The former millenniaire is pale, white and naked apart from the black disc of his Watch.
Unruh’s body shudders. He draws a deep, wet, ragged breath. He coughs, and his eyes fly open.
‘What – where—’
‘I’m sorry, M. Unruh, this will only take a moment.’ Mieli hands me the upload helmet, a featureless black cap. I place it onto his head, and it sticks to his skull eagerly.
Unruh laughs, only to be broken by a cough. ‘You again?’ He shakes his head. ‘I am disappointed. I did not expect you to be some common gogol pirate.’
I smile. ‘I assure you that I don’t have a sliver of your gevulot, and I have returned all I stole from you. This is about something else. Hold still.’
It was the obvious thing to do. How do you find out if there are shadowy forces manipulating people’s minds? You find a clean template, and make a before-and-after comparison. Unruh was young, with no previous resurrections or Quiet time: his mind as a whole had never passed through the resurrection system. Now it has, and if someone has done something to it, we will find out. If not – well, I have been to worse parties.
‘If I must.’ Unruh sighs. ‘I see. You stole a minute of my Time, and gave it back? To get access to my mind here? Interesting. I can’t imagine why. This is a very strange crime, M. le Flambeur. I wish I could stay and watch young M. Beautrelet catch you.’
‘I will pass him your regards,’ I say. ‘And by the way, I apologise for the surroundings. I wish we could have at least arranged a drink.’
‘It’s fine. I have recently experienced much more discomfort.’
‘While we wait,’ I say, ‘I wonder if you mind me asking how you knew we were going to be at your party?’
‘The letter.’ He waves a hand.
‘A letter?’
He looks at me curiously. ‘It wasn’t from you? Oh, this is even richer than I imagined. Such a shame that I have to miss all this. A letter in my library, from you. We could not figure out how it got there. M. Beautrelet thought there was something wrong with the exomemory—’
Unruh’s features twist into a snarl. He goes for my throat, white fingers digging into my flesh. He screams, a terrible, tearing sound, slamming his forehead against my face. My vision goes red in a haze of pain.
Mieli pulls him off me, twisting his arms behind his back. ‘Le Flambeur!’ he shouts, in a different voice. ‘He will come for you. Le Roi will come for you!’
Then he goes limp in Mieli’s grip as his Time runs out again.
I massage my throat. ‘Well,’ I say. ‘I’d say that if further proof of manipulation of Oubliette minds is required, we’ve got it.’
Mieli cocks her head, listening. ‘Someone is coming,’ she says. And then I hear it too, distant footsteps and approaching Quiet.
‘Oh my,’ I say. ‘I think the teen sleuth actually worked out what we were going to do.’
Mieli grabs my arm. ‘You can play games later,’ she says. ‘We need to go.’
Mieli studies the three-dimensional map
‘Shouldn’t we be running?’ the thief asks.
‘Ssh.’ The metacortex suggests ways out, computing paths with minimal probability of a hostile encounter. She has no desire to fight their way out.
The ground and the walls shake. There is a groaning sound, and the map
‘This way,’ she snaps at the thief and starts running down the tunnel, towards the voices.
‘More to the point,’ says the thief, ‘shouldn’t we be running
‘There was absolutely no need for that!’
The tunnel running through the crypt chamber is wide and cylindrical, widening as they go. Her metacortex spots the echoes of the Quiet and Resurrection Men ahead. But they are not what she is interested in.