Branegate (9 page)

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Authors: James C. Glass

Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #War & Military, #Fiction

BOOK: Branegate
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“Ah, but from the point of view of Gan’s Emperor the Lyraen people are not innocents. They advocate his overthrow. They’ll accept only a pure democracy, a utopian concept brought to them by a foreign people who have come from far away, and who say they’re Immortal. Even that concept is difficult to believe, and I say that as a member of the Lyraen faith. The Church here questions things; it doesn’t blindly accept them. We question the idea of a pure democracy when personal freedom and high quality of life can be accomplished in other ways. The Lyraens on Gan do not question the teachings of The Immortals. Their thinking is narrow and rigid.”

“Would you allow them to be killed, then?” Trae felt heat in his face, and anger stirred in him.

“I haven’t said that,” said Assan quickly. “The point I’m trying to make is that even among Lyraens on planets of our local system the reputation of The Church on Gan has always been poor. It is rigid and uncompromising, and the problem has now coupled with the existence of a cruel Emperor who’s threatened by it. To topple an Emperor means war,
or
, the threat may be removed by a mass migration of the Lyraens on Gan. But who will take them? Should we open our doors to them on Galena, allow them to come in and then make trouble because we don’t meet their ideals? There are seven planets, and seven Emperors in The League. None are purely democratic, and most are dictatorships to some degree. Good relationships between us are of mutual benefit. So what are we to do with the rebellious Lyraens of Gan? Do you see the dilemma?”

Trae stared at Assan for just an instant, and then his eyes focused again. “I see that unless my people can compromise their beliefs the only way I can save them is to take them far away from here. Their neighbors won’t take them in, and there’s no way they can overthrow Emperor Osman without outside help.”

“We cannot give you that kind of help,” said Assan. “Our military is purely for defense, and we will not intervene in the business of other League members unless it threatens our safety. Emperor Siddique wanted this made clear to you. On the other hand, if The Church on Gan could adopt more liberal views of what a free society is, we would consider taking them in as citizens, provided they make no plans to return to Gan or plot against the government there.”

“I can’t speak for The Church, but it might be possible,” said Trae, but then Petyr touched his arm.

“I don’t think it’s likely. The conservative element of The Church has dominated since your father left us. We don’t have time to persuade them to soften their views.”

“Then we can’t take them in,” said Assan. “That leaves arrest, imprisonment or death, exile at the best. I’m sorry, but extremists are often the source of their own problems. One thing my Emperor has mentioned to me; Khalid Osman has spoken of the Lyraen problem in League Council, but it’s common knowledge his reign is considered oppressive by all his people, not just one group. If he brings it up again, an Emperor known for compassion might suggest exile of antagonists to another colony world and give Osman an opportunity to allow it. He has good reason to be concerned about his image on the Council these days.”

Trae looked at Petyr, who shrugged his shoulders in resignation. Assan smiled. “It’s the best we can do for you right now, but the two of you can remain here as long as you wish. You might visit with officials of The Church and get their views. I think it will give you a new perspective.”

“Thank you,” said Trae. “It’s not what we’d hoped for, but I’m sure it’s all you can do for us. There’s so much for me to learn, and I don’t have much time. I really think Osman will begin arresting Lyraens soon. He obviously knows they’ve sent an emissary off-planet. We were followed and attacked on our way here.”

“That alone might delay any arrests he’d like to make. Any outward signs of oppression are signs of instability. The League of Emperors is working for free trade between all their worlds, and wants permanent agreements. They’ll shy away from worlds showing unrest. It’s a lever Emperor Siddique can use, and he has suggested it in my presence. Please believe me when I say he’s sympathetic to the plight of any oppressed people, but all he can do for you now is subtle and political. He certainly wishes you well, and I need to get back to him. Your escort by the door will show you to your rooms and see to your needs.”

Assan stood up, and extended a hand to them. They shook it. “You will not see me again, but I pray The Source will give you a safe journey.”

“And for you and your Emperor a good life,” said Trae with a nod.

Assan smiled broadly. “Amazing, such a youthful look. One would never know. Perhaps one day your own people will return to show us better ways.” He turned and left the room, and Pavel, their escort, was instantly standing in the doorway.

“My own people?” said Trae.

“The Immortals,” said Petyr. “That’s what you are.”

Pavel led them to their rooms.

Assan’s face flushed as he quickly crossed the foyer and down a long hallway to the adjoining office building. He was feeling a strange mixture of awe and shame, awe at having met an actual Immortal and shame at not providing what the man had come for. Khalid Osman was a despicable despot, and sooner or later The League would have to deal harshly with him before the cancer of his policies could spread. Now was not the time.

An Immortal, so old, but a strip of a boy, and at one point it seemed his eyes had glowed. An Immortal on a mission, but there was more to it than just a fight against a harsh Emperor, of this Assan was certain. Perhaps The Immortals would return in force to create new systems of government in The League. Perhaps this boy he’d just met, this reincarnation of the son of an Immortal missionary, was being sent to fetch them. And if The Immortals returned, what would happen to the Emperors, good or bad? What would happen to their devoted servants?

Assan mused on this as he reached the preparation room, and went inside. He changed out of his robe of humility, and put on the white robe of wisdom and purity of thought, then went through the door to the judgment chamber.

It was empty. Good. He had a few minutes to think. His hard-soled sandels clicked hollowly on the marble floor, the sound echoing from the high vaulted ceiling above him. He went to the throne on a dais rising three feet above the floor, and sat on it, bowing, and placing his face in his hands.

“Source of all things, give me the courage and wisdom to do that which you would have me do,” he prayed, then straightened, and enjoyed a few moments of quiet meditation.

There was a knock on the great door.

“Come!”

The door opened, and a secretary stood there. “The delegation has arrived, Excellency.”

“Send them in,” said Emperor Rasim Siddique, the ruler of all Galena, and a clandestine Servant of The Source.

CHAPTER 8

A
fter his visit to the palace of Rasim Siddique, the dreams were suddenly more frequent and intense. The first night Trae was startled awake, face hot and sweaty. His feet hit the floor with a thud that awoke Petyr. Trae had never felt such a sense of urgency before. He tried to grasp the reason for it, but it was gone, fading with the dream. He’d been talking to Petyr, or rather his father, and there’d been drawings, technical things, on a table in front of them, and long lists of numbers. He awoke remembering nothing except a visual flash of the scene, but his head hurt, and somehow he knew all the details were still in his mind, and it was urgent he find the key to release them. But why?

Petyr questioned him, and seemed concerned. “The Church is supposed to provide for you wherever we go, but I have no new contacts. We’ll have to ask them whenever they decide to meet us. I’m sure Siddique will expect us to move along quickly. The treatments are initiating these dreams, Trae, and I don’t know how or why.”

They had to wait three days before being contacted by the Lyraen church on Galena, and then it was only a note delivered by an unknown messenger. It told them where and when to go, but Petyr was suspicious enough to ask Pavel for a military escort. There was another delay of a day before the meeting, and in the meantime the dreams came every night, a jumble that confused Trae and frightened him.

It was no longer conversations with a familiar face in a familiar room. There were visions of other places: forests, and two moons in a deep blue sky, a huge room in polished brown marble with frescos on a high, vaulted ceiling, then domed huts made of bricks and surrounded by sticky mud he struggled to walk through. The fire came again, and he was beating at the flames with crisping hands, the same dream he’d had since childhood. All of this happened in one night, and repeated after that. Each morning he awoke exhausted and shaking to find Petyr there, sitting on the edge of his bed, looking down at him.

Pavel took their request seriously and showed up with a heavily armed escort of a dozen soldiers and three armored vehicles. They were driven to the central Lyraen church in the capital city, an unadorned building that could have been offices or a bank. They were met by three, young priests, and an elderly proctor named Nicolus Shue, all dressed in business suits. The entire time they were in the church the young priests were never introduced to them, were apparently present only to listen and learn. They bowed in deference to Trae, watched his eyes constantly, and hung on his every word.

“They’ve never seen an Immortal before now,” explained Nicolus. “I was a small lad when your father passed through here, and we’ve not seen him since. It has been a disappointment to us.”

They went to a large room with white undecorated stucco walls. Rows of tables went back from a stage and podium. One table was prepared with two pitchers of water, glasses, and notepads in front of six straight back chairs. They sat.

“I’m trying to find my father, or any other Immortal who can lead me to him. The Church is in serious trouble on Gan, and lives are at stake,” said Trae.

“So I hear,” said Nicolus, “but that has nothing to do with us. They’ve made their own nest, and broken contact with churches all across The League.”

“They’ve been driven underground by threat of imprisonment or death. There can be no communication because of the risk of discovery.”

“Yet here you are.” Nicolus smiled.

“The leaving was planned for many years,” said Petyr, “but our destination was kept secret from us until the last moment.”

“Not a very well kept secret. You were attacked, and apparently killed.”

“How do you know that?” asked Petyr, and glanced over his shoulder. Pavel was there at the doorway with four of his soldiers.

“We have our sources,” said Nicolus.

“Are you questioning our identity?” Petyr’s eyes narrowed.

“I am. There have been recent attempts to infiltrate our ranks, and the bodies have been returned to their masters on Gan. Like all planets, we also have soldiers of The Church.”

“And I am one of them.”

“He’s been my teacher and guard since I was a child,” said Trae. “If you question his identity you question mine.”

“Yes, I do. There’s a simple test, if you’ll permit it.”

“Of course.”

“Not so fast, Trae,” said Petyr, and motioned to Pavel. The man came running, the soldiers right behind him. Nicolus recoiled in surprise, and the young priests pushed back their chairs, ready to flee. Four rifles were now leveled at them.

“You question who we are, but how do I know you represent The Church?”

“What’s the test?” asked Trae quickly.

“We need a small drop of your blood, that’s all,” said Nicolus, and looked straight at him with fear in his eyes. The muzzle of a rifle was only a foot from the man’s head.

“Then do it,” said Trae, with authority. “I need no proof of your identity. I’ve seen your face before, and the faces of these young men. You’ve stored things my father left behind for me. They’re in a black, wooden box, and I need to have them before we can move on. Take the blood and make your test. We can’t waste time with this.”

“Trae, I—”

“Please, Petyr. They’re only questioning me. Their agents have seen you before at a concave on Gan when I was small. They believe who you are. The test will tell them I’m an Immortal, and also that I’m the son of Leonid Zylak. Put the guns down. You’re frightening them.”

Petyr hesitated, then raised a hand. Pavel mumbled something, and the rifles were lowered. Petyr glared at Nicolus. “At best, you’re arrogant. Make your test, but one sign of threat and I promise you won’t survive it.”

Nicolus’ hand shook as he withdrew a leather wallet from an inner pocket, and opened it flat on the table. The implements in it were familiar: analytical syringe with a display for blood sugar and hemoglobin count and a built-in chamber for sample prep. Trae held out his hand, felt a jab of pain. Numbers appeared on the screen of the instrument. Nicolus pressed a button, and a small glass square was ejected from a slot under the screen. He handed it to one of the priests, who walked quickly away with it.

“It’ll take a few minutes. The readings here are normal. When did you last see a physician?”

“He had a treatment just before we left Gan,” said Petyr, still looking and sounding angry.

“He won’t have one here, but we’ll want to scan him.”

Now Petyr seemed to soften. “I understand.”

“I don’t,” said Trae.

“Just a check. You’ll be having a lot of these to see how you’re reacting to the treatments, and we don’t know when the opportunities will arise.”

Everyone seemed to relax just a bit, and Nicolus said, “While we’re waiting, perhaps you could tell us what happened on your journey here. We all had our individual assignments, and it seems to me security was penetrated on Gan even before you left.”

Petyr told him what had happened, but wasn’t finished when the young priest came back with the results of the blood test, handing a sheet of paper and two photographs to Nicolus. The man studied them, looked up at Trae and smiled.

“You are the Immortal son of Leonid Zylak, and his heir. We’ll do as he’s ordered us to do.”

Trae pointed at the photographs. “Can I see those?”

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