"Why not?"
"The town was too small," Foxleigh said. "Everyone knew everyone else, and there were two or three Adamson didn't trust to keep their mouths shut under pressure. So he took me up to the cabin and asked Toby to put me up for a while."
"So there was an actual Toby?"
"Adamson's uncle," Foxleigh said. "He'd moved up to the cabin about ten years earlier to get away from what he called the irritations of civilization."
"Not much of an escape," Jensen pointed out. "He was, what, a whole two hundred meters out of town?"
"But everyone knew to leave him alone," Foxleigh said. "Actually, the cabin's location was a compromise with the rest of his family, who were adamant about him not disappearing off somewhere into the wild and maybe dying in an accident without them even knowing about it."
"And then you showed up," Jensen said. "He must have been thrilled."
"Thrilled isn't the word for it," Foxleigh said ruefully, remembering the long and heated discussions.
"But Adamson promised it wouldn't be for long, just until the Ryqril and their collaborators finished the census we knew they'd be taking of the mountain areas. Once that was over, I could move back down to Shelter Valley, and eventually to Denver."
"So what went wrong?"
"What do you think?" Foxleigh retorted. "The Ryqril decided to stick that damned sensor pylon at the edge of town. That meant Security could be popping in at any time to check on the thing. Worse, it meant everyone would be on file somewhere, which killed any chance for me to slip into town and pretend I'd always been there."
"So you and Toby became permanent roommates?" Jensen suggested.
Foxleigh swallowed. "Only for a while," he said quietly. "Three months later he caught pneumonia and died."
"Leaving you his cabin and his name."
"Everyone in town already knew about old Toby the hermit," Foxleigh said. "But no one outside the Adamson family had seen him recently enough to remember what he looked like. It seemed the perfect place to hide."
"Temporarily, anyway," Jensen said. "Only you seem to have made it permanent."
Foxleigh felt his stomach tighten. "I guess I just got used to it."
Jensen shook his head. "Lie number two," he said.
Foxleigh frowned. "What?"
"That was lie number two," Jensen said. "Lie number one was in your story somewhere, though I'm not sure exactly where. But this was definitely number two. You want to try again?"
Foxleigh sighed. "All right," he said. "The fact is that I wanted to stay near the mountain. I knew it was locked down, but I thought someday I might be able to find a way back in."
"To do what?"
"Basically, to do exactly what you're planning," Foxleigh said. "I wanted to take a fighter and do as much damage as I could to the Ryqril before they caught up with me." He squared his shoulders. "And I'll guarantee I'm a better pilot than you are."
"No doubt," Jensen agreed. "So what exactly do you want?"
"What I just said," Foxleigh told him. "Let me take the Talus out into the Ryqril base."
"Sounds reasonable," Jensen said. "The answer's no."
He said it so calmly that for a second the word didn't register. When it finally did, it hit Foxleigh like a slap in the face. "What do you mean, no?" he demanded.
"I mean that before you pulled this I might have been interested," Jensen said, hefting the gun. "Now, your currency's all been burned."
"I wasn't going to shoot you," Foxleigh insisted again, his stomach churning. This was his last, his very last chance. "I just wanted to make sure you'd listen."
"And if I didn't, you had the final argument?" Jensen shook his head. "Sorry, Toby. Or Foxleigh, or whatever your real name is."
"It's Foxleigh."
"Whatever." Jensen gestured back toward the elevator. "Come on. You're going home."
Silently, they made their way back down to the Level Nine storage room where they'd first entered Aegis Mountain. Sitting Foxleigh down on one of the crates, Jensen poked around for a few minutes and came up with a short length of thin cord. "I'm going to tie your hands together," he told Foxleigh as he set to work. "It'll make some parts of the trip a little tricky, I'm afraid, but a former fighter pilot should be able to make do."
"What about the rope ladder?" Foxleigh asked. "I can't climb it this way."
"The housing on the sonic Torch set up at the base of the shaft has a couple of sharp edges on it," Jensen told him. "I damn near sliced my hand open on one of them on our way out last time. A little work and you should be able to cut yourself free."
"And meanwhile you'll be committing suicide?"
"I'll be avenging fallen comrades," Jensen corrected. "And, with luck, I'll be helping bring all this to an end. Okay; on your feet."
"Wait a second," Foxleigh said as Jensen took his arm helped him up. "What do you mean, bring it to an end? Bring what to an end?"
"The Ryqril domination, of course," Jensen said. "What else is there?"
"No—hold it," Foxleigh protested as Jensen started pulling him toward the tunnel. "How is shooting up one Ryqril base going to do that?"
"Just part of the larger whole," Jensen said. "I'd love to chat about it, but I've got work to do." Gently but firmly he pushed Foxleigh through the opening. "Get going."
"Jensen, I want to be a part of what you're doing," Foxleigh said, trying one final time. "I need to be a part of it."
"And don't try to come back," Jensen added, shoving Foxleigh's gun into his own belt. "If you do, I'll kill you." Turning, he strode back across the room.
Foxleigh watched him go, his heart feeling like a chunk of lead. It had been his absolute last chance.
And he'd blown it.
Jensen disappeared out the door. Foxleigh stood there a little longer, wondering if he should follow the other and try again. All the blackcollar could do would be to follow through on his warning and kill him.
And one way or another, Foxleigh was already dead.
With a sigh, he turned his back on the base. Yes, he was dead, but even a dead man had obligations. At the very least, Adamson deserved to hear the whole story, and to finally know what kind of person he'd spent all these years protecting.
When he did, maybe the old medic would kill him himself.
Lowering his head, balancing himself with his tied hands, he headed for home.
Skyler drifted back to consciousness with a sense that he was sitting up, his chin lolling against his chest, his arms pinioned together in front of him. Carefully, expecting to find himself in a Security interrogation cell, he opened his eyes.
He wasn't inside a cell, or even indoors. He was seated on the ground not five meters from where they'd been attacked, his back braced against the trunk of a tree at the edge of the small clearing. His feet were free, but his forearms were pinned securely together by a pair of heavy-duty mag-lock shackles, the sort that couldn't be removed without special equipment. His nunchaku had been taken, as had his slingshot and the knives and shuriken from his various pouches and sheaths.
He turned his head a couple of degrees to his left. Flynn was sitting against the next tree over, his head still bowed against his chest but his eyes half open as he worked his way awake. Beyond him at successive trees were O'Hara and Hawking, similarly trussed up, similarly coming awake.
"Yae are arake," a Ryqril voice said.
There didn't seem much point in pretending he wasn't. Opening his eyes all the way, Skyler lifted his head.