anyone could be, and she inhaled the rich smell of printer’s ink appreciatively as she opened the book. She’d always loved beauty, and she was both amused and genuinely pleased by the effect neural computer feeds had produced on the printing industry. Man had rediscovered that books were treasures, not simply a means of conveying information, and the volume she held was a masterpiece of the printer’s art.
She leafed through it admiringly, then paused at the Lamentations of Jeremiah. The tissue-thin paper slid out with pleasing ease—unlike the last time, when some idiot had used glue and wrecked two pages of Leviticus.
She unfolded the sheets, careful of their fragility, and spread them on her blotter. Datachips were far smaller and easier to hide. She and her allies knew that, but they also knew few modern security people thought in terms of anything as clumsy as written messages, which meant few looked for them. And, of course, data that was never
She got out her code book, translated the message, and read through it slowly twice, committing it to memory. Then she burned the sheets, ground the ash to powder, and leaned back to consider the news.
MacIntyre and his crowd were finally ready to begin on Stepmother, and she agreed with her ally’s assessment. By rights, Stepmother ought to represent an enormous threat to their long-term plans, but that could be changed. With a little luck and a great deal of hard work, the “threat” was going to become the advantage that let them bring off the most ambitious coup d’etat in human history, instead.
She gnawed her thumbnail thoughtfully. In many ways, she’d prefer to strike now, but Stepmother had to be closer to completion. Not complete, but within sight of it. That gave them their time frame, and she was beginning to understand the purpose that godawful gravitonic warhead would serve. Her eyes gleamed appreciatively as she considered the implications. It would be their very own Reichstag fire, and the Narhani gave them such a splendid “internal threat” to justify the “special powers” their candidate for the crown would invoke to insure Stepmother got finished the right way.
But that was for the future. For now, there was this latest news about the Narhani to consider, and she pondered it carefully. Officially, she was simply the general secretary of the Church’s coequal bishops—but then, Josef Stalin had been “simply” the General Secretary of the Central Committee, hadn’t he?—and it would be her job to soothe her flock’s anxiety when the information was officially released. Still, the Achuultani
And, in the meantime, there were those
The Reverend Robert Stevens sat in the dingy room beneath his church and watched the shocked eyes of the men and women seated around him. He felt their horror rising with his own, and more than one face was ashen.
“Are you
“Yes, Alice.” Stevens’ grating, high-pitched voice was ill-suited to prayers or sermons, but God had given him a mission which put such paltry burdens into their proper perspective. “You know I can’t reveal my source’s identity—” in fact, he had no idea who the ultimate source was, though its information had always proven reliable “—but I’m sure.”
“God forgive them,” Tom Mason whispered. “How could they actually help the Anti-Christ’s spawn
“Oh, come on, Tom!” Yance Jackson’s lip curled and his green eyes blazed. “We’ve known the answer to that ever since they started cloning their precious ‘
“But how?” Alice asked hesitantly. “They fought the Achuultani as God’s own champions! How could they do that … and then do
“It’s this new technology,” Jackson growled. “Don’t you see, where fear couldn’t tempt them, power has. They’ve set
“I’m afraid Yance is right,” Stevens said sadly. “They were God’s champions, Alice, but Satan knows that as well as we do. He couldn’t defeat them when they fought in His armor, so Satan’s turned to temptation, seducing where he couldn’t conquer. And this—” he tapped the piece of paper on the table before them “—is the proof he’s succeeded.”
“And so is the name they’ve given this demon of theirs,” Jackson said harshly. ” ‘
Stevens nodded even more sadly, but a new fire kindled in his eyes.
“The Emperor and his Council have fallen into evil,” cold certitude cleansed his voice of sorrow, “and God- fearing people are under no obligation to obey evil rulers.” He reached out to the people sitting on either side of him, and more hands rose, joining in a circle of faith under the humming fluorescent light. Stevens felt their belief feeding his own, making it strong, and a fierce sense of purpose filled him.
“The time is coming, brothers and sisters,” he told them. “The time of fire, when the Lord shall call us to smite the ungodly in His name, and we must be strong to do His will. For the Armageddon is truly upon us, and
Chapter Seven
The planet Marha, seventeen light-minutes from Bia and smaller than Mars, had never been much of a planet, and it had become less of one when the Fourth Imperium made it a weapons testing site. For two thousand years, until antimatter and gravitonic warheads made planetary tests superfluous, fission, fusion, and kinetic weapons had gouged and ripped its near-airless surface into a tortured waste whose features defied all logical prediction.
Which was precisely why the Imperial Marines loved Marha. It was a wonderful place to teach infantry the finer points of killing other people, and Generals Tsien and MacMahan were delighted to share it with Admiral Robbins’ midshipmen. Naval officers might not face infantry combat often, but they couldn’t always avoid it, either, and not knowing what they were doing was a good way to get people (especially their Marine-type people) killed.
At the moment, Admiral Robbins rode the command deck of the transport
Mid/3 MacIntyre hand-signaled a stop, and his company of raiders slumped in the knife-sharp shadow of the tortured ring wall. He slumped with them, panting hard, and tried to remember he was being brilliant. If he managed to pull this off, he might even find two or three people to agree with him; if he screwed up, everybody would be waiting to tell him what a jackass he’d been.