“The search for the Hoveny—important. But many Triads search, on many other worlds. Most look for years and nothing worthwhile. Our families forget us. Those who sent us here, they send supplies and wait for reports. Forget us.” A hand pressed to his chest with the word. “Security checks, back at First. Offworld protocols. Good enough, understand? No risk, no one cares, forgotten. Unless we find something. Or think we have. Once find confirmed, every protection sent.” That desperate edge to his voice. “Reports secret. Go only to the office of the First. No one else should know.”
“Why?” Aryl narrowed her eyes. “Who shouldn’t know?”
“Those who take what isn’t theirs.”
Why had she thought his vast Trade Pact would be safe from greed and thieves? Maybe, she realized, because the alternative was terrifying. “You think that’s what’s happened.” She licked dry lips. “That someone’s come to Cersi, to take from you.”
“I could be wrong.” Marcus lifted his hand from hers; guessing he worried about the contact, she released his arm. “No
She was right to ask. “You said ‘danger.’ What kind of danger? What would they do?” Whoever “they” were.
Marcus consulted his screens—not, Aryl judged, because they told him what to say. Finally, he gave her that uncertain sideways glance. “The bad kind. I flew over Site One on the way here. The tower is damaged. I thought—hoped that explained the com silence. A broken machine, not—not—Then you called. Coms work, Aryl. No one’s using them. No one.”
And she’d worried he was leaving.
A physical threat. To him. To those who worked with him. Something that could disrupt the Strangers’ seemingly invincible technology. “Do they threaten us?”
“I’ll take you home,” he said as if he hadn’t heard. “You get everyone inside the Cloisters. Stay there until I come. Promise me.”
Haxel would have her blade against the softness of his throat by now, demanding answers. Not that it would work, Aryl knew. No threat would move Marcus Bowman to say anything he didn’t want to say.
And she’d never allow it.
“We’ll go with you.” Two of the Triad sites were between here and Sona. He wasn’t a fool.
Not a fool; not happy either. Marcus frowned. “No.”
“You need to check on your people. You’ve already wasted time coming for us.”
Behind her, Naryn sighed, but Aryl could feel her
“Bad idea!” Marcus lurched around in his seat. “Enris. Tell her.”
“I like it.” Her Chosen leaned back and put his massive arms behind his head in a show of ease. “The sooner we’re home, the sooner Haxel puts me to work.”
“I’d—” Naryn bent double, her hands holding her abdomen. “Leave me be!” she gasped.
She didn’t protest to them.
Aryl checked her shields.
She knew what Anaj meant.
Aryl blinked herself free of the M’hir to the sound of the Human’s voice, loud and vehement. “—go home. This is Trade Pact problem. Triad problem. Not Om’ray. Not yours! What of babies?”
What would he think of the acerbic old Adept currently living inside Naryn? She was
Some things, Aryl reminded herself, Marcus didn’t need to know.
One he did. “If you take us to Sona, we won’t get out of this machine. Unless you think you can force us out? And our babies?”
Enris made a choking noise.