Part 61 (1/2)

And it was far too late to go back.

Stiggur broke the silence first, and with the words Jonny knew he would use.

”Does anyone have a recommendation to make?”

Vartanson looked around the table, compressed his lips, and nodded heavily. ”I do, Brom.” He took a deep breath. ”I recommend we accept the Baliu demesne's offer of five new worlds in exchange for eliminating the Qasaman threat.”

Stiggur nodded. ”Anyone else?”

Jonny licked his lips... but in his mind's eye he saw the Qasamans and their mojos moving on Chata, Kubha, and Tacta... and from there to the Cobra Worlds themselves. We will come and find you, Moff had said, and Jonny knew he'd meant it... and the objection he'd been about to raise died in his throat.

The others may have seen similar visions. Certainly, none of them spoke.

Three minutes later, Vartanson's recommendation became official.

It had been a long time since Justin had been in his Capitalia apartment.

Standing at the living room window, gazing out at the city lights, he tried to count how many times he'd been back here since beginning his Cobra training... four months ago? Five?

The train of thought petered out from lack of interest. Sighing, he stepped back to his desk and sat down. The clean paper and magdisks he'd put there an hour ago were still untouched, and down deep he knew they were going to remain that way for a while longer. Tonight he could see nothing but the faces of the three men who'd been buried this morning, the Cobras who'd died getting the Dewdrop off Qasama. He hadn't even known there'd been casualties in the confusion of that time; hadn't known until they all arrived at the Menssana and he saw the bodies being carried by their friends.

Tonight was not the night to begin preparations for war.

The doorbell twittered. Governor Telek, most likely, come to check on his progress. ”Come in,” he called.

The door unlocked and opened. ”h.e.l.lo, Justin,” Jonny said.

Justin felt his stomach tighten. ”Hi, Dad. What're you doing out this late?”

”In the cold rain?” Jonny added with a half smile, shaking the last few drops off his coat before stepping into the apartment and letting the door close behind him. ”I wanted you to come by the house tonight and your phone was off.

This seemed the logical alternative.”

Justin dropped his eyes to his desk. ”I'm sorry, but I'm supposed to be working on... something.”

”A battle plan?” Jonny asked gently.

Justin grimaced. ”Governor Telek told you?”

”Not in so many words, but it wasn't hard to figure out. You've already shown yourself to have a surprisingly good tactical ability, and she was bound to want something to show the full Council tomorrow.”

”Tactical ability,” Justin said bitterly. ”Oh, sure. A great plan, wasn't it?-except for the minor fact that Decker and Michael had to improvise an ending just to get us out. And even at that we lost three men.”

Jonny was silent for a moment. ”Most military plans wind up being changed somewhere along the line,” he said at last. ”I wish I could offer some words of comfort about the casualties, too, but only the inadequate line about them sacrificing themselves to save everyone else comes to mind. That one never satisfied me, either.”

”So they sacrifice themselves for the mission, and the next thousand sacrifice themselves for the Worlds. Is that how it goes?” Justin shook his head. ”Where do you draw the line?”

”Anywhere you can,” Jonny said. ”And the sooner the better. Which is why I want you to come back to the house tonight.”

”A family round table?”