Tachyon lay in bed. They had wanted to put him back in the hospital, but he had fought that like a maddened creature, and Jack had kept him out of the hands of the doctors. He had allowed them to rebandage his stump, rewrap his ribs, but no more. He had even refused the pain pills. Because somewhere in this city was his grandchild, and Tach needed a clear head to find him. His brain seemed to be battering at the confines of his skull as he searched, but only darkness answered him.
Pain took him, and he hung over the side of the bed and retched. The memory of those final chaotic minutes at the convention reared up and added to his confusion. Hartmann's mind beating like a trapped and terrified animal at the iron confines of Tachyon's mind-control.
For an instant remorse gripped him, then slowly Tachyon raised the ugly ungainly stump, and studied it. Hate replaced the momentary flicker of regret. I'll never do surgery again. Damn him to eternal wandering!
His jaw set in a stubborn, bitter line, and he crawled from the bed. The Nagyvary lay in its case. City light filtered around the edge of the curtain and glimmered on the polished grain of the wood, danced on the strings. Gently he drew the fingers of his left hand across the strings releasing a sigh of sound. Rage filled him. Snatching out the violin, Tachyon swung it hard against the wall. The wood splintered with a horrible brittle sound. Several strings broke with sharp jarring notes; a musical scream of pain.
His final swing pulled hum off balance, and Tach instinctively threw out his right hand to catch himself. Screamed. Black spots danced before his eyes, and suddenly he felt hands on his shoulders. Someone lifting him.
"You damn fool! What now are you doing?" asked Polyakov, depositing him back in the bed.
"How… how did.. you… get in?"
"I'm a spy, remember?"
The worst of the agony receded. Tach touched his upper lip with his tongue, tasting salt. "This isn't very good trade craft," said Tachyon.
"We needed to talk." George was rummaging about Tach's discarded clothes until he found the flask.
"You could have just left," the alien whimpered, and hated himself for his weakness. "Slipped away to Europe, the Far East… begun again. And left me to face the inharmonious music."
Polyakov gulped down brandy. "I owe you too much for that. "
A tiny, bitter smile touched Tachyon's thin lips. "What? You don't believe in Gregg's tragic breakdown?"
"I believe that he had a little help." A sigh.
"It was damn close." Polyakov grunted. "More exciting that way."
Tachyon accepted the flask, and took a sip. "You don't like exciting. You like subtle and efficient. George, what are we going to do? Share a cell at Leavenworth?"
"What do you want?"
"I'm not too proud to beg. Help me, please. My devil's stepchildren, my grandson, what will become of them if I am incarcerated? Please, please help me."
The mattress squeaked and shifted as the man seated himself. "Why should I?"
"Because you owe me, remember."
"We'll probably never see each other again."
"I've heard that before, too."
The Russian took another swallow of brandy. "How are you going to control Blaise?"
"Make him love me. Oh, George, where has he gone? Where can he be? What if he's hurt and he needs me and I'm not there!" His voice rose shrilly. Polyakov pushed him back against the pillows.
"Hysterics won't help."
Tach pleated the edge of the sheet, stared with strained eyes into the oblivion of the far wall.
"Let me ease your mind on one point. I've already called the FBI, and offered to roll over in exchange for your immunity."
"Oh, George, thank you." His head fell back wearily against the pillows. "Goodbye, George. I would offer to shake hands, but…"
"We'll say goodbye the Russian way."
Polyakov bear-hugged him, and pressed hard kisses onto each thin cheek. Tachyon reciprocated in the Takisian fashion with a kiss to the forehead and lips.
The Russian paused at the bedroom door. "How do you know you can trust me?"' "Because I am a Takisian, and I still believe in honor."
"Not much of that around."
"I take it where I can find it."
"Goodbye, Dancer."
"Goodbye, George."