'THIS WORLD WAS once infested by genestealers,' Jaq told Rakel at the dinner table. 'Do you know what those are?'
Yes, her criminal contacts had told her about the infestation by Old Four-Arms. 'Not all hybrids may have been destroyed,' said Jaq. 'The courthouse does not seem to be exercising enough diligence these days. I do not suggest that the courthouse is contaminated. However, an inquisitor must always harbour many suspicions - and often act secretly. You may have seen an inquisitor storming about on that other world you visited. The best work of the Inquisition is often pursued unseen, until the crucial moment. That book downstairs contains secrets about genestealers and their origin.' Did it? Did it not?
They're bred by tyranids, Lex almost said; but he kept silent. In the tyranid hive-ship, in that evil leviathan shaped like a snail, Biff and Yeremi had died...
To read the book I shall need something which is probably stored in the courthouse. I must not reveal myself prematurely to the Arbites. So your arrival is timely. However, you must be tested. We intercepted you, after all.
'I'm told,' Jaq continued, 'that the Oriens Temple was once home to the ancient thigh bone of a Space Marine, housed in a reliquary.' The real Meh'lindi had told him this. 'I wonder whether that thigh bone survived the destruction of the temple? I wonder whether the Occidens Temple sequestered that bone, just as they have done with the Emperor's fingernails. Find out, Rakel, find out from your criminal contacts! If that femur is hidden away in Occidens I want you to steal the bone and bring it here for Lex to ornament with his graving tool.'
'Oh yes indeed,' said Lex. 'Oh yes!' His fists opened and closed as though already grasping the revered bone.
Why Lex should wish to engage in such an activity was not to be confided. Rakel knew Lex's name - but not his identity.
'Ask about illegal cults as well,' continued Jaq. 'Is there any cult devoted to metamorphosis - or to revolutionary change? Is there any cult devoted to lust and wanton pleasures of the flesh?'
Rakel ventured to ask: 'Is that why I should not praise the food we eat, no matter how fine it is?'
'Not at all! We eat well because austerity narrows one's perspectives.' Grimm tilted his pot of ale. 'You used not to allow any alcohol aboard the good ship Tormentum, Jaq.' These days, Grimm had been allowed to provision the larder with beer and wine and even some of the strong local djinn spirit. Jaq himself still drank no alcohol. For Lex, with his supplementary preomnor stomach and his purifying oolitic kidney, indulgence would be futile.
'Alcohol disorders the senses,' Jaq explained. 'I may need to exploit disorder.
You, Rakel, in your new assassin shape, should not express sensual preferences regarding food. It isn't fitting.' Jaq placed the assassin's sash upon the table. From the sash he removed three small hooded rings, baroque thimbles. 'Wear these on your fingers, Rakel.'
With a professional, if puzzled, eye Rakel was assessing the possible value of these supposed items of bijouterie.
'You crook your finger suddenly just so,' Jaq mimed. 'These are rare digital weapons of jokaero manufacture. One fires a toxic needle, the next a laser beam, and the third is a tiny flamer. Each will fire once. We have no means to replenish these. They are only for use in case you are cornered, with no other means of escape.'
Rakel eyed the three digital devices, and the three other persons seated at table.
'See how we trust you!' sneered Grimm.
'You would not defeat me,' Lex growled at her, 'not with toxin nor flame nor laser burst. Even blind, I would break your back.'
'And your body would soon go into flux,' said Jaq. Nodding, Rakel slid the three digital weapons on to different fingers. 'You're perfect,' Jaq said bleakly.
The abhuman dabbed a stubby finger in the spiced milk and sucked as if on a teat. 'Huh, this sauce is getting cold!'