how much love there must have been in his marriage, to have given him that strength. Where another man, a weaker man, might have felt himself weakened further by his wife’s self-sacrifice, her father had simply drawn more strength from it.

People had misunderstood him, she now realized—she as much as any. They had ascribed his stoicism to simple stolidity. The resistance of a Gryphon mountain to the flails of nature, bearing up under wind and rain and lightning with the endurance of rock. They had forgotten that mountains are not passive things. Mountains are shaped, forged, in the fiery furnace. They do not simply “bear up”—they rise up, driven by the mightiest forces of a planet. The stone face had been shaped by a beating heart.

Oh, Daddy… She drifted off to sleep, as if she were lying on a continent rather than a pallet. Secure and safe, not in her situation, but in the certainty of stone itself. Her father would find her, soon enough. Of that she had no doubt at all.

Stone moves.

The Sixth Day

Victor

When they found the bodies, Victor had to restrain himself from grinning. Whoever had cut the three men had done so with as much enthusiasm as lack of skill. So far as Victor knew, there was no antonym for the word “surgical.” But if there was such a term, the half-severed heads of the wretched vagabonds lying sprawled in the middle of the dry channel exemplified it perfectly.

The small mob of Scrags accompanying Victor and his squad of SS troopers were convinced that the girl had done it. And that was the source of Victor’s humor. He wasn’t sure what amused him the most: their fury, their bewilderment, or—the most likely source—their obvious relief. As in: There but for the grace of God…

There was more ferocity than genuine humor in Victor’s suppressed grin. The Scrags were notorious, among other things—the females as much as the males—for their predatory sexual habits. Victor had no doubt at all that they had planned to rape the Zilwicki girl when her immediate purpose was served. Before killing her.

Now, looking at the corpses, the thoughts of the Scrags were not hard to read. Easier said than done…

Victor leaned over the sergeant’s shoulder. “And?” he asked.

Citizen Sergeant Kurt Fallon shook his head. “I don’t think it was the girl cut ’em, sir.” He pointed to the small pools of blood which had spread out from the wounds. The blood was dry and covered with insects, as were the corpses themselves. “They didn’t bleed much, as you can see. Not for those kinds of wounds. She couldn’t have cut ’em any time soon after she killed ’em. And why would she wait?”

“Did she kill them?” asked Victor.

Fallon nodded, pointing to the small tracking device in his left hand. Victor was unable to interpret the readings on the screen. The chemo-hormone sensor was a highly specialized piece of equipment. As rare as it was expensive. That was the reason, Durkheim had told Victor, that he was assigning Fallon to the squad. The citizen sergeant was an expert with the device.

“Her traces are all over them,” said Fallon. “Adrenaline reading’s practically off the scale. That means either fear or fury—or both—and as you can see…” He shrugged. “She didn’t have much to fear. Besides—”

He pointed to the head of one of the corpses. The filthy, bearded thing was unnaturally twisted. “Broke neck.” He pointed to another. “Same.” Then, at the third, whose throat had clearly been crushed as well as slit. “And again.”

Fallon rose. “Didn’t know the girl had training, but that’s what you’re seeing.” He studied the sensor screen. “But there’s someone else’s readings here, too. Besides her and the croaks. Male readings. Prepubescent, I’m pretty sure.”

Victor glanced around. The Scrags had now collected in a body around them, staring at the tracker in the sergeant’s hand. For all their strutting swagger, and their pretensions at superhuman status, the Scrags were really nothing much more than Loop vagabonds themselves. They were clearly intimidated by the technical capacity of the SS device. During the hours in which they had organized a search for the girl after discovering her escape, before they finally admitted their screw-up to their Mesan overlords, the Scrags had accomplished absolutely nothing. After they found the bodies and the lean-to, the girl’s trail seemed to have vanished.

“Can we follow her?” Victor asked. “Or them?

Fallon nodded. “Oh, sure. Nothing to it. Won’t be quick, of course. But—” He cast a sour glance at the nearby Scrags. “Since they atleasthad the sense to come to us before too much time had gone by, the traces are still good. Another couple of days, and it would have been a different story.”

“Let’s to it, then.”

They set off, following the traces picked up by the sensor. Victor and Citizen Sergeant Fallon led the way, flanked by the other three SS soldiers in Fallon’s squad. Victor and Fallon didn’t bother carrying their weapons to hand. The other SS soldiers did, but they held the pulse rifles in a loose and easy grip. The Scrags trailed behind, with their own haphazard weaponry. For all the bravado with which they brandished the guns, they reminded Victor of nothing so much as a flock of buzzards following a pack of wolves.

He glanced sideways at Fallon. The citizen sergeant was too preoccupied with reading the tracker to notice the scrutiny. There was no expression on his lean-jawed, hatchet face beyond intense concentration.

Like a hawk on the prowl. Which, Victor knew, was an apt comparison. Fallon was a raptor—and he was hunting bigger prey than a fourteen-year-old girl.

And that, of course, was the other reason Durkheim had assigned Fallon and his squad to Victor. The hatchet-faced man was a hatchetman in truth. And Victor’s neck was the target of his blade.

Anton

As he watched the rally, Anton was struck by the irony of his situation. He really didn’t approve of this kind of gathering. For all the stiff-necked belligerence of Gryphon’s yeomanry toward nobility, the highlanders were very far from being political radicals. They were a conservative lot, when all was said and done. That was especially true of the large percentage—perhaps a third of the population—which belonged to the Second Reformation Roman Catholic Church, a sect which retained its ancient attitude of reverence for monarchy and obedience to authority in general.

Anton himself had been raised in that creed. And if his continued membership as an adult was more a cultural than a religious habit—his basso was much sought after by church choirs, and he enjoyed singing himself— his career as a naval officer had done nothing to weaken his traditional political attitudes. A strong monarchy resting on a stout yeomanry—that was Moses and the prophets, for Gryphon highlanders. Their quarrel with the nobility was, in a sense, the opposite of radicalism. It was Gryphon’s nobles, after all—not the commoners—who were continually seeking to subvert the established order.

So, watching the huge crowd of poor immigrants who were packed into the amphitheater, applauding the firebrand speakers and chanting distinctly anti-establishment slogans, Anton felt a bit like a church deacon trapped in a sinners’ convention. That was all the more so since the rally’s hidden purpose was directly bound up

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