
Dead silence. It went on and on.
His lamp flickered.
He got up and stood at the door.
"Let me out!"
No sound.
A single shot. Voices again, running feet again, shouting, calling. After another long silence, distant voices, the sound of men coming down the corridor outside the room. A man said, "Keep them out there for now," a flat, harsh voice. He hesitated and nerved himself and shouted out, "I'm a prisoner! In here!"
A pause.
"Who's in there?"
It was no voice he had heard. He was good at voices, faces, names, intentions.
"Esdardon Aya of the Embassy of the Ekumen."
"Mighty Lord!" the voice said.
"Get me out of here, will you?"
There was no reply, but the door was rattled vainly on its massive hinges, was thumped; more voices outside, more thumping and banging. "Ax," somebody said, "Find the key," somebody else said; they went off. Esdan waited. He fought down a repeated impulse to laugh, afraid of hysteria, but it was funny, stupidly funny, all the shouting through the door and seeking keys and axes, a farce in the middle of a battle. What battle?
He had had it backwards. Liberation men had entered the house and killed Rayaye's men, taking most of them by surprise.
