“How much?” The General’s voice was dark and low.
“None,” Thomas lied. “She was perfectly behaved.” He didn’t know what he would do if Sasha decided to become a problem in front of the General. He made a silent wish that she would sense her place and submit to him. Otherwise, they would both be in a lot of trouble.
“And if I called Agent Fillmore, he’d tell me the same thing?” The General was testing him, seeing if he’d break like metal rusted through.
“Of course.” Thomas nodded, the corners of his mouth turning up ever so slightly, the widest smile he’d ever given the man. “Sir—” Then he stopped himself.
“Ask your question, Agent,” the General commanded.
“Where is he?”
“Who?” The General turned to look at him, his gaze piercing behind the rimless glasses he wore on his nose. “Your analog, you mean?”
“Yes, sir. Did the squad pick him up?”
“There was an issue with the retrieval of your analog on this side of the tandem.”
“An issue? What kind of an issue?” Thomas knew he should be disinterested in Grant Davis’s fate; indifference to aspects outside the parameters of his mission had been a fundamental part of his training, had practically been grafted into his DNA during his time at the Academy. And yet, he couldn’t help wondering. It was a strange relationship, the one between analogs. There was a natural sympathy that rose unbidden; he’d felt it when he’d met Grant Davis face to face, in the empty park back on Earth. It was a cold-hearted bastard who didn’t find it in him to care about another human being who wore his face.
Besides, he didn’t quite consider Grant Davis’s situation to be outside the parameters of his mission. Thomas was the reason Grant was in Aurora in the first place—he’d sent Grant there himself, knowing full well what kinds of trouble there were to get into for someone who looked like them. If there had been any problems for Grant on the other side of the tandem, it was more than a little bit Thomas’s fault. “Did the squad not find him? They were supposed to be waiting.”
“Oh, they found him, all right,” the General said, frowning at the tone in Thomas’s voice, the implication that men under his command had been in any way deficient in fulfilling their duties. “About two minutes after Libertas did.”
“Libertas? On the South End?” Though the Tattered City was very much Libertas’s territory, their security units mostly stuck to the North End and City Center, where the majority of the remaining residents actually lived. The South End had been hemorrhaging its population for years, and these days it was mostly abandoned, so Libertas didn’t waste resources on patrolling it. If there had been a unit down there, it meant one of two things: that Libertas was expanding its reach for some no doubt suspicious reason of its own, or—though Thomas really couldn’t see how this was possible—they knew something was about to go down and they were lying in wait.
The General nodded, but his mind seemed far away. “Seems they’re expanding.”
“Why would they even want him?”
The General turned to him with an odd, inscrutable expression that Thomas had often tried to replicate, with varying degrees of success. “I assume they believed he was you.”
Thomas clenched his jaw. It was unheard of for KES agents to fail in their missions. How was it possible that a team of highly trained operatives had allowed their own assignment to be captured by enemy forces? And here the General was, sedate and resigned, as if nothing could be done about it.
“So now what? We can’t leave him to them.” He was struggling not to raise his voice to the General, who didn’t tolerate insubordination on any level. He was no ordinary KES agent, but on this point the General was as firm with him as with any other.
“They’ll never believe he’s not you, but eventually they’ll see they can’t get anything out of him,” the General said. “And they’ll realize that his only value is financial. I expect a ransom demand any day now.”
“Will you pay it?” When it came to the General, Thomas could be sure of nothing.
“I suppose that depends on what they ask for.” The General jerked his chin in Sasha’s direction. “It’s time.”
“Sir, I—” It was unwise to oppose a direct order, but Thomas wasn’t through talking about Grant. He wanted to know the particulars of what had happened that night on this side of the tandem. He needed to know if there was anything he could have done.
“Agent,” the General said firmly. “It’s time.”

