“Why not?” Damian shrugged with deliberate contempt. “Once the—product—is transferred, there’s nothing you can do.”
“The lachesi, you mean,” Ransome said, and, after a moment, Damian nodded.
“That’s right.”
“Chauvelin won’t be pleased,” Ransome said, and Damian shrugged again.
“Chauvelin won’t be in a position to do anything about his displeasure for very much longer. The tzu Tsinraan are losing face by the day, they won’t be in power much longer. And then Chauvelin won’t be able to do a damn thing to help you.”
Ransome sat very still, kept his face expressionless with an effort. It was true; if the tzu Tsinraan lost their dominant position at the court on Hsiamai, then Chauvelin would go down—
“You don’t. But you don’t have another choice,” Damian Chrestil answered. “I tell you—I’ll give you my word—that if you give me the data, you can go free.”
“Your word,” Ransome said, in spite of himself, remembering Bettis Chrestil. She had given her word, too, and it had been less than useless. Damian Chrestil gave his sister’s humorless smile.
“I don’t care if you believe me or not,” he said. “This is the only deal you’ve got. Tell me where you stashed the data, or I’ll give you to ji-Imbaoa, now.”
“Tell me the codes.”
“They’re in my loft, in the mail systems there,” Ransome said. “You’ll find a message in
Damian nodded then, beckoned to one of his people, a thin woman with a pilot’s calluses on her wrists. “Cossi, you’ve done this before. I need to get some information out of his mailbox.”
Cossi shrugged. “Can you give me a key?”
“Well?” Damian said.
Ransome hesitated, then reeled off the string of numbers.
“Right, Na Damian,” Cossi said, and turned away. Ransome watched her walk to the nearest netlink and settle herself at the workstation. For a crazy moment, he hoped that she didn’t know what she was doing—she was a pilot, after all—but then he saw the way her hands moved across the shadowscreens, and that hope died.
He looked away, not wanting to watch, but could still hear the steady click of the machines as Cossi worked her way onto the nets. This was it: there was no hope left, and he could expect to choke to death in a hsai prison… He heard his breath whistling in his lungs, and this time reached for the cylinder of Mist. There was no point in pretending anymore, no point in trying to hide his weakness. He’d played his best hand, and he’d lost. He laid the mask against his face, inhaled the cool vapor. Damian Chrestil watched him, his thin face expressionless. Ransome refolded the mask with deliberate care, and slipped the cylinder back into his pocket.
“Na Damian,” Cossi said. “I’m being blocked.”
“What?” Damian looked up sharply, frowning.
“I’m being blocked,” Cossi said again. “Somebody’s pulled that system off-line. There’s no way I can access it.”
Damian looked back at Ransome, his thin eyebrows drawn into a scowl. “Well? I thought we had a bargain.”
Ransome spread his hands, did his best to hide his sudden elation. Someone was in the loft, Chauvelin, maybe, or—better still and most likely—Quinn Lioe. And if Lioe was there, and had changed the system settings, then maybe he had a second chance. “Everything was on-line when I left it. Maybe the storm’s knocked it off.”