He shrugged, and for the first time smiled slightly. 'I have no sons, and I fear I have been too indulgent with her-even allowing her to be taught to read. Perhaps it will be better for her thus.'
subject tewfik is sincere, the computer-angel said. probability 82 % ±7.
Raj was slightly startled. Usually the percentage was much higher, one way or another.
subject tewfik has an unusual degree of control over autonomic body functions. in your vernacular, a poker face.
'A moment,' Raj said.
He turned and looked out over the dusty plain of the Drangosh. Then he turned back.
'That sounds acceptable, in outline,' he said. 'We'll have to settle a few details. Release of all Civil Government prisoners in the Colony, for instance; and an annual tribute sufficient to pay the twenty-five thousand men you'll be giving us. Customs, tariffs, that sort of thing the bureaucrats can settle.'
Tewfik nodded, hesitated, then stroked his beard. 'My offer, of course, would apply to any
Meaning, take the Chair yourself and rule the world, Raj thought.
interpretation of subtext correct, probability 98 %±1, Center clarified.
'How do I know this isn't a ploy to save Ali and half your army?' Raj said. 'You could be planning to write the other half off. It'd still be a larger force than I have in the field, and campaigning down to the Drangosh delta would be a nightmare, particularly with this area too devastated to use as a base.'
Tewfik smiled grimly and opened the saddlebag he'd brought. His curly-toed boot hooked it over to lie at Raj's feet. A head rolled out; fairly fresh, although the flies were already crawling around the hacked stump of the neck and the staring eyes. Raj did not need the ruby-clasped turban that rolled from the shaven skull to identify it.
'That for Ali,' Tewfik said, and kicked the head to one side. 'I should have done that years ago.'
Raj raised his brows slightly.
'There shall be peace,' Raj said. 'I accept. . in Governor Barholm's name.'
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
'All off!'
Raj swung down off the train. The East Residence station was crowded, full of the heat and smoke and steam of a busy summer's day. It felt humid after the Drangosh Valley; he rested his eyes on the hints of green higher up the hill and the fleecy clouds scattered across the sky. It was after 1900, near sunset, with Miniluna and Maxiluna both up, huge translucent globes hanging in a purpling sky.
'Move it, soldier!' the conductor said.
Raj smiled wryly and hopped down, ignoring the wooden steps the Central Rail slave was putting by the passenger car. He had a bandage over half his face, and he was dressed in common soldier's clothing-as a Descotter cavalry sergeant, which was probably what he'd have been if he hadn't been born to a noble family. The uniform brought a few cheers and careful claps on the back as he walked out through the station, a garrison bag slung over one shoulder.
That
'Is it true
'Are they going to march the prisoners through the streets?'
He smiled lopsidedly and pointed to his bandage; somebody thrust a goatskin of wine into his hand, and a free ticket to the bullfights. He dropped both of them off at the porticoed entrance to the train station-another of Barholm's construction projects-and plunged into the streets. They were thick with people, even though it was still normal working hours. Municipal flunkies were hanging ribbons and streamers from the standards of the gaslights, and a great cheer went up as an ox-wagon piled with huge wine casks halted at a corner.
Probably not. They'd been very frightened, and the euphoria of relief would be all the stronger for it.
Well, at least the troops won't have any problems getting a drink and a lay when they get in. They deserved that.
He was close enough to hear two of the men dipping their cups into the head of the broached wine cask. They wore the knee breeches, full-sleeved shirts, and leather aprons of prosperous artisans; their shoes had good pewter buckles.
'To Messer Raj and the damnation of all wogs,' one said, drinking. 'Ah, not bad.'
'Looks like Barholm pulled it off again,' the other replied. 'This'll keep the Chair under his fundament until the day he dies.'
'That might be thirty years.'
'Thirty more years of Barholm. Spirit. Ah, his wine's good, anyway, and we deserve it-our taxes paid for it. To Messer Raj, Mihwel.'
'To the Sword of the Spirit of Man-we won't see his like again, worse luck.'
Raj ducked into the tiled entrance of a public bathhouse.
Center strobed an indicator above one door. Not surprising that a bathhouse had a connection to the catacombs; all this section of the city was underlain by the Ancient tunnels.
* * *
'Raj!'
Thom Poplanich stirred to life in the mirrored sphere that was Center's physical being.
He gripped his friend's shoulders. 'You did it!' His eyes noted the fresh creases, and the leathery tan of the Drangosh Valley's sun and sand-laden wind. 'You did it!'
Raj returned the
'I did my duty,' he said quietly. He shook his head, as if the magnitude of it was only now striking him. 'I've reunited Earth-'
bellevue.
'— Bellevue under Holy Federation and the Spirit of Man of the Stars.'
'The Fall is over,' Thom whispered, awed. 'After a thousand years, it's over.'
the next cycle has begun, Center clarified. this is only a beginning, but the direction of maximum probability has been reversed. there is no longer a strong drive to maximum entropy here on bellevue; and from bellevue, the human universe may be reclaimed in time. fifteen thousand years of barbarism have been reduced to a maximum of another five centuries. beyond that, stochastic analysis is no longer adequate. my projections indicate that human capacities will have increased beyond my ability to analyze.
Raj laughed and ran a hand through his gray-shot curls. 'I feel like a man who's been running down stairs and didn't notice that the staircase ended,' he said. 'The troops and the Colonials are on their way back; it'll take a while, but the first trains should arrive in hours. I came to say goodbye, before. .'
Thom's smile died. 'Before what?' he asked sharply.
Raj looked up in surprise at the tone of command in the other man's voice. 'Before I report to the Governor,'