Chapter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
CHAPTER TWOThe Beta Cassiopeiae Sector, 4325 C.E.DM +63 137a dim K7v orange starwasnt much like Iota Pegasi. And the rust-red planet it was peeking over wasnt at all similar to Santaclara. But Roderick Brady-Schiavona was gazing through the transparency at it in a way that made him resemble Corin Marshak to a remarkable degree, given that they didnt look in the least alike. In fact, he wasnt looking at the local astronomical scenery, but at the ships that reflected the dawning sunlight as they orbited in company with the titanic orbital fortress from which he gazedthe sector military headquarters, and therefore the natural location for the ceremony that was about to commence. He turned from the transparency and looked around him. He stood on a mezzanine that overlooked the fortresss vast docking bay where a Marine honor guard, like the row of dignitaries at right angles to it, faced a dais. That dais filled the space which would have accommodated an arriving shuttle, and it was unoccupiedfor now. Roderick moved to the railing and looked down, watching for a moment as Marine noncoms dressed the honor guards lines to an even higher degree of exactitude. Then he glanced to right and left along the railing, at others who, like him, were of rank insufficiently exalted to be with the reception committee below. "Why, Roderick!" The familiar voice was in bantering mode. "I expected you to be down below with the rest of the social elite." Roderick turned around, and his moody expression dissolved into a grin that wasnt quite as dazzling as its wonthed been away from the light of any sun long enough for his face to lose the accustomed ruddy tan that went well with his chestnut-brown hair and provided contrast for his white teeth and blue-gray eyes. He greeted the civilian-clothed figure the way a man who is leaving youth behind greets his mentor. "You must be joking! A mere captain? You have to be flag rank, or a damned highly placed civilian, to get anywhere close to that receiving line down there." "A captain, true . . . but hardly a mere one," Jason Aerenthal demurred. "After all, as the Sector Admirals son" "Now I know youre joking." "Of course I am. Anything smacking even remotely of favoritism would be anathema to your father. He is unique in my experience: a man with an accurate public image of probity and rectitude. Besides . . ." Aerenthal didnt need to complete the thought. In the four and a half centuries since the First Empire had begun to unravel, familial ties had waxed in significance as societal ones had waned. The urge to advance ones own blood had assumed an importance it hadnt seen since Old Earths unimaginably ancient preindustrial days. Even if Admiral Ivar Brady-Schiavona had harbored any dynastic ambitions, he would have been well advised to keep them concealed in the presence of his master the Emperorholder of the Empires sole officially hereditary office. Roderick needed no coaching on the subject of forbidden topicshed spent part of his youth at the Imperial court on Prometheus. Nevertheless, he couldnt resist asking the question that had been uppermost in his mind since hed seen Aerenthal. "But why arent you down there? Surely you ought to be." "Hardly. As you know, I prefer to avoid the limelight." Roderick did know it. He reflected that every one of the officers around them knew about the results of Aerenthals exploits, but only a few of them knew the name of the man responsibleand of those, not one recognized the civilian sharing the railing with them as that man. The celebrity secret agent of popular fiction exists there alone. "Yes, I know youve raised inconspicuousness to a fine art. You cultivate it like a banker cultivates conservative respectabilityand for much the same reasons. But still . . ." "Theres more to it than that, at the moment." Rodericks face clouded. "Its totally unfair! You were just carrying out a policy" "with which I disagreed. Softly, please." Aerenthal smiled in a way for which the term "world-weary" would have had to be invented had it not already existed. "But, you see, if Im not to blame, then who is?" He let the question hang suspended in silence for a heartbeat, then nodded. "So the point is, its necessary to have someone to blame who can be blamed. And Im the logical choice." Roderick leaned forward, suddenly alarmed. "See here, how seriously out of favor with the Emperor are you, really?" "Oh, dont concern yourself. I hardly think the scapegoating process will be carried to its ultimate conclusion. And if things do get hazardous . . . well, I still have a lot of friends and associates in both Domains. My well-established cover persona can become actuality." "Youre lucky I know you too well to take that seriously." "True." Aerenthals contrite look might have fooled some people. "With you, I can indulge my abiding vice of flippancy. But look down there. I believe things are about to happen." An anticipatory hush was falling, only to be shattered as the loudspeaker system filled the vast space with the opening notes of Kolodins Imperial Anthem. A split second later, a series of bellowed commands brought the honor guard to attention. Without any noise at all, a figure appeared on the dais, dressed in a Fleet officers uniform which bore a golden dragon in place of rank insignia because its wearer transcended rank. A more stately, impressive ceremony could probably have been built around the arrival of a grav shuttle and the Emperors descent down its ramp. But this was typical of Oleg, second of the Duschane dynasty. The Emperor who had installed transposer networks on all the newly restored Empires principal worlds would hardly pass up an opportunity to make dramatic use of the technology. Roderick knew him only slightlythey were distant relativesbut he knew that much. He mentally reviewed what else he knew as Oleg stepped forward to receive the homage of the sectors military and civilian leadership. The dynastic name was not that of a Sword Clans family, but Oleg had about as much of their blood as Roderick himself did. Old Armand Duschane, an official of the Sword Clans "Empire of Man," had married a Moran-Tulwar and arranged for his daughter to marry the Emperor hed served. Dynastic chance had left Armand regent for his infant grandson. There was still some controversy as to how Armand had parleyed his regency into the Imperial title; there was none at all about the ruthlessness with which hed purged all possible rival claimants. But none of that mattered. What mattered was that, for the first time, a man of genuine ability and ambition had been at the helm of the Empire of Man at a moment when the rump Solarian Empire which had taken refuge in the Serpens/Bootes region, and which the Sword Clans had never succeeded in conquering, had lain helpless in the aftermath of its latest factional struggle. Armand had his detractors, but not even they denied that hed had an eye for the main chance. Hed recognized his unique historical opportunity, and taken it. And, for the first time in more than two and a half centuries (more than three and a half, not counting Marvells ephemeral reunification), the Empire had found itself one. Armand had been a prudent, canny ruler, cautiously husbanding his resourceswhich, thanks to the ease of his reconquest, hadnt been decimated by protracted warfare. The only real blunder of which he could be accused was that he hadnt availed himself of the Emperors traditional prerogative of choosing their successors from among their blood relatives. He surely could have found somebody besides his son and heir apparent, Oleg. . . .
No, Roderick told himself, that isnt fair. This wasnt the stereotypical case of a dynasty brought to premature grief by its founders lounge-lizard sonlike the second and last Emperor of the Draconis Empire, or Basil Castellans son. Oleg wasnt that sort. Far from it. True, his appetite for ostentatious grandeur was notorious, as witness his pet project of restoring Old Earth as a secondary capital world, an alternative to frightfully earnest Prometheus. But that was just one among many outsized appetitesmost notably, for planning and executing grandiose projects of all kinds. Many of those projects were even farsighted. His crusade to abolish distance on the planetary scale by use of transposer technologyan artificial duplication of the very rare and limited psionic teleportation effect, introduced by the Sword Clans and heretofore used only for military purposes and as a toy of the super-richwould surely yield economic fruits in the long run. He certainly wasnt stupid. He just lacked a sense of proportion, a recognition of limits.
Maybe Id lack them too, in his position, Roderick thought ruefully as he watched the Emperor acknowledge a stately salute from his father, to whom almost everyone deferred. But the fact was that Oleg had tried to do too much too fast. Not even antimatter power and nanotechnology could repeal the fundamental economic law of scarcity. His internal projects would have laid the Empires peoples under a crushing load of taxation even if they hadnt simultaneously had to support his ambitions beyond the frontiers.
Overreaching, Roderick thought bleakly. Youd think thats the one lesson our history would have taught us. He thought back to the Founder, but like most people he shied away from even mentally pronouncing the name of the first Emperor of the Draconis Empire. Eight centuries had been powerless to dispel the memory of that totalitarianism which, however inherently horrible, had been but a means to an even more horrible end: a vast processor into which Homo sapiens was to be fed, emerging as specialized subtypes serving a master race from Sigma Draconis, an interstellar ant colony blending with its own machines in an obscene fusion of flesh, metal and plastic. And yet the decade-and-a-half nightmare of the Draconis Empire had merely capped the two-century nightmare of the Unification Wars. Humanity had finally awakened, with certain phobias so strong that they might as well have been encoded in its genes. Sovereignty must be universal and undivided, and centered in the person of a single individual so as to reinforce its universality by reducing the basis of social organization to its original common denominator. But that sovereign must be limited to the most inarguable governmental functions, presiding over individuals and societies which were allowed to be themselves. Very belatedly, the totalitarian temptation had been burned out of the races collective souland so it had remained, despite the brief New Human relapse. Oleg could not be compared with the Founder. But hed lost sight of the fact that the Emperors legitimate functions were almost entirely negative ones, at least as far as internal matters went. And even in external ones, hed never known when to stop. Instead of learning from the failure of his first Chaxanthu campaign, hed dragooned the Ursa Major frontier sectors into a war effort that had grown all out of proportion to the objective, creating a logistics infrastructure to support a second invasion and then a third, on a steadily increasing scale of grandiosity. The uprisings in those sectors against the ever-increasing exactions, and the repression that had followed, had left a legacy of bitterness that would, Roderick was certain, do the Empire a kind of long-term harm that military defeats could not. And as his last invasion had ebbed back like a spent wave, Oleg had managed to create a new enemy for his bankrupted Empire, on its opposite side. . . . "Its really too bad," Aerenthal interrupted his thoughts even as he mirrored them. "All he had to do was do nothing." "He doesnt have it in him to do nothing," Roderick said absently, not taking his eyes off the Imperial figure below. "Too true. But the settlement Id engineered was holding together so well . . ." Aerenthals tone was that of an artist whod watched his masterpiece being "improved" by a bumptious amateurand, in fact, been forced to do the desecration himself, under that amateurs direction. It had all started back in the previous reign. Armand had barely ascended the throne before hed begun intriguing to neutralize the Tarakans, inciting the Outer Domain to attack the Inner Domain which had been bullying it. But hed been too clever by half; for his orchestrated war had turned into a rout of the Inner Domain. Not even Armands hasty switching of sides had stopped the Outer Domains grim Araharl. By 4295before completing his reunification of the EmpireArmand had found himself facing a unified Tarakan state such as hadnt existed since Zhangulas corpse had grown cold. Fortunately, the Outer Domains need to digest its new acquisitions had given Armand time to reorganizewhich sounded better than "purge"the section of the Inspectorate that concerned itself with the Tarakan Domains. The situation had been grave enough for him to override bureaucratic precedence and place matters squarely in the hands of his principal on-scene agent, a man with an established persona as a businessman from the Empire dealing through interlocking partnerships in the Inner Domain. (Any interstellar boundary is, of necessity, a porous one.) That man now stood beside Roderick and mused wistfully concerning squandered opportunities. "Yes, it worked out rather well, if I do say so myself . . . and before Armand was dead." Roderick had been in his first year at the Academy in 4313, when a rebellion had ousted the Outer Domains Araharl and established friendly regimes in both of the again-sundered Domains. He still wasnt altogether clear on how Aerenthal had engineered that, for all the older mans reminiscences. Theyd met on Prometheus a few years after that, when one of Aerenthals periodic returns to the capital had coincided with Rodericks stint at court, and the agent was always willing to avail himself of an appreciative audience; but there were too many things he couldnt talk about. By then, Oleg had inherited the throneand a Tarakan situation which couldnt have been better. Unfortunately, hed also inherited a congenital need to meddle. "To a certain extent, Im to blame," Aerenthal was saying, paralleling Rodericks thoughts in his always-startling way. (He was, Roderick knew, a telepath. It was useful enough, despite the ubiquity of psi-damping technology, to allow intelligence agents a conditional exemption from the general strictures against psionics. But he didnt have the kind of powerful abilities whose possessors were generally unfit for anything else; he was limited to accessing active surface thoughts like those formed in the process of preparing to speak. And he would, Roderick was certain, never use it on a friend without knowledge and consent.) "I should have resistedeven to the point of threatening to resignwhen Oleg ordered me to destabilize the Outer Domain five years ago." "Popular legend has it that resignation is discouraged in your line of work," Roderick said playfully. "Theres something to thatand it may possibly have influenced my decision not to make the threat. Still, I should have expressed my feelings more emphatically. The possible benefitsreplacing a compliant regime with an even more compliant onenever justified the risks. Theres always an element of uncertainty in these things, you know." "And, in the end, the faction you were ordered to support turned out to be hostile to us. Yes, I know. But at least having them in power is only a limited inconvenience to us. After all, given the Outer Domains remoteness . . ." Rodericks voice trained miserably to a halt. Open mouth, insert foot, he recited to himself. Aerenthal smiled. "Finish the thought. The Inner Domain isnt remote. Its the immediate danger. So I had even less excuse for not digging my heels in two years later when Oleg was taken in againby Tarakan malcontents offering to break up the Inner Domain. I warned him that they were all talk." "But why did Oleg even want the Inner Domain balkanized? The Outer Domain would have gobbled up the fragments, leaving the Tarakans united under a hostile regime." "Unfortunately, my efforts to tactfully point that out merely reminded him of the reason for the Outer Domains new hostilitywhich didnt exactly enhance my credibility. At any rate, I again followed orders under protest. And, as Id expected, my efforts had no result except to irritate a basically friendly regime and turn it into an enemy." "The enemy hes here now to overawe," Roderick finished for him. He heard a fresh set of orders being bawled at the honor guard below, and looked down over the railing. "Things are breaking up down there. And I am invited to the reception. Are you coming?" "Oh, yes. I cant avoid that. Hopefully it wont be too unpleasant." Aerenthal stood up from the rail and straightened the cravat that fashion decreed for semi-formal attire. He had always been good-looking in a saturnine way, and he was wealthy enough from his business dealings in the Inner Domainwhich were legitimate, as far as they wentto afford anagathics, to which he took unusually well. Nevertheless, he was some years past the blood-chilling moment when a man accustomed to being described as handsome first hears the dread words "distinguished-looking." "Maybe the hors doeuvres will be better than usual, considering whos the guest of honor," Roderick speculated hopefully as they set out through the dispersing crowd. * * * The reception room was at the "top" of the orbital station, as defined by artificial gravity: a vast circular chamber whose wall curved upward to join the ceiling in a seamless ellipse. Vertical transparencies all around the rooms circumference admitted the light of DM +63 137 and a billion more distant stars, as well as the reflected light glinting off the flanks of the ships matching the stations orbit. The throng that filled the room was less dazzling than might have been expected, given its social composition. Current civilian styles were on the sober side; and the Sword Clans, with their centuries-long heritage of bitter struggle, had established an enduring tradition of utilitarian plainness in military uniforms. Even the full-dress versions on display for this occasion were austere by the peacocklike standards of the old Solarian Empire. Both sorts of dress were in evidence in an especially select knot of people near the rooms center, a group set apart as though by an invisible wall. The man who was the focus of that group turned to his host with an easy smile. "Admiral, we were given to understand that your younger son would be present. We were looking forward to renewing our acquaintance with him." "Yes, Your Imperial Majesty. He should be here any time." Admiral Ivar Brady-Schiavona was a big mannot fat, but large-framed, with a massive square-set solidity. He didnt look like one given to fidgeting, and as a general rule he wasnt. But he cast an anxious look around and ran a hand over his broad, gleaming scalp. In an age when baldness was correctable, its presence was widely regarded as a sign of a man above vanity. Some men had their hair-growth artificially suppressed for that very reason. The admiral was not one of them. "Good. We havent seen him since his time at the capital, you knowand that was several years back." "Before his meteoric rise," one of the Emperors civilian flunkies simpered. Then his eyes met the admiralsand froze. Ivar Brady-Schiavonas uncharacteristic jitters had departed, burned away by anger, and under his rock-steady gaze the flunky wilted rapidly. It was a sore point, and a matter for mixed emotions, to have a son who was a captain at the unheard-of age of twenty-nine standard years. The admiral was death on any hint of nepotism and determined to lead by example. But he could hardly tell the boy to underachieve. Olegs eyes twinkled as he observed the byplayhe had no use for stupid courtiers, and enjoyed watching them squirm in the coils they created for themselves. He was about to say something when he noticed two approaching figures. "Ah, here he is now." "Your Imperial Majesty." Roderick came to attention as was proper for a serving officer in uniform, below decks and uncovered. His civilian companion bowed from the waist. "Ah, Captain Brady-Schiavona! Please be at ease. We were just discussing the splendid course your career has taken since your time at court as a junior officer." Oleg glanced sideways at Aerenthal and his mouth drooped at the corners. "Inspector," he greeted coolly. It was the correct form of address for all officers of the Inspectorate, originally a watchdog agency over the bureaucracy, which over the centuries had grown to encompass all Imperial security functions, including external espionage. But Oleg said it in the tone one uses when unavoidably referring to an unfortunate social disability. "Your Imperial Majesty," Aerenthal acknowledged. His bland expression excluded the courtiers snickering and whispered remarks from notice. Roderick, determined to match the older mans urbanity, ignored the flunkies and studied the Emperor. Oleg was very tall, and his buildwide in the hips and narrow in the shouldersgave him the look of an attenuated rectangle, which his face mirrored. Now in his fifties, he had the indeterminate early-middle-aged look of those whod been on anagathics from the earliest agethe late twentiesat which they could be usefully applied. The staggeringly expensive annual regimen slowed the aging process by a factor which was almost three in some individuals and averaged a little less than twoexcept for the six percent or so of humanity for whom they had no effect whatsoever. . . . Roderick thrust the thought down below the level of consciousness in a way which, in less than a year and a half, had not yet attained the automatism of habit. He concentrated on his fathers voice. "Roderick will be in command of the screening force were providing, sir." The admirals "sir" was as acceptable as Rodericks coming to attention had been, for he too was a Fleet officer and these were field conditions despite the background musicsomething semiclassical from Old Earths unthinkably ancient pastand the waiters who circulated with trays of wine glasses and canapes. "Excellent. Not that we expect to need one. After all were merely reinforcing this frontier against potential dangers." Oleg gave Aerenthal another sidelong glance. "A potentiality which wouldnt exist had our agents in the field executed our directives properly." Sheer outrage at the injustice took Rodericks breath away, preventing him from saying the unsayable. The courtiers, recognizing their cue, resumed their tittering. One of thema Fleet captain named Vladimir Liang, who was chief of the Emperors personal military staff, spoke up with a sneer in Aerenthals direction. "Yes, its a pity that His Imperial Majesty himself has to come here, applying his own incomparable gifts to a problem that his agents should have been able to deal with, given the ordinary competence he has a right to expect of them." Oleg beamed, and Roderick began to understand how Liangwhose dress tunic was innocent of combat-related decorationshad attained his post. He started to open his mouth, but caught his fathers warning glance out of the corner of his eye. Well, he told himself, if Jason can continue to disregard this shit, so can I. "Still, sir," the admiral said in his formidable bass, as though the byplay had never taken place, "it cant hurt to have a screen out as per tactical doctrine. Standard procedures should be observed at all times." "Spoken like a line officer of the old school, Admiral! And of course we couldnt ask for a finer officer to command it." He favored Roderick with a smile. "And now, we need to speak to the Sector Governor, if you and Captain Brady-Schiavona will excuse us." Pointedly ignoring Aerenthal, Oleg moved away, the flunkies following in a sycophantic swarm. "Be careful what you say," the admiral rumbled in Rodericks ear. "Hes . . . unpredictable. He can sometimes be very tolerant. But he can also be vindictiveespecially with slime like Liang around to goad him in that direction." "True," Aerenthal agreed. "The secret of success as a courtier is to play to the rulers mood of the moment, thus amplifying it and translating into actions what are, for most of us, mere passing impulses. Small wonder that monarchs have always been noted for extreme behavior." Abruptly, the bantering tone dropped from his voice. "By the same token, the lickspittles who surround him are likely to confirm him in his disinclination to take the dangers out here seriously. This would be . . . unfortunate." The admiral looked up sharply. His feelings about Aerenthal were ambivalent. The military class to which he belonged had always despised intelligence work, which doubtless helped account for the Empires traditional weakness in that area. But he also valued expertise in any workman, and he knew full well that Aerenthals workhowever unappetizing he himself found ithad given the Empire a decades-long respite on this frontier. So hed never been inclined to disapprove of Rodericks association with the agent. "What do you mean?" he asked quietly. "In spite of everything Ive managed to maintain contact with most of my sources of information in the Inner Domain. And my impression is that . . . well, the individual personalities involved would mean nothing to you. Suffice it to say that the Inner Domains attitude goes beyond the mere annoyance that has to be expected in light of the pathetic intrigues to which I was required to lend the Empires support. I believe something major is in the offing." The admirals gaze grew even sharper, and his voice harshened. "If you have reason to believe theres a serious danger to the Imperial person, why didnt you speak up?" "To repeat, its only an impressionalbeit an impression backed by not inconsiderable experience out here. I have no real proof. And how much weight do you suppose my opinion would carry with the Emperor just now?" "Some truth in that," the admiral admitted gruffly. "Just so. And now that Ive put in my obligatory appearance, I must be going. Thank you for your hospitality, Admiral. Good luck, Roderick." And Aerenthal was gone, leaving father and son in thoughtful silence. "Ive never quite known what to make of him," the admiral finally said. "But if hes worried, Im worried. And I know better than to waste my time trying to persuade the Emperor to change his plans." His massive head turned slowly toward Roderick, and his voice grew even deeper than its wont as he spoke with obvious effort. "I know I dont have to remind you of your duty. But this goes beyond ordinary duty. The reunification is still young, and fragile. His life"he jerked his chin in the direction of Oleg, across the room"is the knot holding everything together. He may not be everything we could have wished for in an Emperor, but hes what weve got. He has to be kept alive. Youre not old enough to remember what it was like before Armands reconquest, but I am." "I understand, sir. We cant afford a succession struggle. Ill bear that in mind at all times." Roderick spoke formally. Hed always found it difficult to speak to his father in any other way. It wasnt that Ivar was frightening or unapproachable. He wasnt even humorlessnot totally. He simply had no lightness in him. His way of speaking suggested that his words were being chiseled into marble above a Classical colonnade. Roderick forced himself to try and bring the conversation down to a more human level. "By the way, Im sorry I didnt have a chance to pay a personal call before the ceremony, but Id only just arrived here. How is everyone?" "Well." The admirals expression softened as much as it ever did. "At least Maura was well the last time I heard from her." Rodericks younger sister was off in Ursa Major, executive officer of a cruiser which, like her, had survived the latest Chaxanthu war. Since then, shed been involved in the police actions among the restive Imperial worlds near that frontiera topic Roderick and his father avoided in conversation. "Ted is as always. In fact, hed hoped to be here by now, but was delayed by business."
Why am I not surprised? Roderick didnt voice the thought. There was something special about a firstborn son, something that tended to banish objectivity. Something that outweighed Ivars mild disappointment that Teodor had left the Fleet after satisfying the minimal demands of family tradition by serving a single hitch. And it didnt help that his serene blond handsomeness recalled the admirals long-dead wife. So Roderick contented himself with a neutral response. "Too bad. But maybe its for the best. If Jason is right, this sector may not be any place for a civilian to be visiting for a while." "No." The admiral was preoccupied, and his eyes focused on something far beyond the confines of the station. Then he shook his head as though irritated with himself and turned his thin but genuine smile on Roderick. "Just remember what I said earlier. I didnt put you in command of the Emperors screen to hand you a plum assignmentwhatever some people may think. I did it because youre the best choice for the job . . . the most important job in the Fleet at this moment." "Yes, sir. I wont forget." * * * In fact, Roderick was recalling the conversation weeks later as he lay in his bunk, staring at the overhead. They had proceeded along a string of closely spaced K-type stars which formed the terminus of the Beta Cassiopeiae Sector, leaving one element after another of the Emperors convoy behind. Now they had departed the sector and entered a starless gulf beyond which lay Theta Persei, capital system of the sector of the same name. Rodericks dozen cruisers had taken their accustomed positionabout a light-month to starboard of the convoy, which placed them between it and the volume of space occupied by the Inner Domain. Now that the deployment was complete, Roderick had turned matters over to Commander Tatsumo, skipper of HIMS Cataphractthe "flag captain," since Roderick had been gazetted to commodore for this commandand retired to his cabin for a moment of relaxation. The Imperial procession had been uneventful, and Aerenthals apprehensions were beginning to look like the kind of compulsive worrying that often overtook people above a certain age. About time, at almost a standard centuryin spite of anagathics . . . Roderick winced away from the thought, which as usual he hadnt forestalled before it could blossom into hurtful life. With time, the knack would doubtless come.
Justice, I suppose, he brooded, picking compulsively at the emotional scab. Ive spent most of my life being told Im exceptional. So why should I expect to be like ninety-four percent of humanity in this one thing? His father had, characteristically, never uttered a word suggesting disappointment. Just as characteristically, hed been unable to relax his stiffness and cry out to his son that it didnt matter.
And it shouldnt matter, Rodericks thought flared. Should I whine because Ill have to settle for the lifespan that my ancestors were content with, and that most humansthose whore neither rich nor socially valuable by Imperial definitionstill have to accept? Not even that; Ive always had access to the best conventional medical technology money can buy, so I ought to outdo the Biblical threescore-and-ten. But . . . Does Father overlook every fault of Teds because, at the back of his mind, hes thinking that at least he has one son who can be expected to outlive him? And do I try so hard because I know my time is limited? He began to drift off as the thoughts pursued their endless loop, and was spiraling down into sleep when the general-quarters klaxon began to whoop. He came sailing up out of the bunk, jabbing for the intercom button with the disoriented clumsiness of the rudely awakened. Before he could find it, Tatsumos voice rasped from the grille as the flag captain spoke on the emergency link that needed no acceptance. "Commodore, weve received an Ultimate Priority distress call from His Imperial Majestys flagship. Theyve detected a hostile force on intercept course. The energy signatures indicate Tarakan ship classes." "But" Roderick savagely shook the last tatters of drowsiness from his head. "But how could we have not detected them?" It was the whole raison detre of the screen. Its function wasnt to fight off a serious attacknot with ships of cruiser size and belowbut to provide early warning by deploying sensors between the Emperor and that region of space from which danger might come. Roderick wouldnt be able to send instantaneous warning, of coursecruisers could receive instantaneous tachyon messages from the mammoth communications ship that accompanied the Emperor, but they couldnt begin to carry the vast transmitter arrays required to send such messages across interstellar distances. But he could dispatch a frigate with the tidings his near-realtime sensors would have provided. "Theyre coming from inside Imperial space, sir. Weve got their vector plotted" "Im on my way. Get us moving immediately." Roderick cut the connection without waiting for an acknowledgment and strode from the cabin. He proceeded toward the bridge, oblivious to the running figures and the raucous klaxon. His thoughts were raging.
From inside Imperial spacethe far side of the convoy from us! Somebody must have sold the Inner Domain his complete itinerary. So they slipped a force into this gap between sectors, where its been lying undetectable in space, waiting to pounce from the direction nobody expected. Meanwhile, we of the screen are out here in the middle of nowhere, playing with ourselves. . . . He shook off the useless self-reproach as he entered the bridge, automatically muttering "As you were" and waving people back to their seats. A Cuirassier-class cruiser leader like Cataphract had no separate flag bridge, just a command chair beside the captains. Roderick flung himself into it and ran his eyes over the readouts and displays that lent color to the dimly lit space. "Were continuing to receive messages from the convoy, sir, and displaying the data as quickly as it can be downloaded," Tatsumo reported. "By now, weve got a fairly comprehensive force composition as well as the vector." "So I see," Roderick murmured, studying the display and feeling ill. It was an even more powerful force than hed feared. The Emperors convoy was just that, not a fighting fleet. At its original strength, it could have held off the fleet bearing down on it. But now, after having left various components behind to reinforce the systems it had visited . . . The good news was that the hostiles hadnt just sprung into detectability right on top of their preythey were coming from a respectable distance, and thus had been discovered at the maximum range of the sensors that Admiral Rahmani, commander of the Emperors escort, had at least had the sense to have out in all directions. Instead of trying to evade, Rahmani was proceeding at his best speedthat of his slowest ship, hence none too goodtoward Theta Persei, hoping to reach the shelter of its defenses. The computers extrapolation of the enemys intercept course foretold that he wasnt quite going to make it. Nor was Rodericks command going to be able to rendezvous with the convoy until after the latter had come under attackand had probably surrendered, given the identity of the passenger for whose life Rahmani was responsible, assuming that the Tarakans offered quarter.
Not that it would matter if we could, Roderick thought as he studied the breakdown of enemy classes and numbers. His light vessels would be little more than a feather in this balance of forces. But he never even considered ordering a change in Tatsumos course. His ships continued to arrow toward the rendezvous they wouldnt make at a speed flatly forbidden by the laws of physicsat least as far as the outside universe, and their personnels own time-sense, were concerned. It never occurred to any of those personnel, from Roderick on down, to marvel at what they were doing. Seventeen centuries had passed since mankind had learned how to fool the gods into thinking their laws were being obeyed, in the words of Chen Hsieh, a leading member of the team that had produced the prototype time-distortion drive . . . which wasnt really a "drive" at all, for it didnt actually move the ship. Rather, it surrounded it with a field within which the passage of time was enormously accelerated. Within that bubble in the continuum, the ship disobeyed no cosmic speed limits. But to outside observers, the acceleration its impellers imparted sent it hurtling past the velocity allowed by the semi-mythical Einstein. Meanwhile, a second, inner field around its crewed spaces slowed time down by the same factor, lest the trip seem to the crew to take the centuries it would have taken without the drive. So Roderick was able to watch the stars stream impossibly past in the viewscreen as he tried to will the drive to even greater compression of time. But of course it couldnt be done. All military ships mounted drives that speeded the time-flow by the same factor: the highest permitted by existing technology. Had they not, they would have been helpless in combat against ships that did, given the drives amplifying effect on the power of energy weapons and corresponding defensive value against directed energy from outside. So speed differentials between ship classes were strictly a function of old-fashioned thrust-to-mass ratios. On that showing, Rodericks ships were fastfaster than either of the other two forces in play, which included massive battleships and transports. But there were no tricks by which they could be made even faster.
And, he asked himself, just what are we going to do when we get there, besides die? Time crawled by at a protracted rate which had nothing to do with the inner field. Food was brought to the bridge, and neither Roderick nor Tatsumo left save to answer calls of nature. No one on the bridge felt inclined to interrupt the commodores intense brooding. At last there came a time when Tatsumo reported quietly. "The Emperors convoy has come under attack, sir." She indicated the holo tank, where the string-lights of the opposing fleets courses had crawled together. Roderick nodded. He didnt need to be told that it meant the comm ship, like every other ship in the convoy, would have killed its inner field, thus maximizing its crews time to react to outside events that seemingly moved at a crawl. "Disengage our inner field," he ordered Tatsumo. It was necessary, for they could only continue to receive transmissions from the convoy if they and it were existing at the same time-rate. Besides, theyd need all the subjective time they could get to prepare themselves. The flag captain obeyed, and the stars abruptly became motionless in the screen, even though Cataphract was still moving through the outer universe at the same speed. Soon, Tatsumo had another report. "Sir, the convoy is continuing to fight back."
So Rahmani isnt going to surrender after all. Or maybe he wasnt given the option. With startling abruptness, Roderick sprang up from the chair in which hed been sitting motionless, and began pacing. Then he stopped and turned to Tatsumo. "Aline, the Emperor is going to be killed. I refuse to believe theres nothing we can do." "I concur, sir. But . . . Well, we havent been able to set up any meaningful tactical models to work out, not knowing exactly what situation were going to be facing when we" "We cant accomplish anything by fighting. We both know that. The numbers and tonnage and firepower just arent there. Besides, that battles probably going to be over by the time we arrive." Roderick resumed pacing, then halted in front of the holo tank. "Were going to be within sensor range of the battle soon. And presumably the Tarakans will have some sensors out, as a routine precaution. I want our stealth systems set for sensor confusionmake them think were stronger than we are." "Yes, sir," Tatsumo nodded, unsurprised. Shed thought of it herself; it was virtually their only option. The systems collectively and anachronistically known as "stealth" couldnt render a vehicle massive enough to carry them invisible to sensors, except temporarily. But they could induce distorted returns. "We can make our cruisers appear to be battlecruisers. But I must point out that the Tarakans know we can, and will therefore view the returns with caution. And given our small numbers, they wont find us very alarming even if they do think theyre dealing with battlecruisers." "I know, I know," Roderick muttered. He watched his force crawl along in the tank, nearing the Tarakans sensor range. It wasnt easy to keep the implications of that range in mind. The sensors were active ones, using treated antineutrinos which could be given superluminal acceleration but which lacked the virtual instantaneity of tachyon communications. It took a finite interval for the antineutrino stream to go out to its extreme range and back again. So some little time would pass before the Tarakans would realize they were there. . . . Then it burst on Roderick with a force that left him physically immobile, staring into the holo tank and thinking in a fury of concentration. After a while, Tatsumo spoke hesitantly. "Uh, Commodore . . . ?" Roderick whirled around and faced her. "Commander, listen very carefully, because it is essential that my orders be carried out to the letter and without a seconds hesitation. Clear?" "Y-y-yes, sir," Tatsumo stammered, caught flat-footed by Rodericks sudden formality and rocked back by what she saw in his eyes. "Good. Now, on my command, just before we enter the Tarakans sensor range, we will implement sensor confusion, with a view to spoofing their sensors into seeing our ships as battlecruisers, as per our earlier discussion. Then, after waiting thirty seconds to assure that well register on their sensors, we will shift our stealth suites to invisibility mode" "But, sir" "Dont interrupt, Commander! Immediately thereafter we will disengage our drives, turn around, and get out of their sensor range." "What?" Tatsumos shock wiped the commodores ban on interruption from her mind. "Run away? Damn it, sir" "Commander, you will implement my orders, or I will relieve you and bring you up on charges." Roderick thrust his face to within inches of Tatsumos and spoke too low for the bridge crew to hear. "Shut up and listen, Aline! Im going to try something a little differentits our only chance." He rapped out his plan in a few swift sentences, overriding her occasional protests. When he was done, her lower jaw was hanging agape. "But, but," she finally sputtered, "you cant! I mean, nobodys ever . . ." All at once, her face cleared, leaving room for a roguish smile. "Yes!" For a second his blue-gray eyes and her dark almond-shaped ones held each other, alike in the gleam they held. Then he straightened up and spoke in a normal volume. "Stand by to execute orders, Commander." "Aye aye, sir. But may I suggest that you communicate directly with the other ship captains first, so theyll know what to expect?" "Not a bad idea. Have comm connect me with themquickly, because we havent much time." It was as Roderick commanded when they crossed the invisible line beyond which they could be detected. When Tatsumo ordered the withdrawal, faces turned toward her from all around the bridge with expressions ranging from incredulity to mutinyuntil their owners met her quelling glare. Then the little formation turned around and swung out of the Tarakans sensor range in the kind of near reversal of course the drive permitted. Then Tatsumo turned briefly to Roderick, and they exchanged a brief, knowing look before she gave her next orders: to disengage the drive again, go back to sensor confusion, and swerve back into enemy sensor range . . . while the first signals were still on their way back to the Tarakan ships. One by one, the bridge crews expressions changed as understanding dawned. They completed the maneuver . . . and tidings of another dozen battlecruisers sped toward the Tarakans. Again, they performed the maneuver. And again. And again. By the time the returns began to register on the Tarakans scopes, a phantom armada was sweeping down on them. Of course, those incoming squadrons of battlecruisers were going to concealment mode immediatelywhich was curious, for given the notoriously short-lived nature of the invisibility it conferred, most commanders preferred to withhold it until battle was almost joined. Or at least it would have seemed curious had the Tarakans possessed the leisure to calmly consider the matter. . . . "That must be one flustered admiral theyve got," Tatsumo murmured to Roderick, barely able to sustain the frowns she periodically directed at the bridge crew as she sought to forestall an incipient manic glee that escaped in occasional splutters and chortles. "I imagine so," was Rodericks measured reply. For the swarms of apparent Imperial battlecruisers were coming in from frontierwardthe one direction from which the Tarakans had known no reinforcements could reach their prey. "In fact, I imagine" "Skipper! Commodore!" The yelp came from the young lieutenant j.g. at the comm station. "Theyre starting to" "We see it, Lieutenant," Roderick said quietly as he settled back in his chair and watched the holo tank where the scarlet icons of the Tarakan units were swinging away from the battered convoy, breaking off the engagement and fleeing in the direction from which theyd come. It worked, it actually worked! The words seemed to sing in his head . . . but only for a moment, before being drowned out by the storm of cheers and applause that Tatsumo, with all the centuries of Fleet discipline behind her, could no longer contain. It is given to only a few people to be present at moments that give birth to legendsand to even fewer to realize it at the time. But every member of the bridge crew knew that HIMS Cataphract had just sailed through the gauzy curtain that separates fact from myth. And they crowded around their impossibly young commodore whod just sent an entire Tarakan battle fleet scurrying with just a dozen scout cruisers, and saved an Emperor. Tatsumo yelled into Rodericks ear to make herself heard. "They know this story will be good for free drinks for the rest of their lives!" * * * The afternoon light of Theta Persei A was streaming through the conference rooms tall windows as the Emperor entered, with Captain Liang following like an eager poodle. They all rose to their feet: Roderick, wearing the insignia of the commodores rank the Emperor had made permanent; Admiral Rahmani, who still hadnt stopped looking at Roderick with incredulous awe; Rodericks father, whod arrived with a powerful task force lest the Tarakans come back, boiling with rage at the way theyd been snookered; and all the rest of the officers around the long, gleaming-topped table. "As you were, as you were," the Emperor said, a little too heartily. He took his seat at the head of the table, with Liang hovering behind him. "We have called you together to make two important announcements. First, we are placing Admiral Brady-Schiavona in overall command of this frontier, with responsibility for this sector as well as Beta Cassiopeiae. In light of the Inner Domains manifest hostility, a unified command structure is essential to deal with the further incursions that are bound to come." Oleg paused and looked around the table in an oddly furtive way, the precise nature of which Roderick found himself unable to define. "It is in light of these inevitable future hostilities that we have reached our second decision. "After taking counsel with our advisors, we have come to accept the view that the Imperial person cannot be hazarded in what must realistically be regarded as a war zone. Indeed, even Sigma Draconis must be considered too close to this frontier. We have therefore decided, despite our private inclinations, to relocate the Imperial court to the secondary capital at Lambda Serpenti." Maybe, Roderick thought, it was something about the rooms acoustics that caused Olegs last words to seem to echo for a few seconds as they dropped into a well of stunned silence. That silence stretched until Roderick feared it would snap like an overdrawn wire. He waited, too junior in this company to speak first, hoping someone else would blurt out what had to be said. Finally, his father spoke. Ivars bass had its usual calming effect. One had to know him well to recognize the near desperation in that voice. "Sir, surely the defenses of Sigma Draconis are strong enough to insure your security. And it is the traditional capitalas well as being in an advantageous location from which to direct the defense of this frontier." "It is precisely this location that is the problem, Admiralas we have already intimated." Olegs voice held an undertone of nervous irritation. His eyes flickered in Liangs direction as though in search of support. Rodericks puzzlement deepened. "But sir," the admiral persisted, "even if Sigma Draconis is too exposed in the present circumstances, there are other alternatives besides the rather . . . drastic one you are contemplating. There are more practical choices for the Imperial seat. Old Earth, perhaps. Much has been done to restore it, and with its central location and its unique prestige as the homeworld" Liang broke in, which at any other time would have left everyone at the table thunderstruck. "Sol is still too close to the threatened frontier, Admiralas must surely be clear to anyone with His Imperial Majestys safety at heart." The admirals expression stayed rock-steady, but his eyes flashed a dangerous fire. Ordinarily, he would have squashed Liang like the insect he was. But he ignored the courtier-captain and addressed the Emperor. The desperation in his voice was now unmistakable, and so was a note of pleading Roderick had never thought to hear in that voice. "Sir . . . Your Imperial Majesty . . . I implore you to reconsider. Lambda Serpentis remoteness is such that the command-and-control problems for this entire flank of the Empire could well become insuperable." "This is why we have granted you extraordinary powers, Admiral. We have the fullest confidence in your ability to contain the Tarakansaided by your son, Commodore Brady-Schiavona." Oleg smiled in nervous self-congratulation for this transparent attempt at mollification. "At any rate, Lambda Serpentis location is the very reason we have chosen it, for security must be the paramount consideration."
Yeah, Roderick thought, seventy-odd light-years ought to be far enough from here. All at once, he realized that in trying to analyze the Emperors odd behavior hed fallen into the classic clever persons fallacy: searching for complexity where there was none. Oleg was, quite simply, a coward. It had never been apparent before, because hed never been in physical danger in his life. But now he was, and his nerves were shattered. He could think of nothing but putting as much distance as possible between his body and the Tarakans. If that meant abandoning all the Empire outside the Serpens/Bootes region, so be it. "At any rate, Admiral," he was concluding with forced briskness, "our mind is made up. And now, ladies and gentlemen, you are dismissed." He stood up with an abruptness that screamed his relief to have this over with. The officers around the table barely had time to scramble to their feet before he was gone, leaving them exchanging nervous glances and separating into muttering groups. Admiral Brady-Schiavona caught his sons eyes and gestured with his chin toward a door. Once outside the conference room, Roderick could barely keep up as his father strode down the corridor. "I doubt if many of them back there realize how bad this really is," the admiral rumbled in a low voice. "From Sigma Draconis, or even Sol, he could maintain order by his presence. But hes effectively abandoning us out here at the very moment that war is breaking out. And it hasnt been that long since we came out of warlordismfour centuries when rebels and local military commanders took matters into their own hands whenever danger threatened or advantage beckoned. Thats why we need the Emperor as a symbol . . . and hes taking that symbol away." "And dont forget where hes taking it to," Roderick said. "Its a disastrous choice, not just astrographically but also historically." The admiral came to a halt and gave a low moan, as though from physical pain. "Yes, youre right. Lambda Serpenti, the last refuge of failing dynasties. Its where the Marvell Emperors fled when the Zyungen took Earth." he shook his massive head slowly. "He usually has some sense of symbolism." "I dont think thats whats on his mind at the moment." Roderick took a deep breath. "Sir, what are we going to do now?" "Do? Well carry out our orders, of course. Were officers of His Imperial Majestynothing more and nothing less." "Of course, sir. But . . . may I suggest that we get in touch with Jason Aerenthal and ask him to join us at our headquarters? I think his counsel may be useful." The silence didnt last quite long enough to become awkward. Then the admiral spoke heavily. "Yes, I imagine youre right. See to it." Then he drew himself up and walked away, moving like a man looking for something hed lost and feared hed never see again. |
Chapter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |