When Rachner Thract heard that Smith was back in the building, he hightailed it down to the joint command post. That's where he should have been during the night,except I'll be damned if I let my crypto get exposedto the domestic branch and the local police. The separate operation had worked, thank goodness. He had hard information for the chief.
He ran into Hrunkner Unnerby going the other way. The old sergeant had lost his usual martinet bearing. He walked unsteadily down the hallway, and there was a long, milky welt across the right side of his head.
He waved at the sergeant. "You okay?" But Unnerby walked on past him, ignoring Rachner as a beheaded osprech might ignore a farmer. He almost turned to follow the cobber, then remembered his own urgency and continued into the joint command post.
The place was silent as a deepness...or a graveyard. Clerks and analysts sat motionless. As Rachner walked across the room toward General Smith, the rattle of work resumed, sounding strangely self-conscious.
Smith was paging through one of the operation logs, just a little too fast to be getting much out of it. She waved him to the perch beside her. "Underville sees evidence of local involvement, but we still don't have anything solid." Her tone was casual, belying or ignoring the astounded silence of a moment before. "Have you got anything new? Any reaction from our Kindred ‘friends'?"
"Lots of reaction, Chief. Even the superficial stuff is intriguing. About an hour after the kidnap story broke, the Kindred turned up the volume on their propaganda—especially the stuff aimed at the poorer nation-states. The spew is ‘murder after Dark' fearmongering, but more intense than usual. They're saying that the kidnapping is the desperate act of decent people, people who realize that non-trad elements have taken over the Accord... ."
Everything was getting quiet again. Victory Smith spoke, a little sharply. "Yes, I know what they say. This is how I'd expect them to react to the kidnappings."
Maybe he should have begun with the big news. "Yes, ma'am, though they did respond a bit too quickly. Our usual sources hadn't heard about this beforehand, but now—well, it's beginning to look like the kidnappings are just a symptom that the Extreme Measures faction has achieved decisive control within the Kindred. In fact, at least five of the Deepest were executed yesterday, ‘moderates' like Klingtram and Sangst, and—alas—incompetents like Droobi. What's left is clever and even more risk-attracted than before—"
Smith leaned back, startled. "I—see."
"We haven't known for more than half an hour, ma'am. I've got all the area analysts on it. We see no related military developments."
For the first time, he seemed to have her full attention. "That makes sense. We're years away from the point where a war would benefit them."
"Right, Chief. Not war, not now. The Kindred grand strategy must still be to wear down the developed world as far as possible before the Dark, and then fight whoever is still awake....Ma'am, we also have less certain information." Rumors, except that one of his deep-cover agents had died to get them out. "It looks like Pedure is now the Kindred's head of external ops. You remember Pedure. We thought she was a low-level operator. Apparently she is smarter and more bloody-handed than we guessed. She's probably responsible for this coup. She may be first among the new Deepest. In any case, she's convinced them that you and, more particularly, Sherkaner Underhill are the key to the Accord's strategic successes. Assassinating you would be very difficult, and you've protected your husband almost as well. Kidnapping your children opens a—"
The General's hands tapped a staccato on the situation table. "Keep talking, Major."
Pretend we're talking about somebody else's cobblies."Chief, Sherkaner Underhill has talked often enough about his feelings on the radio, how much he values each child. What I'm getting now"—from the agent who had blown cover to get the word out—"is that Pedure sees almost no downside to grabbing your children, and any number of advantages. At best, she hoped to get all of your children out of the Accord, and then quietly play with you and your husband over a period of—years, perhaps. She figures that you could not continue in your present job with that sort of side conflict."
Smith began, "If they were killed one by one, pieces of them sent back to us..." Her voice faded. "You're right about Pedure. She would understand how things work with Sherkaner and me. Okay, I want you and Belga to—"
One of the desk phones chattered, an in-building direct line. Victory Smith flicked a pair of long arms across the table and grabbed the handset. "Smith."
She listened for a moment, then whistled softly. "Theywhat ? But... Okay, Sherkaner, I believe you. Yes, Jaybert was right to pass it on to Underville."
She rang off, and said to Thract, "Sherkaner's found the key. He's deciphered last night's radio intercepts. It looks like the cobblies are being held in the Plaza Spar, downtown."
Now the phone by Thract went off. He stabbed the Public On hole, and said, "Thract here."
Belga Underville's voice sounded faint and off-mike: "They have? Well, shut them up!" Then louder: "Listen, Thract? I've got my hands full down here. Now I get a call from your techie-freaks saying the victims are being held on the top floor of the Plaza Spar. Are you cobbers for real?"
Thract: "They're not my techs. It's important intelligence, Colonel, wherever it came from."
"Damn, I already had a real lead. The city police spotted a silk banner snagged on the Bank of Princeton tower." That was about half a mile from the Plaza Spar. "It was the jacket fabric that Downing described to us."
Smith leaned close to the mike, and said, "Belga, was there anything attached? A note?"
There was an instant's hesitation, and Thract could imagine Belga Underville getting her temper under control. Belga didn't mind complaining to her fellows about all the "bloody stupid technology," but not with Smith on the line.
"No, Chief. It was pretty well shredded. Look. The techs could be right about the Plaza Spar, but that's a busy place. I'll send a team to the lower floors, pretending to be customers. But—"
"Good. No alarms; get in close."
"Chief, I think the tower where we found the banner is a better bet. It's mostly vacant, and—"
"Fine. Go after both."
"Yes, ma'am. The problem is the city police. They went off on their own, sirens, everything."
Last night, Victory Smith had lectured Thract on the power of local police. But that power was economic, and political. Just now she said, "They have? Well, shut them up! I'll take responsibility."
She waved to Thract. "We're going downtown."
THIRTY-ONE
Shynkrette paced about her "command post." Talk about luck. This mission had been designed as a hundred-day lurk-and-pounce. Instead, they'd bagged their targets less than ten days after insertion. The whole op had been an incredible combination of happenstance and screwup. So what else was new? Promotions came from pulling success out of real-world situations, and Shynkrette had survived worse than this. Barker and Fremm getting squashed had been bad luck and inattention. Maybe the worst mistake had been leaving the witnesses—at least it was the worst mistake that could be laid on her own back. On the other hand they had six children, at least four of them the targets. The getaway from the museum had been smooth, but the airport pickup fell through. The Accord's local security was just a little too quick—maybe again because of those surviving witnesses.
This office space ringed the Plaza Spar, twenty-five stories up. It gave an excellent view of city activity, except directly below. In one sense, they were completely trapped here—who had ever hidden by sticking themselves up in the sky? In another sense—Shynkrette paused behind her team sergeant. "What does Trivelle say, Denni?"