surrender ourselves to the Imperium.”
“Hush, ’Tanni,” Horus said softly. He clasped the shoulders of the young woman—his daughter, which, Colin suddenly realized, made her Isis Tudor’s
Jiltanith’s tight face was furious with objection, and Horus sighed and gathered her close, staring into Colin’s face over her shoulder.
“We ask only one thing in return, Commander,” he said softly.
“What?” Colin asked quietly.
“Immunity—pardon, if you will—for those like ’Tanni.” The girl stiffened in his arms, trying to thrust him away, but he held her easily with one arm. The other hand rose, covering her lips to still her furious protests.
“They were
The proud old face was pleading, the dark, ancient eyes almost desperate, and Colin recognized the justice of the plea.
“If—and I say
“I know,” Horus said. “But you
“I will,” Colin replied levelly.
The old man regarded him a moment longer, then took the suppresser gently from Jiltanith. She fought him a moment, surrendering the device with manifest reluctance, and Horus hugged her gently. His eyes were understanding and sad, but a small smile played around his lips as he looked down at it.
“In that case,” he said, “we’ll just have to convince you. Please meet us half-way by not transmitting to
And he switched off the suppresser.
For just an instant Colin sat absolutely motionless. The other Imperials on the command bridge were suddenly bright presences, glowing with their own implants, and he felt his computer feeds come on line.
Colin’s eyes met Horus’s as he recognized the risk the old man had just taken, for no new security codes had been buried in
But trust was a two-edged sword.
“I suppose that, as head of your council, you’re also captain of this ship?” he said calmly, and the old man nodded.
“Then sit down, Captain, and tell me how we’re going to beat Anu.”
Horus nodded once more, sharply, and sat beside Isis. Colin never glanced away from his new ally’s face, but he didn’t have to; he could
Chapter Eleven
Colin leaned back and propped his heels on his desk. The quarters the mutineers (if that was still the proper word) had assigned him were another attempt to prove their sincerity, for this was the captain’s cabin, fitted with neural relays to the old battleship’s computers. He could not keep them from retaking
Which, Colin thought, was shrewd of Horus, whether he was truly sincere or not.
He sighed and pinched the bridge of his nose, wishing desperately that he could contact
The same applied to any effort to reach
It was maddening. He’d acquired a support team just as determined to destroy Anu as he was, yet it was pathetically weak compared to its enemies and there was no way to inform
Colin was deeply impressed by what the northerners had achieved over the centuries, but very little of what he’d found in
The old battleship’s memory was long overdue for purging, for
For fifty thousand years, the faithful, moronic genius had carefully logged everything as it happened, and while molecular memories could store an awesome amount of data, there was so much in
There was, of course, far too much data for any human mind to assimilate, but he could skim the high points, and it had been hard to maintain his nonexpression as he did. If anything, Horus had understated the war he and his fellows had fought. Direct clashes were infrequent, but there had been only two hundred and three adult northerners at the start, and age, as well as casualties, had winnowed their ranks. Fewer than seventy of them remained.
He and Horus had lingered, conferring with one another and the computers through their feeds while the rest of the Council went on about their duties. Only Horus’s daughters had stayed.
Iris had interjected only an occasional word as she tried to follow their half-spoken, half-silent conversation, but Jiltanith had been a silent, sullen presence in their link. She’d neither offered nor asked anything, but her cold, bitter loathing for all he was had appalled Colin.
He’d never realized emotions could color the link, perhaps because his only previous use of it had been with
It was fortunate Horus had been able to meet him in the computers. Some vocalization was necessary to set data in context, but the old mutineer had led him unerringly through the data banks, and his memory went back,