"No." Arcadia forced a standstill, "I don"t understand."
Lady Callia squeezed her hands tightly together. "You must go back to warn your people there will be war. Isn"t that clear?" Absolute terror seemed paradoxically to have lent a lucidity to her thoughts and words that was entirely out of character. "Now come!"
Out another way! Past officials who stared after them, but saw no reason to stop one whom only the Lord of Kalgan could stop with impunity. Guards clicked heels and presented arms when they went through doors.
Arcadia breathed only on occasion through the years the trip seemed to take ?yet from the first crooking of the white finger to the time she stood at the outer gate, with people and noise and traffic in the distance was only twenty-five minutes.
She looked back, with a sudden frightened pity. "I ... I ... don"t know why you"re doing this, my lady, but thanks?What"s going to happen to Uncle Homir?"
"I don"t know," wailed the other. "Can"t you leave? Go straight to the spaceport. Don"t wait. He may be looking for you this very minute."
And still Arcadia lingered. She would be leaving Homir; and, belatedly, now that she felt the free air about her, she was suspicious. "But what do you care if he does?"
Lady Callia bit her lower lip and muttered, "I can"t explain to a little girl like you. It would be improper. Well, you"ll be growing up and I ... I met Poochie when I was sixteen. I can"t have you about, you know." There was a half-ashamed hostility in her eyes.
The implications froze Arcadia. She whispered: "What will he do to you when he finds out?"
And she whimpered back: "I don"t know," and threw her arm to her head as she left at a half-run, back along the wide way to the mansion of the Lord of Kalgan.
But for one eternal second, Arcadia still did not move, for in that last moment before Lady Callia left, Arcadia had seen something. Those frightened, frantic eyes had momentarily ?flashingly ?lit up with a cold amusement.
A vast, inhuman amusement.
It was much to see in such a quick flicker of a pair of eyes, but Arcadia had no doubt of what she saw.
She was running now ?running wildly ?searching madly for an unoccupied public booth at which one could press a button for public conveyance.
She was not running from Lord Stettin; not from him or from all the human hounds he could place at her heels ?not from all his twenty-seven worlds rolled into a single gigantic phenomenon, hallooing at her shadow.
She was running from a single, frail woman who had helped her escape. From a creature who had loaded her with money and jewels; who had risked her own life to save her. From an entity she knew, certainly and finally, to be a woman of the Second Foundation.
An air-taxi came to a soft clicking halt in the cradle. The wind of its coming brushed against Arcadia"s face and stirred at the hair beneath the softly-furred hood Callia had given her.
"Where"ll it be, lady?"
She fought desperately to low-pitch her voice to make it not that of a child. "How many spaceports in the city?"
"Two. Which one ya want?"
"Which is closer?"
He stared at her: "Kalgan Central, lady."
"The other one, please. I鎶砮 got the money." She had a twenty-Kalganid note in her hand. The denomination of the note made little difference to her, but the taxi-man grinned appreciatively.
"Anything ya say, lady. Sky-line cabs take ya anywhere."
She cooled her cheek against the slightly musty upholstery. The lights of the city moved leisurely below her.
What should she do?
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