"I don't care if it's more likely that I was going to sprout wings," I said. "I didn't think it was ever possible that you might think to kill my parents, Hickory. I was wrong about that. I'm not going to be wrong about it again. So swear it. Swear you will never harm my parents."
Hickory spoke briefly to Dickory in their own language. "We swear it," Hickory said.
"Swear it for all Obin," I said.
"We cannot," Hickory said. "That is not something we can promise. It is not within our power. But neither Dickory nor I will seek to harm your parents. And we will defend them against all those who would try to harm them. Even other Obin. This we swear to you, Zoe."
It was the last part of this that made me believe Hickory. I hadn't asked him to defend John and Jane, just not harm them. Hickory added it in. They both did.
"Thank you," I said. I felt as if I were suddenly coming unwound; until that second I didn't realize how worked up I was just sitting there, talking about this. "Thank you both. I really needed to hear that."
"You are welcome, Zoe," Hickory said. "Is there something else you want to ask us?"
"You have files on the Conclave," I said.
"Yes," Hickory said. "We have already given them to Lieutenant Sagan for analysis."
That made perfect sense; Jane had been an intelligence officer when she was in the Special Forces. "I want to see them, too," I said. "Everything you have."
"We will provide them to you," Hickory said. "But there is a lot of information, and not all of it is easy to understand. Lieutenant Sagan is far more qualified to work with this information."
"I'm not saying give it to me and not her," I said. "I just want to see it too."
"If you wish," Hickory said.
"And anything else that you might get from your government on the Conclave," I said. "And I mean all of it, Hickory. None of this 'you didn't ask directly' junk from now on. We're done with that. Do you understand me?"
"Yes," Hickory said. "You understand that the information we receive might in itself be incomplete. We are not told everything."
"I know," I said. "But you still seem to know more than we do. And I want to understand what we're up against. Or were, anyway."
"Why do you say 'were'?" Hickory asked.
"General Rybicki told the crowd today that the Conclave was about to be defeated," I said. "Why? Do you know any different?"
"We do not know any different," Hickory said. "But we do not think that just because General Rybicki says something in public to a large crowd, it means he is telling the truth. Nor does it mean that Roanoke itself is entirely out of danger."
"But that doesn't make any sense," I said. I held up my PDA to Hickory. "We were told we can use these again. That we can use all of our electronics again. We had stopped using them because they would give us away. If we're allowed to use them again, we don't have to worry about being given away."
"That is one interpretation of the data," Hickory said.
"There's another?" I asked.
"The general did not say that the Conclave had been defeated, but that he believed they would be defeated," Hickory said. "That is correct?"
"Yes," I said.
"Then it is possible that the general means for Roanoke to play a part in the defeat of the Conclave," Hickory said. "In which case, it is not that you are being allowed to use your electronics because it is safe. You are being allowed to use them because you are now bait."
"You think the Colonial Union is leading the Conclave here," I said, after a minute.
"We offer no opinion one way or another," Hickory said. "We note only that it is possible. And it fits what data we have."
"Have you told my dad about this?" I asked.
"We have not - " Hickory began, but I was already out the door.
"Close the door behind you," Dad said.
I did.
"Who have you talked to about this?" he asked.
"Hickory and Dickory, obviously," I said. "No one else."
"No one?" Dad asked. "Not even Gretchen?"
"No," I said. Gretchen had gone off to harass Magdy for sending her that video. I was beginning to wish I had gone with her instead of making Hickory and Dickory come to my room.