Death Match, page 60
part #3 of Sten Omnibus Series
He forced his attention back to the interview. He saw Baseeker’s small eyes fire brighter. “This proposal is nothing, Lord, compared to my true vision,” she said, full of holy fervor. “I see temples to your exalted self in every town and city of the Empire. Where your subjects can gather together and bask in your glory.”
“Really?” the Emperor said. “I had no idea there were so many potential converts.”
“How can it be otherwise, Lord?” Baseeker said. “For is it not written in our holy scriptures that soon your worshipers will outnumber the stars in the heavens? And that they will praise your name as the one true God of us all?”
Even the Emperor was embarrassed by this. He coughed into a closed fist. “Uh…Yes. The way you put it…I suppose it does make sense.”
“We only lack funds, Lord,” Baseeker said, “to put this program fully into motion.”
The Emperor frowned. “I’ve already supplied a sufficiency of funds. Have I not?”
“Oh, but you have, Lord,” Baseeker backpedaled. “And in my opinion, this has been an unfair—bordering on blasphemous—burden. In my view, those who benefit most should bear the cost. Your humble subjects, Lord, should be the ones to pay.
“I do not think it seemly for a living god to pay for his own temples. But, we—your faithful subjects—have been denied this small pleasure, Lord. And it is the fault of our political leaders, I fear. They’re too busy lining their own pockets instead.”
“Very well put,” the Emperor said. “And refreshingly so.”
He turned to Poyndex. “I’m getting tired of those penny-pinchers in the Parliament. It’s time for them to put their credits where their mouths are. Get together with Avri and work up some kind of funding bill. A subject so loyal as this woman shouldn’t have to go begging for funds for such a worthy proposal.”
“Yes, Your Highness. I’ll do it immediately.”
The Emperor shifted back to Baseeker. “I have one request.”
“Anything, Lord.”
“I’d like you to sift through the membership. Ferret out the most ardent believers.”
“We would all lay our lives down for you, Lord.”
“Yes…. But some are always going to be more willing than others. You know the type I mean.”
Baseeker nodded. The word “fanatic” was the unspoken answer.
“I want them organized into a core group. I have some special training in mind for them. Training Poyndex’s people can supply.”
“Yes, Lord.”
“They are to hold themselves ready. Until they hear from me. Then they are to act instantly, and without question.”
“Yes, Lord. These…missions…you have in mind? I assume they will be dangerous?”
“Yes. Possibly even suicidal.”
Baseeker smiled. “I know just the type of individual we’ll need,” she said, rat teeth snipping off each word.
Poyndex shuddered. There was nothing new about using religious fanatics as assassins. But the image of a wild-eyed cultist waving a bloody knife was decidedly unsettling. He wiped the image away. As frightening as the idea was, he could not deny its merit.
“Fine. We have an understanding, then,” the Emperor said, winding things up. “Now…if you’ll forgive me.”
Baseeker leaped to her feet. “Certainly, Lord. And thank you so much for gracing me with these precious moments of your time.”
She dropped to her knees again and bounced her head on the floor three times. “Praise thy name, Lord. Praise, thy name.”
And she was gone.
The Emperor turned to Poyndex with a huge smile. “Amazing. They really do believe I’m a god.”
“No doubt about it, Your Majesty,” Poyndex said. His survival instinct, however, kept him from smiling back. “Their beliefs may be childlike…but they certainly are sincere.”
The Eternal Emperor looked at the door Baseeker had just exited. “Out of the mouths of babes,” he murmured.
The mood broke and the Emperor slid a bottle of Scotch from his desk. He briskly poured a drink. And as briskly downed it.
“Now. From the sublime to pure damned foolishness,” the Emperor said. “I have a complaint from my chamberlain involving you.”
Poyndex lifted a brow. “Yes, Your Highness?”
“Apparently those honors I asked you to process have yet to reach his desk. And he has an awards ceremony to prepare for. A ceremony, I might add, scheduled for less than two weeks from now.”
“I am so very sorry, sir,” Poyndex said at his most humble. “It’s my fault. And I have no excuses for it.”
“Damned straight,” the Eternal Emperor snorted. “For crying out loud, Poyndex, I know and you know these things are meaningless. But medals and honors are good public relations. Especially in these times.”
“Yes, Your Highness. I’m sorry, Your Highness. I’ll get on it right away.”
“Never mind,” the Emperor said. “Send the list to me. I’ll deal with it.” He shook his head. “Might as well. It seems like I have to do everything else myself.”
“Yes, sir.”
The Emperor drank more Scotch, his irritation waning. “I suppose you do have your hands full at the moment,” he said.
“It’s still no excuse, sir. But thank you.”
“Don’t thank me yet,” the Emperor said. “Because I have another rather large item for your plate.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I’ve been thinking about our problem with Sten. He’s been doing us a great deal of damage. But only because he’s the one with the momentum. And while we’re still coming up to speed, he can continue to hit us at will. Build up his image as a bold hero of the masses and all that rot.”
“He’s bound to falter soon, sir,” Poyndex said.
“I don’t like depending on luck or another being’s mistakes,” the Emperor said. “We need to grab the march now. Put so much pressure on him he won’t know which way is up.”
“I don’t mean to be negative, sir,” Poyndex said, “but we’ve already stretched our forces to the limit. And then some. At this point, even our reserve units are strapped.”
“Strap them some more,” the Emperor said.
“But…if there should be some emergency, sir.”
The Emperor’s eyes blazed. “Clot that! Sten’s been surprising us at every turn. Hitting us from every angle. My pet news stations, to AM2 depots, to the financial market.”
Poyndex puzzled. “The financial market? I assumed the economy was merely suffering because of the crisis. What could Sten have—”
The Emperor gave him a scornful look. “Don’t be a fool. That had all the marks of a guerrilla action. Nothing natural about it. No. It was Sten’s doing. Or one of his people.”
“I see…Your Majesty,” Poyndex said haltingly, not really seeing. The Emperor snorted, frustrated. “Now get this through that thick skull of yours, Poyndex. This is the emergency. And if we don’t put this fire out soon, we’re going to be in even deeper drakh. Do I make myself clear?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good. Now, take a look at this.” The Emperor moved aside the bottle of Scotch and spread out a map of his empire. Poyndex bent over it, noting the many circles, crosses, and arrows the Emperor had scrawled.
“These are the areas I think are the most vulnerable,” the Emperor said, jabbing here and here and here.
“The most likely places for him to hit next. We can cover if we move the Fifth Guard from Solfi…then shift the fleet at Bordbuch.”
Poyndex watched in amazement as the Eternal Emperor jabbed at the map, rejiggering his forces.
And every time his finger touched paper, hundreds of ships and thousands of soldiers were hurled across the stars.
In pursuit of a single man.
Much later, secure in his own small kingdom in Arundel Castle, Poyndex reflected on the state of the Empire.
He touched a sensor at his desk and the mural on the far wall of the command center shattered, and was replaced by an electronic version of the map the Emperor had shown him: the situation board. Crisis lights winking.
Poyndex scanned the bad news. Food riots. Rolling blackouts. Wildcat strikes. His eyes moved on. Money markets in disarray. Commodities seesawing. Panicked corporate reports. Appeal after appeal for more AM2.
The bad news wasn’t limited to the civilian sector. Sten’s attacks against the Empire were indicated all over the board. As were the declarations of war or independence from many of the Emperor’s former allies.
Dead agents, blown missions, and other intelligence failures were also added to the Empire’s burden.
A normal being might have despaired. Poyndex was far from normal. In each failure he saw opportunity. In each disaster, a hidden treasure trove.
Poyndex had learned much from the Eternal Emperor in a very short time. Success required perspective…and patience.
In this case the long view was Poyndex’s—not the Emperor’s.
As his black-uniformed aides hustled about the enormous room, Poyndex once again weighed the odds. And once again he came to the conclusion that the Emperor was wrong. He was taking the threat of Sten far too seriously.
In fact, it was Poyndex’s view that Sten was actually being propped up by the Emperor’s attention. His antics would be seen as just that if he was officially ignored. But the more the Emperor ranted and raved and flung about ships and troops, the more attractive a figure Sten became to the Emperor’s enemies.
All data suggested that the dice were loaded against Sten. His forces were puny and his resources slim, when compared to the juggernaut that was the Empire.
Sten could not afford one mistake. The Emperor could afford many.
For some reason the Emperor couldn’t see this. He was completely obsessed with Sten. Very little else was getting his attention.
A large blind spot.
A small smile began to grow on Poyndex’s lips. He couldn’t help feeling clever for encouraging the Emperor’s obsession. And slipping around that blind spot.
He’d warned the Emperor of this and that. But only to protect himself—if things went wrong. Meanwhile, he’d successfully isolated the Emperor from the outside world, moving in his own people. The Gurkhas were the last of the old guard to go.
Now, the Emperor was totally dependent on him. It was Poyndex who had chosen Zoran’s successor. Poyndex who controlled all people permitted in the Emperor’s presence. And it was Poyndex who encouraged the Emperor in his madness whenever possible.
As a matter of fact, he had become so indispensable to the Emperor that he’d deliberately started making a few mistakes. Such as the mishandling of the honors-banquet nonsense.
The Emperor might be mad. But he was certainly no fool. He knew as well as Poyndex that there was nothing so dangerous as an indispensable man.
So Poyndex had to foul up once in a while. Just enough so the Emperor wouldn’t resent him.
He looked up at the situation board. Not at the bad news. But at the sheer expanse of the Empire.
An Empire that in some ways bent to his will.
Not the Emperor’s. And as each day passed—and the Emperor deteriorated—Poyndex’s influence grew.
He did not make the mistake of ever seeing himself as Emperor. At least not very often.
During the time of the privy council, Poyndex had viewed firsthand what happened to the Empire when there was no figurehead to give it form.
No. The Emperor was a necessity. At least his presence was. His legend.
There was only one large flaw. Poyndex would eventually grow old.
Weaken.
And die.
But the Emperor was immortal.
What if Poyndex could somehow learn that secret?
What if he could live…forever?
Poyndex brushed the sensor and the situation board became a mural again.
There were more possibilities here than even Poyndex could ever dream of.
And Poyndex was a practiced dreamer.
Chapter Sixteen
“I DON’T KNOW how they discovered your whereabouts,” Sr. Ecu said. His holo image was shadowed on the edges from the strength of the scrambler.
“The point is, they’re on their way to the Lupus Cluster right now. A 260-being delegation. Headed by the three top leaders of the Zaginows.”
“Speaking as one trained diplomat to another,” Sten said, “this is not what I call clottin’ wonderful. I’m going to have to move our base of operations. Fast.”
“I think it would be a mistake not to meet with them,” Sr. Ecu said, his tail agitating the Seilichi atmosphere. The flick sent him drifting across the chamber.
“I know it’s dangerous to assume innocent intent.” Another flick, and Sr. Ecu’s body steadied. “However…if the Zaginows do join with us…it will be a major blow against the Emperor. Think of it. An entire region—representing hundreds of clusters—defecting to our side. The propaganda value would easily equal any military venture you might be considering.”
Sten tapped a nervous foot against the cold, stone floor of the Bhor com room. “I know. I know. But I still can’t get past the frightening little detail that somehow the Zaginows not only connected us, but also figured out where I’m holed up.”
“I was as startled as you,” Sr. Ecu said, “when they arrived at my front door, demanding to meet with you. My first assumption was there had been a leak. The second was the Manabi were doomed. I had visions of an Imperial planetbuster in our immediate future.
“But after speaking with them, running all the progs through my techs, combined with my personal knowledge of the Zaginows—I see very little possibility of a trap.”
“It’s the little possibility that scares me,” Sten said. “Also a largish ‘howcome ’…In other words, if they want to sign on with the revolution…how come they didn’t do so with you? Why is it so important they have a face-to-face with me?”
“Because the Zaginows are not entirely convinced,” Sr. Ecu said. “They’re only sure we share the same enemy. They’re not sure we have the means to do something about said enemy.”
Sr. Ecu drifted closer to the camera lens. “It’s up to you, Sten. They’re already leaning heavily in our direction. Otherwise they wouldn’t be taking such a risk.”
“So, what you are advising,” Sten said, “is a little diplomatic razzle-dazzle so we can reel them the rest of the way in.”
“Razzle-dazzle? I don’t understand this term.”
“A big show.”
“Oh. Very descriptive. Yes. That’s precisely what I advise. A very big show.”
Sten hesitated. “Did you ask how they figured it out?”
“Yes. They said they added one plus one to a great deal of wishful thinking. They used the same nonlogic to pinpoint you in the Bhor worlds. Although, I certainly didn’t confirm their belief. Actually, the Zaginows didn’t even ask. When they left, they just kindly asked me to notify you they were on the way.”
Sten sighed. “Okay. I’ll do it. What the clot? If we’re wrong, I’ll be too damned dead to count how many ways I was played the fool.”
“You won’t be alone, Sten,” Sr. Ecu said. Dry. “The afterlife, it is rumored, is mostly composed of fools like us.”
“I feel a lot better already,” Sten said with a grimace. “Thanks.”
“You’re quite welcome.”
Sr. Ecu’s image was gone.
Sten began pacing to work out his thoughts. But his mind was already crammed with so many odd details of the complex war he was waging against the Emperor that he soon found himself spinning about his own fundament.
He needed advice. Badly.
“So, Sr. Ecu claims it was mostly luck that led them to us?” Rykor said.
“That pretty well sums it up,” Sten said.
“Ah dinnae believe i’ luck,” Alex said. “’Cept when i’s m’ own wee hide time’s beggin’ f r it.”
“Of course there’s luck,” Otho insisted. “The Bhor know it well. It comes in three varieties. Blind, dumb, and bad.”
“We’ve been in kitchens,” Marr said, “where we’ve encountered all three.”
“And in one dinner rush as well,” Senn said.
“I have to accept Sr. Ecu’s word for it,” Sten said. “But I still think it was a helluva gamble for the Zaginows to take. What if they were wrong? They might as well have flung themselves into the Emperor’s arms and shouted, ‘Take me, I’m a traitor.’”
“Very kinky,” Marr said. “I like it.”
“Shush. We’re being serious, here,” Senn said.
“So was I, dear.” He patted Senn’s knee. “I’ll explain it to you some night.”
“When you really think about it,” Rykor said, easing her bulk in the tank, “their actions make an odd sort of sense.”
“Good,” Sten said. “I’ve been short that lately. Spell it out for me. And don’t use any big words. Like ‘the’ or ‘and.’”
“I believe it’s the nature of the Zaginows, Sten,” Rykor said. “They are all economic refugees. Refugees have always been willing to take great risks for tenuous gain. When you have very little, the act of gambling sometimes makes you feel empowered. As if you have finally taken control of your own fate.”
Sten nodded. Good sense, indeed. He had dealt with the Zaginow region before. Almost all of the many billions of beings inhabiting the area were descendants of poor working stock—human and ET alike—who had followed scarce work opportunities across the Empire. The slightest tilt in the economy impoverished them.
Like Sten’s own family, they had little but dreams and strong backs to sustain them. Some ended up in slave factories like Vulcan. The lucky ones—that word, again!—drifted into the jumble of star clusters that made up the Zaginows. There the wandering ended. The refugees took root.
