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"Colonel Bradford's office, Corporal Callahan speaking, sir."
"This is Colonel Cortin. I'd like to speak with Colonel Bradford, please, if he's available."
"Yes, ma'am--one moment, please."
Seconds later, Bradford was on the line. "What can I do for you, Colonel?"
"I'm not sure. Does being the High King's Inquisitor let me borrow you to debrief someone?"
"It lets you borrow anyone you need to do your job. Who do you need debriefed, and how soon?"
"My new team member, Lieutenant Powell. As soon as you can, please."
"Half an hour soon enough?"
"That'd be fine, thanks. I've already gotten some useful information from him, but I'm not good enough at the memory-enhancing techniques to do a really thorough job."
"He's the one who told you about the raid on the Blue Sisters' convent?"
"Yes."
"I'll be over as soon as I can. I'm in charge of the task force protecting them; I'll need all the good information I can get."
"I'll probably be saying Ma.s.s when you get here, then. You can talk to him in our quarters if you want, or you're welcome to use my public office on the main floor. Any idea how long it'll take?"
"That's hard to say exactly, but two hours is about average. And since you haven't said Ma.s.s yet, I'd appreciate it if you wait till I get there; I like to attend all my priests' services at least once."
"Of course." She couldn't refuse her Bishop, and since no one had commented on her bearing during Ma.s.s, her absorption was either normal or not noticeable, so it shouldn't be a problem. "Then this afternoon I can have someone help Powell get the Service formalities straightened out--payroll, uniforms, ID, all that sort of thing." She shook her head, even though he couldn't see the gesture. "Things are going too fast and working out too well, Brad. I'm living in luxury, doing valuable work I enjoy, having an incredible s.e.x life--I ought to be overjoyed, but I'm not. It scares me."
Looked at from her point of view, Bradford could understand that. But since he'd helped with much of the maneuvering that had gotten her into the first two situations--that the third had worked out so well had been by G.o.d's mercy, not human skill--he didn't share her apprehension.
But he also couldn't reveal any more of that maneuvering than she already knew about, so he tried to rea.s.sure her instead. "I don't see anything to worry about, Joan. Think back--everything that's happened to you since the attack has been perfectly reasonable, given your talent as an Inquisitor and Their Majesties' determination to put down the terrorists. If you weren't High King's Inquisitor, someone else would be--someone less talented. As for the speed, well," he let his smile show in his voice, "from what I hear, you were the one in a hurry to qualify as an Inquisitor and get to work--and I know you didn't waste any time getting your team together."
"I can't argue that," Cortin said. She had pushed hard to learn, and learned faster than she'd expected even with that amount of work.
"Motivation does work wonders--but it still bothers me."
"We'll talk about it more this afternoon, then, if you're not at a point in an interrogation where you can't take a break for an hour or so."
"I should be able to manage; the one I'm working on seemed to be coming along nicely when I left him last night, and I doubt it'll take me more than a couple of hours to finish him."
Bradford was both astonished and pleased. Except for Powell, he'd chosen these subjects himself, as being particularly resistant. Either he'd been wrong about one, or she had an even more accurate sense for individual weaknesses than he'd realized. "I'd have expected at least two days of concentrated effort for any one of them--what did you do?"
"Thought aloud for his benefit, then left him alone under a twelve-hour dose of eroticine. Not very original, but effective."
"That's what counts." Bradford shook his head, glad she couldn't see the chagrin on his face. "Sometimes simple methods are the most effective." And the hardest to spot special vulnerability to, he reminded himself. "I'll be at the chapel in about fifteen minutes--talk to you more this afternoon."
"Right." Cortin hung up, turned to the two waiting. "He mentioned a chapel--where is it?"
"On the main floor," Pritchett told her. "Dedicated to St. Eleanor, of course."
The patron saint of Enforcement, yes, since there were no Inquisitor saints. "Good--I'd hoped for a chapel, but I hadn't really expected one."
"I'll show you where it is." Pritchett grinned. "I go to Ma.s.s every day, when I can--glad I didn't miss it today."
"Can I go too?" Powell asked hesitantly. "I've been once, so I can't take Communion, but . . ."
"Certainly!" Cortin exclaimed. "Whenever you want, as long as it doesn't interfere with your duties. Shall we go, gentlemen?"
Not at all to her surprise, after seeing other parts of the Lodge, Cortin found the chapel to be exquisitely--and expensively!--equipped and decorated. She went into the vestry for some private meditation, then put on her stole and went out to say Ma.s.s.
Bradford was struck by the change in her when she went to the altar and began the preliminary prayers. She was still attractive, rather than beautiful, but there was an aura about her now that made her seem as beautiful as the ceremony itself. She was completely wrapped up in it, obviously unaware of those in the chapel with her except for the little time it took her to administer Communion. He couldn't be sure if she even needed her Missal, or if her references to it were simply as part of the ceremony; somehow, he believed it was the latter. He'd only seen this sort of absorption twice before, he thought in awe. He'd have to report it to his superior--and he'd definitely have to talk to her later. After talking to Odeon!
As soon as Ma.s.s was over, Bradford took advantage of Cortin's offer to borrow her main-floor office. He should have summoned Powell for questioning, but what he'd just seen wouldn't let him; it was Odeon he called for. And, as he'd half expected, Cortin's second in command was trying to conceal something, his cold pale eyes revealing to the Inquisitor what his impa.s.sive expression hid: he was afraid. Not for himself, though; for Cortin?
Bradford gestured Odeon to join him in the informal seating area. When he did, Bradford leaned forward. "Mike, I have no intention of doing anything to hurt Joanie. But it's pretty clear you and Sis are hiding something you've found out about her--something her Commanding Officer and Bishop ought to know about."
Odeon was silent. Bradford had a point, but was it a strong enough one to justify risking Joanie's life? No, he corrected himself, not her life--her mission. Their lives. It was true that Bradford could be helpful, as Bishop of the Strike Forces--but again, helpful enough to justify the risk? Well, he'd been promised support, so there should be a way to find out.
Bradford watched, initial puzzlement quickly turning to awe as Odeon's eyes lost focus and he seemed to glow, despite the bright office lighting. Yes, there was definitely something highly unusual happening in and around Team Azrael!
When Odeon became aware of his surroundings again, he grinned. "You're in, Colonel. What's going on is hard to believe, but you'll get help."
He sobered. "And you'll get help keeping it from all except the very few with a need to know--plus one who has a need not to know."
"Something else we have to keep from her for her own good?"
"Hers and the entire Systems'," Odeon said. "It's why she attracts people in spite of being an Inquisitor. Brad, she's the Herald and acting Protector--and she doesn't know it, can't afford to know it until we've gotten people ready to accept her changes. As long as she doesn't know her ident.i.ty and powers, Shayan can't use his against her--in fact, he's afraid to use them at all, for fear of waking hers."
Bradford had gone pale. Hard as it was to believe, he couldn't disbelieve. "But she'd win!"
"There's no guarantee of that," Odeon said grimly. "I think she would--but the only limit I'm sure of on Shayan's power is his inability to create life. Joan's limited herself to restrain him and give us a chance." He grimaced. "That's how I understand it, anyway; I could be misinterpreting what I was shown. But I'm positive we can't afford to tell her who she really is. We've got to act normal as long as she does--with a few exceptions."
"Normal." Bradford shuddered. "Around the one who's supposed to judge us for eternity? Or, from what you said about being acting Protector, maybe not make the final judgement?"
"I can't be sure myself," Odeon said. "I have the feeling that anything she does in that capacity will be permanent, or there'd be no reason for an acting one, but it is just a feeling." He paused. "And acting normal around her's possible. Not easy, but possible, because Sis and I are doing it--and essential." He quirked an eyebrow, smiled.
"Fun, too, at times. One thing she's doing is reclaiming the jurisdiction over s.e.x that Shayan claimed in the Garden. If you've got any doubts on that score, just remember the shelter party."
Bradford did, his mind going back to her enthusiasm and the incredible pleasure she'd given her men and her guests. "That is going to be one of the hardest things to convince most people of," he said eventually.
"Is that going to be the Seal of Life G.o.d said the Protector would bring?"
"No--though that's not a bad guess." Odeon told him about the early-hours visit by the man in the white Enforcement uniform, including himself and Sis drinking from the still-unconscious Cortin.
"From that and everything else I've seen," he concluded, "the New Kingdom--for lack of my ability to imagine a better name--is going to be a lot more enjoyable, as well as a lot more challenging."
"A lot more sensual, at any rate," Bradford said drily. "Do you think that means all Her priests will be women?"
"I doubt it," Odeon said after a moment's thought "Even though Jeshua's were all men until not long before the War, which would only be fair. But we have a life fluid of our own, and knowing our Joanie, she'll want it used both ways." He paused, then grinned. "And it wouldn't surprise me if the normal arrangement was to celebrate this Sealing with a priest of the opposite s.e.x."
"Normal--but not necessary?"