He smiled, palely.
'Very close to that, I think. I gather that what it was doing there was that an agent from the Department—one of the rogues—had been last on the garbage run before me—several Standards before me, in fact. Given leave to look about, that agent investigated the cache of old equipment. They were testing and trying things, copying things, copying records. Inadvertently or not, they had activated the call signal, and did not know that it had finally been answered. I was first on the scene, after it had waited . . . and it imprinted on me.'
Theo thought back to school, wagged her body from side to side in the chair and said, 'Quack, quack, quack, gooselets on parade?'
Win Ton gave a bow so light it was barely a nod.
'Indeed. But then the rogues saw the report, hid it, shared the information among themselves, and went back for the ship.'
'Which didn't acknowledge them?' Theo said helpfully.
'In a manner of speaking.'
Win Ton paused, poured himself more tea from the pot, appearing somewhat steadier.
'
Theo blinked.
'Had you programmed the defenses?'
'Until now, recall, I have not had the study of antique Terran ships close to my heart.'
'But how do you know this, about the landing party?'
'The survivors decided that what had worked once, would do so again. They came looking for me, Theo—and they found me.'
Theo looked to the hall in horror. Win Ton raised his hands and signed heavily—
'I escaped, but they know that there were two keys. They believe that the second is still with the ship.' He paused. 'I believe I convinced them of that.'
She sipped her tea, which was cold; sipped again and put the empty cup on the table.
'Thank you,' she said, because she felt she had to acknowledge his last statement. She took a breath. 'How do you have
He sighed. 'It is Old Tech, and it is imprinted on me. It returned itself to me as it was able.' He used his chin to point at it, there on the table between them. 'There, take it up.'
She picked it up, feeling a sense of relaxation, of welcome—and something more. Her key warmed agreeably between her breasts, and she heard a buzz, as if the captain's key was . . . acknowledging the copilot's.
'I feel it,' she murmured, hardly aware that she spoke aloud.
'No difficulty?' Win Ton asked. 'No headache?'
She shook her head, and put his key back on the table, not really wanting to. Her fingers moved gently—
He sighed, quite loudly. 'May I hold yours?'
Reluctantly she drew the necklace, and handed to him.
He held it in his fist a moment, then returned it across his open palm, face gone Liaden bland.
'What's wrong?' she asked, holding the chain in her hand.
'Yes, Pilot, that is the question. The answer is like the birds you mentioned, Theo, the gooselets. That key, it has imprinted on you. I did not think—but there, that is given, is it not?' He moved his head, maybe he meant to shake it. 'You not only hold the captain's key, Theo, but the key has also been imprinted.
Thirty- Eight
'Theo?'
The chain was bright, the odd-shaped pendant familiar and comforting. In fact, so comforting that she was inclined to accept Win Ton's tale of Old Tech imprinting; the key almost
Win Ton's voice was more insistent this time, a little stronger. That was better—he almost sounded like his old self for a moment.
'Theo?'
She looked up into his face across the scarred table, feeling the smile trying to twitch at the corners of her mouth despite the annoyance that informed her shoulders.
'What am I supposed to do, Win Ton? You're not looking up to sitting a board and I—I don't know where this ship