
“This mission has nothing to do with House Ryoval. We shall avoid them.”
“So I hope,” agreed Thorne fervently. It paused, thoughtfully sipping tea. “Now, despite the fact that Jackson’s Whole is long overdue for a housecleaning, preferably with atomics, I presume we are not doing this just out of the goodness of our hearts. What’s, ah, the mission behind the mission this time?”
He had a rehearsed answer for that one. “In fact, only one of the clones, or rather, one of its progenitors, is of interest to our employer. The rest are to be camouflage. Among them, Bharaputra’s customers have a lot of enemies. They won’t know which one is attacking who. It makes our employer’s identity, which they very much desire to keep secret, all the more secure.”
Thorne grinned smugly. “That little refinement was your idea, I take it.”
He shrugged. “In a sense.”
“Hadn’t we better know which clone we’re after, to prevent accidents, or in case we have to cut and run? If our employer wants it alive—or does it matter to them if the clone is alive or dead? If the real target is the old bugger who had it grown.”
“They care. Alive. But … for practical purposes, let us assume that all the clones are the one we’re after.”
Thorne spread its hands in acquiescence. “It’s all right by me.” The hermaphrodite’s eyes glinted with enthusiasm, and it suddenly smacked its fist into its palm with a crack that made him jump. “It’s about time someone took those Jacksonian bastards on! Oh, this is going to be fun!” It bared its teeth in a most alarming grin. “How much help do we have lined up on Jackson’s Whole? Safety nets?”
