"I can believe he needs us to get the cloak that will let him control this Spelljammer," Vorr said in a low voice, "but that he needs us afterward to count his riches-I doubt that very much. All the tales I've ever heard about the Spelljammer were terror stories for infants. Every soldier and sailor in wild-space has heard them. They're all skawer crap. But if a tenth of what's said about the ship is true, and if Skarkesh were to get his bony little hands on it, he wouldn't need us. If he could rule the universe with that one ship, we'd be only flies to him. Everyone swats flies when they get in the way."
"Mmm-hmm," mumbled the admiral. He rubbed his wrinkled chin with thin fingers. "Certainly. Unless…" He left the thought unfinished.
The two commanders looked at each other in silence.
"I don't believe it would be the first time for you, would it?" said the admiral at last.
"I'd love the chance," said the general, "but I couldn't do a thing with the cloak. You know that."
"I'll need someone like that," said the admiral. "Someone I could trust to handle things. If a spell-casting lich can use the cloak, then perhaps a spell-casting scro admiral can, too." He raised both his hands, fingers apart. He didn't smile. "We'll need all the information we can get on this Spelljammer, and I don't mean baby tales. If we can use it against the elves, we might just win the war by ourselves."
Vorr's interest was rising by the second. He was starting to imagine leading his marines into action again. It would be good to fight after so long a peace. "We'd still have to follow his lead for a while," he said.
"That's another thing," said Halker. "He claims he can show us the way to the cloak, though I'm damned if I know how he could. Does he have a crystal ball, a seeing pool, a spell, or a helpful godling? I want to know how he knows. Usso could help us there, and maybe he could get a little more intelligence on the pyramid ship, too.
"One more thing. Skarkesh wants us to fly to the Rock of Bral, which, the last time I heard, has its own little navy. We could crush it, but we'd be wasting our strength on humans, not the Imperial Fleet. I'd like to avoid that unless absolutely necessary, no matter what the lich wants. Maybe a marine raid, in and out, something like that. You'd know what to do. Then we'd have the cloak."
Vorr nodded again, looking at the door as if he were looking through it. His face was set in stone, broad teeth showing between his drawn lips.
"Later," said Halker. "First, the cloak. Then…" He tilted his head toward the door.
Vorr considered that and smiled, showing all of his teeth. It was the first time the admiral had seen him smile since the landings on Spiral, when a zwarth had attacked the general's command post. "Don't want to forget the elves," Vorr said.
"I haven't," said the admiral.
"Then we're agreed to help him?"
"Mmm-hmm. But first have Usso check him out, just to make sure he's not pulling us along for something else. If his story is dear, then let's get on with it."
"Agreed." The general reached for the doorknob-and stopped, deep in thought.
"What's on your mind, General?"
Vorr shook his head briefly. "I was just wondering what route the lich took into the building."
Halker raised an eyebrow. "He and his bodyguards walked in. They came up through the goblins' quarter of the camp. The 'hulks wore those eye shrouds, and none of them gave us any trouble. Why?"
"Just curious, sir," he said. That tears it, he thought. If goblins wouldn't run from a lich, something was wrong. The truth was suddenly undeniable.
Skarkesh was not a real lich.
The general grunted, then opened the door. Together, they went out to greet their guest.
*****
When General Vorr got back to his office late that night, he found his charcoaled chair replaced by a less-comfortable one. Fortunately, he'd been told that scro carpenters were at work on a replacement, though it would take a few days. A single light globe illuminated his command room. It looked a lot tidier now, but it still smelled of smoke and death. The breezes that blew through the broken windows would clear even that out in time. It being long after hours, the general wore only a military kilt and shoulder straps for small weapons. With the doors firmly closed and the guards properly warned for privacy, Vorr sat in his chair and waited for Usso's report.
"You called?" came the invisible feminine voice. "I'm not in the mood," Vorr said bluntly. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his desk. "Just get it out."
He heard Usso snort. "Short of temper, are we? You wanted to know about the lich, or whatever it is? Well, it isn't a lich, I can tell that. You nailed that right. It lacks all the basic lich parts. A lich is a lot more than a bare skeleton in a robe. I couldn't break its disguise without it knowing, but it does show up as undead, as an organized evil being-which liches aren't particularly-and as thick with magic, especially illusion. It also has no personal history, so it isn't who it says it is. I'd guess it was another undead creature that for some reason wants to look like a lich. It's not lying about the cloak, anyway. It wants it so badly it could just about fall apart."
Vorr thought it over. He could end the charade by touching the lich, but he felt like playing along for now. "Can we trust it not to kill us if it gets the cloak?"
"Kobas," said the silken voice, "if you had your big hands ready to grab the universe by the neck, would you think anyone could trust you?"
Vorr grunted. "Recommendations?"
"Leave the ground troops here, the ores and goblins, but get the fleet up for a spin. Hit the Rock of Bral if the human's still there. When you grab the cloak, break some bones- Skarkesh's. And when you do get it, toss the cloak to me, not to that senile orc-dog you take orders from."
Vorr looked up sharply. "You are out of line."
There was faint laughter in the air. "Use that tone with me again, Kobas, and you can sleep by yourself."
Vorr felt his face darken. "If you play games with me," he said evenly, "I'll see that you go hungry for a month. You know I can do it. You know what that feels like. You know you can't escape me."
In the silence that followed, Vorr heard a presence stir behind him. A small, soft hand appeared on his left shoulder, sliding over his rough gray skin.
"You were joking with me, weren't you, Kobas?" said the sweet voice, a trace of anxiety behind it. "You know I hate to joke about that. I don't like to go hungry."
Vorr reached up, his broad hand swallowing hers whole. He slowly turned in his seat and looked into the long-lashed almond eyes of a human woman with long black hair. Her yellow-brown skin was paler than when he had last seen her; she must be quite hungry already. It had been three days since she'd fed last, on an elf prisoner who'd lasted only a day.
Vorr knew all that lay behind those eyes. If he gave Usso the cloak, she would be only marginally more trustworthy than the false lich. He'd have to watch her closely from now on and warn the war priests and the admiral if she showed signs of treachery; she'd be dangerous right up to the end. It was a good thing Usso couldn't read his mind the way she could everyone else's.
"Mad at me?" asked the woman. She ran her hands over the sides of his face. "Will you feed me soon?"
She'd love to have the Spelljammer, Vorr knew. She could pick her meals from any populated world she chose. She was almost as bad as a vampire. Vorr remembered seeing Usso for the first time, a prisoner from an Oriental human-built dragonship. She'd looked human enough; in fact, she'd looked like an old male wizard. The old man's skills and charisma had impressed his captors, and soon he was adopted into the Tarantula Fleet. Only the general knew the truth about her. All he'd had to do was to touch the old man, and the shapeshifted form had melted away. Vorr had kept Usso's secret, but he had named a price for it.