The players were gathering in one of the larger lounges, where food and drink were already set out for the players—on the house, Gueremei said loudly. Medard-Yasine nodded his agreement, and moved off with only a quick word of apology to supervise the house staff. Ransome stood just inside the door, content to watch from a distance for now, matching names and real faces to voices that had become oddly familiar. Savian and Beledin he had recognized instantly, despite the new implants glimmering in Beledin’s eyes, and seeing them standing with their arms around each other, he guessed that their old affair might rekindle for the night. A thin, olive-skinned young man in a steward’s jacket stood blinking for a moment in the doorway, the mark of his shades prominent on his nose, and Beledin detached himself from Savian’s hold to embrace the newcomer.
Even as he thought it, the door from the session room opened again, and a tall, lanky woman came into the room. She was dark, her skin the color of old bronze, and her face was made up of stark planes, a severe and sculptural beauty. A pilot’s hat, a small one, just a narrow toque with a knot of spangled fabric wound around it, hugged her close-cut hair. Then someone called to her, a voice out of the crowd congratulating her on the session, and she turned to face him, her expression breaking into a smile that shattered the stony beauty and gave her instead a vivid plainness. Ransome caught his breath—he hadn’t expected that, had expected a woman with looks like that to use them, to stay always grave and expressionless, to fear the sudden change—and in that moment someone spoke his name.
“Having fun, I-Jay?”
He looked down and down again, to the upturned face and half-bared breasts of a tiny, perfect woman. She smiled up at him, well aware of and comfortable with his regard, and Ransome was unable to keep his own smile in return from twisting slightly out of true. “Oh, enormously,” he said. “Are you here professionally, Cella, or are you here to play?”
If the barb touched her, she gave no sign of it. “To play—or to watch, rather. It was nice of you to drop in, I-Jay, after all this time. But then, somebody was playing with your toys.”
She kept her tone light, masking the insult, but Ransome was not deceived. “Why do you care if I’m out of the Game?”
Cella laughed at him, a lovely, practiced sound. “We’ve missed you, I-Jay, missed Ambidexter. Though with this Lioe around, that may be less of a problem. She does very well with your templates, don’t you think?”
“Well enough,” Ransome said.
“Oh, I’ve been running a session or two,” Cella said. “But we’ve all missed your input.”
“I’ll have to see if I can remedy that,” Ransome said slowly, and was not reassured by Cella’s blinding smile.