“Quinn!” Roscha turned at the sound of the other woman’s footsteps, her eyes going instantly to the patches of selfheal. “Are you all right?”
“Yes, fine,” Lioe said, irritably, and made herself stop. “It’s just cuts and bruises,” she said. “Listen, did you send someone to tell me you were at someplace called the Mad Monkey?”
“No.” Roscha shook her head, sending the red hair flying. “No, I didn’t, and the Lockwardens have been talking to me already. What happened?”
Lioe looked over her shoulder, saw Laness leaning against his counter, listening shamelessly. “Over here,” she said, and drew Roscha away into the shelter of the pillars that defined the common entertainment center. No one was there, the VDIRT consoles empty, and she turned back to face Roscha. “Maybe you can tell me,” she said. “This man came up to me, called me by name, and said you’d given him a message to be passed on, to meet you at this place called the Mad Monkey.”
“I know it,” Roscha muttered, and waved a hand in apology. “I’m sorry, go on.”
“When I tried to go there,” Lioe said, and heard her voice tight and angry, “I was followed, and someone stepped out of a doorway carrying a gun. He said somebody wanted to talk to me, and I was to come quietly. Do you have any idea who that somebody might be?”
“No.” Roscha shook her head, stopped abruptly. “Do you work for C-and-I?”
“What?” Lioe blinked, irrationally offended by the question. “No, I’m a pilot. And I’m a Gamer. I don’t need to work for Customs.”
“Na Damian—Damian Chrestil thinks you do,” Roscha said, slowly. “And you’ve been hanging out with Ransome, who’s not exactly clean when it comes to politics.” There was a fleeting note of malice in her voice that vanished almost as soon as Lioe recognized it. “And Na Damian went out of his way to make sure I had an alibi for this afternoon.”
“So you think Damian Chrestil is behind this?” Lioe asked.
“You don’t sound that surprised,” Roscha answered, bitterly.
“I’m not, exactly. Ransome—” Lioe stopped abruptly.
Roscha made an angry sound that was almost laughter. “Because I don’t like being jerked around. Because I don’t like being used to set somebody up—especially you, somebody I’ve been sleeping with, somebody I like. Somebody as good as you are in the Game.” Her voice cracked then, and she looked away, scowling. “Na Damian lied to me, and he used me, and he maybe would’ve murdered you, and it could’ve been my fault. I’ll be damned if I’ll let him do that to me.”
There was something in her voice, the street kid’s—
Roscha nodded, silent, still scowling.
“I need your help,” Lioe went on, more slowly still, a voice screaming reproaches inside her head.
“I know where it is,” Roscha said. She nodded, her face grim. “Na Damian’s going to be looking for both of us now—I was supposed to stay on the docks until midnight. I guess I don’t need an alibi now.” She smiled wryly, but shrugged the thought away. “I borrowed a denki-bike, we can take that.”
“In this weather?” Lioe said. The thought of riding one of the unstable little two-wheeled vehicles in the same winds that had tossed the Lockwardens’ helicab across the sky was not appealing.
Roscha glanced toward the window beside the door, shrugged slightly. “It’s not raining yet.”