A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows by Poul Anderson. Chapter 1, 2

thinner lines than ever hers had done. “That’s what scares me. You see,

we’ve collected evidence that Dennitzans are engineering a rebellion on

Diomedes. Have you heard of Diomedes?”

“Ye-e-es. Any man who appreciates your three primaries of life ought to

study the biography of Nicholas van Rijn, and he was shipwrecked there

once. Yes, I know a little. But it isn’t a terribly important planet to

this day, is it? Why should it revolt, and how could it hope to

succeed?”

“I wasn’t on that team myself. But my unit was carrying out related

investigations in the same sector, and we exchanged data. Apparently the

Diomedeans–factions among them–hope the Domain of Ythri will help.

They’ve acquired a mystique about the kinship of winged beings …

Whether the Ythrians really would intervene or not is hard to tell. I

suspect not, to the extent that’d bring on overt conflict with us. But

they might well use the potentiality, the threat, to steer us into new

orbits–We’ve barely started tracing the connections.”

Flandry scowled. “And those turn out to be Dennitzan?”

“Correct. Any such conspiracy would have to involve members of a society

with spaceships–preferably humans–to plant and cultivate the seed on

Diomedes, and maintain at least enough liaison with Ythri that the

would-be rebels stay hopeful. When our people first got on the track of

this, they naturally assumed the humans were Avalonian. But a lucky

capture they made, just before I left for Sol, indicated otherwise.

Dennitzan agents, Dennitzan.”

“Why, on the opposite side of Terra from their home?”

“Oh, come on! You know why. If the Gospodar’s planning an uprising of

his own, what better preliminary than one in that direction?” Hazeltine

drew breath. “I don’t have the details. Those are, or will be, in the

reports to GHQ from our units. But isn’t something in the Empire always

going wrong? The word is, his Majesty plans to leave soon for Sector

Spica, at the head of an armada, and curb the barbarians there. That’s a

long way from anyplace else. Meanwhile, how slowly do reports from an

obscure clod like Diomedes grind their way through the bureaucracy?”

“When a fleet can incinerate a world,” Flandry said bleakly, “I prefer

governments not have fast reflexes. You and your teammates could well be

quantum-hopping to an unwarranted conclusion. For instance, those

Dennitzans who were caught, if they really are Dennitzans, could be

freebooters. Or if they have bosses at home, those bosses may be a

single clique–may be, themselves, maneuvering to overthrow the

Gospodar–and may or may not have ambitions beyond that. How much more

than you’ve told me do you know for certain?”

Hazeltine sighed. “Not much. But I hoped–” He looked suddenly,

pathetically young. “I hoped you might check further into the question.”

Chives entered, on bare feet which touched the carpet soundlessly though

the gee-field was set at Terran standard. “I beg your pardon, sir,” he

addressed his master. “If you wish dinner before we reach the landing

approach zone, I must commence preparations. The tournedos will

obviously require a red wine. Shall I open the Chateau Falkayn ’35?”

“Hm?” Flandry blinked, recalled from darker matters. “Why … um-m …

I’d thought of Beaujolais.”

“No, sir,” said Chives, respectfully immovable. “I cannot recommend

Beaujolais to accompany a tournedos such as is contemplated. And may I

suggest drinking and smoking cease until your meal is ready?”

Summer evening around Catalina deepened into night. Flandry sat on a

terrace of the lodge which the island’s owner, his friend the Mayor

Palatine of Britain, had built on its heights and had lent to him. He

wasn’t sleepy; during the space trip, his circadian rhythm had slipped

out of phase with this area. Nor was he energetic. He felt–a bit

sad?–no, pensive, lonesome, less in an immediate fashion than as an

accumulation from the years–a mood he had often felt before and

recognized would soon become restlessness. Yet while it stayed as it

was, he could wonder if he should have married now and then. Or even for

life? It would have been good to help young Dominic grow.

He sighed, twisted about in his lounger till he found a comfortable

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