Birds Of Prey

ding of the recipient’s mind at a level of which he isn’t aware, so it becomes his thought. And it keeps returning, a little stronger each time, until he acts on it. Nothing that he might not have done anyway, of course, but there are so many actions that are within the capacity of an imperial usher, for instance, that it isn’t hard to find one that prepares for the next stage of action. And at last, the Emperor comes to believe something which is in fact true but which he would probably not have acted on if approached in any other fashion.”

The rumble of their iron wheels on the road made Perennius’ bowels quiver and his head nod toward the sleep it had not gotten the night before. Everything was going smoothly now. He had conceived his plan and put it into operation. The agent’s mind was ready to relax, now, until the next of the inevitable disasters lurched into its path to be dealt with. “Calvus,” the Illyrian said.

“Yes, Aulus Perennius,” the other replied.

“Don’t screw with my mind. I know myself pretty well. If I ever find myself acting . . . some way I don’t, I’ll come after you. It … This world doesn’t always seem to have a lot for me in it, but that’s always been my own.”

“Would you file the edge of a good sword?” asked the tall man.

Perennius had been avoiding Calvus’ eyes. Now he glanced back at the tall man. “Hell no,” he said.

“Neither would I, Aulus Perennius,” Calvus said.

They were nearing the formal boundaries of the city. Both sides of the road were lined with tombs and funerary steles. In recent years, many of those who could afford it were being buried whole instead of being cremated as their ancestors had been. Instead of a single stone plate with a prayer for their spirits and a base on which a wine and food offering could be left by relatives, they wanted to be embalmed to await resurrection. Fools and their mystery religions, their Isis and Attis and Christos. But when there was increasingly little hope or security in the world, how could anyone blame people who looked for hope elsewhere?

Perennius muttered a curse. Easily. If the damned cowards would buckle down and do something about the present, they wouldn’t need to despair about it. Miniature pyramids, polished granite sarcophagi with peaks on the corners in Syrian style . . . Those were the fancy ones. For the poor, there were boxes of tufa, so strait that even short men must have their legs folded at the knees or separated by a bone saw.

The agent’s face stayed blank, but his hands were gripping the reins so tightly that the skin striped white and red over his knuckles. Calvus watched him closely. With the care of a scout trying to disarm a deadfall, the tall man said, “I couldn’t have affected the gang which waylaid us last night, even if I hadn’t been immobilizing the Guardian’s weapon. There were too many of them, too hopped-up, and it was too sudden. But I did encourage the group behind us to run, after you killed the Guardian.”

“What?” Perennius said. Curiosity dissolved from his mind the anger directed at his whole world. The agent’s muscles relaxed to the normal tautness of a man driving a pair of spirited mules. “What were you doing to the thunderbolt thing? That is what you mean?”

The bald man nodded. “For the weapon to work, two small metal parts had to touch each other inside it. While I could, I kept them from touching by keeping a layer of – ” he risked a gesture with his left hand – “part of the air between them. Until I was hit on the head, that is.” He smiled.

Perennius had the impression that the smile was real, not a gesture trotted out for a suitable occasion. That lightened the agent’s mood as much as did the interesting problem which the statement posed. The stable from which they had rented the carriage was in sight. Wheeled vehicles were unlawful in the city during daylight, and only goods wagons were permitted on the streets even after dark. They would walk to Headquarters. Perennius had a dislike for sedan chairs, a fear of being closely surrounded by four strong men who had every reason to dislike him as a burden. No doubt chairmen who really did hate the folk who hired them soon enough found another line of work, but the feeling persisted.

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