by Timothy Zahn
She nodded and left. Turning off Morse’s reader, I returned the data chip to the case and took both of them back to his jacket. I slid the reader into its tailored pocket, and returned the case to its own slot.
I had turned toward the door when Morse’s voice croaked at me from the bed. “That does it, Compton,” he said. “You’re under arrest.”
SEVEN
I turned back and looked at Morse. His face was still pale, but there was nothing uncertain about the disbelieving anger in his eyes. “Welcome back to the living,” I said pleasantly.
“Did you hear me?” he rasped. “You’re under arrest.”
“I heard you,” I confirmed. “Unfortunately, you still have the same jurisdictional problem you had at Bellis.”
“Not at all,” he countered. His voice was sounding stronger now. “This medical facility is Human-owned and Human-run. That makes it Human territory.”
“An interesting interpretation,” I agreed. “However, unless you know of an arraignment court on the premises, you still have to take me through Spider territory to get me to a shuttle.”
“The Spiders can—” He broke off, twisting his wrist around and looking at his watch. “Bloody hell,” he snarled, fumbling for the call button beside him on the rail. He squeezed it and then swung his legs over the side of the bed, pushing himself up into a sitting position. He spotted his shoes beside the bed and leaned over to grab them.
And toppled straight to the floor.
I was ready for it, and managed to grab one of his arms in time to keep his head from bouncing off the tile. “What happened?” the doctor said sharply from the doorway.
“Nothing,” Morse’s slightly muffled voice came before I could answer. “I’m all right.”
“He tried to pass out,” I told the doctor. “Almost made it, too.”
“Help me get him back on the bed,” the doctor said.
Together, he and I helped Morse back into a prone position on the bed. Morse fought us the whole way. “Let me alone,” he insisted. “I have to leave.”
“You’ll leave the minute you’re ready,” the doctor countered firmly. “Not before.”
“Then give me something to speed up the process,” Morse demanded. “I’m already an hour behind the train I’m supposed to be on.”
“And, what, you’re going to chase after it on a dit rec western handcar?” I asked.
Morse tried his dagger-glaring technique, but with his eyes still woozy it wasn’t very effective. “Mr. Compton is right,” the doctor said. “There’ll be other trains.”
“Doctor, I need whatever you can do,” Morse said, pitching his voice low and earnest and reasonable. “I can finish recovering once I’m on the train. I’m a EuroUnion government agent, and I have to get out of here.”
The doctor looked at me. “He is, and he probably does,” I confirmed.
The doctor grimaced, but nodded. “Wait here.” Turning, he left the room.
“Don’t think this is helping,” Morse warned me. “Even if you manage to slide on Künstler’s murder, I can still get you for theft of official ESS property and data. The penalty for that is eight to ten in the Minsk Four facility.”
“That’s good to know,” I said. “I’ll be sure to mention that to the next pickpockets I run into.”
An uncertain frown edged across his forehead. “What are you talking about?”
“I’m talking about three Halkas out in the station, one of whom called your name, thus enabling two of his buddies to trip you up and knock you cold, thus enabling them to steal this.” I snagged his jacket and pulled out the data chip case. “Luckily for you, I got there in time to steal it back. No, no—don’t thank me. That sunny smile of gratitude is all the thanks I need.”
That one got the daggers up and running again. “Compton, if you think—”
“Hey, relax,” I interrupted what would probably have been an impressive threat. “Believe it or not, we really are on the same side. Besides, Deputy UN Director Losutu has given me a clean bill of health.”
“That might mean something if I actually cared about Losutu’s opinions,” Morse growled. “As it happens, I don’t.”
I shook my head and dropped the case onto the bed beside him. “You know, Morse, it’s exactly this kind of simmering rage that starts popping capillaries when you hit fifty. Are you just mad that you lost your bird dog?”
“My what?”
“The late Mr. Künstler,” I said. “You were following him in hopes that he’d lead you to Daniel Stafford and the Nemuti Lynx.”
“I was escorting Lady Dorchester,” he corrected stiffly.
“Whom you dropped like an election-year tax hike the second Künstler was murdered,” I countered. “Since when does art theft fall under ESS’s jurisdiction, anyway?”
For a dozen heartbeats he stared at me in silence. I was starting to wonder if he’d fallen asleep with his eyes open when he stirred and picked up the data chip case I’d dropped beside him. “My reader, please?” he asked.
I pulled it out and handed it to him. “It’s the last file on the lower right-hand chip,” I said helpfully.
In silence he inserted the chip, keyed on the decryption program, and scrolled down to Losutu’s vote of confidence.
He was still studying it when the doctor returned with a hypo. “This is a mild stimulant,” he told Morse as he gave him the injection. “It’ll keep you going for an hour or two, but once it wears off you’ll find yourself exactly where you are right now. Maybe even a little worse.”
“That’s fine,” Morse said. “Like I said, I can sleep all I need to on the train.”
“And here’s a packet of QuixHeals,” the doctor added, handing him a package. “Give the shot a few minutes to take effect, and you should be able to get to your train all right.”
“Thank you,” Morse said. “You wouldn’t happen to have a schedule handy, would you?”
“I can do better than that,” I offered. “Doc, did you see a young lady out in the waiting room?”
“The one looking through her carrybags?” the doctor asked. “Yes, she’s still here.”
I grimaced. I’d told Bayta I’d check for Modhran surprises. “Ask her to come in here, will you?”
“Wait a second,” Morse growled. “It says your bona fides are in place, not anyone else’s.”
“Just ask her to come in,” I repeated to the doctor.
He gave me the kind of look of strained patience I seemed to get a lot from people and left the room. “Losutu knows all about Bayta,” I told Morse. “If you’d mentioned her in your report, he certainly would have included her in his note.”
“Of course,” Morse said. “By the way, in case you’re interested, I’ve got ESS running a full check on you even as we speak.”
“They’re welcome to waste their time,” I said, with just a twinge of concern. There was nothing blatantly illegal anyone could point to, but over the years I’d had my share of incidents that might easily be misinterpreted. “Meanwhile, if I were you, I’d try very hard to stay on Bayta’s good side. If you need to make up time on a Quadrail, Bayta’s the one who can make it happen.”
He snorted. “What is she, a travel agent?”
“Way better than that,” I assured him. “But if we’re going to help you, you need to tell us what exactly is going on.”
For another moment he studied my face. He still looked weak, but the color was starting to come back to his skin. Whatever the doctor had given him, it was working. “All right,” he said at last, laying the reader aside. “What do you know about three sets of Nemuti sculptures called Hawk, Viper, and Lynx?”
“Never heard of them before yesterday,” I told him truthfully. “Not until Künstler’s dying words, actually.”
His eyes widened. “Künstler talked to you? What did he say?”
“You first,” I said. “Tell me about these sculptures.”
His lips compressed. “There are nine of them,” he sa
id. “Smallish things, the size of your forearm or perhaps a bit smaller. They’re very old, apparently from some vanished civilization that predates the Nemuti colonization of Veerstu. Even so, the art community doesn’t put a lot of value on them.” He tapped the reader. “I presume you read all this?”
“Enough to get the gist,” I said, glancing over my shoulder as the door opened and Bayta slipped into the room. “I know about the attempted robbery and Daniel Stafford’s mysterious disappearance. We both do,” I added, nodding toward Bayta.
Morse turned a brief glare on Bayta. “What you don’t know is that all nine of the sculptures have disappeared over the past year, stolen from various collectors or museums,” he continued. “The last of them, one of the Hawks, was stolen from a Belldic collector just over three weeks ago.”
“I thought the report said that the attempt on Künstler’s Lynx failed,” I reminded him.
“No, that group didn’t get it,” Morse said with a touch of impatience. “But it is gone. Odds are Stafford stole it, either at the time of the botched burglary, or else earlier, with the other attempt merely exposing its absence.” He raised his eyebrows. “Curiously enough, in the five weeks since then Künstler never filed a missing-item report with his insurance agency. That tells me he knew where it was and thought he could get it back.”
“From Stafford.”
“Or whoever Stafford has sold it to,” Morse said. “Unfortunately, there isn’t enough actual evidence to issue a detention order.”
“He is apparently traveling under a false ID, though,” I said.
“Which we’ll be happy to charge him with once we catch him at it,” Morse agreed. “But we have to find him first. At any rate, when Künstler suddenly made plans to travel to Bellis right after the theft of the Hawk there we thought he might know something. Since Lady Dorchester already had plans to visit friends on Bellis, ESS put me aboard as her escort to keep an eye on him.”
“Only Künstler never made it that far,” I murmured. “Do we know if he had any communications from the Estates-General before he headed off there?”
“He received communications every day from all over the galaxy,” Morse said patiently. “Barring a complete tap-and-strain, there’s no way for us to tell if any of them mentioned the Lynx. Now, what did Künstler say before he died?”
“One more question,” I said. “If you don’t know where Stafford is, where exactly are you heading in such a hurry?”
“Stafford has friends,” Morse said. “Eight of them are currently on their way to a ski resort in the Halkavisti Empire.”
I looked at Bayta, noting the sudden tightening of her face. Our last visit to a Halkan ski resort had nearly gotten both of us killed. “Which one?” I asked.
“Carvlis Fang Mountain,” he said. “It’s on Ian-apof, one of the systems bordering the Tra’hok Unity.”
Nowhere near Sistarrko, then. I started breathing again. “And you think they’ll lead you to Stafford?”
“I don’t know, but at the moment, they’re all we have.” Morse’s lips compressed. “Unfortunately, they were on the express train that left an hour ago.”
“Any of these friends particularly close to Stafford?” I asked.
“Penny Auslander,” Morse said. “Twenty-three years old, daughter of the financier Charles Auslander of Zurich. She was Stafford’s girlfriend all last school year, and there’s no indication the relationship has cooled any.”
“Really,” I said. Penny’s name had been the first one on ESS’s list of Stafford’s friends, but there hadn’t been anything about them being snuggly. “How do you know?”
Morse smiled tightly, patting the side pocket on his slacks. “Not all the data chips end up in the data chip case,” he said. “There was a set of follow-up information that came on its own chip.”
“I’d like to see that.”
“I’m sure you would,” he countered. “Not going to happen.”
I shrugged. We’d see about that. “Fine. What class are you traveling?”
“I have a six-week first-class pass,” Morse said, his smile fading into a frown. “Why?”
“We need to know what kind of seats to get,” I said. “Get your shoes and jacket and meet us in the lobby.”
“Just a moment,” he growled as he sat up. This time, he didn’t fall over. “You haven’t told me what Künstler said to you before he died.”
“It wasn’t much, actually,” I said. “I told him who I was, he said he trusted me, then he told me about the Lynx—”
“Wait, wait, wait,” Morse interrupted. “He said he trusted you?”
“Or words to that effect,” I said. “He mentioned the Lynx, then he mentioned Daniel, then he died.”
“Just Daniel?” Morse asked. “Not Daniel Stafford?”
Künstler’s fading voice echoed again in my ears. Daniel—Daniel Mice. “No, just Daniel,” I told Morse. “Now finish getting dressed while I get us some seats.”
“You just get seats for wherever you’re going,” Morse said as he started putting on his shoes. “I can get my own.”
“Fine,” I said. Nudging Bayta, I moved us out into the corridor.
“Are we just getting two seats, then?” she asked as we headed toward the lobby.
“We’re getting three,” I told her. “We need to find Stafford and the Lynx before the Modhri does, and Morse has some of the pieces to that puzzle. I want to stay with him as long as we can.”
“He may not like that.”
“He’s welcome to wait for another train,” I said shortly. “First things first. I presume our friend Ms. Auslander will need to change trains at some point on her way to Ian-apof?”
“At least twice,” Bayta said, frowning in concentration. “The first change will be at either Homshil or Jurskala.”
“Have the stationmaster pull her itinerary and find out which it is,” I said. “Then have him send a message ahead to the stationmaster there to keep her from getting on her next train.”
Bayta blinked. “How is he going to do that?”
“Have the Spiders tell her there’s some problem with her transfer,” I said. “Or that her ticket record’s been lost, or her ID’s not reading right and they’ll need to message back to Terra for confirmation.”
She gave me the same look she’d used earlier when I’d suggested smoking the Gang of Fifteen out of their compartment with a fake fire. “I suppose they can do that,” she said reluctantly.
“Don’t worry, it won’t go on anyone’s personal record,” I soothed her. “We just need to hold this girl in one place long enough to catch up with her.”
“And then what?” Bayta asked. “What if she doesn’t know where Mr. Stafford is?”
“Let’s play this one move at a time, okay?” I said, a smoothly evasive way of saying I didn’t have the foggiest idea. “Once you’ve got that in the works, see how fast you can get us moving after her.”
Bayta’s eyes defocused. “There’s a local leaving in forty minutes, or an express leaving in two hours. Both of them stop at both Homshil and Jurskala.”
“Let’s try for the express,” I told her. “Three first-class seats.”
“You don’t want a double compartment for us?”
“Homshil’s less than a day away by express,” I reminded her. “Hardly seems worth tying up two compartments for.”
“I’d rather we had compartments.”
I shrugged. “Fine. Whatever you want.”
“Thank you.” She paused. “By the way, Mr. Künstler didn’t exactly say he trusted you,” she said. “He said ‘he hates you.’”
“Which is something we should probably avoid mentioning to Morse,” I warned. “In case you hadn’t noticed, he’s the only one around who makes no bones about the fact that he hates me.”
Bayta glanced over her shoulder. “You have any idea why?”
“I wish I did,” I said. “Maybe I was part of some Westali operation that stepped on ESS toes.”
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But deep down, I knew that wasn’t it. Morse’s antagonism was way more personal than just misplaced professional rivalry.
Maybe there was a way to find out. “Can you get the Spiders to encode a message and send it to Earth?” I asked Bayta.
“If it’s simple enough,” Bayta said. “They’d prefer you to go to the message center and do it yourself.”
“I’d rather not be seen at the message center right now,” I told her. “Too many people might notice and wonder who I’m writing notes to. I just want a simple message sent to Losutu: ‘Verify Ackerley Morse’s bona fides—reply via Spiders.’ Sign my name and send it.”
“I suppose they can do that,” Bayta said, a little doubtfully.
There was the sound of footsteps behind us, and I turned to see Morse hurrying down the corridor. “No need to rush,” I called. “We’ve got your seat.”
His expression darkened. “I told you not to do that,” he growled. “You’re not coming with me.”
“No, you’re coming with us,” I clarified for him. “At least, if you want to catch up with Penny Auslander before she gets to Ian-apof.”
His eyes narrowed. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“We’re getting her pulled off the train at either Homshil or Jurskala,” I told him. “Our train—”
“You’re getting her pulled off?”
“Our train leaves in two hours,” I went on, ignoring the question. “That gives us all time to get something to eat and compare notes a little.”
For another few seconds Morse continued to eye me. Then, his lip twitched. “You’ve already seen most of my notes,” he said. “And I don’t especially care about yours. You really booked me a seat?”
“The ticket can be picked up at the stationmaster’s office,” Bayta said.
“You’re not on this case,” Morse warned. “This is official Euro-Union business, and you aren’t involved in any way, shape, or form. Make very sure you understand that.”
“We’re just on the way to meet up with a friend,” I said, stifling a sigh. There was something about Morse’s attitude that was just plain tiring. “We just happen to be traveling on the same train as you, that’s all.”