d’Alembert 2 – Stranglers Moon – E. E. Doc Smith

allowed her to survive without a heart attack.

“You called for me, Your Excellency?” he asked as nicely as he could.

“Yes,” she said. Her voice was a throaty rasp, escaping from deep inside her throat. She

reached out one ponderous arm to him and extended a hand as round as a balloon.

Garst brought the hand to his lips and kissed it.

He wanted to drop the hand after the kiss, but the Marchioness gripped his hand tightly

with her own and pulled him closer to the side of her bed. The stench of her perfume

grew ten times worse with each centimeter closer he came.

A silence hung in the air for a long moment, until Garst’s impatience got the better of him.

“May I ask, Your Excellency, why you sent for me at this particular hour? Though the

urgency of matters of state of course pales beside my desire to please you, there are

still some details that are important and must be done at certain times.

Marchioness Gindri looked up at him with great, rheumy eyes. “You haven’t been to see

me in three days.

Her voice wavered, as though she were on the verge of tears. “I need to know that you

still love me.” Though his outward expression did not alter, Garst’s inward fuming

resumed at an increased level. This stupid sow called me all the way over here for that?

he thought. Oh, how good it will be when I can get away from this moon and start out in

business on my own. “Of course I still love you,” he said aloud, seating himself on the

little bit of edge next to the woman’s enormous body. “What is there not to love about

you? You’re beautiful, intelligent, personable, wealthy and powerful, everything I admire

most in a woman.” And if you believe that, I deserve the Galaxy Award for acting.

But the Marchioness saw no falseness in his words or eyes, and was reassured of his

continuing affection. Spreading her arms apart to welcome him to her bosom, she said,

“Come to me then, my lamb, and prove your love for me.

With thoughts darker than the blackness of space, Garst crawled into her arms. I won’t

always be stuck on this miserable little rock-and when that day conies, I’ll see that you

get the rewards you’ve earned. Just wait.

CHAPTER 2

The Problem with Vesa

As La Comete Cuivre drifted purposefully through the void of interplanetary space toward

its rendezvous, its two occupants were keyed to the breaking point with eager

anticipation. Yvette and Jules d’Alembert had been ,.on vacation” for three months-far

longer than they would have liked-and they were itching for action.

“I wonder what we’ll be up against this time,” Yvette speculated aloud. “Are there any

more grand dukes plotting against the “Throne?.

“Probably nothing so dramatic,” her brother smiled. He spoke in the French-English

patois that was their native tongue. “After all, it doesn’t take a direct threat against the

Emperor’s life to endanger the peace. There’s always a long, uphill battle against

entropy.

They stopped speaking as their radarscope indicated they were nearing their destination.

Jules quickly computed the approach pattern and laid it into the ship’s computer. The

action was followed moments later by a flashing light on the control panel in front of them

and, five seconds after that, a short blast from the retrorockets. La Comete, according

to the numbers flashed on Jules’ screen, would be docking with the other ship in four

minutes, thirty-seven seconds.

“Let’s see what she’s like out there,” Yvette said, reaching for a different switch. Both

turned their heads and watched a panel to the right of their seats as a vidscreen that had

been dark suddenly jumped to life. Though they had known intellectually what to expect,

they still could not stifle the gasps of awe as they gazed at the ship they were

approaching.

The Anna Liebling was easily the biggest private space going vessel they had ever seen.

The d’Alemberts had grown up among circus ships that had to carry all the personnel and

equipment of the Greatest Show in the Galaxy, monstrous fat freighters ranging up to a

hundred meters long. That was considered the maximum size for any ship that had to

maneuver through an atmosphere and land on the surface of a planet, and they had

never thought they would behold anything bigger short of a battle cruiser. But now they

did.

The ship before them looked like a giant rectangular box a hundred and twenty-five

meters long and perhaps fifty wide and deep. Its outer hull was dull and pitted from

uncounted billions of encounters with micrometeoroids. It was a ship that could only have

been constructed in space, and would never be able to land. The dartlike sliver of the

ten-meter-long Comete seemed terribly insignificant beside the space behemoth.

“Wow,” Yvette whispered softly. “Rank certainly doth have its privileges.

As they came closer to the enormous vessel, part of the hull slid open and, like modern

Jonahs, the two d’Alemberts and their ships were swallowed intact by the space-going

whale.

The hull closed again behind them as their ship came to rest inside a giant hangar next to

several other small shuttles that served to take the Anna Liebling’s passengers to and

from the ship. From one of the hangar’s walls a long metal tube three meters in diameter

snaked toward the d’Alembert vessel and attached itself firmly to their airlock hatch. This

shuttle room was simply too big to use as an airlock; it would require too much time and

energy to pump air into and out of it each time it was used. So it was left free of air, and

these transit tubes allowed passengers to walk to and from the shuttles without donning

spacesuits.

“All right,” Jules said as the tube wheezed its airtight connection onto their lock, “let’s find

out what the Head has in store for us.

Dressed as they both were in the routine gray spacer’s coveralls that fit them only

loosely, neither Jules nor Yvette d’Alembert looked like what they truly were the two

most capable, most highly trained secret agents in the Galaxy. Both were a trifle too

short when compared to the standard Earther height these days-Jules stood at a

hundred seventy-three centimeters while his sister was ten centimeters shorter-but that

was because they weren’t from Earth. Both were natives of DesPlaines, that harsh

mining world with a surface gravity three times that of Earth normal. Over the course of

the fourteen generations their family had lived on that planet, they had adapted well to

life under extreme conditions.

Under their loose-fitting outfits, their bodies were packed with solid muscle, tested to

withstand the grueling pull of their world’s gravity. Their reflexes were lightning fast, as

they had to be-on a planet where objects fell at such an increased rate, even a slight

stumble could be fatal. The d’Alemberts’ bones were thicker and harder than an Earth

person’s, their sinews tougher, their muscles stronger.

But there was more to their heritage than just tough bodies. For the d’Alembert family

had, for the past two centuries, operated and starred in the Circus of the Galaxy, the

number one attraction throughout human occupied space. Jules and Yvette had been the

premier aerialists for the Circus for over a dozen years, their already perfect bodies

honed to clinical precision by the intensive training and impossible demands of their art.

Several months ago, though, Jules and Yvette had left the Circus. There was no outward

sign that they had departed, for their younger cousins had stepped in to become the new

“Jules and Yvette,” while the old ones, as their predecessors had before them-moved up

to their real jobs: undercover agents for the Service of the Empire.

Almost from its inception, the Circus had provided SOTE with its top agents. The

specialized skills its performers possessed were ideal for the jobs that the Service

needed done. Added to that was the fact that the d’Alembert family, led by Duke Etienne

d’Alembert, had always been extremely intelligent and unquestioningly loyal to the

Throne, and that the Circus was able to travel all over the Galaxy without arousing

suspicion. The Circus was SOTE’s secret weapon against the forces of disorder, with

the emphasis on the word secret. Only a handful of people knew about it-and since that

handful comprised the Imperial family, the Head of the Service and his chief assistant,

that secret was well-kept indeed.

As Jules and Yvette emerged from the transit tube they found the chief assistant waiting

for them. Duchess Helena von Wilmenhorst was obviously bred of Earth, tall, willowly and

beautiful, with her long black hair tied into braids behind her so that it wouldn’t be in her

way on the ship. Apparently not all portions of the Anna Liebling were under ultragrav as

this part was.

Helena strode quickly toward them. Her brown- and peach-colored pants suit

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