By the time Kit reached the aerie, he was almost asleep again, leaning against the elevator doors for the ride up from Commons. The elevator doors slid open, dumping Kit unceremoniously into the room. He staggered, recovered, and hitched the kimono around with an irritable twitch, then met the astonished gazes of John Caddrick, three armed bodyguards, and five I.T.C.H. agents impeccably attired—respectively—in six-thousand dollar suits and neatly pressed uniforms. Kit scratched absently at a thick growth of stubble, yawned, and wove his way toward a chair, where he promptly collapsed.
Caddrick glared. “You’re drunk!”
“God, I wish,” Kit muttered. “I just haven’t been to bed in about five days. Thanks for waking me up. Now, what’s this bullshit about closing Shangri-La?”
Caddrick glanced at the highest-ranking I.T.C.H. officer. “Agent Kirkegard has agreed to shut down this station. TT-86 is dangerously out of control, thanks to gross incompetence among the managerial staff.”
Kit just looked at him. Then switched his attention to the immaculately groomed Kirkegard, her blond hair pulled back into a severe knot at the nape of her neck. “You wouldn’t mind, would you, if I toss this jackass through the window?”
“This is not a time to joke!” she snapped.
“I’m not joking,” Kit growled. “The only thing wrong with this station is John Caddrick’s butt, sitting on it.”
Bull Morgan stood up hastily, clearing his throat. “Kit, I know how hard you’ve been working during this crisis. I asked you to join this meeting to present your case as a station resident and business owner, before I.T.C.H. makes its final determination.”