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The Operations head was damned lucky to be alive, Jantu thought viciously. Somehow Ramman had gotten his hands on an energy pistol despite his suspect status—something Jantu still couldn’t understand—and only the fact that Ganhar had out—drawn him had saved his life. Damn Ramman! The least he might have done was kill the son-of-a-bitch!

Unfortunately, he hadn’t, and Ganhar had not only preserved his own life, but uncovered the worst security breach in the enclave’s history: a self-confessed spy who’d admitted he was working for Horus. And the fact that Horus had gotten to Ramman without being detected was Jantu’s failure, not Ganhar’s. His failure to spot Ramman, coupled with the fact that it was his bitterest rival Ramman had almost killed, had seemed dangerously close to collusion rather than carelessness, and Jantu knew Anu thought so.

“Maybe you’re right,” he admitted now, the words choking in his throat. “But if so, what else should we do?”

“We ought to make sure we’re right about their reaction,” Ganhar said positively. “Our important degenerates have been safe inside the shield, but Nergal’s bunch’ve blown the crap out of our outside networks. Let’s start rebuilding while the rest of the degenerates are still disorganized. There’s no way the other side could miss our doing that. If they’ve still got the guts to face us, they’ll go after our degenerates as soon as they spot them.”

“Sounds reasonable,” Anu agreed. “Which batch do you want to throw out first?”

“Let’s sit tight on our people in government and industry.” Ganhar had personally run the background checks on too many of those people for it to be likely Ramman’s courier was among them. “They’re too valuable to risk.”

“If we hang onto them too long, they’ll lose credibility,” Ina

“A few more days won’t make much difference, and the delay’s worth it to keep them alive if we’ve guessed wrong. Remember, the very fact that we hid them has marked them for Nergal’s bunch. If they do have the guts to go on, they’ll know exactly who to gun for.” Ganhar wanted to marshal weightier arguments, but he dared not. Ina

“You’re right again, Ganhar,” Anu said expansively. “By the Maker, it’s almost a pity Kirinal didn’t get herself killed earlier. If you’d been ru

“Thanks, Chief,” the words were like splintered bone in Ganhar’s throat, “but I stand by what I said. There was simply no way to predict what they were going to pull. All we could do was see which way the wind blew and then hit back hard.”

He saw a trace of approval in Ina

“Well, you did a good job,” Anu said, “and I’m inclined to follow your advice now. Start with the combat types—they’re easier to replace anyway.”

He nodded to indicate the meeting was adjourned, and the other three rose and left.

Ganhar felt the hatch close behind him with a vast sense of relief, then nodded to Ina





The cold wind of mortality blew down his spine, and he’d put it there himself, but he still didn’t know exactly why he had. The events he’d set in motion—or, more accurately, allowed to remain in motion-terrified him, yet there was a curious satisfaction in it. One way or another, it would bring the eternal, intricate betrayal and counter-betrayal to an end, and perhaps it could go some way towards expiating the sickness he’d felt ever since he had replaced Kirinal and his had become the hand that personally managed the organized murder of the people of Terra.

And it would also be the gambit that ended the long, futile game. The consummate, smoothly-polished stratagem that set all the other plotting, scheming would—be tyrants at naught. There was a certain sweetness in that, and—who knew?—he might even survive it after all.

Chapter Twenty-Two

It was very quiet on Nergal’s hangar deck. The command deck was too small for the crowd of people who had gathered here, and Colin let his eyes run over them thoughtfully. Every surviving Imperial was present, but they were vastly outnumbered by their Terra-born descendants and allies, and perhaps that was as it should be. It was fitting that what had started as a battle between Anu’s mutineers and the loyalists of Dahak’s crew should end as a battle between those same butchers and the descendants of those they had betrayed.

He sat beside Jiltanith on the stage against the big compartment’s outer bulkhead and wondered how the rest of Nergal’s people were reacting to the outward signs of their changing relationship. There were dark, still places in her soul that he doubted he would ever understand fully, and he had no idea where they were ultimately headed, but he was content to wait and see. Assuming they won and they both survived, they would have plenty of time to find out.

Hector MacMahan, immaculate as ever in his Marine uniform, entered the hangar deck beside a dark-faced, almost-handsome young man in the uniform of a US Army master sergeant, and Colin felt a stir rustle through the gathering as they found chairs to Jiltanith’s left. Only a few of them had yet met Andrew Asnani, but all of them had heard of him by now.

Horus waited until they were seated, then stood and folded his hands behind him. He had abandoned his ratty old Clemson sweatshirt for this meeting and, at Colin’s insistence, wore the midnight blue of the Fleet for the first time in fifty thousand years. His collar bore the single golden starburst of a fleet captain, not his old pre-mutiny rank, in a gesture that spoke to all of his fellow mutineers, even if they did not understand its full implications, and Colin had seen one or two of the older Imperials sit a bit straighter, their eyes a bit brighter, at the change.

“We’ve waited a long time for this moment,” Horus said quietly, looking out over the silent ranks, “and we and, far more, the i

He paused and drew a deep breath.

“All of you know what we’ve been trying to do. It looks—and I caution you that appearances may be deceiving—but it looks like we’ve succeeded.”

A sound like wind through grass filled the hangar deck. His words were no surprise, but they were a vast relief—and a source of even greater tension.

“Hector will brief you on our operations plan in just a moment, but there’s something else I want to say to our children and our allies first.” He looked out, and his determined old eyes were dark.

“We’re sorry,” he said quietly. “What you face is our fault, not yours. We can never repay you, never even thank you properly, for the sacrifices you and your parents and grandparents have made for us, knowing that we are to blame for so many terrible things. Whatever happens, we’re proud of you—prouder, perhaps, than you can ever know. By being who you are, you’ve restored something to us, for if we can call upon the aid of people as extraordinary as you have proven yourselves to be, then perhaps there truly remains something of good in all of us. I—”