Authors: David Weber,John Ringo
“About what I was thinking,” Roger agreed.
“And either way, the first
good
news we’ve had,” Ral said.
“True. But the Palace is still a fortress,” Eleanora pointed out. “The automated defenses alone could hold off a regiment.”
“Then we don’t let the automated defenses come on line,” Roger said.
“And how do we stop them?” Eleanora challenged.
“I have no idea,” Roger replied, then tapped the face of a hardcopy hologram from one of the data packets the minister had brought. “But I bet anything he does.”
“Catrone?” Kosutic said, looking over his shoulder. “Yeah. If we can get him on our side. The thing to understand is that the Palace’s defenses aren’t one layer. There are sections of the security arrangements I never knew, because I was in Bronze Battalion. You’re a senior member of Bronze, you learn the defenses Bronze needs to know. Steel knew more, Silver more than Steel. The core defenses were only authorized to Gold, and Catrone was the Gold sergeant major for over a decade. Not quite the longest run in history, but the longest in
recent
history. If anyone knows a way to penetrate the Palace, it’s Catrone.”
“Putting all your faith in one person, with whom you have no significant contact, is unwise,” Sroonday pointed out. “One does not build a successful strategy around a plan in which
everything
must go right.”
“If we can’t get Catrone’s help, we’ll find another way,” Roger said. “I don’t care how paranoid the Palace’s designers were, there’ll be a way in. And we’ll find it.”
“And your Home Fleet?” Edock asked.
“Strike fast enough, and they’ll be left with a
fait accompli,
” Roger pointed out. “They’re not going to want to escalate to the point of nuking the Palace with Mother inside, and if they don’t act immediately, we’ll have news media and reasonably honest politicians all over it before they can do anything else. Home Fleet doesn’t
have
a sizable Marine contingent, and there’s a reason for that. They
could
nuke the Palace—assuming they could get through the surface-to-space defenses—but I’d be interested to see the reactions among the officers who heard the order. And that assumes we can’t checkmate them, somehow.”
“Take out Greenberg, for starters,” Julian said. “And Gianetto. We’ll have to get control of the Defense Headquarters, anyway.”
“And a base?” the Phaenur asked.
“We’ve got one,” Kosutic replied. Sroonday looked at her, and her mouth twitched in a tight grin.
“We’ve been talking about the Palace’s security systems, but security for the Imperial Family isn’t about individual structures, no matter how intimidating they may be. It’s an entire edifice, an incredibly baroque and compartmentalized infrastructure which, for all intents and purposes, was directly designed by Miranda the First.”
“With all due respect, Sergeant Major,” War Minister Edock said, “Miranda the First has been dead for five hundred and sixty of your years.”
“I realize that, Minister,” Kosutic said. “And I don’t mean to say that anything she personally designed is still part of the system. Mind you, it wouldn’t really surprise me if that were the case. Miranda MacClintock was a bloody dangerous woman to get pissed off, and the terms ‘incredibly devious’ and ‘long-term thinking’ could have been invented expressly for the way her mind worked. But what I meant was that she was the one who created the entire concept of the Empress’ Own, and established the philosophy and basic planning parameters for the Imperial Family’s security. That’s why things are so compartmentalized.”
“Compartmentalized in what sense, Sergeant Major?” Edock asked.
“The same way the Palace’s security systems are,” she said. “There are facilities—facilities outside the Palace, outside the entire normal chain of command—dedicated solely to the Imperial Family’s security. Each battalion of the Empress’s Own has its own set of secure facilities, known only to the battalion’s senior members, to be used in case of an emergency. This is the first coup attempt to even come close to success in over half a millennium, Minister. There’s a reason for that.”
“Are you saying that no one from Steel, Silver, or Gold would know about these ‘facilities,’ Eva?” Temu Jin asked. “They’re
that
secure?”
“Probably not,” she conceded. “Most of the senior members of those battalions came up the ladder, starting with Bronze. So it’s likely at least someone from the more senior outfits knows where just about everything assigned to Bronze is located. But they’re not going to be talking about it, and even if they wanted to, our toots are equipped with security protocols which would make that an . . . unpleasant experience even after we retire. Which means there’s no way anyone working for Adoula could have that information. So once we get to the Sol System, we’ll use one of the Bronze facilities.”
“I think, then, that we are as far along as we can get today,” Sroonday said sibilantly. “Fleshing out the bones we have already put in place is a matter of details best left to staff. It will take some time, a few days at least, to acquire the materials you need. A freighter and a . . . discreet crew. And a captain.”
“We have a captain,” Roger said. “I’ll get a list of the positions we’ll need filled on the freighter. An old freighter, or one that
looks
old.”
“Done,” Sroonday said, rising. “I will not be directly involved in this further. It was hard enough to find a time when I could conveniently disappear as it is. Sreeetoth will be your liaison with me, and Admiral Ral will liaise with the War Minister.”
“We thank you for your support, Minister Sroonday,” Roger said, rising in turn and bowing across the table.
“As I pointed out, it is in our mutual interest,” the Minister replied. “Alliances are always based upon mutual interest.”
“So I’ve learned,” Roger said with a thin smile.
Despreaux frowned and looked up from the list of stores she’d been accessing when the door beeped at her.
“Enter,” she said, and frowned harder when she saw that it was the sergeant major and Eleanora O’Casey.
“Girl talk time again?” she asked more than a little caustically, swinging her station chair around to face them.
“You see what we meant,” Eleanora said bluntly, without preamble, as she sat down in one of the room’s float chairs and moved it closer to the desk. “I noticed you were really quiet in the meeting, Nimashet,” she continued.
“I didn’t have any contribution to make,” Despreaux replied uncomfortably. “I’m already in way over my pay grade.”
“Bullshit you didn’t have a contribution,” Kosutic said, even more bluntly than O’Casey. “And you know just what that contribution would be.”
“Except that in this case, I halfway agree with him!” Despreaux replied angrily. “I think standing Adoula and his cronies, and everyone else associated with this plot, up against a nice, bead-pocked wall is a dandy idea!”
“And their families, too?” Eleanora asked. “Or are you going to let their relatives continue to have the positions of power their families held before the coup and also a blood feud with the Emperor? The point of courts and laws is to distance the individual from the act. If Roger has Adoula and everyone else summarily executed, everyone who disagrees with the decision will be after his scalp. And let’s not even think about how the news media would play it! If he stands them all up against a wall and has a company of Mardukans shoot them, we
will
have a civil war on our hands. And a guerrilla war, and every other kind of war you can imagine.”
“So we let them
walk
?” Despreaux demanded in exasperation. “Just like they always do? Or maybe they should get some quality time in a country-club prison, and then come out to make more minor mischief?”
“No,” Kosutic said. “We arrest them, charge them with treason, and put them in jail. Then the IBI gathers the evidence, the courts do their work, and the guilty get quietly put to death. No passion. No fury. Calmly, efficiently, legally, and
justly
.”
“And you think they won’t walk with a passel of high-priced Imperial City lawyers?” Despreaux half-sneered. “With as much money as they have to throw at the problem?”
“Roger . . . didn’t see all the data Sroonday had,” Eleanora said uncomfortably. “With the things the Empress will have to say about . . . what’s going on, I’d be very surprised if anyone were
willing
to be their lawyer, no matter what the fee. The difficulty will be keeping Adoula and New Madrid from being torn limb from limb.”
“And just what,” Despreaux asked carefully, “didn’t Roger see?”
“I think that, for now, that will be kept to the Sergeant Major and myself,” Eleanora said sternly. “You just focus on how to keep Roger from turning into another Dagger Lord. When he finds out, I think you’ll have all you can handle keeping him from gutting New Madrid on the Palace steps.”
“Welcome, Your Highness, to my home,” Sreeetoth said, bowing to the prince as Roger stepped through the door.
“It’s beautiful,” Despreaux said in a hushed voice.
The home was a large plant—not exactly a tree, but more of a very
large
root. The top of the root-bole towered nearly twenty meters in the air and covered a roughly oval base which measured about thirty meters in its long dimension. Narrow branches clothed in long, fernlike purple leaves extended from the tops and sides, and the brown and gray moss which covered the surface of the root itself formed intricate patterns, something like a Celtic brooch.
It was placed against the slope of a low hill in a forest. Apparently, it had been positioned directly in the path of what had been a waterfall, for water moved among the twisting branches of the root, pouring out of the front of the “house” in a thousand small brightly sparkling streams. The interior, however, was snug and dry. There were some human chairs, but scattered around the main room were pillows and rugs made of some sort of deep-pile fabric.
“I was fortunate to acquire it while I was still a young officer,” Sreeetoth said. “It is nearly two hundred of your years old. It takes only a decade or so for a
po’al
root to grow to maximum size, but they . . . improve with age. And this one is remarkably well-placed. May I offer drinks? I have human tea and coffee, beer, wine, and spirits.”
“I’ll take a glass of wine,” Roger said, and Despreaux nodded in agreement.
“Thank you for joining me,” the Phaenur said, reclining on one of the pillows, then widened its eyes as Roger and Despreaux sank down on others.
“Most humans use the chairs,” it noted.
“We’ve been on Marduk for so long that chairs seem strange,” Roger said, taking a sip of the wine. It was excellent. “Very nice,” he complimented.
“A friend keeps a small winery,” Sreeetoth said, bobbing its head in one of the abrupt, lizardlike gestures of its species. “
Tool
fruit wine is a valuable, though small, export of the Alphane Alliance. Most of it,” it added dryly, “is consumed internally, however. Your health.”
“Thank you,” Roger said, raising his own glass in response.
“You are uneasy about being asked to join me in my home,” the Phaenur said, taking a sip of its own wine. “Especially when I specifically invited the young Sergeant to accompany you, and no others.”
“Yes,” Roger said, simply. “In a human, that would be a guess. In your case, it’s as plain as if I’d said it out loud, right?”
“Correct,” it replied. “The reason for my invitation is simple enough, however. Much of the success of this operation depends upon you—upon your strength and steadiness. I wanted to meet with you in a situation uncluttered by other emotions.”
“Then why not invite me to come alone?” Roger asked, tilting his head to the side.
“Because your own emotions are less cluttered when the Sergeant is near you,” the Phaenur said simply. “When she leaves your side, for even a moment, you become uneasy. Less . . . centered. If you were Phaenur, I would say she was a
tsrooto
, an anchor. It translates badly. It means . . . one part of a linked pair.”
“Oh.” Roger looked at Despreaux. “We . . . are not so linked.”
“Not in any official form or way,” Sreeetoth agreed. “But you
are
so linked. The Sergeant, too, is uneasy when away from you. Her agitation does not show on her surface, but it is there. Not the same as yours. You become . . . sharp, edgy. In some circumstances, dangerous. She becomes . . . less focused, unhappy, worried.”
“Are we here for couples counseling, then?” Despreaux asked dryly.
“No, you are here because your Prince is happier when you are around,” it replied, taking another sip of wine. “On the other hand, if this
were
a matter for counseling, I would point out to both of you that there is nothing whatsoever wrong in requiring—or being—a
tsrooto
. The fact that the Prince is calmer, more centered, in your presence does not mean that he is weak or ineffectual without you, Sergeant. It simply indicates that he is in some ways still stronger and more effective
with
you. That the two of you have much strength to give one another, that together you become still more formidable. It is a reminder that—as I believe you humans put it—the whole can be greater than the sum of its two parts, not that either of you becomes somehow weak, or diminished, in the other’s absence.
“But that is not why you are here. The Prince is here because I wanted to taste him, to know what we are wagering our trust upon. You are an odd human, Prince. Did you know that?”
“No,” Roger said. “I mean, I’m quick—probably neural enhancements I didn’t know I had—but . . .”
“I did not refer to any physical oddity,” Sreeetoth said. “I have seen the reports, of course. Your agility and physical good looks, for a human, were noted in the reports we had from before your supposed death. As was your . . . untried but clearly capable mind.
Athroo
reports, samplings of your emotions, were few, but said that you were childish, disinterested in anything but play. Now we have this . . . other Prince. Before, you were normal; now we have someone who radiates more like an Althari than a human. There is no dissembling in you, none of the constant desire to hide your purpose we find among most humans. Fear of revealing your hidden faults, that overarching miasma of guilt that humans seem to run around in all the time. For the most part, you are as clear and clean as a sword. It is refreshing, but so odd that I was told to sample it fully and make a report.”