"I don't think it really matters if I'm seen with you," Bach said.
"No? Then would you care to comment on why the New Dresden Police Department, among other government agencies, is allowing an eight-year-old child to go without the rescue she so obviously needs?"
Bach said nothing.
"Would you comment on the rumor that the NDPD does not intend to effect the child's rescue? That, if it can get away with it, the NDPD will let the child be smashed to pieces?"
Still Bach waited.
Galloway sighed, and ran a hand through her hair.
"You're the most exasperating woman I've ever known, Bach," she said. "Listen, don't you even want to try to talk me out of going with the story?"
Bach almost said something, but decided to wait once more.
"If you want to, you can meet me at the end of your shift. The Mozartplatz. I'm on the Great Northern, suite 1, but I'll see you in the bar on the top deck."
"I'll be there," Bach said, and broke the connection.
Charlie sang the Hangover Song most of the morning. It was not one of her favorites.
There was penance to do, of course. Tik-Tok made her drink a foul glop that—she had to admit—did do wonders for her headache. When she was done she was drenched in sweat, but her hangover was gone.
"You're lucky," Tik-Tok said. "Your hangovers are never severe."
"They're severe enough for me," Charlie said.
He made her wash her hair, too.
After that, she spent some time with her mother. She always valued that time. Tik-Tok was a good friend, mostly, but he was so bossy. Charlie's mother never shouted at her, never scolded or lectured.
She simply listened. True, she wasn't very active. But it was nice to have somebody just to talk to.
One day, Charlie hoped, her mother would walk again. Tik-Tok said that was unlikely.
Then she had to round up the dogs and take them for their morning run.
And everywhere she went, the red camera eyes followed her. Finally she had enough. She stopped, put her fists on her hips, and shouted at a camera.
"You stop that!" she said.
The camera started to make noises. At first she couldn't understand anything, then some words started to come through.
"...lie, Tango... Foxtrot...in, please. Tango Charlie..."
"Hey, that's my name."
The camera continued to buzz and spit noise at her.
"Tik-Tok, is that you?"
"I'm afraid not, Charlie."
"What's going on, then?"
"It's those nosy people. They've been watching you, and now they're trying to talk to you. But I'm holding them off. I don't think they'll bother you, if you just ignore the cameras."
"But why are you fighting them?"
"I didn't think you'd want to be bothered."
Maybe there was some of that hangover still around. Anyway, Charlie got real angry at Tik-Tok, and called him some names he didn't approve of. She knew she'd pay for it later, but for now Tik-Tok was pissed, and in no mood to reason with her. So he let her have what she wanted, on the principle that getting what you want is usually the worst thing that can happen to anybody.
"Tango Charlie, this is Foxtrot Romeo. Come in, please. Tango—"
"Come in where?" Charlie asked, reasonably. "And my name isn't Tango."
Bach was so surprised to have the little girl actually reply that for a moment she couldn't think of anything to say.
"Uh... it's just an expression," Bach said. "Come in... that's radio talk for 'please answer.' "
"Then you should say please answer," the little girl pointed out.
"Maybe you're right. My name is Bach. You can call me Anna-Louise, if you'd like. We've been trying to—"
"Why should I?"
"Excuse me?"
"Excuse you for what?"
Bach looked at the screen and drummed her fingers silently for a short time. Around her in the monitoring room, there was not a sound to be heard. At last, she managed a smile.
"Maybe we started off on the wrong foot."
"Which foot would that be?"
The little girl just kept staring at her. Her expression was not amused, not hostile, not really argumentative. Then why was the conversation suddenly so maddening?
"Could I make a statement?" Bach tried.
"I don't know. Can you?"
Bach's fingers didn't tap this time; they were balled up in a fist.
"I shall, anyway. My name is Anna-Louise Bach. I'm talking to you from New Dresden, Luna. That's a city on the moon, which you can probably see—"
"I know where it is."
"Fine. I've been trying to contact you for many hours, but your computer has been fighting me all the time."
"That's right. He said so."
"Now, I can't explain why he's been fighting me, but—"
"I know why. He thinks you're nosy."
"I won't deny that. But we're trying to help you."
"Why?"
"Because... it's what we do. Now if you could—"
"Hey. Shut up, will you?"
Bach did so. With forty-five other people at their scattered screens. Bach watched the little girl—the horrible little girl, as she was beginning to think of her—take a long pull from the green glass bottle of Scotch whiskey. She belched, wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, and scratched between her legs. When she was done, she smelled her fingers.
She seemed about to say something, then cocked her head, listening to something Bach couldn't hear.
"That's a good idea," she said, then got up and ran away. She was just vanishing around the curve of the deck when Hoeffer burst into the room, trailed by six members of his advisory team. Bach leaned back in her chair, and tried to fend off thoughts of homicide.
"I was told you'd established contact," Hoeffer said, leaning over Bach's shoulder in a way she absolutely detested. He peered at the lifeless scene. "What happened to her?"
"I don't know. She said, 'That's a good idea,' got up, and ran off."
"I told you to keep her here until I got a chance to talk to her."
"I tried," Bach said.
"You should have—"
"I have her on camera nineteen," Steiner called out.
Everyone watched as the technicians followed the girl's progress on the working cameras. They saw her enter a room to emerge in a moment with a big-screen monitor. Bach tried to call her each time she passed a camera, but it seemed only the first one was working for incoming calls. She passed through the range of four cameras before coming back to the original, where she carefully unrolled the monitor and tacked it to a wall, then payed out the cord and plugged it in very close to the wall camera Bach's team had been using. She unshipped this camera from its mount. The picture jerked around for awhile, and finally steadied. The girl had set it on the floor.
"Stabilize that," Bach told her team, and the picture on her monitor righted itself. She now had a worm's-eye view of the corridor. The girl sat down in front of the camera, and grinned.
"Now I can see you," she said. Then she frowned. "If you send me a picture."
"Bring a camera over here," Bach ordered.
While it was being set up, Hoeffer shouldered her out of the way and sat in her chair.
"There you are," the girl said. And again, she frowned. "That's funny. I was sure you were a girl. Did somebody cut your balls off?"
Now it was Hoeffer's turn to be speechless. There were a few badly suppressed giggles; Bach quickly silenced them with her most ferocious glare, while giving thanks no one would ever know how close she had come to bursting into laughter.
"Never mind that," Hoeffer said. "My name is Hoeffer. Would you go get your parents? We need to talk to them."
"No," said the girl. "And no."
"What's that?"
"No, I won't get them," the girl clarified, "and no, you don't need to talk to them."
Hoeffer had little experience dealing with children.
"Now, please be reasonable," he began, in a wheedling tone. "We're trying to help you, after all. We have to talk to your parents, to find out more about your situation. After that, we're going to help get you out of there."