“A cylinder of metal in the throat,” said Rigg. He demonstrated the size of it with his hands. “They slipped it into place during one of the gaps in your time-slicing. It tore your head off your body and burned you up.”
Param felt ill. “Why? What did I do?”
“I think they wanted to show us how easily we could be killed,” said Olivenko.
“I think they wanted to force us to use our powers and get out of here,” said Loaf.
“Why?” asked Param. “All they had to do was ask us to leave!”
“The people who wanted us to go may have been in the minority,” said Loaf. “We only ever met Swims-in-the-Air and Mouse-Breeder. It gave us an impression of perfect unity among the Odinfolders. But there may well have been a powerful faction that wanted us gone.”
“By killing me?”
“They knew we wouldn’t leave you dead,” said Rigg. “And they knew that we wouldn’t stay.”
“But what about meeting the Visitors?” asked Param. “I thought we were supposed to figure out a way to convince them not to wipe out Garden.”
“I don’t think so,” said Umbo. “I don’t think that was ever the plan.”
“They’ve been lying to us?”
“Of course they have,” said Loaf. “They’re only human.”
“Why did we believe them?” said Rigg, shaking his head. He imitated Swims-in-the-Air’s melodious voice. “‘We want you to figure things out yourselves. We want you to find your own way to convince the Visitors that we’re worth saving.’ Silbom’s right heel!”
“What did they want?”
“We don’t know yet,” said Loaf.
“I have a theory,” said Umbo.
“Which is?” asked Rigg.
“You’ll think it’s stupid,” said Umbo.
“Probably,” said Rigg. “But that doesn’t mean you won’t be right.”
“Or lead us to a right answer,” said Loaf.
“I think they’ve given up completely on changing the Visitors’ minds,” said Umbo. “I think they only wanted us to get on the Visitors’ starship long enough to smuggle a weapon aboard. A weapon that they’d carry back to Earth and wipe out the human race there before they can possibly send the Destroyers to kill all the people of Garden.”
“A weapon?” asked Param. “I thought we couldn’t build weapons.”
“Not literally a weapon,” said Umbo. “They can’t make a weapon. They haven’t made a weapon. Not mechanical, not biological, no such thing.”
“Then what is it that they’re supposedly going to smuggle back to Earth?” asked Rigg.
In reply, Umbo gestured toward Loaf.
Only now did Param notice that a couple of mice were perched on Loaf’s shoulders.
“Mice?” she asked.
“I told you there was no machine,” said Rigg. “But they think there is one. They think they’ve seen it, they think they know how it works. Instead, what they’ve seen is a very solid-seeming hologram. And when things get sent back in time and over to some distant location, they think the machine is doing
it.”
Param realized what he was leading up to. “But it’s the mice doing it.”