TWENTY-SEVEN
LOGAN TOM SPENT the remainder of the night keeping watch in the hallway outside the door he had tried unsuccessfully to pass through earlier. Realizing that the gypsy morph was in all likelihood the boy called Hawk–the one he'd unfortunately let pass him by on the street before coming into the building–he had determined to wait for his return. Hawk would be back soon, Owl had insisted. He had gone to the compound to visit his girlfriend. She would not say anything more than that. No one quite trusted him yet. Candle, more than the others, believed he was there to help. But it was Owl who made all the decisions, and she was taking no chances.
So, despite everything–or perhaps because of it–she had steadfastly refused to let him enter their quarters. All she had been willing to agree to was letting him remain in the hallway outside the door. She had promised that they would not make up their minds about him until Hawk's return. She promised that they would not try to slip out the back or flee into the city and that they would let him cast the finger bones again when Hawk returned.
Then, having left his staff lying on the floor where he could reach it, they had backed into their lair and closed and locked the door. There had been no argument from any of them, including Candle, that he should be allowed to come inside.
So he sat in the hallway all night with his back against the far wall, facing the door and waiting. He slept off and on, but never deeply and never for very long. He had time to think about what he would do once he had determined if the boy Hawk was, in fact, the gypsy morph. How hard would it be to persuade him of his lineage? It was one thing to offer your help; it was another to gain acceptance. None of these street kids knew anything of Knights of the Word. Why should they? But it made his job just that much more difficult. There was no reason for the morph to trust him any more than these other street kids did.
There was another problem, a potentially bigger one. Would the morph even know what it was supposed to do once it had been told what it was? O'olish Amaneh had seemed confident that all the pieces would fall into place once the morph was found. But Logan was suspicious. In his experience, few things ever seemed to work out the way you expected. Mostly, something went wrong.
Dawn broke, and Hawk had not returned. Logan rose and went down to the street and looked around. There was no one in sight. He stood there for a long time, willing the boy to appear. But the street remained empty of life.
He took a deep breath and exhaled. Something was wrong, and he was afraid that it was going to change everything.
He needed a bath and something to eat, but he gave up on both and went back into the building. He climbed the stairs to the fourth floor and knocked on the door to the lair of the Ghosts. This time the door opened immediately and Owl wheeled into view, the other street kids trailing silently.
"He hasn't come back?" Logan asked. Owl shook her head. "Will you try to find him?" "I don't know. Has this ever happened before?" She tightened her lips. "No. He meets Tessa secretly, and then comes back before it gets light.
Usually, he takes Cheney, but Cheney is hurt, so he left him behind. Hawk has been taking chances lately with Tessa. Someone in the compound might have found out about them. I've warned him that these meetings are dangerous. The people in the compound don't like street kids."
Logan nodded. "I know how they think. I've encountered it before. They don't like anyone who lives beyond the walls. They can be very hard on outsiders."
"It might be worse here. Tessa was stealing medicines from the compound stores to help street kids. Hawk asked her, and she agreed. If they found out about that…"
"Can you get inside the compound to find out?" asked the girl with dark hair and intense eyes.
"Maybe." He shrugged. "Maybe not. They don't have any reason to help me. A lot of them don't even like me."
The dark–skinned kid pushed forward and looked back at the others, blocking Logan off. "We don't need him. He ain't got nothin' useful to offer us.
Ain't got nothin' but that staff. At least we got weapons. We can find out for ourselves about the Bird‑Man."
"Shut up, Panther," snapped the slender girl with the straw–colored hair and the fierce eyes. She looked back at Logan. "Will you try to find him? Will you go to the compound and ask?" Straightforward and to the point. 'All right," he agreed. "Do you want any of us to go with you?"
He shook his head. "Stay here. Let me see what I can learn on my own first. If that doesn't work, I'll come back and we'll try something else."
He went down the stairs without waiting for their reply, his mind made up about what he was going to do. He had come a long way to find the gypsy morph, and he wasn't about to give up on it now. The Ghosts meant well, but they would only get in his way if Hawk was inside the compound. His best chance of reaching the boy was to speak with the compound leaders. Assuming Hawk was still alive.
He got a block away before he stopped to throw the bones, unable to wait any longer to make certain there was still a reason to go on. But the bones formed up on the square of black cloth, pointing down the street and toward the sports complex that he already knew was serving as shelter for the compound members. He had seen it from the highway coming in and recognized it for what it was–another futile attempt by a dying civilization at staying alive, another false hope that protection from the world could be found by hiding behind walls.
He picked up the finger bones and put them back in his pocket. He wished sometimes he could find a way to convince those who lived in the compounds that they were inhabiting their own tombs. He wished he could make them see that there was no longer any safe place in the world, and that their best bet was to keep moving. But he knew that thousands of years of conditioned thinking was standing in the way of any real change, and the advice of one man wasn't likely to overcome that.
He caught sight of some of the other denizens of the city as he went, their furtive, shadowy movements giving them away. Another would have missed them entirely, but his training and the magic of his staff revealed their presence to him. Mutants: some of them dangerous, some not. Some were solitary, some tribal, but the humans who had not mutated shunned them all. He wondered what would become of them in the future that Two Bears had prophesied.
He reached the compound without incident and walked up to the main gates, not trying to hide his approach. If he was to get anywhere, he must be direct.
Guards atop the walls challenged him when he came into view, and he stopped where they could see him, calling up his name and order of service. One of the guards, at least, knew what it meant to be a Knight of the Word and told him that someone would be right down. He waited patiently, studying the complex, noting its defenses. It was heavily fortified; its inhabitants would be well armed. An attack would have to be massive and sustained if it was to succeed.
Not that it wouldn't. Eventually, they all did.
A small, metal–clad door opened to one side of the main gates, and a man stepped through into the daylight.
"Morning," he called out, walking toward Logan. "I'm Ethan Cole, Chairman of the Compound Directorate. What brings a Knight of the Word up this way?"
His voice was flat and perfunctory, and his manner was brusque. There was no offer of anything to eat or drink, no invitation to come inside and rest, no small talk, and no time wasted. Get it said and get it done. It wasn't difficult to get an accurate measure of Ethan Cole. He was perhaps fifty years of age, of average size and ordinary looks, nothing unusual about him, nothing odd. But he spoke and walked in the way of a man used to wielding authority. Logan had met men like him before. They were always the same.