For a moment Jack couldn't speak, his mouth hanging open in stunned bewilderment. 'Mr. Braxton,' he managed at last. 'But...'

'I see you do recognize me,' Braxton said. 'Now, do you wish to continue your story? Or shall I have Vance throw you out?'

Jack shook his head, trying to get his brain to stop spinning. What in the name of vacuum sealant was going on? 'I'm sorry, Mr. Braxton,' he said. 'But I'm very confused here. That phony theft, the one I told you they first tried to frame me for? That was with a Braxton Universis cargo on Vagran.'

'My cargoes travel all over the Orion Arm,' Braxton reminded him. 'You need more than that.'

'And then they took me aboard a Braxton Universis ship,' Jack said. 'The Advocatus Diaboli. The guy aboard —'

He stopped as something flickered on the man's face. 'The Advocatus Diaboli'?' Braxton repeated. 'Are you sure?'

'Positive,' Jack said. 'My companion saw it and took down the name—'

'Blast it!' Boyle bit out. 'Vance—cover them!'

Jack jumped, twisting to his right as he caught the sudden movement out of the corner of his eye. The guard was on his feet, his newssheet crumpled on the floor.

His gun pointed straight at Jack.

'Wait a second,' Jack protested, his mouth suddenly dry. What had he said? 'Look, Mr. Braxton—'

'Shut up!' Boyle snapped. 'Lieutenant! Get in here! Quick!'

'You stupid fool,' another familiar voice snarled from the side archway. 'Do I have to do everything myself?'

Jack turned to look... and felt his breath catch in his throat.

It was Lieutenant Raven.

Chapter 23

Jack stared at Raven, his head spinning. No—this couldn't be happening.

'The Advocatus Diaboli, you say?' Braxton commented quietly.

With an effort, Jack tore his eyes away from Raven and looked back at Braxton. First Raven, and now Braxton, too. It was like one of those awful times back with Uncle Virgil and his friends when someone pulled a joke and everyone was in on it. Everyone, that is, except Jack. He would think something was happening, something important or dangerous or scary.

Then someone would laugh, and then everyone would laugh, and he'd realize they were all laughing at him.

He took a good look at Braxton's face. If this was a joke, Braxton wasn't in on it, either.

And no one in the room was laughing.

'Put your hands up, Mr. Braxton,' Raven ordered, drawing his gun as he strode toward them across the room. 'Blast it all, Boyle. Of all the flat-headed, idiotic—'

'But he knows,' Boyle protested, jabbing a finger at Jack.

'He knows everything. The ship, Mr. Neverlin—'

'So he knows,' Raven snapped, glaring at the secretary. 'So you sit here and pick his story apart and pretend he's blowing smoke.'

'But—'

'You blew it, Boyle,' Raven cut him off. 'You panicked and you blew it. Now we've got a real mess to clean up.'

He stepped behind Braxton and stuck his gun into the older man's back. With his free hand he patted Braxton's clothes, searching for weapons. Jack watched him, feeling like he was going to be sick. He'd tried to do what was right; and instead he'd landed smack in the middle of an even bigger pit than he'd been in before.

Because there was no doubt that he, Jack Morgan, was the mess Raven was talking about cleaning up. Him, and maybe Braxton. Two of them, by themselves, against Raven and his men. It was just like the old days, with him and Uncle Virgil going up against the cops or the system or even other criminals.

Only this time it was him and Cornelius Braxton. At least Uncle Virgil had known what he was doing in a con or a fight or a slink. You could count on him to have a trick or two up his sleeve.

But Braxton wasn't Uncle Virgil. He was old, and he was way out of his element here. He probably hadn't had a fight outside a corporate boardroom in thirty years. Jack's skin began to crawl with the thought.

He frowned in sudden realization. No; that wasn't his skin crawling.

It was Draycos.

In the flick of an eye his mood and his fear and all the old memories vanished away. Yes, it was like the old days, all right. Only this time it was Jack who had the trick up his sleeve.

Whatever Raven had in mind, Jack would bet heavy odds that it didn't include the possibility of a K'da poet- warrior joining the game.

He reached up and squeezed his shoulder, hoping Draycos would take the hint and stay put for now. Part of the reason Uncle Virgil had never been thrown in prison, he knew, was that the cops had never been able to gather enough evidence against him.

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