Shadow Warrior- Omnibus

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Shadow Warrior- Omnibus Page 6

by Chris Bunch


  The three started down a hall.

  ‘I thought you were going out, my dear.’

  ‘I was. But I thought I might stay on. Whatever Mister Wolfe’s business is, it certainly sounds fascinating.’

  ‘I hate to be a spoilsport, but it is fairly private. And I’d rather keep what we’re going to discuss sub rosa. Unless you mind?’

  Ariadne Penruddock looked at her husband. ‘No. I don’t mind at all. I’ll see you later, then, dear. It was nice meeting you, Mister Wolfe.’ Her voice was nearly a monotone.

  Penruddock watched her walk away, then produced a booming laugh. ‘Women! Aren’t they always trying to hang on, even though they ought to know they’ll just be bored listening to man talk.’

  Joshua said nothing, followed the judge.

  The den was as he’d anticipated - all dark wood and leather, with maps, guns, and trophies.

  ‘A drink, sir?’

  ‘No, thanks,’ Joshua said. ‘Maybe later.’

  ‘One of the virtues of retirement,’ the judge said, ‘is being able to do what you like whenever you want. I’ve found a brandy and milk goes very well before the midday meal.’ He went to a sideboard, poured a drink from a nearly empty crystal decanter with too many facets, added a bare splash of milk from a refrigerated container, and drank about half before lowering the glass.

  ‘I’m delighted, sir,’ he said, ‘that you were able to put paid to that vile scoundrel Khodyan. I’ve learned over the years that there’s but one way to deal with men like him, and that’s in the manner you did.’

  ‘I suppose,’ Joshua said, ‘you might feel that way, having been a judge. I’ve never had that much confidence.’

  ‘That’s not confidence, Joshua, and I’d like to call you that, if I may. That’s just plain common sense.’ Penruddock emptied the glass and made himself another. ‘You know, when that Sector Marshal sent me the com of what had happened, I wondered if you were the same Joshua Wolfe friends told me about during the war.

  ‘I did a little checking and found out. Damned pleased to meet you, sir. You did good work, turning all they’d taught you back against those bastard Al’ar. The service you did our Federation was of the greatest, the greatest indeed.’ Penruddock’s voice had gotten louder, as if he were giving an after-dinner oration. ‘Why didn’t you stay on in the service, if I may be so bold?’

  ‘The war was over,’ Joshua said.

  ‘But the Federation can always use men like you, even in peacetime. A great loss, sir. A great loss. Heaven knows I tried to serve, tried to join up, but you know, my heart . . . well, it just wasn’t one of those things that was to be.

  ‘But I can tell you, I did my part as best I could. Even though my training was in the civil field, I set up Loyalty Courts and made sure there wasn’t the slightest bit of dissent on Mandodari. Men like you, men out there fighting on the frontiers, didn’t need to have people backstabbing them with either deeds or words.’

  Penruddock looked at Joshua for some gratitude and was disappointed when he didn’t get it. Joshua walked to one bookshelf.

  ‘Behind this is your jewel collection?’

  Penruddock was startled. ‘Well . . . yes. But . . . how could you tell?’

  ‘Would you open it, please.’

  Joshua watched carefully as Penruddock fingered a sensor and the false books lifted into the ceiling, revealing a vault. Penruddock touched several spots on the vault’s face that appeared unremarkable and then turned the handle, and the colunterbalanced door swung open. Inside were rows of shelves. Joshua pulled one shelf out, and gem-stones shot up multicolored starlight.

  ‘How many other people know where this is? The police report on the robbery said the thief or thieves -’

  ‘Thieves, sir,’ Penruddock said. ‘There had to be more than just one man. They took away half a dozen trays, and I’ve never known a burglar so bold as to make more than one trip.

  ‘But to answer your question. Myself. My wife. One . . . perhaps two of my servants. Long-time employees, still with me today.

  ‘But all that doesn’t matter, does it? You’ve recovered what you were able to recover, for which I am grateful, and Innokenty Khodyan is dead, which makes things still better.’ Penruddock looked anxiously at the open door and sighed in relief when Joshua nodded. He closed and relocked the vault.

  ‘Now I must ask the question that’s been puzzling me, Joshua,’ the judge said. ‘I was told you are a warrant hunter now. Your business with me is over, isn’t it?’

  ‘No,’ Joshua said. ‘Sometimes I hunt other things than men. I’m interested in the things that weren’t on Khodyan when I killed him.’

  ‘You mean the diamonds?’

  ‘And one other thing.’

  Judge Penruddock started and tried to cover it. ‘Oh . . . you mean that little stone? That was just something of sentimental value. Something I bought when I was a boy, and, well, I guess it was the cornerstone, without intending the pun, of my collection.’ He had deliberately kept his eyes on Joshua, trying to force belief.

  Wolfe stared back until Penruddock looked away. The silence climbed about them.

  ‘Very well,’ Penruddock said. ‘I don’t know why I’m so secretive about it. It’s not illegal to own, after all. It was an Al’ar Lumina stone. How did you guess?’

  ‘I didn’t know exactly what it was,’ Joshua lied. ‘But that “sentimental value only” jumped at me. Since no one died in the robbery, there had to be something important for you to post the reward you did.’

  ‘You came to the correct end, sir, but you took a wrong turn. I would have wanted the thief hunted down regardless. Have you ever been robbed? It’s like . . . like being raped. They came into my house and defiled it. So of course I wanted revenge. Consider this, Joshua. If my wife and I had been here on that night, wouldn’t we have most likely been hurt or worse? The police told me this Khodyan had no hesitation about using violence.’

  ‘Let’s get back to the stone, Your Honor.’

  ‘Since you were among the Al’ar, you know what it was used for.’

  Joshua hesitated, then told the truth. ‘No. I don’t. Not completely. The Lumina gave them focus, like I’ve heard crystal does a meditator. But it also was an amplifier and allowed greater use of their powers.

  ‘Was that why you had it?’

  Penruddock turned around and looked out a window at a huge Japanese rock garden, its effect ruined by size.

  ‘No, or not exactly. I’d heard stories about the Lumina. But I’m not into such metaphysical -’ Penruddock hesitated before going on, ‘- stuff. I wanted it as a trophy. Most of my gems have a history, and I know their value, not just in money. Some have been the ruin of a family or a dynasty, some have been part of a reluctant bride’s price, and so forth. This Lumina was the price of empire for us.’

  Joshua knew Penruddock was lying.

  ‘What do you think happened to it?’ the judge went on.

  ‘I don’t know. Innokenty Khodyan hadn’t linked up with his fence when I took him, and supposedly nobody else on Platte had gotten any jewels from him.’

  ‘Then he must have sold it before he reached whatever godforsaken world you killed him on. Certainly there’s no market for it on Mandodari III.’

  ‘Possibly,’ Joshua said. ‘Or else he had already made the delivery to his customer.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Innokenty Khodyan was a professional. Some of the dozen thefts he pulled before I took him were general - he’d found out about someone’s stash and gone after it.

  ‘But this would appear to be something different. I’d suspect the theft was commissioned.’

  ‘For the Lumina?’ Penruddock looked shaken.

  ‘There are other collectors of Al’ar gear,’ Joshua pressed. ‘Do you know any of them? Better, have any of them come here and seen the Lumina?’

  ‘No to both of your questions,’ Penruddock said flatly. ‘I’ve heard about those wretches, with their bits
of uniforms and parts of shot-down ships . . . thank you, I am hardly of their ilk.’

  ‘Where did you get the Lumina?’

  ‘I can’t tell you.’

  ‘Was it here on Mandodari?’ Joshua caught and held Penruddock’s gaze.

  ‘I said I can’t -’

  ‘You just did. Who sold it to you?’

  ‘A man contacted me directly,’ Penruddock said grudgingly.

  ‘How did he know you were interested?’

  ‘I’d mentioned what I wanted to some friends.’

  ‘Other gem collectors?’

  ‘Yes. One had told me he’d heard of a Lumina - actually that there were two, for sale, but they were far beyond his price.’

  ‘Where is he now?’

  ‘He’s dead. He died . . . natural causes . . . about two months after I bought the stone.’

  ‘The man you bought it from here. Was he a native of Mandodari?’

  ‘No. I met him at the spaceport. He said he was between ships.’

  ‘Do you know where he came from? Where he was going?’

  ‘No. I only cared about what he wanted to sell.’

  ‘How’d you pay?’

  ‘Cash.’

  ‘How much?’

  Penruddock looked stubborn.

  ‘How much?’

  ‘Two million five hundred,’ he said.

  ‘That’s a great deal of money for something you’re just going to leave in a vault and just look at once a week or so. What else did you plan to do with it?’

  ‘I already said - nothing. It was merely to have it! You’re not a collector, so you wouldn’t understand.’

  ‘Maybe I wouldn’t,’ Wolfe said. ‘Have you ever heard of a man named Sutro?’

  ‘Never.’

  Joshua searched for his next question.

  ‘I didn’t expect this when I allowed you to come here,’ Penruddock said. ‘To be grilled like I was some kind of criminal.’

  ‘So the Lumina’s gone, and you have no idea who might have taken it,’ Wolfe went on, paying no mind to the judge’s words. ‘Do you want it back?’

  ‘Yes . . . no.’

  ‘Make up your mind.’

  ‘I don’t want that stone back. I don’t think you could recover it,’ Penruddock said. ‘Especially if what you said is true and another collector sent that son of a bitch Khodyan to steal it from me. But I want another one.’

  ‘That doesn’t make sense.’

  ‘I don’t have to make sense, Wolfe,’ the judge said, trying to regain control of the situation. ‘Perhaps I just realized it myself. You said you came here looking for warrant work. Very well. You’ve got it. I’ll cover your expenses and pay you a finder’s fee when you secure me a second Lumina. I’ll pay the same price as I did for the first.’

  Joshua walked across the room and stared down at the mansion’s front entrance and driveway. He heard a slight noise, and a small metallic green lifter came into view, hovering down the drive and out the gate. Joshua turned back.

  ‘If I take the warrant,’ he said, ‘I’ll want the rest of what you’re not telling me.’

  ‘What are you saying?’

  ‘I’ll need to know who the man was you bought it from, how he got in contact with you, where he came from, and why you trusted him enough to go to a spaceport with that much cold cash. Just for a beginning.’

  ‘I told you everything!’

  Joshua Wolfe took one of the hotel’s cards from a pocket and laid it on a table.

  ‘You can reach me here.’

  The gate closed behind Joshua, and he started back toward the city. He heard a turbine whine, turned, and saw the metallic green lifter. Ariadne Penruddock was at the controls. She stopped the craft, and the window hissed down.

  ‘It’s a long walk, even if it’s downhill. Need a ride?’

  ‘I never walk unless I have to.’

  Joshua went around the back of the vehicle and opened the door. He looked back up the drive at the house. In an upper-story window he saw a white blur that might have been a face.

  He got in and slid the door closed.

  ‘I’m at the Acropolis,’ he said.

  ‘Mister Wolfe, would you mind if we had a talk?’

  ‘Not at all. What about?’

  ‘My husband. Lumina stones.’

  ‘I felt someone else’s presence while we were talking,’ Joshua said. ‘Were you eavesdropping . . . or are you more sophisticated?’

  Without taking her eyes from the road, Lady Penruddock opened her purse and showed him a small com. ‘Sometimes a woman needs to know what’s being said about her even if she’s away from the house. I had the pickup put in his study just after we were married.’

  ‘Maybe,’ Wolfe suggested, ‘you’d better pick a place for our talk where you’re not known.’

  ‘The Acropolis is fine. Nobody in our circle goes there.’

  The bar was automated, which meant one less witness. It was empty except for two salesmen nursing beers and glowering at their notebook screens as if they were the supervisors who’d given them this awful territory. Ariadne studied the menu set into the tabletop.

  ‘Deneb sherry,’ she decided, and touched the correct sensor.

  There were no Armagnacs, but there was a local pomace brandy. The delivery slot opened, and Lady Penruddock’s drink and Wolfe’s water and brandy appeared. He fingered the tab sensor, touched the snifter to his lips and drank ice water.

  ‘Let me tell you about my husband and myself,’ Ariadne said without preamble. ‘We married for our own separate reasons, and for me at least, nothing has altered my intent.

  ‘Malcolm and I largely lead our own lives. What he does is his business. If he wishes me to accompany him, I am delighted. If not . . .’ She shrugged. ‘I have my own friends, my own pursuits. Malcolm cares little what I do so long as I do not embarrass him or force him to take notice.

  ‘If I found you attractive, which I do, and we happened to spend some time together, that would only concern the two of us.

  ‘I am not sure, though, that that would be wise. For me. But I am still thinking about it.’ Her fingers touched the fastener of her blouse for an instant, then went away.

  ‘What Malcolm perhaps does not yet realize is that I require the same from him. He must not embarrass me or force me to have to apologize for his sometimes unusual predilections.’

  ‘Such as the Lumina?’

  ‘Exactly. Did you know he was lying when he said he only wished to own the Lumina for itself?’

  ‘I did.’

  ‘My husband is a devotee of power,’ Ariadne said carefully. ‘He chose to become a civil judge for that reason, instead of criminal law. That was well before the war, when our world was thriving.

  ‘Malcolm made his decisions wisely over the years, not so much for justice as for how they might benefit him. He was quite successful.

  ‘Then the war ruined him, as it ruined this world. When it was over and the Federation left, all the wonderful wheelings and dealings with land, and estates, and investments, on- and offworld, were mostly gone.

  ‘Malcolm had planned to use his Loyalty Courts to propel him into politics, possibly to the highest offices. But with peace came the new government, which holds office by the size of the welfare checks it gives out.’

  She shrugged. ‘I care nothing about that or about what the working man does or thinks.

  ‘Malcolm retired from the bench at the advice of several lawyers who said there might otherwise be an investigation of his decisions before and during the war.

  ‘So he looked about for other fields to conquer.

  ‘One of them was me. My family had been very indiscreet in war investments, so our standing with the hoi polloi was shaky. Also, I’d been a bit . . . indiscreet once when I was very, very young. Mandodari doesn’t care what goes on in its bedrooms so long as the windows are blanked. I wasn’t that cautious. The woman and her husband were able to leave, but I was trapped here, and Malcolm w
as a most convenient salvation.

  ‘You look surprised, Mister Wolfe. Isn’t a woman permitted to be honest about herself and her chances?’

  ‘I’m just surprised you’re telling all this to a stranger.’

  ‘Why not? Better to a stranger, one that’ll be offworld in a few days, than to the whale-mouthed gossips I normally associate with. As I was saying, marriage benefited us both. Malcolm received certain material advantages, perhaps what was known as a dowry in the old days, and I became a quote honest end quote woman.

  ‘After we were married, Malcolm started hearing about the Lumina stone. He already had his collection of jewels, which I truthfully believe is the only thing he completely loves, and so it didn’t seem that odd for him to want an Al’ar stone.’

  ‘The Lumina is not a jewel.’

  ‘And how many people know that? Let me continue. He felt that possession of a Lumina stone could bring him some feeling for power that might guide him to his next step.

  ‘At least that was what he thought when he began his quest. Then he heard about the ur-Lumina.’

  ‘The what?’

  ‘Now it’s my turn for surprise. I thought you would have known of that, since I heard Malcolm say you were among the Al’ar, although I’m not sure I completely understand.

  ‘Malcolm heard stories of a great Lumina, although I don’t know if anyone ever said anything about its physical size. I’ve heard him call it a “king Lumina” or a “mother Lumina.” He didn’t tell me what it was used for, what it was meant to do. But if a small Lumina had the purpose you told Malcolm, the great one would surely be worth possessing.

  ‘He was going to use the Lumina he had to track down the big one. I don’t know how. Maybe he thought it would lead him directly; maybe he thought whoever he bought the stone from could help him. He was never that specific. Now he wants to hire you for the search.’

  Joshua rolled brandy round his mouth, concentrating on the burn, letting the words find their own meaning. He took a second swallow.

  ‘Very well,’ he said. ‘You were honest with me, and I’ll return the trade. I’ve never heard of this ultimate Lumina, not even when I was a boy and was among them. I don’t see how such a thing could even exist. If it did, it would have been at least hinted at in their ceremonies.’

 

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