Orc looked thoughtful and paced back and forth for a while. Suddenly, he stopped and looked at Kickaha. He was smiling as if a brilliant idea were shining through him.
“You make yourself sound very tricky and resourceful,” he said. “So tricky that I could almost think you were a Lord, not just a leblabbiy Earthling.”
“Anana has the crazy idea that I could be the son of a Lord,” Kickaha said. “In fact, she thinks I could be your son.”
Orc said, “What?” and he looked closely at Kickaha and then began laughing. When he had recovered, he wiped his eyes and said, “That felt good! I haven’t laughed like that for … how long? Never mind. So you really think you could be my child?”
“Not me,” Kickaha said. “Anana. And she liked to speculate about it because she still needs some justification for falling in love with a leblabbiy. If I could be half-Lord, then I’d be more acceptable. But this idea is one hundred percent wishful thinking, of course.”
“I have no children because I want to interfere as little as possible with the natural development here, although a child or two could really make little difference,” Orc said. “But you could be the child of another Lord, I suppose. However, you’ve gotten me off the subject. I was saying that you were very tricky, if I am to believe your account of yourself. Perhaps I could use you.”
He fell silent again and paced back and forth once more with his head bent and his hands clasped behind him. Then he stopped, looked at Kickaha, and smiled. “Why not? Let’s see how good you are. I can’t lose by it no matter what happens, and I may gain.”
Kickaha had guessed, correctly, what he was going to propose. He would tell him the address of Urthona, would take him there, in fact, provide him with some weapons, and allow him to attack Urthona as he wished. And if Kickaha failed, he still might so distract Urthona that Orc could take advantage of the distraction.
In any event, it would be amusing to watch a leblabbiy trying to invade the seat of power of a Lord. “And if I do succeed?” Kickaha said.
“It’s not very likely, since I have not had any success yet. Though, of course, I haven’t really tried yet. But if you should succeed, and I’m not worried that you will, I will permit you and your lover and your friends to return to your world. Provided that the others also swear, while under the influence of the proper drugs, that they have no intention of returning to either Earth.”
Kickaha did not believe this, but he saw no profit in telling Orc so. Once he was out of this cell and had some freedom of action-though closely watched by Orc-he would have some chance against the Lords.
Orc spoke the unknown language into a wristband device, and a moment later another entered. His kilt was red with a black stylized bird with a silver fish in its claws. He carried some papers which he gave to Orc, bowed, and withdrew.
Orc sat down by Kickaha.
The papers turned out to be maps of the central Los Angeles area and of Beverly Hills. Orc circled an area in Beverly Hills.
“That is the house where I lived and where Urthona now lives,” he said. “The house you were searching for and where Anana and the others are now undoubtedly held. Or, at least, where they were taken after being captured.”
Orc’s description of the defenses in the house made Kickaha feel very vulnerable. It was true that Urthona would have changed the defense setup in the house. But, though the configuration of the traps might be different, the traps would remain fundamentally the same.
“Why haven’t you tried to attack before this?”
“I have,” Red Orc replied. “Several times. My men got into the house, but I never saw them again. The last attempt was made about three years ago.
“If you don’t succeed,” Orc continued, “I will threaten Urthona with the Beller. I doubt, however, that that will do much good, since he will find it inconceivable that a Lord could do such a thing.”