued speaking. “You manifested mental
weapons, did you not?”
Tassadar nodded, and so did Raynor, remembering
the glittering blue-white energy spikes protruding
above the Executor’s wrists.
“Yet you wore no bracers,” Zeratul pointed out.
Raynor was sure he saw Tassadar’s eyes widen as he
realized what the Praetor was saying.
“Okay,” Raynor said, leaning forward slightly,
“sorry to interrupt but I don’t get it. So what?”
“The bracers amplify and focus our minds,” Tassadar
explained slowly. “They allow us to generate psi-
blades. Yet I—” He paused, apparently unable to finish
the thought openly.
“You created such weapons with no tools,” Zeratul
agreed. “Your mind alone focused your power and
gave it form.” He sounded proud, like a father watch-
ing a son fire a rifle for the first time. “Truly your mind
has already made the leap away from the Khala and its
restrictions.” He rested his hands upon Tassadar’s
shoulders. “You are ready for the next step.”
Raynor didn’t follow much of what came after that. It
was both too specific and too vague, instructions mixed
with metaphors and sprinkled with poetry, as Zeratul
showed Tassadar the true potential of the protoss mind.
But he did witness the results as Tassadar mastered each
new gift in turn, and he was present when, after the two
protoss had sat silently communing for several hours,
Zeratul finally rose and declared, “You are ready.”
298A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
“Ready?” Raynor scrambled to his feet, cursing the
pins and needles in his legs and massaging them
absently back to life. “Ready for what?”
“The Shadow Walk,” Zeratul explained as he led
Tassadar down from the small nook they had found
and across the valley they were currently using as their
combined camp. “The test each Dark Templar must
undergo to demonstrate his mastery of our skills.”
Raynor, walking along behind the two protoss, sud-
denly understood what Zeratul was saying. All this
time he had thought Tassadar was simply learning
more about his heritage, and about the powers every
protoss possessed. Apparently it had been more than
that. Zeratul had been training the Executor, yes, but
not just as a friendly gesture. He had been teaching
Tassadar to become a Dark Templar!
“What happens if he passes?” Raynor asked as they
neared the far end of the valley. The rest of the protoss
moved aside, Tassadar’s Zealots stepping back against
the east wall and Zeratul’s Dark Templar vanishing into
the shadows along the west face, and Raynor gestured
for his own people to stay where they were at the
southeast corner.
“He becomes one of us,” Zeratul replied.
“What about being a Templar, then?” Raynor
demanded. “Does he lose that?” He wasn’t sure why it
was so important to him except that he had grown to
like the Executor, and knew that his achievements as a
High Templar were important to Tassadar.
Zeratul paused at the question and turned back to
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 299
study Raynor carefully. The old protoss’s pale green
eyes were as unreadable as ever, but Raynor thought
he saw a flicker of amusement there—and perhaps of
delight as well.
“Only one other has attempted to walk both paths,”
Zeratul admitted, but he did not explain beyond that.
They had reached the end of the valley now, and the
Praetor gently turned his pupil back the way they had
come.
“What must I do?” Tassadar asked simply. He had
followed Zeratul here as if in a daze, and only now
seemed to waken from it, glancing around, his sharp
blue eyes taking in every detail.
“You must traverse the valley to the far end,” Zer-
atul replied. “Pass through the shadows only. Let none
prevent your progress.”
“That’s it?” Raynor couldn’t stop himself from ask-
ing. “That’s all he has to do, walk across the valley?”
Both protoss glanced at him and nodded. Then
Raynor’s brain caught up with his hearing and he
glanced down at the valley again, realizing what he’d
seen as they’d passed. Tassadar’s Zealots were all on the
east side, in the fading sunlight. But Zeratul’s followers
had vanished into the shadows. The same shadows Tas-
sadar was expected to stay within as he walked. Cross-
ing a valley filled with invisible warriors who could
attack at any time—yeah, that was a challenge.
“Good luck,” he told Tassadar.
“Thank you, James Raynor,” the Executor replied,
his blue-white eyes wise and unblinking. Then the
300A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
High Templar turned and took three paces forward and
to the left, the shadows rising about him like mist as he
entered their domain.
“Will he make it?” Raynor asked Zeratul, who had
also turned back toward the valley’s far end but was
staying outside the shadows.
“If such is his destiny,” the Praetor replied. He did
not offer any further comment, and after a few min-
utes Raynor found himself alone, the old protoss hav-
ing vanished somewhere between one footstep and
another. Raynor considered joining his own men but
decided against it. They were at the front end of the
valley, and Tassadar had already passed them. He
wanted a better view, particularly for the end of the
walk, which he suspected would be the hardest part.
So he returned to the nook and settled himself there,
back against the wall, to watch the show.
Tassadar was moving slowly but surely through the
shadows. Somewhere before beginning the ordeal he
had shed his uniform and now wore only the long
loincloth, more ceremonial than necessary. His eyes
glowed blue-white, pinpricks in the darkness. Shad-
ows swirled about him, enveloping him as he walked.
Then the first Dark Templar struck.
It was difficult to follow, particularly from a dis-
tance. Raynor’s first clue came when Tassadar twisted
to one side, arm rising to block a blow. Then a protoss
was standing beside him, angling for position, his
hands wreathed in that strange beyond-dark glow Zer-
atul had manifested when saving Tassadar from the
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S301
zerg. Those hands swung toward the Executor and
Raynor thought he could feel the cold rising off them,
though he knew it was just his mind playing tricks on
him. Still, he breathed a sigh of relief when Tassadar
blocked the first blow and tripped the warrior, sinking
to his knees alongside, his own hand lashing out to
land against his opponent’s chest and pin him to the
ground. That was a clear defeat, and the Dark Templar
did not rise as Tassadar straightened and resumed his
walk.
The second attack came from behind, a protoss
appearing from shadows Tassadar had just passed. This
one’s hands also bore the darkness, stretched between
them like a garrote torn from deep space, and with a
quick flick the protoss tossed the band over Tassadar’s
head and around his neck. The Dark Templar tugged
back sharply, planning to catch his quarry about the
throat and yank him off balance. But Tassadar raised
his right hand and his glittering psi-blade burst from it,
the blade slicing cleanly through the dark band and
scattering its shadowy substance. The warrior Tassadar
dispatched with three quick moves, one to the chest
and one to the throat and one to the space between the
glowing eyes, and then he was moving again.
Everyone was watching now, human and protoss
alike, knowing that this strange journey was somehow
important. Raynor could see the look of awe on the
faces of his men and knew he bore a similar expres-
sion. Tassadar’s complete focus, his grace, and the
powers he was demonstrating, seemingly without
302A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
effort, put most legends and fairy tales to shame. Here
was true power, true strength, manifested in a being
who lived among them and fought beside them. Here
was a true legend.
Tassadar’s warriors seemed less impressed and more
disquieted, though Raynor wasn’t sure how he was
getting that impression. They were all watching the
shadows intently, barely moving, and though he could
feel the occasional flutter he’d learned to recognize as
mental communication it was too far away and too
private for him to notice anything beyond its mere
presence. He understood, though. The Zealots had
watched their leader become friendly with Zeratul,
someone they had been raised to believe was an
enemy every bit as bad as the zerg. Even though they’d
learned to respect the Dark Templar, it was still asking
a lot for them to accept seeing their leader so chummy
with one. And now they were watching what was
clearly a test and an initiation. They probably worried
that Tassadar would betray them, would become as
dark and cryptic as the Praetor, and perhaps even as
evil and ruthless and deranged as their legends of
every Dark Templar. It was only their discipline and
their tremendous respect for Tassadar himself that was
keeping them from interfering.
Tassadar was halfway across the valley now. He had
faced more than a dozen of the Dark Templar, defeat-
ing each one in turn. Some he had conquered with
only his speed and strength. Others he had used his
psi-blades to disarm. Still others he had bested with
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S303
their own gifts, as when one had punched at him with
a dark-shrouded fist and Tassadar had caught the blow,
his own hand stealing the darkness and then releasing
it harmlessly back into the shadows. Each Dark Tem-
plar, as he was defeated, moved aside to let him pass.
But he still had half the valley to go, and many Dark
Templar yet to defeat—including Zeratul himself.
As Raynor watched, however, he noticed some-
thing strange. Tassadar’s eyes were still visible among
the shadows, but now he saw a faint speck of light
upon the protoss warrior’s chest as well. A second
appeared, then a third, forming an inverted triangle
above the Executor’s triple hearts. The tiny spots grew
brighter, as did Tassadar’s eyes, and slowly the glow
crept across the rest of his body, until his entire frame
was engulfed in a near-blinding light. It dispersed the
shadows around him, scattering them into small pock-
ets of stubborn darkness—pockets shaped much like
protoss warriors preparing to strike.
Raynor blinked. For just an instant, as the glow had
flared to full intensity, he thought he’d seen a flicker
from it, like a candle bending in a strong wind. Or a
faint shadow scurrying clear of the revealing light. But
now it was gone and he wasn’t sure if he’d imagined it.
He saw Tassadar, wreathed in light, continue his
slow, steady march along the valley floor. Several of
the Dark Templar straightened and let him pass with-
out a fight, apparently accepting his tactic as a win
since it had robbed them of their concealment and
their tactical advantage. Others attacked but could not
304A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
get close enough to strike, the light dazzling them and
forcing them back before they could reach him. And
still the Executor walked.
Finally he was just below the nook, and one last
patch of shadow remained before him. As Tassadar
approached the shadow spread out rather than shrink-
ing back, extending tendrils to wrap around him and
smother his light. The glow dimmed but did not die,
and in return it lanced deep into the darkness, strip-
ping away layers until the form of a tall, bent protoss
was revealed. Zeratul.
“Excellent,” the Praetor acknowledged, letting the
shadows fall away from him now that they were no
longer useful. “You have used both light and darkness
to good advantage. Your skill with your Templar gifts is
commendable, and you use our native gifts as one
born to them. Truly you are worthy.” Not for the first
time Raynor could hear the grin in the old protoss’s
mental voice, the hints of laughter wrapped around
every word. “Provided you can escape my grasp and
reach the gathering place beyond.”
Tassadar replied, the first time he had broadcast his
thoughts since the challenge began. “Come then, old
one, and let us see if my light or your darkness will
prevail.”
For an instant Zeratul’s eyes flared as if in anger, and
his response was sharp. “It is not about light or dark! I
have told you this! It is about using what we are
given!” Then, as if his anger spurred him on, the Prae-
tor attacked. The shadows rose about him again,
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 305
sheathing his limbs in their dark bands, and he drove
them forward like twin blades, skewering the glowing
form before him. Raynor almost called out in sympa-
thy, until he saw that Tassadar was unfazed. His glitter-
ing aura had been pierced—in fact, the dark blades had
driven deep into his shoulders as well—but he showed
no signs of pain or even surprise.
Instead it was Zeratul who stepped back, confused.
“Your mind is shuttered,” the old protoss noted.
“Good. But why conceal your thoughts when your
body glows so brightly?”
Raynor got it just as Zeratul did, and watched the
Praetor leap backward, pulling his blades free as he
moved and twisted around. Both of them knew it was
too late, however. One corner of the Dark Templar’s
shadow, an edge that had not wrapped back around
him as he’d moved to battle, had swept past while Zer-
atul struck at Tassadar. Now that same wisp of shadow
flowed up the rocks at the valley’s edge, to settle
squarely in the lesser shadows against the valley wall
behind where Raynor sat. And then the darkness
faded away, torn apart from within by a pair of small,
diamond-bright blue lights, and Tassadar stood there,
looking down upon Zeratul and the rest of the valley
behind him.
“A ploy, then,” the Praetor commented as he aban-
doned his own shadowy weaponry and climbed back
up to the nook himself. “The light a mere decoy as you
slipped past in shadow.”
Tassadar nodded but did not otherwise reply.
306A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
For an instant Zeratul glared at him. Then he
laughed, the mingled humor and pride washing over
them all in a wave and briefly uniting human, Zealot,
and Dark Templar alike.
“Wonderful!” Zeratul announced. “Inspired! Truly
you took advantage of your abilities, old and new
both, and our own prejudices as well. Without your
Templar training that tactic might have failed, but
without your newly awakened talents you could not
have succeeded.”
“Truly,” Tassadar agreed, “I can feel the energies
within me in ways as never before. The training I had
as a Templar was a mere fragment of the whole, a care-
fully controlled sample of what lay beneath.” He
bowed his head. “Thank you.”
“It is I who should thank you,” Zeratul replied. He
stepped forward and again placed both hands on Tas-
sadar’s shoulders. “And I greet you, brother, to the
ranks of those who walk the true path of our race,
through shadow and through light.” He straightened to
his full height and his next thought rippled across the
valley, filled with power and grandeur that made the
very rocks shake. “May you fulfill your destiny, child of
Adun,” Zeratul proclaimed, “and bring honor to us all.”
From the rest of the Dark Templar, now assembled
below them, came a mental shout, a wash of greetings
and admiration. And from Tassadar’s own warriors
came an answering flow of cautious congratulation—
respect for their leader and awe at his new skills, but
concern over what he would now become.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 307
“Nice going,” Raynor said, offering his hand to Tas-
sadar. The Executor stared down at it for an instant,
then reached out and grasped it firmly in his own.
“Thank you, James Raynor.” Tassadar’s gaze swept
across Zeratul and then the Dark Templar and his own
Zealots, and even the rest of Raynor’s people at the far
end of the valley. “And thank you to all,” he added,
“for without the presence of so many, so different and
yet so alike, I could not—”
But whatever he meant to say next was cut short, as
a loud shriek split the air. An oily form followed it,
wings beating hard as its awkward body dove down
and acid flew from its mouth and splattered one of the
protoss, who fell to the ground writhing in pain. The
zerg had found them unawares. They were under
attack!
CHAPTER 19
“DAMN IT!” RAYNOR LEAPED DOWN FROM THE
nook and raced across the valley toward his men on the
far side. He continued cursing as he moved. Why hadn’t
they thought to keep lookouts? Because they’d all been
so entranced by the whole Shadow Walk thing. And
he’d let his men get sloppy lately, allowing them to
maintain only casual patrols, if that, because the protoss
were always on alert and could detect incoming zerg
better than they could, even in their suits.
And the suits! Their powered combat armor, so
damn useful in a fight, sitting there useless against the
valley wall. None of his men were suited up, though
several were hurriedly climbing into the armor now.
He just hoped they’d have time to get the suits up and
running.
“Cavez! Abernathy!” he shouted as he hit the mid-
point of the valley, hoping his voice would carry over
the noise of the dive-bombing zerg. “Get rifles up and
ready! Give us some cover fire!” Whether his two lieu-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S309
tenants heard him or simply anticipated his command,
they turned and grabbed rifles, releasing a barrage of
ammo toward the incoming creatures. Other troopers
hoisted weapons as well, and soon the air above the
valley was filled with glittering shards as the rifles fired
wave after wave at the invaders.
By then Raynor was in the camp. He made a beeline
for his suit, still sitting off to one side, and climbed into
it as quickly as possible. He’d had years of experience
with powered armor and had it sealed and in motion
by the time he’d caught his breath from his run. Then
he reached over his shoulder, unslung the canister rifle
on his back, and began taking down zerg.
With the sky finally covered, the airborne zerg lost
their advantage. They’d killed several protoss in the first
wave but after that the Zealots and Dark Templar had
moved to the safety of the walls and the fliers couldn’t
hit them as easily. Of course, the winged zerg weren’t
the only ones attacking—this time it was a larger group
than usual, at least a hundred of them, and half were
ground-based. They’d apparently found the valley and
waited by the entrance until the fliers could distract
everyone, then charged in. Raynor’s camp was closest
to the valley’s front and so he and his men quickly
found themselves swamped by hydralisks, zerglings,
and ultralisks. The protoss moved to their aid and bol-
stered their ranks.
Raynor heard a strange noise over the sound of
gunfire, a keening moan, and risked a glance toward
the valley’s other end. He saw Tassadar’s Zealots using
310A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
their psi-blades to take down any zerg that got close,
and Zeratul’s Dark Templar doing the same thing on
the other side. He saw Zeratul himself, still perched in
that small nook, casting strange bands of darkness like
nets upon any flier that chanced nearby—even as he
watched a devourer plummeted to the ground, its
body wrapped in the inky strands.
And then he saw Tassadar.
The Executor had leaped down from the nook and
was fighting his way across the valley floor, taking his
Shadow Walk in reverse. Darkness rose behind him like
a cloak, a curve of cold shadow that the zerg apparently
could not pierce, but his glittering psi-blades flared from
his wrists, now longer than a man’s forearm and capa-
ble of reaching and searing through a soaring mutalisk
with a mere flick upward. Raynor saw the High Templar
turn and jerk his right arm in the direction of an
approaching devourer. The psi-blade on that wrist
lengthened somehow, going from a triangular blade to a
long tendril like a glowing whip, and crackled as it
lashed out. The gleaming tip struck the descending zerg
just above its gaping snout and lanced clean through,
causing a small spark of light to appear within the crea-
ture’s mouth. Then the spark exploded and the creature
fell, headless, to the ground as Tassadar retracted his
weapon and used it, bladelike once again, on a
hydralisk that had foolishly charged within range.
It was the most amazing display Raynor had ever
seen. He had watched Tassadar fight before, and the
protoss had always impressed him with his grace,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S311
speed, and accuracy. But now there was something
new. Not only did the Executor possess these strange
new gifts Zeratul had taught him, but he carried him-
self with more poise, more calm, more confidence. It
wasn’t posturing, either—if anything, the tall protoss
warrior made less show of his authority now, but that
somehow served only to deepen the aura of strength
and power he projected. The zerg began backing away
from him, sensing the same might Raynor saw, and
Tassadar used that advantage, forcing them into his
Zealots and the Dark Templar alike, clearing a path.
Within minutes the zerg had gone from conquering
invaders to desperate defenders, the surviving brood
members clustering together and striving to hold off
their foes while they searched for a way out.
Then a small blip appeared on Raynor’s screen and
he turned, tracking the new arrival the suit had
detected.
There, up along one of the ridges above the valley,
hovered a large, familiar shape. One of the zerg over-
lords. But where had it come from? It hadn’t been
there before or his systems would have marked it. And
the overlords were slow, clumsy, and vulnerable. They
were also vital to maintaining the brood, providing a
communications link between its controlling cere-
brate—and Kerrigan above it—and the rest of the zerg.
Kerrigan wouldn’t send one into the mountains with-
out adequate protection.
“Do not despair, my brethren,” the overlord called
down to the zerg still trapped in the valley. “More of
312A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
our brood are close by, and will reach us soon. Pull
back now, that your strength can add to the ferocity of
our renewed attack.”
Upon hearing this, the zerg below scattered. They
gave up all attempts to hold off the protoss and human
forces and scrambled for the walls, climbing and flying
and crawling up to the ridge and then over it. In less
than a minute they had vanished, leaving only their
dead behind.
“Yeah!” Non shouted, raising his rifle high in both
hands. “Run, you stinkers!”
“Shut it!” Raynor snapped at him. “Pack up! We’re
out of here!”
“What?” McMurty stopped slapping hands with one
of the other troopers and turned, confusion written
across his broad face. “But sir, we won! They’ve got
their tails between their legs!”
“They’re regrouping,” Raynor corrected him.
“They’ll be back in minutes, and a lot more of them this
time. We need to move on.” He gestured. “McMurty,
you and Ling take your rifles. I want you up on that
ridge. The minute you see zerg, you start shooting. Got
it?” He glanced at the rest of his crew. “Non, you and
Deslan are on the valley entrance. Same deal—stand
guard, keep frosty, and shoot anything that moves. The
rest of you, get this gear packed!”
For a second his men stared at him. The victory had
been so quick, so decisive, they clearly couldn’t believe
they were still in danger. But then their training kicked
in and Cavez and Abernathy began bellowing orders,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 313
organizing the rest of the troopers while the four
Raynor had singled out clambered up the slopes and
stood guard high above.
It took them only ten minutes to pack and get
moving, but Non began firing just as they had stowed
the last tent. Deslan joined him an instant later,
shouting, “Zerg! Heading toward us!” over his shoul-
der. It was the only good way out of the valley, but
not the only way possible—Tassadar was too sharp a
tactician to pick a site with no escape routes.
Everyone else moved to the far end of the valley, fil-
ing up into the small nook where Raynor had so
recently sat with his two protoss allies. Tassadar had
already leaped onto a long, narrow ledge above the
nook, which led them up and out of the valley and
back onto a nearby peak. The troopers in armor
helped those without to reach the ledge, then joined
them. The Zealots and Dark Templar followed, Zeratul
with them, and finally Raynor pulled his four guards
back, covering them as they raced across the valley
and then up and out. The zerg were still struggling to
enter the valley, climbing over those already slain,
when Raynor dropped down on the other side of the
ridge and joined the rest of his forces in the quick
march away from the recent battleground.
Several hours later, certain they had shaken their
pursuit, Tassadar selected another valley and led them
all beneath the shelter of its overhanging walls. They
set up camp again with the ease of long practice, but
314 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
this time Raynor set guards in armor to watch at
every corner. He wasn’t going to be surprised again.
“Nice call, chief,” McMurty admitted as they
crouched and ate some dried meat, washed down with
superheated sludge-coffee. “How’d you know they
were coming back?”
“I heard ’em talking,” Raynor admitted, taking a
cautious sip of his brew. “The overlord called them
back to regroup.”
He was still choking down the sludge when he real-
ized the valley had gone very quiet. Looking up from
his cup, he saw his men staring at him—and the pro-
toss, sitting beyond them, as well. Even Tassadar and
Zeratul were studying him closely, heads tilted to one
side, eyes narrowed as if unsure they had heard cor-
rectly.
“They talk?” Cavez asked softly. “But, Commander,
they don’t talk. None of them do.”
“What?” Raynor set his cup down and glared at his
young lieutenant. “‘Course they do. What, you think
I’d make this up? I heard ’em!”
“The Swarm do not speak,” Tassadar said, moving
forward and crouching beside Raynor. Zeratul moved
to his other side, he and Tassadar like a pair of statues
at his arms. “Not as you do.”
“They speak no more than we do,” Zeratul con-
firmed, his green eyes watching Raynor intently.
“What you call speech is not within their capabilities.”
Raynor shook his head. “That’s a crock!” he said,
slamming one fist against his leg. “I’ve heard ‘em!” He
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 315
stared at Zeratul, daring him to deny his next statement.
“So’ve you! What about when you talked to Zasz?”
The Praetor’s eyes widened. “You heard this? How?”
“I was there,” Raynor reminded him. “I watched the
whole thing.”
Zeratul tilted his head again, eyes narrowed now
in contemplation rather than mere confusion. “The
exchange was private,” he explained after a moment,
“a brief touch of minds that I might gauge the crea-
ture’s attitude and study the effect my attack had upon
it and its brood.” His eyes turned back toward Raynor.
“There were no words exchanged, not of the kind you
would use.”
“You’re saying they talk in your head?” Raynor
heard a hint of fear, actually more like terror, in
Cavez’s voice, and knew the younger man was imag-
ining what that must be like.
“I guess,” Raynor admitted slowly, thinking back. “I
haven’t actually seen their mouths move, now I think
about it. But I’ve definitely heard them.” He looked
over at Zeratul again. “How else would I have known
Zasz’s name? Or that they were regrouping today?”
“You speak truth,” Tassadar assured him from his
other side. “This information was too accurate to be
imagined. Somehow you have tapped into the Swarm’s
mind. You hear their thoughts to one another, just as
we protoss hear each other in our own mental speech.”
“Great.” Raynor pressed his hands to his temples,
hoping to squeeze the thoughts away. “I’m going
bonkers. That’s it, right? They say crazy people ‘hear
316 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
voices.’ Now I’m hearing ‘em too. Just my luck, the
voices I get are zerg.”
“Your mind is intact,” Zeratul replied, “and your
rationality undiminished.” For an instant Raynor felt a
soft, feathery touch inside his head, dry but gentle.
Then it was gone and the Praetor nodded slowly. “Ker-
rigan,” he announced.
“Kerrigan? What’s she got to do with this?” But
Raynor already had an idea what the Dark Templar
meant.
“Your minds are linked,” Zeratul confirmed. “She
reaches out to you through this link, both to deliver
you dreams and to monitor your welfare. But she is
not careful.” He chuckled, that raspy but soothing
mental effect that always reminded Raynor of dry
leaves in autumn. “She has not our experience at focus
or control. Though her power is formidable, she can-
not yet control it precisely.”
“What’s he talking about, sir?” Abernathy asked,
staring at Raynor, her face gone pale. Raynor sighed,
realizing he’d have to explain a few things he’d been
hoping to avoid.
“Kerrigan’s tapped into my head,” he told his crew,
ignoring the gasps that arose from his statement. “She’s
been messing with me for weeks, ever since we got
here, in fact.” Even before, actually, but he didn’t want
to go into that. “But it’s a two-way street.” He grinned at
Abernathy, and was reassured to see her smile back.
“She’s sloppy, and Zeratul can detect the tag she put on
me. He’s been using it to keep tabs on her location, at
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 317
least her general whereabouts. That’s part of how we’ve
been hitting them so well—we can tell if she’s nearby
and stay clear while taking out her troops.” He shook
his head, still absorbing the new information he’d just
been given. “I guess there’s another side effect. I can
hear them talk, somehow. The zerg.”
“You hear what she would hear, were she present,”
Tassadar explained. “She is linked to all her brood and
thus all their communication reaches her. Most she
ignores as beneath her notice, but she still receives it.
When you are near zerg and those zerg communicate,
her mind translates the thoughts into words you
would understand.”
“So she’s keeping up a running translation because
she hears it too, and automatically translates it into
Terran if they’re within my range?”
Tassadar and Zeratul both nodded in reply.
“Hunh.” Raynor leaned back and thought about this,
absently lifting his cup again and draining the thick liq-
uid within. “So we can tell where she is,” he said finally,
putting the empty cup back down beside him, “and we
can listen in on her troop reports.” He looked at the two
protoss leaders for confirmation, and when they nod-
ded again he felt a small, hard smile crease his face.
“That’s one helluva advantage,” he pointed out. He
glanced around, at the assembled protoss and humans,
not missing the fact that they were all there together, all
listening side by side, not as three separate teams but as
one larger unit. “I think,” he said finally, “it’s time we
stopped running. Let’s take the fight to her.”
CHAPTER 20
IT TOOK THEM TWO FULL DAYS TO HAMMER OUT
a plan. Surprisingly, Zeratul was the sticking point.
Tassadar had agreed with Raynor that the time for hit-
and-run tactics was past. But the Praetor was not as
easily convinced.
“We must not leap carelessly into the dark places,”
he warned Raynor and Tassadar as the three of them
sat together discussing their options. “Fight the zerg,
yes, but maintain our focus and do not expose our-
selves to unnecessary danger.” He stared at Tassadar as
if he expected the Executor to become reckless now
that he was a Dark Templar.
“No one’s saying we’re gonna throw our lives
away,” Raynor reassured the old protoss. “But we can’t
hide forever, and I’m sure sick of it. We’ve got the tools
to take her down—I say we use them and deal with
her brood once and for all.”
Tassadar, seated across from him, nodded. “I too feel
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S319
this conflict has continued past its proper time. We
must resolve the issue, and soon.”
Zeratul gave in then, though he continued to pro-
vide the voice of caution during their planning. But
finally they had a course of action even he liked. And
now they were putting it into effect.
The first step was Raynor’s. He lay down, closing his
eyes and taking slow, deep breaths until he felt himself
slipping into slumber. And, as he’d expected, he found
himself dreaming. He was standing on a small grassy
hill, looking out over a green valley nestled between
low, grain-covered mountains. The sun hung low in
the sky, casting streamers of pink and orange along the
horizon.
“Breathtaking,” a husky voice said in his ear. At the
same time he felt strong arms wrap around him from
behind, and a warm, curvaceous body press up against
him.
“Definitely,” he replied, trying to keep his voice and
his breathing steady even though his skin tingled
where she touched him. He twisted to look behind
him, and saw Kerrigan, the wholesome, happy Kerri-
gan of his fondest dreams.
“I wish we could stay like this forever,” she said
wistfully, tightening her hold on him and laying her
head on his shoulder so her long red hair cascaded
down over his shoulders and chest.
“Me too,” Raynor agreed, reaching up to clasp both
her hands in his own. “Sure beats the alternative.” For
320 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
an instant his mind flashed to the box canyon they
were currently using as a hideout.
Behind him he felt Kerrigan stiffen, then relax,
molding her body more tightly against him. “Oh,
Jimmy,” she said with a sigh, freeing one hand to
stroke his cheek. He turned in her embrace until he
was facing her, and was surprised to see tears glisten-
ing in her eyes. “I’ll see you soon,” she whispered, her
voice thick, and she laid a soft kiss on his lips. Then she
smiled, a smile that was both sad and triumphant—
and vanished.
Raynor bolted upright, the dream driven from his
head. He was lying out in the open rather than in his
tent, and Zeratul was leaning over him, one gnarled
hand resting on his shoulder. The old protoss was
watching him closely, those pale green eyes narrowed.
“It went well?” the Praetor inquired.
“Perfect,” Raynor replied, standing up and running
a hand over his hair, shaking the last bits of sleep from
his head. “She took the bait, hook, line, and sinker.”
He grinned at Zeratul. “Nice job. I said exactly what
we’d discussed, and the image showed up right on
schedule.”
The Dark Templar’s chuckle rippled over him again,
and Zeratul’s eyes widened slightly, a sign that he was
definitely amused. “Potent indeed is your Queen of
Blades,” he explained, “yet for centuries I have experi-
enced the communion of minds; I know many tricks
she has not yet begun to suspect. And for one of such
might she lacks all subtlety.”
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S321
“Yeah,” Raynor agreed, rubbing the back of his neck.
“She always did.”
A motion to his side caught Raynor’s attention as
Tassadar stirred and stepped closer to them. They had
agreed that his linking to both protoss might have
aroused even Kerrigan’s suspicions.
“All set,” Raynor assured the Executor, who nodded.
“You are certain?” Tassadar asked softly, and Raynor
knew what he meant. Both protoss understood the
deep feelings Raynor still had for Kerrigan.
“This attack does not require your participation,”
Zeratul agreed. “Your part is done. You may step aside
and leave us to finish the matter, thus freeing you from
confrontation.”
“Thanks,” Raynor said, and meant it. They all knew
that, while the Zealots and Dark Templar might be able
to do this alone, they’d stand a better chance with
Raynor and his men alongside them. Though Cavez
and Abernathy would do whatever he said, even lead
the fight without him, they all knew he couldn’t just
sit by and watch his troopers go into battle without
him. Nor could he let his friends take the risk alone.
“I can handle it,” he said slowly, searching his head
and heart as he spoke. “It’d hurt, taking her down, but
I can do it. I have to do it. We all do.” He thought again
about Kerrigan as she’d become, as he’d seen her—
taunting enemies, licking their blood from her claws,
laughing at their misfortune—and shuddered. Yes, the
woman he loved was still in there, but she was more
than that now. She wasn’t just Sarah Kerrigan any-
322 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
more—she was the Queen of Blades. The enemy. And
for all their sakes, she had to die.
“Very well.” Tassadar rested one hand on Raynor’s
shoulder, and he could feel the sympathy and support
pouring from the tall protoss. “We fight together, then,
our fates still bound as one.” The Executor nodded to
Zeratul as well, and then he was moving, his long
strides carrying him swiftly from the canyon and over
the ridge beyond, toward the caves that lay just past
them. They had deliberately chosen a location close to
the hive entrance.
“Explain to me again why he’s going and not you,”
Raynor asked as he and Zeratul watched their friend
disappear. “You’ve done this before.”
“Indeed,” Zeratul replied, and his thoughts bore
that heavy echo they sometimes carried when he
spoke of important matters. “He requires the experi-
ence, however.” That was what he’d told Tassadar as
well, when suggesting the Templar handle this portion
of the plan. “I have demonstrated the technique,” the
Praetor had explained, “yet to fully grasp it you must
perform it yourself.”
“All right,” Raynor said finally, turning away from
the place where he’d last seen Tassadar. “Let’s get to
work.”
It felt like hours, but Raynor knew from his suit
that it was only ten minutes before the first zerg
appeared. He heard them before he saw them.
“Are you sure this is wise, mistress?” came a flutter-
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 323
ing voice Raynor knew must be one of the overlords.
“Taking our full strength when we do not know for
certain—”
“Silence!” Kerrigan hissed, and the overlord wisely
obeyed. “I tire of these games! We will find the little
templars and their playmates and crush them all!”
Turning, Raynor signaled to his men, who were sta-
tioned beside him along the ridgetop. He didn’t dare
risk verbal communications with the zerg so close, but
that was fine. They’d worked it all out beforehand.
“Go, and scout the area,” Kerrigan ordered a
moment later, and Raynor was sure he could feel the
rush of air as the bulky overlord took flight.
It seemed like a mere heartbeart before his suit reg-
istered the approaching zerg, and he forced himself to
stay still, gesturing for the others to do the same. They
crouched there, hidden by the rocky overhang, their
suits coated in ash to make them blend more closely,
and waited.
At last he saw the shadow fall across the rocks to his
left, and knew the overlord had arrived. An instant
later he heard its update.
“I have found them, mistress!” Its mental call carried
a note of triumph and pride. “They are in the canyon,
just as you said!”
This was what Raynor had been waiting to hear.
“Now!” he shouted, and Non and Ling opened fire.
Their rifles had already been trained on the overlord
and cut the bulky zerg to shreds, its lifeless body falling
across the ridgetop not far from where Raynor waited.
324A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
As soon as the corpse dropped, he and his men were
moving. So were the protoss below. They scrambled up
and out of the canyon, using a narrow path Tassadar
had found for that purpose. Raynor scuttled along the
ridgetop, keeping low, until he and his troopers were
safely beneath an overhang. It had taken a while to
find a place that had everything they needed.
“They have destroyed your overlord, mistress!” he
heard another zerg declare from somewhere nearby,
but the creature was beyond his suit’s range. Only Ker-
rigan’s mental powers were letting him hear their com-
munications at all. Which is what he had counted on.
“It matters not,” she replied. “We know where they
are. Swarm the canyon, my brood! Fill its walls with
your flesh, smother the protoss and the humans with
your bodies! Let none survive!”
“Here they come,” Raynor muttered to himself. His
hands tightened on the canister rifle and he reflexively
checked the readouts on his suit. Green across the
board. He was ready, at least physically. Mentally, he
wasn’t so sure. Could he kill Kerrigan if it came down
to that? He was about to find out.
The zerg came boiling over the ridge and through
the mouth of the valley, just as Kerrigan had com-
manded. There were more of them than Raynor had
seen at any time since that first excursion into the cav-
erns, several hundred at least, and he was a little
shaken despite their careful planning. All those raids,
all those zerg they had killed, and still her brood out-
numbered them at least three to one! If things didn’t
Q U E E N O F B L A D E S 325
go exactly as planned this could easily become a
slaughter—with him and his men and their allies as
the victims.
He had to trust that Tassadar would handle his end.
Fortunately, he couldn’t see the Templar as someone
who considered failure an option.
Staying still was difficult. Every muscle in Raynor’s
body, every impulse, screamed at him to stand up and
start firing. There were so many zerg it would be
impossible to miss. But that wasn’t the plan. He had to
stick to the plan, he reminded himself again and again.
It was their only chance to survive this thing, much
less win it.
As the brood topped the rise and started down into
the canyon, he heard their mental cries change from
glee to confusion, from hatred to rage. Several faltered,
only to be dragged along by their kin in the mad rush
to the bottom. Soon all the zerg were there, milling
about, searching desperately for something to attack.
The only problem was, there wasn’t anything there.
“What?” Kerrigan was the last one down, her wing-
spikes flared as if to slow her descent, long claws digging
into the rock as she skidded toward the bottom. It was
the first time Raynor had seen her in the flesh since
teaming with the protoss, and his breath caught in his
throat. Despite the dreams, despite what she had
become, he had forgotten how beautiful she was, and
her presence sent him reeling. If she had confronted
him now he wouldn’t have been able to pull the trigger,
or do much of anything. Fortunately she was focused
326A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
on something else entirely. Specifically, on the canyon
floor—and its complete and utter lack of targets.
“Where are they?” she screamed, her wings flexing
in rage, hands closing spasmodically as if they would
tear the very air apart in search of her prey. “They were
here!”
Her brood looked around as well, but no one
answered. They didn’t know either. Instead they all
stood there, uncertain what to do next.
And that was the perfect moment. “Now!” Raynor
whispered, though he knew no one would hear him.
That was fine. He wasn’t the one sending the signal
this time.
From his vantage point, he could just see the shad-
owy ledge near the far end of the canyon. And, magni-
fied by his suit’s targeting system, he thought he saw a
faint green gleam at one end. But even without a
visual he knew that Zeratul stood there, and that right
now the Praetor was reaching out telepathically,
through the link he had forged with Tassadar.
And the Executor, hearing the mental signal he had
waited for, turned toward the creature he had snuck
up on so stealthily. And struck.
“Arghhh!” Kerrigan reeled backward, hands clasped
to her head, wings scraping the wall as she staggered
into it. And all around her, her brood erupted into
chaos and violence and frenzy.
“No! Stop!” she shouted, one hand still pressed to
her temple, but it was to no avail. The brood had lost
control.
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 327
And that was the signal for Raynor and his men to
stand up and start shooting. The zerg weren’t able to
control themselves, and they died beneath the barrage,
unable to focus long enough to realize their enemies
stood upon the ridge rather than down with them in
the canyon.
“Like fish in a barrel!” Non shouted as he cut a
hydralisk in half with one burst. “Damn!”
It had gone perfectly.
They had known they couldn’t take Kerrigan and
her brood in a fair fight. So they’d made sure it wasn’t
fair. First Raynor had let her see their location. Then
they’d let the overlord confirm it. But they’d left only
a handful of protoss in the canyon, just enough to con-
vince the zerg it had seen the entire force. Once it was
dead they’d pulled everyone out along the walls. The
canyon had high, steep walls and a nice wide space at
the bottom—a perfect killing ground. The zerg thought
they’d sweep in and take their opponents by surprise,
overwhelming them before they could respond or flee.
But they hadn’t realized Raynor, Tassadar, and Zeratul
had orchestrated all this.
Nor had they known that, while Kerrigan was lead-
ing her entire brood out of the caves, Tassadar was slip-
ping past them, cloaked in shadows. Or that he would
wait patiently beside the nameless cerebrate, who
alone among the brood was too large to leave the cav-
erns. And, when Zeratul gave the word, Tassadar
struck just as Zeratul had with Zasz, killing the cere-
brate and severing its link to its brood.
328 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Driving them insane.
Kerrigan was strong enough to control her own
brood, of course. But she wasn’t trained for it, or bred
for it. She had been created for a different purpose. So
when her cerebrate died she was unable to take com-
mand and reestablish the links. She was powerless to
stop her brood from collapsing into a mad frenzy,
slaughtering each other by sheer reflex.
And the rifle fire from on high cut them down that
much more quickly.
“Come out, little templar!” Kerrigan howled, scraping
the claws of one hand along the valley wall for empha-
sis. Several of Raynor’s troops targeted her with their
rifles but the high-velocity metal spikes stopped just shy
of hitting her, rebounding from a glittering, almost oily
disturbance in the air around her. She ignored them,
weapons and shooters alike. “I know you are here!” she
shouted instead, eyes narrowed as she searched every
nook and cranny. “I can feel you! Face me!”
A moment passed, and no reply. Kerrigan reached
out then and snagged a devourer from the air, her
wings pinning it against the wall beside her. “Obey!”
she commanded, and Raynor was sure he saw a burst
of yellowish-green light leap from her eyes and into
those of the captive zerg. Its struggling ceased immedi-
ately, and when she released it it hovered above her,
awaiting orders. She did this with several more, taking
them one at a time, until she had five devourers once
more linked to her. Then she grinned and looked
straight at Raynor.
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 329
“Kill the humans,” she instructed, and the airborne
zerg hastened to obey.
Next she reclaimed a trio of hydralisks and set them
to scouring the edges of the canyon, avoiding their
still-crazed brethren and searching for the elusive pro-
toss. Raynor caught only glimpses of her actions then,
because he and his men were busy fending off the
devourers, which swooped in quickly and moved too
fast for them to shoot down at such close range. By the
time they’d taken down the last one Raynor had lost
several of his troopers and needed a minute to locate
Kerrigan again.
A large portion of her brood was dead now, the bod-
ies strewn about the canyon floor. And the protoss had
apparently decided they were tired of waiting to be
found. Or perhaps they felt she needed an additional
distraction to keep her from restoring order to the rest
of her zerg minions. Whatever the reason, Raynor
stepped away from the last devourer and glanced
down just in time to see a pair of Zealots leap at Kerri-
gan, psi-blades glittering in an arc.
Kerrigan’s wings blocked the first warrior’s attack,
shearing partway through his arm in the process, and
her claws tore the second one’s arm from his shoulder,
tossing it aside in a shower of blood. Then her wing-
tips pierced the first one’s chest, neck, and head, even
as a vicious backhand ripped the second’s head off. She
let the bodies fall behind her, but she had noticed their
origin point and turned her attention toward the
ledge.
330A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
Next to attack her were two Dark Templar, materi-
alizing from the shadows on either side and stabbing
quickly toward her with their psi-blades. But she had
apparently sensed their presence, and her wings drove
them back before they could reach her. One fell against
an ultralisk, which bellowed and used its massive tusks
to carve him open. The other righted himself and
attacked again but Kerrigan’s hands drove forward,
into and then through his chest, and the poor protoss
was dead before his body hit the ground.
Kerrigan straightened and made a show of wiping
the blood from her hands. “Once again,” she called, “I
grow tired of slaughtering your servants. Have the
mighty Templars lost their infallible courage?”
“Well spoken, concubine of the zerg,” came the
reply. It was Zeratul, still ensconced in shadows, and
his statement reverberated through the valley, the
power in it causing several zerglings to collapse in
helpless spasms. “But though we strike at you from the
shadows,” the Praetor continued, “do not think that
we lack the courage to stand in the light. You would do
well to abandon this attack.”
“You seem overconfident of your abilities, dark one,”
Kerrigan answered, snarling, her eyes attempting to
burn holes in the shadows of the ledge. “I am no help-
less cerebrate to be assailed under cover of darkness. I
am the Queen of Blades, and my stare alone would
reduce you to ashes.” She stalked toward the end of
the valley, those zerg still alive smart enough to move
out of her way. “You and your ilk cease to amuse me,”
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S331
she called out as she neared the ledge. With a single
leap, wing-spikes beating behind her, she reached the
ledge. “Prepare yourself for oblivion’s embrace,” she
announced, and a sickly yellow light rose from her
flesh, driving back the shadows. Zeratul and his Dark
Templar stood revealed before her, and Kerrigan
smiled, a nasty, hungry smile, when she saw him.
“Now, protoss,” she all but purred, flexing her wing-
spikes and her clawed fingers, “you shall know my
wrath. Now you will know the fury of the Queen of
Blades!”
She lashed out, her wings piercing the nearest Dark
Templar and then sweeping outward to fling his body
from the ledge and into the zerg still rioting below. Zer-
atul gestured and the rest of his warriors leaped down,
skirting the crazed zerg and climbing up toward the
ridge where Raynor and his men stood and picked off
those zerg who showed signs of leaving the general
chaos. The Praetor himself waited calmly for Kerrigan
to reach him, his eyes blazing and an answering gleam
emerging above his wrists as his psi-blades ignited.
“Come then, Queen,” he challenged her, “and let us
see if either of us fares better than the last time we
crossed paths.” The darkness rose up around him again,
though it did not conceal him. Instead it hung about
him like a mantle, in much the way Tassadar had used
it recently, for protection.
Tassadar! Whether it was Zeratul’s thinking of the
Executor that triggered it or a mere coincidence,
Raynor suddenly caught a glimpse of motion at the top
332 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
of the canyon’s back wall, above that same ledge. It
was a mere flicker, nothing more, a brief hint of color
against the ash-coated rocks, but somehow he knew
what it meant. Tassadar had returned! And with that
knowledge Raynor realized something else—Zeratul
was stalling, biding his time until he and the Executor
could attack Kerrigan together.
“Aw, hell,” Raynor muttered. “Cavez, Abernathy,
keep everybody sharp. I’ve got something I need to
do.” And he started making his way around the side of
the canyon, eyes still focused upon that ledge, rifle idly
picking off random zerg as he went.
During the planning stage he and the two protoss
commanders had agreed that none of them could take
Kerrigan alone. Two together stood a slim chance, but
all three would fare better. And that’s what they’d
decided to do—attack her together, all at once. And
now here were Zeratul and Tassadar getting into posi-
tion without him. Damn it! On the one hand he was
furious that they would try to cut him out of the
attack. On the other, he was relieved at the thought
that he wouldn’t have to face Kerrigan in battle, that
he wouldn’t have to make that hard decision. And on
yet another hand he realized that was why his friends
were about to act without him, to spare him that prob-
lem. Which was entirely too many hands.
“I said I’d do it,” he whispered to himself as he half-
ran along the ridgeline, “and I will.”
Zeratul was still taunting Kerrigan, still staying out-
side her reach. Tassadar was almost to the ledge now,
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S 333
moving carefully and quietly, the noise from below
providing plenty of cover. And Raynor was a hard
jump away. Another second and they’d have her.
They didn’t get it.
“Enough!” Kerrigan shouted, her temper finally flar-
ing out of control. She lunged at Zeratul, both wings
lancing forward over her shoulders, determined to
spear him and tear him open. His darkness blunted the
blow but could not stop it entirely, the glow around her
body piercing it as her claws hoped to pierce his flesh,
and he was shoved back against the wall. As he parried
a blow from her right hand, the left clipped him on the
shoulder, leaving deep scratches there, and his brow
furrowed in pain. But he did not fall or falter.
“No pretty words now, little protoss?” Kerrigan asked
mockingly, waving her claws before him. “No challenges
or cryptic replies? Nothing left to say?” Zeratul did not
reply. “Then die!”
She speared again, claws and wings both, all aimed
for his chest. Raynor, seeing her dart forward, gave up
on subtlety and hurled himself at her, pivoting midair
to plant his heavy boots on her back and smash her to
the ground.
He wasn’t fast enough.
Fortunately, Tassadar was.
The High Templar had been right above the ledge
and swung himself down as she moved, flipping for-
ward with both hands gripping the rock just above
Zeratul’s head. As Tassadar uncurled, his legs swept
down, knocking Kerrigan to one side and causing her
334 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
hands and wing-spikes to grate harmlessly against the
valley wall, inches from where Zeratul stood. Then
Tassadar released his grip and dropped the rest of the
way, to stand beside his friend and mentor.
“Now, o Queen of Blades,” he announced, “you shall
face us both.”
Kerrigan straightened and began to reply. But
before she could speak Raynor’s feet struck her full
force, sending her sprawling. He stumbled himself, but
caught himself with one arm and stayed upright.
Now they were all there, he and Tassadar and Zer-
atul, in a rough triangle. And Kerrigan stretched out
between them.
It was Tassadar who reacted first. His psi-blades
flared into existence even as he dropped to one knee,
fists plunging toward her head and neck. Her wing-
spikes arced up, however, catching his wrists and turn-
ing his attack.
Zeratul was right beside Tassadar, his own psi-blades
aimed not at Kerrigan’s head but at her wings. These
blows connected, and Kerrigan screamed as the glitter-
ing green beams cut into her appendages, ichor seep-
ing from the wounds.
Raynor leaned in as well, canister rifle at the ready.
He rested the barrel against her head and—overruling
the cries from deep within his heart—pulled the trigger.
And just as he did, Kerrigan raised herself to a
crouch and pivoted, one leg sliding out to trip him.
Despite the suit’s servos he toppled, the gun firing
spikes in an arc along the valley wall. She was on him
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S335
before his back hit the ledge, clinging to his chest like
an oversized spider, her face inches from his helmet.
“We’ll play later, Jimmy,” Kerrigan assured him
softly, her eyes glittering. She planted a kiss on his
faceplate even as her fingers twitched along his side,
then she was spinning away from him. He tried to rise
but discovered he couldn’t move. His suit was frozen.
“Damn it!” Raynor let loose a whole volley of
curses, thrashing as best he could within the suit’s con-
fines. She’d triggered the emergency lockdown! It was
meant to help immobilize wounded troopers, or to
shut down a shorted-out suit before it could misfire.
Kerrigan knew these suits at least as well as he did,
maybe better, and she’d activated his lockdown, trap-
ping him inside until someone could set him free. All
he could do was lie there, stretched out on the ledge,
and watch the battle that would occur just above him.
Now that he had no chance to participate in it, he
wanted to do that more than anything.
He watched as Zeratul and Tassadar faced off against
Kerrigan, their psi-blades versus her wings and claws.
The two protoss moved together perfectly, each
motion complementing the other, their attacks in per-
fect harmony, a mix of shadows and light, strength and
wisdom, knowledge and power. It was a devastating
charge, and Raynor knew that few creatures could sur-
vive it.
Kerrigan was one of them.
Her wings acted of their own accord, it seemed, par-
rying and attacking without her conscious control, so
336A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
that she always fought with an ally at her back. Their
spikes blocked strikes and stabbed back in return, scor-
ing both protoss several times, and her claws were just
as fast, leaving furrows in their skin. The yellow glow
around her intensified, weakening their shadows and
blocking their light, and she moved with the grace and
danger of a panther, lithe and lovely and deadly.
Tassadar drove his blade toward Kerrigan’s heart
and she caught his wrist between her wings, stopping
the attack inches from her chest and trapping his hand.
She spun then, hands rising to ensnare his wrist, wings
flaring to hurl Zeratul back against the wall with such
force he dropped to his knees. Tassadar raised a
shadow around himself but Kerrigan tore it away with
one glowing wing, and then she slowly, deliberately
pierced his side with the other, until the pain made
him wince and the shadows fled.
“Trapped again, little protoss?” she whispered to
Tassadar, tugging him to her until her lips brushed his
leathery cheek. “How familiar this all seems, yes?” She
smiled and twisted the wing within him, the pain so
intense he would have fallen if she had not held him
up. “The end to our little drama. I swore to kill you
slowly, but I think not. You are too dangerous to risk.
So, this is farewell, little protoss. You led me on a
merry chase.” She kissed him on the brow, right
between the eyes, and her other wing reared up
behind her, spikes angled to strike all three of his
hearts at once.
“No!” Zeratul’s cry roared through their minds,
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 337
shaking the rocks all around, sending loose stone
down into the valley and overwhelming many of the
surviving zerg in an instant. Kerrigan merely grinned
at him.
“Do not worry, Dark Templar,” she assured him. “You
will be next.” Then she turned and slowly, provoca-
tively, winked at Raynor. “You I’m saving for last, dear
Jimmy.” Her wing-spikes flared outward again, then
leaped forward—
—as the ledge just beyond her disappeared in a
shower of fine dust, obliterated by a beam of light so
intense it was colorless.
A beam that had come from the graceful ship
descending upon them now.
A protoss ship.
A second beam lanced out, carving away more of
the ledge. A dozen zerg disappeared as well, caught in
the beam near the cavern floor. And Kerrigan reeled
backward, one arm raised to shield her eyes from the
light. Tassadar dropped to the ground as she stepped
away.
“This is not over,” she assured the three sprawled
before her. “There will be a reckoning.” Then she
leaped forward, her claws stabbing deep into the rock
overhead and pulling her up above the ledge and onto
the ridgeline. She quickly vaulted that crest and disap-
peared from view.
“Indeed there shall.” Zeratul’s thought was so soft
Raynor wondered if it had been meant as a reply or if
it was merely the Praetor’s own musings. “But a reck-
338 A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
oning for whom?” Then the Praetor reached forward
and helped Tassadar stand.
“Can you stand, James Raynor?” Tassadar asked
after a second, ignoring his own wounds to stagger
over to where Raynor lay.
“Not without unlocking this thing,” Raynor replied.
“Give me a hand, willya?” He thought about the
sequence to remove the lockdown, and the tall protoss
nodded and duplicated the process. Raynor sighed
with relief as the suit’s warning lights blinked out and
he felt control return. Then he took his friend’s hand
and stood up.
“Well,” he said after he was on his feet again. He
glanced up at the protoss ship, still on the descent, and
then down at the carnage below. Most of Kerrigan’s
brood was dead, and though here and there a protoss
or human body lay among them, by far the largest
body count belonged to the zerg. Raynor grinned at his
two allies.
“That went better than I expected.”
EPILOGUE
THEY STOOD THERE, WATCHING THE SHIP DESCEND.
But Raynor noticed that Zeratul had stepped back into
the shadows, and was fading from view even as he
turned to comment.
“Hey!” Raynor said. “What gives?”
Tassadar turned as well, and the Praetor reappeared
from the darkness, though it seemed he did so grudg-
ingly. “The time has not yet come for us to return to
our brethren,” he told them gravely. “It would be best
if we were not present when the ship alighted.”
Raynor started to protest, but Tassadar merely nod-
ded and stepped forward. “I will honor your decision,”
the Executor stated, his thoughts strong and soothing as
always. He rested his hands on the older protoss’s shoul-
ders. “But know that your counsel shall be missed . . .
my brother.”
Zeratul placed his hands on Tassadar’s shoulders as
well. “Thank you, my brother. Know that you will
always be in my thoughts, and thus close to my spirit.
340A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
If you have need of me I shall find you.” Then he
turned to Raynor and nodded so deeply his chin
scraped his chest. “Fare well, James Raynor,” the Dark
Templar intoned, his words ringing through Raynor’s
head. “Truly you are protoss in spirit if not in flesh, and
I acknowledge you as a brother in kind if not in race. If
ever you require aid I will be there as well.”
“Yeah, thanks.” Raynor reached out to clasp Zer-
atul’s hand. “But hey, where’re you gonna go?” He
jerked his free hand back toward the descending ship.
“That’s the only ride in town.”
Zeratul’s eyes crinkled in what Raynor recognized
as the protoss equivalent of a smile. “Not quite,” he
admitted.
“What? That cerebrate Daggoth said he destroyed
both your ships!”
“So he thought,” the Praetor said. “But for centuries
I have honed my arts, and long ago I mastered illusions
such as no zerg could penetrate.” Raynor could hear
the old protoss’s mental laughter. “Though he thought
his mission successful, yet the Void Seeker waits for my
return.”
“Wait a second.” Raynor shook his head to make
sure he’d heard right. “You’re saying your ship is
intact?” Zeratul nodded. “But what the hell? We were
stranded here for weeks—months! And you could
have left at any time? Why the hell did you stick
around? Why didn’t you get off this rock?”
The Praetor looked at him, pale green eyes guileless
for once. “Such was not my destiny,” he replied. He
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S341
turned to look at Tassadar. “I was meant to be here, as
were we all. Thus has our race’s future been assured.”
Then, without a sound, he bowed and backed away,
disappearing into the shadows.
“Hunh.” Raynor stared after him for a moment,
then turned back to Tassadar. “Well, guess that leaves
just us, eh?” The tall protoss nodded—he had not
watched Zeratul go, and was now looking at the arriv-
ing protoss ship again.
Together they watched the protoss ship finally
touch down. It looked almost exactly like the ship Tas-
sadar himself had arrived in, and Raynor thought
about the changes that had occurred since he had
watched that first ship land and the Executor emerge.
Back then the protoss had been a strange, alien race,
possibly allies but possibly enemies and certainly dan-
gerous and unreadable. Now he stood here with one of
their high commanders, side by side, and knew he
could trust the protoss with his life and those of his
men. It seemed like so little time had passed, but at the
same time it felt like an eternity.
The ramp unfurled from the ship’s side and the door
irised open. Several protoss warriors stepped out and
arrayed themselves at the ramp’s base, standing at
attention as two tall figures followed them down.
Raynor recognized them immediately as the two he
had seen when Tassadar, with Zeratul’s help, had con-
tacted his people to warn them of the Swarm invasion.
The first one, Aldaris, wore the same long heavy robes
of crimson and gold, the long hood still covering his
342 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
face completely so that only his blue-gray eyes were
visible beneath the shadowy cowl. The second figure
was the one Aldaris had called Executor and Tassadar
had named Artanis, and his garb was the same as Tas-
sadar’s, though the newcomer’s clothing and armor
were undamaged and glittered in the weak sunlight.
His sky-blue eyes locked on Tassadar immediately and
he looked only at the High Templar as he approached,
projecting a mixture of friendship, respect, and embar-
rassment.
Tassadar saw them both and strode forward eagerly,
his eyes ablaze. Raynor followed behind him.
“Aldaris?” Tassadar called as he approached. “Arta-
nis? How is it that you’ve come here? I was about to
abandon all hope of rescue!”
He and the newcomers were now face-to-face, with
Raynor right beside Tassadar. The High Templar bowed
slightly, a mark of respect among equals, and Artanis
matched his movements. Aldaris did not, however,
and his eyes narrowed instead.
“I have come to arrest you,” the Judicator stated, his
mental words as cool and distant as his eyes, “and
bring you home to Aiur to stand trial.”
Tassadar straightened and stepped back slightly,
eyes widening in obvious surprise. “Arrest me? Aiur
burns at the touch of the zerg, and you travel all this
way to arrest me?”
“Don’t let it get to you, man,” Raynor said, knowing
what his friend was going through. “This happened to
me once. . . .” He flashed back to his own arrest and
Q U E E NO F B L A D E S343
incarceration, back on Mar Sara, and how Mike Lib-
erty had rescued him and then introduced him to Arc-
turus Mengsk. It had been the first step on the long
road that had led him here.
Aldaris turned and stared at him, his eyes cold.
“Who is this human, Tassadar?” Raynor could feel the
disdain in his question, and bristled at it.
“The name’s Jim Raynor, pal,” he replied, stepping
forward to glare at the protoss commander. “And I
won’t be talked down to by anybody. Not even a pro-
toss.”
“Amusing . . . ,” Aldaris said, though his eyes and
his tone showed no humor. “Tassadar, your taste in
companions grows ever more inexplicable.” He turned
back toward Artanis. “Executor, prepare to take Tas-
sadar into custody.”
Tassadar turned to study the second protoss, and his
eyes narrowed for an instant. Then he nodded. “I did
not fully appreciate the change in title before,” he
admitted. “You have been promoted to my former
position, Artanis. I take it, then, that I no longer hold
that title?”
Artanis fidgeted slightly, which made Raynor think
he must be young. In some ways this sky-eyed protoss
warrior reminded him of Cavez. “The Conclave felt it
best,” the new Executor replied. “I am sorry, Tassadar.”
Raynor could feel the warrior’s sincerity, and he was
sure Tassadar could as well.
“You are a wise choice,” Tassadar assured the
younger protoss. “I know you will protect our people
344A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
well.” Artanis dipped his head, and Raynor was sure
he would have been blushing if the protoss had been
capable of such a feat.
“Enough of this,” Aldaris commanded, and with a
gesture he summoned the guards waiting nearby. “You
will be held, Tassadar—you and your companion—until
such time as we may return to Aiur for your sentencing
and punishment.” The scorn radiating from the Judica-
tor left no doubt about the verdict he expected.
“Executor, wait,” Tassadar asked, raising both hands.
“I do not know what they have told you about me, but
what I’ve done, I’ve done for Aiur. Help me find Zeratul
and his Dark Templar.” If he noticed how Aldaris and
many of the warriors recoiled at the name, he ignored
it. “They alone can defeat the Overmind’s cerebrates.
Once we’ve won I’ll gladly submit myself to the judg-
ment of the Conclave.”
Aldaris’s eyes blazed with anger. “Unthinkable!” he
announced, the word ringing like steel. “You presume
that we would side with the Dark Ones as you have?
You have gone quite mad, Tassadar.”
This time it was Tassadar’s eyes that flared, and even
Aldaris backed away, clearly awed by the power the
Executor wielded. “You shall speak of them with
respect, Aldaris.” Then he calmed himself and turned
back toward Artanis. “Executor, there is much that I
can explain to you, if only you’ll help me find Zeratul.”
“I thought he said he wasn’t ready to rejoin your
society,” Raynor pointed out quietly.
“He said the time had not yet come,” Tassadar cor-
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 345
rected him. “I have reconsidered, however. I believe
we must stand together once again if we are to protect
our homeworld.”
“You think he’s reached his ship yet?” Raynor
asked. Tassadar shook his head.
“Our minds are still linked,” the High Templar
explained. “I would know if he had departed this
world.” He turned back toward the newly arrived pro-
toss and addressed not Aldaris, who stood seething in
front of him, but Artanis and the warriors behind him.
“Hear me, my brethren,” he called, his words a sooth-
ing blanket that drifted across their minds. “You know
me, for I am Tassadar, High Templar and once Executor
of our forces. However, I speak to you now not as your
leader but as your brother. Our world, our people are
in danger. Only by reclaiming our ancient birthright
may we save them. And only the Dark Templar, whom
we have wronged these long centuries, can aid us in
this process.” The warriors stood unmoving, neither
accepting nor rejecting, and Tassadar nodded. “If you
cannot accept them yet, so be it. But I ask that you
trust me in this matter, for truly it is the only path for
our survival.”
“You have become corrupted!” Aldaris claimed, but
Artanis stepped forward and held up one hand, palm
out. Tassadar mirrored him, and the two protoss
touched palms, a faint glow forming between and
around them. They stood thus for a moment before the
young Executor lowered his hand and stepped away.
“The tenor of your thought is different,” Artanis
346A A R O NR O S E N B E R G
admitted, “but I sense no evil about you. And your
devotion to our world and our people is as strong as
ever.” He bowed. “I will trust in your wisdom, noble
Tassadar. It shall be as you wish.”
“You defy my orders?” Aldaris’s mental query was
as sharp as a well-honed knife, and Raynor could feel
the anger that accompanied it. This one was a danger-
ous foe. But Artanis, for all his youth, faced the Judi-
cator with composure.
“You wish Tassadar returned to Aiur,” he stated.
“And so he shall be. His impressive achievements for
our race have earned him respect, however, and we
shall not treat him as a criminal. Let him go before the
Conclave with his head held high, that all might hear
him and judge for themselves whether he has done
right. We shall retrieve these Dark Templar, too, as Tas-
sadar suggests, and bring them before the Conclave as
well. For surely our people would know the truth of
this matter, and within the Khala none may dissem-
ble.” For an instant the young Executor’s eyes blazed a
vivid cobalt blue, a glimpse of strength waiting to be
tapped and daring to be challenged, and Raynor got
the message. As did Aldaris, apparently, for the Judica-
tor backed away and did not again object. The protoss
warriors moved forward then, flanking the four of
them. But Raynor could see from their posture, and
the way they bowed to Tassadar, that they were treat-
ing him as their commander again, or at least as an
honored guest, rather than a prisoner.
“You have my thanks, Executor,” Tassadar told
Q U E E NO FB L A D E S 347
Artanis, nodding in return. “Now let’s find Zeratul and
speed our way home.”
He turned back toward Raynor. “And what of you,
James Raynor?”
Raynor started to reply, but just then a small light
began blinking in his helmet. It took him a minute to
realize what it meant. It was an incoming call.
He stared at it for a second. A call? He and his men
had routed their communications through the shut-
tle—when the zerg destroyed it they’d lost the ability
to do more than line-of-sight communication. And
this was way too strong a signal for that. Cautiously, he
opened the link. “Raynor,” he said.
“Captain?” The voice was young, male, and utterly
familiar. He’d hoped to hear it for weeks now, but
Raynor still felt tears in his eyes as he responded.
“Matt? Matt! Damn, am I glad to hear you, son!” He
scanned the skies overhead, and sure enough now that
he looked he saw a familiar outline off in the distance.
The Hyperion!
“Thank you, sir,” Matt Horner replied. “Same here.
Sorry it took us so long”—he sounded embarrassed,
and Raynor could practically see the young lieutenant
sitting in the captain’s chair, his face wearing that
abashed look that always made Raynor think of a
puppy that had just peed on the rug—“but the emer-
gency jump took us a ways out and crashed some of
our systems. We had to make several repairs before we
could get back.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Raynor said. “I’m just glad
348 A A R O N R O S E N B E R G
you made it back. Any chance you can send someone
down to get us?”
“Already done, sir,” Horner answered. “Belloc is on
his way down in a shuttle, locked in on your signal.”
Raynor vaguely remembered Belloc as a short, round
man who laughed a lot, often at the worst possible
moment. But right now he was ready to kiss him upon
sight.
“Great, we’ll be here,” he said, and closed the link.
“I am glad your ship has returned.” He turned to
find Tassadar watching him, the protoss’s blue eyes
sympathetic. “Now you too can depart this world.”
“Yeah.” Raynor thought about that. He’d come here
to save Kerrigan, and he’d failed. A lot of people had
died as a result. But he’d met Tassadar, and Zeratul,
and forged a friendship with them, a friendship
between two different races. Perhaps that was worth
all the lives. He thought maybe it was.
“What will you do now?” Tassadar asked again,
ignoring the obviously impatient Aldaris and even the
puzzled Artanis beside him.
Raynor thought about it. He had his ship back, if
understaffed. Cavez and Abernathy had both survived
somehow, as had McMurty, but he’d lost Non, Ling,
Deslan, and several others. The crew totaled forty now,
himself included. Not enough to take the war to
Mengsk, really. But perhaps enough to tip the scales
on Aiur. Besides, he wanted to be there when that
slimy Overmind got what he deserved. And Kerrigan
was probably heading toward the protoss homeworld
Q U E E N O FB L A D E S 349
as well. Besides, he, Zeratul, and Tassadar made a good
team. It would be a shame to break that up.
“I think I’ll tag along, if you don’t mind,” he said
finally. Aldaris flinched, clearly offended, but Raynor
ignored him and concentrated on Tassadar. “I’d like to
see this to the end.”
Artanis turned toward Tassadar, clearly not sure
how to respond.
“James Raynor is a valued friend and ally,” the High
Templar assured his counterpart. “I for one hold him
most welcome, and I am honored that he would
accompany us.”
Taking his cue from Tassadar, Artanis turned then
and bowed to Raynor. “You are welcome among us,
James Raynor,” his thoughts proclaimed, quiet and
uncertain and slightly formal, but honest nonetheless.
“You and your people both.”
“Let us locate the Praetor and his Dark Templar,
then,” Tassadar said, and Raynor could feel the warmth
of his friend’s affection and thanks. “And then, indeed,
we shall end this together.”
Raynor grinned. “Well, all right, then. What are we
waiting for?”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
AARON ROSENBERG is originally from New Jersey
and New York. He returned to New York City seven
years ago, after stints in New Orleans and Kansas.
He has taught college-level English and worked in cor-
porate graphics and book publishing. Aaron has writ-
ten novels for Pocket’s Star Trek: Starfleet Corps of
Engineers, White Wolf’s Exalted, and Games Workshop’s
Warhammer lines. He also writes educational books and
roleplaying games and has his own game company,
Clockworks (www.clockworksgames.com). Aaron lives
in New York with his wife, their two-year-old daugh-
ter, their infant son, and their cat, unless they’ve
moved out while he was chained to his desk again. |
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