CHAPTER FIVE
Ossian Wethermere entered an unmarked and unmapped observation room 120 meters below one of Bellerophon’s many wooded outbacks, where two interrogators were picking holes in yet another of Ishmael’s increasingly lame prevarications. Alessandro Magee looked around, saluted. His wife, Jennifer Pietchkov, offered a small smile and equally small nod before gesturing through the one-way glass into the interview room. “He doesn’t have the slightest idea of what he was actually involved in, does he?”
Ossian smiled back “No, ma’am, but we never expected that he did. We’re just trying to get faces, names, leads.”
“How’s that coming?” asked Harry Li who, after receiving Wethermere’s casual acknowledgment of his own salute, had turned back to look at the rather crestfallen detainee. Clearly, incarceration—even of the most comfortable kind—did not agree with Ishmael at all.
“Well,” replied Ossian, “when it comes to getting workable leads from our unwilling guest, there’s good news and there’s bad news.”
“What’s the good news?” asked Magee hopefully.
“Well, Ishmael hasn’t maintained his tough-guy act. He’s given us pretty much everything we’ve asked for when it comes to implicating others. Anything that might implicate him—that’s a different story. And the genetic samples we pulled from his collection of hair follicles”—all of which the thug had cataloged and maintained with surprising precision—“pinged on a whole lot of promising identicodes. A good number of Ishmael’s contacts and clients are black market middlemen: they deal in connections, not the contraband itself. A number of others were predominantly hands-on felons: fences, con artists, mules for really small packages, and petty frauds. Only a few hardcore criminals in the bunch. We figure they were probably peripheral players: muscle brought along just to make sure that the deals went down as advertised.”
“And the bad news?” asked the habitually sour Harry Li.
“The bad news is that two-thirds of those suspects are missing or dead. About equal portions are in the morgue or at-large. And the last third of our suspects aren’t even in the identicode master registry, so we have no way of knowing what their status is or how to track them.”
“No identicodes?” Jennifer frowned. “How’s that possible?”
Her husband shrugged his impressive shoulders. “There are plenty of backwater worlds in the Rim Federation, Jen. Even more in the Terran Republic.”
“Yes, I know. But even if their birth didn’t take place in a hospital or wasn’t otherwise officially recorded, the first time anyone leaves a planet, they’re supposed to be gene-swiped. That’s the law. Not only here in the Rim, but throughout the Republic as well. It’s even become standard practice in Orion space.”
Harry leaned against the one-way glass. Ossian decided not to point out that it was both against policy and a bad habit to acquire. “Jennifer, the key qualifier in your comment is the phrase ‘supposed to be.’ Like most laws and pronouncements, there are lots of places where the gene swiping protocols are not—or can’t—be obeyed. To start with, lots of folks aren’t born planetside or in big communities, so their first trip outsystem doesn’t require that they pass through an identicode reader. It’s easy to forget that, since there are so many shirt-sleeve planets at our disposal. But belters, moon-dwellers, folks who inhabit the older or out-of-the-way space stations have unrecorded babies every day. And when each of those little tykes grows up, each is likely to get a job offer from an interstellar black marketeer or con artist.”
“Just because they were born off the grid?” Jennifer’s tone was moderately surprised and profoundly disgusted.
Ossian shrugged. “It’s an unfortunate but well-established fact that a person without an identicode finds it much easier to commit crimes that can’t be definitively attributed. And so, if they are smart, they can avoid having a file accumulate on their activities and thereby dodge a lot of typical security checks, particularly if they restrict their activities to planets and communities that aren’t fully tied into the database. Which is pretty easy to do in the Terran Republic, since a lot of worlds flatly refuse the ‘intrusion’ of submitting any personal information to a central database.”
Jennifer looked perplexed. “I wonder why the Republic worlds are not overrun by crime, then.”
“Oh, they breed plenty of criminals,” Harry drawled sardonically, “but most of them leave home. Right away.”
“Why’s that?”
Magee spoke softly. “Jen, have you ever read about the average local penalties for crime in the Republic? And in the real backwaters, they are often carried out after a drumhead trial by an armed posse. Criminals there have pretty short life expectancies.”
Jen stared. “And those posses never make mistakes?”
Harry Li’s grin was feral. “Not much more than our beloved and overburdened court system does.”
“Which errs to the side of caution, Harry—since real lives are involved. Proof beyond reasonable doubt, remember?”
“In determination of guilt, not sentencing,” Harry countered.
“Yeah, and a ‘try-and-hang’ posse is a really great means of ensuring objective and measured ‘determination of guilt,’” Jennifer retorted, color rising in her face.
Ossian had heard about scenes in which Harry and Jennifer debated social issues until the night threatened to become morning and the patience of both threatened to fray and split. He stepped in to prevent a midday command performance. “So, returning to the topic at hand…” Wethermere inserted a pause pregnant enough to signify triplets. The two social-issue combatants looked gratifyingly sheepish.
’Sandro Magee hid a grin behind a broad, red-furred paw. “So, grilling Ishmael hasn’t produced any useful leads, Captain Wethermere?”
“Not many. But the deaths and last known locations of his missing contacts are astrographically significant. They all fall along a line that stretches from the Rim’s capitol in the Zephrain system, passes through Metifilli, and leads all the way to Skraozpfurr’n in Orion space. It’s also significant that all the relevant homicides and missing person reports along that route were registered within the last five months.”
Harry frowned. “But we only busted Ishmael a month ago. So how is it that the masterminds behind this scheme knew to start killing off their hirelings four months before we came on the scene? They had no reason to suspect that their operation was compromised.”
Ossian shrugged. “Because it was not our grabbing Ishmael that prompted the killings and disappearings. The masterminds were clearly committed to using their hirelings only for a while, and then cutting them loose. And later, when no one who was clued-in to their operation was in a position to see or learn, their old bosses got rid of them. Permanently. In short, the intel braintrust running this operation has adopted an SOP of periodically burning dismissed assets to maintain a security firewall.”
Jennifer shook her head. “In English, please.”
“Sorry, Ms. Pietchkov—”
“Jennifer, please.”
“Uh—okay; Jennifer. Apologies: I slipped into trade-speak. I’m pretty sure that the persons running this operation are such a ruthless bunch that they’ve decided to protect the secrecy of their pipeline by replacing the people who service it every so often. And then, when a little time has gone by and the people they’ve dismissed are no longer in contact with any of their current scam-artists, the bosses eliminate their former hirelings. That’s called ‘firewalling’ the operation: it leaves no external traces for us to find and follow.”
“So we hit the nexus of their operations on Metifilli for nothing?” Harry’s disappointment had evidently dissolved his sense of the tone and decorum that their difference in ranks required.
Up until eight years ago, Ossian had lived most of his life as a naval reservist. Consequently, he remained more accustomed to the casual exchanges of civilian life than the formal ones of the military. However, this time, he put a stern edge in his tone. “That is not correct, Lieutenant Li. If we hadn’t grabbed Ishmael and his team of courier drone baby-sitters on Metifilli, we’d still be in the dark about the opposition’s method of information transfer.”
Li straightened up sharply. “Yes, sir. It’s just frustrating not to have any leads to follow, now.”
“I couldn’t agree more—although we do have investigatory options, even though we don’t have living leads. As I said, the deaths and disappearances follow the trail from Zephrain to Orion space with almost no variance. What little drift there is from that route probably occurs when the former henchmen put a little distance between the places they worked for these drone grabbers and the site of their next illicit activity.”
“Modus operandi for most con artists and informers,” put in ’Sandro.
Jennifer lightly punched her behemothic husband in the bicep. “You’re starting to sound like a cop, now, Tank.”
Alessandro Magee half-scowled at Jennifer’s use of his size- and behavior-related nickname. Since becoming a father more than six years ago, during the late war with the Arduans, Alessandro Magee’s customary problem-solving behavior had evolved from that of a bull in a china shop into that of a honeybear with a beehive. “Well, the professional slang kind of rubs off on you, Jen. Don’t worry: underneath, I’m still just the big, dumb grunt you’ve come to love and domesticate.”
Ossian smiled and silently reflected that while Alessandro Magee was big, he had never been dumb, and fatherhood had imparted a salutary sobering effect that made him both a better field agent and officer.
The door opened behind Ossian. Ankaht, Ossian’s opposite number among their Arduan partners, glided into the now crowded room, surveying it with her largest, central eye while amiably fluttering the tendril-clusters that were her race’s hand-analogs.
Harry Li stiffened slightly. Despite working regularly with Ankaht and her staff, his tense unease grew in direct proportion to an Arduan’s proximity.
Jennifer smiled and her face went through a set of quick, subtle transformations, as if she were engaged in lively conversation—and she probably was, Ossian reflected. The telempathic link she was able to share with Arduans—but Ankaht in particular—facilitated extremely rapid communication. The best measurements by the forensic intel folks who’d surreptitiously monitored casual data transfer rates among Arduans indicated a tenfold speed advantage over human conversation.
Ankaht turned her three eyes upon the other humans in the room, gave a somewhat spasmodic nod: her attempts at adopting human physical gestures had improved but the results were still crude and rudimentary. Hardly surprising since, relying almost solely on the telempathy they called selnarm, Arduans had little physical speech and even less body language—beyond what they showed in the tendril clusters that served as their hands. It was that difference, along with the Arduans’ reincarnative nature, which had made communication between their species and humans so difficult—tragically so. Those differences in communication had not only caused but perpetuated the horrifically costly two-year war that followed their first encounter with humanity.
And despite the armistice which ended that war, and the cautious cooperation which succeeded it, interactions between Arduans and humans were still challenging on both conceptual and physical levels. As if underscoring the latter, Ankaht adjusted a selnarmic headset on her earless and hairless cranium so that the new portable translator she carried—a “vocoder” which massed five kilos—would receive her telempathic sendings with maximum clarity. “Hello, colleagues,” was the smooth alto greeting that emerged from the device. “I trust the human interview subject is not proving to be too uncooperative this day?”
Ossian gestured at the sound-proof glass. “Not intentionally, but as you’ve seen, he’s difficult to debrief. He’s relatively intelligent, but gets easily distracted and goes off on tangents that we don’t initially know are, in fact, just tangents.”
Ankaht’s clusters—anemone-like bunches of ten prehensile tentacles—curled and flexed in frustration. “Yes. He has a disorderly mind. I suspect it is congenital, and may have led him into criminal behavior.”
“Come again?” said Harry Li. His tone was flat, but Ossian heard a readiness for contention behind its careful neutrality. He wondered if the new vocoder was capable of detecting and alerting Ankaht to such nuances.
If it was, Ankaht maintained her typical equanimity. “I simply mean that his combination of traits—relatively high intelligence, impatience, undisciplined thought—will make him ultimately unsuitable for so many of the pursuits that you humans reward most richly. And since he would have discovered at an early age that, despite having greater perspicacity than the majority of his peers, he was not to be rewarded for it, that would logically lead to frustration and resentment with the system of education and labor that denied him suitable gratification.”
“Whereas Arduan methods would have prevented him from evolving into a criminal at all?” Li’s tone was now so provocatively flat that Wethermere was sure the vocoder had to be alerting Ankaht to it. He turned toward Harry—
But not before Jen had rounded on the diminutive lieutenant. “Ankaht didn’t say, or imply, that, Harry.”
Ankaht raised her left cluster. The smaller tentacles—tendrils, really—seemed to wave in a nonexistent wind: Ossian found the effect vaguely soothing. “I meant no offense, and have taken none from Lieutenant Li’s question. Perhaps I can clarify. It is true that our Firstlings—our young—are provided with selnarmic intervention to help them recognize and manage any cognitive traits that obstructed forming adequate relationships with either their peers or our society in general. With proper resources, your species often does no less, and it demonstrates incredible inventiveness in doing so, since it does not have the shortcut of selnarmic contact. It is, after all, much harder to explain a difference than it is to show and share the feeling of that difference—which is what selnarm enables.
“But our Firstlings are no less susceptible to going astray when deprived of appropriate nurture. If we once were proud enough to think otherwise, we need merely look at the rift that divides our people today.”
Magee nodded. “You’re referring to your warrior caste’s increasing rejection of selnarm.”
“I am, Captain Magee. What you call our ‘warrior caste’—and many of the Destoshaz have redefined themselves in just that way—became so demographically dominant during our long, slower-than-light exodus to this part of space that there were not enough of the selnarm-specializing castes, the shaxzhu and the selnarshaz, to provide that nurture. Our research, since arriving here, has identified this as a key variable in our collective loss of narmata—of the overarching social unity that we once enjoyed through our openly shared selnarmic connections. Indeed, the Destoshaz have become markedly more reliant upon vocalizing their thoughts and upon writings devoid of a selnarmic accompaniment. They are increasingly turning their back upon the rest of Illudor’s children, upon the narmata that joins us as one.”
“In short, the genocidal radicals among your Destoshaz warrior caste are becoming more individualistic and non-selnarmic—like us humans.” Li sounded mostly mollified, but his tone was still sardonic.
“It would be misleading to believe the Destoshaz to be strictly a warrior caste, or that their changes make them more akin to humans,” Ankaht demurred mildly. “After all, your species, lacking selnarm, has evolved a wide array of socializing customs, pedagogies, and rituals that transform your young into balanced members of your society. You have never relied upon selnarm as a socializing force. But the Destoshaz now increasingly assert that selnarm is merely emotional noise, and that past-life knowledge—shaxzhutok—is either useless or mostly illusory. However, like the rest of the Children of Illudor, the Destoshaz lack your many institutions that detect and correct antisocial development.” Ankaht grew still. “It is not a revelation to anyone in this room that this troubles me more than any other development in either of our species, for I fear that this rift among my own people cannot help but increase hostilities with yours. And after all, that is what brings us here today, in our investigation of this unwitting human proxy you have captured: the certainty that he is but a cat’s paw of a Destoshaz plot.” Her cluster writhed briefly at Ishmael.
’Sandro leaned forward. “A Destoshaz plot?”
Ankaht looked at Ossian.
He shrugged. “I hadn’t brought them up to speed on that yet,” he explained. “But I think the time is right.”
Harry Li looked from Ankaht to Ossian. “I know there are Arduan intelligence specialists working on this case, too, but I thought that was just, well, pro forma. You know, we each tend our own gardens and pull our own weeds.”
Jen glanced at Harry—almost pityingly, Ossian thought—and said, “Harry, I think your—well, ‘anxieties’—are blinding you to certain aspects of Arduan culture, and therefore why it would be essential that their personnel are partners in our investigation.”
Harry folded his arms. “Enlighten me.”
“Harry, tell me something: what do you know about Arduan economics?”
“Uh…” Li’s reply trailed into annoyed silence.
“That’s what I mean, Harry. Read a little about how they share resources, how their narmata makes them not only intellectually aware, but emotionally invested, in any distress within their own community. The motive we’ve officially conjectured to be the foundation of this conspiracy—profit—was always just a cover story, a blind to keep the real reason from generating a political firestorm. Culturally, the Destoshaz-as-sulhaji radicals would never carry out such a scheme for money.”
Ossian studied her. “So you’ve known these crimes were politically motivated from the start, Jen?”
She shrugged. “Known? No. Guessed? Yeah. The mere fact that all the courier drones in question were modified to carry selnarmic messages made that a near-certainty.”
“Yeah, that didn’t slip my notice either, you know,” Harry protested. “But it doesn’t follow that Destoshaz are behind it. And for all we know, it could be humans trying to adjust or falsify data in the selnarmic data banks—you know, rile up tensions in our community with a false-flag operation. There are plenty of people still chanting the postwar slogan that ‘the only good Baldie is a dead Baldie.’” Li darkened as he became conscious of having uttered the slur “Baldie” in the act of repeating the favorite slogan of human genocidalists. “Their words, not mine, Ankaht,” he muttered contritely.
Her small tendrils rippled calm reassurance that no offense had been taken. “I am aware of that, Lieutenant. I have heard that epithet in the mouths of those who mean it. I can quite easily distinguish those expressions of genuine hatred from your simple recounting of their speech.” Her eyes closed momentarily. “However, Jennifer is correct when she suggests that you are misunderstanding the Destoshaz-as-sulhaji radicals if you believe that they would stoop to criminality for profit—even to fund their activities. That is not their way. They are reminiscent of the truest exemplars of your ancient orders of knighthood, or holy warriors. Regardless of those sects’ different origins and objectives, all shared certain traits: myopic worldview; intolerance for other opinions; fanatical conviction that their personal involvement was the direct will of deity; and utter depersonalization of their foes. In sum, these traits ensured that they could carry out genocidal massacres without believing them to be moral outrages.
“The Destoshaz-as-sulhaji evince all these traits, to the point where they consider those Arduans who do not share their beliefs to be heretical enemies of the true and pure will of Illudor, who lives through our reincarnated souls just as a body depends upon the cells which comprise it. So you may be certain that the Destoshaz radicals would consider any mutually profitable cooperation with humans to be an affront to the purity of their mission and the will of Illudor.”
Magee nodded. “That’s also perfectly consistent with the way the opposition has been burning all the criminals who’ve serviced their intel pipeline—all of whom are human criminals, I might add.”
Ossian nodded. “It’s not decisive evidence on its own, but if this is a Destoshaz-as-sulhaji plot, you can bet they’d consider that killing two birds with one stone. They keep their intelligence trail minimal while also killing off the humans who’ve been servicing it. There’s a gruesome elegance to the strategy.”
“It also reflects their moral disdain for your species,” Ankaht said quietly. “They consider lying or race-treachery as repellent—even among non-Arduans. If you consider that the human criminals they have employed evince both those characteristics—”
Harry Li nodded. “Why, they’re just doing the good Lord’s work by putting down the very worst of us furry human scum.”
Ankaht closed her eyes. “I am afraid that might be exactly how they would see their actions, yes.”
Jen’s brow had remained furrowed. “You know, there’s one thing I don’t get. If the data in the couriers is being copied, then whoever does the copying would have to have another selnarmic data core to transfer it to, correct?”
“Correct, Jennifer. Selnarmic data, as you call it, cannot be digitalized without a tremendous loss of fidelity. Consequently, the cores in our couriers are not digital, nor can they interface with such a format.”
Magee folded his arms, leaned against the door jamb. “How is selnarmic data archived, then?”
Ankaht’s clusters interlaced, wriggled a bit. “The data cannot be archived, not as you mean it, because it must remain dynamic.” She fretted her smaller tendrils. “I cannot explain it well in your words, probably because I have not yet been tasked to do so. Perhaps, Ossian, you would be kind enough—?”
Ossian tried to keep from grimacing. “I’m no theoretical physicist, but I’ll try. Selnarmic information is fundamentally quantum manipulation. That’s why it’s instantaneous.”
“Which is what makes the selnarmic couriers so valuable,” put in Magee. “One of them pops into a system, sends its selnarmic message to another one waiting to exit through a different warp point at the other end of the system, and bang—instantaneous message transmission. Beforehand, it took hours or even days waiting for radio or lascom relays to reach a conventional courier—if one happened to be standing by on the opposite side of the heliopause. Now, priority transmissions can travel from one end of known space to the other in a matter of one or two days, if there’s an unbroken string of selnarmic couriers in place.”
“Yeah, yeah,” muttered Harry. “Shut up and let the captain get back to the nuts and bolts, will ya?”
Ossian smiled. “So, in order to keep selnarmic information truly intact, you can’t convert it into ones and zeros. It medium is a real-time matrix of subparticulate patterns that cannot be turned into a sequence. You can’t break it down, not even for the purposes of building it back up, because part of the information it carries is resident in the matrix of quantum uncertainty factors embedded in it.” Seeing the look on Harry’s face, he tried a different approach: “You pull one thread and the whole ball of yarn comes unraveled before you can make a map of it. So there’s no way to look at it in parts; it’s all or nothing. Observer effect creeps into the explanation somewhere, but that’s where the connection between theory and application broke apart for me.
“Suffice it to say that you have to create a kind of sustained field-effect in which to store selnarmic data packages. That’s what the selnarmic data core does. It creates and sustains a kind of extensive subatomic honeycomb of those fields. That’s why it’s got a self-contained long-duration power source and why tapping the core is a delicate business that can only be conducted by a person—or device—that can access it with an extension of their own selnarm.” He turned to Ankaht, wondered if he was sweating from the effort of rendering a coherent explanation. “Is that relatively accurate?”
“Far better than I could have achieved.” Her voice sounded as if she was “speaking” through a smile.
Li was still frowning. “So exchanging selnarm doesn’t involve some kind of…eh, micro-telekinesis?” He wound up grinning at how improbable that explanation sounded, even in his own ears.
Ankaht’s clusters rippled with mirth. “No. If Arduans were telekinetic, imagine what we could have accomplished in battle. When engaging your fleets, we could have thrown any switch, disconnected any wires, disrupted any magnetic bottle. Your early analysis of our systems misidentified selnarm-operated switches as telekinetically operated because they missed a key detail: the switches were connected to a selnarmic receiver. Our selnarmic orders went to that receiver, which then sent a standard electric current to activate the switch. Rather like one of your solenoids. Selnarm itself can only be used to exchange information, nothing else.”
Jennifer rubbed her chin. “You know, I never thought about it before, but how did you ever discover how selnarm works, or that it’s a dynamic matrix that exists at the quantum level?”
Ankaht nodded stiffly. “It was a relatively late discovery in the history of our people. Only after the theories of Myrtak—our equivalent of your Einstein—were accepted was there even a way to investigate the physics of the phenomenon. Which, I remind you, we still do not fully understand on the mechanistic level. We have complete control of its utilization, but exactly what occurs in those tiny field effects is still a matter of conjecture. Only two centuries before our exodus from Ardu began, scientists observed that the simplest forms of life that utilized what we call proto-selnarm experienced minute changes of energy when undertaking coordinated activities. Ultimately, our technologists learned how to create the fields similar to those they discovered in those microorganisms.”
Magee straightened up, put his arm around Jennifer: the movement was subtly prefatory to leave-taking. “So what did you learn from the selnarmic core we found on Metifilli while we went hunting for more bad guys in the Surzan system? Were our opponents grabbing the selnarmic info, or were they after the human, digitalized data? Or was data-tapping just a play act, a stalking horse to steer us away from encrypted messages they’ve hidden within the data or even the programming itself?”
Ankaht became still. “We cannot say, Captain Magee.”
“You haven’t found anything yet?”
Jen put a hand on his arm. “I think—that’s not what Ankaht means, ’Sandro.” Magee looked genuinely perplexed.
But Harry Li frowned. “No, it’s not what Ankaht means. She saying that she won’t tell us. Isn’t that right, ma’am?”
Ankaht’s clusters and limbs went through a slow, listless undulation: one of several Arduan versions of an uncomfortable human shrug. She raised one fitful cluster —
“More accurately, she can’t tell you, Lieutenant,” Ossian cut in. “And it’s not her doing.”
Li’s eyes were wide. “It’s yours—sir?”
“You vastly overestimate my place on the command food chain, Lieutenant. And you’d better remember to include a bare minimum of respect in your tone, as well, mister.”
Li blinked in response to Wethermere’s stare. “I’m—I’m sorry, sir.”
“To answer your question, Lieutenant, we’ve entered a new phase of this operation, which triggers a number of predetermined security contingencies. One of which is a reshuffling of clearance levels. I’m sorry, but at this point, the confidentiality firewall shifts higher up the table of organization. That’s as per orders cut jointly by the PSU, the Rim Federation, and our Arduan allies. So if you have any disagreements you’d like to air, I suggest you address a message to Admiral Ian Trevayne. He’s the person at the top of this particular intel pyramid.” Although I suspect he confabbed with my great-cousin thrice removed Kevin Sanders before he signed off on the counterintelligence protocols.
Harry Li had become noticeably pale. “I, uh, I won’t be sending any messages to the admiral, sir.”
“Excellent. He’s a busy man. He rarely has time to consider unsolicited advice from Marine lieutenants barely a third his age.”
“Yes, sir. Are we dismissed?”
“Nothing so formal as that, Lieutenant Li. I just wanted you all to drop by today so you get a look at what was happening as we wrap up this stage of the operation.” Ossian sent a glance that he tried to invest with an apologetic quality toward ’Sandro and Jennifer. “I suspect ninety percent of the new security precautions are totally unnecessary, but we’re entering a phase where we have to control information flow with absolute surety and precision.” Because now we get to the part where we have to start examining the possibility of moles and intel breaches within our own organizations, damn it.
Magee straightened into a posture just one shade less formal than attention. “We understand, sir. Perfectly.”
“I’m grateful for that, ’Sandro. And you all have two weeks leave. Enjoy it.”
“And after that, sir?”
“More chasing down leads in startown dives and other open sewers, I’m afraid. I’ll be a few weeks late joining you, though.”
“Oo-rah, sir,” smiled Magee, who saluted, put his arm back around the shoulder of his beaming wife, and left.
Harry Li followed, was half out the door, paused, turned to glance at Ankaht. “Ma’am, I’m sorry if I, well, if—”
Somehow the vocoder managed to impart the zenlike benignity of Ankaht’s reply. “You have nothing to apologize for, Lieutenant. Enjoy your holiday. I will see you soon again, I am sure.”
Harry “Lighthorse” Li’s eyes drifted down toward the floor, then he nodded and closed the door behind him.