Authors: Chris Bunch; Allan Cole
Christ, Sten thought with a chill. If Kilgour wasn’t off on his run against Poyndex… he might have taken him along. Even Mantis killers like someone guarding their back, and Sten and Alex had been friends too long.
Count one . . count two .
And this gleaming room would have been melted-down shambles.
He looked around at the keys to the kingdom. There were four secondary boards in the room. Reporting stations, Sten theorized. Three of them showed identical readouts, the fourth was zero/zero. That would be the station Kyes or Kyes’s men had discovered, and, in the discovery, destroyed.
In the center of the room was a great circular control panel. Readouts and controls.
Sten touched nothing as he examined that carefully. Most of them were unlabeled—mat wouldn’t be necessary for one operator, the operator who’d designed the entire system. But there were enough marked so he could tell what the panel was intended for.
This was the secret of the universe. Sten felt a chill.
From here, the Eternal Emperor could turn the “power” on or off. Direct those great robot convoys to deliver the AM2 to the depot he directed. Increase the amount of AM2 for each depot. His decisions would be repeated at the three surviving relay stations.
And from here Ms commands would be transmitted out. Out toward another universe. Somewhere out there, somewhere beyond, was the discontinuity. All that was necessary was for Sten to plot the transmission coordinates of the beam from this station and send them up to Preston on the
Victory
. Simple triangulation with the beam from the mansion would locate the discontinuity.
“All right,” Sten whispered, not aware that he spoke aloud. “All right, you bastard. It’s all over now.”
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
THE ETERNAL EMPEROR storhied down the corridor to his office. The long, broad hallway bristled with guards. On one side were the Internal Security thugs. On the other, a grizzled detachment of veteran Imperial Guardsmen.
He had a pistol at his belt and he kept a ready hand on the butt as he rushed by them. His eyes swept their ranks as he moved. At the slightest hint of a threat he was braced to draw and fire.
But not a being’s eyes met his as he hurried to the relative safety of his quarters. They were all too busy watching one another. The atmosphere was so thick with suspicion, a sneeze would have set off a full-scale battle.
His chamberlain was writing by the door. “What are you doing here, Bleick?” the Emperor snarled. “I didn’t send for you.”
Bleick’s weasel eyes took on a startled cast “I was only here to report—”
The Emperor chopped in. “Search him!”
Bleick gave a bleat of fear as four guards—two IS men and two troopers—hurled him to the floor and put him through a humiliating body search. They followed this up with a thorough scanning, to make sure no assassination devices had been surgically implanted.
When they were done, Bleick scrambled to his feet. “I am so deeply sorry, Your Highness,” he whined, “if my presence gave you even the slightest cause to worry.”
“Shut up, Bleick,” the Emperor said. “My orders were clear. No one is to come near me unannounced.”
“But I thought—”
“Did I say you had permission to speak?”
“No, Your Highness.”
“That’s your problem, Bleick. You attempt to mimic the thought process. Instead of-following orders.”
The Emperor turned slightly to~4he side, so he could keep both Bleick and the corridor in view>
“All right,” he said. “As long as you’re here, you might as well tell me what you had to say.”
“It’s only about Poyndex, Your Majesty.”
“Only? Only? What the clot’s wrong with you, man? My chief of security disappears from the face of Prime World, and
you
call that only? For crying out loud, don’t you—” He broke off, disgusted. “What a load of drakh. Okay. Speak up. I’m tired of making like a target in my own damned hallway.”
“Yessir. I only came to report, sir, that I’ve just finished an exhaustive study of…” Bleick saw the Emperor was about to explode again, and dropped a few self-serving modifiers. “Uh… No one on the staff has seen him for some time, sir.
I double-checked every room log in the castle. And personally supervised the follow-up interrogation of the staff.“
“Who interrogated
youT
Again, that startled look. “Ufa… Me, sir? Why… No one, Your Majesty.”
The Emperor motioned to two of the guards. Since Poyndex’s disappearance he had ordered them paired at all times, so there was always an IS man watching an Imperial Guardsman—and vice versa.
‘Take him down to interrogation. Put the screws to him real good. I want to make sure he and Poyndex didn’t do a little deal together.“
Bleick squealed in alarm. “But, Your Majesty. I have certainly proved my loyalty over the—”
A beefy hand slapped over his mush, cutting off the rest of his nonsense, and he was hauled away.
The Emperor turned back to his door. Submitted himself to a thumb- and iris-print check. Then he tapped in the code that only he knew. The door slid open. He glanced around once more to make sure he wasn’t threatened, then drew his pistol and stepped inside.
The door hissed shut behind him. He was alone. The Emperor carefully checked the new sensors he’d had installed. A little of the tension eased. His security was intact. No one had breached his office while he’d been gone. The Emperor bolstered his weapon.
He crossed to his desk and pulled out some Scotch. He poured a glass. But before he drank, he slipped a small rodlike device from his pocket. Inserted it in the liquid. The pea light at the top of the rod beamed green.
The drink was safe.
He shuddered it down, then sagged into his chair. The Emperor was at the edge of exhaustion. He got out a syrette and pressed it against his arm. There was a slight stinging sensation, a tingling in his vein, then his heart gave a sudden jolt And he was filled with drug-induced energy.
His hand shook as he reached for the bottle to refill his glass. The Emperor grimaced. It was one of the many downsides of amphets.
Another, he realized, was paranoia. A small laugh burst from his lips. There was a slight hysterical tinge to it that annoyed him. He’d have to watch it. Be very careful. Make sure his rea-soning process was his own and not something out of a pharmacy.
On the other hand, as the man once said, even paranoiacs have enemies.
The Eternal Emperor settled back to take stock of his situation.
He had just returned from a personal tour of the interrogation rooms. His lips curled in disgust at the memory of the smells of blood, fear, puke, and body wastes. Only the loud screams of pain had given him any real sense of satisfaction. Not that he enjoyed that sort of thing. Not really. After all, that would be a symptom of madness.
The satisfaction came from seeing for himself that real effort was being put into solving the mystery of Poyndex’s disappearance. He had also stressed to his interrogators it was equally important to uncover any conspiracy connected to the disappearance.
There had been a score or more confessions already. A few might even turn out to be true.
They had played a tape of Baseeker’s hysterical babblings. She had admitted her disbelief in the Emperor’s godhood. Confessed her motivations were only from greed. And then further revealed that Poyndex had suborned her. That she was directly working for him.
There were sure to be others. He would soon learn the extent of Poyndex’s game playing.
He doubted Bleick was involved. But the Emperor was not willing to chance it. Of course, the man would be useless for any kind of position when the interrogators were through with him. He would have to find a new chamberlain. Ah, well. It was a price the Emperor was willing to pay/N
The Emperor emptied his glass. He pushed the bottle aside. He would wait before having another.
It was time to put the crisis into perspective^.
Poyndex’s disappearance posed several possibilities—all of them nasty:
1. Poyndex was dead. Slain by the enemy.
2. He’d been kidnapped.
In either case, it was possible that he had been tortured and had spilled his guts to an agent, or agents, of the rebel forces. Which meant some of the Emperor’s deepest secrets might have been revealed. Literally, considering it was Poyndex who’d su-pervised the removal of the bomb in the Emperor’s gut. And that little secret could eventually lead to Alva Sector.
3. Poyndex had suddenly decided to defect to the other side.
4. Poyndex had been in league with the Emperor’s enemies for some time, and fled because he feared his treachery was about to be uncovered.
5. If numbers three and four were true, it was likely Poyndex had co-conspirators within Arundel itself.
Internal Security certainly couldn’t be trusted. And since Poyndex had crept into so many other areas, neither could any other branch of the Imperial Service. Once again, the Emperor’s secrets were in jeopardy.
The most glaring fact—not possibility—of all was that:
6. Arundel, the most secure facility in the Empire, had been breached.
On that general topic, there was another item gnawing at him. And might not belong on the list. Although he would put it down anyway.
7.
One of his safehouses had also been violated. The Shahryar mansion
.
The full report on the incident had only just reached him. The enemy agent had obviously been supremely professional. This was one of the times any of his sanctuaries had been invaded, by a burglar or otherwise. The agent was also professional enough to escape unscathed after wiping out his security force.
However, the report had assured him the woman had been unsuccessful in getting any useful information.
But, wait! What about the code word she’d attempted to penetrate the computer?
Raschid!
How did she know that name? The Emperor’s secret persona?
Poyndex?
Possible. But, only if he had secretly joined the enemy some time before. Besides, how would Poyndex have known that name?
No. Highly unlikely. Just as it was unlikely that Poyndex was a longtime traitor. A mole. Nothing in the man’s profile fit this. He’d been running his own, complex power game, but the Emperor was just as certain now as before that Poyndex’s power yearnings were satisfied by being the most important member of the Emperor’s staff.
Could the rebels sweeten that kitty?
Not a chance, the Emperor thought. Besides, Poyndex was the type to take the cash and let the credit go. Promises for the future by a rebel force had to be the rottenest credit in town.
There was one further item that argued against betrayal by Poyndex: the planetbusting program the Emperor had ordered. One hundred and eighteen planets and all their inhabitants had been targeted for destruction.
If Poyndex was in league with rebels, those planets would have been warned and their security jumped to the nth degree.
Intelligence assured him this had not happened. All transmissions and traffic from those systems were absolutely normal.
Good.
So, Poyndex was not a traitor.
Was he willing to bet his life on it?
Yes, he was.
This line of logic also erased the possibility Poyndex had been kidnapped. Or that he had revealed anything under torture. Because, once again, the intended victims would have been warned.
Very,
very
, good!
The Emperor rewarded himself with a drink.
As he was pouring, another possibility hit him. The trembling hand shook harder, spilling Scotch. He slammed the bottle down with such force that it shattered. Scotch pooled on his desk.
He didn’t notice. Just as he didn’t notice the sliver of glass in his palm.
The Shahryar mansion!
His safehouse!
What would be the worst-case scenario if the agent’s mission had actually been successful? Even if the woman hadn’t actually penetrated the computer, what could she have learned?
There was the tightbeam transmitter. Alori&r-it-iBeant little. But there was a second clue the enemy might have uncovered. And that clue could lead to one of his AM2 relay stations.
From that point, it would be simple to get a fix on Alva Sector!
Oh, come on, he scoffed. That’s foolishness. That’s assuming an awful lot. That’s seeing a level of professionalism rare in the history of his Empire. Who could possibly have—
Another gut-wrenching thought.
Sten could have accomplished it!
Yes. By himself, or he could have planned a mission to be carried out by one of his supremely efficient comrades. Alex Kilgour, for instance. Or that Bhor woman—what was her name? His warrior lover.
Could she have been the woman at the mansion?
No. That was ridiculous.
Wasn’t it?
But…
Sten had been the very best he had ever had in his service. He had surpassed even that old warrior and spy master, Ian Mahoney. As an enemy, he had proven his deadly efficiency many times over.
Sten would have also been able to penetrate Arundel at will.
True.
But Sten was dead.
Wasn’t he?
It was insanity to believe otherwise.
Wasn’t it?
Another wrench of the gut. Bile rose. What was the proof of his death? There was no body. No witnesses.
Yes. But given the circumstances, escape had been impossible.
Hadn’t it?
He felt a sudden chill. Hackles prickling like desert thorn.
The Emperor had a sudden certainly that it had all been a sham.
Sten was alive.
The Emperor drew a long breath. What should he do about it?
For the first time in his long reign, the Eternal Emperor was unsure what he ought to do next.
BOOK FIVE
ENDGAME
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
“ALL SYSTEMS GREEN. Entry to be effected in twenty seconds…”
There is a moment that confronts every sentient being. When moral imperative collides with survival in the shadow world that lies between decision and action.