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Not that they’d have such freedom much longer. Sean had been vested with the first official sign of his status as Heir last year when he was presented to Mother, for under the Great Charter Mother passed on the acceptability of the Heir’s intellect and psych-profile. He’d been accepted, and the subliminal challenge-response patterns and implant codes which identified him as Heir had been implanted, but it had been the scariest moment of his life—and a clear sign that adulthood was coming closer.
There were signs for his friends, as well. All of them were headed for Battle Fleet—they’d known that for years—but they were getting close to meeting the Academy’s entry requirements. Another year, possibly two, Sean estimated, until their free time evaporated.
But for now the day was young, the pride of tyranotops they’d come to see awaited them, and he intended to enjoy himself to the full.
A cool breeze flowed over the balcony, for it was summer in Birhat’s northern hemisphere, and Colin had switched off the force fields which walled the balcony against the elements at need.
The city of Phoenix lay before him in the night, the serpentine curve of the River Nikkan sparkling far below, and Tsien Tao-ling’s engineering crews had done well by Birhat’s settlers. Phoenix was the product of a gravitonic civilization, and its towers soared even above the mighty near-sequoias about them, but the Palace was the tallest spire of all. Perhaps some thought that was to reflect its inhabitants’ rank, but the real reason was practicality. True, the imperial family had luxurious personal quarters, but that was almost a side effect of the Imperium’s administrative needs. Even a structure as vast as the Palace was badly overcrowded by functionaries and bureaucrats, though the new A
He sighed and slid an arm about Jiltanith, and silken hair brushed his cheek as she leaned against him. He kissed the top of her head, then swept his telescopic eyes over the city, enjoying the jeweled interplay of lights and the magical wash of shifting moonlight. The complex pattern never ceased to delight him, for he’d grown up with but a single moon.
He raised his gaze to the heavens, and the stars were hard to see. The gleaming disk of Mother’s fortress hull hung almost directly overhead, and over fifty huge planetoids dotted the night sky beyond her. They were much farther out (the comings and goings of that many “moons” would play merry hell with Birhat’s tides), but the sunlight reflected from their hulls gilded the Fifth Imperium’s capital in bronze and ebony. And on the farside of the planet from Mother—indeed, just about directly over the spot where his children were even now observing their tyranotops—hung another vast sphere named Dahak.
“God, ’Ta
“Aye.” She squeezed him gently. ” ’Tis like unto God’s own gem box.”
“It really is,” he agreed softly. “Sort of makes it all seem worthwhile, doesn’t it?” She nodded against his shoulder, and he sighed, looking back up at the distant planetoids once more. “Of course, looking at all this also tends to make me think about how much we still have to do.”
“Mayhap, my love. Yet have we done all Fate hath called us to thus far. I misdoubt not we’ll do all else when time demands.”
“Yeah.” He inhaled deeply, savoring the night, and pressed his cheek against her hair in deep, happy contentment.
“How’re the kids coming along, Dahak?”
“I regret to report that Sean has just tripped Harriet into a particularly muddy stream. Otherwise, things are proceeding to plan. Analysis of Harriet’s personality suggests she will attain revenge shortly.”
“Damn right,” Colin agreed, and Jiltanith’s laugh gurgled in his ear.
“Thou’rt worse by far than thy offspring, Colin MacIntyre!”
“Nah, just older and deeper in sin.” He chuckled. “God, I’m glad they’re growing up like normal kids!”
” ‘Normal,’ thou sayest? My love, the Furies themselves scarce could wreak the havoc those twain do leave strewn in their wake!”
“I know. Ain’t it great?” Bio-enhanced fingers pinched his ribs like a steel vise and he yelped. “Just think what royal pains in the ass they could have turned into,” he said, rubbing his side.
“Aye, there’s that,” Jiltanith said more seriously, “and ’twas thou didst save them from it.”
“You had a hand in it, too.”
“Oh, aye, there’s truth in that, but thou’rt the one who taught them warmth, my Colin. I love them well, and that they know wi’out doubt, but life hath not fitted me o’er well to nourish younglings.”
“You did good, anyway,” Colin said. “Actually, it looks like we make a pretty good team.”
“Indeed, ’Ta
“Oh, I would, would I? Well, mister energy-state smarty pants, who was smart enough to suggest finding them something to do besides sitting around sucking on silver spoons?”
“It was you,” Dahak replied with a soft, electronic chuckle. “A fact which, I must confess, continues to surprise me.” Colin muttered something rude, and Jiltanith giggled. “Actually,” the computer went on, “it was an excellent idea, Colin. One which should have occurred to me.”
“Oh, it probably would’ve come to you eventually. But unless something goes wrong in a big way, ’Ta
“Indeed. The classic example from your own recent history would, of course, be that of Queen Victoria and Edward VII. The tragic waste of Edward’s potential did great disservice to his country, and—”
“Maybe,” Colin interrupted, “but I wasn’t thinking about the Imperium. I want our kids to do something, and not for the Imperium. I want them to be able to look back and know they were wi
He fell silent for a moment, feeling Jiltanith’s silent agreement as she hugged him tight, and stared up to where Mother hung overhead like the very embodiment of an emperor’s power and treacherous grandeur.
“Dahak,” he said finally, “Herdan’s dynasty ruled for five thousand years. Five thousand years. That’s not a long time for someone like you, but it’s literally beyond the comprehension of a human. Yet long as it was, impossible as it is for me to imagine, our kids—and their kids, and their kids’ kids—may rule even longer. I can’t begin to guess what they’ll face, the sorts of decisions they’ll have to make, but there’s one thing ’Ta
“What, Colin?” Dahak asked quietly.
“The knowledge that power is a responsibility. The belief that who they are and what they do is as important as what they’re born to. A tradition of—well, of service. Becoming Emperor should be the capstone of a life, not a career in itself, and ’Ta
Dahak was silent for a moment—a very long moment, for him—before he spoke again. “I believe I understand you, Colin, and you are correct. Sean and Harriet do not yet realize what you and ’Ta