Page 32 of Heart of a Warrior


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Brittany gritted her teeth, even counted to ten before she said, “Do you really expect me to believe that?”

“Did I not say inventions that defy belief? And weren’t you subject to it yourself, when the fellow tried to convince you that you didn’t see him?”

“Which just proves it doesn’t do what you say it does. I still saw him perfectly.”

“Lucky for you, doll, it doesn’t work on women,” Martha replied. “And lucky for us, Jorran and his people obviously don’t know that yet.”

“His people? You mean that wasn’t Jorran that Dalden just took control of?”

“No, he can alter his looks, but not his height. Jorran’s about as tall as you are. But we knew we’d have a lot of peons to deal with as well. Jorran travels with a full entourage, and the Altering Rods have likely been passed out to the lot of them. Getting our hands on Jorran will gather them all in, though.”

“So that’s what this is all about? Retrieving stolen property? Why haven’t you just gone to the police about it?”

“Don’t you realize the kind of mass paranoia that can be caused if word spreads about these rods and that there are people running around using them? Have you even realized yet what’s possible with their use? A perfect stranger can be asked for all his worldly goods and he’ll turn them over happily, then go off and never know what happened to pauperize him. A man can be told to quit his job and do so, and never figure out why he did. People can be made to do things totally against their nature. Is it sinking in yet, why the fewer people who know about them, the better?”

“No. The police have the manpower to find them more quickly—”

“Brittany, Brittany,” Martha cut in with a sigh. “You are missing the point. First you’d have to convince your law enforcement that the rods are real; then you’d have to swear them to secrecy. We now have one of the rods to do the first, but human nature will counter the second. Wordwouldspread, and you’d have your whole town suspicious of everyone they see. Mass hysteria, paranoia, and panic. Is that what you’re suggesting?”

“Whatyou’resuggesting is next to impossible, if there are a lot more people involved than you first led me to believe. How are we supposed to find them all?”

“We don’t need to find them all, we only need to find Jorran. The rest will come voluntarily to us if we have him, and we’ll take the lot of them back to where they belong. We happen to have a lot more manpower available to send in, but they would just alert Jorran to our presence, which wedon’twant to happen. If he suspects at all that we’re here looking for him, he’ll relocate and then we’ll be reduced to zero chance of finding him.”

“Won’t he suspect something is wrong when the guy you entranced doesn’t report in?”

“Not to worry, doll. You’ll find I’m always one step ahead in any situation. Now, we really don’t want to send any more people rushing off to visit their eye doctors, so point the big guy to a place where he can be assured of some privacy to deal with our ‘slave.’”

“Deal with him how?”

A chuckle came out of the box. “That’s rich. You don’t really think we’re here to kill anyone, do you?”

Brittany blushed profusely. Shehadsounded a bit horrified there, andhadbeen thinking the worst. But what else did they suddenly need privacy for, if not to dispose of this fellow they’d managed to capture?

“Interrogation,” Martha continued, as if she’d been able to read Brittany’s mind. “And then he’ll be sent back to the enemy camp with no memory of us, but minus his rod, of course, which he’ll assume he lost. But he’ll be given a link to me, and once a day I’ll get a report in about Jorran’s progress—an added bonus for our side.”

“You make it sound so easy.”

“Thatisthe easy part,” Martha told her. “The hard part is still in your court. We’d like to stop Jorran before he alters too many personalities or causes too much irreparable grief.”

“You don’t think you’ll find out from this fellow where Jorran is now?”

“Highly improbable. Jorran will surround himself with only a select few. The rest of his people will have been turned loose to do his bidding without question. They’ll have means of communication in case directives get changed, but not with Jorran himself. It would be beneath him to speak directly with mere underlings.”

“Like a crime boss?”

“Like an autocratic king.”

“Not much difference there.”

“An excellent observation, though the two might disagree—just on principle, of course. Now if we’re done with the jokes, that place of privacy?”

Brittany sighed. She would have preferred to continue the discussion. The new piece of the puzzle was still missing some of its edges. But she supposed it was pointless to keep at it, once Martha was done with a subject.

“The bathroom around the corner over there would afford some brief privacy, but being public, that won’t last long. My car would probably work,” and she tossed the keys at Dalden. “Just turn on the air conditioner and keep the windows rolled up, and no one should be able to hear you.”

“I was more concerned with sight,” Martha said. “But I suppose that will do. And how about having a chat with your mayor while we’re gone? Wedoneed to make sure he hasn’t been tampered with yet.”

“You don’t just get to have ‘chats’ with the mayor around here. I need an appointment first, then a good reason for it. He’s a busy man. His secretary would object to taking up his time just shooting the breeze.”