A quick glance around the central hall had Dalden saying, “Other than Brittany is not here?”
“Yes, other than that. Strange equipment? Electrical storms?”
“Your viewers are not working, either?”
“Only sporadically, which is unacceptable. Corth II is on his way with a few emergency essentials. He’ll be a few minutes getting here, since I had to set him down out of the range frequency of that interference. It’s imperative that it be located and disabled, whatever it is.”
“It is more imperative that you tell me where Brittany is,” Dalden countered.
A sigh. “She’s still in the mayor’s office.”
“Why?”
“Probably because Jorran is in there, too. Hold it right there! If you go barging in, she’s liable to get hurt. At the moment, she’s fine.”
“I will not leave her in there, Martha.”
It was said so emphatically that only a fool would try to argue—or a computer. “She’s fine, kiddo,reallyshe is. I’m not getting full conversations with this interference, but from the bits and pieces I am getting, it sounds like she’s got them believing that she’s joined their camp and will be a benefit to them. Besides, he’s not going to hurt her when he finds her interesting.”
“I find these trees growing indoors interesting. That does not mean I would not cut them down.”
“I meant interested as in bedtime fun—hold it right there! You don’t chop someone up for what they are thinking, and that’s as far as his interest has gone. She doesn’t know he finds her attractive. He’s the type who won’t reveal emotions to anyone if they could be perceived as a weakness that could be used against him.”
“You have had chains on me too long, Martha.”
“Dalden, sweetie,” she cajoled in syrupy tones. “We are almost done here. The end of this rising should see us on our way home. Don’t blow it now because you’re impatient to get your hands around his neck. If it sounds like she’s in the slightest trouble, you get the green light. But at the moment, we want him to think he’s got the upper hand, so he’ll leave here and you can then deal with him under less public scrutiny. Here, there are a good forty people or more who will jump to his defense.”
“He has that many with him?”
“No, but you keep forgetting what I told you about the people in this country. They are an aggressive lot. They will interfere just because they can.”
“Not if I stun them all.”
Another sigh, much longer and riddled with static. “Tedra could pull that off, but you haven’t had any practice with that phazor combo-unit. With calm, slow use and sightline up, you’d have no trouble with it, but Probables say that in your rush to stun them all before they can get to you, you’ll end up missing one or two and risk the chance of the beam reflecting off something and coming right back at you. But in case you haven’t realized it yet, Transfer isn’t the only thing currently being affected by that local interference. Your weapon is out of order as well.”
“Then what do you propose?”
“Let him get beyond the interference, or get rid of it first. Andpleasekeep in mind that you can’t kill Jorran, much as you might be currently relishing the thought, or we lose the leverage for a recall onallof the rods. So the original plan still holds: disable his shield so I can Transfer him to the ship, but do it in the least crowded place so you won’t be jumped by locals who think you’re accosting an innocent party. The advantage is still ours, since he still doesn’t suspect that we’re here. Ah, that’s better.” A sigh filled with relief, and minus any static.
“What?”
“Corth II has arrived and turned off the interference, though not very diplomatically,” Martha complained. “I’ll have to talk to him about threatening to break people who don’t want to cooperate with him, and leaving stunned bodies all over the place. We’re going to have to wrap this up, kiddo. We’ve got about an hour before those stuns wear off and all hell breaks loose around here.”
Dalden grinned. “I will have to thank him for releasing me from your restraints.”
“If I don’t fry his circuits first,” Martha mumbled. “But all systems are back in full operation—on our end. And those cameramen coming into the building haven’t realized yet that they’ve been disconnected from making a live broadcast. So it was the media transmission equipment causing—Jorran is coming out. Show time.”
“Show time?”
“Time for you to do your thing, warrior.”
Quite a few people were coming out of the mayor’s reception room. Dalden saw none of them until he saw Brittany and that she was all right. Jorran followed her. He looked harmless wearing local clothes, rather than his royal garb, but Dalden knew just how dangerous he could be, especially if he had a razor sword tucked into the pocket of his suit. Would he feel the need for a weapon here, or assume that the Altering Rod was all the weapon he needed?
At least a dozen people had come out, including the mayor. “How many are Jorran’s people?” Dalden asked.
“Three of them,” Martha replied. “The others with them are on the mayor’s staff, though Probables say they’ve all been altered.Yourmain concern will be avoiding any rods pointed your way.”
“I will have you to counter any suggestions that halt me, as Brock did for us on Sunder when we were told to forget my sister.”