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CROWN OF FIRE
by Kathy Tyers
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PRELUDE
Absently smoothing a
wrinkle in her snug black pants, genetics technician Terza Shirak
pressed her forehead to her scanner and examined a sixteen-cell
human morula. She could not allow one microscopic
imperfection.
Fortunately,
all the visible chromosome divisions proceeded normally. Cytoplasmic
proteins were also within tolerance. Terza reached around and
carefully returned that culture dish to incubation, then drew the
next tiny zygote from its sloshy growing place.
Recently
graduated from pre-adult training, Terza worked long hours
overseeing these womb banks and embrytubes. Her supervisor, Juddis
Adiyn, served the city's new Eldest as a personal advisor. She hoped
to be introduced to the Eldest soon, for a vital reason. At her
graduation, less than a year ago, they finally told her that Three
Zed colony's new administrator, Modabah Shirak, was her own
gene-father.
Terza had wondered, during training, if she
might be Modabah's offspring. She had his abnormally fair skin,
black hair and eyes, and the sharp chin of her half-brother Micahel.
She was tall, too, just under 180 centimeters. Still, no sub-adult
conceived in this laboratory knew her parents. The parents never
knew her, either, unless she survived training. That objectivity
freed the colony to continue its 240-year experiment in genetic
engineering. As a named adult, Terza hoped to contribute to Three
Zed's strength. To humanity's future.
In such a scheme, there
had to be casualties. Many of these zygotes malformed and died. A
high percentage of sub-adult children were culled in training, and
recently, Micahel destroyed a Federate city.
Terza stared at
the next zygote, then frowned. One chromosome division had stalled,
and a delicate chromosomal fibril, which should've divided, dangled
through an incomplete cell division instead. The embryo would
develop malformed. Absently she inserted a flash probe and vaporized
the culture, then removed its entry from her catalog. This no longer
bothered her.
Next, she turned to her weekly fertilizations.
Fewer than ten percent of zygotes survived to adulthood, culled as
malformed embryos or imperfect-response infants, pronounced
untrainable at the settlements where they were raised, or killed in
training.
As she reached for her touchboard, a barely
perceptible temblor shook the ground. Her ancestors had built the
Golden City inside an extinct, plugged volcano. The world itself had
not quite died.
The tissue-bank list contained her orders
for the day, and the first ovum to be fertilized carried the TWS-1
designation. That was her own code -- this would be her first
fertilization! She sat up straight and flicked black hair out of her
face. The odds said this offspring would perish before adulthood,
but this was an honor. Her supervisor ordered gene crosses according
to hereditary talents and his mysterious ability to predict future
events.
Was the cross with Dru Polar? she wondered. The
colony's late Testing Director had been abnormally strong in Ehretan
talents. Just last night, her hall-mates on Third South had regaled
each other with shivery tales about the trainer who culled so many
of their peers. Polar had been found dead twenty days ago, hideously
killed, beside Terza's masterful grandfather and another City
resident, Cassia Talumah.
Terza grasped her lower lip
between her teeth and glanced across the screen, checking her guess.
Was it Polar?
No. The ordered fertilization's paternal
designation was not Polar's DLP, but the cryptic BDC-5X.
BDC
-- Brennen Daye Caldwell? Terza clenched a hand. She personally
cloned that prisoner's skin cells, several days before he escaped --
but Shirak males made a sport out of thinning his family! According
to zealots among his people, a Caldwell would eventually destroy her
world.
Terza's people had sacrificed one planet, their home
world, to save themselves. Recently, they'd taken a city off the
Sentinels' adopted world. They would neutralize the Caldwells if
necessary, and create more craters, because the timing was urgent.
Soon, they would be able to offer humanity a gift it wanted at any
price: immortality. One world at a time, Terza's people -- the
unbound starbred -- would craft a new human race in a more durable
image.
Fortunately, Terza hadn't been involved in selecting
the first planetary population to be modified.
She refocused
her eyes on her orders. BDC-5X: this would be a female child, with
Caldwell genes, but one who wouldn't carry the allegedly messianic
Carabohd name.
This, at least, made sense. Before Dru
Polar's interrogations and research ruined him, Caldwell had shown
prodigious psionic talent. Maybe her supervisor wanted to create a
pool of Shirak-Caldwell embryonic cells. He could tease apart that
breeding stock to create a quick second generation.
Whatever
he wanted, she must exceed his expectations. She keyed the stasis
unit to deliver appropriate cultures. Within moments, the BDC-5X
dropped into the micro-injector on her examining
cradle.
Because of its dermal origins, the gamete had no
whip-tail. She confirmed with a glance that it carried the requisite
X chromosome, then injected the gamete into the TWS-1 ovum, creating
her own first offspring. Instantly, the smaller cell's nuclear
membrane started to dissolve, releasing its genetic contents.
Flattening her lips, she transferred the new zygote into a dish of
nutrient medium.
Maybe her father hoped to duplicate
Caldwell's abilities in his own gametic descendants, the ones who
might live forever. Or maybe Terza's lab supervisor meant to test
her, to see if she'd obey a distasteful order -- this one -- or else
destroy her own fertilization late in its term. Terza did hate
culling late fetuses, whose features looked almost human. Gene
technology was dangerous work for a woman secretly more sensitive
than most of her fellows.
And this one will carry my
genes. Half of all I am.
Appalled by the tug of that new
sensation, Terza reminded herself that it would also carry the genes
of an enemy. She checked her screen for the next prescribed
fertilization.
That day's final order sent her to her
supervisor's apartment, several levels beneath Three Zed's basaltic
surface. Stocky and small-eyed, Juddis Adiyn looked more like a
dark-flour dumpling than a leader of the unbound starbred. He
slumped in a brocaded wing chair, clasping stout hands in his lap.
Adiyn was old enough -- 152, by the Federate calendar -- to need
ayin treatments to preserve his waning abilities. That was one
reason her telepathically skilled elders normally spoke aloud. "By
now," he said, "you are aware of your primary fertilization. An
outcross with the Carabohd-Caldwell line."
Terza rocked from
one foot to the other. On the near wall, a glasteel case displayed
jeweled offworld trinkets against a frothy lava backdrop. Across the
ceiling, red, blue, and green threads of light snaked and writhed.
Terza found them mildly hypnotic, and she avoided staring at them.
"You're displeased?" Adiyn asked.
Of course,
Terza sent silently. A young underling generally subvocalized,
speaking mind-to-mind on her epsilon carrier wave. I would have
preferred not soiling my father's line with Thyrian genes. But this
seems appropriate, considering my profession in
genetics.
"Have you made any guess? Any
rationale?"
Something to do with Tallis's
announcement, she suggested, taking a shot without a targeting
beam. Yesterday, the Federates' regional capitol had claimed that
the Sentinels had developed a new technology. They threatened to use
this RIA weapon against her people, in revenge for Three Zed's
preemptive strike against the Sentinels' world.
The
Federates had good reason to be afraid. Terza was glad to be
employed in reproduction, so she would miss the coming
horrors.
"You're close," Adiyn said. "It has more to do with
your father's scouting trip to Netaia, and with bringing Caldwell
back to face justice."
Terza raised her head. Her father gave
the fertilization order? She did hope to meet him before the colony
moved elsewhere, after a century on this sterile planet. As for
Caldwell, he and his Lady stood accused of assassinating her
grandfather, the previous Eldest ... and possibly Dru Polar and
Cassia Talumah. No witness to their deaths had survived to testify.
A summons had been sent, but no one expected Caldwell to return
voluntarily.
Ironically, his people shared her genetic
heritage. Because of those psionic abilities, this colony had superb
defenses. It had little else, though. Modabah would leave in a few
weeks to inspect the chosen planetary system. Netaia had rich
assets, estimated at a quarter of the Federacy's. It could be seized
relatively easily, by altering a few nobly born minds and destroying
only one, or maybe two or three of its cities. Its top-heavy
government made it charmingly vulnerable to such a simple approach.
There, Terza's people would launch the next phase of their grand
experiment. She wanted a pivotal position in that program.
"I assume you've heard that General Caldwell and Lady
Firebird will also be traveling to Netaia."
Nudged back to
the here and now, Terza nodded and responded, Some sort of
ceremonial.
"And naturally, your father wants Caldwell
back in custody."
She shrugged. Call it justice, or call it
vengeance. Eshdeth and Polar had been powerful leaders, poised to
destroy the Sentinels' fortress world --
Adiyn raised a
hand, cutting off her thought. "Your father prefers to start any
operation with several options. If the unexpected occurs, he can be
ready."
How true. Down on Third South, her father's love of
options had been the subject of some cautious
derision.
"Among his options for Netaia," said Adiyn, "is to
lure out General Caldwell, preferably in bereavement shock, since he
will be there anyway. Modabah requests your
assistance."
Terza raised one eyebrow. Bereavement left
Sentinels mentally and physically incapacitated, easily seized or
dispatched in the following days, because they bonded with their
mates at the deepest level of consciousness. But --
Lure
him out? she demanded. A man almost legendary for his
ethics? He wouldn't want illicit power or
pleasures.
Adiyn's little eyes focused over Terza's shoulder,
toward the ceiling and those eerie light threads. She'd heard that
he used them to read the future. "Your primary role will be as
messenger, regarding the new Caldwell offspring."
She avoided
scoffing, because Adiyn would sense it. Sir, Caldwell knows we
could make him a hundred offspring. A thousand. If we really want to
trap him, we should offer him a full case of embrytubes --
Adiyn raised a gray eyebrow. "Don't display your
ignorance," he said tightly.
Terza crossed her ankles. She
compressed her lips.
"Sentinels," Adiyn explained, "carry
their own young. Apparently, breeding like animals fulfills some
kind of psychological need in them." He waved one hand in front of
his face. "Caldwell couldn't ignore an embryo that was carried by a
woman, particularly a woman highly placed among his enemies. He
would try to get her into custody."
Carried by a woman?
Custody? "I beg your pardon." Terza spoke aloud this time,
dispersing an outer cloud of epsilon static. Normally, she used it
to shield her emotions.
"No, we wouldn't let you be
kidnapped. We want this offspring for further research and breeding,
to say nothing of your own value to your people."
An
insubstantial iron band tightened around Terza's chest. He still
hadn't explained carried. "Sir, you can't mean --
"
"If you are unwilling, your father will gladly set you
aside and choose another."
The iron band tightened further,
and she struggled for her next breath. In colony parlance, "set
aside" meant the cold-stasis crypts. There was no escape from that
frozen prison, except to a short life as an experimental subject.
Modabah wouldn't hesitate to stase one rebellious gene tech, even if
she was his own offspring, any more than he would hesitate to order
another Federate city destroyed.
Respectfully, sir,
she sent, grasping at the first argument that occurred to her,
and I am not saying I am unwilling ... but if we arrive on
Netaia, and circumstances change, the Eldest might not even decide
to lure Caldwell out that way. He always has half a dozen options.
That would waste ... my effort ... She could barely imagine the
embarrassment, not to mention the discomfort, the blood and pain
--
Adiyn clasped his hands again. "Then call it part of your
education, Terza. Your contribution to our pending expansion."
CHAPTER 1: TO STRIKE BACK
tema
theme
"And then this
is the Codex simulation," said Occupation Governor Danton. "The
Electorate sent it down yesterday, demanding that we
act."
Firebird pushed long auburn hair back from her face as
she leaned forward. Governor Danton's wood-paneled office had two
broad, darkened windows and an antique desk, all chosen to set
Netaia's Federate conquerors on equal footing with a snooty
nobility. She sat in a comfortable brownbuck chair across from the
Governor.
Above the media block on his desk appeared an image
she would've known from any approach vector: Citangelo, the heart of
royal Netaia and its two buffer systems. Between the broad sideways
Y formed by Etlason and Tiggaree Rivers, Sander Hill wore a broad
green ring of noble estates, while south of the Y, the central city
thrust up ancient towers and shining new constructs. The Hall of
Charity stood like a gold-banded cube at the junction of two long
green swathes.
Out of mid-air, a fiery projectile
plummeted.
Danton had just shown them an actual recording of
the Sunton disaster, on Thyrica. Firebird could hardly bear to watch
this simulation, but she didn't blink as the projectile --
representing a trio of piloted fighters, diving from orbit --
plunged into the city's southeast quarter, near the new Federate
military base. It sank through buildings and soil into bedrock.
Around it, the city heaved like water into which a stone had been
thrown. As the crater blasted deep, buildings, greenery, and people
-- everything flammable -- coalesced in fire ... .
"Enough,"
Firebird muttered, turning away. Muirnen Rogonin, Regent Until the
Majority of Her Majesty Queen Iarla, owned the Codex newsnet
service. Naturally, he'd sent this to the Governor's office, as a
greeting to Firebird and Brennen.
Governor Danton stroked
something on his desktop. The windowfilters opened, and Firebird
took a short step backward. She glanced out at a heartbreakingly
familiar view. An ancient arch framed three distant housing stacks
and the central-city towers. Closer at hand, a cluster of tinted
glasteel terminals had risen phoenix-like out of Citangelo
Spaceport's ashes, evidence of its Federate conquerors' rebuilding
program. Webs of gravidic scaffolding surrounded a partly finished
ten-meter projection dish that was probably part of the new
planetary defense system.
Still intact. Still home.
Governor Danton shook his head. "No one actually knows where
they'll strike next?"
Firebird's husband, Field General
Brennen Caldwell, sat in one of Danton's luxurious office chairs,
lacing his fingers, looking just as sober as Danton. A small,
whitening scar marked his left cheek, external evidence of his
recent captivity. Brennen had taken terrible injuries at Three Zed.
In the weeks since they escaped, he'd struggled to convalesce. "I'm
afraid not," he answered. "That is the real reason we've
returned."
"I don't understand," said the Federate
Governor.
Firebird pointedly picked up a kass mug she'd left
on Governor Danton's desk. She forced down a bitter sip, hating the
taste but needing the mild stimulant. With her day cycle shifted
eleven hours, this was all that was keeping her awake. Her gesture
also cued Brenn that she would rather let him answer.
He set
down his own mug. "The Federacy asked us to accept the Assembly's
invitation," he said. "When Firebird was asked to return and be
confirmed as an heiress of House Angelo, we both wanted to
refuse."
Firebird nodded. She wanted that made
plain.
"But we found good reasons to accept," Brennen said.
"Regional command asked us to make the strongest possible statement
that the Federacy supports local governments and their
customs."
Danton nodded. "No surprises so
far."
Brennen pressed one finger to the scar on his
cheekbone, a gesture he'd picked up in recent weeks. "This is the
crux, Lee. No one knows where the Shuhr will attack next, and my
people have no intention of sending an agent back to Three
Zed."
Not after what they did to you, Firebird
reflected. Vengeance belonged to the One, but in retrospect, she was
glad it'd been necessary to kill Dru Polar to escape. He'd tortured
Brennen, then tried to force him to kill her --
"They know
Firebird and I will be here in Citangelo for the next six days,"
Brennen went on. "The Sentinel College has publicized the fact that
I was injured and reduced in Ehretan abilities. We hope to draw out
a Shuhr agent, take a prisoner, and interrogate." He glanced at his
bodyguard, the rather dashing Lieutenant Colonel Uri Harris. "We
need to find out their plans before they can strike again," Brennen
finished.
"That's why you'll be staying in the palace?"
Danton asked. "You'll try to take your prisoner
there?"
Firebird nodded and said, "That's plan one. Besides,
I'm supposed to show that having accepted Federate transnational
citizenship doesn't make me any less a Netaian, or less an Angelo."
She managed a smile, despite her queasy reaction to the Codex image.
"One Shuhr agent might be foolish enough to think we won't be
adequately guarded there."
Brennen, recently reinstated into
Regional command's Special Operations force, had just sent twelve of
his fellow Sentinels to infiltrate palace staff. Sentinel Uri
Harris, his bodyguard, was an access-interrogation specialist, as
Brennen had been before Three Zed. Firebird's own bodyguard was a
weapons instructor at the Sentinel college.
As the Shuhr
continued to step up their raids against military craft, Regional
command could draw only one conclusion. The decades-long standoff
between Brennen's kindred and their renegade relatives was about to
fly apart into open conflict.
Regional command had ordered
Brennen's team to find out where the Shuhr planned their next major
attack, and to prevent it. He carried sealed orders, to be opened if
they could get one Shuhr in custody for
interrogation.
Firebird's confirmation gave Brennen's team
its opportunity. Confirmation was only a formality, and if she did
stay here long enough to go through with it, it would convey no
actual power -- but Netaia had thrived on spectacle for centuries.
In one carefully choreographed alternate scenario, Firebird and
Brennen planned to walk up the aisle of Citangelo's great, cubical
Hall of Charity ... as bait for the trap.
"And the new RIA
technology?" Danton's voice dropped a little farther, and he drummed
his fingers on the desktop. Regional command had announced RIA just
over forty days ago. Half the Federacy was now screaming for the
Sentinels to use it, to attack Three Zed before the Shuhr could
destroy one more city. The other half demanded that all trained
Sentinels be surgically disempowered, rather than let them dominate
the Federacy.
Danton raised one eyebrow and stared at
Brennen. Firebird was willing to bet the RIA announcement disturbed
him.
"I promise you," Brennen said firmly, "Remote Individual
Amplification poses the Federacy no threat. We will only use it
against the Shuhr."
Firebird
emerged from Governor Danton's inner office into a narrow lounge.
Prince Tel Tellai-Angelo sprang up out of a chair. She hurried
forward to greet him.
Tel, widower of Firebird's sister
Phoena, was their only ally among Netaia's noble class. Flamboyant
in a maroon shirt and knickers, he whisked off a feather-brimmed
hat. "Firebird," he murmured. "I just arrived." He turned to
Brennen. "Caldwell, welcome back to Citangelo. Are you all
right?"
Brennen laid a hand on the smaller man's shoulder.
"I'm fine," he said, hastily turning aside.
Firebird sensed
his sudden shortness of breath. Ever since Three Zed, narrow spaces
like this lounge unnerved him. "Shel," he said, "Uri, this is Prince
Tel. He's on the short list."
Uri Harris maintained a
cultured air, even when walking behind Brenn at full attention.
Keeping closer to Firebird, Sentinel Shelevah Mattason was 170
centimeters of feminine power, with pale blue-gray eyes. She rarely
smiled.
Tel raised a black eyebrow. "Short
list?"
Firebird threw her arms around Tel and translated,
"You're not a potential threat. These are our
bodyguards."
Tel pulled away, glanced at Uri and Shel, and
said, "Good. I hope there are more where they came from."
Two
burly men in Tallan ash-gray emerged from Danton's inner office.
"Yes," Firebird answered. She couldn't tell Tel about the team
infiltrating the palace -- not out here, where she might be
overheard. "And Governor Danton assured us there'll be extra
security, plain-clothes. One team will follow us to the palace
now."
Brennen led down a passway lined with windowed doors.
Firebird hung back with Tel, who leaned down toward her. "How is he,
really?"
Firebird pursed her lips. "As well as we can hope."
Brennen had done the damage himself, creating amnesia blocks to keep
his captors from learning Federate military secrets. Eight weeks had
passed since their return from the Shuhr, and he seemed calmer,
better able to accept his losses. Besides memory gaps, he no longer
had the fine epsilon control that had made him a Master Sentinel.
That resulted in a shattering loss of status. The College had asked
him to give up wearing his eight-rayed Master's star. His Ehretan
Scale rating, once an exceptional 97, had restabilized ten points
below the Master's requisite ES 93. "Solid but no longer
exceptional" was the new prognosis.
She'd seen him powerless
and stammering at Three Zed. She was thankful he'd restabilized with
this much strength.
She glanced up at Brenn's well-muscled
shoulder, at the new four-rayed emblem. While this mission lasted,
he was masquerading as even more dramatically disabled -- an ES 32.
If the Shuhr thought he was virtually helpless, they might be more
likely to try and strike.
Almost everyone he met, these days,
looked first at his new shoulder star. He'd told Firebird how
plainly he sensed their relief. On the pair bond that joined them,
she felt his pained attempts to turn embarrassment into genuine
humility. He often succeeded.
Firebird quickened her steps to
follow him across the new base. It had a sterile feel, bare of trim
and almost surgically clean. As they passed an observation
window-wall, she could see little of the aging, dignified spaceport
she remembered, nor the vast military installation nearby. Bombed
to slag under the Federates, she realized.
Would the
Shuhr try to do even worse here, or had they set their sights on
another world? Lenguad, or Caroli, or even Tallis?
"How are
the babies?" Tel asked, pacing alongside her.
Firebird
pictured four-month-old Kiel and Kinnor, asleep on their warming
cots back at Hesed. "Wonderful," she said. "Active. They're changing
so quickly, we'll be hard put to catch up when we get back."
Tel touched her arm. "Sixteen more days."
Yes. If
this trap caught no one, then at least she might return quickly. It
would take six days to finish her electoral business, then ten to
travel back across space.
On the other hand, if the trap
caught a Shuhr as they hoped, then ten days on a different vector
would take them back to Three Zed and battle. Brennen's people were
determined not to let the Shuhr blast one more crater or slaughter
another innocent twelve-year-old and her family in their home.
Firebird glanced at the small black duffel in Brennen's left
hand, sent to Hesed by Regional command, and the sealed message roll
inside. Before he could even open it, they had to catch a
Shuhr.
"It's not quite that simple," she told
Tel.
They emerged at the command building's main entry. Damp
winter air pierced her to the bone. She tightened the belt on her
woolen coat, a gift from Sanctuary Mistress Anna. A monstrous indigo
groundcar stood nearby, its side trunk open, their luggage
automatically stacked inside. Uri walked to the trunk and drew a
scanning device from his belt. Shel slid into the car, brandishing a
similar scanner.
Beside the front door stood a squat man in
indigo-and-black Tellai livery. Tel positioned himself alongside the
car, then beckoned Brennen closer. He pulled off his hat and offered
it to Firebird. "The height of this year's male couture. What do you
think?"
Nestled inside lay two tiny handblazers. "I think
it's ridiculous," she said firmly, pocketing one weapon. She would
prefer to carry a non-lethal shock pistol, but it felt good to be
armed again.
Brennen laughed, a hollow attempt at good humor.
"I've seen worse," he said. Firebird didn't see the other blazer
leave Tel's hat, but when Tel centered it again on his black hair,
it rode lightly.
Brennen stared
past Tel's vehicle. Returning to this base felt eerie. Danton's
office had looked vaguely familiar, but the long hall was utterly
strange, full of foreboding.
He did not regret creating the
amnesia blocks. He'd saved vital military secrets and brought down
two of the Shuhr's most dangerous leaders, saving Hesed House from
destruction. He had to believe that some day, he would fully
understand why the Eternal One let him be disabled.
He'd
returned with irrational fears that were clues to the memories he'd
lost. Bladed weapons, anything made of gold -- he understood why
those things stole his breath. He'd returned with a knife scar on
his chest, and in accessing Firebird's memories of Three Zed, he'd
seen long golden corridors.
But why did he fear flashing red
lights? He remembered little from that place, with one terrible
exception. For three generations, a Shuhr family had pursued his
own. A Shirak murdered his great-uncle. That man's son killed his
uncles, and the grandson ...
In a black-walled conference
room, surrounded by hostile observers, Micahel Shirak had admitted
slaughtering Brennen's brother, sister-in-law, and their children.
He forced Brennen's mind open and poured in a memory Brennen wished
he could forget.
Brennen clenched a hand. This would be a
dangerous double game, to protect Firebird Mari while hunting down a
Shuhr. He hoped he might catch Micahel Shirak. That cruel braggart
ought to feel the anguish of being probed for secrets that might
bring down his own people. Micahel's family still threatened
Brennen's children, and their children, and theirs. Micahel might
have brothers, or cousins ...
Brennen frowned. If only he
could remember! The Shuhr tri-D summons, demanding he return and
face justice, showed only Micahel, sitting at an obsidian desk,
promising further destruction if Brennen didn't return. Regional
command hadn't publicly released that summons.
Laying a hand
on the car's fender, he stared at the metal-spiked energy fence
surrounding this parking zone. He caught an odd epsilon savor at the
edge of his new, limited range. Something felt wrong, almost hazy,
as if someone were epsilon-shielding their own presence.
Brennen clung to his masquerade, resisting the urge to
react. He had to convince the Shuhr he'd lost more ability than he
actually had. He'd planted disinformation in the Sentinel College's
records, rating himself barely psi-competent. No ES 32 would notice
that vague presence. Hardly daring to hope his trap would bring in a
Shuhr this quickly, he gripped his duffel strap and forced himself
to play the concerned but unaware husband, depending on Shel and Uri
for protection. They knew the real extent of his injuries, of
course. Special Operations agents had to trust each
other.
Firebird leaned close to Tel, speaking softly. The
slight young nobleman was half a head taller than Firebird, and her
plain gray traveling suit was an elegant contrast to his gaudy
outfit.
Shel grabbed her sidearm. Uri hit an alarm on his
belt at almost the same moment. They must have finally sensed the
intruder.
Brennen curled his hand around Tel's small defense
blazer. A brilliant green energy bolt splattered on the door arch
behind him, and a foul presence slid into the edge of his mind. He
couldn't resist the probe without compromising his masquerade, and
so -- as planned -- he let it take his arm muscles. Controlled from
a distance by a lawless stranger's epsilon power, his own arm swung
toward Firebird. His thumb slid against his will toward the firing
stud.
He seized his right wrist with his left hand and
choked, "Get in, Mari." That was his private name for Firebird. If
the Sentinel infiltration team was still in the area, this could be
their chance --
Where were they?
He forced his rebel
fingers open. Tel's little blazer clattered to the
pavement.
Uri, Shel, and the plainclothes guards fanned out.
As Firebird scrambled into the passenger compartment, Brennen rose
onto the balls of his feet and looked around. From some distance
away came a pulse of gloating, of shields dropped to reveal epsilon
power, a Shuhr agent tossing down a gauntlet. In that instant,
Brennen saw himself through other eyes as an easy mark.
He
kept anger out of his surface thoughts, where the Shuhr might sense
it, but deep in his heart he answered the challenge. No. This
time, we will take you. Ingrained habits, such as that
confidence, proved how deeply he had relied on his own powers,
instead of the One he served.
Uri covered a spot near the
gate with his own blazer. No one's close enough to assist, he
subvocalized into Brennen's mind.
"Who was it?" Firebird
demanded. On the pair bond, he felt her tension as she peered out
the car's second door.
"Can't tell," he muttered, scooping
up the small blazer. "Uri, Shel. Recognize him?"
"No," Uri
answered. "We'll see if we can get him to follow."
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