the shelves closely enough to determine whether the selection was actually eclectic, but it was certainly chaotic. She edged the front door open cautiously, never sure a newly delivered stack of books wouldnât be balanced in its path, and made her way into the crowded shop.
The foyerâdefined by being the only area in the store without books piled everywhereâwas tidier than usual, an extra square foot or two available around the till. Margrit grinned and let the door close to the sound of chimes, echoed an instant later by a rattle of beads from behind the stacks. âCara?â
âHi, Chelsea.â Margrit lifted her voice unnecessarily as the shopâs tiny proprietor appeared from between the shelves. Surprise darted across her apple-round face as she peered at Margrit, then at the door leading to the street. âCara sent me,â Margrit said, then winced. âIâm doing it again. Every time I come in here, I start sounding like a noir film.â
Chelsea put fingertips on a stack of books to keep it from toppling as she passed, then stopped before Margrit with her arms folded under her breasts. Margrit, looking at the top of her head, counted a handful of silver hairs among the black, and wondered how old the woman was. Something about her tea-colored eyes made her seem both wizened and ageless, but nothing in the way she moved suggested she was at all old. âWhy didnât Cara come herself?â
âSheâs in the hospital. Sheâs hurt. Fighting down on the docks got out of hand. Sheâll be all right,â Margrit added hastily. âAssuming nothing weird comes up in her blood work, anyway. She called me. Iâm supposed to goâ¦Oh, you know.â She sighed, suddenly feeling the weariness that had been absent earlier. âIâm supposed to go make sure their treaty holds, so theyâll keep fighting us instead of turning on each other. And youâre supposed to come along to shore me up, I guess.â
Surprise snapped through Chelseaâs eyes again. âAre you, now? Youâve come a long way in a little time, Margrit Knight. From novice to negotiator. I may be impressed.â
âOh, good. I hope they are.â Margrit stuck her tongue out, feeling not at all impressive. âAre they going to listen to me?â
âTheyâre there to negotiate, Margrit. They might be expecting Cara, but Iâve been helping her and theyâll recognize you as her proxy if Iâm there to back it up. Even in the worst scenarios, none of the Old Races want to expose themselves to humanity. Theyâll listen, if youâre ready for this.â
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But Iâm not ready for it! The protest rang through Margritâs mind as it had for the past hour, thoroughly clenched down. She knew too little about the situation, but at the same time she thought she understood the basic scenario. Most complications rose from one or two fundamental difficulties: she only had to address those, and with luck the remainder would come unraveled. She reminded herself of that as she climbed grate stairs in a dockside warehouse. Chelsea, a step ahead of her, lookedcalm and utterly collected, completely at odds with the butterflies in Margritâs stomach.
She was uncomfortably aware of the plummet just to her right. Workmen were visible below, forklifts beeping and crashes announcing the periodic drop of materials. Several moved with the characteristic ease of the Old Races, though more still were only human. She stopped to watch them, trying to find her equilibrium, and Chelsea glanced back with an arched eyebrow as she reached the door leading into the warehouse office. Margritâs shoulders slumped, and, more determined than prepared, she nodded her readiness. Chelsea pushed the door open.
The office was as far from Janxâs alcove as she could imagine, with ordinary plate-glass windows and cheap furniture, none of it saying anything
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