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A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows by Poul Anderson. Chapter 13, 14, 15, 16

an outer gate, on a driveway which curved through gardens and parkscape,

Flandry saw first the tile roof of the manor above shading trees, then

its half-timbered brick bulk, at last its outbuildings. Situated around

a rear court, they made a complete hamlet: servants’ cottages, garages,

sheds, stables, kennels, mews, workshops, bakery, brewery, armory,

recreation hall, school, chapel. For centuries the demesne must have

brawled with life.

On this day it felt more silent and deserted than it was. While many of

the younger adults were gone to their militia units, many folk of every

other age remained. Most of them, though, went about their tasks

curt-spoken; chatter, japes, laughter, song or whistling were so rare as

to resound ghostly between walls; energy turned inward on itself and

became tension. Dogs snuffed the air and walked stiff-legged, ready to

growl.

At a portico, the gamekeeper who accompanied Flandry explained to a

sentry: “We met this fellow on the riverside lumber road. He won’t talk

except to insist he has to see the voivode alone. How he got here

unbeknownst I couldn’t well guess. He claims he’s friendly.”

The soldier used an intercom. Flandry offered cigarettes around. Both

men looked tempted but refused. “Why not?” he asked. ‘They aren’t

drugged. Nothing awful has happened since mobilization, right?” Radio

news received on his minicom had been meager during the seven planetary

days of march; entering inhabited country, he and Kossara had shunned

its dwellers.

“We haven’t been told,” the ranger grated. “Nobody tells us a thing.

They must be waiting–for what?”

“I’m lately back from an errand in the city,” the guardsman added. “I

heard, over and over–Well, can we trust those Impies the Gospodar

called in along with our own ships? Why did he? If we’ve got to fight

Terra, what keeps them from turning on us, right here in the Zorian

System? They sure throw their weight around in town. What’re you up to,

Impie?”

A voice from the loudspeaker ended the exchange. Danilo Vymezal would

see the stranger as requested. Let him be brought under armed escort to

the Gray Chamber.

Darkly wainscoted and heavily furnished like most of the interior,

smaller than average, that room must draw its name from rugs and drapes.

An open window let in cool air, a glimpse of sunlight golden through the

wings of a hovering chiropteroid. Kossara’s father stood beside, arms

folded, big in the embroidered, high-collared shirt and baggy trousers

of his home territory. She resembled her uncle more, doubtless through

her mother, but Flandry found traces of her in those weather-darkened

craggy features. Her gaze could be as stern.

“Zdravo, stranac,” Vymezal said, formal greeting, tone barely polite. “I

am he you seek, voivode and nachalnik.” Local aristocrat by inheritance,

provincial governor by choice of Gospodar and popular assembly. “Who are

you and what is your business?”

“Are we safe from eavesdroppers, sir?” Flandry responded.

“None here would betray.” Scorn: “This isn’t Zorka-grad, let alone

Archopolis.”

“Nevertheless, you don’t want some well-intentioned retainer shouting

forth what I’ll say. Believe me, you don’t.”

Vymezal studied Flandry for seconds. A little wariness left him, a

little eagerness came in. “Yes, we are safe. Three floors aloft,

double-thick door, for hearing confidences.” A haunted smile touched his

lips. “A cook who wants me to get the father of her child to marry her

has as much right to privacy as an admiral discussing plans for regional

defense. Speak.”

The Terran gave his name and rank. “My first news–your daughter Kossara

is unharmed. I’ve brought her back.”

Vymezal croaked a word that might be oath or prayer, and caught a table

to brace himself.

He rallied fast. The next half-hour was furiously paced talk, while

neither man sat down.

Flandry’s immediate declaration was simple. He and the girl lacked

accurate knowledge of how matters stood, of what might happen if her

return was announced. She waited in the woods for him to fetch her, or

guide Vymezal to her, depending on what was decided. Flandry favored the

latter course–the voivode only, and a secret word to the Gospodar.

He must spell out his reasons for that at length. Finally the Dennitzan

nodded. “Aye,” he growled. “I hate to keep the tidings from her mother

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