The whole thing would have to be crushed, and fast. Cobb would have to be killed. His rescuers would have to be killed. And, above all, that bloody damned, snooping, sniveling little spy for the feds would have to be found and made to vanish. And once all that was done he was going to have to find a way to lie very, very low for a while; he’d have to change his whole operation, which would cost him, well, a lot.
He turned and faced his window. He felt like ordering the ducks killed, but he knew he’d regret it later.
Finally finishing a rutting exercise in rutting futility, he disconnected his rutting comlink, which held all the rutting information he’d gathered in eight rutting months.
It was a fair question which bothered him more: the eight months wasted on the investigation; the fact that he was within a couple of weeks of having it sewn up when he was required to blow his cover; the stupid reason for blowing his cover; or the fact that if they didn’t show up to retrieve him soon, he’d probably die on this stupid rock.
It was one thing to know, in the abstract, that field work was risky; it was another thing to know that he was being hunted like an animal and could be snuffed out at any moment. And all because some pissant bureaucrat decided some pissant fugitive was more important than eight months from his life, eight months from the life of his three-man support staff back home, at least a quarter of a million credits, and, above all, the job of seeing to it that this bastard didn’t get away with what he was doing.
Not even taking into account what a successful prosecution might do to the—probably dozens, maybe scores of— bastards doing the same thing on their own little worlds.
Being hunted didn’t frighten him only because he was too busy being pissed off.
Whenever he could concentrate on the big picture, he liked what he was doing: he was making a difference, he was making lives better for people who couldn’t stand up for themselves, he was taking down the bad guys. But it was hard to keep his mind on the big picture when every detail ranged from bungling stupidity to outright evil.
The cure was better than the disease, he told himself.
But just barely.
Zoë said, “What’s the plan, sir?”
“Well, seems the three of us can’t do much against the whole passel they’re throwing at us.”
“True enough, sir.”
“Especially as we’re not keen on giving Jayne a firearm.”
Jayne said, “Can we reconsid—”
“So I figure we need reinforcements.”
“Good call, sir. Got a battalion in mind?”
“Better than that. Major reinforcements.”
“How many?”
“One.”
“Hooray, sir. We’re saved,” said Zoë.
Jayne stared at him. “You’re going to bring the gorram fed in on this.”
Mal cocked his head at the big man. “Damn, Jayne. When did you get higher order cerebral function?”
“I don’t know that math stuff.”
“Sir, you aren’t really—”
“Yes.”
“Do we have any way of reaching him?”
“Sure. We walk back to Yuva and find him.”
“Walk back to… I think it’s a bad idea, sir.”
“Maybe, but we’re doing it. Let’s head to town.”
“I think you ought to reconsider, sir.”
“Zoë, I’m not used to having my orders questioned.”
Zoë looked at him and waited.
“All right,” he said. “I am used to having my orders questioned. But we’re heading back to town.”
“Yes, sir.”
Jayne said, “Why should I go back there, if you won’t even give me a gorram gun?”
Zoë poked him in the back with her carbine.
Mal took his lack of reply for agreement.
They were still in deep woods when the sun set. They kept listening for buzzboats or horses, but they heard only the sounds of whatever wildlife had been imported to make the woods seem natural.
Every once in a while, he thought as he walked, I get tired of sounding confident when I ain’t. It’s almost like lying to them, making it seem like I know what exactly I’m doing, when all I have is an idea that’s just a bit better than any other idea. And it doesn’t help that Zoë knows damned well what I’m doing, and goes along with it anyway; almost makes it worse.
He mentally shook himself. What’s going on with me? Why am I doing this now?
“Damn this whole world,” said Zoë. “I hate being on it, I hate marching on it, I hate—”
Mal looked at her.
“Sorry, sir.”
“No, it’s just I was having those same thoughts.”
It was full dark, so they had to slow down a bit; the light from two of the moons, one of them almost full, was just barely enough to keep them from walking into trees. They stopped from time to time to check the direction, and to listen.
“I think we’re getting close,” said Zoë. Jayne, blessedly, didn’t say anything.
“Once we leave the woods, we have about a quarter of a mile to cross. We go slow and steady, like we belong. Once we hit town, we head to that warehouse, and hope the fed is still there. Keep to the shadows. I doubt they’re looking for us in town, but be careful.”
He felt Zoë nod, and heard Jayne grunt, and they moved forward. The woods ended abruptly, leaving them on rocky, broken hills that reminded him of other parts of this same world. Memories wanted to flood him; he focused on the task at hand.
Gorram this whole world.
Something rattled on the window.
He’d have turned the light out, but it was already off. He waited for a few minutes, then carefully looked out.
There were three figures standing there, out in plain sight, like they were waiting. Even in the dim light, he recognized two of them from their shape.
Well, all right then.
He armed himself, went down the hall, opened the door, and stepped out. He kept himself next to the wall. They were still there, and still silhouetted. Only one was holding a weapon, and that weapon was pointing squarely at the back of the largest of the three.
He stepped away from the wall. “Good evening,” he said.
“So far,” said Captain Reynolds. “Going to invite us in?”
“All right. Come in.”
He stuck his pistol back in his belt and led them inside, down the hall, past the office he’d taken over, and to a second office, which had the advantage of being windowless. He turned on a light, and waited while all of their eyes adjusted; then he focused on the big man.
“You were supposed to meet me in the canteen.”
“Figured,” he said.
Mal said, “Kit, meet Jayne. You already know Zoë.”
Kit nodded. “What brings you to my little sanctuary?”
“We need your help, and you need our help,” said the captain. “Seem like that gives us grounds to do some bargaining.”
Kit studied the captain, wishing he had access to a full psych workup of the man. He didn’t seem like the trickster sort; but a good confidence man never did. So: play it careful, pull out what intel he could, give away the minimum, commit to nothing.
“Let’s start with the part where I need your help,” he said. “I imagine you could explain that if you tried, so I’ll do the listening.”