‘Believe me, I was taken as much by surprise as you are, deeah. I’m afraid fighting has already started. It’s a tragedy, but now we have to deal with it. What -’
‘Where’s Blue?’ Pyrgus interrupted.
‘She’s here beside me, deeah. She’s safe and completely -’
‘I want to talk to her,’ Pyrgus said.
Blue’s voice came through immediately. She sounded brisk as well. ‘Pyrgus, I want you to -’
‘How are you?’ Pyrgus asked.
‘I’m fine,’ Blue said. ‘Henry was… look, that doesn’t matter now: I’ll tell you all about it when you get back. I want you to listen to Madame Cardui. We’ve spotted something that may be important to the war effort.’
War effort, Pyrgus thought. It had happened. The greatest disaster in the history of the Realm and now they summed it up in two words.
‘Yes, OK,’ he said.
Madame Cardui’s voice replaced Blue’s. ‘I take it you haven’t found the flowers?’
‘Not really,’ Pyrgus admitted, thinking it sounded a little better than Not at all.
‘That doesn’t matter for the moment. This is more important. Do you know how to get to the Eastern Desert?’
‘I do,’ Nymph whispered.
‘Yes,’ Pyrgus said loudly, glaring at her: he wasn’t a complete idiot.
‘How long will it take you to reach it from where you are now?’
Pyrgus frowned. ‘Not very long – we’ve flyers inside the estate and we’re right inside Yammeth City. Once we get back to the flyers, it’s only fifteen minutes to the wasteland.’
‘That’s what I thought,’ said Madame Cardui. ‘You’re the closest people we have. Now, this is what I want you to do: fly to the desert at once. You and Nymphalis and your CC. No one else. This mission is top-secret – above top-secret, really. I’d prefer it was just you and Nymphalis, but you must get word back to me as quickly as possible, so the CC goes too. The rest of your people will just have to find the time flowers on their own – appoint a temporary officer commanding and leave them to it.’
‘Madame Car-’ Pyrgus began, but Madame Cardui wasn’t listening.
‘Your triangulation is 38/17/105. Will you remember that?’
‘Yes, of -’
‘I will, Painted Lady,’ Nymph put in, interrupting him.
‘Good. Thank you, Nymphalis: it’s such a relief to have someone mature and experienced on this mission – I did clear it with your mother, of course.’ Even from the CC’s mouth it was possible to hear the change of tone as a worried note crept in. ‘You can land at that triangulation, deeahs, but I’m afraid you’ll have to make the rest of your way on foot. I would have preferred you to stay in the flyer, but the volcanic thermals make it quite impossible for you to travel further by air. But this is a dangerous mission and I want you to be extremely careful.’
‘I’ll look after him,’ Nymph promised, to Pyrgus’s fury.
‘Thank you, deeah. Now, from your landing coordinates, you should proceed north-east – directly north-east. The good news is it isn’t far – an hour’s march, two at most, and you may get some help from the nomads, although I wouldn’t count on it. The worst will be the hills: there’s a range of low, volcanic hills. But once you top that, you should have a clear view of what is happening.’
‘But what is ha-?’ Pyrgus tried to ask.
‘I want no heroics, Pyrgus. No guerrilla tactics, nothing like that. In fact, I want you to make sure you aren’t even seen. Just use the CC to report back to me at once.’
‘What am I reporting on?’ Pyrgus blurted desperately.
‘It looks as if Lord Hairstreak may have found some allies,’ said Madame Cardui.
Seventy-nine
Unexpectedly, Madame Cardui stood on tiptoe to kiss him gently on the cheek. ‘I need to see you in my office, Alan,’ she whispered. ‘Door on your right – I’ll join you in a moment.’
You learned a little every day, Fogarty thought. An office in the palace upstairs and now an office off the Situation Room. A remarkable woman by any measure. Sometimes he got luckier than he’d any right to ask for. All he needed now was time to enjoy it.
He looked around. Madame Cardui’s office was small, but remarkably well-appointed. She had a desk and one of those expensive new-fangled chairs that moulded itself to your bottom and squeezed it every so often to remind you you were still alive. A biological storage unit oozed and bubbled in a cauldron in the corner. A spell-driven food butler stood ready in case she wanted a snack. There was even a reproducing chair for visitors, lurking on the floor ready to clone itself indefinitely depending on how many visitors there were – you could tell its talent from the creepy black material that covered it.
But the thing that caught his attention was the miniaturised view globe sunk into the desk. That was a levitator for sure, hence state-of-the-art. It had to be linked with the view globes in the Situation Room, but there wasn’t a wire or cable in sight. Little gizmos like that were always hideously expensive, but the taxpayers were probably paying for it.
He was reaching for the reproducing chair when Madame Cardui bustled in and closed the door carefully. She pressed a thumb on the built-in spell cone and the leathery smell of privacy enchantments filled the room. Well-oiled locks slid into place.
‘I thought it best we talk on our own, dahling,’ she told him as she walked across the room. ‘The Generals are fine men in their way, but you can never be sure how they’ll interpret the concept of loyalty. And with so much bustle, you never know who might listen in. Besides, I suspect Hairstreak has a spy eye in there despite our sweeps.’
‘Trust nobody,’ Fogarty growled. The chair had sensed his singularity and inhibited its tendency to reproduce. He parked his bottom with a scowl. The surface felt dank and unappealing, an effect he suspected was deliberate. Cynthia was exactly like himself. She did nothing to encourage visitors to outstay their welcome. ‘What’s happening?’ he asked.
She walked across the room to take her own seat. ‘There’s something I want you to look at…’ She set both hands on her desk and the globe levitated to eye level. As it began to glow, she said, ‘Pull your chair over, Alan: this isn’t awfully easy to see, even close up.’
Fogarty set his jaw and pulled the chair across. He leaned forward. A scene began to form as the globe heated and suddenly he was staring into a scorched wasteland of barren rocks and smoky fume.
‘You haven’t managed to get a spy eye into Hael?’ he asked, using the Realm pronunciation. If she had, he was impressed.
But Madame Cardui was shaking her head. ‘No, deeah. That’s not Hael. It’s a segment of the desert to the east of Yammeth Cretch. Fumaroles… gas vents… lava flows… boiling mud springs – they tell me it’s the most volcanically active area on the face of the planet. Nobody lives there except a few nomadic Trinians and even they find life hard going. The Nighters look on it as a protection for that flank of their city – try to march men across that and you’d lose nine-tenths of them before you met a single enemy. But look…’
After a moment, Fogarty asked, ‘What am I looking for?’
Madame Cardui’s slim hand floated forward to point. ‘See that ridge? There’s a break – some sort of opening, quite a large one, deeah, except that it’s partly hidden by the dust that’s venting. The view varies, but keep your eye on… here, just here. It’ll clear in a moment, then you should catch a glimpse…’
‘Can’t you get a close-up?’ Fogarty asked. ‘Zoom the lens or whatever it is you do here?’
Madame Cardui shook her head again. ‘We don’t actually have a spy eye in the desert – there’s so much sulphur venting that any moisture turns to acid. The eyes are moist, of course, so it eats through their spell coating in a matter of hours. Simply isn’t worth installing them. And for what, usually? A few wandering Trinians? No, the eye you’re looking through is on the eastern gate of Yammeth City. It’s normally turned on the city itself: there are a few spell factories in that quarter we like to keep an eye on, forgive the bad pun. But one of them blew up last week – some sort of industrial accident involving sprites, I believe. In any case, the energy discharge turned the eye around. No damage, just turned it so it was looking out across the desert. What with everything that’s been going on, we didn’t get round to sending an agent to correct it. Then earlier today, a monitor noticed this -’