“Incoming!” Officer Tanner called. “Ten o’clock to the southern wall! Headed straight toward the gate!”
“How many?” First Officer Ellis shouted, vaulting over the rail dividing the stairs from the wall. He landed near Tanner and peered where his officer pointed.
“Just one, sir. He looks hurt.”
“Wilson! This one’s yours!” Ellis ordered. “We’ll get your feet wet with an easy one. Move where you can get a good shot, then shoot to kill when you’re ready.”
“Yes, sir,” Roger answered. He gripped his gun and trotted along the top of the wall, looking for a good angle. The other soldiers grinned and patted his back as he passed them. “Good hunting, Wilson,” some of them told him. First kill was a big deal here in the south.
The incoming man staggered across the open swathe of desert in front of the Southern Fort. He looked like he’d been running for days without stopping; his skin was grey with exhaustion, his clothing filthy and bedraggled, his eyes wild and desperate. He struggled to put each foot before the other, tripping every other step and barely catching himself before pushing forward again. He shivered despite the blazing heat; the injuries scratched out of his skin were all red and oozing.
He looked up and saw the Fort ahead. Fear skittered across his face. He stopped, looking at the soldiers on the wall warily. But something caught his attention behind him. He glanced back then staggered forward again, the desperation overpowering his fear.
“Please… please… please,” he was gasping. “In the name of the Twin Lights, the gods of life and death, anything, please…”
Next to Roger, one of the soldiers spat. “Fucking deists,” Reynolds muttered. “Probably just trying to spread that religious crap through the confederacy, too. Jackass.”

