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Throne of Stars

Page 25

by David Weber


  Cord wheeled around and stared out the window towards the mountains. It was a rather silly and dramatic pose, and he knew it, but he didn’t want her to see his amusement. Or the fact that . . . parts of him had just surged.

  Not the Season, he thought. Please, not that. That would be . . . bad.

  “Whatever your life and destiny before,” he said finally, solemnly, careful to keep any humor—or anything else—out of his voice, “your life and destiny now are to become an armsmaster.”

  So, as Julian would say, put that in your pipe and smoke it.

  “I know that,” Pedi said, with a gesture of resignation. “But that doesn’t mean I have to like it.”

  “Perhaps you don’t, but . . .” Cord began, only to pause, looking more intently out of the window.

  “But what?” she asked.

  “But I have a question for you.”

  “Yes?” She looked down at her outfit. “Is something wrong?”

  “I’d rather hoped you could tell me that,” Cord said, gesturing out the window. “You are from here, after all. So tell me, do the mountains often smoke?”

  It was nearly noon, yet the only light in the room came from oil lamps as the human and Mardukan staff and senior commanders trickled into the room. Pahner looked towards the window, listening to the slow, atonal chanting that echoed through the darkened streets, and shook his head.

  “I have the funny feeling that this is not a good thing,” he muttered.

  “They must have these eruptions on a fairly regular basis,” O’Casey pointed out as she flopped onto one of the pillows. She pulled a strand of hair away from her face and grimaced at the gritty ash that covered it. “At least we know now why they wear clothing here. Getting this stuff out of a Mardukan’s mucous must be an almost impossible task.”

  Roger pulled up his own cushion without even glancing behind him as the various entities who had taken to following him jockeyed for position. It usually ended up with Cord to one side, Pedi stretched in the same general direction, and Dogzard curled up on top of Pedi. But for the fact that every one of them was, in his or her own way, heavily armed, it would have been humorous.

  “I wish we had a better handle on their religion,” he said seriously, listening to the same chant. “I can’t figure out if this is a celebration or a funeral.”

  “The Krath Fire Priests consider this a dark omen of their gods,” Pedi said. “Many Servants will be ingathered.”

  “More slave raids, then,” Pahner said.

  “Yes. And a great gathering.” The Shin made a gesture of absolute disgust. “The Fire-loving bastards.”

  “T’e merchants have clam up,” Poertena said. “Even t’e stuff we already contract for not getting delivered.”

  “How are we fixed?” Kosutic asked. “Can we hang on until things clear up, or do we need to talk to the Powers That Be?”

  “We got ten days or so supply,” the Pinopan said without consulting any of his data devices. “And more on t’e ship. But if we have to cut out, we gots problem.”

  “We may be able to avoid that,” O’Casey said. “I think that something’s broken free in the council. Maybe it has something to do with the eruption—I don’t know.” She shrugged. “Whatever it is, we’ve received a message from the High Priest indicating that he’s willing to meet with Roger under the conditions we prescribed. That is, that Roger will not have to recognize the High Priest’s sovereignty.”

  “I thought the council was more or less in control,” Pahner said. “If that’s true, what’s the point of meeting with the High priest?”

  “The council is in day-to-day control,” O’Casey admitted. “But if the High Priest pronounces that we’re free to travel, the council will have to accede to that.”

  “When is this thing?” Fain asked. “And who’s going to accompany Roger?”

  “Me, for one, obviously,” O’Casey said with a faint smile. “After that, the guest list will be up to Captain Pahner. Who, I trust, will pack it with suitably lethal individuals.”

  “Kosutic in charge,” Pahner said. “Despreaux and a fire team from her squad. Turn in your smoke poles and draw bead rifles. We’ve got enough ammo left for almost a full unit of fire for your team, and some of these people may recognize Imperial weapons when they see them. If they do, I want them to know we cared enough to send the very best. Fain, one squad from your infantry and one squad of cavalry. You, Rastar, and Honal stay back, though.”

  “I’ll send Chim Pri,” Rastar said. “It will get him off the boats.”

  “Where is this going to take place, Eleanora?” Kosutic asked.

  “At the High Temple. That’s the one all the way up at the crest of the ridge.”

  “I wish we knew whether or not this is a good sign,” Roger said.

  “I think it’s a good one,” O’Casey told him. “If there hadn’t been some movement on their front, it wouldn’t make sense to arrange a meeting with the High Priest.”

  “We’ll see,” Pahner said. “It could also be because they have such bad news to give us that the High Priest is the only appropriate spokesman to break it to us, you know. Rastar, how are the civan?”

  “They don’t like the ash,” the Prince of Therdan said. “Neither do I, for that matter, and their hides are a lot more resistant to it than my slime is! Other than that, they’re fine. They’ve recovered from their sea voyage, at least, and we’re getting them back into training.”

  “Okay.” Pahner nodded. “I don’t know how this meeting is going to work out, but we’re getting to the end of the time we can afford to spend here. I want everyone to quietly and not too obviously get ready to move out on a moment’s notice. We’ll have an inspection and get everything packaged for that. Eleanora, when is this meeting?”

  “Tomorrow, just after the dawn service.”

  “Right. We’ll schedule the inspection for the same time.”

  “Does all this martial ardor indicate that you think I’m going to have problems at the meeting?” Roger asked, unconsciously tapping the butt of one of his pistols.

  “I hope not,” Pahner said. “I’ll go further—if I thought you were going to, I wouldn’t let you go. Period. We haven’t gotten this far taking things for granted, but I don’t expect this to be the sort of problem you’ll need a pistol for. Nobody’s going to call a visiting Imperial nobleman and his bodyguards together with the High Priest of the entire satrap for a shooting match, at any rate.”

  “Nah,” O’Casey agreed with a smile. “Heads of state are too valuable to use for targets or get caught in cross fires. That’s what lower-level functionaries are for.”

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  The large meeting room was near the highest point of the entire High Temple complex, with a single broad balcony at one end that looked down and out over the city. A marginal amount of illumination came from there, but not much. The city was still shrouded in the darkness and ash from the ongoing, low-level eruption. The room was long and low (by Mardukan standards), stretching back in a series of low arches into absolute blackness, punctuated by dim lamps that barely penetrated the gloom.

  The prince had forgone his helmet in the interests of diplomacy, and his hair—unbound due to the formal nature of the meeting—spilled down his back in a golden wave. In deference to his image, and the fact that the meeting, however formal, had been arranged suddenly and with no specific agenda, he wore his bead pistol and had his sword slung over his back. Formal was all well and good, but on Marduk, paranoia was a survival trait.

  Roger’s eyes had benefitted from as much genetic tinkering as the rest of him and managed to compensate for the dimness of the illumination as he entered the meeting chamber. He could pick out the guards, arrayed in two groups along the walls, almost as well as his Marine bodyguards with their helmet low-light systems. And he could also see the High Priest, standing and waiting to greet him at the far end, shrouded in shadow and flanked by Sor Teb. It seemed a fitting situation: dark places,
inhabited by dark souls.

  Roger stopped a measured ten paces from the priest and bowed. It had been determined that a certain amount of kowtowing was permissible, but the dose had to be properly balanced. Yes, he was a prince of a star-spanning empire. But the High Priest—they hoped—knew him only as “Baron Chang.” And there was also the minor fact that he was fundamentally lacking in heavy backup.

  The prelate, an extremely elderly Mardukan, certainly looked frail enough to justify the rumors of his impending demise. He beckoned his visitors forward, and Roger took a few more steps, followed by his own guards.

  Ever since Marshad, whose ruler had taken advantage of a relatively small guard force to take the prince “captive,” the rule of thumb had been that Roger never went anywhere “threatening” with less than a dozen guards.

  As the humans had become fewer and fewer in number, with more and more missions to perform, the native Mardukans had assumed a steadily growing degree of responsibility for guarding his safety. Thus, more than half the guard force detailed for this meeting consisted of Mardukan cavalry and infantry. The block of guards following the prince was a mixture of bead rifle-toting humans, breechloader-toting Diasprans, revolver-toting Vashin, the sumei-swathed Pedi, and the still mostly naked Cord and his immense spear. It made for a motley but dangerous crew.

  Roger stopped and bowed again, making a two-armed gesture that corresponded more or less to the local one for respectful greeting.

  “I am pleased to meet you, Your Voice. I am Seran Chang, Baron of Washinghome, of the Empire of Man, at your service.”

  “I greet you, Baron Chang,” the priest responded in an age-quavery voice. “May the God favor you. I speak as His Voice. It is time to speak of many things that have been long avoided.” The Mardukan stepped backward, with Sor Teb supporting him, and settled onto a low stool. “Many things.”

  “Such matters are generally discussed at a lower level, first,” Roger observed with a frown. “Unless you refer to our petition to travel upriver?”

  “Travel is for others to discuss,” the High Priest said with a cough. “I speak of the needs of the God. The God is angry. He sends His Darkness upon us. He has spoken, and must be answered. Too long have the humans avoided Service to the Fire Lord. It is of this we must speak. I speak as His Voice.”

  Roger tilted his head to the side and frowned again.

  “Am I to understand that you are requiring a ‘Servant of God’ from among the humans of our party before we will be permitted to leave?”

  “That is not our requirement,” Sor Teb answered for the High Priest with what, in a human, would have been an oily smile. “It is the God’s.”

  “Pardon me,” Roger said, then turned to the side. “Huddle time, people.”

  His senior advisers closed in, and he looked at the cloth-swathed Pedi Karuse, who was practically jumping up and down.

  “In a minute, Pedi. I know you don’t think this is a good idea. Eleanora?”

  “We don’t know the parameters of being a Servant of God,” she said simply. “I’ve tried to get some idea of the duties, but the locals are very reticent about it, and talking to Pedi has been circular. The duties are ‘to Serve the God.’ I don’t know if that means as a glorified altar boy, as a drudge scrubbing stone floors, or what. You don’t see any of the Servants in public at all, so I have no idea where they all go, much less what they all do.”

  “So you’re saying that we might actually go for this?” Kosutic hissed. “I don’t think that’s a good idea. Not at all.”

  “Look,” O’Casey said sharply, “if being a servant means participating in some harmless rituals, and the alternative is trying to fight our way out of the city, which would you rather do?”

  Kosutic glanced over at Pedi and shook her head.

  “People don’t fight like wildcats to avoid some ‘harmless rituals.’ So far, she hasn’t said anything about cleaning. And I don’t like any religion that doesn’t perform its rituals out in the open. Call me old-fashioned, but the only decent place for a ritual is the open air. Anything else smacks of—”

  “—Christianity?” O’Casey asked with an arched eyebrow. “We can probably get some concessions on the nature of their duties. Then, after we retake the spaceport, we’ll come back and negotiate some more. With some real firepower behind us.”

  Despite the tension of the moment, Roger almost smiled. His chief of staff might not have become quite as bloodthirsty as Despreaux thought he was becoming, but she certainly had become a convert to the notion of peace through superior firepower.

  “You’re saying that whether or not we should agree depends on the duties, then?” he asked her after a moment, and cocked an eyebrow of his own at Kosutic.

  “Okay, okay,” the sergeant major said. “If they’re treated well, we could leave a volunteer behind. Somebody will be willing.”

  “I will,” Despreaux said. “If it’s ringing some bells and pouring some water versus fighting our way out of the city, well, just hand me the goddamned bells!”

  “You’re not under consideration,” Roger said crisply.

  “Why not?” Despreaux asked angrily. “Because I’m a guuuurl?”

  “No.” Roger’s tone was curt. “Because you’re my fiancée. And because everybody knows you are, and that puts you in a special category. Get over it.”

  “He’s right,” Kosutic said before Despreaux could swell with outrage. “And you do need to get over it, Sergeant Despreaux. Technically, we should be guarding you. If we were back on Earth, you’d have a ring around you twenty-four/seven. Since we don’t have the manpower, you don’t. But you are not ‘just another troop’ anymore.” The sergeant major shook her head. “Probably me or Gunny Lai would be the best choice—both ‘guuuurls,’ you might note.”

  Roger chuckled at Despreaux’s expression, then again, harder, as he looked at the group around him. Of the humans, better than half of his guards and advisers were females.

  “I hadn’t noticed until just now, but this does seem to be an episode of Warrior Amazons of Marduk.”

  “Smile when you say that, Your Highness,” Despreaux said. But at least she smiled when she said it.

  “I am smiling,” Roger replied, making a face. “Okay, if the duties aren’t too onerous—and we’ll determine what ‘onerous’ means—we’ll agree on the condition that the rest of us are given free passage to the spaceport.”

  “Agreed,” Eleanora said, and Roger looked over at Pedi, who was still making surreptitious negative gestures under her sumei.

  “Okay, why not?”

  “Not Servant,” she whispered in broken Imperial. “Bad, bad. Not Servants.”

  “And what if duties okay?” Roger asked in Krath.

  “Duty of Servant is to Serve,” the Shin whispered back. “Is no other duty.”

  “And what’s so bad about that?” Roger asked quietly.

  “What?!” The Shin’s voice came out in a squeak as she tried not to scream the question. “Duty is to be of Service! How much worse could it be? To be of Service and to Serve! What you want, to Serve twice?”

  Roger glanced over at O’Casey and Kosutic, both of whom looked suddenly very thoughtful.

  “We’re missing something,” he said.

  “Agreed,” Kosutic said. “I mean, she’s sliming, and this is a ‘guuuurl’ who killed two armed guards with her bare hands. While chained to the deck.” She shook her head. “Could the translation be bad?”

  “This is the only language group for which we actually had a comprehensive kernel when we landed,” O’Casey said thoughtfully. “It’s possible that the kernel has a bias built in. I’m not sure what to do about that, though.”

  Roger considered the translation program for a moment. Throughout the trip, the burden of translation of new dialects had fallen upon him and Eleanora due to their superior implants. To aid in that, he’d read most of the manual for the software, but that had been a long time ago. There was a section on poor
translations related to initial impressions and inaccurate kernels, but at the moment he couldn’t find it on the help menu.

  “The only thing I can think of to do is to dump the kernel,” Roger said. “Dump the whole translation scheme, and start fresh.”

  “We need time to do that,” O’Casey objected.

  “Agreed,” the prince replied, and turned back to the local leaders. They were showing signs of impatience, and he smiled much more calmly than he felt.

  “We need to discuss this with the other members of our party, and we seem to be having a problem with our translation system. Could we perhaps call a recess, and resume the discussion tomorrow?”

  “It is with regret that I must decline that suggestion,” Sor Teb replied. “The God speaks to us now. He sends His darkness upon His people now. Now is when we must gather our Servant, and you are the leader, the decision maker, of your people. If you would prefer that the Servant come from one of your lesser minions at your headquarters rather than from those here with you, we can send a runner. But the decision must be made now.”

  “Pardon me for a moment longer, then,” Roger said slowly, and turned back to the others.

  “Oh, shit,” Despreaux said quietly.

  “Did he just say what I think he said?” Cord asked.

  “So much for ‘minor functionaries,’” Kosutic said with a snort. “Marshad time.”

  “Stop talking,” Roger said, pointing a finger directly at Pedi. As soon as she froze, he sent a command to his toot, “dumping” the entire Krath language and everything they had determined of Shin. Then he locked out the “kernel” that had come with the system, as well. It was now as if he had never heard of Shin or Krath, and any biases would be erased, as long as he concentrated on ignoring them. He also locked out the low-level interplay between the systems, so that his own would not be corrupted by the Marines’ and O’Casey’s. Taking a guess, based upon O’Casey’s idea of a migratory connection between the Shin and Cord’s people, he loaded the language of “the People” as a potential kernel.

 

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