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A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows by Poul Anderson. Chapter 17, 18, 19, 20

material? More incoherent than usual, too, because of the brain

channeling. We did sort out his basic biography, details of his most

recent task, that kind of thing. Offhand, the rest of what we got seems

promising. But to fit the broken, scrambled association chains together,

interpret the symbols and find their significance–”

“I’ll take care of that,” Flandry snapped. “Your part is over.”

“Yes, sir.” Mitchell dropped his gaze. “I’m … sorry … on account of

the relationship involved. He really did admire you. Uh, what shall we

do about him now?”

Flandry fell quiet. Miyatovich puffed volcanic clouds. Outside, the

bells caroled.

“Sir?”

“Let me see him,” Flandry said.

Interlinks flickered. In the screen appeared the image of a young man,

naked on a bed, arms spreadeagled to meet the tubes driven into his

veins, chest and abdominal cavities opened for the entry of machines

that kept most cells alive. He stared at the ceiling with eyes that

never moved nor blinked. His mouth dribbled. Click, chug, it said in the

background, click, chug.

Flandry made a noise. Miyatovich seized his hand.

After a while Flandry stated, “Thank you. Switch it off.”

They held Kossara Vymezal in a coldvault until the Imperials had left.

This was by command of the Gospodar, and folk supposed the reason was

she was Dennitza’s, nobody else’s, and said he did right. As many as

were able would attend her funeral.

The day before, she was brought to the Cathedral of St. Clement, though

none save kin were let near. Only the four men of her honor guard were

there when Dominic Flandry came.

They stood in uniform of the Narodna Voyska, heads lowered, rifles

reversed, at the corners of her bier. He paid them no more mind than he

did the candles burning in tall holders, the lilies, roses, viyenatz

everywhere between, their fragrance or a breath of incense or the

somehow far-off sound of a priest chanting behind the iconostasis, which

filled the cool dim air. Alone he walked over the stones to her. Evening

sunlight slanted through windows and among columns, filtered to a domed

ceiling, brought forth out of dusk, remote upon gold and blue, the

Twelve Apostles and Christ Lord of All.

At first he was afraid to look, dreading less the gaping glaring

hideousness he had last seen–that was only what violent death

wrought–than the kind of rouged doll they made when Terran bodies lay

in state. Forcing himself, he found that nothing more had been done than

to cleanse her, close the eyes, bind the chin, gown and garland her. The

divided coffin lid showed her down to the bosom. The face he saw was

hers, hers, though color was gone and time had eased it into an inhuman

serenity.

This makes me a little happier, dear, he thought. I didn’t feel it was

fitting that they mean to build you a big tomb on Founders’ Hill. I

wanted your ashes strewn over land and sea, into sun and wind. Then if

ever I came back here I could dream every brightness was yours. But they

understand what they do, your people. A corner of his mouth bent upward.

It’s I who am the sentimental old fool. Would you laugh if you could

know?

He stooped closer. You believed you would know, Kossara. If you do,

won’t you help me believe too–believe that you still are?

His sole answer was the priest’s voice rising and falling through

archaic words. Flandry nodded. He hadn’t expected more. He couldn’t keep

himself from telling her, I’m sorry, darling.

And I won’t kiss what’s left, I who kissed you. He searched among his

languages for the best final word. Sayonara. Since it must be so.

Stepping back a pace, he bowed three times very deeply, turned, and

departed.

Bodin Miyatovich and his wife waited outside. The weather was milder

than before, as if a ghost of springtime flitted fugitive ahead of

winter. Traffic boomed in the street. Walkers cast glances at the three

on the stairs, spoke to whatever companions they had, but didn’t stop;

they taught good manners on Dennitza.

Draga Miyatovich took Flandry by the elbow. “Are you well, Dominic?” she

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