She stared from one altered photograph to the other, mind racing back to the events at the Denver Gate’s last opening; then pivoted on one stiletto heel and headed for the telephone. “Good work, Skeeter, very good work. Denver opens—” she peered through the windows to the nearest chronometer hanging from the Commons ceiling “—at nine-fifty a.m., six days from now. Be there. You’re joining the search team. If I remember right, you’ve been down the Wild West Gate before and you’re good in a scrap. And clearly, you’ve got more than laundry fuzz between your ears.”
Kit said drolly, “Better make that two reservations for Denver, Ronnie. I’m going, too.”
Telephone halfway to her ear to arrange for Skeeter’s gate pass, Ronisha aborted the motion midair. She stared, mouth coming adrift. Kit and Skeeter started laughing. “Okay,” she muttered. “You’re going, too.” She punched the direct-line intercom to the war room. “Bax, outfit a search team through the Wild West Gate, stat. Skeeter Jackson and Kit Carson have located Noah Armstrong. He’s posing as Joey Tyrolin, in company with those kids headed for the Colorado pistol competition. And I’ve got a sketch up here to match against photos of all the women who went through on that tour. I want you to put a name to one of them. The one Tyrolin’s porter dropped a trunk on. You remember the incident? That lady was our missing down-time teenager, Julius. Looks like Armstrong forced the boy to help him escape by threatening Ianira and her family.”