I took a nap myself. It lasted through most of the night. I awakened to find my accomplices feeling better physically but no less testy. They all complained of hunger. The prisoners were all awake now, too, but were unable, or unwilling, to communicate. When I gave Casey his suit back, in hopes that that would help, but he just stared at the ruins and shook his head. Evidently my knifework had deprived him of his sorcery permanently.
I said, “I’ve had a thought.”
Saucerhead grumbled, “Don’t go spraining your brain.”
“This one just popped right up, no work at all.”
“Like a toadstool, probably. Growing on a cow pie.’
“Somebody from town should be showing up pretty soon. But they don’t need to find the rest of you here. They don’t know about you so there’s no need for you to deal with their crap.”
Playmate said, “They’ll just hunt us down later.”
“Not if I don’t tell them. None of these elves can talk.”
“There’s that grapestomper.”
“He’s only seen the big guys. I can make him a deal that’ll guarantee his silence.”
Playmate gave up arguing. He enjoyed official scrutiny as little as the next man. “What about Kip? We haven’t found Kip. Kip is what this mess is all about. It’s all a waste of time, money, and pain if we don’t get the kid back.”
“I’ll keep looking. He’s got to be here somewhere.”
“I have to take him back, Garrett.”
“I know.” Overly moral me, I’d decided that I couldn’t let a kid fall into Colonel Block’s hands. Not even that kid. Block is a decent enough guy—for a royal functionary—but there are a lot of people, way nastier than me, that he’s obliged to keep happy. And Kip meant nothing to him personally. There were ten thousand Kips in town.
Maybe I get him together with Kayne Prose. Make Kip mean something long enough for the Hill folk to lose interest.
I strolled over to the discus. I climbed inside. The bulk of a sandwich awaited me beside the hatch to Kip’s compartment. I was tempted to enjoy it myself. But I was concerned, too. That sandwich had drawn no flies. When I reflected on the matter I realized that I had yet to see any insect inside the aerial ship.
Now there was a sorcery worth stealing.
“Hello, Kip. This could be your lucky day. I have something for you to eat and a chance for you to get out of here before Baron Dreadlore and the Civil Guards arrive.” Dreadlore was a fabrication but somebody with a name very much like that would turn up soon. Maybe several of them, considering how much damage a sorcerer could imagine himself doing if he owned the secret magery of flight.
“Water.”
“Dang me, Kip.” I hadn’t even thought about water. I should have. I must be getting senile. “There’s a whole big pond of the stuff right outside. And a nice cold spring. You still want to be stubborn?”
Yes, he did.
I told him, “They got hold of your mother and Rhafi, you know.”
He croaked, “That was Casey.”
“How would you know? How would you know that name?”
“The Drople and the Graple both told me. They have ways of observing things that are happening in the city.” He didn’t explain who the Drople and the Graple were. Two of his captors, presumably.
“They talked to you?”
“They hoped to convert me to their cause. They didn’t get the job done.” It was nice to see the kid too weak to be a smart-ass. “I couldn’t understand what they were talking about. Lastyr and Noodiss are the only ones of them that I ever actually do get. They just want to go home.”
“How’d they get here in the first place?”
“In a sky vessel. Like this one. But they didn’t know how to work it well enough. They crashed it.”
“I don’t recall the incident.”
“They crashed in the river. Whatever’s left of their ship is underwater.”
At last I was starting to dig something out. Not that it made a lick of sense.
“That being the case, why not let Casey take them home?”
“Because Casey isn’t here to take them home. Casey is here to take them to prison.”
“They’re escaped convicts?”
Kip was losing patience with me and my questions. “No. They have the wrong politics. Although politics isn’t exactly what it is. Not like what we mean when we say politics here. It’s all politics and philosophy and science and law and research with all three groups. And even though I’ve talked and talked about it with Lastyr and Noodiss I still don’t understand much better than you do without ever having heard them explain anything. It seems like there’s a war going on between people who’ve got different ideas about how knowledge should be handled. The party Lastyr and Noodiss belong to, the Brotherhood of Light, believe that knowledge is the birthright of all intelligent life-forms. That it should be freely shared with anybody able to understand it. That’s why they came here. So they could teach us.”
I believe I’ve mentioned my tendency toward the cynical reaction. I sneered at the charity of Kip’s friends.
I said, “The way you’re hacking and croaking, I’ll bet you’re ready for a long, cool drink of springwater.”
Kip grunted.
“So point the way for me.”
In complete exasperation, the boy told me, “I don’t know where they are!”
“You know how to contact them. Let’s go, Kip. It isn’t a game anymore. It isn’t an adventure. People are coming for you who’ll pull pieces off you like you’re a bug. The stakes are probably a lot bigger than either of us can imagine.”
He gave me a look that belittled my imagination. I kept plugging. “We need to do whatever we can to get ourselves out of their way.”
The kid looked at the stale sandwich but didn’t fold. I had to admire him even if, from my point of view, he was being stubborn for all the wrong reasons.
“You win, kid. Eat hearty.” Time to change over to Plan Q.