The messenger cleared his throat, and continued, “It was etched into a plate from a spaceship’s outer hull. The complete text read, ‘You have one hour to contact me and explain the delay.’ It came through the warp…” He glanced at his watch. “…twenty-three minutes ago.”
“Good God,” Sheffield said, struggling to his feet.
His legs didn’t want to support him; he leaned heavily on the table.
They had to keep Brown talking.
“Send a messenger through immediately,” he said. “Before the hour is up. The messenger is to say that an explanation will be along within another hour. Use a telepath to get that to the warp crew, if it’s fastest-do whatever it takes. Go! Get going!”
The messenger saluted, and turned away.
“Run!” Sheffield shouted after him. “Run, damn you!”
The messenger ran.
* * * *
Pel wished he had a watch.
Electronics didn’t work in Faerie, though, so his old digital watch would have been useless even if he still had it. Spring-driven watches probably worked well enough, but they didn’t appear to have been invented here-at any rate, Pel hadn’t seen any.
He hadn’t bothered to make a sundial, either.
An hourglass would be in keeping with the local technology, but he didn’t have one, and he had no idea how he could calibrate the thing if he created one.
It made it hard to tell how much of the hour had passed. It felt as if it had been an hour or more since he had sent that chunk of steel through the warp, but he couldn’t really tell for sure.
Just then he felt the kinking of the matrix as something came through the warp. He looked up, blinking against the sun, and tried to focus on the top of the ladder.
Leaves were in the way, but that was easily fixed; a brief flare in the matrix and nothing blocked his view, not even the drifting wisp of smoke that was all that remained of the branches that had obtruded.
The space suited figure was moving slowly and carefully down the ladder, and Pel didn’t want to wait; he reached a magical something up and snatched the person off the ladder, swept him spiraling down through the treetops and deposited him with a bump on Pel’s own verandah, in the very midst of the glare of the matrix.
* * * *
“Maybe you should just give him the damn bodies,” Markham suggested.
Albright turned, shocked. “Give up our only bargaining chip?”
Markham shrugged.
“Why the hell not?” he asked.
But he knew he was outvoted.
* * * *
Pel kept the first messenger on the verandah while they waited for the second.
The man was terrified. At first Pel didn’t much care; he let the fellow sit there in his space suit with the helmet off, trembling, looking around at the trees, at the twenty-foot drop to the ground, at the shifting polychrome of the matrix.
But it was probably going to be an hour before the next guy appeared, and it wasn’t the poor messenger’s fault he’d been sent. This wasn’t anyone Pel had seen before, not Curran or any of the soldiers.
“You been here before?” Pel asked at last.
“No,” the messenger said, shaking his head violently. “I haven’t even been in a suit since basic training.”
“Why’d they send you, then?”
“I was handy. I’m just a base messenger. Secretary Sheffield was in private, no telepath, so they sent me to give him your message, and he sent me back, and they suited me up and put me through. All the regulars, Lieutenant Warner and Lieutenant James and Lieutenant Butler, were in conference somewhere.”
“What about Best, or Wilkins?”
The messenger looked up into the glare, then blinked quickly and turned away. “Who?” he asked.
“Never mind.” Pel considered telling the poor bastard to suit up and go home, but just then, as he glanced thoughtfully up the ladder, he saw something glitter in the sun.
The second messenger was arriving.
Again, he reached up and plucked the suited figure off the ladder, and swept it down to the verandah.
As he lowered the newcomer to the wooden beams, Pel smiled.
It was Curran, and his absurd hat was squeezed into the helmet of his space suit, looking rather like an unborn chick inside its egg in one of those grade-school science books. Pel was tempted to shatter or dissolve the helmet to free the poor thing, but he resisted-that would have meant stranding the man here until a replacement could be sent.
Or made; Pel supposed he could make one almost as easily as he could shatter one.
Instead, he waited while Curran undogged the thing and lifted it off.
He then doffed his hat, and while still wearing his space suit he bowed dramatically, surreptitiously shaking the feathers back into shape as he did; Pel watched with amusement.
For one thing, Curran had misjudged Pel’s position within the glowing haze of the matrix, and was bowing elegantly to a tree-branch.
“All right, Curran,” Pel said, “what’s the story? Why aren’t the bodies here? I had my people turn themselves in; what’s the delay?”
“Your pardon, my lord,” Curran said. “We just need some surety, some guarantee, that in fact all your agents have surrendered.”
“Why? Do you have any evidence that some are missing?”
“No, my lord; we just need proof that you’ve held nothing back. We were, we confess, rather shaken by how high some of them had penetrated in the Imperial government, and we need to know that there are no more.”
“There are no more. I give you my word on it,” Pel said. “I ordered all of them to surrender.” He hesitated. “I suppose it’s possible a couple didn’t get the word, but if so, they’re people I’ve lost contact with myself, so they’re harmless.” He waved the possibility aside. “In any case, I’ve lived up to my side of the bargain-I’ve turned the lot of them over. Now it’s the Empire’s turn to deliver.”
“The bodies of your wife and child, you mean.”
“Right. I want them. Now.”
“My lord, if you could give us some proof that no spies remain…”
“How the hell am I supposed to prove it?” Pel shouted. “I gave you my word I ordered them all to surrender; what the hell else can I do?”
“I’m afraid I don’t know what would satisfy my superiors, my lord; perhaps they don’t know themselves.”
“Well, you better go back and bloody well find out!” Pel shouted, lifting Curran into the air. “Or better yet, tell them to go fuck themselves-if those bodies aren’t here in…in two hours, I’ll make the Empire regret it!” He tried to force himself to calm down, and partially managed it. “Look, Curran,” he said, “all I’m asking is this one simple thing-two corpses that I know you people already have, stored away in a freezer somewhere on Base One. All you have to do is haul ’em through the space warp and lower them down on a rope-what’s the big deal? You don’t care about them! And I don’t care about your stupid Galactic Empire-I just want my wife and daughter back. You people have set me conditions, you’ve put me off, you’ve lied and procrastinated, and I’ve done nothing but go along with it, I’ve acted in good faith, I’ve had dozens of my servants give themselves up, and God only knows what you’re doing with them all. And what have I got to show for it?” His temper snapped again. “Nothing!” he shouted. “That’s what I’ve got to show for it! Well, to hell with you and your damn empire, Mr. Curran-I want those bodies now, within two hours, or the Empire’s going to be very sorry! You go back and you tell them that!”
Curran might have been trying to say something, but whatever it was, Pel didn’t wait to hear it; he sent Curran soaring upward on an arc of raw magical energy, toward and through the space warp.
Curran was still trying to dog down his helmet seals when he vanished.
* * * *
“It’s an empty threat,” Albright said. “It has to be. What can he possibly do to us? After all, this psionic super-science of his, his so-called ‘magic,’ can’t operate in normal space, can it?”