would eventually win his prize and depart. Remember that we still half-believed his promise to leave any loyalists marooned behind him, Commander. And because we did, we planned to emerge from hiding after he left and do what we could for the survivors in an effort to atone for our crime and—I will admit it frankly—as the only thing we could think of that might win us some clemency when the Imperium found us at last.
“But, of course, it didn’t work out that way,” he said quietly, “for Anu’s plan failed. Somehow,
“If he hadn’t been mad before, Commander, he went mad then. He sent most of his followers into stasis —to wait out
“Tell me, Commander MacIntyre, have you ever wondered what happened to all
“I’ve … wondered,” Colin admitted. He had, and not even
“The answer is simple, Commander. Anu hunted them down. He tracked the surviving bridge officers by their implant signatures and butchered them to finish off any surviving chain of command. And for revenge, of course. And whenever a cluster of survivors tried to rebuild their technology, he wiped them out. He quartered this planet, Commander MacIntyre, seeking out the lifeboats with operational power plants and blowing them apart, making certain he alone monopolized technology, that no possible threat to him remained. The survivors soon learned primitivism was the only way they could survive.”
“But
“True,” he said heavily, “but look about you, Commander. How much tech base do we truly have? A single carefully—hidden battleship. We lack the infrastructure to build anything more, and if we’d attempted to build that infrastructure, Anu would have found us as he found the loyalists who made the same attempt. We might have given a good account of ourselves, but with only one ship against seven of the same class, plus escorts, we would have achieved nothing beyond an heroic death.”
He held out one hand, palm upward in an eloquent gesture of helplessness, and Colin felt an unwilling sympathy for the man, much as he had for
“So what did you do?” he asked finally.
“We hid, Commander,” Horus admitted. “Our own plans had gone hopelessly wrong, for Anu couldn’t leave. So we activated
Of course they’d hidden, Colin thought, and that explained why
“We hid,” Horus continued, “but we set our own monitors to watch for any activity on Anu’s part. We dared not challenge his enclave’s defenses with our single ship. I am—was—a missile specialist, Commander, and I know. Not even
“And so you just sat here,” Colin said flatly, but his tone said he knew better. There were too many Terra-born in this compartment.
“No, Commander,” Horus said, and his voice accepted the knowledge behind Colin’s statement. “We’ve tried to fight him, over the millennia, but there was little we could do. It was obvious the threat of an evolving indigenous technology would be enough to spark Anu’s intervention, and so our computers were set to wake us when local civilizations appeared. We interacted with the early civilizations of your Fertile Crescent—” he grinned wryly as Colin suddenly connected his own name with the Egyptian pantheon “—in an effort to temper their advance, but Anu was watching, as well. Several of our people were killed when he suddenly reappeared, and it was he who shaped the Sumerian and Babylonian cultures. It was he who led the Hsia Dynasty in the destruction of the neolithic cultural centers of China, and we who lent the Shang Dynasty clandestine aid to rebuild, and that was only one of the battles we fought.
“Yet we had to work secretly, hiding from him, effecting tiny changes, hoping for the best. Worse, there were but two hundred of us, and Anu had thousands. We couldn’t rotate our personnel as he could—at least, that was what we thought he was doing—and we grew old far, far more quickly than he. But worst of all, Commander, was the attitude Anu’s followers developed. They call your people ‘degenerates,’ did you know that?”
Colin nodded, remembering Girru’s words in a chamber of horror that had once been a friend’s study.
“They’re wrong,” Horus said harshly. “
“Let’s be honest with one another, Commander MacIntyre. Humans, whether Imperials or born of your planet, are humans. There are good and bad among all of us, as our very presence here proves, and Earth’s people would have inflicted sufficient suffering on themselves without Anu, but he and his have made it far, far worse. They’ve toppled civilizations by provoking and encouraging barbarian invasions—from the Hittites to the Hsia, the Achaeans, the Huns, the Vikings, and the Mongols—but even worse, in some ways, is what they’ve done since abandoning that policy. They helped fuel the Hundred Years War, and the Thirty Years’ War, and Europe’s ruthless imperialism, both for enjoyment and to create power blocs that could pave the way for the scientific and industrial revolutions. And when progress wasn’t rapid enough to suit them, they provoked the First World War, and the Second, and the Cold War.
“We’ve done what we could to mitigate their excesses, but our best efforts have been paltry.
“Yet we’ve never given up, Commander MacIntyre!” The old man’s voice was suddenly harsh, glittering with a strange fire, and Colin swallowed. That suddenly fiery tone was almost fanatical, and he shook free of Horus’s story, making himself step back and wondering if perhaps his captors hadn’t gone more than a bit mad themselves.
“No. We’ve never given up,” Horus said more softly. “And if you’ll let us, we’ll prove that to you.”
“How?” Colin’s flat voice refused to offer any hope. Try though he might, it was hard to doubt Horus’s sincerity. Yet it was his duty to doubt it. It was his responsibility—his, and his alone—to doubt everyone, question everything. Because if he made a mistake—
“We’ll help you against Anu,” Horus said, his voice equally flat, his eyes level. “And afterward, we will