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They actually run up these cliffs, he mused. Why?

Here, on the bare overlook above the Preserve, he reviewed the latest messages regarding the HoloVision foil and the curious rebellion of the largest stand of kelp in the region.

“So, Marta, do you really believe that they’ve turned back?” he asked.

His communications officer, a little plump for her regulation blue jumpsuit, managed a quick chew at her lip before responding. Flattery had bedded her once and recalled that her touch was far more satisfying than her looks. She’d been a slender young thing then—four, maybe five years ago. She had started as a bodyguard on his nightside detail, but showed a facility with electronics that impressed his engineers. When she requested a transfer, he granted it. The move headed off rumors and the inevitable discomfort of extracting himself from a sticky personal situation.

“I … I don’t know,” she said. “The device that I placed personally on their foil is working perfectly, and its course is consistent with a return to this—”

“Bah!” Flattery blurted. “They’re not stupid. I insisted that you place the device on or inside her person and you took it upon yourself to place it elsewhere. A Current Control outpost has already confirmed the device to be aboard a crippled sub train dragging a few thousand kilos of dead fish.”

Flattery enjoyed the stunned look that flattened her face. She looked small and pale now.

“I was afraid,” she said. “I was afraid to touch her.”

Marta hung her head as though expecting a blade. The merciless suns here on the bluff widened the circles of sweat forming under her armpits. It was that heavy, sticky time on the coast just before the rain squalls hit. He didn’t have to sniff to smell the rain.

Flattery remembered that time with her on a hot afternoon like this, and their skins poured sweat. Tiny black hairs from his chest had stuck to her small white breasts and she laughed as she picked them off. She hadn’t been so afraid of him then, just a little bit in awe, which made things easier.

“Dammit!” he muttered to himself. Bitten by the fiction again.

He drew himself up to his full height, nearly two heads taller than Marta.

“Didn’t I assure you that it was safe?”

This he delivered in his most consoling voice.

She nodded, but still did not lift her head.

Flattery was very pleased with himself. If this woman who knew him so well was afraid of Crista, of what her touch might do, then these strangers must be terrified. Thanks to his foresight in the beginning and her daily “medications,” Crista should be withdrawing violently by now, exhibiting the very symptoms attributed to her touch. Perhaps by now she’d be catatonic—something else he’d engineered to see that she was brought back to him.

The neurotoxin would be oozing from her every pore by now, and the fiction he had laid down so carefully for so long would become true. Everyone, particularly the enemy, would see it with their own eyes. Only he, the Director, could save her. Those Shadows would soon find themselves in the presence of a monster that they could not afford to keep.

The wonders of chemistry, he thought, and smiled. Aloud, he reassured Marta.

“I understand your fear,” he said. “The important thing is that we were not fooled by their amateurish attempt at deception. What do you have to report on damage here?”

Both of them flinched at the simultaneous crackle of two lasguns, and Flattery turned to see that his guards had cooked a pair of hooded dashers closing from the direction of the high reaches.

“I wonder …”

He didn’t finish the rest aloud. What he wondered was whether or not the Zavatans were training dashers.

“I want studies on dasher sightings coordinated with known Zavatan positions,” he said.

Marta nodded and unholstered the electronic link at her side. The movement drew a subtle shift in Aumock’s position. Marta didn’t notice that his lasgun muzzle had focused on her head before the link cleared daylight. She clicked out her coded entry in her usual unhurried manner.

Flattery knew something of the Zavatans and their history, but not nearly as much as he’d like. They were patient, organized, and they scavenged everything. If rumor was correct, they grew illicit crops in the upcoast regions and distributed them among refugees. Flattery resented this because it seriously weakened his bargaining position with the masses. He did not have the manpower to police thousands of square kilometers of rugged countryside and complete Project Voidship at the same time. Project Voidship was infinitely more important.

He saluted approval as one of the men vaulted over the wall to fetch the dasher skins. That much less for those Zavatans, he thought.

He made a mental note to see what the lab would have to say about where the dashers had been, with whom, what they were eating, when and why.

“And your report on the fighting?” he asked. “Compound perimeter is secure,” she said.

Marta pressed the spot behind her right ear that activated the receive mode of her messenger implant.

“I’m getting a lot of interference here, don’t know the cause. Minimal damage to the compound—the expected rubble but mostly cosmetic, as usual. Rocks and sticks are no match for lasguns. Prisoners are being held in the courtyard.” She paused as more information fed into her messenger.

“Reports on the power station, the ferry terminal and the grid situation,” he ordered.

Marta fed something into her messenger, then her expression changed. The facade of the impartial reporter wrinkled into concern at her brow, and she leaned forward as information vibrated her mastoid bone, washed through the fluids and hairs of her inner ear to her brain.

“There is a massive force congregating at the power station,” she said. “The squad of security that attacked our detachment at the site has dug in and persisted. The refugee camp is less than a kilometer away. People from the camp are backing up the rebel squad, just out of lasgun range of our defense.”

“Operation H,” Flattery barked. “If they keep coming, have air support shift to the camp.” Marta paled further. She lowered her voice so that the guards wouldn’t hear.

“Operation H, sir … they’d see it from the camp. If you jelly the attackers, witnesses will know it wasn’t a hylighter.”

“Use an LTA,” he said. “We have a few balloons in the hangar that look like hylighters. Get them into the air. We’ll worry about witnesses later. I want that squad burned, I want anyone backing them up burned. Is that understood?”

Marta nodded, and her fingers flicked the orders across her instrument. “The ferries?”

“Operational, sir. The current shift reported on time. Casualties high, but replacements are already on-site receiving training. The OMC launch lit off and docked at Orbiter station, no update. Current Control terminated their signal to the kelp in sector eight, there is no grid but no aggressive activity.”

“Terminated?”

Flattery regretted the lie to MacIntosh. He was sure that the kelp would yield, given the full electrical prod long enough. He had never thought that MacIntosh would terminate the signal.

Idiot! What could he be thinking, giving the kelp its head. Doesn’t he know how much we need those kelpways open?

He inhaled one long, slow breath, half in the left nostril, half in the right. He let it out just as slowly.

“Is it working?” he asked.

“A few merchant vessels lost,” she said. “Most have surfaced, making repairs. They will not fare well in the storm.”

“Order Dr. MacIntosh to reestablish the kelpways, or I will do it my way from here. He has one hour.”

“Yes, sir.”

Flattery’s mood blackened. Two small explosions and a flash came from the center of Kalaloch. He signaled one of his guards.

“Have security get what they can from the leaders of this rabble. I don’t expect much. Then have the rest of them staked in the open.” He surveyed the cliffside behind him that led to

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