
or anything like that—you just die the second you leave the system where you did the bad things. It's like
magic; except that there is no magic, just superadvanced science from races millions of years older than
us humans. To the League, we were as stupid as worms on a plate, and no matter how smart we thought
we were, the League was a billion times smarter. No oneever fooled them.
Samantha told me the same thing years ago. "Edward, if you ever do something really awful, you'd better
stay put after that. Don't go running off into space, thinking you can just sneak away without anyone
knowing; because the League always knows. Always." I'd followed my sister's advice ever since... till
now.
Now I was headed for a party to celebrate leaving the Troyen system. If it weren't for the admiral pulling
me along with her, I might have gone back to my cabin and tried not to cry.
The lounge was decked out like one of those old masquerade carnivals in Venice or Rome—all the walls
set to starry night, with fountains and cobblestones and fancy bridges over canals that stretched far back
into the distance. Now and then, the moving pictures showed people in masks and patchwork costumes,
running through the streets with torches or gathering in courtyards for medieval dances.
Very pretty and classical. Unlike thereal party.
Nearly everybody inWillow's crew was there... and they sure weren't acting like sober navy personnel.
Only the woman and I were in uniform, her in admiral's gray, me in Explorer Corps black. The rest were
all costumed up, either in strange clothes or body paints or holo-surrounds. I couldn't tell what half of
them were supposed to be—like the man just inside the door, wearing pink-silk pajamas and a big putty
nose. He gave me a sloppy wet kiss on the cheek, and said, "Ooo, aren't you the fetching whelp!"... in a
high voice with an odd accent, like he was imitating a character on some broadcast. The woman on my
arm laughed, and glanced to see if I'd laugh too; but it'd been so long since I'd seen any shows, I didn't
know why this was supposed to be funny.
After a moment, the admiral woman gave my arm a squeeze, and said, "Come on, angel, relax, okay?
You want to dance?"
I hadn't even realized there was music playing. It was soft as rainfall but tinkly-jangly, with no beat I
could make out. "I don't know how to dance to this," I said. It wasn't anything like the music Sam and I
listened to, back in the darkened gazebo.
"This is just Coy-Grip," the admiral woman told me. "You don't have to do anything special." Which
wasn't true at all. Apparently, she and I had to wrap our arms tight together in something like achin na
submission hold I'd learned once. (Over the years, Dad's security guards gave me a heap of free
martial-arts training.) I ended up hunched over like a bear, while the woman was practically on tiptoe; but
she told me we fitted together perfectly, my shoulders touching hers, our arms all twined around each
other, holding hands, our faces very close.
The woman murmured I could move my feet any way I wanted—the dance was the position, not the
steps. She started an inch-by-inch shuffle and I followed along, doing my best to match her every motion;
I was terrified if I went the wrong direction, I might accidentally snap her thin little wrists. After a few
seconds, she gave a twittery laugh and whispered, "Relax, angel, relax. You look like you're at a funeral."
She gave me a quick kiss on the nose. I could smell wine on her breath: really strong. She must have
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