Gerta dug her heels in and waited until the stretcher came level, then sheathed her knife and took the left front pole. The man she was relieving worked his fingers for a moment, drew his bowie and plunged forward to slash a way for his comrades. She took the left front pole, Heinrich carried both rear poles, and Elke Tirnwitz was on the right front. Johan Kloster moved farther ahead, chopping his way through the vines. Etkar Summeldorf was getting the free ride; he'd broken a leg spearing a crocodile that tried to snack on them while they forded a river yesterday.

They'd eaten a fair bit of the croc. You got nothing supplied in the team-endurance event that concluded the Test of Life. Well, almost nothing: a pair of shorts, a pair of sandals, a cloth halter if you were a girl, and a bowie knife. Then they dropped you and four teammates down a sliderope from a dirigible into the Kopenrung Mountains along the north side of the Land, and you made the best time you could to the pickup station. Nobody told you exactly where that was, either. The Chosen of the Land didn't need to have their hands held. If you couldn't make it, the Chosen didn't need you-and you had better all make it. The Chosen didn't need selfish grandstanders, either.

'Leave me,' Etkar mumbled. 'Leave me. Go.'

'We can't leave you, you stupid git,' Elke said in a voice hoarse with worry and fatigue-they were an item, and besides, Etkar had probably saved their lives at the river. 'This is a team event. We'd all drop a hundred points if we left you behind.'

They'd all saved each other's lives.

It was hot: thirty-eight degrees, at least, and steambath humid. Bad even by the Land's standards. The Kopenrungs were in the far north, nearest to the equator. That was one reason they'd never been intensively developed, that and the constant steep slopes and the lateritic soils. And the leeches, the mosquitoes, the wild boar and wild buffalo and leopards and constant thunderstorms and tornadoes.

Sweat trickled down her skin, adding to the greasy film already there and stinging in the insect bites and budding jungle sores. The rough wood pulled at her arm and abraded the calluses on her palm. Muscles in her lower back complained as she leaned back against the weight of the stretcher and the slope. Branches and leaves swatted at her face.

'Heinrich, min brueder,' Gerta said, pacing the words to the muscular effort. 'Tell me again how wonderful it is to be Chosen.'

Elke made a sharp hissing sound with her teeth. The Fourth Bureau was unlikely to be listening, but you never knew. Heinrich grunted a chuckle.

'Shays,' Johan swore. 'Shit.' There was wonder in his tone.

'What is it?' Gerta asked. She couldn't see more than a few paces through the undergrowth; this section of hillside had burned off a while ago, and the second growth was rank.

'We made it.'

'What?' in three strong young voices.

'We made it! That was the clearing we saw back on the crest!'

None of them spoke; they didn't slow down, either. Gerta managed a sweat-blurred glimpse at the mist- shrouded, jungle-covered mountains ahead. They looked precisely like the mist-shrouded, jungle-clad mountains she'd been staring at for the entire past week.

When they broke out of the cover onto the little bench-plateau they broke into a trot by sheer reflex. There were pavilions ahead, and a crowd of people-officers, officials, Protege servants. A doctor ran forward at the sight of the stretcher.

'How is he?' Elke said.

The doctor looked up and frowned. 'The leg doesn't look too bad. Now. He'd have lost it in another twenty hours.'

Proteges held out trays. Gerta grabbed at a ceramic tumbler and drank, long and carefully. It was orange juice, slightly salted. She shut her eyes for an instant of pure bliss.

A man cleared his throat. She opened her eyes and snapped to attention with the other members of her team; all but Ektar, who was out with a syringe of morphine in his arm.

The man was elderly, bald, stringy-muscular. He had colonel's pips on the shoulders of his summer-weight uniform, and a smile like Death in a good mood on his wrinkled, bony face. She was acutely conscious of the ring on the third finger of his left hand, an intertwined circlet of iron and gold. The Chosen ring.

'Gerta Hosten, Heinrich Hosten, Johan Kloster, Elke Tirnwitz, Etkar Summeldorf. The ceremony will come later, of course, but it is my honor to inform you that each of you has achieved at least the minimum necessary score in the Test of Life. Accordingly, at the age of eighteen years and six months, you will be enrolled among the Chosen of the Land. Congratulations.'

One of the others whooped. Gerta couldn't tell which; she was too busy keeping herself erect. Six months of examinations, tests, psychological tests, tests of nerve, tests of intelligence, tests of ability to endure stress; all topped off with seven hellish days in the Kopenrung jungles-and it was over.

I'm not going to be a Washout. She'd decided long ago to kill herself rather than endure that; a large proportion of Washouts did. Born in a Protege cottage, and I'm Chosen of the Land.

She snapped off a salute, arm outstretched and fist clenched. A blood-boil burst and left red running down her mouth as she grinned; the pain was a sharp stab, but she didn't give a damn.

* * *

'You are a very wealthy young man,' the River Electric Company executive said, looking down at the statement in surprise.

'I had some seed money from my stepfather,' John explained. 'The rest of it comes from commodities deals, mainly.' Courtesy of Center's analysis; that made things childishly easy. 'And investment in Western Petroleum.'

His formal neckcloth felt a little tight; he suppressed an impulse to fiddle with it. The room was on the seventh story of one of the new office buildings between the Eastern Highway and the river, with an overhead fan and shuttered windows that made it cool even on the hot summer's day. The River Electric exec had very little on the broad ebony expanse of his desk, just a blotter and a telephone with a sea-ivory handset. And the plans John had sent in.

'This. .'

'Mercury-arc rectifier,' John supplied helpfully.

'Rectifier, yes, seems to be very ingenious,' the executive said.

He was a plump little man with bifocals, wearing a rather dandified cream-colored jacket and blue neckcloth. There was a parrots feather in the band of his trilby where it hung on the rack by the door.

'However,' he went on, 'at present the River Electric Company is engaged in an extensive, a very extensive, investment program in primary generating capacity. Why should we undertake a risky new venture which will require tying up capital in new manufacturing plant?'

John leaned forward. 'That's just it, Mr. Henforth. The rectifier will save capital by reducing transmission losses. The expense of installing them will be considerably less than the savings in raw generating capacity. And the construction can be subcontracted. There are a lot of firms here in the capital, or anywhere in the Eastern Provinces-Tonsville, say, or Ensburg-who could handle this. River Electric's primary focus on hydraulic turbines and turbogenerators wouldn't be affected.'

Henforth steepled his fingers and waited.

'And,' John went on after the silence stretched, 'I'd be willing to buy say, five hundred thousand shares of River Electric at par. Also licensing fees from the patent would be assigned.'

'It's definitely an interesting proposition,' Henforth said, smiling. 'Come, we'll go up to the executive lounge on the roof and discuss this further with some of our technical people.' He shook his head. 'A young man of your capacities is wasted in the diplomatic service, Mr. Hosten. Wasted.'

* * *

'Skirmish order!'

The infantry platoon fanned out, three meters between each man, in two long lines. The first line jogged forward across the rocky pasture, their fixed bayonets glittering in the chilly upland air. Fifty meters forward they went to ground, taking cover behind ridges and boulders. The second line moved up and leapfrogged forward in

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