“We’ll have to keep a very close eye on them,” Staenbridge said thoughtfully.
Raj tapped his chin with one thumb. “Constant patrols,” he agreed. “I don’t think they’ll want to wear down their dogs with skirmishing, hungry as they are.”
The carnivore grins widened. Gruder began to laugh; after a moment, the others joined in.
Center drew a graph across Raj’s vision, of consumption balanced against maximum possible reserves. At the back of his consciousness there was a trace of feeling, a satisfaction colder and more complete than a human mind could feel.
“Hold your fire!” Raj snapped.
He blinked into the setting sun; four days in the saddle had left his eyes red-rimmed and sore, the Drangosh Valley was hell for dust. He wiped his sleeve across his face and brought up his binoculars. Around him on the hillock the platoon of the 5th lowered their rifles, and the crew of the splatgun looked up from their weapon. Horace stood under the shade of the carob tree and panted, washcloth-sized tongue hanging down, and drooping ears almost covering his eyes.
“Easy target, ser,” the gunner said, hopefully.
Raj raised his binoculars. The main Colonial army was several kilometers away; this encampment was notably more ragged than the last. Hardly an encampment at all, with no baggage train; the animals had all been eaten, to judge from the cracked bones left in their campfires. Most of their cavalry were walking and leading their dogs behind them. Some were carrying the saddles as well.
It was the patrol riding towards his men on the hilltop that interested him now. There were two banners at its head, hanging limp in the hot still air. He waited patiently; a gust of breeze flapped them out. One was pure white; the other, black with a Seal of Solomon in red.
“Tewfik,” Raj whispered. The sweat down his spine turned clammy.
“Ensign,” he said. “We’re staying for a moment; they’re coming under a truce flag. Get something white and wave it on a stick. Water the dogs, but keep a careful look-out. And have someone set out a blanket, with a piece of hard-tack and some salt.”
They were out of extreme field gun range of the Colonial camp, but you never knew.
“Sir,” the Ensign said, relaying the orders.
A detail trotted downslope to the well in the courtyard of a burned-out steading. A trooper unstrapped the rolled blanket from behind his saddle, spread it on the scraggly twistgrass beneath the carob tree, and set out a canteen, two cups and a piece of Colonial flat biscuit with a small twist of gray salt on it.
The men were looking at Raj curiously. “What does it mean, sir?” the young officer asked.
“I think,” Raj said slowly, “it means the war is over. Escort our guest to me.”
Raj saw Tewfik’s eye widen in surprise as he recognized the Civil Government commander. The Colonial was much as Raj remembered him from the parley just before the first battle of Sandoral five years ago, perhaps a little grayer. Looking a little gaunt from five days on quarter-rations, but still stocky and strong. Like a scarred bull in a pasture, confronting a younger rival and twitching his horns. Raj knew that Tewfik would be seeing far greater changes in him.
“Salaam aleikoum,” the Arab said, bowing slightly.
“Aleikoum es-salaam,” Raj replied in accentless Arabic. Center had given him that, and practice made it come smoothly. “And upon you, peace, Tewfik ibn’Jamal.”
“Shall it be peace, then?”
“If the Spirit wills. Come, let us talk.”
Raj gestured, and the troopers retreated down the slope, out of immediate earshot and with their backs to the supreme commanders. The two men walked into the shade of the carob. Tewfik’s eye caught the bread and salt; also the fact that they hadn’t yet been offered to him. There was wary respect on his face as he turned to face his enemy and let the saddlebags he carried over one shoulder drop to the ground.
Carefully, carefully, Raj told himself. Take no chances with this man.
indeed, Center said. A brief vision flashed before Raj’s eyes: the same meeting, but with the relative positions reversed. if my physical centrum had been located in al kebir, rather than east residence . . .
I’d be the one trying to salvage something from the wreck, Raj acknowledged.
“I will not waste words,” Tewfik said abruptly, into the growing silence. “You have won this campaign. Without even fighting a major battle. My compliments, young kaphar; it is a feat for the manuals and the historians to chew over.”
“More than the campaign,” Raj said quietly. “The war. And I would betray my ruler and my State, if I did not use this advantage to ensure the Colony is no longer a threat to the Civil Government. We have fought you every generation for nearly a thousand years; it’s irrelevant who was at fault in any given war. It must cease.”
Tewfik nodded, his face still cat-calm. “Yet it is said that Heneralissimo Whitehall fights also for the cause of civilization on Bellevue,” he said. “We of the House of Islam brought man to this world. We built its first cities. We preserved much of what learning survived the Fall, and we are the other half of civilized life on this world. Would you see our cities burn and the books with them, while the howling peoples camp in the ruins?”
Raj inclined his head. “You admit that the Colony is ruined if your army is destroyed?”
“That is as God wills; but too many of our high nobles are with us, our best commanders and the leadership needed to maintain the unity of our state. And our best troops; we left nothing but garrison forces on the frontiers. If they do not return, there will be civil war—fourscore separate civil wars; instead of one Settler, we will have a hundred malik al’taifas, petty kings ruling factions. They will not be able to maintain the irrigation canals, nor guard the frontiers against the Skinners and the Zanj.”
“Or us,” Raj pointed out.
Tewfik shook his head. “Conquering a hundred splinter realms would be impossible. You would have to garrison them heavily and there would be constant revolt; our people will not tolerate direct rule by unbelievers, not without such punishment as would destroy what you tried to govern.”
“What do you propose?”
The Arab nobleman took a deep breath. “I cannot rule,” he said, touching his eye. “And Ali . . . he is my brother, but he is a disaster for all Muslims. One way or another, sooner or later, he would have ruined the Colony. Already he has killed many of our best men—and anyone else who was there at the wrong time.
“What I propose is this: half our army to be disarmed and sent to East Residence. I suggest that you use them to garrison the Southern and Western Territories; there they will be hostages against the Colony’s good behavior. I will take the other half back with me to Al Kebir, and there rule as Vice-Governor in Barholm Clerett’s name. My daughter Chaba will go to East Residence and wed Governor Barholm.”
He shrugged, and for the first time smiled slightly. “I have no sons, and I fear I have been too indulgent with her—even allowing her to be taught to read. Perhaps it will be better for her thus.”
Well, Raj thought, slightly dazed. That’s emphatic enough. Center’s sensor-grid came down over Tewfik’s face, tracing blood flow, temperature, pupil-dilation.
subject tewfik is sincere, the computer-angel said. probability 82%±7.
Raj was slightly startled. Usually the percentage was much higher, one way or another.
subject tewfik has an unusual degree of control over autonomic body functions. in your vernacular, a poker face.
“A moment,” Raj said.
He turned and looked out over the dusty plain of the Drangosh. Then he turned back.
“That sounds acceptable, in outline,” he said. “We’ll have to settle a few details. Release of all Civil Government prisoners in the Colony, for instance; and an annual tribute sufficient to pay the twenty-five thousand men you’ll be giving us. Customs, tariffs, that sort of thing the bureaucrats can settle.”
Tewfik nodded, hesitated, then stroked his beard.
“My offer, of course, would apply to any other Governor as well,” he hinted. “From all reports, Governor Barholm is somewhat preferable to my brother Ali . . . but that is not a strong recommendation.”
Meaning, take the Chair yourself and rule the world, Raj thought.
interpretation of subtext correct, probability 98%±1, Center clarified.
“How do I know this isn’t a ploy to save Ali and half your army?” Raj said. “You could be planning to write the other half off. It’d still be a larger force than I have in the field, and campaigning down to the Drangosh delta would be a nightmare, particularly with this area too devastated to use as a base.”
Tewfik smiled grimly and opened the saddlebag he’d brought. His curly-toed boot hooked it over to lie at Raj’s feet. A head rolled out; fairly fresh, although the flies were already crawling around the hacked stump of the neck and the staring eyes. Raj did not need the ruby-clasped turban that rolled from the shaven skull to identify it.
“That for Ali,” Tewfik said, and kicked the head to one side. “I should have done that years ago.”
Raj raised his brows slightly. I shouldn’t be surprised if he’s . . . decisive, he decided. He gestured to the blanket. They sat down across from each other cross-legged, and shared the bread and salt. Raj laid the sword between them and Tewfik touched his hand to the hilt and blade.
“There shall be peace,” Raj said. “I accept . . . in Governor Barholm’s name.”
“Wa sha’ a-l-lah,” Tewfik said, the formula full of a tired sincerity. He shrugged and spat on the head. “May God will it.”
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
“All off!”
Raj swung down off the train. The East Residence station was crowded, full of the heat and smoke and steam of a busy summer’s day. It felt humid after the Drangosh Valley; he rested his eyes on the hints of green higher up the hill and the fleecy clouds scattered across the sky. It was after 1900, near sunset, with Miniluna and Maxiluna both up, huge translucent globes hanging in a purpling sky.
“Move it, soldier!” the conductor said.
Raj smiled wryly and hopped down, ignoring the wooden steps the Central Rail slave was putting by the passenger car. He had a bandage over half his face, and he was dressed in common soldier’s clothing—as a Descotter cavalry sergeant, which was probably what he’d have been if he hadn’t been born to a noble family. The uniform brought a few cheers and careful claps on the back as he walked out through the station, a garrison bag slung over one shoulder.
That was unusual. Questions flew at him:
“Is it true Heneralissimo Whitehall cut off Ali’s head with his own hand?”
“Are they going to march the prisoners through the streets?”
He smiled lopsidedly and pointed to his bandage; somebody thrust a goatskin of wine into his hand, and a free ticket to the bullfights. He dropped both of them off at the porticoed entrance to the train station—another of Barholm’s construction projects—and plunged into the streets. They were thick with people, even though it was still normal working hours. Municipal flunkies were hanging ribbons and streamers from the standards of the gaslights, and a great cheer went up as an ox-wagon piled with huge wine casks halted at a corner.
The full treatment, he thought wryly. He nodded as the crowd began to chant his name when the wine cask was unloaded at the corner. Barholm’s not going to ignore that sort of thing. It was bad enough that he’d been popular with the troops. Having the capital city mob on his side, no matter how he’d put down the Victory riots six years ago, would be the final nail in the Governor’s coffin. I wonder if they know they’re condemning me to death? he wondered.
Probably not. They’d been very frightened, and the euphoria of relief would be all the stronger for it.
Well, at least the troops won’t have any problems getting a drink and a lay when they get in. They deserved that.
He was close enough to hear two of the men dipping their cups into the head of the broached wine cask. They wore the knee breeches, full-sleeved shirts, and leather aprons of prosperous artisans; their shoes had good pewter buckles.
“To Messer Raj and the damnation of all wogs,” one said, drinking. “Ah, not bad.”
“Looks like Barholm pulled it off again,” the other replied. “This’ll keep the Chair under his fundament until the day he dies.”
“That might be thirty years.”
“Thirty more years of Barholm. Spirit. Ah, his wine’s good, anyway, and we deserve it—our taxes paid for it. To Messer Raj, Mihwel.”
“To the Sword of the Spirit of Man—we won’t see his like again, worse luck.”
Raj ducked into the tiled entrance of a public bathhouse. Where . . .
Center strobed an indicator above one door. Not surprising that a bathhouse had a connection to the catacombs; all this section of the city was underlain by the Ancient tunnels.
“Raj!”
Thom Poplanich stirred to life in the mirrored sphere that was Center’s physical being.
He gripped his friend’s shoulders. “You did it!” His eyes noted the fresh creases, and the leathery tan of the Drangosh Valley’s sun and sand-laden wind. “You did it!”
Raj returned the embrahzo.
“I did my duty,” he said quietly. He shook his head, as if the magnitude of it was only now striking him. “I’ve reunited Earth—”
bellevue.
“—Bellevue under Holy Federation and the Spirit of Man of the Stars.”
“The Fall is over,” Thom whispered, awed. “After a thousand years, it’s over.”
the next cycle has begun, Center clarified. this is only a beginning, but the direction of maximum probability has been reversed. there is no longer a strong drive to maximum entropy here on bellevue; and from bellevue, the human universe may be reclaimed in time. fifteen thousand years of barbarism have been reduced to a maximum of another five centuries. beyond that, stochastic analysis is no longer adequate. my projections indicate that human capacities will have increased beyond my ability to analyze.
Raj laughed and ran a hand through his gray-shot curls. “I feel like a man who’s been running down stairs and didn’t notice that the staircase ended,” he said. “The troops and the Colonials are on their way back; it’ll take a while, but the first trains should arrive in hours. I came to say goodbye, before . . .”
Thom’s smile died. “Before what?” he asked sharply.
Raj looked up in surprise at the tone of command in the other man’s voice. “Before I report to the Governor,” he said.
“Who no longer needs you. Who fears you,” Thom said.
Raj shrugged. “I’ve done my duty to the Spirit of Man. I’m not going to flinch at the end. Barholm can’t kill me deader than a Colonial bullet or a Brigadero’s broadsword might have. It’s not a safe profession, soldiering.”
Thom turned, a terrible anger on his face. “There’s no need for that! There’s no need for that now—and even if there was, a ruler who treats a faithful servant that way doesn’t deserve to rule, doesn’t deserve to exist. Hasn’t he done enough? More than any other man could have done?”
The shout rang in the strait confines of the sphere, then sank away as if the material had changed to absorb it.
raj whitehall has one further duty to the plan.
Raj put a comforting hand on Thom’s shoulder. “I know. I said I was willing to die.”
not that.
Both men started.
for six years, i have been training your friend here to rule as i trained you to fight. now it is time to put him on the throne of the reunited planet. you should find that easy, in comparison to the things you have already accomplished in my service.
The mirrored sphere flashed and vanished. They were disembodied viewpoints watching a huge crowd surge through the gardens of the Gubernatorial Palace, crying out and eddying around the iron order of the troops who guarded it. Raj recognized the shoulder-flashes of the 5th Descott and the Rogor Slashers, o
f Cruisers and Brigaderos units . . . and Colonials, still in their crimson djellabas but carrying Armory rifles.
The great ebony doors with their hammered silver Starbursts swung open. Barholm Clerett came through; bandaged and bruised, his hands bound before him. Gerrin Staenbridge walked beside him with drawn pistol, Bartin Foley on the other side, and a file of Descotters with fixed bayonets on either side. They hustled the blank-faced Barholm into a closed carriage at the foot of the marble stairs. Mounted troopers of the 1st Cruisers with drawn swords fell in around it, and the driver touched the white greyhounds of the team into action. The crowd parted reluctantly; a few rocks and lumps of dogshit flew at the carriage.
“To the frying post with the tyrant Barholm!”
“Death to Barholm the tax-eater!”
“Dig up Barholm’s bones!”
The clamor might have turned to riot, but trumpeters blew a ceremonial fanfare from the balcony above. Tall windows swung open, and Raj Whitehall walked out and halted, his hands clasped behind his back.
Silence fell gradually, although the noise of the crowd was like distant surf or the rustling of leaves in dense forest.
Raj heard his own voice; the superb acoustics of the semicircular frontage of the Palace carried it out over the heads of the crowd.
“Citizens of Holy Federation! The tyrant Barholm is de-Chaired!”
Massed cheering broke over him like thunder, and cries hailing him governor. He raised his hand again.
“I am the Sword of the Spirit of Man, but not the Spirit’s viceregent on Earth. Citizens, I give you your Governor. Governor Poplanich, grandson of Governor Poplanich, legitimate heir to the Chair.”
In the slow, hieratic pace that the regalia imposed, Thom Poplanich paced out to stand beside his General. The sunlight blazed on metallized robes, on the Stylus and Keyboard in his hands.
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