“The other targets are fleeing the building,” it said.
“It’s your money. Where do you want us to go and who do you want us to kill next?”
While Karnstadt took a tour of the room, finishing each living Indowy with a blade through the brain, Wheeler held the box, getting indigo blood all over it. AIDs were, of course, incapable of shuddering.
There was a notable pause before the AID answered, “The intriguers in the meeting room are not yet leaving. A number of them are high priority. Go there.”
“Hey, I want you to notice I’m being thorough,” Karnstadt told it. “No claiming later we didn’t do our job. If their medics manage to save any of these midgets, it won’t be because of us.”
“Noted.”
Three buildings over, a very agitated Indowy clan head had closeted himself away in a side office, currently co-occupied by one Cphxtht, here to inspect the progress on a particularly tricky order for an amphibious musical instrument. The Indowy Maeloo was begging.
“O unfortunate but talented craftsman, I fail to see what this internal Darhel response to intriguers, while very bad, has to do with us?” The Tchpth jittered from a complicated dance with the feet to his left, to his right set of feet, and back.
“Revulsion?” Maeloo, having no logic to offer, fell back on deep instinct and base emotion.
Cphxtht considered, dance changing to forward and back, almost a rocking motion. “That argument… is acceptable. Most persuasive clan head, I will carry your plea.”
“Unnecessary.” At the top of the ceiling, a Himmit detached itself from its smooth and seamless blend with the curved geometric design that ringed the top of the office walls, returning to its natural purplish-gray color. “I will carry the message and those who come. You and others who wish to leave Prall will be on the top floor of building—” The creature gave a string of designators, the equivalent of an Indowy street address, and named a local time some five Earth hours hence.
The Maeloo agreed with alacrity, even though he knew that only perhaps twenty-five percent of the most critical Bane Sidhe personnel would be able to make the rendezvous, and even then the survivors would be crammed together at a density that would be uncomfortable even for his race.
The Himmit was not indulging in charity. In exchange for the transport, it would want to hear the story of every refugee. In detail.
Far more important than the transport itself, the Himmit would need to know where to take its passengers, and would wish to know if similar events were transpiring on other Galactic worlds. It would, therefore, take the rare step of using advanced communication to carry another race’s message. In return, the Indowy Maeloo and any other clan head aboard would affect not to notice that the information traveled so much faster than it ought.
The small cabin was empty except for himself and Himmit Harlas, their rescuer and host. Accomplishing this feat had required cramming the Indowy outside even more tightly together, but it was only for a few minutes. The resulting discomfort didn’t matter to the refugees. They were Bane Sidhe, they were terrified, and in any case, Indowy did not question the orders of a clan head.
The walls of the cabin were the same purplish-gray as a Himmit in its natural state. Maeloo supposed it was the other entity’s idea of restful. He’d known Himmit, of course, but this was the first time in his long years he’d had occasion to leave Prall, and therefore his first time encountering a Himmit on its own ground.
“Are you ready for your call?” the Himmit asked.
“Yes. Have you initiated the connection?”
“It should be coming in momentarily.”
The image of a sword sticking out of a stone appeared in the air.
“Himmit Harlas. What brings you to contact me?” the sword sang.
“The call is on my behalf, Master,” Maeloo began. “There has been a catastrophe on Prall. The plan is in shambles.”
“Explain.”
The sword apparently wanted the story in the same level of detail as Himmit Harlas would have expected later. For Maeloo, this was something of a relief, as it meant that he only had to relate the horror once.
“Your people believed it was a good idea to take sides between business groups?” The disbelief came through despite the harmonics.
“While it was not my choice, as my own clan has no people involved with loading and unloading ships, my understanding is that nobody, not even the wisest on Prall, foresaw the actual collapse of a Darhel clan. Some clans did a few individual favors that should not have had more than a marginal impact on the fortunes of the Epetar Group. Business is not my people’s strength. Are we to blame for the bad decisions of Darhel? We did not orchestrate this, nor did we take a side. What, for us, do the fortunes of Gistar and Epetar matter? My information on those events is incomplete, for obvious reasons.” Maeloo shuddered.
“True. Being used to a group’s benefit or detriment is not the same thing as choosing support or opposition. I will help you. As you can see, your people are known, not secret, as are your hiding places and methods. Go to Earth. While it is, of course, obvious that the Bane Sidhe are quite active among the humans, their primary location is, as yet, uncompromised. I can protect you there until I sort out this mess and can formulate some plan for rebuilding. This is, indeed, catastrophic. Nearly a thousand years of work, multiple generations.” The sword hummed for a moment unhappily. “Earth. Go to Earth. And do not annoy me with your petty differences with the humans. I have helped you. You must hope they are willing to do the same. I take my leave.”
Maeloo faced the now-empty space grimly. “Himmit Harlas? If I may impose on you and one of your fellows once more, I would like to send a message to Adenast.”
“Certainly. This is a very good story. A very good story indeed. Although I am personally sorry for your circumstances, of course.”
Michelle O’Neal sat on a low bench, against the wall of her construction bay, which could have accommodated several modest airplane hangars from Earth and still been uncrowded. One wall of the bay faced the street outside, with great doors through which finished product could be flown out on the Galactic equivalent of an anti-grav forklift. This was, of course, not the top floor of her building. That space was reserved for the really big jobs.
The mentat quashed her very unprofessional case of project envy and looked down at her hands, which rested on her knees. Said knees were laid down extremely slantwise of her feet. Had they not been, they’d have been propped halfway to her chin, as the bench was built for Indowy, not humans. She had chosen the seat in deference to the being beside her. It was in her interests — O’Neal interests — to keep the Indowy Roolnai happy. Or, rather, it had been, as the balance of favors had lately been very much in his direction. Until now.
“Allow me to be certain I understand.” She picked a tiny fleck of lint off her brown mentat robe. “After breaking with humanity and Clan O’Neal so severely that you almost jeopardized my entire slate of contracts you are now coming to me for help.”
Unquestionably she would help them, although she personally disapproved. Intriguers all, it had finally gotten them in trouble on a scale that caused her to blink. Her disapproval made no difference to clan policy. Even as acting clan head, she would not make major policy changes away from what she knew to be her grandfather’s political positions. She didn’t disapprove quite as much as she used to, but she still disapproved. She was, therefore, not entirely displeased that a bit of Grandfather’s likely response of “rubbing it in” was indicated.
“The work goes well.” Roolnai indicated the scaffolding where a chunk of the orbital module had been elevated, ready to be formed and fitted together with its next unwieldy piece as soon as the latter finished final curing in the tank below.