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A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows by Poul Anderson. Chapter 7, 8

am not prone to talk shop.”

“No, wait.” She fended him off, a push which was a caress. “What do you

need to know, Ahab?”

“Why–” He measured out his hesitation. “Something you’re not allowed to

tell me.”

“But they’d tell you at HQ.”

“Oh, yes. This is a miserable technicality.”

“All right,” Susette said fast. “What is it?”

“You might–” Flandry donned enthusiasm. “Darling! You wouldn’t get in

trouble, I swear. No, you’d be expediting the business of the Empire.”

She shook her head and giggled. “Uh-uh. Remember, you’ve got to spend

the time you gain here. Promise?”

“On my honor” as a double agent.

She leaned back again, her beer set aside, hands clasped behind her

neck, enjoying her submission. “Ask me anything.”

Flandry faced her, arms wrapped around drawn-up knees. “Mainly, who was

with Maspes? Nonhumans especi’lly. I’d better not spell out the reason.

But consider. No mind can conceive, let alone remember, the planets and

races we’ve discovered in this tiny offside corner of the solitary

galaxy we’ve explored a little bit. Infiltration, espionage–such things

have happened before.”

She stared. “Wouldn’t they check a memory bank?”

Memory banks can have lies put into them, whenever we get a government

many of whose officials can be bought, and later during the confusion of

disputed succession, civil war, and sweeping purges. Those lies can then

wait, never called on and therefore never suspected, till somebody has

need for one of them. “Let’s say no system is perfect, ‘cept yours for

lovemaking. Terra itself doesn’t have a complete, fully updated file.

Regional bitkeepers don’t try; and checking back with Terra seldom seems

worth the delay and trouble.”

“Gollool” She was more titillated than alarmed. “You mean we might’ve

had an enemy spy right here?”

“That’s what I’m s’posed to find out, sweetling.”

“Well, there was only a single xeno on the team.” She sighed. “I’d hate

to believe he was enemy. So beautiful a person. You know, I daydreamed

about going to bed with him, though of course I don’t imagine that’d

have worked, even if he did look pretty much like a man.”

“Who was he? Where from?”

“Uh–his name, Ay … Aycharaych.” She handled the diphthongs better

than the open consonants. “From, uh, he said his planet’s called

Chereion. Way off toward Betelgeuse.”

Further, Flandry thought amidst a thrumming.

This time he didn’t bother to conceal his right name or his very origin.

And why should he? Nobody would check on a duly accredited member of an

Imperial Intelligence force–not that the files in Thursday Landing

would help anyway–and he could read in their minds that none had ever

heard of an obscure world within the Roidhunate–and the secrecy command

would cover his trail as long as he needed, after he’d done his damage

and was gone.

When at last, maybe, the truth came out: why, our people who do know a

little something about Chereion would recognize that was where he glided

from, as soon as they heard his description, regardless of whether he’d

given a false origin or not. He might as well amuse himself by leaving

his legal signature.

Which I’d already begun to think I saw in this whole affair. Dreams and

shadows and flitting ghosts–

“He’s about as tall as you are,” Susette was saying, “skinny–no, I mean

fine-boned and lean–except for wide shoulders and a kind of jutting

chest. Six fingers to a hand, extra-jointed, ambery nails; but four

claws to a foot and a spur behind, like a sort of bird. And he did say

his race conies from a, uh, an analogue of flightless birds. I can’t say

a lot more about his body, because he always wore a long robe, though

usually going barefoot. His face … well, I’d make him sound ugly if I

spoke about a dome of a brow, big hook nose, thin lips, pointed ears,

and of course all the, the shapes, angles, proportions different from

ours. Actually, he’s beautiful. I could’ve spent days looking into those

huge red-brown whiteless eyes of his, if he’d let me. His skin is deep

gold color. He has no hair anywhere I saw, but a kind of shark-fin crest

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