"The Qasamans wouldn't put up with that, in my opinion," Roi shook his head.
"Let's get back to the point, shall we?" Telek said. "The question is why the
Qasamans are still bothering to carry these birds around with them when it's not necessary to do so."
"But we've answered that question," Stiggur said with a sigh. "As long as anyone carries a gun and a mojo, everyone has to do so. Otherwise they won't feel safe."
"The cultural conditioning-"
"Will be adequate for most of them," Stiggur said. "But not for all. And if I were a Qasaman, I'd want protection against even that small group of dangerous people."
Telek grimaced, clearly hunting for a new approach. "Brom-"
"All right, we've talked long enough," Hemner said firmly. "We're going to vote on Lizabet's proposal. Now."
All eyes shifted to the frail old man. "Jor, you're out of order," Stiggur said quietly. "I know emotions are running high on all this-"
"You do, do you?" Hemner smiled thinly. His hands, Jonny noted with a vague twinge of uneasiness, had left their usual place on top of the table and were hidden from view in his lap. "And you prefer words to actions, I suppose. It's so much easier to manipulate people's emotions. Well, the time has come for action. We're going to vote, and we're going to pass Lizabet's mojo study. Or else."
"Or else what?" Stiggur snapped, irritation finally breaking through.
"Or else the nay votes will be eliminated," Hemner said harshly. "Beginning with him."
And his right hand came up over the edge of the table, the small flat handgun clutched in it swiveling to point at Roi.
Someone gasped in shock... but even before the pistol had steadied on its target, Jonny was in motion. Both fingertip lasers spat fire, one into the pistol, the other tracing a line directly in front of Hemner's eyes. The old man jerked back with a cry as the heat and light reached his hand and face, the pistol swinging away from the others. Gripping the table edge with both hands,
Jonny kicked back and up with his feet, sending his chair spinning across the room and flipping his body to slam onto his back on the table. His legs caught
Hemner's arm full force, eliciting a second yelp from the other and sending the gun sailing into the far wall.
"Get the gun!" Jonny snapped through the agony the sudden violence had ignited in his arthritic joints. He swung up to a sitting position, grabbed both of
Hemner's wrists. "Jor, what the hell was that supposed to accomplish?"
"Just proving a point," Hemner said calmly, the harshness of a minute earlier gone without a trace. "My wrists-easy-"
"You were what?"
"I'll be damned." The voice was Roi's and Jonny turned to look.
Roi was standing by the far wall, holding Hemner's "gun."
Which was nothing more than a pen and an intricately folded magcard.
Jonny looked down at Hemner. "Jor... what's going on?"
"As I said, I was proving a point," the other said. "Uh-if you wouldn't mind...?"
Releasing his grip, Jonny climbed carefully off the table and walked around back to his seat. Roi sat down, too, and Stiggur cleared his throat. "This had better be good," he warned Hemner.
The other nodded. "Olor, were you armed just now when I pretended to pull a weapon on you?" he asked.
"Of course not," Roi snorted.
"Yet even with a real gun I wouldn't have been able to shoot you. True? Why not?"
"Because Jonny was here and he's faster than you are."
Hemner nodded and turned to Stiggur. "Security, Brom. You don't need everyone carrying mojos for your citizens to be protected. The mojos attack anyone drawing a gun, whether their own masters are specifically threatened or not." He waved at his display. "The records of the bus attack on York clearly show that-I've just checked. Even if everyone wants to carry a gun, you still don't need that many mojos. Twenty percent, or even less, combined with the cultural bias against fighting would be more than adequate."
"Assuming they're that peaceful without that taloned reminder on their shoulders," Fairleigh growled. "Maybe they're more violent without mojos nearby."
Vartanson laughed abruptly. "Dylan, did you hear what you just said? Almost exactly what Jonny's been suggesting." He nodded at Jonny. "All right; I'm convinced the mojos need more study. But we need to learn about the Qasaman technological base, too, and I'm not sure which is more important."
"Then let's do both," Telek spoke up. Reaching to the stack of magdisks in front of her, she selected one and slid it into her reader. "This is a complete tactical plan that was submitted to my office yesterday via Almo Pyre. I'd like us all to read it through and seriously consider it as a basis for the next mission to Qasama, Brom?"
"Any comments or objections?" Stiggur asked, his eyes sweeping the table. "All right, then. Let's take a look."
Telek sent the report to the other displays and they all settled down to read.
Jonny felt memories of his own tactical training rising to the surface as he studied the plan... memories, and a growing respect for Pyre's work. Granted that there were some military manuals and histories in the computer library, it still took a great deal of raw talent to put together a scheme this comprehensive, especially with only the limited training the First Cobras had been able to give Pyre and his team.
It wasn't until he reached the end that he found the author's name... and he stared at it for nearly a minute before he finally could believe it.
Justin Moreau.
The wait in Telek's office had stretched into nearly two hours, but Pyre had been almost too busy to notice. Justin's plan was highly detailed, but the boy naturally had not done any actual personnel assignments, a task that would fall to Coordinator Sun and the Cobra upper echelon if the plan was accepted. Nothing said Pyre couldn't submit his own roster for their approval, though. He'd finished the main group and was working on the first of the three outrider teams when Telek returned.
"Well?" he asked as she closed the door and sank into her desk chair.
"They bought it," she said with tired satisfaction. "Brom wants to submit it to a review board of First Cobras, but I doubt they'll change it too much. You still hold with two weeks to equip and train the task force?"
Pyre nodded. "All they'll need is the multiple-targeting enhancers and some tactical training. For a change, all the experience we've logged hunting down spine leopards is going to do some of us some good."
"Um. You... ah... plan to be out in the forest, then?"
"I had, yes. Unless you wanted me on the village force."
Telek pursed her lips. "Might be better for you to stay aboard the ship, actually. To coordinate things."
"Oh?" Pyre eyed her. "You'd rather I not be down on Qasama?"
"I'd rather you not risk your life, if you must know," she said grudgingly.
"You've done your bit."
"Ah. You feel the same way about Justin, Michael, and Dorjay? Or is it different because you specifically asked that I be aboard the Dewdrop the last time around?"
Her lip curled. "So you did know. I'd hoped I'd hid my tracks a bit better than that."
"I have friends among the elite, too. Which is why I was surprised you'd requested me."
Telek exhaled loudly. "Well, it wasn't because you were a good friend of the
Moreaus," she said. "Though that was why I asked you and Halloran for the initial cost study. But for the trip itself...." She paused, eyes drifting to the window and the Capitalia cityscape beyond. "It bothered me all the way from the beginning why the Baliu demesne should think Cobras would have a better shot at the Qasamans then they did."
"They already knew the mojos attack drawn weapons," Pyre suggested.
"True. And there was the whole question of whether this was a test. But it occurred to me that there was one other possibility."