Skeeter stood breathing hard in the bathroom doorway, hardly able to believe it was over so quickly. He turned over his own prisoner from the shower stall, gratefully stripped off the headdress and tool belt, handed over the borrowed weapons, and gave Security his statement. “Do me a favor, will you?” he asked in a tight, controlled voice. “Find out what they know about Ianira’s disappearance.” Then, far too wound up from the adrenaline rush to just hang around, he headed out into the corridor, away from the stink of gunpowder and blood, wishing mightily for a glass of something cold to swallow.
“Skeeter.”
He glanced up and found Kit heading his way, sans disguise. The prisoners were being dragged—or carried—out of room 423. The door to room 425 was open as officers checked the frightened occupants for injuries and reassured a sobbing woman that the danger was over. “Security will take it from here,” Kit told Skeeter. “Hashim’s going down with them to translate. Good work. If you hadn’t taken those two out, I might’ve ended up with a bullet in my back. I don’t know about you, but I could do with a good, stiff drink and a plateful of hot food. How about I treat you to supper at the Silkworm Caterpillar while we talk?”
Skeeter swallowed surprise—and an involuntary rush of saliva—and was overwhelmed by a sudden flood of hunger, accompanied by a spreading sense of euphoria that he was still alive to be hungry. He couldn’t recall when he’d eaten his last real meal and didn’t want to remember too closely what it had consisted of, either.