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Usher leaned forward, sticking up his right thumb. “The first thing that’s going to go wrong already has, and don’t think for a moment even Durkheim isn’t nervous about it. I’ll bet you any amount of money you choose that he expected Manpower would use some of their own professionals to do the dirty work with the kid. Instead, no doubt because they want to keep their distance in case the thing goes sour—no idiots there—they turned it over to the Scrags they keep on their leash. They’ll save their pros for the attacks on Parnell and Bergren.”

He squinted at Victor. “Do you really know anything about the Scrags?”

Victor started to give a vigorous, even belligerent, affirmative response, but hesitated. Other than a lot of abstract ideological notions about fascistic believers in a master race—

“No,” he said firmly.

“Good for you, lad,” chuckled Usher. “Okay, Victor. Forget everything you may have heard. The fundamental thing you’ve got to understand about the Scrags is that they’re a bunch of clowns.” He waved a hand. “Oh, yeah, sure. Murderous clowns. Perfect physical specimens, bred and trained to be supreme warriors. Eat nails, can walk through walls, blah blah blah. The problem is, the morons believe it too. Which means they’re as careless as five year olds, and never think to plan for the inevitable screw-ups. Which there always are, in any plan—much less one as elaborate as this scheme of Durkheim’s. So they’re going to foul up, somewhere along the line, and Durkheim’s going to be scrambling to patch the holes. The problem is, since he organized this entire thing outside of SS channels, he doesn’t have a back-up team in place and ready to go. He’ll have to jury-rig one. Which is something you never want to do in a situation as”—another dry chuckle—“as ‘fraught with danger,’ as they say, as this one.”

He held up the thumb of his left hand. “And the other thing that’s going to go wrong—this one is guaranteed, and it’s a real lulu—is that the Manty officer he selected to be the official patsy in the scheme is going to tear him a new asshole.” Usher pressed the palms of his hands to his temples. The gesture combined utter exasperation with fury. “In the name of God! Bad enough Durkheim screws around with a Manty’s kid. But Zilwicki’s?” He drove up onto his feet. “What a cretin!”

Victor stared at him. He was acquainted with Anton Zilwicki, in the very casual way that two intelligence officers belonging to nations at war encounter each other at social functions in the capital of a neutral state, but the ‘acquaintance’ was extremely distant. Thinking about it, Victor could only summon up two impressions of the man. Physically, Zilwicki had a rather peculiar physique. Almost as wide, he seemed, as he was tall. And, from his accent, he came from the highlands of Gryphon.

Victor frowned. “I don’t quite understand, Kevin. Zilwicki’s not a field agent. He’s an analyst. Specializes in technical stuff. Software, as a matter of fact. The guy’s basically a computer geek. He’s the one who tries to find out how much tech transfer we’re getting from the Sollies.”

Usher snorted. “Yeah, I’m sure that’s what Durkheim was thinking. But you’re forgetting three other things about him. First of all, the kid’s mother was Helen Zilwicki, who was posthumously awarded Manticore’s Parliamentary Medal of Honor for hammering one of our task forces half-bloody with a vastly inferior force of her own.”

Victor was still frowning. Usher sighed. “Victor, do you really think a woman like that married a wimp?”

“Oh.”

“Yeah. Oh. Second, he’s from the Gryphon highlands. And while I think those highlanders are possibly the galaxy’s all time political morons—they hate the aristocracy so they put their faith in Aristocrat Number One—you won’t find anywhere a more maniacal set of feudists. Talk about stupid! Snatching one of their kids, in the scale of intelligence, ranks right up there with snatching a tiger’s cub.”

He slapped his hands together and rubbed them, in that mock-gleeful way of saying: oh, yes—here comes the best part! “And—just to put the icing on the cake—Anton Zilwicki may not be a field agent but he’s hardly your typical desk pilot either.”

He cocked an eyebrow at the young SS officer. “You’ve met him?” Victor nodded. Usher put his hand at shoulder level. “Short fellow, ’bout yay tall.” He spread his arms wide, cupping the hands. “And about yay wide.”

He dropped his arms. “The reason for that build is because he’s a weightlifter. Good enough that he could probably compete in his weight class in the Terran Olympics, which are still the top athletic contest in the settled portion of the universe.”

Usher frowned. “The truth is, though, he probably ought to give it up. Since his wife died, he’s become a bit of a monomaniac about the weightlifting. I imagine it’s his way of trying to control his grief. But by now he’s probably starting to get muscle-bound, which is too bad because—”

The wicked smile was back. “—there ain’t no question at all that he could compete in the Olympics in his old sport, seeing as how he won the gold medal three times running in the Manticoran Games in the wrestling event. Graeco-Roman, if I remember right.”

Usher was grinning, now. “Oh yeah, young man. That’s your genius boss Raphael Durkheim. And to think I accused the Scrags of being sloppy and careless! Durkheim’s trying to make a patsy out of somebody like that.”

Victor cleared his throat. “I don’t think he knew all that.” Which, of course, he realized was no excuse. Durkheim was supposed to know about such things. And that, finally, brought Victor to a new awareness.

“How is it that you know this stuff about Zilwicki?”

Usher stared at him for a moment in silence. Then, after taking a deep breath, said:

“Okay, young Victor Cachat. We have now arrived at what they call the moment of truth.”

Usher hesitated. He was obviously trying to select the right way of saying something. But, in a sudden rush of understanding, Victor grasped the essence of it. The elaborate nature of Usher’s disguise, combined with his uncanny knowledge of things no simple Marine citizen colonel—much less a drunkard—could possibly have known, all confirmed the shadowy hints Victor had occasionally encountered elsewhere. That there existed, somewhere buried deep, an opposition.

“I’m in,” he stated firmly. “Whatever it is.”

Usher scrutinized him carefully. “This is the part I always hate,” he mused. “No matter how shrewd you are, no matter how experienced, there always comes that moment when you’ve got to decide whether you trust someone or not.”

Victor waited; and, as he waited, felt calmness come over him. His ideological beliefs had taken a battering, but there was still enough of them there to leave him intact. For the first time—ever—he understood men like Kevin Usher. It was like looking in a mirror. A cracked mirror, but a mirror sure and true.

Usher apparently reached the same conclusion. “It’s my Revolution, Victor, not Saint-Just’s. Sure as hell not Durkheim and Tresca’s. It belongs to me and mine—we fought for it, we bled for it—and we will damn well have it back.

“So what do we do?” asked Victor.

Usher shrugged. “Well, for the moment why don’t we concentrate on this little problem in front of us.” Cheerfully, he sprawled back on the couch. “For one thing, let’s figure out a way to turn Durkheim’s mousetrap into a rat trap. And, for another, let’s see if there isn’t some way we can keep a fourteen-year-old girl from becoming another stain on our banner. Whaddaya say?”