Kit held back a sigh and entered the glass-walled office anyway. The I.T.C.H. agents were stiff in their spotless uniforms, while Ronisha Azzan stood in cool elegance behind Bull Morgan’s immense desk, which left Kit feeling even dirtier, grittier, and wearier than before. He rearranged grime on the back of his neck, then stalked over to the nearest chair and promptly folded up into it. Tired as he was—and stolid as the Grand Inquisitors were—Kit didn’t miss the slight shuffle in chairs as his pungent perfume, the accumulation of fourteen days on a horse, wafted across the office.
“Welcome home, Kit,” Ronisha Azzan greeted him quietly. “If I could have your report, please?”
Kit told the Deputy Station Manager what they’d found in the mining camp, bringing everyone up to date in a few brief sentences. When he finished, utter silence held the glass-walled aerie. Senator John Caddrick’s expression was a study in lightning-fast realizations: shock, dismay, anxiety, and oddly, triumph. Then Caddrick’s face went slowly purple as anger—or something approximating it—won out over the other emotions. “Benny Catlin? Do you mean to tell me you’ve wasted two entire weeks chasing the wrong tourist? When my daughter has been lost down your godforsaken Britannia Gate this whole time?”
“It wasn’t wasted!” Kit snapped. “We know a great deal more than we did two weeks ago. One of our residents was murdered, down the Denver gate! That boy hadn’t even turned seventeen, Caddrick, and he took a bullet meant for your daughter!”