"Wait a minute," Flynn said, trying to keep his tone under control. The last thing he was going to do was leave Jensen here alone. Not after that veiled comment about making sure the Ryqril didn't get into Aegis. "You're going to need me here."
"I'm fine," Jensen said, warning him with his eyes. "I need you to go contact Skyler."
"But—"
"I have a message only you can deliver," Jensen said, his tone leaving no room for argument.
Flynn sighed silently. Whatever Jensen was planning, it was clear he intended to do it alone.
"Understood," he murmured.
"I hope the message isn't too urgent," Trapper warned. "Denver's a big place. It may take a while to find them."
"Don't worry, we know some shortcuts," Jensen said. "He'll find them."
"Still cost at least a day." Trapper looked at his father. "And you'd be missed faster than I would."
"Probably," Adamson agreed reluctantly. "I take it you're volunteering?"
"Yes," Trapper said. "Though we can't leave until day after tomorrow."
"Why not?" Adamson frowned. "Oh, that's right. Martin won't be coming back with the sedan until tomorrow night."
"And Alex and Jane are taking in a load of spices with the pickup tomorrow," Trapper said, nodding.
"Couldn't we hitch a ride with them?" Flynn asked.
"No," Adamson said firmly. "They're probably trustworthy, but I don't want any more people than necessary in on this. If Security comes calling, I want their interrogations to show that no one but us had any idea what was going on."
Flynn grimaced. Lathe had warned them during their training that their very presence would put innocent people at risk, but this was the first time that fact had taken on any flesh-and-blood meaning. It was a sobering thought. "Maybe we could leave as soon as Martin gets back tomorrow," he suggested.
"The sooner we're out of your way, the better."
"Agreed," Adamson said. "But Martin will be back too late for us to take off. There are a couple of places along the road you definitely don't want to tackle in the dark."
"Then I guess it's first light the day after tomorrow," Flynn concluded. He looked questioningly at Jensen. "That all right?"
Jensen didn't look particularly happy about it, but he nodded. "I guess it'll have to be," he said. "I just hope Skyler doesn't start the party without us."
"First light it is, then," Adamson said. "Even that early we can't have you showing up in town, though, so I'll come up and take you to a rendezvous spot."
"Make it Goldfinch Hook," Trapper suggested. "I can wait there out of sight as long as I need to."
"Fine." Adamson looked at Jensen, a small smile touching his lips. "Well, it looks like you'll have at least one of those bed-rest days I asked for."
"Looks like it," Jensen agreed. "Speaking of days, mine has been long and fairly uncomfortable," he added, easing himself up off the bed again. "I'd like to find myself a corner and settle down for the night."
"You stay right where you are," Toby said firmly. "I've got a couple of old bedrolls the kid and I can use."
"He's right," Adamson seconded. "Let me get a thincast on you, then mix you up some of that Calcron."
Adamson got the blackcollar fixed up, and he and his son headed back to town.
Leaving Foxleigh and his new houseguests alone.
Despite the long day Jensen had mentioned, he and Flynn didn't go immediately to sleep. Instead, they whispered together for nearly half an hour, Jensen on the bed, Flynn on his borrowed bedroll on the floor beside him.
They kept their voices too low for Foxleigh to hear what they were saying. But that didn't matter. Three things were already certain, and they were all he needed. One: in a little over a day Flynn would be going to Denver, leaving Jensen behind. Two: Jensen was definitely one of the blackcollars he'd seen slipping into Aegis Mountain a year ago. And three: with Adamson's thincast wrapped around his torso, Jensen wasn't going to be fitting into his fancy flexarmor shirt anytime soon.
Which meant the time had finally come.
Rolling over on his bedroll, wincing at the unaccustomed hardness of the floor beneath him, Foxleigh drifted off to sleep.
CHAPTER 11
"As I said before, there's a lot of guesswork here," Shaw warned as he dropped the stack of rolled papers on one end of the kitchen table and selected one from the pile. "But it's all we've got."
"Understood," Lathe said. "Let's take a look."
Standing beside Mordecai at the side of the table, Judas craned his neck as Shaw unrolled the sheet and spread it out. To his surprise, it looked nearly as detailed as an actual blueprint would have been. If this was guesswork, he thought with a shiver, he would hate to see what blackcollars came up with when they actually had something to work with.
"This is the main floor," Shaw identified it. He tapped at the four sides in turn. "Here are the four entrances we saw yesterday; the eight entrance bunkers, two per door; and the reinforced bases at each of the eight corners for the antiaircraft lasers."
"Where's Spadafora?" Judas asked, looking around as he suddenly realized the third Plinry blackcollar wasn't there. In fact, now that he thought about it, he realized he hadn't seen the other leaving for their look at Khorstron the previous afternoon.
"He's out on another job," Lathe said.
"Comsquare Lathe has him dealing with the sensors in the fence," Shaw added.
"The sensors?" Judas asked, his stomach tightening. Surely they weren't attacking today, were they?
"You mean we're—today?"
"No, no," Shaw soothed, looking rather amused. "Certain things take time, Trainee Caine. Aged whiskey and out-link sensor systems are two of them."
Judas swallowed. "Oh," he said, feeling his face warming. "Sorry."
"Looks like there are mantrap foyers inside each entrance," Lathe said, tapping the large oval rooms behind the east entrance.
"Probably," Shaw agreed. "We don't know how they're furnished, of course, but from the thickness of the walls and these support points we assume each will have a couple of autotarget lasers flanking the inner door and a pair of guard holes a meter or two around the curve from them."
Judas winced. "That doesn't sound good."
"Depends on how they're set up," Lathe said. "Autotargeters can sometimes be disabled with a shuriken or two."
"Though you do tend to get only one shot at a given laser," Shaw said.
"There's that," Lathe agreed. "Tell me more about these entrance guard bunkers. You implied earlier that they didn't have any outer doors?"
"Right—they open directly through the wall into the base."
"So you could get inside through the bunkers?"
"Yes, but I wouldn't count on that being very useful," Shaw said. "The bunker walls themselves are relatively thin, but the entry doors behind them are every bit as tough as the main door they're protecting. And of course, with no external door on the bunker you'd have to blow the front off the thing to even gain access."
"Still, it would avoid the mantrap problem," Lathe pointed out. "What about the outer bunkers, the ones at the gate entrances?"
"Same deal, only the guards get in from the base via underground tunnels," Shaw said. "Here, here, here, and here. And, of course, once you were through the tunnels you'd have the same serious door to get through at the base end."
"Plus whatever additional goodies the Ryqril put in the tunnels themselves to discourage trespassers,"
Lathe said.
Shaw nodded. "Plus that."