"Wish I could have brought the kids," the Slug mused. "They thought the Baron's was something."
At the alcove the waiter held Mollya's chair.
"Was that Baron Ver Dorco of the War Yards?"
"Yeah," said Calli. "Barbequed lamb, plum wine, the best looking peacocks I've seen in two years. Never got to eat 'em." He shook his head.
"One of the annoying habits of aristocracy," T'mwarba laughed, "they'll go ethnic at the slightest provocation. But there're only a few of us left, and most of us have the good manners to drop our titles.”
"Late weapons master of Armsedge," the Slug corrected.
"I read the report of his death. Rydra was there?"
"We all were. It was a 'retty wild evening."
"What exactly happened?"
Brass shook his head. "Well, Ca'tain went early . . ." When he had finished recounting the incidents, with the others adding details. Dr. T'mwarba sat back in his chair. "The papers didn't give it that way. But they wouldn't. What was this TW-55 anyway?"
Brass shrugged.
There was a click as the discorporaphone in the doctor's ear went on; "It's a human being who's been worked over and over from birth till it isn't human anymore," the Eye said. "I was with Captain Wong when the Baron first showed it to her."
Dr. T'mwarba nodded. "Is there anything else you can tell me?"
Slug, who had been trying to get comfortable in the hard-backed chair, now leaned his stomach against the table edge. "Why?"
The others got still, quickly.
The fat man looked at the rest of the crew. “Why are we telling him all this? He's going back and give it to the stellarmen."
"That's right," Dr. T'mwarba said. "Any of it that might help Rydra."
Ron put down his glass of iced cola. “The stellarmen haven't been what you'd call nice to us, Doc," he explained.
"They didn't take us to no fancy restaurants." Calli tucked his napkin into the zircon necklace he'd worn for the occasion. A waiter placed a bowl of French fried potatoes on the table, turned away, and came back with a platter of hamburgers.
Across the table Mollya picked up the tall, red flask and looked at it questioningly.
"Ketchup," Dr. T'mwarba said.
"Ohhh," breathed Mollya and returned it to the damask table cloth.
"Diavalo should be here now." The Slug sat back slowly and stopped looking at the doctor. "He's an artist with a carbo-synth, and he's got a feel for a protein-dispenser that's fine for good solid meals like nut stuffed pheasant, fillet of snapper-creyonnaise, and good stick-to-your-ribs food for a hungry spaceship crew. But this fancy stuff"—he spread mustard carefully across his bun—"give him a pound of real chopped meat, and I bet he'd run out of the galley 'cause it might bite him."
Brass said: "What's wrong with Ca'tain Wong? That's what nobody wants to ask."
"I don't know. But if you'll tell me all you can, I'll have a lot better chance of doing something."
"The other thing nobody wants to say," Brass went on, "is that one of us don't want you to do anything for her. But we don't know which."
The others silenced again.
“There was a s'y on the shi'. We all knew about it. It tried to destroy the shi' twice. I think it's responsible for whatever ha'ened to Ca'tain Wong and the Butcher."
"We all think so," the Slug said.
"This is what you didn't want to tell the stellar-men?"
Brass nodded.
“Tell him about the circuit boards and the phony take off before we got to Tarik," Ron said.
Brass explained.
"If it hadn't been for the Butcher," the discorporaphone clicked again, "we would have reentered normal space in the Cygnus Nova. The Butcher convinced Jebel to hook us out and take us aboard."
"So." Dr. Tmwarba looked around the table. "One of you is a spy."
"It could be one of the kids," the Slug said. "It doesn't have to be someone at this table."
"If it is," Dr. Tmwarba said, "I'm talking to the rest of you. General Forester couldn't get anything out of you. Rydra needs somebody's help— It's that simple."
Brass broke the lengthening silence. "I'd just lost a shi' to the Invaders, Doc; a whole 'latoon of kids, more than half the officers. Even though I could wrestle well and was a good 'ilot, to any other trans'ort ca'tain, that run-in with the Invaders made me a stiff jinx. Ca'tain Wong's not from our world. But wherever she came from, she brought a set of values with her that said, 'I like your work and I want to hire you.' I'm grateful."
"She knows about so much," Calli said. "This is the wildest trip I've ever been on. Worlds. That's it, Doc. She cuts through worlds and don't mind taking you along. When's the last time somebody took me to a Baron's for dinner and espionage? Next day I'm eating with pirates. And here I am now. Sure I want to help."
"Calli's too mixed up with his stomach," Ron interrupted. "What it is, is she gets you thinking. Doc. She made me think about Mollya and Calli. You know she was tripled with Muels Aranlyde, the guy who wrote Empire Star. But I guess you must, if you're her doctor. Anyway, you start thinking that maybe those people who live in other worlds—like Calli says—where people write books or make weapons, are real. If you believe in them, you're a little more ready to believe in yourself. And when somebody who can do that needs help, you help."
"Doctor," Motlya said, "I was dead. She made me alive. What can I do?"
"You can tell me everything you know"—he leaned across the table and locked his fingers—"about the Butcher."
"The Butcher?" Brass asked. The others were surprised. "What about him? We don't know anything exce't that Ca'tain and him got to be real close."
"You were on the same ship with him for three weeks. Tell me everything you saw him do."
They looked at one another, silence questioning.
"Was there anything that might have indicated where he was from?"
"Titin," Calli said. "The mark on his arm."
"Before Titin, at least five years before. The problem is that the Butcher doesn't know either."
They looked even more perplexed. Then Brass said, "His language. Ca'tain said he originally had s'oken a language where there was no word for I."
Dr. Tmwarba frowned more deeply as the discorporaphone clicked again. "She taught him how to say I and you. They wandered through the graveyard in evening, and we hovered over them while they taught each other who they were."
"The 'I'," Tmwarba said, "that's something to go on." He sat back. "It's funny. I suppose I know everything about Rydra there is to know. And I know just that little about—"
The discorporaphone clicked a third time. "You don't know about the myna bird."
T'mwarba was surprised. "Of course I do. I was there."
The discorporate crew laughed softly. "But she never told you why she was so frightened."
"It was a hysterical onset brought about by her previous condition—"
Ghostly laughter again. "The worm. Dr. T'mwarba. She wasn't afraid of the bird at all. She was afraid of the telepathic impression of a huge worm crawling toward her, the worm that the bird was picturing."
"She told you this—" and never told me, was the ending of what had began in minor outrage and ceased in wonder.
“Worlds," the ghost reiterated. “Sometimes worlds exist under your eyes and you never see— This room might be filled with phantoms, you'd never know. Even the rest of the crew can't be sure what we're saying now. But Captain Wong, she never used a discorporaphone. She found a way to talk with us without one. She cut through worlds, and joined them—that's the important part—so that both became bigger."
"Then somebody's got to figure out where in the world, yours, mine, or hers, the Butcher came from." A memory resolved like a cadence closing, and he laughed. The others looked puzzled. "A worm. Some where in Eden now, a worm, a worm . . . That was one of her earliest poems. And it never occurred to me."