by Diane Duane
“Someone was watching her make the pass,” Jim said. “Tall, dark-haired woman, black robes.”
“Green eyes? Kind of a high coloration for a Romulan?” McCoy said. “Uh-oh. I think I may know that one. She must have been keeping away from me, or I would have spotted her for sure. She’s intelligence, Jim.”
“Wonderful,” Jim said. “Spock?”
The Vulcan was looking closely at the chips. “It is one of the high-density solid media,” he said, “but not the newest. I will take them up to the bridge and see what they contain.”
“I think I have a good guess,” Jim said.
“Tried them in the reader in my quarters,” McCoy said. “Both of them were gibberish.”
“They will not be for long,” Spock said. “Captain, if you will excuse me…” He headed out.
“Bones,” Jim said, trying not to sound too plaintive, “there’s a little man in my head rehearsing the percussion line for the ‘Anvil Chorus.’ Could you please…”
“Yeah, me too, just keep your tunic on.” McCoy sat down behind his desk and began rummaging through it for a particular hypospray. He glanced up. “Jim,” he said, “I’m kind of worried about Terise. Her cover was never meant to stand this kind of scrutiny.”
“It withstood enough scrutiny to allow her to be elevated to the Senate, Bones…”
“In a hurried way,” McCoy said, finding the hypo he wanted and getting up, “and with a lot of emotional overreaction going on in the upper levels of the government at that point, and the need to make a hero out of somebody, yes. But now there’s going to be time for more detailed investigation. Both back on ch’Rihan and on the ship that brought her here, which has to be crawling with intelligence operatives. Every word she says is going to be scrutinized.” He slid open one of his meds cabinets and started going through it. “And she’s here in the first place, you can bet, because someone high up in the government has decided to use her to find out what someone else high up in the government is doing during these talks. No matter what she says or does, she’s going to be in danger.”
“She’s a very intelligent young woman, if what you told us is true,” Jim said. “We’re going to have to assume that she’s capable of taking care of herself.”
“She’s more than half Rihannsu, by choice,” McCoy muttered as he came up with the vial he wanted. “I’m just hoping that’s going to be enough. She’s swimming with the sharks for real at the moment, and there’s nothing we can do to help.”
“Meanwhile,” Jim said, “Spock’ll see what he can make of what she gave you.”
“Yeah, well, what surprises me is that there should be two of those things. One I can understand. The second one is—what? An afterthought? A revision?”
“We’ll know pretty soon. Ow!”
“Sorry, I have to do this bolus. Timed release won’t help with what you drank.” McCoy reversed the hypo and gave himself a spray in the arm. “Ow! Lord, that smarts.”
“Crybaby.”
“Now sit down,” McCoy said. “Even Spock isn’t going to be able to decode those chips in five minutes.” He went over to the food slot and had it produce a pitcher of cold water and a couple of glasses. “And then tell me what that Praetor said to you…”
Chapter Eight
Eisn was just risen, and so was tr’Anierh when he heard the flitter landing outside his study and sighed. He was barely dressed and had only just had morning-draft, and here the man was already. “Who would be a Praetor of the Empire?” he muttered. “All my influence and I can’t even keep one of my peers out of my house until I’ve broken fast…”
He heard the door open, and the poor opener’s faint protest. Down the hall he could hear Urellh pounding his way, noisy as a herd of hlai. Then the study door flew open, and in Urellh came bustling, all good cheer, actually rubbing his hands together. Why does he never storm into Arhm’n’s house this way? tr’Anierh thought wearily. Or perhaps he does, and I am merely his second stop today. Oh, happy Arhm’n, to be rid of him already…
“The earliest reports have come back,” Urellh said. “Matters are going well.”
Tr’Anierh sat down again behind the desk as he watched Urellh pace up and down the room. The man was unable to sit still when he was excited; it was astonishing that he had been able to keep people from knowing what he was thinking when he was still in the Senate. Except that most of the Senators of his time were as dim as he, tr’Anierh thought. “So what have you heard?”
“In the initial meeting they glossed over the attack at 15 Trianguli,” Urellh said. “It was not without mention, of course, but they are so nervous as to the result of the negotiations that they have not put nearly as much weight on it as they might have. It goes very well indeed.”
“Was the woman there?” said tr’Anierh, moving over to the bookshelves to start putting away the volumes he had been using the night before.
“No, she had been sent off somewhere out of the way,” said Urellh, producing his first frown of the morning. “More’s the pity. But she is not far, our people there think. They have begun remote sensor sweeps to locate her ship.”
Tr’Anierh nodded. “I would not hope for too much success too quickly in that regard,” he said, “but we will see what the scans reveal. They may become incautious of her while they try to prolong the talks to see what else they can discover about our situation.”
“They will have just been given more to chew on than they will like,” Urellh said, “and their minds should be more on others’ troubles than on ours.” He looked abnormally pleased.
That by itself bothered tr’Anierh, for he had recently come into rather more information than he wanted about some of Urellh’s doings and had been puzzling over what to do with it. “Well,” he said, “that is as well. We would not want them paying too much attention to our own preparations just now.”
“They would be paying less attention still had those seven ships not been where they were not wanted,” Urellh said. But he said it with much less venom than tr’Anierh would have expected. “However, it turns out that that ill-thought-out venture has perhaps done us a favor. There were folk aboard a few of those ships who might have done us a disservice had they returned.” He was frowning now. “The less comfortable and aggressive some elements of the other power blocs in the Senate feel at the moment, the better I like it.”
Tr’Anierh took a long breath. “I have been meaning to talk to you about this,” tr’Anierh said, “and this is probably as good a time as any.” He had been thinking of how to phrase this for some days; now he threw all those ideas away as useless temporizing. “As regards those disturbances on the outworlds…”
Urellh’s frown got more threatening. “They are unimportant. A seasonal manifestation.”
“I am not so sure of that,” tr’Anierh said. “Urellh, I have seen clearly enough how intelligence has been trying to manage this business, and the tactic is not working. I was willing enough to give it a chance to produce a positive result, but it has not done so. We should not be hunting those people down. The more intelligence does so, the more foolish they look, especially when those they are hunting escape them and spread the word. And if our people in the outworlds are indeed growing dissatisfied with our rule, we should be working to find out why, and to put the problem right.”
Urellh looked at him as if he had grown another head. “What should be done,” he said, “is what is being done. They are being told what we require of them, and how to obey. If they do not obey, the results will be predictable. That predictability is what keeps them in order—”
“It is not keeping them in order,” tr’Anierh said, turning on Urellh with a suddenness that actually made the man take a step backward. “I have other sources of news than those you see fit to allow around you, Urellh. A thousand dead on Jullheh three days ago in the rioting; the government buildings set alight on Saulnrih, and half the state’s spacecraft there destroyed or stolen in a night. This is a new definition o
f order! The men and women in those seven ships had friends, and now they are stirring up others on their behalf.”
Urellh glared at him. “That,” he said, “is your problem to deal with, of your making, not mine. If I were of a suspicious turn of mind, I would think perhaps you sent those people into harm’s way specifically to produce this result.”
Tr’Anierh’s face went hard as he took a couple of steps toward the other. “You would think hard before you made that claim as a certainty,” he said softly, “for it would be the Park for you then, for certain. I am one of the Three, Urellh, whether you like the fact or not, whether you think the number too large or not. You had best study to resign yourself more completely to that fact.” Urellh’s face closed over as if he did not care, and he held his ground, but tr’Anierh was not fooled. “And as for your earlier accusations, I have only one thing to say. What about Eilhaunn, Urellh? How was it that the Klingons happened on that world at just such a time? Apparently knowing everything about where its defenses were—and what defenses it had?”
Urellh did not even have the grace to look embarrassed. “I know well enough that one of your creatures was responsible for that. Where does that leave you now with the Elements, after such behavior toward ‘My people, whom I rule’?” There was no use trying to contain his scorn anymore. “Driven off as slaves now, sold to Klingon worlds, into lives of abuse and scorn, if lives they have at all! How have you protected them?”
“If it was not that world,” said Urellh, “it would soon enough have been another. The Klingons were coming anyway, tr’Anierh! They would have struck deeper into our spaces, and found richer prey, richer worlds, ones more important to us, had the beasts not had a bone thrown them—something to satisfy their own command, something that would not affect our own security too deeply. Now they are stripping Eilhaunn, yes, but little enough they’ll find for their pains. No industry to speak of, nothing of worth but slaves—and a long way to come for just those! That they will notice. They will think again before their next raid, for such poor payment. And they have shown their side of the board, in doing so. Now the Federation are looking their way, when once they had been concentrating wholly on us. That will cool their ale for them. No, we have lost a few lives, and gained many. And gained time, which is more precious than lives right now, for even though we seem to have acquired an early advantage in the talks, the game is still delicately balanced—”
Tr’Anierh looked at Urellh through his carefully suppressed distaste and anger and thought, The package. Where is it now? More, who does know where it is? It was something he dared not ask about directly. To show interest at all would be to show his own side of the board, and where his counters lay. “I am still not sure I care for the physical circumstances,” he said. “The Lalairu cannot be trusted not to interfere, and the Federation has begun to move much more significant assets into that area, as we know. Those six ships all by themselves—”
“Are enough to keep the Federation and the Starfleet people busy for the moment,” Urellh said lightly, having apparently regained his composure. “Too busy to see the seventh that passes, if all goes well. If it does…then all our problems will be over, quite soon.”
Tr’Anierh nodded, trying to look casual about it, trying to look as if the momentary unease had blown past him now. “Well,” he said, “then all the trouble and disruption will have been worth something after all. And once it finally happens, the outworlds will fall into line quickly enough. The traitress’s allies will be either destroyed or powerless, and the Klingons will swiftly enough learn to lie quiet lest they receive such a package themselves.”
“I thought you would see sense eventually,” Urellh said. Tr’Anierh held his face still until Urellh turned, for even now the man had no sense of his own arrogance and how transparent it was. “We have an early session today…” He was already halfway to the door.
“I know. I will be there.”
Urellh went out without closing the door, as usual. Softly tr’Anierh crossed to it, shut it, and began to walk slowly toward the windows again, looking out at the expanse of reinforced pavement, with flitters and small courier craft parked on it, that ran up against the distant wall.
He is too intent on his own vision, tr’Anierh thought, to see or allow the validity of any other. I wish he were merely mad; he might be turned from this course if he were. But he is all too sane.
Now all that remains to be seen is whether I can make Arhm’n aware of the danger, and get him to turn my way rather than Urellh’s.
And there was the other image, the image of the destruction of whole worlds. That was on his mind more or less constantly now, coming between him and his sleep and making the light of Eisn and the very greenness of the sky look uncertain in his eyes. Tr’Anierh shivered. Even the news of this thing, tr’Anierh thought, should be enough to strike fear into them. Knowing we have such a device, the Federation would not then dare move against us. We would have leisure enough to restore order in our own good time.
But one way or another…they must know about it.
Tr’Anierh looked around the comfortable room, the shelves of books, almost properly organized now, the beautiful table with its delicate inlay over which he idly brushed his fingers. He thought of what lay outside that door, these windows—people and machines and wealth, the accessories of power, hard-earned over many years, all marshaled and ready to do his bidding. All he had to do to stay where he was, to keep what was his, was keep silent.
Let matters take their course. Do nothing. Nothing would happen to him. He was, after all, one of the Three.
Yet…
Are there things worth giving up all this for? There had seemed to be, when he was younger. Was that simply a stage that he had grown out of? He would have thought so. But now old doubts and fears that tr’Anierh had not felt for years were assailing him, and, having long ago given up the discipline of struggling with them every day, he was losing this struggle now.
The inlay in the table caught his eye again as his fingers brushed it, that one long stanza from “The Song of the Sun”:
I am They; I am the light of their shining:
save by me, how shall you see and behold
Them?
How shall anything else be seen
save by the light of Their burning?
How shall the shapes of things be known
except that Truth burning give light thereto:
how shall reality be disclosed
without Them burning Themselves away?
Fused, the atom dies, yet by its dying we see,
Day by day, as the light
boils up from the depths of the starheart:
if the Elements for your sake
so burn themselves to nothing,
how much more you for each other?
How are you less than They?
He turned, looked out at the lawn. The sound of Urellh’s departing flitter had almost faded to nothing against the normal morning city sounds. Things grew very quiet, very still, as tr’Anierh looked out into the burgeoning day, at Eisn’s amber sunlight striking in sideways and casting long shadows from the trees that surrounded the compound. The shadows, to his dismay, looked more real than the light; the light looked temporary, endangered, ephemeral.
Tr’Anierh turned and headed quickly out of the room.
Aboard the Enterprise, Spock had returned to sickbay, not in a matter of minutes, but after nearly an hour. He dropped a small data solid on the desk. Jim picked it up and turned it over in his hands. “The cryptography,” Spock said, “decoded correctly, but I wished to take some extra time to be sure of the encoded signatures associated with the material.” He looked grave.
“And?” Jim said.
“They were both genuine. But the material is, to put it mildly, explosive. It comes in two different sets, as you will have gathered from the two chips. One set of data purports to be from another Federation operative on ch’Rihan, who I fear we may assume h
as come to what the doctor would doubtless describe as ‘a bad end.’”
“And just how can we assume that?” McCoy asked.
“Because I have run a syntactic and stylistic analysis on that entire set of data, Doctor,” Spock said. “Even within a single short letter or message, each unique writer has specific telltales, stylistic tendencies from sentence structure to punctuation, that can serve as a guide to the genuineness of the text as a whole. In this case, there are alterations to the operative’s text, in a style that differs quantifiably, to no less than an eighty-four percent certainty, from its main body. The immediate suggestion, to my mind at least, is that the material was taken from this operative under, shall we say, less than optimum circumstances, and altered afterward so that we should accept it as genuine. Mostly the data has to do with troop and ship movements in the parts of Romulan space closest to the Neutral Zone, and if my conjectures as to the purposes of those who altered it are correct, we are meant to believe that the Rihannsu are not preparing for any major offensive, or rather not one against us, but for a ‘police action’ against rebellious elements within the Imperium.”
“The intel people are going to want to make up their own minds about that,” Jim said.
“Yes, Captain. But I would guess that their analysis will not be very different from mine.” Spock folded his arms and leaned back. “The other set of data—” He looked at McCoy. “Doctor, I have read Lieutenant Commander Haleakala-LoBrutto’s initial report on her stay on ch’Rihan, but you have had more recent contact with her. I would appreciate your input as to whether you note stylistic changes in the content. I do not, however.”
“I’ll look at it right away, Spock. But what’s the story?”
“It is a remarkable one.” Spock’s expression, to Jim’s eye at least, got much graver. “There would seem to be some truth in the first data set’s report of rebellion among the Romulan Empire’s worlds. There is indeed such rebellion. But it is far worse than we have expected. The commander has not overstated the case in the slightest; possibly she has understated it, and the first report may have acknowledged rebellion in the first place because it has become impracticable to continue disguising or suppressing the truth. Various of the outermost worlds, which normally have a somewhat less stringent level of government imposed on them by the Senate and Praetorate—for the good reason that it is logistically more difficult to exert such control over great distances—are beginning to move to assert what on Earth once would have been called UDI…”