Mack 'n' Me: The Wolves of Alpha 9 C.M. Simpson (top 10 inspirational books txt) đ
- Author: C.M. Simpson
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âWhen youâre quite finished.â
Well, Barangail didnât sound impressed. I wondered what had gotten into his britches, and tried to wipe the tears from my eyes so I could see him clearly... and then I remembered he hadnât shown himself.
âIs it normal for you to conduct business from the other side of a closed door?â I asked.
âThe bracelet,â he said, completely ignoring my question, as the image of a thick, gold bracelet, outlined in silver and studded with a single row of alternating red and blue gems floated in the invisible wall. âI want it back.â
âSure,â I said, irritated by his theatrics and his absence.
I caught Mackâs eye, and raised an eyebrow to see if I should continue. He shrugged and nodded. It was a typical âSure, why notâ kind of look, and I have to admit it surprised me. The man usually did his own set of negotiations.
Was he sure? I sent him a questioning look, and he nodded. He was sure. Well, alrighty, then.
âWhen did you have it last?â
I know, as a question calculated to piss off some masochistic lord with a he-man complex, that wasnât bad. What can I say? I couldnât resist. I could resist looking at Mack, though. I didnât need to see his face to know he probably wanted to wring my neck. Barangail ignored the bait.
âIt belonged to one of my concubines,â he said, and the full-length picture of a beautiful red-head, with aquiline features appeared beside the slowly spinning image of the bracelet.
Before either of us could respond to the image, Barangail continued.
âIt was stolen from her chambers by one of the maids, and the woman fled before we realized it had gone.â
âDo you know where she went?â
âSomewhere in the caverns. One of the mine guards recognized her.â
âA ladyâs maid in the mines? Didnât that raise questions?â
âShe told them sheâd been assigned kitchen duties for displeasing her mistress,â Barangail said. âItâs a common punishment, and the task of taking meals to the mines isnât popular.â
I wondered why, but Barangail answered the question before I could ask it.
âSometimes we have incursions, and the guards arenât enough.â
Incursions, huh? But Mack had had enough of staying quietâand incursions were a job for muscle, which I, typically, was not.
âWhat kind of incursions?â
There was a momentâs pause, as though Barangail had to think of how much he was going to tell us. I looked over at Mack, and he looked back. Neither of us was very happy. Part of me tried to work out why we were even bothering to negotiate the contract, when our patron was so untrustworthy. Another part said it was because Mack was curious.
The arach were on this world for a reason, and we needed an excuse to be down here, too. The fact we didnât have much of a choice about accepting Barangailâs contract paled to insignificance compared to that. Barangailâs answer brought me back to the cell.
âThereâs a species of giant ant that infests the caverns,â he said. âSometimes we can mine for months without running into their hunters, and sometimes a new nest starts up close enough to the mine for the ants to consider it prime hunting territory. They migrate underground, so we donât usually get a warning.â
I frowned. That couldnât be the only reason. Mack clearly agreed.
âAnything else?â
âJust the usual underground beasties. We have large arthropods, and insects pretty much all over the caverns. Of the usual carnivores and scavengers, we have the odd killena, wargrul and baskalie. We clear those out whenever we come across them.â
Neither Mack nor I wanted to admit we had no idea what the three predators were that heâd mentioned, and I found myself missing Caseâs quick research capability, and trying to work out how Iâd been so thoroughly patched out of the system. It wasnât anything that I could see in the implant.
Mack, however, had realized weâd missed something in our distraction with incursions.
âWhat was she doing in the mines?â
Of course, Barangail missed the point.
âI told you. The guard thought she was serving meals.â
âNo,â Mack said. âI mean: why did she go to the mines after sheâd stolen the bracelet? Why not the city? You said the guard only thought sheâd been sent there to serve meals. Presumably she hadnât?â
And Barangail got it.
âNo, of course she hadnât. Up until the point where weâd found the bracelet missing, we hadnât known sheâd done anything worthy of punishment.â
Incursions or no, I still couldnât see how a slightly dangerous journey to a serving kitchen in a mine could be considered a punishment for a maid. There was something else going on there. I made a note to chase it down, later, and forced myself to pay attention to what Barangail was saying.
âOur best guess is that she used the kitchen duty as an excuse to leave the mansion, and slipped away through the mines to join the other runaways.â
âRunaways?â Again, Mack let the question dangle.
âRunaways,â Barangail agreed. âAny planet with indentured servitude has them. As does any world with criminals who wish to avoid punishment. They try to hide underground, here, but we eventually smoke them out.â
Smoke them out, I thought. What an odd choice of words... but neither Mack nor I asked for clarification. There were more important things we needed to know.
âAre these runaways likely to be dangerous?â
Again, there was a pause, and I knew we werenât going to get the truth.
âSome might have weapons,â was evasive, and âbut most are unarmed and poorly equipped to survive, let alone anything else,â was almost certainly a lie.
I thought about the people whoâd attacked us on the way to dinner.
âWhat about the ambush?â I asked, and didnât need to add that our attackers had been well-armed, and pretty well-equipped.
This time the reply was too quick to be believed.
âTerrorists. Every world has them.â
The images in the separating wall alternated as they flashed.
âSo,â Barangail asked. âWill you take the job?â
âYes,â came as a chorus from both Mack and me, and
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