long after hours, the general wore only a military kilt and shoulder straps for small weapons. With the doors firmly closed and the guards properly warned for privacy, Vorr sat in his chair and waited for Usso's report.
'You called?' came the invisible feminine voice. 'I'm not in the mood,' Vorr said bluntly. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his desk. 'Just get it out.'
He heard Usso snort. 'Short of temper, are we? You wanted to know about the lich, or whatever it is? Well, it isn't a lich, I can tell that. You nailed that right. It lacks all the basic lich parts. A lich is a lot more than a bare skeleton in a robe. I couldn't break its disguise without it knowing, but it does show up as undead, as an organized evil being-which liches aren't particularly-and as thick with magic, especially illusion. It also has no personal history, so it isn't who it says it is. I'd guess it was another undead creature that for some reason wants to look like a lich. It's not lying about the cloak, anyway. It wants it so badly it could just about fall apart.'
Vorr thought it over. He could end the charade by touching the lich, but he felt like playing along for now. 'Can we trust it not to kill us if it gets the cloak?'
'Kobas,' said the silken voice, 'if you had your big hands ready to grab the universe by the neck, would you think anyone could trust you?'
Vorr grunted. 'Recommendations?'
'Leave the ground troops here, the ores and goblins, but get the fleet up for a spin. Hit the Rock of Bral if the human's still there. When you grab the cloak, break some bones- Skarkesh's. And when you do get it, toss the cloak to me, not to that senile orc-dog you take orders from.'
Vorr looked up sharply. 'You are out of line.'
There was faint laughter in the air. 'Use that tone with me again, Kobas, and you can sleep by yourself.'
Vorr felt his face darken. 'If you play games with me,' he said evenly, 'I'll see that you go hungry for a month. You know I can do it. You know what that feels like. You know you can't escape me.'
In the silence that followed, Vorr heard a presence stir behind him. A small, soft hand appeared on his left shoulder, sliding over his rough gray skin.
'You were joking with me, weren't you, Kobas?' said the sweet voice, a trace of anxiety behind it. 'You know I hate to joke about that. I don't like to go hungry.'
Vorr reached up, his broad hand swallowing hers whole. He slowly turned in his seat and looked into the long- lashed almond eyes of a human woman with long black hair. Her yellow-brown skin was paler than when he had last seen her; she must be quite hungry already. It had been three days since she'd fed last, on an elf prisoner who'd lasted only a day.
Vorr knew all that lay behind those eyes. If he gave Usso the cloak, she would be only marginally more trustworthy than the false lich. He'd have to watch her closely from now on and warn the war priests and the admiral if she showed signs of treachery; she'd be dangerous right up to the end. It was a good thing Usso couldn't read his mind the way she could everyone else's.
'Mad at me?' asked the woman. She ran her hands over the sides of his face. 'Will you feed me soon?'
She'd love to have the
'Maybe,' he said. 'Maybe later tonight.'
Her long white robes stirred in back; she had wagged her tail in her excitement.
'I might find one for you,' Vorr said. Still holding her hand firmly in one of his own, he reached out and caught her under the chin, forcing her to look at him. 'But you owe me, Usso, for ruining my fight today.' His grip tightened as he pulled her closer, and she winced, her eyes tearing up with the pain. 'You owe me a lot.'
'Careful,' she said in a quavering voice. 'You get rough sometimes. Be careful, Kobas.'
'Of course,' he said.
It was a very good thing, the general thought again as he pulled her face to his, that she couldn't read his mind.
Chapter Five
The door to the captain's cabin had barely closed when the argument started.
'Aelfred, you've got to get rid of Gaye.'
The warrior looked up in shock. 'You're kidding me.'
'Tell her we're overbooked. Tell her you have an unlucky number of crew aboard. Just get her off the ship.'
'Old son, you're not making any sense.'
'Gaye is a kender. You don't understand what kender are like. They're pure trouble. We're just begging for-'
'Ptah's black beard, Teldin, do you hear what you're saying? You served on this ship when it was commanded by a mind flayer, and just a minute ago you asked me to hire on a gnome, but now you're having a fit over a girl who-'
'A
'No!' shouted Aelfred. He raised a thick finger and jabbed it an inch from Teldin's nose. 'You stupid son of a bitch, we are nor going to start a fight here about a kender, whatever the hells a kender is, and we aren't going to start up about this one. She was aboard just an hour when she caught two thieves trying to make off with one of our silk crates. We caught 'em both because she was so fast and quiet that she got five of us after them before the thieves had even cleared the docks.
Teldin dropped his gaze and rubbed a hand over his face. He could see it wasn't going to work. 'She lied to you, Aelfred,' he said, feeling tired and frustrated. 'I didn't send her over here. She's just a-just a gypsy, some homeless kender I ran into in the Greater Market. I couldn't get rid of her. I'm just-'
Aelfred slammed a fist into a wall. Teldin started and looked up. 'So, she lied! Who in the Nine Hells cares? I lied to get aboard my first spelljammer. I didn't know what I was in for, but I wouldn't have cared if I had, you know that. I had people after me. I can't hold it against every person who tells me a lie just to serve on a ship, as long as he or she's got skills worth having!' Aelfred paused to clear his throat, then suddenly gave Teldin a crooked smile. 'If nothing else, she's a long sight better looking than you are. We've needed some color around here, and she's just in time.'
Teldin frowned. 'She's just a kid, Aelfred,' he said, even though he wasn't quite sure of that.
Aelfred snorted and suppressed a laugh. 'Gods, Teldin, there are no kids in wildspace. She can handle herself. I'm not saying that looks mean everything, but it sure brightened up my day to have her on board.' He stared at Teldin hard. 'You never came out with
Teldin said nothing in return. His gaze dropped under Aelfred's own. Strangely, he found it hard to pinpoint what had set him off. He'd been angry with Gaye's intrusion, and he had never trusted the few kender he'd known. Something else was eating at him about Gaye. He couldn't say what.
'Speaking of the elves,' Aelfred said, his voice growing warmer again, 'how did things go? What did they have to say about your cloak?'
After a few moments, Teldin went along with the change in topic and related everything that had happened since he had left the