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“Eleven-fifteen,” Geraint told her. “Looks as if Serrin is trying to wake up, too. Let’s get a coffee relay going and talk this all out.”

* * *

Two pots of coffee later, they had all begun to perk up a little. Serrin still felt light-headed and unsteady when he tried to stand, which Geraint warned him was how he would feel most of the day. Francesca was more worried about Geraint’s leg.

“Well, tomorrow I think I may have to ask you to drive me to a friendly contact of mine in Oxford. Get this dealt with.” The wound was clean, bandaged, but even after a local shot, his whole leg throbbed with pain and stiffness.

Rani spoke up, “Why were you in my patch last night? You’re strangers, but you must have known it wasn’t safe. The Harry Hooks or the other gangs, they'd have ripped you apart if they’d been around. You were lucky.” Her directness caught the others off guard. They looked at each other for a second or two. How much could they trust her?

“Ah, well, Rani.” Geraint began uncertainly. We were… we were trying to prevent a murder.”

“Why should you want to do that? They happen every day. Was it someone important?” She was very curious.

There was a tong silence. “Rani, please don’t be offended, but we aren’t really sure how much we should tell you. We may be dealing with a string of related murders, and we haven’t yet had a chance to talk about last night among ourselves. There may be another murder soon and we’ll have to figure out what we can do. We’re still not sure who we can talk to…” Geraint’s voice tapered off into an attempted apology for not trusting her enough to tell her more, but she was unabashed.

“Can I tell you about me? Trusting me might be easier if you know what I was doing.”

“Sure. Fire away,” Serrin said, If nothing else, it would give them time to think while she spoke.

Rani began by explaining the need to revenge the deaths in her family, the bungled sucker run in which several had been killed, and why her brother wasn’t helping much. She didn’t give any details, and was rather awkwardly beginning to explain her Undercity exploits.

“This bungled run,” Serrin broke in. “When was it?” Something she’d said had his mind fretting.

In her urgency to explain, to prove herself trustworthy, Rani had forgotten all about the elf. She smiled in delight as she played her trump card. You know already. After all, you were there too.”

What?”

“I saw you. Imran and I were running from troopers and a huge fire thing-”

“Fire elemental, yes.” Serrin looked confused.

“Fire thing, it was coming after us. I saw you, and then it disappeared. We managed to get to our car and get away. The others weren’t so lucky.”

The girl was sitting forward on the edge of the armchair. Her gaze was fixed directly on the elf and her shoulders were hunched forward, the power of her ork muscles very apparent.

Of course. Geraint realized. Strength; here she is. He addressed himself to the mage.

“Serrin, do you remember that I said someone else was going to he a part of this?”

The elf struggled to remember. So much had happened to him since Geraint had foretold the struggle to come. But then, as if a storm-gray cloud had lifted from him, he perked up, and smiled. Yes, he remembered.

Rani, though, looked confused, not understanding Geraint’s inference.

“Rani, I don’t know how much of what I’m going to tell you now will make sense. We’re still trying to sort it all ourselves. But it seems to me an amazing coincidence that Serrin’s magic saved your skin last week and then you rescued us last night. I suppose in some sense that makes us quits.”

She smiled sadly. That was what Smeng had said, and she had lost him. She didn’t want to lose the excitement of being with these people, such different people in this different world.

“But I still feel we owe you an explanation,” Geraint went on, as far as we’ve actually got one. You’ve told us enough about yourself. Now it’s our turn.”

* * *

As the conversation unfolded, they began to realize that two different strands of events had been affecting their lives.

On the one hand, there were the murders, the living Ripper in the here and now of London, 2054. Geraint thought this affected only the three of them, so he kept his explanations short, deliberately eliminating any details of the brutal, gory scenes he and Francesca had witnessed. When he got to the fourth name, though, Rani’s expression changed. Before, she’d been simply attentive. At the mention of Catherine Eddowes, she grew upset and then angry.

“I knew her, a little. She used to come into Beigel’s Bake in the mornings, always had coffee and two cheese bagels. When I was little my dad used to tell me not to go near her because she was a bad woman. Because of what he said I was afraid of her, but when I got old enough to go down to the markets with my brother sometimes she used to buy me coffee and a treat. She didn’t change after I, urn, after I changed, you know? She was kind to me. Plenty of people weren’t.” Rani shifted uncomfortably in her chair, reliving some painful memories of late childhood.

“I saw her only a few weeks ago. She’d been knocked about, had a bad black eye and a bruise covering half her forearm. She looked miserable, and for the first time I could see she was getting old. Now some bastard’s cut her up.” She held her head in her hands for a few moments, then sat upright and reasserted her presence and strength. “I want to help find out who’s doing this. I live in the East End. I know the patch and the people. I could help you.”

“You probably can, Rani,” Geraint replied. I hope so. But in the meantime, we still have to figure out what we’re going to do next.”

Then they talked of the other business, less straightforward, difficult to comprehend. In some way, they had all been drawn into set-ups of one kind or another. Serrin couldn’t figure out what had been going on with his employment, Francesca had blundered into something vicious in the Matrix, and Rani had been part of the most obvious set-up job of all. They had chased their tails thinking about this one before, and they still couldn’t work out what, if anything, had been behind each of their misfortunes. But when Rani began talking about the man Pershinkin for the second time, the crucial detail she had omitted first time around gave them something extra.

“So the fat man with the jewel in the tooth and his thin accomplice disappeared into the limo and-”

“What? Say that again.” Serrin couldn’t believe what he had just heard her say. He grabbed the table for support and leaned forward toward her.

Rani was not sure what she was supposed to reiterate. Two of them, the fat one and the thin one, they got-”

“No, no!” he snapped impatiently. “What did you say about the fat guy?’

“Well, urn, he was losing his hair… and he had a jewel in his tooth. Sorry, that’s all I was told.”

“I don’t suppose you got to hear which one?”

“Which what?”

It was becoming a comedy of errors, Serrin shouting, Rani confused, Geraint and Francesca totally bewildered. Finally, though, they heard her say that the fat man had a jewel fixed in a front tooth.

Serrin sat back with an expression as black as thunder. “Frag me with a baseball bat. That’s fragging Smith!”

Geraint looked pained. “Please, Serrin, you’re not in Seattle now, and there are ladies present. Watch your language”

The elf wasn’t bothered about his language. Now he was suspicious as hell. “Smith. Smith and Jones, right. You know, the men who hired me? Smith was a fat guy, balding, chiphead, and he had a small ruby set in his right front tooth. Couldn’t miss the damn thing.”