Page 25 of The Third Lynx


  I caught Bayta’s eye and nodded. She nodded back and set off after him. “Well, that went well,” Morse commented.

  “It’ll be all right,” I said, watching Stafford’s stiff back.

  “Your record is so convincing so far.” Morse paused. “There is another way to play this, of course.”

  “You mean just give them the Lynx?”

  “I mean we wait for them to bring Ms. Auslander across to the Tube,” he said tartly.

  “And then what?” I asked.

  “We grab her back, of course,” he said. “At least here it’s a level playing pitch. No guns for us; no guns for them.”

  I snorted. “Like that’ll matter when they can bring ten thugs for each of us.”

  “Can’t the Spiders help?”

  “Can’t and won’t,” I said. “No, the only way to get Ms. Auslander back is to play it straight.”

  His eyes narrowed slightly. “You have a plan, don’t you?”

  “Not yet,” I admitted. “But it’s a long way back to Terra. I’ll think of something.”

  TWENTY-ONE

  Stafford, as befit his status and the number of zeroes on his cash sticks, booked himself a first-class compartment. As befit his frustration at my inability to deliver his fiancée, he booked me a seat back in the second to the last of the third-class cars.

  “It’s bloody unfair,” Morse grumbled as we made our way down the narrow aisle to our seats. “It’s not your fault she isn’t here. If she’d stayed with Bayta and me during your little performance, she’d have been fine.”

  “You don’t hear me arguing,” I said as I took my seat beside a pair of Shorshians. Honeymooners, from the look of them. At least I wouldn’t need to sit next to Morse, whose seat was three rows ahead of mine. “You don’t have to do this, you know,” I added. “Your pass will be good the whole way to Terra, and there’s a good chance there are still first-class seats available.”

  “Only if you let me take that with me,” he said, his eyes following my every move as I heaved my carrybags up onto the rack above the seats. “Evidence in grand theft and homicide, remember?”

  “Forget it,” I said as I sat down.

  “Then I stay here.”

  “Suit yourself,” I said. I wasn’t exactly happy about leaving Stafford out of my sight in first class, either. But Bayta was there, and had even managed to get the compartment that connected to his. If the Modhri tried anything, she could whistle up the Spiders and get a message to me. Hopefully in time to do something.

  Besides which, Fayr was also aboard, though I wasn’t exactly sure where. With luck, the Modhri hadn’t made the connection between him and us, which would leave him free to play the role of wild card if necessary.

  I very much hoped it wouldn’t be necessary.

  We were about an hour out of Ghonsilya Station, and I’d just put my reader away in favor of a nap, when the vestibule at the front of the car opened and Bayta appeared, an expression on her face that I’d seen before. She looked around, spotted me, and headed back. I focused on the top of Morse’s head, visible over the top of the seat back, and hoped hard that he was asleep.

  No such luck. As Bayta passed he rose from his seat and stepped into the aisle behind her. “Let me guess,” I said as Bayta reached me. “Now?”

  “Right now,” she confirmed, her voice tight. “They say it’s urgent.”

  “Who says?” Morse asked from behind her.

  She looked over her shoulder, startled at his unseen entry into the conversation. “It’s nothing to do with you,” she told him.

  “Anything that affects Compton has to do with me,” he countered as I stood up. “Where are we going?”

  “You’re staying here,” I said firmly. “Don’t worry, we won’t be long.” Without waiting for a reply, I ushered Bayta past me and we headed toward the rear of the train.

  The Chahwyn, apparently, wanted to speak with us again.

  We traveled through the rest of the Quadrail’s third-class section and two of the three luggage cars. “Any idea what it’s about?” I asked Bayta as we moved through the last baggage car toward the train’s rear door.

  “The Spiders didn’t know,” she said. “But I suppose—”

  She broke off at the soft sound of the car’s forward vestibule door opening behind us.

  I spun around, peering forward through the car’s dim lighting, my hands curling reflexively into fists. There was a vague figure approaching down the aisle between the stacks of crates . . .

  “There you are,” Morse puffed, my larger carrybag clutched across his chest. “What in bloody hell are you doing back here?”

  “What in bloody hell are you doing back here?” I countered, sorely tempted to deck him anyway just for startling us that way.

  “You forgot this,” he said, thrusting the carrybag toward me.

  “I didn’t forget it,” I said, making no move to take it. “I didn’t want it.”

  “Thought so,” Morse grunted, lowering the bag to the floor. “The Lynx isn’t in here, is it?”

  I grimaced. But then, I shouldn’t have expected a trained investigator to be taken in that easily. “Of course not,” I said. “Way too obvious.”

  “So where is—whoa!” he interrupted himself as the car abruptly began to slow down. “What’s going on? Are we stopping?”

  “Just this car,” I told him.

  He stared at me. “In the middle of bloody nowhere?”

  “Trust me.” I said, gesturing to one of the nearby stacks of crates. “Might as well have a seat and make yourself comfortable.”

  He eyed me another moment, then eased himself down onto the floor. He was shifting his back against the crates when the car began to pick up speed again. “So where is the Lynx?” he asked. “With Stafford?”

  “Well, I certainly couldn’t risk carrying it,” I pointed out. “My face was way too well known. Stafford, on the other hand, currently looks like a refugee from a dit rec war drama. We thought there was a good chance he could slip by them.”

  He cocked his head to the side in sudden understanding. “I’ll be damned,” he said. “That sculpture thing he had in his backpack that looked like a half-carved log?”

  I nodded. “He’d built a fake log around the Lynx and hidden it at the bottom of a fire pit at the Paradise,” I explained. “Naturally, you can’t just carry a big ceramic log through customs without someone wondering. So I had him redo it as a sort of folk art piece.”

  “Clever,” Morse murmured. “Of course, that means he and the Lynx are sitting all alone on that train right now.”

  “This won’t take long,” I assured him. “Besides, he’s in a locked compartment, and the bad guys don’t know who he is.”

  Morse grunted. “Let’s hope not.”

  Given the urgency of the summons, I wasn’t expecting the trip to take very long. I was right. We’d been traveling our private way for no more than fifteen minutes when we again began to slow down. “So what happens now?” Morse said, standing up and brushing himself off.

  “Bayta and I go outside for a chat,” I said. “You stay here and cultivate your patience.”

  For a moment I thought he was going to argue about that. He glanced at the stony expression on Bayta’s face and apparently thought better of it. “Whatever you say,” he said.

  The car door irised open, and Bayta and I stepped out into yet another of the Spiders’ secret sidings. Unlike all the others I’d visited, though, this one was playing host to a second train, another of the short pushmi-pullyu tenders like the one the Spiders had provided for our trip from Homshil to Jurskala. There seemed to be more Spiders around than usual, too, including several of the unknown stationmaster-sized class.

  One of the latter was waiting on the platform, and led us to a typical meeting building. Inside, waiting at his point of the three-chair triangle, was a Chahwyn, a pair of Spiders standing watchdog behind him. “Sit down, Mr. Compton,” he said, pointing to one of the ot
her chairs.

  “Thank you,” I said as I did so. His voice sounded very much like that of the Chahwyn who’d pink-slipped me earlier this trip, but given the species’ malleable bodies and voice boxes that might not mean anything. “To what do I owe the pleasure of your company?”

  “You have obtained the third Nemuti Lynx,” he said, extending his hand. “I will take it.”

  “Will you, now?” I said, leaning back in my chair and crossing my legs casually. “Sorry—did I miss the part where you thanked me for tracking it down?”

  “Frank,” Bayta murmured warningly.

  I glanced at her, paused for a second look. Her face was tight and pinched, the look of someone walking through a graveyard in a midnight mist. “What?” I asked.

  For a moment neither of them spoke, their eyes locked in another of those annoying little telepathic conferences. “Hello?” I called. “Remember me?”

  The Chahwyn’s eyes dipped briefly away from the contact, then rose again to face me. “You are not Chahwyn,” he said flatly. “You cannot be told.”

  I felt my ears prick up. There was a deep, dark secret lurking behind that plastic face, just waiting for me to weasel it out of him. “No, I’m not Chahwyn,” I agreed calmly. “That’s precisely why I need to be told everything.”

  “You no longer work for the Chahwyn.”

  “Then you’re in deep trouble,” I said. Time to trot out the trump card I’d been saving for just such an occasion. “Because I’m the only guy in town who the Modhri’s afraid of.”

  His face wrinkled like an old dishrag. “What do you say? You make no sense.”

  “Why not?” I countered. “Don’t you think the Modhri can feel fear?”

  “Not toward you,” he said flatly. “Not toward a single Human.”

  I smiled tightly. “But I’m not just a single Human. I’m the single Human. I’m the Human who took on an entire trainload of his walkers and destroyed them.”

  The Chahwyn gave a short, two-toned whistle. “That’s not how it happened.”

  “Isn’t it?” I countered. “A few months ago Bayta and I boarded a Quadrail with a Modhri mind segment that was ready and willing to take over the entire train in order to nail us to the floor. There was surely another mind segment at the platform who knew of that intent. Only we came out alive, while the train’s mind segment and the rest of the whole damn train vanished without a trace. If you were the Modhri, what conclusion would you come to?”

  His face was rippling now like a lake in a stiff breeze. “No,” he said firmly. “I know what happened aboard that train. It wasn’t as easy as you imply.”

  “I never said it was,” I said. “But what you and I know doesn’t matter. As far as the Modhri’s concerned it’s a big fat unknown. Big fat unknowns always make people nervous.”

  “The Modhri does not panic so easily.”

  “I never said he was panicked, either,” I said. “I said he was afraid of me. An entire mind segment was destroyed, aboard a Quadrail where we theoretically had no access to weapons. The Modhri has no idea how we pulled it off, and he’s sure as hell not ready to risk us doing it again.”

  I gestured to Bayta. “But don’t take my word for it. Ask Bayta whether or not the Modhri’s been playing us with tweezers and cotton batting ever since we tripped over Künstler’s body on the way to Bellis.”

  They locked eyes in another miniconference. This time I stayed quiet and let them finish at their own speed.

  It took over a minute, but when the Chahwyn again turned to face me I was pretty sure Bayta had won. “What do you want?” he asked.

  “Number one: I want to be reinstated,” I said. “I didn’t ask to get into this war, but I’m in it now and I’ll be damned if I’ll quit before the final whistle. That includes reactivating my fancy unlimited first-class compartment pass, and all the bells and whistles that go with it.”

  “It will be done,” the Chahwyn said.

  “And I want a monthly stipend, as well,” I added. “There are all sorts of out-of-pocket expenses in this job, plus I still have an apartment in New York I’m paying rent on. Say, ten thousand dollars a month?”

  The Chahwyn’s face contorted slightly, but he nodded. “It will be done.”

  “Number two: I want to know what this new big secret is about the Lynx,” I said. “First point on that list being how to make sure it won’t blow up on me.”

  “The Lynx will not explode.” He looked at Bayta again, possibly trying one last time to argue for silence in front of this upstart alien.

  He might as well have saved himself the effort. Bayta was wearing her set-in-concrete stubborn expression, another of the looks I knew all too well. “I’m listening,” I prodded.

  “Have you ever heard of—” He glanced at Bayta, as if searching for the right English word. “Of trinary weapons?”

  “I’m familiar with binaries,” I said. “Explosives built from two components that you have to mix together to get the desired boom.”

  “Trinaries are not explosives,” the Chahwyn said. “They’re shock or energy weapons composed of three separate sections.”

  “You mean like breaking a rifle down into component parts?” I asked, frowning.

  “Not at all,” he said. “A rifle component is instantly recognizable as part of a weapon. A true trinary is a weapon whose components are completely inert when they are alone. Only when they are joined is the weapon’s true nature awakened.”

  Something with cold feet ran up my spine. Three components. Hawk, Viper, Lynx. “Are you saying that’s what the Nemuti sculptures are? Some exotic alien weapon?”

  “Not just an alien weapon,” he said grimly. “A weapon created by the Shonkla-raa.”

  “Terrific,” I murmured. The Modhri and the Nemuti sculptures. One weapon of the Shonkla-raa busily collecting the pieces of another. “How do they work?”

  “As I say, the three components are joined together,” the Chahwyn said. “Each component then activates the others and is activated in turn by them.”

  “And in the meantime, not only are they dormant, they’re also effectively invisible to sensors,” I said. This whole thing was sounding more unpleasant by the minute. “Do we know which sculpture is which component?”

  He shrugged, a fluid rolling of the shoulders like a move in a scarecrow dance routine. “From their shapes, I would assume the Lynx is the emitter and the Hawk the handle.”

  “Yes, that makes sense,” I agreed, pulling up my mental image of the pictures that had been on Morse’s data chip. “And that would make—” I broke off, fumbling for my reader as something suddenly occurred to me.

  “What is it?” Bayta asked.

  “I just had a thought,” I said, plugging in the dictionary chip, “I was about to say that would make the Viper the power supply.” “And?”

  “Remember what the Spider report said about that Nemuti scholar doing an etymological study on the sculptures’ names and coming up with alien equivalents?” I punched in the word Lynx. “Okay, let’s see. Lynx comes from Middle English, from Latin, from Greek from— see leuk—” I hit the link. “Bingo. The Indo-European root leuk means light or brightness.”

  “Light?” Bayta asked, sounding confused.

  “As in shock or energy,” I said.

  Her expression hardened. “Oh.”

  “Exactly,” I agreed, keying for the other names. “Hawk . . . from kap, meaning to grasp. There’s your grip, all right. And Viper . . . from gwei and pere, meaning to live and to produce.”

  “The power supply,” Bayta murmured.

  “Right,” I said. “This scholar was smarter than I thought. With this kind of hint, I’m surprised no one’s figured it out before now.”

  “This is all interesting, but of no immediate usage,” the Chahwyn put in. “Now that you know the truth, you see that you must give me the Lynx.”

  “I do, and I’d love to comply,” I said. “Unfortunately, we’ve picked up a couple of compl
ications along the way. For one thing, I don’t have it with me. For another, it looks like we’re going to have to trade it to the Modhri for one of our friends.”

  The Chahwyn’s back stiffened. “You cannot do that,” he insisted. “You will not do that. I demand that you retrieve the Lynx at once and bring it to me.”

  “Easy,” I calmed him, holding out a soothing hand. “You’re missing the big picture.”

  He snorted. “Do you have any idea what the Modhri could do with such a weapon?”

  “He could create havoc across the galaxy, including and maybe especially aboard the Quadrail trains,” I said. “And I wholeheartedly agree that’s something we very much want to avoid. But that’s not the big picture I was referring to.”

  “Then what is?”

  “I can get you the Lynx,” I said. “But what you really want are all the rest of the sculptures.”

  “Except the one that exploded in the Ghonsilya art museum,” Bayta murmured.

  I stared at her, her words echoing through my brain. Suddenly, with that simple comment, the whole thing had taken a sideways tilt. A very, very dangerous sideways tilt. “Right,” I said, keeping my voice steady. I needed time to think this through. “Of course not that one. So retrieving the rest of them is next on the agenda.”

  “How can you do that?” the Chahwyn asked suspiciously. “You don’t even know where the sculptures are.”

  “No, but I know where they were going,” I said. “That first group of Bellidos, the ones with the stolen Hawk, were on their way to Laarmiten in the Nemuti FarReach.”

  “You think to find the sculptures there?”

  “If they’re there, we’ll get them back,” I promised. “Which brings up my third request.”

  “Your third request?” the Chahwyn asked, sounding confused.

  “After reinstatement and the truth,” I said to him. “Request three is that I want a gun.”

  “Impossible,” the Chahwyn said flatly. “No weapons are allowed inside the Tube.”

  “Of course they are,” I asked. “You have one.”

  The room went a dark gray shade of silence. The Chahwyn’s eyes darted to Bayta’s, turned back to me. “Explain,” he said, his voice right.