The House That Jack Built by Robert Asprin & Linda Evans

Judging from the printouts Skeeter now held, that fact was not lost on Kit Carson. He just didn’t know what Kit had in mind to do about it.

Kit was grinning at him, though. He leaned forward, still smiling, and tapped the printouts in Skeeter’s hands. “Mike Benson, bless him, has been glowering for days over this. If he hadn’t been so busy trying to keep this station from exploding into violence, I expect he’d have called you in to explain by now.”

Belatedly, Skeeter realized he’d made the head of Shangri-La security look . . . Well, if not outright incompetent, downright foolish. Thirty-one arrests in seven and a half days was a helluva haul, even for TT-86. Kit was studying Skeeter intently, eyes glinting in the indirect lighting. “I must confess to a considerable curiosity.”

Skeeter sighed and set the reports down. “Not that I expect you to believe me,” he met Kit’s gaze, “but with Ianira and her family gone . . .” He blinked rapidly, told himself sternly that now was not the time to sniffle. His reputation for playing on a rube’s emotions was too well known. “Well, dammit, somebody’s got to make this place fit for the down-timer kids to grow up in! I was thinking about Ianira’s little girls the other day, right about the time I saw a pickpocket snatch that Chilean lady’s wallet. It made me so flaming mad, I just walked over and grabbed him. Maybe you haven’t heard, but Artemisia and Gelasia call me `Uncle Skeeter.’ The last time I was anybody’s uncle . . .”

He shut his mouth hastily, not wanting to talk about the deep feelings he still harbored for little Temujin. He’d seen the child born nine months after he’d fallen through an unstable gate, the one that had dumped him at the feet of the khan of forty-thousand Yakka Mongol yurts, or gers, as the Mongolians, themselves, called their felted tents. Yesukai had named Skeeter his first-born son’s honorary uncle, effectively placing his heir under the protection of the bogdo, the sacred mountain spirit the Yakka clan had believed Skeeter to be. He didn’t talk about it, much. It was a deeply private thing, standing as honorary uncle to the future Genghis Khan. Skeeter’s rescue by the time scout who’d pushed TT-86’s Mongolian Gate had caused Skeeter to lose that “nephew.” And now the Ansar Majlis had deprived him of his honorary nieces.

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