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"Oh, I wasn't planning on killing you." The girl dropped her sword, and grabbed hold of her mother's forearm. With a few quick twists and turns, Ethelberthina had herself under the startled woman's defenseswith the edge of the blade pressed to her own small throat. Glancing up, she grinned and said, "Whenever you're ready, Mother."
Goodwife Eyebright tried to wriggle her sword away from her daughter's neck, but in vain.
"Ethelberthina, what are you doing and stop it!"
"Not until you do. Drop the charges against Zoli or I swear I'll make you cut my throat. Know what that means?"
"It means you are a very inconsiderate child," the goodwife replied stiffly.
"It also means that you will have to go into strict mourning for two years. That's the minimum acceptable period for the loss of a grown daughter.Strict mourning," she repeated. "Nocelebrations of any kind."
"No . . . what?"
"No celebrations," Ethelberthina said. "Oh, like, just for an instance say . . . weddings?" Her smile was a caution to the unG.o.dly.
A cry more b.e.s.t.i.a.l than human shot skyward from the crowd. Demystria and Mauve Eyebright burst into the arena, their hair streaming wildly, their faces contorted into masks of mindless terror. Only the thought of what a collision might do to the sword at Ethelberthina's throat stopped them from throwing themselves at their mother's knees. Instead they pitched facefirst to the sand, pounding it with fists and feet while they yowled with grief.
"Do what she says, Mummy!" they begged in unison. "Drop the sword! Drop the charges! Let her go!"
"Girls, girls," the goodwife chided. "If your sister wants me to cut her throat, that's her choice, isn't it?
Besides, it's just come to me that if she dies-not that I'm encouraging that sort of thing, mind you-then all of her money goes to her closest living relative. I do believe that should be me. Then Mummy will be able to give you the biggest, splashiest, most expensive weddings that Overford has ever seen."
"And how am I supposed to get married with no groom?" Mauve demanded. "There's no courting allowed during strict mourning! By the time I'm free of it, I'll beooold !"
"That can't be helped; you should have planned ahead, like your sister.She knew what to do to get a man!" Goodwife Eyebright beamed at Demystria. "Well, at leastyou shall have the finest wedding ever, and you'll have two whole years to plan-"
"I can't wait two years to get married." Demystria sat back on her haunches and gave her mother a hard, eloquent look. "I want-Ineed to get married.Now ."
There were times when Goodwife Eyebright could be as quick on the uptake as Ethelberthina. Her eyes locked with Demystria's, her face lost some color, but she never flinched. All she said was: "Oh."
The sword fell from her fingers to the sand.
"Thank you, Mummy dear." Ethelberthina made a perfect curtsey that was a thumbed nose in thin disguise.
* * *It was a lovely wedding, the talk of Overford. The Eyebrights hired the entire Crusty Boar tavern to host the festivities. Garth Justi's-son helped break up six knife fights, and that was just counting the ones that broke out before the happy couple cut the bridal cake. He had to: Five of them involved Zoli.
Dean Porfirio finally called upon his magic to compel the retired swordswoman to take a Time Out. One moment she was arguing hotly with Mayor Eyebright, the next she was *poofed* into a locked storage room. Her curses shook plaster from the walls and dust from the thatch.
"Calm yourself, m'lady; we're in for the duration," came a familiar voice in the dark. Bursar Tailings pa.s.sed her a tankard of ale drawn from one of the many barrels around them.
"Why'reyou locked up?" Zoli asked, sipping the brew.
"I'm here at my own request, to avoid accidental exposure to sunlight. Nothing spoils a good wedding like an unintended fatality, I told them."
Zoli lifted one eyebrow. "This weddingbegan atsundown ."
"I know." The troll chuckled. "Most of the ale's in here and so am I, with no Eyebrights to say me nay.
Not the sharpest bunch of pickaxes in the mineshaft, are they?"
"Except for your betrothed," Zoli teased.
"Oh, that's all off." The troll waved his hand cavalierly. "As a troll I can't wed a human, and it seems that since I was designated a deadly weapon in Ludlow Pennywhistle's suit, I can't be betrothed to a human either. It's against the law."
"Whatlaw? Since when has anyone bothered toenact a law against marrying weapons? Who'd even think ofdoing something like that?"
A ball of parchment sailed out of the dark recesses of the storeroom and hit Zoli in mid-breastplate. The retired swordsister uncrumpled it, read it, and blushed.
"Animperial law, for your consideration, which is still on the books of this and all other lands once ruled by the Talligar Empire," said Ethelberthina, emerging from the shadows, a cup of sparkling quince juice in her hands. "Rushed into effect more than forty years ago by a certain warrior queen whose only daughter announced she'd sooner marry her sword than any man."
Zoli's blushes deepened. "I was young and idealistic! I didn't know any better! I hadn't met Garth yet!
You have no idea how bossy my mother could be! And it was onlythirty years ago; closer to twenty."
Noting the badly concealed smirks of her listeners, she nimbly switched the subject. "What are you doing in here, Ethelberthina? Your sister's wedding is outthere ."
"It's rude to answer your own questions," the girl responded pleasantly. Lifting her cup, she proposed a toast: "To other people's weddings! I'm not losing a sister, I'm gaining closet s.p.a.ce." She drained her drink to the dregs.
"You know," the troll murmured, "she reallyis an exceptional child."
"Since she's had her Maiden Morn, she's an exceptionaladult ," Zoli corrected him. "And as such, she'd best be thinking about her future." "Don'tyou start in on me about marriage," Ethelberthina spoke up.
"Me? Never. But you will be wanting something to do with your life. You can't sell any more of Mama Ethina's Elixir-your stock's as good as all gone-so whatwill you do?"
Ethelberthina tapped her lips with a fingertip thoughtfully. "Well, I'm not exactly the physical type to enter the Swordsisters' Union, much as I'd like to, and I don't fancy further dabblings in alchemy-too stinky.
What Iwould like is power: Great honking heaps of unmitigated power, the ability to make people fear me, to cringe before me, and most especially to never,ever think they can bully me and get away with it.
Not even Mummy. So I suppose what I'd trulylike to be is-"
"-a wizard?" Zoli suggested.
"-a bursar?" The troll tried to be helpful.
"-a priestess?"
"-a queen?"
"-a lawyer," said the girl.
And the shrieks which burst from the storeroom of the Crusty Boar caused Goodwife Eyebright to go into labor, so that Ethelberthina did not lose a sister that day after all.
Looking for Rhonda Honda
William Sanders
The minute she clanked into the office I knew she was trouble.
Okay, she didn't clank, not really; body armor hasn't clanked since before I was born. But people like her always seem as if theyought to clank, or at least jingle a little. Maybe it's the att.i.tude they all seem to wear with it.
She said, "You're Johnny Noir?"
I sat back in the creaking old swivel chair and looked at her. That wasn't hard work at all. She had pale skin and nice small features, maybe a little on the sharp side. Short-cropped reddish-brown hair showed beneath her squared-off black beret. She was a little on the short side, but what there was of her, under that snug-tailored black one-piece suit, looked pretty good. Of course it was hard to tell, with so much of her upper body concealed by that d.a.m.ned bulky vest.
Which was silly, since n.o.body really needs to wear that kind of heavy protective gear any more-youcan buy a vest off the rack, now, capable of stopping anything short of an ant.i.tank projectile, and light and thin enough that your own tailor couldn't spot it-but then that wouldn't send the message:My job is so important, people try to kill me to stop me from doing it.
I couldn't guess her age. Who can, nowadays? She looked somewhere in her middle twenties, but for all I knew she was old enough to be my grandmother. For all I knew she couldbe my grandmother; the old dear had been talking lately about getting a new morph job.
I said, "Yes, I'm Johnny Noir. And you're not, are you?"
She ignored that. So much for dry humor; it wasn't my best subject at detective school. She was looking around the office with an expression that might have indicated either scorn or routine professional paranoia. I couldn't really tell with those wraparound mirror shades hiding her eyes.
She finished her inspection and looked at me again. "My name is immaterial," she said in a dry flat voice.
"You can call me Margo."
She didn't offer her hand. I had a feeling that wasn't all she wasn't going to offer. I said, "Well, Ms.
Immaterial-uh, Margo-what can I do for you?"
"We need you to find somebody," she said.
"We?" I looked past her but I didn't see anybody else.
Her mouth pulled tight at the corners. "I . . . represent the interested persons," she said reluctantly.
"Please don't ask questions. You'll be told everything you need to know."
She took a quick step forward and leaned across my desk. For a second I thought she was warming to the Noir charm after all, but she was merely reaching for the battered old phone. She picked it up, jabbed quickly at the b.u.t.tons, and handed it to me. I held it up to my ear just as a familiar voice said, "Noir?"
"Chief." I caught myself sitting up a little straighter.
"Listen closely, Noir." The Chief's voice was high and hoa.r.s.e, with an edge like a cheap steak knife.
About the same as usual, in other words. "Somebody is going to tell you what she wants you to do. Do it."
I said carefully, "I see."
"The h.e.l.l you do. You got no idea atall- Christ,I don't know how far up this comes from.The person in your office right now? She's not really there. Anything she says to you, you never heard. Whatever you wind up doing for the people she works for, it never happened. Am I getting through, Noir?"
I said, "Is this an order?"
There was a moment of silence, broken only by the Chief's wheezy breath. "Of course not, stupid," he said finally. "How can I order you to do something that's never going to happen, for people who don't exist? Especially when I'm not even talking to you right now."
He hung up. "Yes,sir," I said to the dead phone. Margo was undoing the front of her bulletproof vest. Hope sprang to life again, but she was just getting something out of an inside pocket. "Here," she said.
She reached across my desk again, this time holding a disk which she popped into the ancient computer with a gesture that sneered. She tapped a few keys, her fingers moving faster than I could follow, and the page I'd been working on disappeared, to be replaced by a head-and-shoulders portrait of a blond-haired woman.
"This," Margo said, "is the person we want you to find."
The face that looked back at me was pretty, maybe even beautiful if you liked that tanned-SoCal-G.o.ddess look. There was a time when I would have said she was in her late teens or early twenties. Now, I wouldn't even bother trying to guess.
"She have a name?" I queried.
"Immaterial," Margo said immediately.
"Related, are you?"
Margo grimaced. "I know, but I'm serious. Her birth name reallyis immaterial, because she's not using it now."
She reached out and touched the keys again, and the picture changed to a full-length shot of what appeared to be the same woman, standing next to a purple-and-black motorcycle. She was dressed in elaborate protective gear: full snug-fitting leathers, high-topped racing boots, lace-on plastic knee and elbow guards, even a shiny perforated breastplate, all of it neatly color coordinated to match the bike.
Other figures, similarly dressed, stood around in the background, or sat on other bikes.
Jesus, I thought. A roadgrrl.
"According to our information," Margo went on, "she is now known as Rhonda Honda."
Marvelous. Now it was beginning to add up. You get these cases all the time: somebody's darling daughter runs off to join a roadgrrl gang, and the distressed family wants her back. Or now and then it's somebody's darling wife; that happens too.
d.a.m.n unusual, though, for somebody like me to catch a case like this. Not if the people concerned could afford anything better . . . I said, "You know, you'd do better to take this to one of the big private agencies, like Herod Foxxe or Gabriel Mallet-they've got the staff and the facilities, I'm just a-"
"No." She was shaking her head. "We've already tried that. It's been six months now since she disappeared, and it took a private agency most of that time to find out the little we know now. You're familiar with the Peter Pick Agency?"
I nodded, repressing a couple of adjectives and a noun that came to mind. Margo said, "Their man was able to determine that she'd joined up with these bikers-"
"Roadgrrls." "Roadgirls?" She did a kind of double take. "I'm not-"
"Roadgrrls." I p.r.o.nounced it carefully for her, trying not to grin. She probably didn't know it, but she'd given her age away with that one word. Nice clean morph job, but this babe had to be at least as old as me.
"Bikers," I told her, "are a lot of overage punks who hang around cheap bars and pool halls-or nursing homes, now-and trade lies about how tough they were in the old days. Roadkids are a whole different breed."
"Yes." She nodded vigorously. "You know about these things, Noir. You worked undercover among the outlaw clubs for almost a year, when you were with the state police. Still got your own bike, don't you?"
Christ, somebody knewway too much about me. "You can get close to these people, talk their language.
That's why we picked you."
She gestured at the photo on the screen. "That was taken by the Peter Pick op just before he lost her.
Supposed to be a good man, but he let her slip away. Somewhere near Salinas, as I recall. His report's on that disk."