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The Course of Empire by Eric Flint & K. D. Wentworth. Part four. Chapter 23, 24, 25, 26, 27

No doubt he does, Oppuk thought sourly. The Commandant, ever watchful of Dano’s interests, would be probing to find advantage.

“Send him to me.” Oppuk rose, doing his best to squelch the smoldering anger. It was very difficult. He could remember a time, long gone, when he had enjoyed the endless maneuvers and tactics of kochan rivalry—and been very good at it. But his time on Terra had caused that pleasure to fade, along with so many others. Now, he simply found it tedious and irksome at best.

* * *

Dano, as always, was blunt. “Pluthrak swells. This victory, coming so quickly and by using his methods, will swell him further. Do not compound the situation by confronting him immediately. Allow him the time to stumble. He is talented, but very young and impulsive. Such is my advice.”

Oppuk felt his temper rising again, and struggled to restrain it. He could not afford to offend Dano. Pluthrak and Narvo might be preeminent among them, but Dano was still one of the great kochan. Since his arrival, several orbital cycles earlier, Kaul had generally allied himself with Oppuk. With the Subcommandant grown so large, in such a short time, Oppuk needed to retain the confidence of the system’s top military officer.

But, try as he might, he could not force himself to do more than issue a grunt. It might have been agreement . . . or might not.

Dano studied him for a moment, then assumed the posture of duty-fulfilled—with a trace of skepticism in the slant of his ears—and withdrew.

Testily, Oppuk summoned his servitor and began putting on his harness. He would follow the Dano’s advice, at least to the extent of receiving the young Pluthrak’s formal announcement of victory.

* * *

“And?” asked Kaul’s fraghta, Jutre krinnu Kio vau Dano.

Kaul, now that he was out of the Governor’s sight, allowed his posture to lapse into a harsh and crude version of folly-observed. “He may have once been namth camiti, but it is hard to imagine. The flow of time carries Oppuk further and further into folly. He reacts to everything now like a maddened lurret.”

Jutre glanced at the entrance to the Governor’s hant. A lurret was one of the great herbivores that roamed the Dano world of Hadiru. An old rogue male, to be precise, notorious for their insane furies. They had been known to charge headlong against combat vehicles.

“If the Pluthrak has taken his measure—which he will, by now, with that fraghta to advise him—he will advance-by-oscillation. I think he is doing so already.”

“Risky,” Kaul murmured. “Very risky. Admittedly, a dazzling tactic that would appeal to a youngster, especially one full of himself. He too, it is said, is namth camiti. But . . . would he be that incautious?”

Kaul considered his fraghta’s assessment further. Advance-by-oscillation was a tactic often mentioned in kochan rivalry, but rarely used in actual practice—precisely because of the risk involved. One attempted to force another kochan into association by steadily increasing the dissociation, matching move to move by swinging ever outward. Each measure, ever more extreme, forcing extreme measures from the other—until one or the other violated custom irreparably.

Dazzling, indeed, if it succeeded. But the chances were far greater that the aggressor, being the one required to initiate each stage of the dance, would misstep first and plunge into the abyss.

“And we should do what?”

“For the moment, nothing but observe.” The sound of an approaching vehicle could be heard. Jutre’s ears rose, his whiskers twitched. “The Pluthrak is arriving.”

When the vehicle came into view, Kaul could see it was a jinau vehicle. Not just any such, either, but the vehicle that bore the insignia of the Pacific Division’s commander. Indeed, he could see Kralik riding alongside Aille.

The significance was obvious, and Jutre put it into words.

“I was right,” he said. “Advance-by-oscillation, it is. He is deliberately provoking the Narvo.”

A movement from the Governor’s hant drew Kaul’s attention. Oppuk was emerging. One glance at the Narvo’s posture was enough.

“He will succeed,” said the Dano gloomily.

* * *

It did not take him long, either. Kaul and Jutre observed it all from the side. Before Aille could do more than begin his report, Oppuk interrupted him brusquely.

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