"Then why build cities?" Jonny said. "They like being decentralized-why not just stick with villages?"
"Because there are social and economic advantages to a certain amount of population concentration," Fairleigh spoke up. "Masking any trace of their underground industry would be a good reason all by itself."
"And before you bring up the Tactan spookies," Roi said, "your correlation between those and the mojos is tentative at best-and the conclusions you come to about the spookies is ridiculous. I'm sorry, but it is."
"That's a rather blanket assessment for someone who doesn't know a thing about biology," Jonny told him tartly.
"Oh, is it? Well, perhaps we ought to ask our resident biologist, then." Roi turned to Telek. "Lizabet, what do you think?"
Telek favored him with a cool look, which she sent slowly around the table. "I think," she said at last, "that we'd damn well better find out for sure. And that we'd better do it fast."
There was a stunned silence. Jonny stared at Telek, her unexpected support throwing his brain off-line. "You agree the mojos are influencing the Qasamans' actions?" he asked.
"I agree they're more than they seem," she said. "How much more is what we've got to find out."
Stiggur cleared his throat. "Lizabet... I understand that your professional interests here are naturally directed more toward the mojos than the Qasaman technological base. But-"
"Then let me put it another way," Telek interrupted him. "I've known about
Jonny's theory since yesterday-never mind how-and I've used that time to do a couple of new studies on the visual record the team brought back." She looked at
Roi. "Olor, I would say that the Palatinian glow-nose is probably the most popular pet anywhere in the Worlds-you agree? Good. How many people on Palatine own one?"
Roi blinked. "I don't know, off hand. Eighty percent, I'd guess."
"I looked up the numbers," Telek said. "Assuming only one per customer the figure is actually under sixty percent. If you include all other pets the number of owners is still only about eighty-seven percent."
"What's your point?" Stiggur asked.
Telek focused on him. "Thirteen percent of an admittedly pet-crazy people don't own pets. But every single damn Qasaman has a mojo."
Jonny frowned into the thoughtful silence, trying to visualize the scenes he'd seen from the records. It was possible, he decided with some surprise. "No exceptions?" he asked Telek.
"Only three the computer scan came up with, and two don't really count: children under ten or so, and dancers and duelists. The duelists get their birds back after their curse ball game, though, and I suspect the dancers have them waiting backstage, too. At which point we're back to one hundred percent of the adult population with mojos. The floor is open for speculation."
"They're living in a dangerous environment," Vartanson shrugged.
"Not really," Telek shook her head. "The villages ought to be safe enough, with the walls and the scarcity of the krisjaw predators that were mentioned. And with the bololin alarms even Sollas and the other cities aren't all that hazardous any more. The big 'danger' argument strikes me as a convenient but flimsy rationale."
"What about all their fellow humans running around with guns?" Roi snorted.
"Yes, what about that?" Jonny put in. Across the table Hemner muttered something and began fiddling with his display. Jonny waited a second, but he didn't say anything, so Jonny turned to Vartanson. "Howie, do you allow your people to carry their weapons inside the fortified compounds?"
Vartanson shook his head slowly. "The Cobras are armed, of course, but all hand weapons are checked inside the inner doors."
"The Qasamans have grown up with a tradition of carrying their guns, though,"
Fairleigh argued. "You couldn't get them to just give them up overnight."
"Why not?" Telek asked. "They've also got a tradition of not attacking each other, remember."
"Besides which," Hemner added without looking up, "banning in-city weapons has been done successfully in dozens of places in the Dominion."
"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."