to have to ask the governor-general for new Cobras.'

'That's okay,' Jonny said, wincing slightly as Eldjarn applied salve to his shoulder, where a near miss had burned him. 'No one's going to try and avenge Challinor or pick up where he left off, if that's what you're worried about. All the fence-straddlers he said he had standing by will be moving like crazy to make sure they come down on the right side. The warlord movement is dead.' He cocked an eye at the mayor. 'You just make sure your report shows that only a very small minority was involved in the plot. We can't have people getting paranoid about us— there's still too much work on Aventine that only Cobras can do.'

Tyler nodded and moved toward the door to his private office. 'Yeah. I just hope Zhu doesn't take the whole thing wrong. I'd hate for Ariel to get stuck with the blame for Challinor's ambition.'

The door closed behind him, and Chrys stood up. 'I suppose I'd better go, too—I've got to get busy fixing the phone system.'

'Chrys—' Jonny hesitated. 'I'm sorry that had to be done at Ken's funeral, and that you had to... to see all of that...'

She smiled wanly. 'That extra damage?' She shook her head. 'Ken was long gone from that body, Jonny. He couldn't feel those lasers. You were the one I was worried about—I was scared to death you'd be killed, too.'

Jonny shook his head. 'There wasn't really much danger of that,' he assured her. 'You, Orrin, and Father Vitkauskas set things up perfectly for me. I just hope Ken's reputation doesn't... I don't know.'

'It already has,' she sighed. 'The rumors are already starting to travel out there, to the effect that Ken was faking death so that he could get in one last shot.'

Jonny grimaced. Yes, that would be what they thought—and within a few days and a hundred kilometers that story would probably be bent completely past recognition. The Avenging Cobra, perhaps, who'd returned from the dead to defend his people from oppression? 'A legend like that might not be all bad, though—it ought to at least slow down future Challinors,' he murmured, thinking out loud. 'I don't think that's something Ken would dislike having attached to his name.'

Chrys shook her head. 'Maybe. I can't think that far in the future right now.'

'You sure you really feel like working?' he asked, studying her strained face. 'Nedt could start the phone repairs alone.'

'I'm all right.' She reached for Jonny's hand, squeezed it briefly. 'I'll see you later, Jonny—and thank you.'

She left, and Jonny sighed. 'The real thanks goes to you two,' he told Eldjarn. The reaction was beginning to hit him, and he suddenly felt very tired. 'I don't think I could have faced having to wire all those sequential relays to Ken's servos, even if I'd known how to do it. It must have been pretty hard on Chrys, especially.'

'We all did what we had to,' Eldjarn said obliquely. 'You know, though, that it's not over yet—not by a long shot. Zhu's going to react to this, all right. If he's smart, part of his reaction will be to start listening to what Cobras have to say on governmental policies and procedures. You'll need to take advantage of the opportunity to offer some good, concrete suggestions.'

Jonny shrugged wearily. 'I'm like Chrys: I really can't think that far ahead right now.'

Eldjarn shook his head. 'Chrys can get away with that excuse; you can't. As long as there are Cobras on Aventine, the threat of something like this happening again will always be with us. We have to act now to make sure that possibility stays small.'

'Oh, come on, Orrin—you're talking politics now, and that's light-years out of my experience. I wouldn't even know where to start.'

'You start by making the Cobras feel that an attack on the government is an attack on them personally,' Eldjarn said. 'Ken fought Challinor because the rebellion was an attack on his family pride; you probably had similar reasons.' He hesitated. 'For most of you, I suspect, we'll have to appeal to enlightened self-interest... once your self-interest has been properly linked with the government's.'

Jonny frowned as understanding began to come. 'You're suggesting we be brought directly into the government somehow?'

'I think it's inevitable,' Eldjarn said; and though his voice was firm, his restless hands indicated his uneasiness. 'You Cobras have a lot more of the power on this world than the system has taken into account, and one way or another the system has to adjust to reflect that reality. We either give it to you in a controlled, orderly way or risk the chaos of Challinor's method. Like it or not, Jonny, you're an important political force now—and your first political responsibility will be to make sure Zhu understands that.'

For just a second Jonny grimaced at the irony. Perhaps, in a small and unexpected way, Challinor had won after all. 'Yes,' he sighed. 'I guess I'll have to.'

Interlude

To the trained and observant eye, the signs were all there.

They weren't obvious, of course. An unnecessary phrase in an official Troft message to the Committee, certain small shiftings of both merchant and perimeter guard star ships, comments coming from the Minthisti at obvious Troft prodding—small things, each in itself completely meaningless. But taken as a group, all the tiny pieces pointed unidirectionally to the same conclusion.

After fifteen years of allowing Dominion ships to pass freely through their territory, the Trofts were getting tired of it.

Vanis D'arl scowled blackly as he stared at the nighttime view of Dome visible through his office window. It wasn't exactly a startling development—half the Committee was frankly surprised the Corridor had remained open as long as it had. The Star Force, in fact, had been updating its contingency plans for eleven years now... and unless something was done, it looked like they'd get the chance to test its strategies within the year.

It went without saying that, win or lose, one of the first casualties of a new war would be Aventine and its own two fledgling colonies... precisely the worlds the war would theoretically be fought to defend. Which, in D'arl's opinion, made the looming conflict an exercise in near-perfect futility.

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