"Just the knife, and it's mostly for eating with," Foxleigh said. "What are you doing?"
"I'm looking around," Griffs said, dropping the mattress and running his hands through the books and other odds and ends in the crate that served as a nightstand. "That all right with you?"
"Not really, no," Foxleigh said, looking back at Smith. "If he wrecks anything, it's coming out of his hide."
"He'll be careful," Smith said, his voice suddenly a little too casual. "You have any visitors up here recently?"
Foxleigh felt his stomach tighten. "Not unless the doc's visit way back when counts as recently," he said.
"Why?"
"The thermal reading we took from the town a little while ago seemed too high for one man," Smith said. "You have anything you'd like to tell us?"
"Aside from go to hell?" Foxleigh countered. "This is the cabin. You see anyone else here?"
"Don't get smart," Griffs warned as he sifted gingerly through the wood bin. "If you're covering for someone, you're going to be in serious trouble."
Foxleigh snorted. "I stopped covering for anyone forty years ago," he said. "You were probably just reading my stove—you can see for yourself it's still hot. That, or your equipment's no damn good."
"We'll have it checked out," Smith said. "Griffs?"
"Seems clean," Griffs said, standing in the middle of the room for one final look. His eyes lingered a moment on the sink and toilet area, and Foxleigh held his breath. But the young Security man turned away without comment and nodded to his partner. "Let's get out of this pig hole."
"Good-bye, Mr. Toby," Smith said, giving Foxleigh an almost friendly smile as they left.
Foxleigh watched through the window as the two men picked their way down the path back toward town, his stomach settling into a hard knot. Smith's smile had been almost friendly, all right. But Foxleigh wasn't fooled, any more than Smith had been fooled by his hot-stove story. A good IR sensor could tell the difference between a stove and a human body, and even if the analyzers on their Birren-7 patrol boat weren't good enough to sort that out the ones in Athena certainly were.
And if he'd been reading Smith's face right, running the track through those analyzers was the first thing he would do when he got back to base.
Half an hour later, he heard the Birren-7 lift back into the sky ... and with that, the clock was now counting down. Still, he couldn't simply haul the two blackcollars back up. Not yet. Smith might have been suspicious enough to leave an observer or two behind.
Maybe there was a way to find out about that. Reaching to the top of the window, he pulled down the red shade. Then, crossing over to his larder, he started putting together a traveling pack.
Adamson must have been watching for the signal. Barely fifteen minutes later, the medic strode through the door. "What happened?" he asked.
"About what you'd expect," Foxleigh said, sinking down on the end of the bed and gesturing his visitor to the chair. "They came in, looked around, and made veiled threats against whoever'd given me my Idunine. I told them you'd used old stock."
"Yes, they asked me about that, too," Adamson said. "But they seemed satisfied with my answers. What did you say about the IR readings?"
"You knew about that?"
"I heard them discussing it," Adamson said. "That was just before they asked me who lived up here."
"I tried to blame the stove," Foxleigh said, grimacing. "But I don't think they bought it."
"I don't think so, either," Adamson agreed with a sigh. "Cracked ribs or not, Jensen and Flynn are both going with me tomorrow."
"They're going sometime in the next hour, you mean," Foxleigh said with a snort. "That's more the round-trip time to Boulder."
"Relax," Adamson said, holding out a hand. "They already have their hands full checking on the other pylons."
Foxleigh frowned. "The pylons? That's all they were here for?"
"That's it," Adamson said. "And they're hurrying like crazy to get back to base before full night.
Apparently, they're expecting trouble in Athena."
Foxleigh took a deep breath. So he had a little more time. Good. "Any idea what kind of trouble?"
Adamson shrugged. "They weren't talking about it, but my guess is blackcollar trouble." He lifted his eyebrows. "Now for the big question: What are you planning to do with all this?"
Foxleigh's first impulse was to lie. But Adamson deserved better. "I'm going into the base," he told the other. "Jensen knows the way—he was in once before."
"You think that's where he and Flynn were headed?"
"I don't know what else could possibly be out here he would want," Foxleigh said. "All I have to do is persuade him to take me in with him."
"How? With the truth?"
Foxleigh shrugged. "As much of it as he needs."
"As much as he needs, or as much as you want him to know?"
"Same difference," Foxleigh said. He smiled tightly. "Hell, doc, even you don't know all the truth."
"Yeah, I've always sort of figured that," Adamson said ruefully. "You can trust me, you know."
"I know," Foxleigh said with a sigh. "But there are certain truths that are better left hidden."
For a moment the two men sat in silence, each wrapped in his own thoughts. For Foxleigh, the thoughts were mingled with bitter memories. But they would soon be over. All of it would soon be over.
Eventually, Adamson stirred. "So what do you want me to do?"
"Take Flynn into Denver tomorrow as planned," Foxleigh said. "He needs to find the other blackcollars and let them know what's happening."
"You sure you and Jensen won't need him?" Adamson asked doubtfully. "That's not an easy hike, and you both qualify for walking-wounded status."
"We'll make it," Foxleigh said.
"If you don't, it's an equally long walk back," Adamson warned. "What then?"
"Then as far as I'm concerned, you're released," Foxleigh said. "Your life is completely your own again."
Adamson's eyes drifted toward the window and the mountain towering against the sky to the southeast.
"You're not coming back, are you?" he said quietly.
Foxleigh shrugged, probably a little too casually. "That depends on what I can talk Jensen into. Hey, I may not even make it over the next ridge." He held out a hand. "But whatever happens, I want you to know how much I appreciate what you've done for me."
"I haven't done anything but my job," Adamson told him, gripping the other's hand tightly. "Good luck to you."
"And to you," Foxleigh said, letting go of his hand. "Now go home. Practice being shocked by the horrific revelations Security's going to bring when they come knocking on the door."
"Shocked I can do in my sleep," Adamson said with a wry smile. "Good-bye ... Sam."
It was the first time in nearly three decades that he'd been called by his true name. The sound of it rang strangely in his ears. "Good-bye, Doc."
He waited until Adamson had disappeared around a turn in the path. Then, crossing the cabin, he pulled open the latrine box. "Clear," he called softly. "Come on up."
A few minutes later, the two blackcollars were back in the cabin. "What did they want?" Jensen asked as he disentangled himself from his rope.
"Adamson says they came to town to check on the sensor pylons," Foxleigh said, running a critical eye over the other. Jensen's voice was firm enough, but his face seemed a little pale and he was definitely favoring his side. Hanging down there for an hour wrapped in a rope harness couldn't have done his injuries any good. "They came up here because their IR sensors seemed to show more than one person present and accounted for."
"I was afraid of that," Jensen said, coiling the rope and setting it on top of the wood bin. "Is there someplace out there where Flynn can wait for Adamson's morning shuttle service?"
"Assuming they don't shut down the whole region," Flynn warned. "Anyway, I'm thinking maybe we should forget Denver and try the cross-country route."