The Patrimony

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The Patrimony Page 22

by Robert Adams


  “But what I consider — as will you — progress is seldom comprehensible to those whose lives span only fifty or sixty years and often less. Nonetheless, the population of the Confederation now includes almost sixty percent mindspeakers, and that is a hopeful sign that, someday, all our people will share the same gift.”

  In the late evening of yet another day, Milo sat with his pipe and a small goblet of fiery cordial, his nude, freshly bathed body wrapped against the chill of the night in a chamber cloak of silk and fur. His long, almost hairless, bare legs were extended before a fragrant fire of oak and applewood.

  Across the width of their chamber, warmed by a nearby brazier, sat Neeka. The woman occupied a low, padded stool, faced a mirror lit by flanking lamps, and was raptly concentrating on the meticulous brushing of her buttock-length black hair. Her own goblet of cordial sat on her dressing table, barely sipped, and the small, richly jeweled pipe she was trying to learn to smoke had been set aside to smolder out.

  Between them, a big bed, its cherrywood headboard carved with the arms of Clan Morguhn, awaited them. Milo was eagerly anticipating the warmth of feather mattress and quilted coverings, but Neeka, it soon became apparent, was thinking of other things.

  “Milo,” she asked, still brushing, “people have to have something to believe in. It was wrong for you to destroy the Church, and that destruction can only breed more and more rebellions over the years. Someday, the Ehleenee may even unite and —”

  Milo chuckled and interrupted her. “Ehleenee unite? Never! Neeka, they couldn’t even unite to face the threat of my armies conquering them, so factionalized and backstabbing were they … and they’ve not changed one whit over the years.

  “My few thousand Horseclansmen and Freefighters could never have defeated any really united Ehleen kingdom, especially if that kingdom had had the minimal support of the others, but none of them was ever completely united or even minimally supported. No sooner did I invade Kehnooryos Ehlahs from the west than that unhappy realm was invaded from south by other Ehleenee — the Karaleenoee, to be exact — from the north by Middle Kingdom types and threatened from the sea by the Ehleen pirates, plus being faced with one large and numerous smaller internal rebellions.

  “When I invaded Karaleenos, it was the same story. Karaleenoee nobles who had bones to pick with Zenos and his successors either openly allied with me or weakened his armies by refusing to contribute troops and supplies or actually rising and laying waste to his rear areas.

  “The last King of the Southwestern Ehleenee, Zastros, might easily have crushed the combined armies I had raised to oppose his advance north had not certain of his chief thoheeksee decided they’d had enough of him and his Witch Kingdom queen, slain her, turned him over to me and disbanded the army.

  “Even the people of whom you were born, the Northern Ehleenee, regularly have a civil war once or twice each century. The only Ehleenee who ever enjoyed any kind of stability for any length of time were the Islanders, those who used to be pirates. And the last king of the pirates, Alexandros, used to say that that was only because every pirate understood that total unity alone prevented the utter extirpation of them all.

  “No, little Neeka, I don’t doubt that there’ll be brief, bitter risings from time to time, but we actually have more of them amongst the recently conquered mountainfolk than amongst the Ehleenee. However, very few of them require intervention by Confederation troops, most being put down on the spot by locals.”

  “But still, Milo,” Neeka went on relentlessly, “if you’d allow those who wish to to follow the Ehleen Church openly, one bone of great contention would be removed and most of the present secret societies which often breed these rebellions would no longer have much cause for existing.”

  Milo shook his head. “Neeka, all you say may well be correct, but such a reestablished Church would require close supervision, lest it become as rotten, corrupt and powerful as its predecessor. I simply have never had the time or energy to spare for such a task … or the inclination, to be honest. I’ve lived for a millennium, and in all that time, in all the many cultures in which I’ve resided, through which I’ve moved, my experiences with organized religions have never been good, so my opinion of them is abysmal.

  “But, if long life has taught me nothing else, my dear, it is that flexibility is a true asset, so I’ll promise you this: When, in twenty or so years, you’ve learned all that you must, if you still want to see an Ehleen Church reestablished and you are willing to supervise that Church and keep its clergy at least law-abiding if not really honest — no one could keep either a politician or a priest honest anymore than they could render chicken dung into gold filigree — I shall then allow such reestablishment to take place.”

  Tossing off his cordial, he laid his pipe on the hearth and stood up. “Now let’s get to bed, woman. We ride north tomorrow, and the dawn will come soon enough. Besides, you have at least five hundred years to brush your hair.”

  Epilogue

  Dr. Sternheimer painfully flexed his arthritic joints enough to take his place at the conference table. All chitchat among the men and women already at that table had ceased immediately he entered the room at a shuffling hobble. Despite the pain of his swollen, inflamed joints, he was smiling broadly. But his smile did nothing to ease the nervous tension which crackled like electricity in the cool, humidified atmosphere of the locked, soundproofed room.

  This body, the Council of Directors, might rule the Center in theory and in name, but in actual fact there was only a single individual who had guided it — through fortune and misfortune, through victories and defeats, through good years and lean — almost from its very inception nearly a thousand years in the past That man was David Sternheimer, D.M.S., D.S., Ph.D.

  He cleared his throat, but still spoke huskily. “Doctors, for centuries we have been seeking a way to displace the mutants whose advent foiled our reconquest of the areas that were once known as Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia and Maryland. We attempted many fine, well-laid-out plans, only to find that some were not laid out well enough.

  “But in all these efforts, we were treating the symptoms — as it were — rather than attacking the disease, proper. Because of the very real and very dangerous mental abilities of the mutants in general and of their leader, Milo Moray, in particular, we feared to put a body occupied by one of us into really close proximity to the mutants.

  “However, a little more than ten years ago, a new and radical plan was broached to me. I first weighed all aspects of it with my usual thoroughness, then began its implementation. In order to do this, I was forced to sacrifice something which I — which we and the Center — have been seeking since first we became aware that such existed; I refer, of course, to a live mutant. Our agents in the north had access to a young female mutant, but I ordered that that person be prepared for a mission, rather than be brought here for experiments.”

  “Now, dammitall, David,” snapped a black-haired, blue-eyed young man, who looked about twenty years old, “you exceeded the authority we — this Council — granted you! It is of vast importance that we learn just what processes make a mutant. For only when we share their strengths and know their weaknesses can we stand up to these people with even a bare chance of defeating them and reuniting our nation. And if we don’t have a mutant or two to take apart, how can we hope to understand them?

  “I, for one, will here state that I’m damned tired of transferring my mind to a younger body every two-or threescore years. If we could have bodies that never aged, that were next to impossible to kill, as the mutants have, think of what we could accomplish.

  “I say that we void this current scheme, reclaim the mutant and bring it here.”

  All looked to Sternheimer, but he just shrugged. “Dr Seiget, even if I agreed with you, and I do not, reclamation of that particular mutant will be impossible for some years to come. It is now accepted by the chief mutant and en route to the capital of that so called Confederation. Not ev
en it knows that it is anything more than what it seems, so mental prying will not betray it. Only an intricate series of tones will awaken the memories deeply buried in its subconscious … and only I own the instrument capable of producing that series of tones.

  “You will get your experimental mutant in time, Lewis, never fear. Maybe you’ll even get more than one. And that damned Milo Moray will get his comeuppance, too! He’s been happily torturing and butchering our colleagues and agents for far too long with virtual impunity. But now, now, I’ve implanted a humanoid time bomb in his very bosom. And when I feel the time is right …”

  THE END

  About the Author

  ROBERT ADAMS lives in Seminole County. Like the characters in his books, he is partial to fencing and fancy swordplay, hunting and riding, good food and drink. And when he is not at hard work on his next science fiction novel, Robert may be found slaving over a hot forge to make a new sword or busily reconstructing a historically accurate military costume.

 

 

 


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