'I want to take away his powers, but I don't think that means he has to die. Jeez, you guys are so damn smart, you can't come up with a way to neutralize him?'
'The Wardens failed to,' said one of the poker players.
'The Wardens were shut out.
'Okay, assuming that I'm considering your proposition to work for you… what are you offering?' I clasped my hands behind my back so they wouldn't see how badly they were shaking. The carpet felt soft and springy under my feet. I put a little more swing into my hips, a little more freedom in my walk. Being the only woman in the room had an advantage, especially among older men. 'Money? Power? What?'
'We're offering you the chance to do what you've always wanted to do,' Myron said. 'We're offering you the chance to do good.'
I smiled thinly. 'Oh, my. And if I don't want to take your generous offer?'
Quinn didn't move, but he suddenly got a whole lot bigger. Nothing supernatural about it; it was a body- language trick, a cooling of the expression, the warmth draining out of his stare.
'We'd have to resort to regrettable alternatives,' Myron said. His eyes didn't move to indicate Quinn, but I got the point. 'I'm sure you're aware that at least one Warden has already met his death here-we did not cause it, but neither did we act to prevent it. Jonathan and Kevin would do a very nice job of eliminating you, if we provided them with reason to do so. But really, my dear, there's no need for any animosity. The Ma'at are dedicated to exactly the same principles that you honor. The Wardens are no longer the saviors of humanity; they're parasites, perpetuating a cycle of violence and destruction, enslaving beings who ought by rights to be free. You can't want to be part of that.'
I inched up into Oversight as I paced the room. It glittered in strings and strands of power, a treacherous spiderweb. Just now, they weren't trying to control me, but the minute I started reaching for power, they'd shut me down. Physical attack was out; I was outnumbered and outgunned at every turn.
'Miss Baldwin? I'm afraid that I require an answer.'
I was about to give him an unladylike one, but then there was a discreet knock at the door and it swung open. A woman looked in-businesslike, professionally coiffed, beautifully dressed-and gave them some kind of high sign. Shut the door gently as she left.
'Ah,' Myron said. He sounded ever-so-slightly disgruntled. 'It appears we'll have to delay this, Miss Baldwin. Our four-o'clock is here. Mr. Quinn? Please show our guest to her room.'
Quinn pushed away from the wall, walked to me, and took my arm. It looked gentlemanly, and it felt authoritarian. He steered me across the soft carpet to the door, opened it, and squired me out without another word.
I glanced back.
They were opening another deck of cards. I wasn't even a topic of conversation.
Quinn took me out past the guards. If the old men of Ma'at had a four-o'clock, he or she wasn't cooling their heels outside; all I could see was the normal business of the casino. I considered screaming
The Luxor was full of things I wanted to see- beautifully reproduced Egyptian statues, the faux treasures of Tut, souvenir shops that held the glitter of gold and silver and gems-but Quinn didn't even slow down.
'Hey,' I said as he hustled me past a storefront full of reproduction Egyptian furniture, 'you know what all villains have in common? They don't shop. They're too busy being evil to shop. You guys need to learn the fine art of browsing.'
Quinn laughed softly and put his arm around my shoulders. No sexual intent-it only meant he could steer me more effectively. He smelled woodsy, a mixture of some sharp green aftershave and a dark hint of male sweat. Maybe some gun oil, too. No tobacco. He wasn't a smoker.
'Sweetheart,' he said, 'you are one lovely piece of work. I gotta tell you, I've seen rich men with power over major corporations break down and cry over less than you just survived. You gave as good as you got.'
'If I gave as good as I got, did good old Chuck get electrocuted? I was too busy convulsing to see.'
He patted my shoulder. From some men, all of this physical contact would have been prurient, but Quinn seemed to not have any ulterior motives, not even the obvious. He was just friendly.
We arrived at a huge bank of closed steel doors. One opened, and Quinn steered me in.
It didn't go up. Well, not directly. It went at an
'It's an inclinator, not an elevator,' Quinn said. 'Like the view?'
I had to admit, it was pretty. Our elevator-
We stopped somewhere near the top.
Quinn tugged me out, walked me down the hall, and opened up a room with the standard electronic card key.
'Well,' I said, startled. 'This'll do.'
My room had an entire wall of windows, sharply angled, and sunlight sparked from the muted gold of faux- Egyptian furniture. The bed looked sumptuous.
Through the bathroom door, I saw a huge Jacuzzi tub facing the windows. 'I'll give your side this: You know how to imprison a girl in style.'
'You're not a prisoner,' Quinn said, and handed me the key. 'And we're not necessarily on the opposite side, either. Listen, feel free to go downstairs, hit the casinos, the spa, the pool… just don't try to leave the building.'
I took the cool, smooth plastic. 'If I do?' Quinn raised a silent eyebrow. 'Right. You know I can't just hang around here, waiting for the Geezer Patrol to decide what to do with me. There's a time limit. Jonathan and Kevin are going to come after me, and believe me, I don't think anybody wants that. It'll be one hell of a show.'
'You don't need to worry about the boy.'
'The fact that you can say that just proves to me that you don't know dick about that boy.'
Quinn reached under his coat. No change in expression. I remembered the gun, felt myself tense, wondered if it was even possible to stop a bullet with the powers I possessed…
… and he came out with another card, this one a different color of plastic.
'Have fun,' he said, and handed it over. 'That's worth five thousand in chips. Go crazy. I've got to get back to work.'
'Quinn!' I caught his arm when he turned to go. 'I can't just stay here!'
He patted my hand, removed it, and walked to the door. 'If you don't,' he said pleasantly as he opened it, 'I'll just have to break your ankles. That'd keep you from wandering.'
He shut the door with a quiet click. I chewed my lip, counted to thirty, then went to look out.
He was gone. When I raced to the window, I saw the inclinator crawling back down the face of the pyramid, and Quinn was facing out toward the view. He didn't look in my direction.
I went to the telephone, got a dial tone, and called a number from memory. Long distance, but I wasn't particularly worried about the charges at the moment. Let the Ma'at pay for it, the crusty old Republicans.
Three rings. Four.
'Bearheart,' a low female voice said. I let out a gasp; I hadn't realized I'd been holding my breath.
' Marion! Don't talk, just listen. I'm inside, but there's something wrong here. A whole different set of-'