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Authors: Timothy Zahn

Tags: #Fiction, #science fiction, #General, #Space Opera, #Action & Adventure

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BOOK: Cobra Outlaw - eARC
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“I see,” Barrington said. “One moment.”

He tapped the mute key and looked at Garrett. “Opinion?”

“It fits the facts as well as any other theory,” Garrett said, frowning in concentration. “It
does
rather imply he’s been manipulating us from the start, though.”

“Which we’d already considered a possibility,” Barrington pointed out. Still, the internal consistency of Ukuthi’s story meant there was nothing they could definitively hang around his neck as a lie. At least, not yet.

But at this point Ukuthi and his manipulation were only second place on Barrington’s priority list. Time to deal with the one in first.

He tapped off the mute. “We’ll be discussing this in more depth in the future,” he told Ukuthi. “Right now, I have a shipful of injured men who need medical attention that’s beyond my ability to provide. I need Qasama’s coordinates, and I need them now.”

“Of course,” Ukuthi said, sounding vaguely surprised that it was even a question. “The Qasama system is approximately one day’s journey along the final vector that brought you here to me. The final coordinates, I am sending them to you now. As I said, my purpose was to bring you here was merely so that we could unite and complete the voyage together.”

“Then let us do that,” Barrington said, twitching his eye to tap into the data stream. The coordinates Ukuthi had promised were there and had already been coded into the helm. The proper course was laid in, and engineering reported the
Dorian
’s drive was ready to kick them back into hyperspace. “We’ll leave as soon as you’re ready.”

“Readiness, we have it,” Ukuthi assured him. “Provide me with a countdown, and we shall drape the cloak of darkness together.”

Barrington pursed his lips.
Drape the cloak of darkness
. An interesting turn of phrase. Was that how all Trofts spoke of hyperspace, he wondered, or was it unique to Ukuthi?

Or was Ukuthi simply waxing poetic because he’d heard that humans responded well to poetry? “Thirty-second countdown on its way,” Barrington said. “Do you have it?”

“I have it,” Ukuthi said. “At Qasama shall we see each other next.”

“At Qasama,” Barrington confirmed.

Or possibly they would see each other earlier than that, he reminded himself. Possibly at the next trap Ukuthi had set up for them, in fact. Right now, there was still no reason to trust him. Nor was there any specific reason
not
to trust him.

At least, not yet.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

The black turned to gray, became wild and discordant colors, then went to black again. Then it did it all again. It was like a carnival ride for the brain, and sometimes Merrick rode it like there was nothing else in the universe that he needed to do.

Other times, he rode it as if letting go would erase all the colors from his mind forever.

He’d lost track of how many times the cycle had repeated itself when, to his weary surprise, he awakened to a world of normal colors and a dazed but more or less normal mind.

And along with the colors and sanity, an incredibly intense thirst.

He blinked his eyes a few times as he looked around. He was in a room in what seemed to be some sort of house, with muted sunlight coming in through small, high windows. Outside the windows seemed to be forest, though the image was obscured by a layer of grime on the glass. The room’s furnishings were sparse: the bed he was lying on, a small table at his side, and a single chair. All of the items were dark wood, and all of them looked rough and hand-made. In contrast with the almost amateurish furniture, the walls were covered in exquisite, highly detailed tapestries.

“You’re awake,” an unfamiliar voice came from behind him.

Merrick twisted his head around, a brief stab of dizziness washing over him as he did so, to see a young woman walking toward him from a half-open door. He craned his neck a little more, hoping to get some idea what was on the other side of the door, but all he could see were more tapestries. “Where am I?” he croaked. His voice was startling, far worse than just his massive thirst should have accounted for.

“My home,” the woman replied as she came around the side of the bed he was lying on. She was blonde, the typical Muninn coloring, and a bit on the short side. “What do you hear today?”

Merrick frowned. That was an odd comment. “I don’t know,” he said. “Just you, I guess. Why do you ask?”

She shrugged. “Often during your illness you claimed to hear things that weren’t there.”

“What sort of things?”

“Sometimes it was the masters’ flying boats,” she said. “Other times you heard predators on the prowl nearby.”

“And you looked and saw that nothing was there?” Merrick asked, suppressing a grimace. He must have been using his audios during one or more of those iridescent nightmares, without enough awareness or self-control to keep from blabbing about what he was hearing.


Looked
?” she echoed, her lip twisting. “Certainly we didn’t bother to look. Not after the first time you proved to be wrong. My time is too precious to waste on a madman.”

“I don’t doubt it,” Merrick said. Belatedly, he realized part of the reason for his odd-sounding voice: his audios were running at a strange and unbalanced setting, as if a child had gotten into his brain and started throwing switches at random. Carefully, he reset them to proper levels. “I appreciate your hospitality,” he added. His voice was still hoarse, but at least it was no longer freaky. “My name is Merrick. May I ask yours?”

“I know who you are, Merrick Hopekeeper.” She gave a little snort. “And let me be honest about my hospitality. If your friends hadn’t insisted, I would have thrown you out days ago.”

“I’m sorry I’ve been a burden,” Merrick said. “It was never my intent.”

The woman’s face softened, just a little, and clearly grudgingly. “I don’t doubt it was not your idea,” she conceded. “Though let us be clear that it was your own clumsiness that first occasioned your arrival. I am Alexis Woolmaster.”

“I’m honored to meet you,” Merrick said, his stomach tightening as something she’d said suddenly penetrated his lingering fogginess. She would have thrown him out
days
ago? How long had he been here, anyway? “May I ask how long it is that I’ve been imposing on you and your home?” he asked carefully.

“You were brought in the night three days ago.” She gave another snort. “You frightened the sheep. For that alone I would have sent you away.”

Merrick looked back toward the dim light coming in through the windows. Three days. Three
days
. While Anya and Kjoic did—

Did what? Sat in the forest and waited for him? Or had they given up and set out for Svipall on their own?

Or had one of his captors gone to get them? He had some vague memory of someone talking about that before the kaleidoscope cycles began, but had no idea whether or not it had happened. “You said my friends insisted I be permitted to stay,” he said. “Are those friends here now?”

“They are,” a new voice came from the doorway.

Again, Merrick turned his head to look, again fighting back the vertigo. This one was a man, older than the young woman facing him, wearing a camouflage sort of outfit of mottled brown, green, and gray. A memory clicked: this was the same middle-aged man who’d been with the group that brought him here after his encounter with the bersark field outside Svipall.

More to the point, it was the man who’d said he was going to find Anya and Kjoic.

“You may leave us, Alexis Tucker,” the man said.

For a moment he and the woman locked eyes, and Merrick wondered if she was going to remind him whose house this was. Then, with a slight compression of her lips, she slipped past him and disappeared through the doorway.

The man watched until she was gone, then pulled the chair over beside the bed and sat down. “I am Ludolf Treetapper,” he said, his eyes flicking briefly down Merrick’s body. “I see your mind has returned to reason.”

“Mostly,” Merrick confirmed. He still felt weak, and even the smallest movement of his head seemed to spark more of the dizziness. Dehydration, probably, and for a moment he considered asking Ludolf for water. But there was something about the man that made him reluctant to ask for favors. “I thought her name was Alexis Woolmaster.”

Ludolf snorted. “So she now calls herself,” he said scornfully. “When I first knew her she barely knew how to pleat the fabrics created by others. Alexis Tucker she was then, and Alexis Tucker she will always be.”

“Ah,” Merrick said noncommittally. Clearly, Ludolf wasn’t a man who bothered with tact and personal diplomacy. Merrick knew people like that, and they tended to go through life leaving emotional brush fires in their wake. “Were you able to find Anya and Kjoic?”

“Eventually,” Ludolf said, his eyes steady on Merrick. “You’ll see them both later.”

“Wait a second,” Merrick asked, frowning. He would see them
both
? “Are you saying you kept
Kjoic
here, too?”

“Why else would we be in Alexis Tucker’s home instead of our own?” Ludolf countered. “We certainly couldn’t bring a master there.”

“But you can’t just hold him here against his will,” Merrick protested. “He’s a
master
. They don’t take well to things like that. The minute he’s free, they’ll turn the whole area into a burn zone.”

“I agree,” Ludolf said. “The simplest way to avoid that would be to simply kill him.”

“No,” Merrick said firmly, a surge of adrenaline momentarily mastering the dizziness. Kjoic was his key to getting into the Troft building at Svipall. The last thing he wanted was to have some wide-eyed local drop his body into a river somewhere. He started to sit up, clenching his teeth against the light-headedness—

“Calm yourself, Merrick Hopekeeper,” Ludolf soothed, putting a hand on Merrick’s chest and easing him back down again. “There will be no need for violence or death. Not yet. Master Kjoic remains in this place of his own free will.”

“Does he, now,” Merrick growled, sinking back onto the bed. A good, solid shove on Ludolf’s chest, he knew, would send the man halfway across the room and maybe teach him not to play games like this.

But that would reveal Merrick’s strength. He might have foolishly talked about hearing things during his bouts with brain fever, but he’d recovered enough to remember that all this was supposed to be a deep, dark secret.

“He does,” Ludolf assured him. “When he learned that one of his slaves was ill, he insisted that on remaining until you were once again ready to travel.” His lip twisted. “He also seems to believe that
we
are his slaves now, as well. Tell me, why do you wish to enter the masters’ gray building?”

“There are things in there I want to see,” Merrick said.

“What things?”

“I won’t know until I see them, will I?”

“That’s not an answer.”

“It’s all I have right now,” Merrick said. “Maybe later I can do better.”

For a moment Ludolf gazed at him in silence. “Who are you?”

“You already know that. I’m Merrick Hopekeeper.”

Ludolf waved an impatient hand. “Words,” he scoffed. “A name is not a person, as you well know. I want to know who you
are
.
And
why you’ve come here to this part of Muninn.”

“Why don’t you ask Anya?”

Ludolf’s lip twisted. “I did,” he said sourly. “She would say only that you were once a fellow slave of a distant warrior-master.”

“She’s right,” Merrick agreed. “That’s who I am. No more; no less.”

“You expect me to believe that?”

“I expect more courtesy between strangers,” Merrick said pointedly. “Certainly with regards to each other’s privacy.”

“Privacy?” Ludolf asked, raising his eyebrows. “This from a man who claims to be a great and powerful warrior himself? A man who has defeated many of the masters in open battle? A man who claims to have torn a jormungand apart with his bare hands?”

Merrick stared, a fresh surge of adrenaline bubbling through him. He’d just about convinced himself that his loose words to Alexis were the biggest mistake he’d made during his drug-induced mania. Apparently, he’d said or done far worse.

But what exactly
had
he said? Did he tell them he was from the Cobra Worlds? Did he tell them he was a Cobra?

Worse, did he
show
them he was a Cobra?

And then, his fogged brain caught up with Ludolf’s accusations, and the rising panic abruptly receded again.

Merrick had never torn a jormungand apart. Not with his bare hands. Not even with his lasers or his arcthrower. Not even close.

So where in the Worlds had Ludolf gotten the idea that he had?

Obviously, Anya must have told him more than the simple fact that Merrick was a fellow slave. She must have hinted at what he was capable of, and Ludolf had taken the vague statements and tried to fill in the blanks. Probably hoping to spark a reaction or maybe goad Merrick into filling in some of the blanks himself.

The revelation came as a relief. Still, the relief came tinged with a sense of disappointment. Anya knew how closely they had to guard the secret of who he was. She shouldn’t have given out
any
information about him, let alone details or even broad hints about his abilities. Especially not to a total stranger.

Unless Ludolf
wasn’t
a total stranger. Unless Ludolf was, in fact…

Merrick felt his eyes narrow as he studied the man’s face, noting with distant amusement that Ludolf was simultaneously studying Merrick’s. The man’s eyes…his mouth…the shape of his cheekbones…

“Sounds like the ravings of a drug-crazed man to me,” Merrick said, keying his infrareds to their emotion-reading setting. “I wouldn’t believe a word of it if I were you. Tell me, what’s it like to finally have your daughter back with you?”

Ludolf was good. His body never twitched, nor were there any sharp intakes of air, and his expression never cracked.

But Merrick’s infrareds told a different story. The man’s heartbeat leaped, blood suffusing his face with surprise or chagrin at Merrick’s unexpected question. The pattern flowed back and forth as Ludolf clearly tried to decide whether to deny it or face the fact that a total stranger had somehow discerned the truth.

It took him nearly five seconds to decide. Merrick waited, content to give him whatever the time he needed.

And then, reluctantly, Ludolf inclined his head. “Anya said you were clever,” he said. “More clever, I see, than I realized.”

“Thank you,” Merrick said. “Then I assume you’re glad to see her?”

Ludolf’s eyes seemed to go a little flat. “We’re glad to see her,” he said. “She is not so glad to see us.”

“Ah,” Merrick said. From the way Anya had talked about them, he wasn’t really surprised by that. “Well, then, let’s hear your side of it. Tell me about your rebellion against the masters.”

“That is the past,” Ludolf said flatly. “What matters now are the present and future.”

“That’s fine,” Merrick said. “Assuming you can lock away the past where it can’t affect anything else. Personally, I’ve never found the past to be so accommodating.”

“I have no wish to talk about it.”

“Then I’ll give it a shot,” Merrick said. “If I understand correctly, you and your wife—Anya’s parents—organized an attack against the Trofts. It failed and you ran off into the forest, leaving her and the rest of Gangari holding the bag. That about right?”

Ludolf’s throat worked. “It is not evil to try a great task and fail.”

“It is when that failure ends up costing someone half their life in exile,” Merrick said. “Especially when that someone is your own daughter.”

“The price of freedom is sometimes great,” Ludolf said. “And sometimes that price and final victory are widely separated. The war continues, and we
will
regain our world.” He tried a smile that didn’t quite come off. “And do not worry about Anya. We will willingly accept her back.”

Merrick stared at him. “
You’ll
accept
her
?” he repeated, wondering if he’d actually heard that right. “Seems to me it’s more a question of whether she’ll accept
you
.”

“Relationships in this part of Muninn are perhaps not the way they are where you come from,” Ludolf said stiffly.

“Perhaps,” Merrick said. “And perhaps Anya has changed since you let her take the brunt of your punishment. What do you say I go and ask her?” He swung his legs over the end of the bed and sat up.

And fell straight back down again as the world suddenly tilted around him.

“You will see no one until you are fully recovered,” Ludolf said severely. “I don’t know why you were foolish enough to tread near a bersark field, but you now pay the consequences.”

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