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Authors: David Weber,John Ringo

Throne of Stars (109 page)

BOOK: Throne of Stars
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“And you accepted that order?” Alexandra asked calmly.

“I’ve always served you, Your Majesty,” Catrone said, looking suddenly very old and tired. “I always will. But, yes. When Roger gave that order, I obeyed it as if it had come from the mouth of my Emperor.”

“Good,” she said. “Good. If he can command that loyalty, that service from you—from my strength and my paladin—then, yes, perhaps I have misjudged him.”

She paused, and her lips worked, trying not to smile.

“Thomas . . . ?”

“No,” he said.

“You don’t know what I was going to ask,” she pointed out.

“Yes, I do,” he said. “And the answer is: No. We never have.”

“Tempted?” she asked.

He looked up, his eyes hot, almost angry, and half-glared at her. One cheek muscle twitched, and Alexandra smiled warmly.

“I’ll take that as a yes,” she said, leaning back in her chair, and cradled her chin in one hand, index finger tapping at her cheek. “You’ve remarried, haven’t you, Tomcat?”

“Yes,” Tomcat replied warily.

“Pity.”

“What’s this about, Catrone?” Roger demanded as he strode down the corridor. “Damn it, I’m up to my eyeballs in work. We’re
all
up to our eyeballs in work.”

“She’s tracking right now,” Catrone replied. “She has something she wants to say, and when she calls, you go.”

“I’m just getting used to being treated like an adult,” Roger snapped. “I’m not happy about being treated like a child again.”

“You’re not,” Eleanora said as she joined them from a cross-corridor. Despreaux was with her, trotting to keep up with the shorter woman, and having a hell of a time doing so in court shoes.

“No, you’re not,” Roger’s fiancée echoed, hopping on one foot and falling behind as she finally gave up and ripped the shoes off. “You’re being treated like her Heir. She has something important to say.”

The shoes came off, and she carried them in one hand by their straps as she hurried to catch back up.

“It’s not just you, Roger,” Eleanora said, nodding at Despreaux in thanks. “All of your Companions, your staff, Catrone, the Prime Minister, the full Cabinet, and the leaders of the major parties in both Lords and Commons.”

“And in the throne room,” Roger growled. “It’s a pocking barn! Why the throne room?”

“I don’t know,” Julian said as he joined them, “but she called for the Imperial Regalia.”

Krindi Fain, Honal, and Doc Dobrescu followed in Julian’s wake, and Roger glanced at all four of them sourly.

“You guys, too?” he asked as they reached the doors of the throne room.

“Us, too,” Julian agreed. “But the Prime Minister and a few of the others have already been in there for over half an hour.”

“Crap,” Roger said. “Tomcat, you’re sure she’s not in la-la-land?” he asked, holding up his hand to stop the footman who’d been about to open the door.

“Hasn’t been for a day and a half,” Catrone replied. “I don’t think it’s going to stick, but . . .”

“But we’d better get whatever this is over with while it does, right?” Roger said, lowering his hand and nodding at the flunky.

“Right,” Catrone agreed as the throne room door swung open.

The throne room of the Empire of Man was a must-see on any tour of the Palace. It was a hundred meters long, and it had escaped the fighting almost completely unscathed. The soaring ceiling, with its magnificent fresco depicting the rise of Man and of the Empire, was intact, suspended sixty meters in the air by flying buttresses that seemed far too thin to support the weight. But they were ChromSten, representing the power and glory that had supported that rise.

More murals covered the walls, inlaid in precious gems. Spaceflight. Medicine. Chemistry. Trade. The arts. All that it meant to be “Man” was represented upon those walls, evoked by the finest artists humanity had produced. There was nothing abstract, nothing surreal—just the simple depiction of the works which made Man what he was.

The floor was a solid sheet of polished glassteel, clear as distilled water, impervious to wear, unblemished and unmarred by the thousands upon thousands of feet which had crossed it in the half-millennium and more of the Empire’s existence. It was two centimeters thick, that glistening floor, protecting the stone beneath. Strange, patchwork-looking stone. The stones composing that patchwork had been removed, carefully, one by one, from all of the great works of Terra. In each case, the stone which was removed had been replaced with one which matched it perfectly, and each of those irregular, varicolored stones—each tile in the throne room’s true floor—was labeled and identified. The Parthenon. The Colosseum. The Forbidden City. Machu Piccu. Temples and theaters and cathedrals. Stones from the pyramids of Cheops and of the Mayans. Stones from the Inca, and from the great works of Africa. Stones from the walls where aboriginal peoples had worshiped their ancestors. Stones from the Great Wall, carrying with them, perhaps, the tortured souls of the millions who had died to build it. Thousands of stones, all of them bringing the souls who had worshiped at them and built them alive in this one place, the center of it all.

The Throne of Man itself was placed upon a dais formed by the ChromSten-armored hatch cover from a missile tube. That hatch cover came from
Freedom’s Fury
, the renamed cruiser from whose command deck Miranda I, the first Empress of Man, had led the battle to throw the Dagger Lords off Old Earth and reestablish functioning and growing civilization in the galaxy. Fourteen steps led up to the throne, each of precious metals or gems. But the sere, scarred ChromSten of the ship outshone them all.

The Throne itself was even simpler, only an old, battered, antique command chair from the same ship. Over the years, it had been necessary to rebuild it more than once. But each master craftsman chosen for the task had taken meticulous care to reproduce exactly the same scarring, the same scorching, as the one Miranda the First, Miranda the Great, had sat upon through those awful battles. And it did have those scars, those burns. Right down to the clumsily carved initials, “AS,” which had been cut into the side of the chair even before Miranda MacClintock and her followers cut their way to the flight deck of what had been a Dagger Lord ship to turn it against its erstwhile owners.

Alexandra VII, the seventeenth MacClintock in direct succession from Miranda I to sit upon that chair, sat upon it now. Roger saw her in the distance as they entered the room—a regal, distant figure, much like the mother he remembered of old. The Imperial Crown glittered upon her head, and she wore a long train of purple-trimmed, snow-white ice-tiger fur, and held the Scepter in one gloved hand. There were others present, dozens of them, although they seemed lost and lonely in the throne room’s vastness, and Roger slowed his pace.

He walked forward, and his staff spread out to either side. Despreaux walked at his right, holding her hated shoes in her hand and fidgeting with them. Then came Julian, tugging on the civilian suit he was just learning to wear. And Honal, wearing the combat suit of a stingship pilot.

Eleanora O’Casey walked to his left, calm and dignified, more accustomed to this room than even Roger. Then Doc Dobrescu, uncomfortable in formal clothes. Krindi Fain, still in his leather harness and kilt. And directly behind him was D’Nal Cord—slave, mentor, bodyguard, friend—and Pedi Karuse.

Thomas Catrone walked behind the two Mardukans, but Roger sensed still others behind him. D’estres and Gronningen. Dokkum, Pentzikis and Bosum. Captain Krasnitsky, of the
DeGlopper
, who’d blown up his own ship to take the second cruiser with him. Ima Hooker, and even Ensign Guha,
DeGlopper
’s unwitting toombie saboteur. Kane and Sawato. Rastar, waving a sword as his
civan
cat-walked to the side. The list went on and on, but most especially, he felt a friendly, fatherly hand on his shoulder. The sensation was so strong he actually looked to the side, and for a moment, with something other than his eyes, he saw Armand Pahner’s face, calm and sober, ready to face any challenge for his Prince and his Empire. And beside Pahner, Kostas Matsugae stood looking on, wondering whether Roger was well-dressed enough for a formal audience, and tut-tutting over Despreaux’s shoes.

He reached the first balk line, where a subject stopped and knelt to the Empress, and kept walking, pressed by an urgency in his mind, pushed forward by his ghosts. He passed the second line, and the third. The fourth. Until he reached the fifth and last, where his staff spread out on either hand behind him. And then, at last, he dropped to both knees and bowed his head.

“Your Majesty,” he said. “You summoned; I am come.”

Alexandra looked down at the top of his bowed head, then looked at the companions who had followed him into her presence. She paused in her perusal at sight of Despreaux’s shoes and smiled, faintly, as if in complete understanding. Then she nodded.

“We are Alexandra Harriet Katryn Griselda Tian MacClintock, eighth Empress of Man, eighteenth of Our House to hold the Crown. We have at times, lately, been unwell. Our judgment has been severely affected. But in this place, at this time We are who We are. At any time, this may change, but at this moment We are in Our right mind, as so attested by attending physicians and as proven in conversation with Our Prime Minister and other ministers, here gathered.”

She paused, and looked around the throne room—not simply at Roger and his companions, but at all the others assembled there and nodded slightly.

“There have been eighteen Emperors and Empresses, stretching back to Miranda the First. Some of us have died in battle, as have our sons and daughters.” She paused sadly as she remembered her own children and grandchildren. “Some of us have died young, some old. Some of us have died in our beds—”

“And some in other beds,” Julian muttered under his breath.

“—and some in accidents. But
all
of us have died, metaphorically, right here,” she said, thumping her left hand on the armrest of the ancient command chair. “No MacClintock Emperor or Empress has ever abdicated.” She paused, her jaw flexing angrily, and looked again at Roger’s bowed head.

“Until now.”

She yanked the heavy train out of her attendants’ hands and stood, wrapping it around her left arm until she had some capability of independent movement. Then she walked down the fourteen steps to the glassteel floor.

“Roger,” she snapped, “get your butt over here.”

Roger looked up, his face hard, and one muscle twitched in his cheek. But he stood at her command and walked to the base of the stairs.

“A coronation would take weeks to arrange,” Alexandra said, looking him in the eye, her face as hard as his. “And we don’t have the time, do we?”

“No,” Roger said coldly. He’d wanted to have a conversation with his mother when he returned. This wasn’t it.

“Fine,” Alexandra said. “In that case, we’ll skip the ceremony. Hold out your right hand.”

Roger did, still looking her in the eye, and she slapped the Scepter into his hand, hard.

“Scepter,” she spat. “Symbol of the Armed Forces of the Empire, of which you are now Commander-in-Chief. Originally a simple device for crushing the skulls of your enemies. Use it wisely. Never crush too many skulls; by the same token, never crush too few.”

She struggled out of the heavy ice-tiger fur train and walked around to throw it over his shoulders. She was tall, for a woman, but she still had to rise on the balls of her feet to get it into place. Then she stepped back around in front of him and fastened it at his throat.

“Big heavy damned cloak,” she snapped. “I can’t remember what it’s a symbol of, but it’s going to be a pain in your imperial ass.”

Last, she removed the Crown and rammed it onto his head, hard. It had been sized to her head for the day of her own coronation, and it was far too small for Roger. It perched on top of his head like an over-small hat.

“Crown,” she said bitterly. “Originally a symbol of the helmets kings wore in battle so the enemy knew who to shoot. Pretty much the same purpose today.”

She stepped back and nodded.

“Congratulations. You’re now the Emperor. With all the authority and horrible responsibility that entails.”

Roger’s eyes stayed locked on hers, hard, angry. So much lay between them, so much pain, so much distrust. And now the steamroller of history, the responsibility which had claimed eighteen generations of their family, perched on
his
head, lay draped about
his
shoulders, weighted
his
right hand. Unwanted, feared, and yet his—the responsibility he could not renounce, to which he had given so many of his dead, and to which he must sacrifice not simply his own life, but Nimashet Despreaux’s and their children’s, as well.

“Thank you, Mother,” he said coldly.

“Wear them in good health,” Alexandra said harshly.

She stood, meeting his gaze, and then, slowly—so slowly—her face crumpled. Her lips trembled, and suddenly she threw herself into his arms and wrapped her own about him.

“Oh, God, my son, my only son,” she sobbed into his chest. “
Please
wear them in better health than I!”

Roger looked at the useless club in his hand and tossed it, overhand, to Honal, who fielded it as if it were radioactive. Then he sat down on the steps of the Throne of Man, wrapped his arms around his mother and held her in his lap, with infinite tenderness, as she sobbed out her grief and loss—the loss of her reign, of her children, of her mind—on her only child’s shoulder.

BOOK: Throne of Stars
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