we find another place that had these finger-chopping murders, we can cross-check names of Silent employees and slaves with the monastery records of Silent who arrived here before the murders began. We might get lucky.'
'More sifting,' Tan sighed.
'I believe a wise woman once told me-how did the saying go?' Ara said. ' ‘Welcome to the tedious side of Guardian work’? '
'Very funny.'
The rotten smell grew stronger. Tan sniffed the air, apparently noticing it herself.
'We should get out of here before our suppressants wear off,' she said. 'I’ll let the techs know we’re finished so they can do the fine-tooth comb thing. Ara, we need to contact some of these corps. Can you do it this evening, meet on your turf at, say, seven?'
'You want me to come with you?' Ara said.
'You know slavers. I don’t,' Tan said. 'And thank god for that. I’d much rather deal with killers.'
At seven o’clock Ara was in her pleasure garden. The fountain made pleasant noises and the pear and orange blossoms smelled exquisite. Usually the place felt quiet and relaxing, but now there was an undercurrent of tension and she felt an urge to keep looking over her shoulder. Twice she spun around expecting to see a looming dark man with a hat that hid a leering face and both times she saw nothing. When Ara felt a presence at the edge of her turf, she had to muffle a scream before she realized it was only Tan.
'Please come,' Ara called.
Tan appeared, and the Dream rippled briefly around her. 'You look nervous.'
'Let’s just get started,' Ara said. 'I have a contact at Dreamers, Inc. Take my arm and I’ll move us.'
Tan obeyed. Ara closed her eyes and cast out her senses. Dreamers, Inc., kept a permanent presence in the Dream, and the pattern of thought was familiar to Ara. She located it and focused on it. They were
The brown desk and the red Oriental carpet stood in the middle of a stark, white space. There were no walls, no ceiling, no doors or windows. Just empty whiteness with a room-sized square of colored silk in the middle of it. A human man, thin and spare, sat behind the desk with his hands primly folded on the blotter. An inkwell and quill pen sat to one side of a small sign that read Welcome to Dreamers, Inc.. Everything about the space and the man said
'May I help you?' asked the man in a reedy voice.
'My name is Araceil Rymar,' Ara said. 'This is Inspector Lewa Tan. I need to talk to Marco Clark. Is he in the Dream?'
'No,' the man replied promptly. 'His shift begins in twenty minutes. Would you care to wait or leave a message?'
'Tell him that I need to speak with him immediately.'
'To Dream Engineer Marco Clark,' the man said. 'Message begins: Araceil Rymar needs to speak with you immediately. Message ends. Is that correct?'
'Yes, thank you.' Ara took Tan’s arm and with a
'Couldn’t you tell yourself if this Marco guy was in the Dream?' Tan asked. Her voice once again was full of rich, low tones.
Ara shook her head. 'I’ve only met him in the Dream, never in person. We’ve never touched, and I’m not good at finding people I haven’t had physical contact with. Marco can find me, though.'
'So where now?'
'Let’s try Silent Acquisitions. They deal exclusively in slaves, so there’s a good chance Dorna passed through them at one time or another.'
Another
Ara again introduced herself and Tan. The cone narrowed its eyes. 'Are either or both connected with Children of Irfan?' Its voice was like a spoon plopping in cold pudding.
'Please answer the question,' the creature plopped. 'Are one or both you connected with the Children of Irfan? Please answer ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ There are no lies in the Dream.'
'Yes,' Ara was forced to say. 'We both are.'
'I am sorry, but I am not allowed to speak with you.'
'But-'
'If you wish to leave a message for a particular party,' the creature went on, 'you may hire a courier ship with a hardcopy missive. Good day.'
The reception room vanished, leaving behind the featureless plain that was the default condition of the Dream.
'Rude,' Tan observed. 'What brought that on?'
'Probably me,' Ara said grimly. 'The Children-including me-have bought, stolen, swindled, and tricked a hell of a lot slaves out of that company over the decades. We’ve probably cost them billions in revenue by now. Silent Acquisitions seem to have adopted a new policy of identifying Children and then refusing to communicate with us so we can’t trick any information out of them. Bastards! Filth doesn’t even begin to describe what they do.'
'I agree,' Tan said, 'but we need to stay focused on the other job.'
Ara let out a long breath. 'Right. Sorry. I just hate slavers. Buying and selling sentient creatures is about the lowest anyone can-'
'You church, me choir,' Tan said. 'Can we go?'
'Right, right. Let’s try the Silent Partners and see what they have to say.'
The Silent Partners, it turned out, didn’t know of any strange murders. Neither did DreamShapers. They were about to visit Quietude, Ltd., when Ara felt a presence brush her mind.
'Marco!' she said with delight. 'He’s in the Dream. Hey, Marco! My turf, all right?'
The pleasure garden appeared around them. Ara was dressed in her green robe with the close-fitting hood. She put Tan in a similar one, but blue. They both sat on the lip of the fountain, waiting. After a brief interval, a yellow sphere of light the size of a basketball whizzed over the garden wall and hovered in front of Ara. Her face showed her pleasure.
'Marco,' she said. 'I’m glad you could talk to me. This is Inspector Lewa Tan.'
'Good morning,' the sphere said in a voice reminiscent of ringing bells. 'Or is it not morning on Bellerophon?'
'It’s evening for us,' Ara told him. 'Listen, I know you’re probably busy, so I’ll be fast.' She gave a quick explanation of the Dream murders. 'Can you find out if there were any similar happenings among Dreamers, Inc.?'
'I know there were,' Marco said in his bell-like voice. 'It was nine or ten years ago.'
Tan stood up, excited. 'Can you put me in contact with the investigator in charge of the case?'
'Perhaps. I will have to go through appropriate channels. Please wait.'
The ball vanished with a
'Marco’s good,' Ara said. 'He knows a lot of people.'
'My drugs are going to wear off soon,' Tan grumbled. 'What species is Marco, anyway?'
'Human.' Ara scratched her nose. 'He’s a practicing Zen Buddhist. When I first met him twenty-some years