any official visits?' asked Brill. 'Men in black, that sort of thing?' She said it lightly, as if half-joking, but Paulette knew how serious it was.
'No, nothing I've noticed. No visits, no strange minivans, none of that sort of thing.'
'Fine.' Brill sounded reassured. Olga, however, looked thoughtful.
'Don't you want to check the phone lines?' she asked, unable to help herself.
'Already done.' Brill's smile was unsettling. 'I left a device behind on my last visit. It would have told me if there was any sign of tampering.'
'We hope,' Olga added, with a disturbing smile.
'Oh.' Paulette took a mouthful of her drink to stop herself saying anything she might regret later. 'Well that's alright then.' Brill showed no sign of noticing any irony. 'So you came to have a little chat. After nearly six months of nothing at all.' She squinted at Brill. 'And you brought Olga. How nice.' Sarcasm was risky, but Paulette was a realist: If the news was really bad, these two wouldn't have invited themselves in for a social. There had to be a
'She sent us,' said Olga. 'She told us to tell you, you were right. But that is not why we are here. It appears the US government has noticed us.'
'Oh.' Paulette put her glass down. 'Shit.'
There was a moment's heartfelt silence.
'Just
'Thoroughly.' Olga looked tired for a moment. 'Brill?'
'There's an entire new federal agency devoted to us.' Brill took a mouthful of tea, frowned. 'Super-black, off the books, siphoning money off the war appropriations and the NSA and the CIA, as far as we can tell. They've captured couriers and used them as mules to get into our world. Most recently they'-she swallowed-'used a backpack nuke to send us a message.'
'Oh Jesus.' There didn't seem to be anything else to say to that. 'That's not policing, that's
'Exactly,' Brilliana said heavily.
'Which leaves us with problems.' Olga picked up the thread. 'We can no longer do business over here as
'And you're off the reservation,' Paulette said drily.
'Yes, there is that.' Olga glanced sidelong at Brill. 'There's no telling how long it'll last.' Brill shook her head slightly. 'But anyway… we came to apologize for dragging you into this mess.'
'Isn't it a bit late for that?'
'Not necessarily. We can cut you loose. You were never directly involved in our principal business operations. There's no record of you outside of a few handwritten ledgers in Niejwein, and the office Hel- Miriam bought, and there's no sign that the feds are aware of what she was up to on her own behalf. I think if we cover your tracks we can be confident that they won't stumble across you.' She halted awkwardly for a moment. 'The flip side is, if they identify you as a person of interest, we won't be able to do anything to protect you. We won't even know.'
'Ah.' Paulette contemplated screaming, but it didn't seem like it would do any good. 'What
'Well, that depends.' Olga put her hands between her knees, clearly uneasy. 'Whatever happens next, the Clan will no longer be acting as, as an extradimensional drugs cartel anymore. The feds consider us to be a hostile government: Should we not act upon our status? Furthermore, the changes among the all-highest mean that they are not entirely wrong. Anyway, I didn't come here merely to say we are cutting you loose.'
'That wasn't Miriam's doing.' Olga grimaced. 'You should not underestimate the power of the enemies she made. She spent months under house arrest. Later, you can ask her yourself if you are so inclined. But this is different.'
'In what way is it different?' Why
'Miriam has both a secure position and a plan,' said Olga. 'She is in a position where, if she plays her hand correctly, she can set policy for the whole Clan. I am not entirely clear on her design, but she said I should tell you that unlike the old trade, this one is both legal and ethically sound. She said it would also need a lot of organizing at this end, materials and books and journals and specialist expertise to buy in… and to be fire-walled completely from the Clan's historic operations. Is that of interest to you?'
Paulette nodded. She'd visited New Britain once at Miriam's behest, found it a strange and disorienting experience, like a trip to another century. 'Well, it's a plan. But what makes this time different?'
Olga glanced at Brill, as if for support. 'She's the queen,' she said.
Paulette blinked. 'Queen,' she repeated. It was the last thing she'd have expected to hear.
'Yes. You know, woman who sits on a throne? Sometimes wears a crown?'
'Eh.' Paulette blinked again, then looked at Brilliana. Who was watching her, a flicker of tightly controlled amusement twitching her lips. 'She's not joking, is she?'
'Power is no joking matter.' The younger woman's eyes were cold. 'We've just fought a civil war over it. And now Helge is carrying the heir to the throne-long story, you do not need to look shocked-we would be fools not to seize the moment. And we need a new world to exploit, now that this one has shown itself hostile. That much has now become glaringly clear even to the most reactionary of the conservative wing.'
'Okay.' Paulette licked suddenly dry lips. She could feel her heartbeat. 'So what's in it for me?'
'A tenth of a point of gross,' said Olga. 'But you don't have to say yes now. Miriam is holding a meeting in a few days of her accomplices and confidantes. If you are interested, you may attend.' She slid a business card across the table. 'Phone this number no later than four o'clock tomorrow afternoon and say yes or no, then follow the post officer's instructions; they will see you across. The nature of the business, and your role in it, is such that if you choose to decline the offer, you have nothing to fear-you could spill everything you know, and the US government would learn nothing of use. Oh, and she sends you this. You can treat it as a nonreturnable advance against wages.' She slid a checkbook across the table to rest atop the card. 'Half a million bucks in the account, Paulie. Try not to spend it all at once.'
It was just another summer party, held on the afternoon of a muggy, humid summer day twelve miles outside of Niejwein, in the grounds of a fortified mansion out near what would-in another world-be Lincoln, Massachusetts. Summer parties were a seasonal fixture among the aristocracy of Niejwein, required to live in proximity to their ruler and lacking in any kind of civil society that might host more public entertainments; but this was also the first Miriam had ever held.
Sir Alasdair had a third of his men dispersed around the perimeter of her commandeered residence, another third staking out the doppelganger house in Lincoln, and the remaining cadre of guards on alert downstairs. Brilliana had the receiving line under control, looking for all the world like the lady of the house herself-and leaving Miriam (again wearing the persona of Helge, Prince Creon's putative widow) free to focus on those she wished to talk to.