Wages of Sin by Robert Asprin & Linda Evans

Then the back doors opened and his gurney was untied, slid backwards, and the wheels lowered. Skeeter closed his eyes against the dizziness of the moving ceiling overhead and pondered Rachel’s revelation. Why would Kit Carson, of all people, agree to pay for Skeeter’s medical bills? He couldn’t understand it. Still didn’t when they injected something incredibly potent into his IV’s heplock. The room swam in dizzy circles for just a second or two, then darkness closed around him.

* * *

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

When Skeeter, aware of a new inner strength, coldcocked and then mopped up the floor with Mike Benson, the big cop didn’t even press charges. “Rotten bastard,” Skeeter growled. “Bad enough you tortured me for hours-I might actually have deserved it, given my reputation” another punch sent Benson reeling into the wall, whereupon he slid comically to the floor like a wrung out cartoon, “-but no, you had to do the same thing to Marcus, who’s never done a goddamned thing wrong in his life. This one’s for Marcus.” And he slammed the flat of his hand against Benson’s nose, with just enough force to break it, but not enough to drive a sliver of bone fatally back into the brain. Blood poured in streams. His eyes lost all focus. He was still sitting there, unable to move so much as one arm, as Skeeter stormed through the astonished crowd of onlookers.

He’d found the Security Chief near Primary, which was due to cycle soon. Montgomery Wilkes, with his red hair, black uniform, and steel-cold eyes, routinely prowled the whole area. When Wilkes deliberately put himself in Skeeter’s way, growling out, “You are under arrest, you filthy little rat,” a collective gasp went up.

Skeeter said dangerously, “No way, Herr Hitler. Way outside your jurisdiction.”

“Nothing’s outside my jurisdiction. And people like you are a danger to peace in our time. And I’m the one who’s going to take you off the streets.” When Wilkes actually grabbed Skeeter by the arm, he slammed his other fist into Monty’s solar plexus. Monty doubled over with a gasp of shock, letting go of Skeeter’s arm to hold his middle. Skeeter, coldly enraged, took advantage of Wilkes’ doubled-up condition and added a nice chop to the back of his neck. Skeeter then kicked him to the floor. That felt good. Wilkes had been begging it for years. He said loudly enough for Wilkes to hear, “Look, I haven’t broken any of your laws. And you just assaulted me. Just remember, I’m hell and gone outside your jurisdiction, Nazi. Or do you really want to spend another couple of weeks in Mike Benson’s lockup?”

Wilkes, too winded to reply, glared coldly up at him, eyes promising retaliation.

Skeeter gave out a harsh bark of laughter that startled Wilkes into widening his eyes. “Forget it, Monty You do and I’ll press charges so serious, you’ll end rotting in a cell forever. l grew up as a living god in the yurt of Genghis Khan. I could kill you in so many different ways, not even your lurid imagination could come up with all of ’em. So take some advice. Go hassle taxes out of honest tourists who can’t or won’t fight back.”

He spat, the wad of saliva landing right next to Monty’s chin. The head ATF agent didn’t bat so much as an eyelash. “Face it, Wilkes. You’re no better than I am. You’ve just got a badge to hide behind when you swindle people and pocket the stuff you skim off the top, before it’s ever recorded where government accountants might find it. So cut the Mr.-Up-holding-Law-and-Order-Good-Guy crap. I ain’t buyin’ it and I ain’t scared of you or any of your underhanded tricks. Got that, Monty?”

Monty looked cold and pale on the floor. He nodded stiffly, his face nearly cracking with the movement. Skeeter had him dead-to-rights and they both knew it.

“Good. You leave me the hell alone and I’ll leave you the hell alone.”

God, that felt good.

When he stalked away, anger palpably radiating from him, everyone got out of his way. Even ATF agents. It reminded Skeeter of that Charlton Heston movie, where the sea had peeled back for the Israelites to flee Pharaoh’s wrath.

So far, so good. Two thrashings down, one yelling match to come. Next stop: Kit Carson’s office.

He shoved impatiently past the Neo Edo’s front desk, grabbed an elevator, pressed the unmarked button, and rose swiftly upward into Kit’s private domain. When he stormed into the office, not bothering to remove his shoes, Kit’s brows knotted above a deeply disproving frown. Skeeter didn’t care. He knew Kit would put him down in about two seconds if he started anything physical, so he gritted his teeth, leaned his palms on the enormous desk, and said, “All, right, Carson. Let’s hear it. Why?”

Kit hadn’t moved. The stillness scared Skeeter, despite his momentum and the fire in his blood.

“Sit down, Skeeter.” It was not an invitation. It was an order and a fairly forceful one at that.

Skeeter sat.

Kit finally moved, back slightly in his chair and observing Skeeter closely for several silent moments. His clothes were disarranged slightly from the knock-down, drag-out with Benson and his knuckles were a scraped-up mess from bringing Monty the Monster down a peg or two. Kit finally pointed to the wall-sized rank of monitors to Skeeter’s right. He turned cautiously, wondering why Kit wanted him to look at them, then understood in a single flash of understanding. One of the screens showed live feed directly from a security camera at Primary. He. saw Mike Benson staggering to his feet, still bleeding, with the help of two of his men. The sway in his knees warmed Skeeter’s heart. Yesukai would have approved: honor avenged.

“That, Skeeter, was quite a performance.” Kit’s voice came out dry as a Mongolian sandstorm.

“I wasn’t performing,” Skeeter growled. “And you haven’t answered me yet.” He ignored the monitors and glared at Kit, whose abrupt bark of laughter startled him so deeply he almost forgot why he’d come up here. “Do you have any idea,” Kit said, actually wiping tears, “how long I’ve wanted someone to put that overbearing ass on the floor so hard his brains rattled? Of course, this is going to start another round of battle between ATF and Station Management. Oh, don’t look so scared, boy. I just got off the phone with Bull Morgan, who was laughing so hard he just about couldn’t talk.” That world-famous grin came and went. “No need to worry about charges being pressed or getting thrown off station. Both of those idiots got what they richly deserved.”

Word traveled fast in La-La Land. Skeeter sighed. “Okay. So everybody’s cheering my fight of honor. Big deal. But you still haven’t answered my question.”

Kit studied him some more. Then rose and walked barefooted except for black tabi socks to a sumptuous bar. He chose an ancient-looking bottle, handled it with the greatest reverence, and found two shot glasses. He poured carefully, not wasting a drop, then put the bottle cautiously back into the depths of the bar. Skeeter realized he was being granted some special privilege and didn’t know why.

Kit returned and set a shot glass in front of him then resumed his chair. His brown eyes were steady as they met Skeeter’s. “Marcus is a friend,” he said softly. “I couldn’t go after him, which damn near broke my heart. I’ve watched that boy grow from a terrified slave into a strong and self-confident young man. I’ve offered him jobs dozens of times, but he always shakes his head and says he prefers friendship over charity.”

Kit paused a moment, shot glass steady in his hand. “You and I haven’t had much love for one another over the years, Skeeter. The way you make your living, what you tried to do to my granddaughter …” He shook his head. “Believe me, I understand all too well the fear behind your eyes, Skeeter Jackson. But four weeks ago you did something so out of character, it shook me up. Badly. You tried to save Marcus from that bastard Farley, or whatever his real name is. Word is, you suffered some pretty rough treatment downtime before both of you escaped.”

Skeeter felt heat in his cheeks. He shrugged. “Gladiator school wasn’t so bad, if you didn’t piss off the slave master enough for him to rake your hide with the whip. And I beat Lupus, hands down, in the Circus. No big deal.”

Kit said quietly, “Yes, very big deal. Remember, I’ve fought for my life in that arena, too.” Skeeter had forgotten in his anger. “So far as I can tell, that fight was an important first in your life. First time you put somebody else’s life ahead of your own.”

Skeeter felt uncomfortable again.

Kit lifted his glass. Clumsily, Skeeter took hold of his.

“To honor,” Kit said quietly.

Skeeter’s throat closed. An ‘eighty-sixer had finally understood. He gulped the bourbon, astonished by the smooth flavor of it. Where, he wondered, had Kit acquired it? And why share it with Skeeter?

Kit set his shot glass upside-down on the desk; Skeeter did the same.

“I offered to pay the hospital bill,” Kit finally said, “because you acquired those injuries in a desperate fight to get Marcus back where he belonged-with his wife and children. And I know exactly how much money you don’t have.”

“There’s the wager money Brian’s holding-hey, what about that wager Do you know anything?

A smile came and went. “Goldie screamed and kicked for a whole week when Brian put the wager on hold until you returned. It’s still on hold until you officially visit Brian in the library.”

Skeeter thought that one out. The wager seemed almost irrelevant, now. But he could use the money Brian was holding. He did rather enjoy the mental image of Goldie purple-faced enraged. Then he sighed and startled himself, admitting, “Wish I’d never made that goddamned wager.”

Kit nodded slowly. “Good. That’s one of the reasons for the bourbon.” He chuckled. “It’s illegal, you know. Brought a few bottles back with me from a scouting trip.”

Skeeter couldn’t believe it. Not only was the Kit Carson speaking to him man-to-man, but he’d shared a chink in his squeaky clean honor, shared it knowing it made him vulnerable.

He rose slowly to leave. “Thanks, Kit. More than you know. And thanks for the `vodka,’ too. It was bracing and I needed that.” It was the only way Skeeter knew to tell Kit he would keep his mouth shut about the wonderful, illegal bourbon.

Kit’s lips twitched and a wicked gleam touched his eyes, but he said only, “Any time. I think Brian’s waiting for you.”

Skeeter nodded, headed for the door, then turned and said, “Sorry about the shoes. Won’t happen again.” Provided, that was, if Skeeter were ever invited back to Kit’s sanctuary, which he deemed improbable at best. He closed the door, stood in the corridor for a moment, a little unsure just what he felt, then he sighed, found the elevator, and left the Neo Edo, heading toward the library. The few coins left from his victory lap jangled in his pocket. If the wager was still on, he was still in very hot water. Any tiny bit of coin he could scrape up would help.

When he entered the library, Brian Hendrickson looked up and said in his impossible accent, “Ah, heard you were up and about again. Glad to see rumor true, for once. I’ve been waiting, you know, for a month.”

Skeeter, his mind and blood cooled by the time spent in Kit’s office, pulled the coins out of his pocket and set them on the counter.

“Mmm … very, very nice. And a gold aura amongst the lot.” Brian looked up. “However did you come into possession of these?”

Skeeter wanted to tell him they’d come from the purses he’d stolen; but that wasn’t the truth. He’d spent every last copper uncia of that money getting Marcus and him through the gate. All that remained were a few coins from the arena sands. So he said, very quietly, “I snatched them from the sand when the crowd. at the Circus Maximus started throwing coins to me on my victory lap. I’d, uh, beaten the favorite champion in Rome, and, uh, things got pretty wild for a few minutes.”

Curiously, “Did you kill him?”

“No,” Skeeter bit out. “But I beat the hell out of him and Claudius spared him.”

Brian Hendrickson gazed at nothing for a moment. `That,” he said, “would have been something to witness. Claudius spared very few” Then he shook himself slightly an a mournful look appeared on his face. “I’m afraid these cannot count toward your wager, Skeeter. You earned them honestly.”

He’d half expected that answer, anyway, so he just nodded and scooped up the coins.

“Going to exchange them somewhere”

“No.” They represented a pivotal moment in his life, when-for just a few minutes-the crowd really had treated him as the god Yesukai the Valiant had once called him. He stuffed the coins back into his pocket. Some god. All the years he’d spent fooling himself into thinking that what he did was correct was simply time wasted from his life, on delusions and fantasies that kept him from seeing what he was and where he was inevitably headed with genuine clarity. Thank God for Marcus. Without him, Skeeter might never have woken up.

“Thanks, Brian.”

He stalked out of the library, unsure what to do next, or where to go. Surprisingly, he ended up at Dr. Mundy’s door. A few minutes later, relaxed in a deep, easy-on-the-back chair with the whir of a tape recorder in the background, Skeeter started spilling all of it out, every single thing he could recall about Yesukai, Temujin, and the yurt he’d lived in as bogda and then as uncle of the Khan’s firstborn son. Then, under Dr. Mundy’s gentle persuasion, he let out the rest of it, as well. When he’d finished, he knew the hurt and fear weren’t gone, but much of it now inhabited that whirring strand of metallic recording tape rather than Skeeter’s belly and nightmares.

He refused the usual payment, startling Mundy into stutters, then left quietly and closed the door on that part of his life forever.

Margo and Malcolm got word from Primary just about the time Skeeter Jackson was punching Mike Benson into the ground. A sealed letter with official letterhead and stamps arrived for them.

“Open it!” Margo demanded.

“Patience,” Malcolm laughed.

“You know I haven’t got any!”

“Ah, yet another lesson to explore.”

The Irish alley-cat glare, at least, had not changed since she’d begun college. Malcolm carefully slit the envelope with his pocketknife, replaced the little folder in his pocket, then slid out a crisp, official reply.

“Re: William Hunter, a.k.a. Charles Farley. Above was apprehended while digging up an illegal hoard of downtime artwork from Denver. Your recordings were most helpful in getting his cooperation and should serve very nicely at trial. I know you’re wondering, and ordinarily I wouldn’t commit words to paper before a trial, but you are, after all, on TT-86, many, many years in `our’ past. He was, indeed an agent, collecting unusual pieces of art from the past and returning with them to his employer.” Malcolm’s eyes bugged when he saw that employer’s world-famous name.

“We’ll have a separate trial for him, of course. Seems he and another rich gentleman, on whom we have not a shred of evidence beyond Mr. Hunter’s statements, had several years ago engaged in a little wager as to which of them could smuggle uptime for their private collections the most, ah, aforementioned artwork We’ve already seized one collection and will be turning it over to an IFARTS office as soon as the trials are completed. No one expects either trial to be long. I thought you should know, as you went far beyond the extra mile, and citizens, not law enforcement, at that-to bring this temporal criminal to justice. Good luck to you and thank you most sincerely for your incalculable help in cracking this illegal wager wide open.”

The signature block caused even Margo’s eyes to pop. “Wow! The actual justice Minister, not one of his flunkies!”

Malcolm chortled and folded up the slip of paper, sliding it back into the envelope. “I’d like to have seen old Chuckie’s face when they caught him with the goods. He’ll get life for the illegal trafficking alone and probably a death sentence for the people he killed along the way.” He sighed slightly. “I always did fancy happy endings,” he mused, smiling down at Margo.

She leaned up and kissed him, not caring who was watching, then breathed against his mouth, “Let’s go make a few copies, eh? Give one to what’s left of Benson’s carcass, another to Bull Morgan, maybe even one to that horrid Montgomery Wilkes. Tax evasion is, after all, in his jurisdiction.”

Malcolm laughed hard enough to draw stares, then brushed a kiss across her lips. “Sounds good to me, fire-eater.”

“Huh. Fire-eater. You just wait until I get you alone, you prudish, staid old Brit, you.”

They set out toward Bull Morgan’s aerie of an office, grinning like a couple of Cheshire Cats.

Wandering aimlessly, Skeeter finally ended up inside the Down Time Bar & Grill, where-of all people, Marcus was on duty at the bar. He flushed and nearly walked out again, but Marcus was pouring his favorite brew and saying, “Skeeter, have a beer with me, eh?”

He halted, then turned. “No money, Marcus.”

“So what?” Marcus said a shade too seriously. He came around the end of the bar, handed Skeeter a foaming mug, then sat down with his own. They drank in silence for a few minutes, popping peanuts in between sips and longer pulls at the beer.

“Been wanting to thank you,” Marcus said quietly.

“Huh. Been wanting to do the same.”

Another long silence reigned, filled with peanuts and beer.

“Just returning the favor,” Marcus said at last. “Isn’t nearly enough, but it’s a start.”

“Now look here, Marcus, I’m not going to put up with any more of your honor is sacred bullshi-”

Goldie Morran appeared at the entrance.

Marcus winked once at Skeeter and resumed his place behind the bar. Goldie walked over and, to Skeeter’s dismay, took a chair at his table. “Marcus, good to see you back,” she, said, with every evidence of sincerity. He just nodded his thanks. “Would you get me a tall bourbon with a touch of soda, please?”

Back in his bartender role, Marcus made the drink to Goldie’s specifications, then delivered it on a tray with another beer for Skeeter.

“Well,” Goldie said. “You have been through it, haven’t you? I didn’t expect you to survive.”

Skeeter narrowed his eyes. “Not survive?” he asked, his tone low and dangerous. “Five years in the yurt of Genghis Khan’s father, and you didn’t think I’d survive?”

Goldie’s eyes widened innocently; then, for some reason, the mask shattered and fell away, leaving her old, tired, and oddly vulnerable. She snatched at her drink the way Skeeter had snatched at that hunting spear in the stinking sands of the Circus.

He wondered which of them would say it first.

Before either of them could summon up the nerve, Mike Benson-both eyes blacked, limping a little, entered the bar a bit gingerly and sat down very carefully at their table. He looked from one to the other, then said, “Got a copy of a communique from the Minister of justice today.” Skeeter’s belly hollowed. “I, uh, just wanted to ask for the record if either of you had run into a professional antiquities thief by the name of William Hunter during these last few weeks? He’s one of the best in the world. Steals ancient pornography for an uptime collector as part of a wager with another collector. Oh, by the way, one of his aliases was Farley. Chuck Farley.”

Skeeter and Goldie exchanged glances. Neither of them spoke.

“Well, do let me know if either of you’ve seen the bastard. They’ll be needing witnesses for the trial next month.”

With that, Benson left them.

Goldie glanced at her drink, then at Skeeter. “Professional, huh? Guess we were a couple of damned amateurs, compared to that.”

“Yeah.” Skeeter pulled at his beer while Goldie gulped numbing bourbon. “Funny, isn’t it? We were trying to win our stupid little wager and he cleaned us both out to win his boss’s wager. Feel a little like a heel, you know?”

Very quietly, Goldie said, “Yes, I know” She stared into her drink for several seconds, then met his gaze, her eyes troubled and dark. “I, uh, I thought I really needed to apologize. I told that gladiator where to find you.”

Skeeter snorted. “Thanks, Goldie. But I already knew.”

Goldie’s eyes widened.

“Marcus told me, right before I went into the arena to fight Lupus Mortiferus.”

Goldie paled. “I never meant things to go so far.”

“Me, neither,” Skeeter muttered. “You should feel what I feel every time I move my back and shoulders.

Got a bottle of pain pills this big.” He measured the length and diameter of the prescription bottle. “Not to mention the antibiotics, the muscle relaxants, and whatever it is Rachel shoots into my butt every few hours. Feel like a goddamned pincushion. One that’s been run over by all twelve racing chariots in a match.”

Goldie cleared her throat. “I don’t suppose …” She stopped, visibly searching for the right words and the courage to say them. “That stupid wager of ours” She gulped a little bourbon for bravery. ” I think we ought to call it off, seeing as how it’s done nothing but hurt a lot of people.” Her eyes flickered to Marcus, then back. “Some of them good people.”

Skeeter just nodded. “Terms accepted, Goldie.”

They shook hands on it, with Marcus a silent witness.

“Suppose we ought to go tell Brian,” Skeeter muttered.

“Yes. Let’s do that, shall we, before I run out of bourbon courage.”

Skeeter slid his chair back and took Goldie’s chair, assisting her up. She shot a startled glance into his face, then fumbled for money.

“Goldie,” Marcus called from the bar, “forget it. You’re money’s no good for that one.”

She stared at the young former slave for a long time. Then turned abruptly and headed for the door.

“Thanks, Marcus,” Skeeter said.

“Any time, friend.”

Skeeter followed Goldie out into Urbs Romae where workmen were busy patching broken mosaics. They stepped past as carefully as possible, then headed for the library.

Word traveled far faster than they did. Telephones, word-of-mouth, however it happened, the alchemy proved itself once again, because by the time they reached Brian Hendrickson’s desk, an enormous crowd of ‘eighty-sixers and newsies holding their vidcams aloft and trying to shove closer, all but filled the library. Goldie faltered. Skeeter muttered, “Hey, it’s only ‘eighty-sixers and some lousy newsies. Isn’t like you’re facing a champion gladiator or anything.”

The color came back into her face, two bright, hot spots of it on her cheekbones. She strode into the crowd, muttering imperiously, “Get out of the way, clod. Move over, idiot.”

Skeeter grinned to himself and followed her through the path she plowed. When he caught sight of Kit Carson, Kit’s grin and wink shook him badly enough he stumbled a couple of steps. But he was glad Kit was there, on his side for once.

Then, too soon, they both faced Brian Hendrickson. Voice flat, Goldie said, “We’re calling off the bet, Brian.”

A complete hush fell as every eye and vidcam lens focused on Skeeter. He shrugged. “Yeah. Stupid wager in the first place. We’re calling it quits.”

A wave of sound rolled over them as minor wagers were paid off, vidcam reporters talked into their microphones, and everyone pondered the reason. Skeeter didn’t care. He signed the paper Brian shoved at him, watched while Goldie signed it, too, then collected his earnings, stuffed them into every pocket he possessed, borrowed an envelope from Brian to hold the arena coins, then moved woodenly through the crowd, holding mute as questions were hurled in his direction. Let Goldie cope with it, he thought emptily. I don’t want any part of it.

A fair percentage of the crowd followed him up to Commons and down its length, whispering wagers as to what he’d do next. He ignored the mob, including at least two persistent newsies, and stalked through Castletown, Frontier Town, and into Urbs Romae.

The only warning he received was the flash of light on a sharp metal blade. Then Lupus Mortiferus–how the hell did he slip though the gate again?-charged, sword and dagger in classic killing position. Skeeter did the only thing he could do, while unarmed. He turned, shot through the startled crowd, and ran. The coins and bills in his pockets slowed him down, but not by much. Lupus remained behind him, running flat out, but the gladiator wasn’t gaining. At least, not yet. A quick over-the-shoulder glance showed Lupus and, incongruously, two newsies in hot pursuit, vidcams capturing every bit of the lethal race.

Skeeter cursed them, catskinned over a railing, and howled at the pain which made itself abruptly known all over again-then charged up a ramp, shouting at tourists to get out of the way. Startled women lunged for children or shop doorways as Skeeter pelted past. His shirt pockets were lighter by a fair percentage, having dumped money to the floor while in the middle of that catskinning move. Damn. He kept running, aware from the screams that Lupus was still back there. Doesn’t this guy ever give up? Then he had to admit, C`mon Skeeter, you robbed him then humiliated him in front of the Imperator himself, never mind all his fans. Either you outrun him, or he’s gonna chop you into deli-sized slices of Skeeter And you’d deserve it.

With Lupus and both panting newsies in pursuit, Skeeter whipped around a corner, grabbed an overhead girder, and swung himself up and around, then dropped to the catwalk the moment Lupus and the confused newsies rounded the corner. He sped back the way he’d come, hearing a roar of rage far behind. The next roar was much closer. Skeeter knew he was getting winded, and cramps the length of his body slowed him even further. He dropped to the Commons floor and headed for Residential, hoping to lose the man in the maze of corridors and elevators. Maybe, if he were lucky, he could grab an elevator for the gym and find a weapon. Preferably one of those fully automatic machine guns Ann kept in her little office, with a full belt of ammo in it.

Lupus charged down the corridor, shouting. obscenities at him in Latin and gaining ground. Winded, aching from wrenched muscles that hadn’t quite healed yet from the arena, Skeeter didn’t notice it at first. Then, as he fell against an elevator door and frantically pressed the button, a shimmer dopplered wildly and a gate opened up between him and the enraged gladiator. The gate’s edges pulsed raggedly in the typical configuration of a very unstable gate. It grew, shrank to a pinhole, then engulfed the entire hallway. Through the intense vibration of his skullbones, Skeeter thought he heard a startled yell. He peered hard at the pulsing, black opening, wondering if anyone had ever studied the back side of a gate, or could see what was on the other side.

Before he could make out any details, the gate shuddered closed. Skeeter slid to the floor, panting, when he realized there was no sign of Lupus, just two gaping newsies. One of the stammered, “D-did you see what I think I saw?”

“I think I did. Our vidcams should’ve caught it.”

They exchanged glances, ignored Skeeter completely, and dashed down the corridor the other way. Wearily, Skeeter found a stubby pencil in one pocket, and pushed himself to trembling legs, marking out the gate’s position and size as best he could, dragging the pencil down walls and across the floor, with arrows pointing toward the ceiling, since he couldn’t reach it.

Unstable gates were nothing to mess with. Whenever possible, their location and duration were logged. He’d call Bull Morgan as soon as he got home. Exhausted, he dug for keys that the slave master must’ve taken away from him at least a month ago, then remembered that Lupus had shattered his door a long time ago. He hadn’t needed a key since his return. Eventually, he might even have enough money to have the door fixed. He stumbled in the direction of his apartment and found it exactly as he’d left it earlier in the day. The bottles of water he’d planned to sell as a con he’d already shoved angrily into the wastebasket. Skeeter hunted a little desperately for the pill bottle he’d described to Goldie. He shook out two tablets, reconsidered, and shook a third into his palm.

He swallowed them dry, then tumbled into bed. By some odd chance, he’d left his small television on this morning. The television, even his apartment still looked and felt alien. He was about to shut it off by remote when a newsflash came on, showing Skeeter running from Lupus, with a breathless commentary on the longstanding feud. Skeeter grunted and reached again for the remote. Then froze, hand in midair.

“This, as you can see, is a blowup of what our vidcam lenses picked up through the unstable gate. Rumor is, it has already started a heated debate among onstation scholars.” Skeeter stared at the screen as Lupus, larger than life, plunged into the gate with a startled yell, then stumbled on a stone step. One of a huge number of stone steps, leading to the crest of a flat-topped pyramid. Lupus, grasping sword and knife, was staring down at an enormous crowd of featherclad Indians. They were prostrate on the ground.

“Clearly,” the voiceover said as Lupus just swayed there, stupefied, “this will begin an intense scholarly debate over the legendary origins of the god-like Viracocha, who came to Central America wearing a pale skin, taught the people a great deal of knowledge they didn’t possess, then vanished across the ocean to the west, vowing to return. Speculation about the classic legend should fuel debate for years to come. Whatever the truth, this tape represents a scholarly as well as journalistic victory in the search for knowledge of our past.”

Skeeter finished the motion he’d started with the remote and turned off the television with a deep sigh. He was almost sorry Lupus had suffered such a fate. He knew in his bones the shock of dissonance caused by plunging accidentally through an unstable gate, with no way home again. But in his inner soul, he was even gladder that he was still alive. Still selfish, aren’t we, Skeeter? He realized sadly he probably always would be. But the painkillers had already begun to hit his system, so that he couldn’t quite raise enough anxiety to worry about it now. Within moments, he drowsed into blissful oblivion.

“Marcus?”

Her voice came drowsily in the darkness. He’d been lying quietly, wrapped up in the miracle of holding her again and wondering if the gods would bless them with a son this time.

“Yes, beloved?”

Ianira’s tiny movement told her how the endearment, new to his lips, had startled and pleased her. “Oh, Marcus,” she breathed huskily into his ear, “what would I have done if-”

He placed gentle fingertips across her lips. “Let us not tempt the Fates, beloved. It did not happen. Let us not speak of it again.”

Her arms tightened around his ribcage and for a moment she buried her face in his shoulder. A marvel of sensation, of need … but she wanted to discuss something, so he willed it back, ran his fingers through her silken black hair and murmured, “You had something to say?”

She turned just enough to kiss his wrist, then sighed and said, “Yes. That telephone call you were so angry about earlier?”

Marcus felt the chuckle build deep inside. “Not angry, love. Impatient.”

His reward was another brush of her lips across his. Then she settled back into his arms, wrapped around him as warmly and contentedly as any cat. He’d had a kitten, as a child, tamed from the wild as the only survivor of its litter. Perhaps they should ask permission to get a kitten for their children? It would be a delightful surprise

“Marcus, you haven’t heard a word I’ve said!”

“I’m sorry, beloved. I was just thinking of asking the Station Manager for permission to get a kitten. For the girls.”

It was Ianira’s turn to chuckle. “Always my romantic dreamer. I would never have you be otherwise.

“What were you saying, beloved?” Strange, how the endearment he’d never been able to say before now came so easily to his lips.

“The phone call. It was Council business. They were taking votes over the phone, to move as quickly as possible.”

Marcus turned his head slightly. “What could possibly be so urgent?”

She said very softly, “Skeeter.”

Ahh…

“He is no longer Lost. He must therefore be given the chance to become Found.”

Marcus nodded. “And your answer?”

“Yes, of course. Who do you think started the round of calls in the first place?”

Marcus laughed, softly enough not to waken their sleeping children, then turned until Ianira was beneath him, both arms still wrapped around him. This time, he could not hold back the love in him. Ianira cried out softly, moaned his name and sought his mouth. Marcus moved slowly, dreamily, thinking of kittens and sons and the miracle of this moment in whatever time Fate gave them together.

* * *

EPILOGUE

Skeeter was dreaming again. He’d dreamed often, these last few weeks, all of them terrible and strange, so at first he felt no great alarm, only a frisson of fear and a great deal of resignation as to what horrors his unconscious mind would put him through this time.

The dream began with dark figures, faces masked in black, bodies sheathed in black, hair covered with black, sinister figures which touched and lifted him, began to wind strips of black around his feet and lower legs so tightly he couldn’t move even his toes. Then he realized he wasn’t sleeping anymore. He began to fight was subdued thoroughly and expertly. Sweat started along his back and chest and face as the black strips rose higher, covering thighs, hips, lower belly, like some monstrous black mummy casing. But they wouldn’t get his arms. He had to have his aims free, to struggle, to plant a fist in someone’s face before his strength ran out.

He fought savagely. He thought he heard a faint curse from one of the figures holding him and fought even harder. But his other fights, never mind that final run from Lupus, had taken nearly everything left in him. Eventually, his strength began to wane. And then, before he could react, an unknown person grabbed his shaved head and bent his head back until the pain was so deep all he could do was blink tears down an open mouth and fight for air through the strain on his windpipe.

When they let him go, black wrappings swathed arms, chest, and neck. He could not move.

Coming slightly out of shock, Skeeter thought to use the other major skill he possessed: language. “Hey,” Skeeter began, “look, whoever you are-not that I care, really, that’s your business-but what’re you doing? With me, I mean? Kidnapping’s illegal on TT-86.” At least, he thought it was. He hadn’t ever gotten around to actually reading the rulebook they’d given him at Primary. “Look, have a heart. You can see I’m helpless, here. What could it possibly hurt to just tell me?”

Then, terrified as a new set of wrappings dug into his brow, covered his head and brow, wound around his eyes in one gauze-thin layer after another, Skeeter fought a whimper that had been building since childhood. “Please,” he said while his mouth, at least, was still free, “what harm have I done to you? Just tell me, please, and I’ll make it up to you, I swear it –”

His eyesight disappeared completely, both eyes covered in layer after layer of thin black cloth until there was no light. He struggled again, far too late. He could not move anything beneath the wrappings more than a quarter inch. Genuinely terrified now, a onetime Mongol battling claustrophobia, his breath came in ragged gasps. They left his nose clear-small comfort, then forcibly closed his jaw over a thick gag and tightly wrapped his mouth closed until the loudest sound he could utter was a faint, muffled, “Mmmmf” which even he had difficulty hearing. Getting enough air through his nose to fuel the mindless terror ripping through him proved futile. As he was lifted and carried toward his shattered apartment door, Skeeter blacked out.

He came to in ragged bits and pieces, aware of movement, of jostling as those carrying him grew tired and rearranged his weight in their grasp. He saw no light whatsoever and could catch no scent that might tell him where he was. He drifted out of consciousness again, then faded back into it, pondering this time who had him? ATF? Benson’s men, intent on wresting whatever “unofficial” confessions they could beat and starve out of him? Or maybe Goldie Morran’s henchmen, hired to do only the gods knew what kill him, cripple him, send him uptime as luggage through Primary … Despite her capitulation on the bet, she must still hate him with all her greedy, cold little heart. Or perhaps it was simply a tourist with a taste for revenge, who’d hired enough men to do this, maybe dump him down the garbage incinerator … .

A chill shook him inside the wrappings. Burned alive, like so many captives over the centuries. He’d heard the crazy stories about Kit’s grandkid and that crazy Welsh bowman, both of whom had nearly been burned alive. His skin crawled already, anticipating the suffocating heat and the flames searing him while he writhed inside his black bindings and screamed himself to death.

He finally was set down on a cold, hard surface, unable to move. Someone unfastened the wrappings from his eyes, allowing him sight. At first, he thought he must’ve gone blind during that semiconscious trip, for whatever room he’d been brought to was black-dark. Then he noticed specks of light as his eyes adjusted. Candles. Candles? He blinked a few times, clearing his eyes of dried tears and grit, and noticed shimmering golden draperies which formed a quiet, snug little room filled with candles-hundreds of ’em-and with warmth beyond any possible heat those candles could’ve given off and … he felt a fool for saying it even to himself… welcome.

Some welcome, Skeeter, wrapped up tight so’s you can’t move, in black mummy bandages.

He noticed a dais, then, low and right in front of him. It was wide enough to hold seven people comfortably. Currently six stood on it, with a gap in the center for someone unknown. The six were men of various builds and heights, robed in black, faces masked in black, but unmistakably male. The ones who brought me here, then. A shuffling of many feet and the sound of dozens of lungs in the utter silence told Skeeter that a crowd had gathered to witness … what?

He shivered inside his imprisoning layers of cloth and looked up. He’d never gone lower in the terminal than the basement where the gym and weapons ranges were, having a Mongol’s fear of tightly closed-in places. This must be the level beneath the basement, nothing but steam pipes, sewage drains, electrical conduits, and computer cables strung everywhere, festooning the girdered ceiling like the web of a very large and completely insane spider.

Skeeter shuddered again.

He didn’t much like spiders.

Being caught in one’s web was even worse.

At just that moment, the golden draperies stirred behind the dais, admitting darkness in the guise of a slim figure also robed and masked in black. Looks like it’s showtime. Skeeter swallowed hard around the thick wad of cloth in his mouth. The gag forced every sound he tried to make shrivel and die in a parched throat. He gazed up at the seven robed figures, aware of dozens of figures still crowding into the already claustrophobic little space.

It’s a court, Skeeter realized with a tremor. It’s a court and they’re the judges and prob’ly the jury, too.

Probability that he’d be sentenced without defense was decidedly high-but for what crime? And what would that sentence be? Skeeter had come through so much over the past few days, he couldn’t credit the evidence of his eyes: robed, silent judges, a rack of what looked like knives and instruments of torture just visible at the edge of his restricted gaze, a neat, terrifying coil of rope, just the right diameter and heft for hanging a man.

Skeeter, claustrophobic twice over, struggled in vain while the back of his brain whispered that any one of those ducts, pipes, and concrete supports overhead would make a great platform for a hangman’s rope. And even if he hadn’t been gagged, who would’ve heard him screaming, anyway, down in the bowels of the terminal where concrete met native Himalayan rock and merged with it?

Well, Skeeter’d survived a bloodbath, giving the spectators their money’s worth; he’d won the damned laurel crown and the money prize fair and square. He’d even managed to rescue Marcus, alive and uninjured, except for the desperation in his dark eyes that spoke eloquently of how much his one-time friend wanted simply to go home and forget everything that had happened.

Skeeter hadn’t expected elaborate thanks from the former slave and he certainly couldn’t blame Marcus for wanting to forget those few weeks when circumstance and his stubborn, Gallic pride had forced him to pick up the burden of slavery again. True to his expectations, Marcus had not offered an elaborate, embarrassing demonstration of gratitude. A couple of beers; but no elaborate show of gratitude. Yes, Skeeter had predicted that and it had come true.

A little bitterly, Skeeter wished he possessed a quarter of his former friend’s character.

But in of all his long musings over Marcus’ eventual reaction, Skeeter had not predicted this. Not in his wildest, most terrifying nightmares.

Before he was ready, a deep, male voice began speaking in a language so archaic Skeeter didn’t understand a single syllable. When the robed judge had made his statement and retired to his place, another stepped forward. At least he spoke English. Sort of, anyway.

“I will speak the words of our most learned colleague, Chenzira Umi, a scribe of pharaohnic Egypt, in English to you, for that is our common language now, necessary for survival; then will I add my own thoughts for your consideration.”

Skeeter didn’t recognize either of those voices; his tummy did inverted spins like a dying aircraft.

“Chenzira Umi speaks against this man, who is nothing more than a common thief and cutpurse. He should have both hands cut off to end his career of thievery and blasphemous conduct such as we might expect of a worshiper of Set himself, the dark one who murders even our very Lord, wise and all-knowing Osiris. These are the words of Chenzira Umi.”

Beneath his wrappings, Skeeter had turned whiter than his bindings were black. Cut off his hands? Who were these people? And what gave them the bloody, arrogant gall to pass such judgment on him? He was far from perfect, a scoundrel since earliest childhood, but that did not justify such torture! Did it? Well, the guy is from Egypt and people from the Middle East have funny ideas about crime and punishment. And there are six more to go. Surely reason would prevail?

He wasn’t so sure when the man who’d done the translating said in a scathing, late-Elizabethan-sounding voice, “If it were my choice, I’d say hang him, then draw and quarter the whoreson on yon wall, for the children to see as an example before he bled out and died.”

Skeeter closed his eyes, queasy to his soul and losing hope fast.

One by one, the five male members spoke. Another one for violent retribution. One for mercy, because he’d never stolen from them, whoever the hell they were, although Skeeter was beginning to form a pretty good guess. Then, surprisingly, another vote for mercy for the sake of the children Skeeter had saved over the years with his large donations. Skeeter narrowed his eyes. How’s he know I’ve been donating, never mind why? Dimly, Marcus’ voice came back to him, explaining how The Found Ones had known about his gifts of money for a long time. Based on that alone, Skeeter knew he ought to know the man, but the voice was completely strange to him. Maybe they wore voice synthesizers under those masks? The sixth vote was also, astonishingly, for mercy, leaving the vote at a tie.

Then the seventh, small-statured person stepped forward.

Skeeter knew her voice in an instant. He stared, aghast that she could be a part of such a bloodthirsty organization, but there she stood, her voice as clear as ancient temple bells.

Ianira Cassondra’s voice, issuing from the black mask, said, “The voting of the Council of Seven stands at three against, three for. Should I vote either way… well, either decision’s outcome would be obvious, would it not? I will not, cannot break a tie in this vote. As head of this Council, I may vote to create a tie, for some things must be considered very cautiously. But I may not cast the deciding vote. All of us having given reasons for our vote, I will speak as a special witness, then we will poll the Committee members again, lest any have changed their minds, hearing others’ testimony.”

Skeeter felt like what’s-his-name, that ancient Greek guy the Athenian city fathers had forced to drink poison. Ianira herself had spoken of it to him one time over dessert in the apartment she and Marcus shared, when Skeeter himself was the guest of honor. So fare the fortunes of men, Skeeter thought bitterly, when seven wolves and a sheep decide what’s for lunch. Perfect democracy: everybody got to vote. Even the lunch.

He wondered if this crowd would even bother asking this lunch before they devoured it, metaphorically speaking?

Ianira Cassondra’s voice, so soft she might have been whispering her children to sleep, yet so well projected Skeeter was certain even the back row of listeners could hear her perfectly, began to speak. Must’ve tricked up that little trick in that big temple of hers. He waited for the betrayal to come.

It didn’t. Instead, disbelieving, Skeeter listened while she wove a thread that became the yarn of a great tale of evil and danger, with Skeeter caught at the center of it, Skeeter who had, indeed, donated large sums of his earnings to them, donations which had saved many a child’s life-and many an adult’s, as well.

Then, as he was beginning to squirm with embarrassment, she launched hypnotically into the tale of Skeeter’s run for life-Marcus’ life-all the way from the back of Residential to the Porta Romae gate, already open with tourists filing through, while he dodged a man determined to kill him. How Skeeter had at last been forced to crash the Porta Romae to try and save his friend from the evil clutches of the man who’d planned all along to kidnap and sell Marcus back into slavery.

A craning, strained glance backwards showed Skeeter a roomful of people leaning forward, intent on her every word.

Damn, I’II bet she was impressive in that temple.

In her flowing robes and flowing hair and that voice …

Many a man would’ve thought she was whatever equivalent to angel he knew.

Ianira’s magic voice then softened in horror at the fate of each man: one sold to the master of the games and ordered to keep track of inventory-men and beasts. Beside that, she wove the story of the other man, kidnapped and sold to be a gladiator, hardly able to communicate with his captors, beaten and tortured into learning the art of butchering others to stay alive, when his own presence in Rome spoke eloquently of the fact that he could be no killer, that he had come here because he had promised to save Marcus, whatever it took. In trying to keep that promise, he had lost his freedom and was slated to die in the arena on the end of a grand champion’s sword.

By this time, there were murmurs in the back rows, murmurs that sounded angry. Skeeter didn’t dare hope that note of anger was for him and the foul treatment he’d received.

“And then,” Ianira Cassondra cried out, raising both arms in a graceful, possibly symbolic motion, “our Skeeter defeated the champion and refused to kill his opponent! The Caesar-“she pronounced it Kai-sar “gave him both laurel crown and purse as rightfully his. Aware that only more slavery awaited him, victory and prize notwithstanding; aware also that he had not yet freed his friend, who stood with his evil master on the great balustrade above the starting boxes for the races, Skeeter did what only a man with the smiles of the gods at his back could possibly have done.”

She deliberately stretched out the tense silence.

Then, all but whispering, as if in holy awe herself, “He galloped his horse for the starting- ate wall. Leapt to his feet on the galloping horse’s back—- ” a number of people, men from the sound of it, gasped in shock “then dug the butt of his spear into the blood drenched sand and spun himself up and over the balustrade. While every guard on the balustrade gawked just to see him there, instead of fifteen feet down in the arena, Skeeter tossed the heavy purse that was his well earned prize to Marcus’ new master as payment for his friend’s freedom.”

Somewhere behind them, a ragged cheer broke out. Skeeter began to pray with the tiniest smidgen of hope that he might yet live through this.

“And then?” Ianira’s voice demanded of her audience. `When our resourceful Skeeter arranged for them to impersonate more highly placed persons than they were, to throw off the slave trackers after them. They hid. They changed disguises and hiding places, again and again. And when gate time came for the Porta Romae, Skeeter caused a great diversion so that he and Marcus could win through to the time gate and come safely home.

“Now,” and her voice turned abruptly hard as diamond and angry as a rattlesnake stirred up in the rocks, “I ask you, members of The Found Ones, what was his reward for this? A monstrous fine from that evil group calling itself Time Tours whose employees use us badly and care not a bit for our health, our dependents left behind should we die, our very lives squandered like spare change without anyone ever warning us of the dangers! They actually had the gall to fine him! Both directions! And what followed that? Imprisonment by Station Security-during which he was starved, beaten, humiliated!

“I ask!” she cried, sweeping off her mask, shaking out her hair, revealing her face, alight now with startling holiness-it was the only way Skeeter could find to describe the light that seemed to flow outward from her-“I ask you, each of you, is this any fair way to treat a man who has risked his very life, not once, but many times, for one of us?”

The roar echoed in the confined space like a Mongolian thunderstorm trapped in the confines of a canyon deep in the high, sharp mountains.

Very, very slowly, Ianira allowed her head to fall forward as though infinitely wearied by the gruesome story of treachery, courage, and betrayal she’d just been forced to reveal. When her head rose again, the mask was back in place. Symbolic, then, Skeeter realized. But of what?

Voice carefully neutral again, Ianira said, “He has the qualifications. All of you know already the story of this man’s childhood, lost in a time not his own. He has faced all that we have faced-and worse. Yet he has survived, prospered, remained generous in his heart to those in greater need than he. I now ask for a new and final poll of the Seven. Do we Punish? Or Accept?”

One by one the answers came to Skeeter’s sweating ears.

In thick-accented English came the single word, “Punish,” from the ever-condemning voice of the Egyptian.

A pause ensued. The man who had previously translated the Egyptian’s longer speech said very quietly, “Accept.”

The next man refused to be swayed, which, if Skeeter were reading the body language under the robe correctly, deeply irritated Ianira Cassondra.

Down the line it went, skipping over Ianira: “Punish.” “Accept.” “Accept.” “Accept.”

Skeeter wasn’t certain he’d heard-or counted-correctly. Was that really four versus two? Now what? Ianira stepped forward, the final member of the Seven to cast her vote. Skeeter waited to hear her confirm what he thought he’d just heard. “The vote stands at four to accept, two to punish. As there is no chance for a tie, I may cast my vote freely.” She looked down at Skeeter, lying helpless on the concrete floor at her feet. “I cannot deny that Skeeter Jackson is a scoundrel, a thief, and a man who charms people out of their money and belongings, to his own benefit.

“Yet I must also repeat that he has saved the lives of many in this very room through donations he thought anonymous. And then, on nothing more than a promise, this scoundrel and thief risked his life to save a downtimer, a member of The Found Ones. I admit difficulty in putting aside personal feelings, for Marcus is the father of my children, but this is a thing in which I was trained at the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus. to look beyond personal feelings to the heart of the truth.

“And that is why, peering as we have into this man’s heart, his soul, judging him by his actions-all his actions-I must vote to Accept.”

Another thunderous roar went up while Skeeter stared, wide-eyed, at Ianira. He still didn’t quite believe it. Ianira approached from the dais, a sharp knife in her hands. Skeeter swallowed hard.

“Do not fear, beloved friend.” She cut loose the clinging, confining gauze wrappings, freeing him to stand up and beat his thighs with equally leaden arms to restore circulation. Then he was swept away, buffeted, occasionally kissed-and the kissers were not always female-his back pounded until he was certain the well-wishers would leave bruises the size of dinner plates. He wasn’t precisely sure just what the vote to Accept meant.

Apparently Ianira sensed this, as she sensed so much else out of thin air, for she called a halt to the merrymaking and restored order to The Found Ones’ chamber.

“Skeeter Jackson, please approach the dais.”

He did so slowly, filing down a sudden double line of grinning Found Ones, curiosity and uncertainty wavering within him still. He hated not knowing precisely what was about to unfold. He wondered what he should do when he got there? Show respect, his mind told him, somewhat dry with disgust that he hadn’t thought of it sooner. So when he arrived, he went down on one knee and kissed the hem of her robe. When he dared glance up, her mask was gone and she was actually blushing-furiously.

Regaining her composure quickly, however, she said to him, “There are things we must explain to you, Skeeter Jackson, for although you are now one of us, it is through accident only. Born an uptimer, you spent formative years of your life downtime, with a group of men as harsh as the summer’s noonday sun on the marble steps at Ephesus. You have suffered, lived, and learned from every misfortune you have encountered. You might have become a creature like the gems dealer, Goldie Morran, who has no true heart anywhere in her.

“But you did not. You gave to others, not once but many times. Your … misadventure … down the Porta Romae only cinched your right to hold this honor, Skeeter Jackson. From this day until the end of your life and beyond, you shall be known as a Found One, for although you have been Lost all your life and took great pains to hide it, Marcus was able to discover the truth. You are one of us,” she swept the room with one arm, taking in what must have been more than a hundred women, men, and children of all ages, dozens of societies and time periods-some having come through a tourist gate, more through an unstable one.

“You are one of us, Skeeter Jackson, and we are now your Family.”

And then, as people filed past, many giving him gifts of welcome-plain, simple gifts made to be cherished over a lifetime: a flower, a handmade handkerchief bearing an embroidered logo which must stand for The Found Ones, a box of food, a new pair of bluejeans—-it happened. Skeeter Jackson began to cry. It started as a tickle at the back of his throat. Worked its way up to a tight throat, then to wetness welling up in his eyes. Before he knew it, he was crying so hard, each indrawn breath shook his slender frame. Eventually he found himself alone on the dais with Ianira and Marcus and the many, many gifts left for him.

“Why?” Marcus asked quietly.

Ianira rolled her eyes. “Men,” she said tiredly. “It is so obvious, Marcus. He has a family now.”

Skeeter nodded vehemently, still unable to speak. He had a real Clan again! One that accepted him on his own terms, knowing his worst faults, yet took him in anyway and made something of him more than an outcast kid shivering in the Mongolian nights and trying desperately not to waken Yesukai the Valiant, lest he waken the man’s formidable temper-and worse punishments.

“I swear,” he whispered, voice still choked with tears, “I swear to you, Ianira, Marcus, I will never betray your faith. I have a Clan again. And I never break faith with the people who are of my Clan. There … there were times I believed I was not worthy of finding another to accept me, other than one I adopted from necessity’s sake.”

“The ‘eighty-sixers?’ Marcus asked.

Skeeter nodded. “Not that I’ll start stealing from them now. I did adopt them, after all. And … and it sounds crazy, but … I don’t know what to do. I haven’t any skills worthy of The Found Ones.”

Ianira and Marcus exchanged glances, obviously having given this careful thought. Then Ianira bent close and murmured in his ear. “We have a few ideas you might find … intriguing.” She then proceeded to describe three of them, just to tantalize his imagination.

Skeeter started; then grinned and began to laugh like a newly freed imp. Not only would he be useful, it sounded like fun!

“Lady,” he shook her hand formally, “you just got yourself a twenty-four-carat deal!”

He had difficulty, still, imagining himself an honest man. But what the hell? Ianira’s ideas were fabulous.

An entire new life stretched out before him.

All he had to do was grasp it.

“Yeah,” he repeated slowly, to himself, “a genuine twenty-four-carat deal.”

That said, he dried his face with the heels of his hands and let Marcus and Ianira carry some of his gifts while he carried the lion’s share. They escorted him away from the dim-lit Council Chamber (blowing out candles as they went) up to the bright lights and holiday cheer of Commons.

Skeeter Jackson stopped and just looked. Today, for the first time in his life, all he saw were happy people making merry during the happiest time of year. “Say, how about we dump these things at my apartment and go celebrate somewhere out there?”

Marcus and Ianira exchanged glances, then smiled.

That was exactly what they did.

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