She did not volunteer another. Eventually, he went on.
“I am—” He gestured at the TV, where a new Law & Order had started. “—a police. I have come…There is someone…”
He stopped, frustration climbing through his whole body, and glared at the television. “I cannot tell you. I have no words.”
Daria shook her head, her hair snapping out wildly. “No, no-no-no! You can’t just lock me in here with you and say it’s okay because you’re a cop! That’s not a reason, that’s a résumé! Now you tell me what you’re doing here or I’ll—”
Tagen shot her a glare and then advanced on her like a panther. His mouth opened and out came a furious rush of sound that she tried hear as an alien language for several minutes before she realized her was speaking perfect Spanish.
The bones went out of Daria’s body. She staggered back and he came forward, circling her and driving her out the corner until she hit the edge of the couch. She sat strengthlessly and stared up at him. There was something so fundamentally surreal about an alien speaking Spanish, although she supposed there was no reason that should be any stranger than one speaking English.
“Stop,” she said finally. “Just stop. I don’t understand you.”
“No,” he snapped. “No no no. You cannot command me to speak and then refuse to hear me merely because you do not know Panyol.”
“Okay, I get the point.” Daria dropped her gaze and tugged her t-shirt over her knees. “I’m sorry.”
“We,” Tagen said fiercely, “must find some way of living together, because my patience is growing very thin and I am not going to leave until my questions are answered.”
“You may not believe this,” she said, tears stinging at her eyes and unsteadying her words, “but I am dealing with you the best I can.”
For a moment, the anger continued to smolder in his gaze. Then he let out a breath and stepped back, the tension fading from his body. “Yes,” he said, and he sounded tired. “I suppose you are.”
She made herself see him then, not just look at him, but truly see him. She saw a stranger who knew full well that he was alone and far from home. She saw a man at the end of his endurance, exhausted down to the very bones of him, and desperate enough to grab at straws. She saw a cop at the end of a long day, one who had put himself in a lot of danger and who was still determined to do his job. She saw Tagen Pahnee, and it broke her a little.
“Okay,” she said. “What are your questions?”
He met her gaze, mistrustful now that she had shown compliance, but then come forward again, intensity a hammer behind every word. “What are your planet’s defenses?” he demanded. “Who has control over the weapons that orbit Earth? Can they be used to repel off-world invasion? What are your methods of locating alien life-forms once they have come to your world? What is your access to the media of—”
“What are you talking about?” Baffled, Daria interrupted him with upraised hands and a hard shake of her head. “We don’t have anything like that on Earth! Most people probably don’t even believe in aliens, and no one could stop a—” The breath fell out of her, heavy as a hot stone, and she stared at him. “Alien invasion?” she gasped. “You’re invading Earth?”
“What?” Now it was his turn to draw back, confused. “No!”
“Don’t lie to me!” She sprang up, her fists balled uselessly at her side and shouted at him. “Why else would you need to know what Earth’s defenses are? I’m not a complete idiot, you know, I can connect the dots! You’re going to invade and kill us all, and you think I’m going to help you do it! Well, I’m not! You can kill me, but I’m not telling you shit!”
Tagen derailed her suicidal bravado with one universally-recognizable gesture. He raised his hand and smacked himself in the forehead.
Daria’s growing outrage blew out of her like steam from an open kettle. She blinked at him, watching him stand before with his eyes tightly shut and his breath coming hard and slow between tightly-clenched jaws, and slowly sat back down. “You…aren’t invading?”
“No.” Tagen moved nothing but his mouth and that not much. “Not as you mean it. There is one only. I am here to take him back.”
“Then…then why would you need to know all that stuff about…weapons and…and repelling aliens and…”
He snatched his hand away and glared at her. “I thought perhaps Earth’s defenses may have located him, sparing me the trouble. It was a fool’s thought, not a conqueror’s. Did you really think I would come to land on Earth and then ask what defenses you possessed if I came to invade?” he demanded, sweeping his arm out to one side as though physically displaying the stupidity of that notion. “And that you would think all of Jota would come to Earth! Do you know what that would cost? What would put such a thought into your head?!”
Daria picked at the hem of her t-shirt, her eyes darting to the shelves beside the TV where she kept her DVDs. Damn the movies.
“No,” Tagen continued. “Only one has come to Earth and only I am come to find him. Even if I were to die, still no one else would come. Your Earth is quite safe from invasion. Are you glad with that?”
“Am I…? Yeah, I guess I’m satisfied.” She risked an upwards glance and dropped her eyes back to her knees when she saw he was still glaring at her. “Sorry.”
He did not seem much mollified. “Will you answer now or must I ask again?”
“I don’t think Earth has any defenses the way you’re thinking,” she said. “And if there’s weapons in orbit like you said, I don’t even know what they are. As for tracking aliens on Earth…Tagen, we just don’t have that kind of technology.” She peeked at him again; he was glaring at the television screen. “Who is this guy you’re looking for?” she asked. “What did he do? And why did he come here?”
Tagen turned back around, his eyes narrowed. He studied her in silence for a short time, and then said, “His name is Kanetus E’Var. I have no words to tell you his crime.”
“But you’re going to find him.”
“Yes.” He paused. “If he is here.”
“You don’t know for sure?”
His brows drew down slowly, carving that line in deeper between his eyes. “No.”
“You can’t…I don’t know…scan for his life-source from orbit?”
Tagen’s head cocked to one side. He stared at her in thunderstruck irritation and snapped, “Can you?!”
“No,” she admitted, and then frowned. “Are you saying…are you seriously saying that you came all the way Earth looking for one guy, and you don’t even know where to look? What was your big plan, just to walk around shaking his food dish?”
It was just as well he couldn’t follow that, because it really wasn’t too smart a thing to say. While Tagen was still obviously attempting to decipher that, Daria took a breath and tried again, more calmly, “Do you know how big Earth is?”
“Yes,” he said, with a black that’s-enough look lurking in his eyes. “I am aware that it will be difficult.”
“Difficult? Tagen, making cassoulet is difficult! Solving the Rubik’s cube is difficult! Stumbling over the whole planet on foot looking for one guy is impossible!”
“Without help, yes.” Tagen leaned forward, his eyes unblinking. “Which is why I need you, Daria Cleavon. And which is why I will not allow you to refuse me.”