The Butcher of Anderson Station Read Online Free Page A

The Butcher of Anderson Station
Book: The Butcher of Anderson Station Read Online Free
Author: James S. A. Corey
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horseshit? Yeah, you can drink it with milk. I have nothing to justify to you. I did my job, and I’m not ashamed of any decision I made. With the same information, I’d do the same thing again.”
    “ With the same information ,” Dawes said, latching on to the phrase hard. “You found something out, then?”
    “Fuck off, Dawes.”
    “What was it, Colonel? What kind of information turns the Butcher of Anderson Station into a suicide? What makes him into a coward?”
     
    * * *
     
    The hundred and seventy Belters occupying Anderson Station hadn’t taken offensive action yet. Fred watched the station in false-color IR.
    “Priority flash traffic from OPCOM, sir, cross-checked and verified,” the intel officer on his monitor said. “Eyes only. Sending it to you now.”
    There was only one line of text.
    A UTHORIZATION TO RETAKE STATION GRANTED .
    And that was that. Thirty-seven hours of negotiation was over. Outer Planets Command was tired of waiting, and they were unleashing the dogs.
    Fred called up the company major and said, “Put them in their racks. We’re go for assault. Set the countdown timer to one hour.”
    “Roger that, sir,” the major said with more glee than Fred was comfortable seeing.
    One hour until they went into the station. Fred called up the negotiation team on the command ship.
    “Psych ops here,” said Captain Santiago, the team commander.
    “Captain, this is Colonel Johnson. We’ve been given authorization to retake the station. My people go in in an hour. Do we have anything left to try? A Hail Mary pass? Have you warned them about the assault?”
    There was no reason for secrecy. There would be no way to hide three Marine assault craft on breaching maneuvers.
    The silence from the other end stretched out, and Fred was almost at the point of checking to see if the line was still open when the reply came.
    “Colonel, are you double-checking my work here, sir?”
    Fred counted to ten slowly.
    “No, Captain. But I’m about to send six hundred marines into the station. In addition to the 170 hostiles, there are over ten thousand civilians. Many or all of them could die before the day’s out. I just want to make sure we’ve exhausted every other possibility before we commit to—”
    “Sir, I’ve got my orders just like you do. We did what we could, but Psych Ops is standing down now. Your turn.”
    “Am I the only one that sees that this doesn’t make any sense?” Fred said. “They claim they took the station because of a three percent cargo transfer fee? I mean, they already threw the administrator who implemented it out the damned airlock. There is literally nothing left for them to win by forcing a fight.”
    The only answer was static.
    “Let me talk to them,” Fred said. “Maybe if they hear it from a different voice, they’ll understand—”
    “Sir,” Santiago cut in. “I am not authorized to do that. You want to argue about it? Call General Jasira back at OPCOM. Santiago out.”
     
    * * *
     
    Fred launched himself at Dawes, pushing out with numbed legs, and Dawes scuttled back. Fred landed on the deck hard. The world grayed out for a second, and he tasted blood. He struggled forward, trying to get at Dawes’s feet with his teeth if that was the best he could manage. He saw the Belter up to the knees, stepping back. Fred twisted. Something in his left shoulder made a sick crunching sound, and a sharp pain shot up his neck. Then the woman stepped forward.
    He looked up into the triangular barrel of the fléchette rifle, and then past it to the woman’s eyes. They were the blue of oceans seen from orbit. There was no pity in them. Her thumb was on the safety. Her finger on the trigger. A little pressure, and the rifle would send a hundred spikes of steel thinner than needles through his brain. And she wanted to. It was in the set of her shoulders and the angles of her face how much she wanted to end him.
    “The problem with you,” Dawes said, his voice calm
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