“She's alive.”
“You sound surprised,” I panted, helping Paul pull Skalet's Human-self over so her respiratory organs could obtain air. He increased the buoyancy of his suit to support us both and I settled myself against him, regarding my web-kin soberly as she coughed and sputtered. “The only reason she isn't giving orders already is because she's swallowed more than her share of ocean. Give her time.”
“She saved our lives, Esen.”
I let my legs float up, my toes becoming tiny pink archipelagos kissed by the now fully risen sun. “Who put us at risk?”
The answer to that question decided to speak for herself, though in a thready voice. “The planâremains feasible. Paul has the ident. Covers the three of us.”
Paul, was it?
I spat salt from my mouth, unsettled by a polite Skalet.
To be fair,
I reminded myself,
she'd recently blown up.
She'd also lost a magnificent form to memory. I wondered if any Prumbin had seen Skalet's Refinne-self; if so, she'd added another chapter to the legend Ersh had begun.
Now she was Kraal. Whatever disguise she'd applied to her skin, to alter the structure of her face and the color of her eyes, hadn't been part of form-memory. The person lapped at by the ocean along Paul's other side, held safely in the curve of his arm despite all she'd done, was the Skalet of my memory. Her tattoos splashed like so much red-and-black paint from where neck met shoulder to the top of her shaved head.
This time, I bothered to read them, her memories informing me of the House names and bloody histories behind every whorl and sequence, the links she'd forged with lies. Skalet knew what I was doing and lifted her chin to show me her newest markings. Not full affiliationâthere were subtle modifications that made this more an acceptance of service, with connotations of mutual interest. “Mocktap,” I acknowledged. “So your admiral survived the loss of her ships.”
“A momentary reprieve,” she answered. As if suddenly realizing her dependence on another ephemeral, she pushed away from Paul to tread water for herself. “The good admiral has recently becomeâinconsiderateâof her affiliation.”
“To you. Why?”
“I don't recall inviting you to question my life, Youngest.”
“I don't recall inviting you to meddle in mineâ”
Before I could finish, I found myself looking at Skalet's outraged face through the clarity of seawater. Up again, but before either of us could do more than sputter, Paul said calmly, but firmly: “Save it for dry land, Fems. Unless you'd prefer to wait for the next Busfish?”
The look of outrage on Skalet's face was the best thing I'd seen in days.
Otherwhere
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THE office of Project Leader Kearn contained two worried Humans, a nondescript envelope and a black book, and a diminishing bottle of brandy.
What it didn't contain
, Rudy thought glumly,
were answers.
“So that's all of it. Thanks to your codes and my ingenuity, we've Port Authority reports of attacks on their warehouseâand home,” Rudy grimaced. It hadn't been pleasant reading, though it could have been worse. “No reports of fatalities. Paul and Es disappeared from the map sometime before Cristoffen had his fatal meeting,” Rudy said, then sighed. “I hope of their own accord, to safety, but there's no way to be sure.”
“Paul is resourceful.”
The remark, coming from Kearn, felt strange. Rudy supposed it would for a while, until he grew accustomed to being on the same side as his former antagonist. “Oh, he's that,” Rudy agreed. “But it will be difficult to get any answers. There's the Largas family involvedâyou know that history. They've shut down any other source of information I'd dare approach. Maybe they're at fault. At first, I thought it was Cristoffenâ” He didn't bother admitting he'd also thought it had been Kearn.
Kearn shook his head. “I've kept the shipâand himâwell away from the Fringe. And there's nothing left in the data banks to lead him to Minas XII. I'm sure Timri looked after that.”
“Good.” Rudy paused, then smiled ruefully. “Esen told me not to worry about Cristoffenâthat you'd handle him. I couldn't understand why at the time.”
Kearn's face darkened. “I didn't handle him well enough. Had I known about Paul's extended family before thisâCristoffen has a damn list!âI might have prevented one tragedy. Are you part ofâno,” he said quickly, holding up one hand before Rudy could answer. “I know more than I should already. These aren't safe times for any of us, not with Kraal involved.”
“More than you know.” Rudy told Kearn about his meeting with Sybil. When he finished, the Project Leader shook his head.
“What's the connection?” he said thoughtfully. “The Kraal are the key. I feel it.” Kearn counted off on his fingers. “There's the one you suspect on Minas XII, this Meony-ro. The Kraal who contacted me forty years ago. The Kraal who is now leading our Cristoffen by the nose. Your âSybil.' And this enemy she wants you to find.”
“Five,” Rudy nodded.
“Or are there? If we discount Meony-roâsince he isn't in a place to act freelyâthere are four. My contact with the Kraal,” Kearn seemed to hunt for words, then said, “differed in style from what I've learned of Cristoffen's. A pair, interested in Esen.”
“There's another pair,” Rudy offered. “Sybil and her enemy.”
Kearn steepled his fingers and nodded. “So. What else do we know about the Kraal?”
“They're self-destructive lunatics.” Rudy had moved to the chair; now he lifted his feet to Kearn's desk, careful not to disturb either book or envelope. “Lunatics who spend far too much time learning how to kill each other.”
“Each other. Yes. That's significant, Rudy. Kraal feuds are always internal. They rarely travel outside their own space. When they must, they do so in groups and never keep households on alien worlds. Important, yes,” Kearn stretched out the words as though checking their flavor. “I find it highly improbable there could be four separate Kraal engaged with outsiders. We are dealing with two individualsâI'm sure of it. Sybil and her enemy. Both of whom are interested in Kearn's Folly.”
Rudy regarded Kearn with new respect. How had he worked with this being for years and never seen this side of him?
Then again
, he thought honestly,
he hadn't bothered to look, believing, like the rest, that Kearn was nothing more than a joke.
“Which one is which? There's no way to know.”
“We can speculate. Something has changed to make Sybil need your help to find her enemy.” He put down his glass too quickly, his face stricken. “Rudy. You don't supposeâcould Esen become Human? Could she be the Kraal in your image?”
Rudy smiled into his glass. “She can be Human,” he acknowledged. “But not that one. There's nothing Kraal about Es.”
“Good, good.” Kearn wiped his forehead and scalp before taking a drink. “That would have made things much too confusing. I've so many questions about her as it isânot now, I know.” He paused. “But the timingâI still believe there's some link here. Trouble for Esen and Paul on Minas XII, then the incident with Cristoffen, then Sybil hires you to find her enemy. An enemy no longer in Kraal-controlled space, or she wouldn't need you. It's as if a battle is being waged, with Esen at its core. But why?” He looked a little embarrassed. “Surely the Kraal don't believe the rumor about a biological weapon any longer.”
“Sybil didn't mention it. I had the feeling she was after blood, not secrets.” There was that other complication. Rudy came to a decision. He reached under his shirt and tugged the scorched data cube from its hiding place. “Cristoffen brought this to his meeting with Duda. He baited him with it, saying it contained information aboutâ” he took a steadying breath, “âabout another of Esen's kind, living in this part of space. That if Duda and the rest of the Group knew about this being, they wouldn't be helping Esen.”
Kearn stared at the tiny thing almost hungrily. “Were you able to read any of it?”
“Not yet, not with the equipment I had available. You might have better luck.” Rudy put it down beside the envelope and book, lining the three items in a row. “It could be a Kraal fabrication. It might be misinterpreted information or material related to the real monsterâthe evil one you mentioned. Orâ” he paused suggestively.
“Or it could be exactly what Cristoffen claims.”
“You don't seem surprised.”
Kearn glanced up from the data cube. “Why would I be? Esen is a living being. She had to come from somewhere; there have to be others of her kind there at least. My discussions with other academics suggest there have been many contacts over the years, given the number of folktales about 'shifters. Why would Esen be the only one?”
There was no point in secrets, not now
, Rudy told himself, although he winced at Paul's probable reaction to what he was about to reveal. But Kearn's obsession might mean he actually knew more than any of them, maybe enough to help if he had all the pieces. “Esen believes herself to be,” he explained. “Her speciesâshe calls herself a Web-beingâisn't from this sector of space. The only others living here were members of her family, six altogether. All but Esen died as a result of that same monster you hunted. Esen told me it was a member of her species, but mindlessâ driven by instinct to hunt them for food and killing any other intelligent life it encountered during its pursuit. She called it âDeath.' ”
Kearn's eyes might have been riveted on his, but Rudy thought the other Human was looking inward, adding this information to other pieces, watching it rearrange what he knew into new shapes. He didn't interrupt.
Finally, Kearn pursed his lips and gave a quick nod. “Well, if there is a second web-being involved in all this, it isn't a predator. I think we'd know that by now. âDeath' wasn't subtle.”
“Agreed. But if there is one, is it Sybil's enemy or someone else? Or is this a ruse to enlist Cristoffen, to help the Kraal find the real thingâEsen? OrâWe don't even know the right questions,” Rudy growled in frustration.
“We might have the answers and not know it,” Kearn said calmly. “Leave the cube with me. I must examine what Sybil gave youâand I want to look into this book immediately. Can you open the envelope without blowing up my ship?”
“Of course,” Rudy told him, pretending to be offended.
“Let's do it before Cristoffen returns. I'll have someone from the crew seal up his room so he doesn't find the mess before we have a chance to talk to him. For what good it will do.” This last seemed to come from bitter experience.
“He probably doesn't know much, but there should be something in his comp from Sybil. We should have a look at whatever Timri pulled from his files.”
“Yes, yes. You know, we missed lunch. I'm sure of it. There isn't time to waste, but I have some crackers ...”
Rudy's eyes narrowed. He watched as Kearn bustled over to a cupboard, glass still in one hand.
Something isn't tracking,
he told himself. “Timri has searched his comp, hasn't she?”
“She's been busy. I've asked her to check Cristoffen's messages using my codes and arrange for him not to receive any more. Which I assume explains the envelope.” Kearn seemed to be having difficulty opening the cupboard. “We don't need her to be further involved. That's why I wanted you here. You have the expertiseâ”
“Yes, but twoâ”
“No.” Having found his box, Kearn slammed the cupboard shut with unnecessary force. “Cristoffen's friends are too dangerous. I won't take chances with the Kraal. I don't want you saying a word to Timri. Not one. Why do you think I had you remove herâ” he stopped, but it was too late.
Well, well.
Rudy put his hands behind his head and leaned back to study his former commander's flushed face. “The only people in danger from Cristoffen or his âfriends' are the ones on his listâor those who should be,” he observed dryly, then shook his head in wonder. “How long have you known, Lionel?”
Kearn seemed to sag. “That she spies on me for Paul? Since that day I overheard you both. That she's part of this group of his?” Kearn tossed the box of crackers on the table and the brandy left in his glass down his throat. “I didn't know it existed until Cristoffen showed me that abominable list. At least he believes Paul dead.” His voice became husky. “I had no idea I'd driven Paul to anything so desperate. I knew he'd put his life on the line, but not that he'd convinced others to join him. It's what Timri would do, risk everything for a cause. I can't let her come to the attention of the Kraalâ”
There were two doors into Kearn's office. Rudy's feet thudded to the floor as the one leading to the bedroom burst open, then he relaxed.
This
, he decided,
was going to be entertaining.
Timri's fury looked remarkably self-righteous for someone who'd taken the ultimate low-tech route to eavesdropping. Kearn had some explaining to do.
But Kearn, who'd been startled enough to drop his glass, was staring behind Rudy. Rudy whipped around in his chair to see Cristoffen standing in the now-open door to the corridor, the weapon in his hand aimed at Timri.
Before Rudy did more than tense, stuffy, nervous, ever-so-foolish Kearnâwhom Rudy had misjudged at least twice today, not to mention innumerable times during their years togetherâstepped into the weapon's path.
Cristoffen fired.
23: Shoreline Afternoon
“IT'S not open to discussion.”