This time the scene was familiar. Raj lashed naked to an iron chair in a stone-walled room far beneath the Palace in East Residence. The glowing iron came closer to his eyes, and closer. .
chance of personal survival if recall order is obeyed is less than 27 % ±6, Center said, chance of reunification of bellevue in this historical cycle is less than 15 % ±2 if order is refused, however.
'It's my duty to go,' Raj repeated. His head lifted, from pride and so that he wouldn't have to see Suzette's eyes fill. 'And may I always do my duty to the Spirit of Man.'

BOOK FIVE: THE SWORD
CHAPTER ONE
'Raj?' Thom Poplanich muttered.
Then, slowly: 'Raj, how old are you?'
Raj Whitehall managed a smile. 'Thirty,' he said.
The perfect mirrored sphere of Sector Command and Control Unit AZ12-b14-c000 Mk. XIV's central. . being. . showed an image which seemed to give the lie to that. It wasn't the gray hairs or the scars on the backs of his hands that made him seem at least forty, or ageless.
It was the eyes.
Thom looked at his own image. Nothing at all had changed since that moment when he'd frozen into immobility, five years ago. Not the unhealed shaving nick on his thin olive cheek, or the tear in his floppy tweed trousers from a revolver bullet.
life is change, Center said. The voice of the ancient computer was like their own thoughts, but with a vibrato overtone that somehow carried a sense of immense weight like a pressure against the film of consciousness. even i change.
Raj and Thom looked up, startled. 'Center? You're alive?' Thom asked.
No words whispered in their skull. Thom looked at his friend.
The two men gripped forearms, then exchanged the
The scents cut through the icy certainties Center's teaching had implanted in his mind. Unshed tears prickled at his eyes as he held the bigger man at arm's length.
'It's good to see you again, my friend,' he said quietly.
'Yes, that's. . well, I came to say goodbye.'
'Goodbye?' Thom asked sharply.
'That's right,' Raj said, turning slightly away. His eyes moved across the perfect mirrored surface of the sphere, that impossibly reflected without distorting. 'Things. . well, Cabot Clerett, the Governor's nephew' — and heir, they both knew- 'was along on the campaign. There were a number of difficulties, and he, ah, was killed.'
'Spirit of Man of the
Raj gave a small crooked smile and shrugged. 'I didn't reconquer the Southern and Western Territories for the Civil Government just to set myself up as a warlord,' he said. 'Center said that would be worse for civilization than if I'd never lived at all.'
an oversimplification but accurate to within 93 %, ±2, Center added remorselessly. Over the years their minds had learned subtlety in interpreting that voice; there was a tinge of. . not pity, but perhaps compassion to it now. the long-term prospects for restoration of the federation, here on bellevue and eventually elsewhere in the human-settled galaxy, required raj whitehall's submission to the civil authorities. too many generals have seized the chair by force.
Thom nodded. The process had started long before Bellevue was isolated by the destruction of its Tanaki Spatial Displacement net. The Federation had been slagging down in civil wars for a generation before that, biting out its own guts like a brain-shot sauroid. The process had continued here in the thousand-odd years since, and according to Center everywhere else in the human-settled galaxy as well.
'Couldn't Lady Anne do something?' he asked. Barholm's consort was a close friend of Raj's wife Suzette, had been since Anne was merely the. . entertainer was the polite phrase. . that young Barholm had unaccountably married despite being the Governor's nephew. The other court ladies had turned a cold shoulder back before Barholm assumed the Chair; Suzette hadn't.
'She died four months ago,' Raj said. 'Cancer.'
A brief flash of vision: a canopied bed, with the incense of the Star priests around it and the drone of their prayers. A woman lying motionless, flesh fallen in on the strong handsome bones of her face, hair a white cloud on the pillow with only a few streaks of its mahogany red left. Suzette Whitehall sat at the bedside, one hand gripping the ivory colored claw-hand of her dying friend. Her face was an expressionless mask, but slow tears ran from the slanted green eyes and dripped down on the priceless snowy torofib of the sheets.
'Damn,' Thom said. 'I know she wanted every Poplanich dead, but. . well, Anne had twice Barholm's guts, and she was loyal to her friends, at least.'
Raj nodded. 'It was right after that that I was suspended from my last posting-Inspector-General-and my properties confiscated. Chancellor Tzetzas handled it personally.'
'That. . that. . he gives graft a bad name,' Thom spat.
Raj smiled wanly. 'Yes, if the Chancellor didn't hate me, I'd wonder what I was doing wrong.'
A flash from Center; a tall thin man in a bureaucrat's court robe sitting at a desk. The room was quietly elegant, dark, silent; a cigarette in a holder of carved sauroid ivory rested in one slim-fingered hand. He signed a heavy parchment, dusted the ink with fine sand, and smiled. A secretary sprang forward to melt wax for the seal. .
Raj nodded. 'I expect to be arrested at the levee this afternoon. Barholm's worried-'
Thom laid a hand on Raj's shoulder. The muscle under the wool jacket was like india rubber. It quivered with tension.
'You
Raj smiled, but he shook his head. 'Thanks, Thom-but if I have a gift for command, it's
observe: