demands for social reform would get plowed under, and the Progressives and Conservatives were afraid Elizabeth and Allen would manage what every Winton since Elizabeth I has hoped to accomplish: finally break the House of Lord's monopoly on the initiation of finance bills and the right of consent for Crown appointments. So even though, ultimately, they can't stand one another, the Opposition parties see no choice but to cooperate and make damned sure no Centrists or Crown Loyalists are anywhere near the peace settlement when the Peeps actually surrender. That way
'I see.' Honor's tone was leached of all expression, and Elizabeth gave her a bleak smile.
'Welcome to the reality of partisan politics, Manticoran style,' the Queen said. 'I'm sure from some of the things he said before I left for home that Benjamin had a shrewd notion of where our domestic politics were headed, and I don't blame him for being worried.
Honor winced at the barely suppressed rage in Elizabeth's tone, but there was something else under it — a raw, driving fury, fueled by some inner agony, which had to stem from more than seeing her will thwarted or even disgust with the Opposition's partisanship.
'Excuse me, Your Majesty,' she heard herself say very gently, 'but there's more to it than just that. For you at least.' Elizabeth's eyebrows shot up, but then her gaze flicked to where Nimitz crouched on the perch next to Ariel.
'Yes. Yes, you would know that, wouldn't you?' she murmured, and Honor nodded. She could hardly believe she'd said a word, for she had no business prying into her Queen's private affairs, but something about Elizabeth's pain left her no choice. She couldn't taste that much hurt and
'There is more,' Elizabeth said, looking away from the two humans. She stood and reached out to Ariel, gathering the treecat in her arms, and buried her face in his fur. He purred to her loudly, caressing her cheek with one true-hand, and she drew a deep breath before she turned back to Honor and Alexander.
'Very few people know this,' she told them, 'and as your Queen, I must have your oaths that no one will hear of it from you — except, perhaps, Benjamin himself, in your case, Honor.' Her guests looked at one another, then nodded and turned back to her, and she squared her shoulders.
'You both know my father was killed in a grav-skiing accident. What you
'My God, Elizabeth!' Alexander was so shaken he forgot the titles he was usually so careful to use in his official relationship with the Queen. 'If you knew that, why didn't you
'I couldn't,' Elizabeth said, her voice bleaker than ever, harrowed and brittle with old pain. 'We weren't ready for open war, and any charge that the Legislaturalists had orchestrated Dad's murder might have led to just that. Even if it hadn't, the proof that Havenite agents had actually penetrated the highest levels of our own government and assassinated the King could only have led to massive witch-hunts which would have crippled us domestically when we had to be strong and united to support the military buildup. And that sort of bitter, denunciatory mutual suspicion would only have made it even easier for
She closed her eyes briefly, her expression haggard and haunted, and her nostrils flared.
'I wanted them dead.
She turned away and stared blindly out a window onto the wondrous light show of Mount Royal Palace's night-struck landscaping, and Honor shook her head. The Peeps had assassinated King Roger in order to put a weak, easily manipulated 'teenager' on the throne? If it had been possible, she would almost have felt sorry for the people who'd gotten Elizabeth III instead.
'And now this,' Elizabeth said at last, so softly it was difficult to hear her. 'We may never prove it, but I'm convinced — I
The steadholder had been impeached, tried, and condemned to death in barely one week, and sentence had been carried out immediately. There had been no question who'd handed the memory stones to Elizabeth and Cromarty, and his fate had been sealed from the moment the beacon inside Elizabeth's stone had been discovered.
She was pulled away from the brief distraction when Elizabeth turned back from the window.
'And some analysts wonder why I hate the People's Republic so bitterly,' she said flatly. 'The answer's simple enough, isn't it? The Legislaturalists and Internal Security murdered my father thirty-four years ago. Now the Committee of Public Safety and State Security have murdered my Prime Minister, my uncle, my cousin, and their entire staffs, plus all their security people and the entire crew of my yacht. People I've known for years.
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN
Oscar Saint-Just closed the file and leaned back in his chair.
There was no one else present, and so no eyes saw what many would have sworn was impossible: a tiny tremor, quivering through the fingers of both hands before he clasped them tightly to still it.