Steve White The Disinherited 03 Debt of Ages

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Debt of Ages by Steve White


PROLOGUE - 491 A.D.2
The Restorer was dying.

I knew him for the Restorer at the moment I first met him, thought
Sidonius Apollinaris, known to the world these past eight years as His
Holiness Gaius II, keeper of the keys of Saint Peter.

Behind him stood most of the Consistory, filling the incense-heavy air
with that sense of numb disbelief with which the entire Sacred Palace, the
entire City of Constantine around it, and the whole of Rome's reunified
and expanded empire beyond that awaited the passing of him who had
brought it all back from the edge of the abyss. But Sidonius was aware of
none of the overdressed dignitaries with whom he shared the Imperial
bedchamber. He stood over the bed and looked down into his old friends
face, worn down by war, the cares of empire and sixty-four winters, as well
as by the sickness that was killing him.

The dark eyes fluttered open, glittering with recognition as much as


with fever. "Sidonius," he said in a dry whisper to which he still managed
to give a kind of firmness.

"Yes, Augustus, I am here."

The shockingly aged face formed the famous grin whose boyishness had
never seemed incongruous and still didn't.

"There you go again, Sidonius! I never persuaded you to stop


addressing me as 'Riothamus' even though I kept telling you we Britons
only used the title on formal occasions. And after that it's always been
'Augustus'! Will you let me go to my grave still refusing to call me by my
name, at least in private?"
All at once, Sidonius was no longer in the ornate room that the doctors
insisted on keeping so stifling. He was on a beach at the mouth of the
Loire twenty-two years before, standing in the chill salt wind with the
men—all dead now, besides him—who had awaited the arrival of the High
King of the Britons whose army was the Western Empires last hope
against the Visigoths.

I can still see the afternoon sun blazing forth through the first break
in that day's overcast as he stepped from the boat, silhouetting him
against the divine fire. But that fire burned even more strongly within
him, burned with a force that could snatch back that which had been
consigned to the irrecoverable past and defy the Fates themselves (as
always, Sidonius automatically chided himself for his lifelong weakness for
pagan mythology). Yes, he had known that the British ruler with whom he
had corresponded was destined to restore the Empire. He had known it
with a simple, absolute certainty that, he guiltily acknowledged, not even
the Church's doctrines could inspire in him.

That moment had remained with Sidonius through all the tumultuous,
unbelievable years that had followed. His certainty had faltered that very
winter when he had learned of the treason of the Praetorian Prefect of
Gaul, whom he had once called friend. (What had his name been? Oh, yes:
Arvandus.) But the Restorers destiny was not to be deflected by betrayal,
and the matter had been forgotten in the jubilation following the great
victory at Bourges. That victory had banished the terrifying Visigothic
threat to the realm of old nightmares from which one had awakened. And
then had come a potentially disastrous digression, with rebellion calling
the High King back to Britain. But he had returned to the continent
somehow strengthened by his campaigning in the islands wild western
hills. After that, events had moved with the seeming inevitability of a
rivers journey to the sea.

The Restorer had never ceased to insist that he had not sought even the
Emperorship of the West, much less of a reunited Roman Empire.
Sidonius was inclined to believe him. Looking back, it was hard to see how
he could have avoided any one of the steps he had taken, or how each of
those steps could have failed to lead to the step that had followed. After his
ally the Western Emperor Anthemius had been murdered, Odoacer—who
had succeeded Ricimer as Master of Soldiers at Rome—had moved against
him. With no alternative save extinction, the Restorer had advanced into
Italy, where on the victorious field of Pavia his British and Gallic and
Frankish troops had proclaimed him Augustus of the West. That had been
in 474, the year the Eastern Emperor Leo had died; his successor Zeno
had never acknowledged that he had a legitimate fellow in the West, and
after six years of uneasy coexistence had come the inevitable clash.
Thinking back, Sidonius wondered how he could ever have doubted its
outcome. Me and most of the world, he reflected, which always made him
feel a little better. But if his confidence had wavered, his loyalty never had.
And when old Pope Simplicius had died in 483, the ruler of the
miraculously reunified Empire had let it be known that in his opinion the
churchmen and citizenry of Rome could make no better choice for their
new bishop than his old friend and supporter, that noted prelate and man
of letters Bishop Sidonius of Clermont. For some odd reason they had
agreed.

No, he could never forget those years. Nothing could dim their luster in
his memory—not even the uncomprehending hurt and disappointment he
had felt all too often during the years that had followed. And he heard
himself form the same words he had spoken on that windy beach
twenty-two years before, when it had all begun. "Very well… Artorius."

The Restorer smiled again. "Better! There may be hope for you yet,
Sidonius!" Then he raised a hand from the bed and grasped the papal
forearm with surprising strength. When he spoke, the whisper was fainter
than before, but not with the faintness of failing strength. No, it was
deliberate—these words were for the two of them alone.

"Sidonius, you will see me again."

"Why, of course, Augustus." Sidonius reverted to formality in his


puzzlement. "There can be no doubt of it. We will see each other again,
before the throne of God, when—"

"No!" The grip tightened on his arm, and the whisper took on a
compelling urgency. "I don't mean that. I mean in this life! I'm telling you
this because I want you to be prepared, and not doubt your sanity nor fear
for your soul. You must dismiss all thoughts of the black arts, and accept
what your eyes and ears and mind and heart tell you…"

The whisper faded to nothing and the grip went slack, for the effort had
been too much. Damasius the Syrian stepped forward and examined his
imperial patient with that look of sharp concentration which all
physicians cultivated, a mask behind which yawned bottomless ignorance.
"He must rest now, Your Holiness. I fear he has exhausted himself."

Sidonius nodded and stepped back from the bedside. Whatever was he
talking about? he wondered. Nothing, probably. His mind is going, and
he can no longer command it to reason. Not even the force of will which
hauled back the outgoing tide of history can hinder death in its work of
dissolution.

"Remember," he told the physician, "I am to be notified when the end is


at hand." Then he turned from the bed and looked around the room, so
very Greek in its massive, mosaic-encrusted sombreness. Equally Greek
were most of the men and eunuchs in the room, the high officials of state
and church. Then he saw a new face, and he froze.

It seemed amazing that Acacius could have entered the room silently,
moving under the weighty vestments of the Patriarch of Constantinople.
Even more amazing was his audacity in being here at all, knowing that the
Pope of Rome, his bitterest enemy, was bound to be present. Well,
Sidonius thought, his habitual good nature reasserting itself, perhaps he
feels sincere affection for this dying man. Hp certainly has every reason
to. And I will not create a scene here!

He nodded stiffly to the Patriarch, who acknowledged with what he had


to admit was probably superior grace. Then he turned and left the room,
moving with that natural stateliness that people assured him he had
acquired by virtue of the weight he had put on in recent decades. I hope
that's true, he thought as he made his way along corridors and past the
occasional statue-like figures of white-uniformed Scholarian Guards. It
would be good to have some recompense in exchange for wind and vigor!
But I mustn't complain. At fifty-nine I should be thanking God that I'm
still alive, not whining to Him about the loss of youth.

He reached the top of the marble stairs that led down from the imperial
apartments to the first floor. Here hp paused, and gazed out the wide
windows that gave light to the landing. They gave little light now, for it
was approaching twilight. Sidonius looked out at the terraced gardens
that sloped down to the Sea of Marmara, where lights were winking to life
on passing ships. He liked this view, for the palace itself and the adjacent
hippodrome blocked from sight the teeming hive that was Constantinople.

At one time I dared hope that he'd move the principal Imperial
residence back to Rome, where it was in the great days before the world
began to go wrong, when the first Augustus ruled as Princeps among his
fellow citizens, not as an Asiatic god-emperor inhabiting a world of
ceremony and splendor far above his subjects' cringing heads. But Rome
was always hopeless as a location for the Imperial capital, from the
military standpoint. The logistics were all wrong. And, of course, most of
our wealth and people—and our most dangerous enemies—are in the
East All of this was as true for Artorius as it had been for Constantine. As
in everything else, he made the only possible choice.

Later, though...

At first Artorius had been a breath of fresh air in this place. But then
the wind had settled, and everything had been as before: the eunuchs, and
the ceremonies and hierarchies they had devised and eternally elaborated
(A substitute for what they've lost? Sidonius wondered); and the clerks
and notaries who did the everyday business of the state with an
inefficiency they defended with a stubbornness fit to shame the Saxons,
for any change could only be to their disadvantage. There's no way the
empire can function without them, Sidonius reflected bleakly. No one else
knows how to play the games they themselves have invented for the
purpose of making themselves indispensable.

He sighed and shook his head. He shouldn't complain about the way
the restored empire was governed. It's like my advancing age, he
reminded himself. Consider the alternative! No, the decisions that had
wedged him and his old friend apart over the last few years had concerned
not the things of Man but those of God… "Sidonius! Your Holiness, I
meant to say!" Sidonius turned and smiled at the man bounding up the
staircase. The clouds lifted from his mind for the moment. It was
impossible to stay depressed around Ecdicius.

"Noblissimus," he greeted, using the proper form of address for the heir
to the Empire.

"Well, now that we've got all that out of the way— greetings!" Ecdicius
reached the landing, not even breathing hard after an ascent that would
have reduced Sidonius to a state of gasping exhaustion, and clasped
forearms with his brother-in-law. Ecdicius flashed the smile that
transfigured his engagingly ugly face, and Sidonius reflected as always on
how much he was like his adoptive father the Augustus.

Ecdicius had not yet reached adolescence when the twenty-year-old


Sidonius, scion of another of the aristocratic Gallo-Roman families of
their set, had come to seek the hand of his older sister Papianilla. Sidonius
still thought of him as the wiry, restlessly energetic boy for whom the villa
in the Auvergne had seemed too confining. God, what a brat he was, he
recalled, in the wake of every man who ever courted a girl with a younger
brother. But that boy had survived the whirlwind of events that had soon
followed—his father Avitus' brief reign as Augustus of the West and
subsequent murder, and the "Marcelliana" conspiracy in which Sidonius
had almost been implicated. And later, in his mid-twenties but already
grown into the kind of man that other men instinctively follow, he had
raised a private cavalry unit that had distinguished itself at the Battle of
Bourges. He had subsequently become one of Artorius' leading cavalry
officers, with a reputation for taking hair-raising risks and emerging alive
through sheer dash. When the childless Restorer had found it politic to
adopt an heir, he hadn't found the choice a difficult one.

"I got back as quickly as I could," Ecdicius said, sobering. "I wouldn't
have left for the Danube a fortnight ago, except that he seemed to be
getting better and insisted that I not let it disrupt my schedule. Of course,
when I heard he had taken a turn for the worse…" He indicated his dusty,
travel-worn clothes. "How is he?" Without waiting for an answer, he
abruptly started in the direction of the imperial apartments. Sidonius
placed a restraining hand on his arm.

"Sleeping now. You can't get in to see him, so you may as well change
and rest." Ecdicius nodded, but continued to move, pacing as though to
vent his excess vitality.

Sidonius couldn't swear that he had ever seen Ecdicius hold still, and it
was no different now that he was in his late forties.

"Come with me to the Daphne Palace," Sidonius continued, gesturing


at the garden vista outside the window and to the right, toward the
residence that had been placed at the disposal of the Pope and his
entourage. "We can dine… and we need to talk. Acacius has been hovering
like a circling vulture. I fear that he and his supporters are planning some
move after Artorius is…" He let the sentence die.

Ecdicius' face grew stormcloud-dark, and he unconsciously gripped the


hilt of the cavalry spatha that never left his side. "I can't imagine what he
thinks hell be able to pull off, after I assume the purple. Maybe he hopes to
take advantage of a confused transition."
"Well, then, we must assure that the transition is a smooth one,"
Sidonius declared as the two of them descended the stairs. There was still
just enough light to see by, and the spring night was warm. So they didn't
wait to summon lantern bearers but proceeded toward the Daphne
unescorted, through gardens that the dusk transformed into a realm of
pagan enchantment and mystery, its deepening shadows inhabited by
nameless dangers…

Ridiculous! Sidonius chided himself. What danger can there be in the


grounds of the Sacred Palace? But for once he felt no inclination to ask
Ecdicius to slow his pace in deference to the papal dignity and years.

Ecdicius seemed oblivious to the frisson Sidonius felt, for he alternated


between brooding and talking. "What can Acacius and his lot possibly
hope for?" he wondered aloud. "Maybe they think they can persuade me to
inaugurate my reign by calling a new Council, where they can do even
more harm than was done at the last one…" He cut himself off. "I know,
Sidonius. I shouldn't speak ill of him, at this of all times. But we wouldn't
be worrying now if he hadn't made that snake Patriarch of Constantinople
again! And some of his other appointments… !" Bewilderment entered
Ecdicius' voice. "Why, Sidonius? What's happened to him over the last few
years?"

"Well," Sidonius spoke in the conciliatory tones of lifelong habit, "we


can hardly blame him for the Council of Chalcedon. It was in 451, when he
wasn't even High King of the Britons yet That was where the great mistake
was made, declaring the See of Constantinople equal to that of Rome, even
though our Lord expressly delivered the keys of the Kingdom into the
hands of Peter…" Exertion overcame indignation, and he had to pause for
a gasping breath as he tried to talk and keep up with Ecdidius at the same
time. "Well, at least they did one thing right at Chalcedon by rejecting the
Monophysite heresy But later it came back to haunt the East."

"Yes… with Acacius carrying its standard! I tell you, Sidonius, I can't
understand it! That devil-begotten 'Declaration of Union' Acacius drew up
in 482 was one of the reasons for Artorius' final break with Zeno, Acacius'
patron. After he'd won, Artorius tore it up and deposed Acacius as
Patriarch. So why, just four years later, did he restore the goat-bugger to
the Patriarchate?"

Sidonius frowned. A prelate of Holy Church—even Acacius!—was


entitled to a certain respect. He was framing a stern admonition when the
four darkly cloaked figures stepped from the bushes ahead of them and
deployed across the pathway.

Ecdicius wordlessly motioned Sidonius back and laid his hand on the
hilt of his spatha. He cast a glance backward and Sidonius, following it,
saw that three more strangers had blocked the path behind them.

One of the quartet to their front stepped forward and spoke in


cultivated Latin. "Noblissimus, a plot against you, and against the sacred
person of the Augustus, has been uncovered. I must ask that you
accompany us to a place of safety."

" 'Uncovered' by whom?" Ecdicius inquired as he unobtrusively twirled


his cloak around his left forearm. He did not draw his weapon—none of
the strangers had— but he stood in a fighting stance that was as
relaxed-seeming as his voice, and measured distances with his eyes. "Who
are you, and who sent you?"

"That is immaterial, Noblissimus. For the safety of the Empire and


Holy Church I'm afraid I must insist that you cooperate." He gestured to
his followers, and swords appeared with a scrape of metal.

Sheer, flabbergasted outrage brought Sidonius out of shock. He stepped


forward to stand beside Ecdicius. "How dare you?" he thundered—or
intended to thunder, but it came out closer to a gasp. "As you hope for
salvation, I command you to let us pass!"

They evidently recognized him. Blades wavered, and one of the men
turned to the leader and muttered something. Sidonius couldn't
understand it, but he recognized the bastard Greek of Constantinople's
slums. The leader snarled back in a Greek that was educated enough for
Sidonius to follow. "You cowardly dung-eaters! Take both of them!"

Ecdicius exploded into action, shoving Sidonius back into the bushes
with one hand as he drew his spatha with the other. He was of only
average size, but his body had lost little of its whipcord toughness to
middle age. Positioning himself to shield Sidonius, he held the
three-and-a-half-foot cavalry sword at the ready as the six bravos closed in
with their shorter weapons. Two of them moved to flank him while two
others leapt in.

Ecdicius' response was too quick for Sidonius to follow, as he suspected


it would have been even in bright daylight. Almost simultaneously with a
quick clang of blades, one bravo was on the ground gurgling his life out
through a slashed throat and Ecdicius was grappling with another who
had gotten in under his long sword. With a vicious move, he dislocated the
bravos shoulder and sent him staggering sideways into his companion
who was moving in from the right. That was all the time it took the bravo
from the left to grab him from behind, as the remaining two moved in.

Sidonius had never encountered physical violence in his entire adult


life, and it was as though he moved through a world of unreality with the
rock he couldn't remember picking up. He brought it down on the head of
the bravo holding Ecdicius. At the same time, the latter kicked out with
both feet, sending the two new arrivals staggering backwards, then fell in
a heap with the unconscious man who had grasped him. He rolled free in
time to grab Sidonius, who was staring openmouthed at the
blood-smeared rock he still held, and haul him back against a thick shrub,
then turn to face their attackers once more.

Things began to register on Sidonius. Ecdicius still had his spatha.


Three bravos were out of action, but the other three had picked
themselves up. Now, in company with their employer—who was holding
his sword as though he knew how to use it—they were closing in warily.
They'd make no more mistakes. And—final detail—Ecdicius was bleeding
from a superficial but doubtless painful wound in his left side.

Sidonius managed to form words. "Guards ho!" he croaked. "To me!"

"Save your breath, Sidonius," Ecdicius said quietly. 'They must have
made certain no one would be in earshot. Otherwise somebody would have
heard this fight."

The leader of their assailants gave an unpleasant smile that provided


confirmation. His face still wore the smile as he started forward… but then
went blank as he crumpled, without fuss, to the ground.

Sidonius became aware of a strange buzzing sound, not really like the
swarming of bees. He wondered what it could be, with a small part of his
reeling mind, as he watched the three bravos collapse.

He and Ecdicius looked at each other.

Two men stepped from the shadows.


Sidonius and Ecdicius started, and the latter raised his spatha again.
The new arrivals halted, and the shorter of them—they were both big
men—spoke in the Latin of the army with an accent not unlike that of the
Augustus.

"Relax, Noblissimus! We're here to save you." He indicated the


motionless forms of their erstwhile attackers. "Sorry we didn't arrive
sooner—although you weren't doing so badly yourself! And you, Your
Holiness—you're pretty handy with that thing. Have you considered you
may be in the wrong line of work?"

Sidonius dropped the rock like a red-hot cinder and tried to draw a
cloak of dignity around his brutalized sense of reality. "Who are you, my
son? Step closer so I may see you."

The pair did so. They wore nondescript civilian garb. Oddly enough, for
men supposedly embarked on a rescue, they were unarmed. Instead, each
held a short metal rod of no apparent function—and yet, in an undefinable
way, they carried the useless-seeming objects like weapons.

The man who had spoken was very dark considering the British origin
his accent suggested, but his features and his blue eyes were not
inconsistent with it. The other, aside from his robust size, could have
passed unnoticed in the streets of Constantinople. Sidonius spared him
barely a glance. He could only stare at the Briton—for such he seemed to
be—and try to decide where he had seen him before, where he had heard
that voice. For he was morally certain that he had met the man.

Ecdicius spoke without preamble. "How did you do that to them… with
those?" he indicated the little metal rods. Sidonius felt his eyebrows rise;
what could make Ecdicius think the strangers had incapacitated the
would-be kidnappers with those things? It was manifestly impossible. And
yet… what else could they have done it with? And Ecdicius and the Briton
were gazing intently at each other, with a look that went beyond mutual
respect, though that was very much present.

"Noblissimus," the other stranger spoke, "I know you have many
questions, but we haven't time to answer them. This city isn't safe for
you—nor for you, Holy Father. Your only hope of safety is to follow us
down to the Boucoleon Harbor." He gestured toward the darkling waters
of the Sea of Marmara, barely visible through the trees. "We have a ship
ready to take you to Italy."
"Italy?" Ecdicius blurted. "I can't just run away from Constantinople in
the night like some footpad! The Augustus needs me. And Faustina,
and—"

"Noblissimus," the big stranger cut in "the Augustus is going to be


beyond your help, or anyone's, very soon. And your wife and children are
already on our ship."

"And," the Briton added, "you can accomplish nothing by staying here.
Ah… here comes someone you know, Holiness. I think he may be able to
persuade you."

A man emerged from the darkness. He was middle-aged, very tall, with
features and coloring that must draw glances in even so cosmopolitan a
place as Constantinople…

"Tertullian," Sidonius breathed.

Ecdicius shot him a glance. "You know this man, Sidonius?"

Sidonius nodded. He heard his voice answer for him. "He was my
secretary, long ago, before the Battle of Bourges. He was never heard of
after the battle. We all assumed he had been killed."

"Well, Your Holiness, as you can see I'm very much alive. I regret that I
had to leave your employ so abruptly. But there's no time for apologies
now. This man—" he indicated the Briton "—is absolutely correct. The
Noblissimus Ecdicius will not be allowed to live to assume the purple. You
must both take refuge in the West, where support for his claim—and for
the true Catholic faith—is concentrated."

Sidonius barely heard the last two sentences, for recognition had smote
him again. "You!" He stared at the Briton. "I remember you now. You're
that mercenary Tertullian hired as a bodyguard while he was traveling
with Artorius. What was your name… ?"

"Bedwyr, Your Holiness. And my comrade here is Andronicus. And now


can we please go?" His eyes met Ecdicius' again, and he raised, ever so
slightly, the metallic rod he held.

For a heartbeat their eyes locked. Then Ecdicius' face broke into the
familiar devil-may-care grin. "Lead on, then! I never was much good with
my books—isn't that so, Sidonius?—but I like to think I can tell a good
man when I see one."

"But Ecdicius," Sidonius stammered, feeling the solidly built structure


of his life begin to pitch and heave like the deck of the ship these
impossible people were leading them toward. "We can't… How do we
know… ?"

"Ah, come on, Sidonius!" Ecdicius slapped the pontifical shoulder. "Is
life really worth so much worrying?" And he was off behind the strangers,
again the wiry, restless boy in the Arvernian villa.

Afterwards Sidonius could never remember much of the scramble


through the darkened gardens, illuminated by the lighthouse to their
right, down to the Boucoleon Harbor with its semicircular artificial mole.
How these people had gotten access to the private imperial harbor was the
least of the impossibilities that swirled through his mind. But underneath
it all there seemed to lurk something very prosaic and obvious, something
he should have noticed. Even as he stumbled over tree roots and half-slid
down the final slope to the quay, he couldn't stop worrying about it.

Then they were approaching a ship, and Ecdicius was rushing ahead to
embrace his wife and children, and Tertullian was conferring with a
strongly built man on the quayside… and it finally came to Sidonius.
Tertullian didn't look a day older than he had when Sidonius had last seen
him. Bedwyr was somewhat older-looking, but not as much so as he
should have been after twenty-two years. He stepped forward to ask
Tertullian about it.

Then the strongly built man turned to face him, and the question fled
his mind, along with everything else.

Tertullian must have seen his expression. "Ah… Your Holiness, I'm
afraid I haven't been entirely candid with you."

Sidonius didn't hear him. He grew aware that he was on his knees,
making the sign of the cross with frantic repetition—and, with his other
hand, older signs such as the peasants of the Auvergne still made when no
priest wag looking. "In nomine Patris," he began.

Strong hands grasped his arms and raised him up. "Don't be afraid,
Sidonius." Yes, it was the same deep baritone.
"But… but… but Augustus?!"

As always, the boyish smile looked somehow right on that face—the face
of a man in his early forties, the same face that the thirty-seven-year-old
Sidonius had seen by the mouth of the Loire.

"Sidonius, you never change! If we're going to be fugitives together, I


think you can address me by my name!"
CHAPTER ONE
The battlecruiser had come out of continuous-displacement drive in the
cold dark domain of the outer system. But now its sunward hyperbolic
orbit had carried it into the regions where liquid water could, under
certain circumstances, exist. Rear Admiral Robert Sarnac, Pan-Human
League Space Fleet (Survey Branch), standing under the curving
armorplast transparency that was a prerogative of his rank, was bathed in
the light of the sun Loriima that flooded his quarters.

To an observer, he might have seemed to be talking very clearly and


distinctly to himself. In fact, he was dictating a report for Fleet Ops. The
computer wasn't really sentient, of course—that still lay in the realm of
science fiction, where Sarnac privately hoped it would remain. But it was
programmed with his personality and handled most of his routine
business on its own, conversing with people mostly too young to care
about their inability to tell whether they were talking to him or to his
silicon-based familiar. It could be trusted to edit reports like this one,
bleeping out all facetiousness, sarcasm and other assorted wise-ass-isms
that he himself wouldn't have allowed onto the final hardcopy. He
sometimes wished it wouldn't.

"… And so," he concluded, "as per orders, I proceeded with all possible
speed to Starholm where I picked up my augmented staff. There, I learned
that it has been confirmed that the hostile forces encountered in the
Toriaerann Chain beyond Loriima are, indeed, of Korvaash race. I
thereupon continued to Loriima, where, pursuant to orders, I have
contacted Battle Group Thirty-Seven and assumed command, effective
this date, Terran Standard 24 June, 2275." The computer would, of
course, insert the Raehaniv half of the paired standard dating. "Upon
arrival at Loriima III, I will receive a full report of the Battle Group's
status, including progress made in repairing the recent battle damage. My
first-sense impression is that the initial reports of the extent of that
damage were not exaggerated.

"I therefore urgently request that the reinforcements I have been


promised be dispatched as expeditiously as possible, since any delay in
mounting a counterattack will only allow the Korvaasha to consolidate
their position in—"

The door chimed for admittance. "Cease recording," Sarnac


ordered—regretfully, for he hated to break such an uncharacteristic flow of
pompous formality. The computer must be proud of me, he thought. I
haven't given it anything to clean up. Or maybe it thinks I'm up to
something. "Enter," he added. The door slid open, revealing his chief of
staff.

Senior Captain Rimaerly zho'Dornaeriel looked as Raehaniv as her


name: tall, slender, sharp-featured, with skin of a coppery shade not quite
like that of any of Earths ethnic types. Her features were a caricature of
those which, in Tiraena, were smoothed and muted by an infusion of
Terran blood. It was a thought Sarnac couldn't let himself dwell on, for it
reminded him of how long it had been since he had seen Tiraena. Too
long. And now we've got another goddamned war.

"Well, Rimaerly," he greeted her, "is everything set for our arrival? And
don't tell me about any last-minute hitches—I don't need it!"

"Not to worry, sir," was what Sarnac heard inside his skull, overriding
Rimaerly's liquid Raehaniv. The ubiquitous implanted translators had
swept away language barriers and allowed the wartime alliance between
the two branches of humanity to ripen into the League.

"Our people have been in contact with what's left of the Battle Group
Thirty-Seven staff," Rimaerly continued, "and it looks like we'll be able to
put together a combined staff without hurting too many feelings—the
seniorities of the people involved worked out right. And we haven't gotten
any trouble after the initial raised eyebrows over a Survey officer
assuming command."

"Come on, Rimaerly! It was more than 'raised eyebrows,' and I know
damned well what these Line types really call 'Survey officers'! But they
couldn't argue with the general order amalgamating Survey and Line and
everything else for the duration and making seniority apply across the
board regardless of branch."
"No, sir, they couldn't. And…" She hesitated. "They naturally stopped
grumbling when they heard who the Survey admiral was."

Sarnac grimaced. He and Rimaerly had been together too long for any
possibility of brown-nosing, and they both knew it. The chief of staff was
just stating facts. But he'd never overcome an inability to wear special
status well. Maybe it was a matter of national character, for he was a
child, however irreverent, of one of the North American successor-states,
and the traditions of aggressive egalitarianism and "aw-shucks"
self-deprecation had never quite died. Still, he reflected, fifteen years
should have been time enough to adjust to it. He'd had to live with it since
the day he and Tiraena had arrived in a stunned Solar System with the
news that the beleaguered Solar Union had allies among the stars—human
allies who had no business being there, including descendants of the
Russian-American Mars Project people whose disappearance had
mystified Terran humanity for two centuries. It had been the beginning of
the end for the late unlamented Realm of Tarzhgul, and he had seen Fleet
action in the final campaigns of the war—experience which should stand
him in good stead now.

But, as always, notoriety had been a decidedly mixed blessing for a


junior officer. There had been times when he had come close to quitting
the service. The lure of new frontiers had kept him in, just as it had kept
Tiraena in the affiliated civilian agencies, specializing in alien contact as
she had done before they—and, through them, their peoples—had met. It
was what she was doing right now, on the far side of the League from the
Torlaerann Chain.

"And," Rimaerly went on, sensing the Admiral's discomfort and


changing the subject, "the fact that we've got an ops officer who's Line
should make them feel better."

Sarnac nodded. Captain Draco had joined the staff at Starholm, and
the death in action of Battle Group Thirty-Sevens operations officer had
left a vacancy he would fill in the combined staff. Sarnac didn't know him,
but on the basis of his service record he'd been glad to get him. An
altogether impressive man… and one whom Sarnac couldn't stop thinking
he had met somewhere, long ago and far away. For the sight of him had
aroused unwelcome, tantalizing echoes of the dreams. They've been
getting worse lately. Why?

"All right, Rimaerly," he said, dragging his mind back to the


here-and-now. "Let me finish this report for Fleet Ops. Then I'll want to go
over the new staff postings with you."

A couple of Terran weeks passed, and the combined staff was, if not
quite a band of brothers (and sisters), at least a smoothly functioning unit.
Rimaerly had worked wonders, Sarnac thought as he entered the briefing
room— Rimaerly, and Captain Draco.

He studied the officers who rose to their feet in the afternoon


Loriima-light that streamed through the tall windows. The majority were
Raehaniv-looking. However integrated the Leagues military had become,
units still tended to retain their original ethnic character. Battle Group
Thirty-Seven, based here at an old Raehaniv colony, had always been a
predominantly Raehaniv outfit. Of course, a certain number of them
showed the blood of those Terran exiles for whose descendants fighting for
Raehan had become a tradition… Sarnac sternly dismissed the image of
Tiraena.

In an instants flash of clarity, he wondered at the way these humans,


originating on two planets a light-millennium apart, could function so
matter-of-factly in the face of the inexplicable. But that was the point, of
course: the existence of homo sapiens sapiens on two different planets
was inexplicable, and the peoples of the League couldn't let themselves
dwell on the mind-numbing impossibility of it. They could only agree that
the human species—and certain others—had evolved on Earth and
somehow appeared on Raehan thirty thousand years ago, apparently
through the agency of a palpably impossible prehistoric human starfaring
culture, and let it go at that, assuring each other that future discoveries
would undoubtedly clear up all the mystery. Only thus could they
concentrate on immediate practicalities.

Like the fact that we've just turned up another Korvaash


successor-state, Sarnac thought. Yeah, the other end of creation is
probably the best place for Tiraena to be right now, just like school on
Earth is the best place for Claude and Liranni.

Two centuries earlier the Korvaash empire, the Unity, had sprawled
over an unknowable expanse of this spiral arm, and had extended one
tentacle to crush the life out of Raehan. Varien hle'Morna, the eccentric
genius who had invented the continuous-displacement drive that allowed
interstellar travel without recourse to fixed displacement points, had
taken his discovery to Earth and offered it as payment for help for his
world. In one of history's little ironies, he had arrived to find a world
turning its back on space as it sought a return to a totalitarian womb. But
the exiled American and Russian terraformers had taken up his offer,
departing with him and destroying all evidence of their origin so as to
place their homeworld beyond Korvaash reprisal in the event of failure.

Against all odds, they had succeeded in lopping off the Korvaash
tentacle that had clutched Raehan. And then had come one of the
recurring realignments of the galaxy's displacement structure. It had put
an end to the Unity, but it left the Terran exiles in the same state of
ignorance as to Earth's location that they had intended for the Korvaasha.

So matters had stood until fifteen years ago, when Earth's recovered
humanity, fighting for its life against one of the surviving fragments of the
Korvaash Unity, had encountered their cousins of Raehan. This time the
reunion of the two humanities was to be permanent, because Lieutenant
Robert Sarnac and Tiraena zho'Daeriel DiFalco had evaded Korvaash
pursuit to reach Earth.

As Sarnac looked his staff over, they studied him in turn through the
lens of that story. They saw a man of barely average Terran height—his
female Raehaniv chief of staff overtopped him by an inch—with dark
complexion and strikingly contrasting light blue eyes. By grace of the
Raehaniv biotechnology now available throughout the League, his curly
hair was as black as ever at forty-three, and thicker than it had been
fifteen years before. Middle-aged solidity had not yet overlaid a kind of
athletic rakishness.

"As you were, people," he said briskly. "After all the shared VR hookups,
I thought it was time we had an in-the-flesh meeting of the entire staff.
Unfortunately, Commander Tarluin can't be present." A freakish shipyard
accident had put the intelligence officer into the regen tank for at least
another week. "But his boss will give us the update. Captain Draco, you
have the floor."

"Thank you, sir." Captain Geoffrey Draco, though dark of hair and eyes,
didn't have the land of Latin look his surname suggested. But names were
only coincidentally related to origins in the ethnic bouillabaisse that was
present-day Earth. He looked European, and you couldn't narrow it down
much more than that. He wasn't tall, but he was very strongly built. He
was about Sarnac's age; his record said he was ex-enlisted, which
explained why he was still just a captain despite his obviously exceptional
abilities. It also explained why Sarnac had never met him during the war
against the Realm of Tarzhgul—they had been serving at different levels.

In fact, nobody in the staff had ever met him…

"Everybody knows the general background," he said, derailing Sarnac's


train of thought. He used a pocket remote unit and a holo of the
Torlaerann Chain appeared between the table and the ceiling. "When a
survey squadron probing along the Chain failed to report, heavy elements
of Battle Group Thirty-Seven investigated. Fortunately, some of them got
back, with a small hostile craft they'd tractored. No prisoners to
interrogate, of course—they had automatic suicide implants. But enough
was left to identify them as Korvaasha. Commander Tarluin and his
people have had a chance to analyze the tapes of the battle. At a
minimum, they're more advanced than the Realm of Tarzhgul was. For
one thing, they've got deflector technology."

"Hm… inventive Korvaasha," Sarnac mused. "Not too good."

"No, sir. But not entirely unanticipated. When the shifting of the
displacement network left the various pieces of the old Unity on their own,
most of them simply died. They'd been locked into a rigid totalitarian
structure so long that they couldn't function in the absence of higher
authority. The ones who survived were the ones who, for whatever
reasons, could adapt. The dangerous ones. There must be a lot of variation
among the surviving Korvaash cultures in the galaxy by now." A bleak
smile. "Maybe there are even some we can get along with. But not these, it
seems."

"Hardly," Sarnac agreed The deflectors worried him. The device was an
application of gravities, fending off incoming objects with a force
proportional to their own kinetic energy. Varien hle'Morna had gotten the
idea from relics of the prehistoric spacefaring culture that was one facet of
the enigma of Raehaniv origins. That the Korvaasha—whose lack of
inventiveness relative to humans was widely thought to be not merely a
cultural trait but a racial one—had apparently come up with it on their
own was disturbing.

"Could they have the continuous-displacement drive?" Rimaerly asked.

"Unknown. The fact that it came before deflectors in our history is


immaterial; our development was shaped by a quirky genius working with
archaeological hints. But even if they do have it, it's of limited use to them
in the current tactical situation, because they have no knowledge of where
we come from in realspace."

Heads nodded around the table. Exploration was something that the
League did with great caution. Survey ships carried no astronomical data
that were not rigged for instant cybernetic lobotomy in the event of
probable capture.

"We, on the other hand, know exactly where they are," Draco
continued. One of the holographic star-symbols flashed obligingly. "And
we do have the continuous-displacement drive. This sets them up for the
classical trap used in the liberation of Raehan by Eric and Aelanni
DiFalco."

Tiraenas great-grandparents, Sarnac thought. Aloud: "Yes—come at


the defenders of a displacement point from a direction where you've got
no business being, and then come through the displacement point like
you're supposed to. One problem, Captain: we're talking a displacement
connection that bypasses a realspace distance of over three hundred
light-years. Any units we send there via continuous-displacement drive are
going to have to be units built for speed and endurance and little else."

"Yes, sir," Draco acknowledged unflinchingly. "Also, there's the


possibility of an additional problem: if they do have
continuous-displacement drive, the maneuver won't come as a surprise to
them. Even if they've never used it themselves, the theoretical possibility
should be apparent to them, and we have to assume that they'll have taken
precautions against it.

"But," he continued after letting the silence stretch just long enough,
"we've developed an operational plan that takes both of these
considerations into account and, I believe, offers a very high probability of
success. I invite your attention to the folders in front of you, marked 'Most
Secret.'"

He continued, holding everyone's attention. Sarnac found himself


admiring not just the plan itself—without question a brilliant piece of
work—but also the dynamism of Draco's presentation. No doubt about it,
he was a man who had that indefinable thing called "charisma" coming
out his ears.
And he was also a man Sarnac had known before. He was surer of that
than ever. But every time a gesture or a mannerism awakened the
insubstantial wisp of familiarity, it flitted elusively away like the tatters of
an old dream.

But the dream didn't lie comfortably in the past—it was new and it
came to renew itself more and more.

Blossoms swirling in the wind of our passage as we rode through the


spring under a cloudless sky when the world was young…

Armies grinding together in a roar of pain and terror and blood.. .

The circle of faces wavering ghostlike in the flickering campfire...

The still lake. . . the sword tumbling end over end through the air,
flashing in the westering sun, dazzling my eyes so that I nearly miss the
ripples spreading from where it had struck the water—where surely it
must have struck the water…

Sarnac's head jerked upward from his desk, spinning with the
disorientation of sudden awakening. For an instant his skin prickled as he
looked beyond the pool of light from the desk lamp into the shadows. Then
he shook his head in annoyance as the familiarity of the office registered.
Served him right, working late and falling asleep at his desk!

He shook his head again, to clear away the last cobwebs of sleep. What
was he going to do? He couldn't fight a war distracted by insomnia! He
knew he'd been resisting sleep lately, since the recurring dreams had
ceased to be the once-in-a-while thing they had been over the years. But
eventually his body's need caught up with him—like just now. And the
dreams would come again, leaving him with an aching need to find a
missing part of himself.

What's the matter with me? In the Middle Ages they would have said
I was being tormented by demons. In the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries they would have said the same thing, only phrased in terms of
their established religion of psychoanalysis. Either way, I could have
gone to the local priesthood and gotten sprinkled with holy water or
psychobabble. Nowadays, we've finally admitted that we really don't
know diddly about what goes on underneath the surface of the human
mind—which is wise but not too awfully helpful. Tiraena had always been
a willing listener but an uncomprehending one, for she had never had such
dreams herself. It was something she couldn't really share with him, and
that inability had come more and more between them. And, at any rate,
she's not here now.

He straightened. He certainly wasn't going to get any more work done


tonight. He needed to get back to his quarters; maybe, having gotten in its
licks already, the dream would leave him alone for the rest of the night. He
stood up.

It was then that he saw the figure in the open door, silhouetted against
the light from the outer office.

"What the… who are you?" he demanded. There shouldn't be anyone


else in this office, they'd all gone home earlier.

Instead of answering, the figure stepped forward into the private office,
entering the circle of light from the desk lamp. He was a nondescript
middle-aged man in nondescript civilian clothes, medium-tall and
ethnically unidentifiable— he might have had some Raehaniv blood, but
Sarnac couldn't be certain. What was certain was that he had no business
being here. I'm gonna have a few words for Security, Sarnac vowed to
himself… but then the thought died as he realized he was feeling the same
thing he always felt in Captain Draco's presence: a tantalizing certainty
that he had seen the face before, in the country of his dreams.

The man smiled gently. "Good evening, Admiral Sarnac. I apologize for
approaching you in this manner. But you're an important man, and it was
the only way I could catch you alone."

"If you're a reporter, this is not the way to get an exclusive interview,"
Sarnac snapped. "And you never answered me. Who are you? And how did
you get in here?" He made the unobtrusive jaw movement that activated
his implant communicator, and was about to subvocalize a call to Security
when the stranger replied.

"To answer your questions in order, Admiral, I am not a journalist; and


my name is Tylar."

"Just… Tylar?"

"Actually, my full name is rather long. But 'Tylar' is quite sufficient."


"I'm relieved." It didn't come out as sarcastic as Sarnac had intended,
and he missed the fact that Tylar had omitted to answer his final question.
For the sense of recognition was back, this time with the force of certainty.

"May I sit down, Admiral? I'm afraid I'm not as young as I once was."
Evidently taking assent for granted, Tylar lowered himself into a chair.
Feeling slightly foolish, Sarnac followed suit. As he did so, he subvocalized
a code which would bring a Security team. There was no acknowledgment.
He frowned with a puzzled annoyance which Tylar's gentle smile did
nothing to ameliorate. Could the man read his mind?

He forced patience on himself. "All right, Tylar. Tell me what you're


doing here."

"I'm here in connection with a matter of mutual interest, Admiral: the


dreams that have been troubling you."

There was a long moment of absolute silence. "What are you talking
about?" Sarnac finally managed.

"Come, now. We both know. And we also know that you need help. I'm
here to offer it."

"Why should you want to?"

"A matter of ethics, Admiral. I'm fulfilling a moral obligation. You see,
I'm responsible for the fact that you're having the dreams." Tylar raised a
forestalling hand as Sarnac's mouth started to open. "Let me hasten to
add that this result was entirely unintended on my part. The fault lies with
an inherently fallible process—to wit, selective memory erasure. I'm afraid
yours simply didn't take very well. This became clear upon your return to
the Solar System fifteen years ago, when you rendezvoused with the
battlecruiser Excalibur."

Sarnac was in the process of signaling Security to send medical


personnel as well—for Tylar clearly was raving mad in a calm, professorial
sort of way—and wondering why he was still getting no acknowledgment,
when the stranger's last sentence brought him up short. It had been years
since he'd thought of that rendezvous, at the conclusion of his uneventful
voyage from Sirius. But now the memories came flooding back, bearing
with them the certain knowledge that there was a connection with the
dreams.
It had been customary in those days to decorate the wardrooms of
Sword-class battlecruisers with murals illustrating the legends of the
blades after which the ships were named. Excalibur's wardroom had been
adorned with a painting of Sir Bedivere throwing his dying kings magical
sword into the water, to be caught by the Lady of the Lake. He had no
clear recollection of what the sight of that mural on the comm pickup had
awakened in him. All he could remember was regaining consciousness in
Tiraenas arms and being asked what he had meant about the artist not
having gotten things right, and about the sun having blinded him…

… The flash of reflected sunlight, strangely dazzling considering that


the blade had been encrusted with dried mud and gore… He shook
himself free of the maddening half-memories. Tylar was smiling his
irritatingly gentle smile.

"Yes, I see that you remember. It was just one of those things. No one
could have foreseen that out of the entire Solar Union fleet you'd be met by
that particular battlecruiser! I suspect it was that instant of recollection
that prevented the unavoidable mnemonic residue from dissipating over
time as it usually does, crowded out by the press of day-to-day sensory
impressions—"

"Wait a minute, Tylar! Talk sense!"

"Believe me, Admiral, everything will become clear after it has been
adequately explained… for which purpose, I must ask you to accompany
me."

"What? Look, Tylar, I admit you've displayed knowledge that requires


me to take you seriously. But I can't just go off with you to God knows
where! In case you hadn't noticed, we've got a war on here—and I, God
help me, am the on-scene commander! I don't know if a sense of duty has
any place in your value system, but—"

"Be assured, Admiral, that the twin concepts of 'honor' and 'duty' are
basic to my culture—as they must be to any culture which lasts long
enough to contribute to that ongoing accumulation of worthwhile ideas
that certain immature societies try so gropingly to conceptualize with the
notion of 'progress.'" The voice had ceased to have anything of the
absent-minded professor about it. Indeed, it was as the voice of many
trumpets. But then the moment was past, as was Sarnac's memory of it,
and there was only Tylar, sitting across the desk and looking faintly
embarrassed.

"But, my dear fellow," he said diffidently, "you need have no worries


concerning your discharge of your duties. When our business is concluded,
I will return you to this place and time… whatever time this is." He
glanced at an ordinary-seeming timepiece. "Loriima III's 28.6 hour
rotation period is frightfully confusing, don't you agree?"

Sarnac blinked. All right, that settled it: Tylar was mad as a hatter. But
then the stranger rose and reached into a pocket. Sarnac stiffened… but
the device Tylar produced was clearly not a weapon. He placed it on the
floor. Sarnac waited for him to do or say something. But all that happened
was that a doorway-sized rectangle, outlined in glowing insubstantial bars
of refracted light, formed with its lower left-hand corner resting on Tylar's
device. Sarnac blinked repeatedly, for through that outline he saw not the
room beyond but… what?

"Shall we go, Admiral?" Tylar asked pleasantly, and stepped through


the immaterial portal. Then he turned and beckoned. "Here lie your
dreams."

As though in a dream, Sarnac followed him.


CHAPTER TWO
They had passed through two more of the portals before Sarnac called a
halt. One had led into a corridor in what Sarnac was somehow sure was a
space vessel—although there were no sensations that he could have
pointed to in support of his conviction—and the second had given entry
through what had been a solid bulkhead into… this place.

"Wait! Wait, Tylar!" He stood stock-still in the gentle breeze under the
blue vault of sky, looking around at the intricately landscaped grounds of
what seemed to be a villa whose gracefulness transcended all canons of
architectural form and, indeed, somehow incorporated them. He tried to
speak again, but no words would come—how does one frame questions
about the patently impossible? He could only drink in the heart-stopping
loveliness of it.

There was an indefinable oddness about every perspective, and an even


more indefinable sense that there were things here he was not seeing, not
because they were invisible but because they were incomprehensible—his
brain simply edited them out, refusing to process the input of his eyes. But
none of this detracted from the almost unendurable perfection of the
scene.

Tylar turned around and faced him. "Yes, I know this is all a bit much,
Admiral. For now, suffice it to say that we are in an artificially generated
pocket universe… and that you have been here before."

The odd tiling was, Sarnac never for an instant doubted him. For this
was one of the impossible settings he glimpsed in his dreams as if by
flashes of lightning. But he could accept no more. He closed his eyes,
shutting out the vista of achingly unattainable beauty, and forced himself
to speak.

"Tylar, before I go another step you've got to tell me more. I want to


know who you are and where you're from and what you once did to me."

Tylar regarded him for a couple of heartbeats, then spoke briskly. "If
you think about it, I'm sure you'll conclude that the question of my origin
can have only one possible answer, however fantastic that answer may
seem in light of your civilization's understanding of reality. I am from your
future—your quite remote future. As for what I did to you, I took you and
your Tiraena into the timestream that my people have learned to navigate,
after rescuing you from your Korvaash captors near the end of your voyage
from Sirius to Sol fifteen years ago—"

Sarnac came out of his paralysis with a jolt. "What? Tylar, what the hell
are you talking about? We left the Korvaasha eating our dust at Sirius!
Nothing happened on our trip from there to Sol; it was almost
anticlimactic."

"Yes," Tylar nodded. "So you remember. It was at the instant before the
Korvaasha overhauled you in the outliers of the Solar System that we cut
off your memories. The battlecruiser you thought you had eluded had in
fact followed you from Sirius using a captured Raehaniv
continuous-displacement drive. It was commanded by a Korvaash officer
with whom you had previously crossed swords, on Danu."

A chill struck into Sarnac. "The Interrogator!"

"Yes, I believe that was what he called himself. At any rate, we


maneuvered a temportal, as we call it, into the path of the Korvaash ship,
thus transposing them—and you—seventeen centuries into the past. You
see, we had need of you in the fifth century of the Christian Era, for
reasons I later explained to you. Afterwards, we regrettably had to delete
your memories of everything except your humdrum voyage from Sirius.
We then returned you to your own time, on course for Sol. After which
you, to use a traditional and deservedly popular phrase, lived happily ever
after… except for the recurring dreams that resulted from a faulty job of
memory erasure."

For a long moment, the silence stretched to the snapping point. Then
Sarnac spoke in a voice choked with rising fury.

"So you used me and Tiraena for God-knows-what purposes of your


own, and then stole our memories! Why, you cynical, dishonest,
manipulative old bastard!"

"Actually, I'm not all that old—at least not on the standards of my own
society. And it would be more accurate to say I borrowed your memories."
His sheepish look would have been funny on anyone else under any other
circumstances. "You see, while your minds still held those memories I took
the liberty of recording them. It wasn't exactly 'by the book,' as I believe
you'd put it, but it seemed a shame to let them simply vanish into
oblivion."

"So on top of everything else you're a mental voyeur!"

"My dear fellow, I should think you'd be grateful to me." Tylar sounded
deeply hurt. "If I hadn't artificially preserved your memories, it wouldn't
be possible to restore them to you, as I now propose to do."

"What? You can do that? You can, uh, 'play back' recorded memories
into the brain?"

"Yes… with some difficulty, and some initial disorientation for the
individual involved. You'll still have your memories of the years since then,
of course; so you'll remember fifteen years of not remembering the events
you'll now remember! I'm told it can be quite disconcerting at first.
Knowing this, are you willing to undergo it? I'll not compel you."

Another interval of strained silence passed. Then Sarnac grinned


crookedly. "Yeah… you know damned well you don't have to compel me,
don't you? There's no way I could possibly turn back now."
"Well then," Tylar beamed, "shall we?" He gestured toward a foot path,
and they proceeded toward the villa.

The brutally massive Korvaash ship looming impossibly astern, laden


with its cargo of nightmare…

The torus of reality-distortion they flashed through, and the


impossible little ship that overtook them at a substantial fraction of
lightspeed and then stopped dead and tractored the great hulking
Korvaash battlecruiser…

Tylar being his inimitable self… "We were so concerned, after this
dreadful mix-up… Dear me! This is going to be even more difficult to
explain than I thought… It occurs to me that if you prefer to make some
use of your time in this era, you could perhaps assist us in our research
…"

The three of them, moving dreamlike through the nearly forgotten


Gallic campaign of the British High King Riothamus: Tylar as
Tertullian, secretary to tinsel-age litterateur Sidonius Apottinaris;
Tiraena as Lucasta, a lady-in-waiting to Riothamus' consort; and
Sarnac as the British soldier of fortune Bedwyr, bodyguard to Tertullian
and later confidant of sorts to Riothamus…

His dawning realization of just who Riothamus really was…

The Battle of Bourg-de-Deols, where Riothamus fell victim to


treachery …

The mountain lake and the thrown sword that had flashed in the
westering sun so many times in his dreams … and after he had thrown
it, his words to his friend Kai, welling up from he knew not where: "His
name will live longer than you can possibly imagine … in a way, he can
never die …"

Tylar's final explanation of what they had been put through, and of
his own people's policing of the past to assure that history followed the
course that had eventuated in their own existence—including their
planting of the ancestral humans on Raehan, where history said they
had to be present in defiance of all evolutionary logic…

"Tylar… aren't you going to change history by returning us to our own


time. I mean, when we get back there knowing what we now know,
knowing all you've just told us…"

"Ah, but do you?"

And the sinking into unconsciousness, as Tylar looked on with


unmistakeable sadness…

"How are we feeling today?"

"What's this 'we' stuff?" Sarnac growled as Tylar entered his quarters.
He wasn't about to give over being mad at the time traveler, but he
couldn't complain about the accommodations.

He was sitting in a kind of solarium, suffused with simulated sunlight


from the holoprojection that was the "sky" of this few-kilometers-wide
pocket universe. It was midmorning of the local twenty-four-hour
day—Sarnac wondered if that was for his benefit—and he was digesting
both his breakfast and his new knowledge.

Tylar crossed the inner living room and joined him in the solarium,
obviously in no hurry. Sarnac allowed himself only a moments glare before
giving in and answering the time travelers question.

"Pretty good. You didn't exaggerate about the 'initial disorientation,'


that's for sure. Besides the problems you mentioned, there's the freshness
of these fifteen-year-old memories—I can remember it all more clearly
than I can the births of my children, or things that happened just last
year!"

"But you're over the sensation by now, I trust?"

"Yeah, I've gotten things more or less sorted out." He gave the time
traveler a hard, level look. "And I've been doing some thinking."

"Oh?" Tylar seated himself across the low table from Sarnac, as though
settling in for a discussion he had known was coming.

"I've been thinking," Sarnac repeated, "about the reason you wiped our
memories: we couldn't be allowed back into our own historical period with
knowledge like the origin of Raehaniv humanity that our era isn't
supposed to have. And yet you had to let us return, because your history
said we had gotten through to Sol. I suppose that's why I'm not exactly
slobbering with gratitude for your having saved us from the Korvaasha.
You had your own reasons; in fact, you needed us as much as we needed
you."

Tylar spread his hands. "What can I say? You're correct, of course—as
far as you go. But I hope you can also remember that my motivations
regarding you and Tiraena were, at bottom, benign."

"Oh, yes, I can accept that. And I think I've more or less gotten over
being pissed at you. But that's not the point now." He leaned forward
intently. "The point is that the same reasons for not letting anybody with
the knowledge you've just given back to me run around loose in the
twenty-third century still apply with equal force. So why have you given
me back the memories? And please don't tell me it's out of an altruistic
desire to relieve me from my nagging dreams!"

"Ah." Tylar settled back in his chair, steepling his fingers in a gesture
Sarnac now remembered. "Well, I'm afraid I haven't been entirely candid
with you…"

Sarnac lowered his head into his hands with a low moan and spoke
without looking up. "Tylar, one of the things I remember is that every time
you say that I end up taking a barge pole up the ass!"

"Oh, nothing as alarming as all that, my dear fellow! It's just that you
needed to have the memories restored in order to fulfill a certain
obligation."

"Obligation?"

"Yes. An ethical obligation—an extremely important one. I should add


that it's primarily mine. But it is in some small part yours as well. And it is
my intention to give you the opportunity to set matters aright—to pay a
debt that you otherwise wouldn't even have realized you owed."

He actually looks proud of himself, Sarnac thought in a haze of


unreality, as though he's doing me some tremendous favor. "Uh, Tylar,
maybe you'd better explain things one at a time… starting with just what
the hell you're talking about."

"Of course. In fact, I'm waiting for someone who will help me with the
explanation… Ah, here he is now."

"May I come in, Admiral?" a familiar deep, resonant baritone spoke


from the entrance.

Sarnac sprang out of his chair and whirled to face the figure in Fleet
uniform. "Captain Draco! What are you doing here… ?" His voice jolted to
a halt and he grasped his chair for support as belated recognition crashed
into him.

How could I have not made the connection with "Captain Geoffrey
Draco" as soon as Tylar poured the memories back into my skull? Well,
he does look different without a beard. And I'm still integrating all these
suddenly reacquired memories with my subsequent life…

Even as the strangely calm thoughts were making their unhurried way
through the storm center of his brain 't his throat struggled to form
words. "But… but… but you died!" he finally got out.

"Ah, but you know what people say about me! You should; it's largely
because of you that they say it!"

Tylar cleared his throat. "I suppose I should have given you some
warning, Robert. You see, we evacuated him and took care of his wounds.
I'd intended to mention it to you and Tiraena, but…"

"But it somehow slipped your mind. Right." Sarnac gave the time
traveler a quick, poisonous look and then addressed his operations
officer." 'Draco.' Of course. Cute. But where did the 'Geoffrey' come from?"

"Oh, that. Well, its my way of paying tribute to Geoffrey of Monmouth.


His account of my life was highly fictionalized, but I rather like it."

"You would! You always had a vain streak, as I recall. Not that I would
have said so out loud, back then. I wasn't exactly on your social level."

"No, you weren't," Draco acknowledged affably. "But now we're both
officers and gentlemen of the Pan-Human League." The voice held not a
hint of irony. "In fact, you outrank me! I'll have to wait for you to invite me
in."

"Huh? Oh, yeah. Sure." Sarnac gestured expansively at the table and
chairs. "Come on in! Mi casa es su casa, and all that! Make yourself at
home…" He realized he was babbling, but he thought he was doing about
as well as could be expected under the circumstances.

After all, he told himself, it's not every day you invite King Arthur into
your quarters.

"So those three ladies who came to take you to the convent in the town
were Tylar's people?" Sarnac fortified himself with another sip of the wine
Tylar had earned his relieved gratitude by supplying. He was
remembering with special vividness the Britons' retreat into the
Burgundian lands with their mortally wounded High King, ending outside
a town perched on a crag at the eastern end of a valley… the town called
Avallon.

"Precisely," said Draco—or was it Artorius? (Arthur? Somehow, no.)


"You were gone at the time."

"Yeah, tossing your pig-sticker into that lake. By the way, what should I
be calling you?"

"Oh, make it 'Artorius'; it is my birth name, after all. Anything but that
honorific 'Riothamus,' which I never much liked." He took a sip of wine.
"And I've been wanting to thank you for that business with the sword. As
you gathered at the time, it meant a lot to me. I was intermittently
delirious by then, and my mind kept returning to the old Sarmatian
hero-tales I'd grown up on."

"Tales that I implanted into the Western tradition, dressed in Celtic


clothes—as you intended all along," Sarnac added with a sideways glare
that didn't put a dent in Tylar's visible self-satisfaction.

"Yes," the time traveler nodded. "It was necessary. And the whole
episode worked out very well indeed, from the standpoint of establishing
the mythic elements of the story. It was a nice touch, if I do say so myself,
to simulate those three ladies who've kept turning up in myth—finding
Christ's tomb empty, for example—ever since the Bronze Age."

Sarnac, a lapsed Catholic, wasn't offended. "Only, they didn't really take
King Arthur off to Avalon, however you spell it. They took him through
your portals to a sickbay where his wounds were a snap to fix. As much as
I hate to admit it, that was pretty decent of you."
"True," Tylar allowed. "But I can't claim it was pure, disinterested
altruism. The fact is, Artorius was simply too valuable to be allowed to die.
I really am a historical researcher, you know—among other things. And in
the course of our time in Gaul in 469 and 470 I came to the conclusion
that he was an even more remarkable individual than we had previously
thought."

"Yeah, I remember you mentioning something about it, at the Battle of


Angers," Sarnac said. Artorius, he noted, was handling all this very well.
But then, it was hard to imagine him not doing so. Never mind the
Romans and their Sarmatian cavalry auxiliaries crowding the Celts in
his family tree, he thought, as he often had in the fifth century. This guy
wrote the book on the charm of the western isles.

"So," Tylar continued, "after restoring him to physical health, we gave


him an up-to-date education and employed him as a field agent You see,
our experience with you and Tiraena had convinced us of the usefulness of
operatives from prim—ah, from backgrounds more typical of most of
human history than our own. We expected Artorius to display tremendous
aptitude for the work. I might add that he's more than fulfilled those
expectations. Indeed, he's made himself indispensable to me in the years
that have followed—more subjective years, by the way, than the fifteen
that have passed for you."

Sarnac nodded. He was still readjusting to the consequences of time


travel. And he noted that Artorius seemed no older than he remembered.
Well, with the kind of medical science Tylar's people must have . . . and of
course anybody looks younger clean-shaven than with a heard. …

"It must have been a hell of an adjustment for you," he suggested to the
former High King of the Britons.

"It was all of that," Artorius agreed with the emphatic nod that Sarnac
recalled. The shadow of a wind-blown cloud seemed to cross the strongly
marked features. "At first it was like a continuation of the delirium.
Afterwards… I can't tell you what it was like, because I can't clearly
remember myself. It would have been worse, I think, if I'd been taken
directly into your world. There would have been just enough that was, if
not familiar, at least comprehensible, to make the rest seem wrong. And
the wrongness might have driven me mad. But in his world, where
everything is beyond dreams, I could just… let go, and accept things as I
found them."
"Yes," Tylar nodded. "You could. Not everyone would have been so
resilient. In this, too, you lived up to our expectations. I for one wasn't
surprised in the least at your subsequent success in the field."

"Well," Artorius said easily, "I've tried to do well by you, for I owe you a
debt. Not just for saving my life, but for giving me a new one, one which
is…" For the first time since Sarnac had known him—in any century—he
was at a loss for words. "The things I've seen," he finally half-whispered.

"I can certainly vouch for how good you are," Sarnac said. "Your
performance as my ops officer… well!" He paused for a moment while they
all partook of the wine.

"Satisfy my curiosity about something. When did you tumble to me?"

Artorius raised one dark brow. 'Tumble… ?"

"Maybe you don't remember it clearly, but at the end you told me you
knew I wasn't just a simple mere. How long had you known? And what
gave me away?"

For a moment their eyes held each other, and Sarnac remembered
those same eyes staring out of a blood-stained face while the dying High
King whispered, "Bedwyr, I know you're not what you claim to be,
though I know not what you really are—nor do I wish to know, for I
believe that knowledge lies beyond the proper ken of mortals."

"There had been a lot of little things," Artorius finally answered. "But
what finally convinced me was the exchange we had just before the army
set out from Bourges. It was obvious that you knew more than you were
telling. You wanted to persuade me not to advance into Berry without
waiting for reinforcements from Soissons, but you couldn't say so openly.
It kept nagging at me. And, of course, when your unspoken prophecy came
true…" He let his voice trail off with a shrug.

Sarnac remembered very well that spring morning in Bourges, looking


up into the face of the man he must watch be destroyed as history
required. The forbidden hint had been out of his mouth before he could
shut it.

"Artorius," he asked softly, "have you ever wished, in the years since
then, that you could just say to hell with history and go back to that
morning and act on my not-quite-advice? Wait inside the walls of Bourges
for the Romans and Franks, then go out and kick the Visigoths' butts…"

"No!" The vehemence rocked Sarnac physically back in his chair, and
he saw in that face what many others had seen above a shield-rim across a
battlefield, though far fewer had lived to remember seeing it. And then
Artorius' smile was like the sun breaking through thunderclouds.

"Sony, old man, but you're talking about things that mustn't even be
spoken of. Besides, I've learned a lot about history since then, and I know
what a calamity it would have been if I had succeeded."

"Yes," Sarnac nodded. "Tylar explained it to me and Tiraena. In defeat


you bequeathed the emerging Western culture a legend that helped give it
shape. If you had won…"

"It wasn't comfortable knowledge, I can tell you! But Tylar helped me to
become reconciled to it, to realize that all I had done hadn't been in vain
or worse." Artorius smiled again. "I understand you tried to do the same
for Kai. Good old Kai! That's something else I meant to thank you for."

"Well," Sarnac said uncomfortably, "he was a friend. It was the least I
could do. I imagine I broke some rules," he added with a glance at Tylar,
"but it didn't matter. I doubt if he understood a word I was saying."

"That's usually the way it is," Tylar acknowledged. "He took the parts
he did grasp back to Britain with him, and they entered into the legend as
was intended. That, too, is usually the way it is. However, I'm glad you've
raised the point, because it's closely related to the reason I've brought you
here again and restored your memories."

"Oh, yeah; I'd almost forgotten, in all this…" Sarnac waved vaguely in
Artorius' direction. "So tell me about this 'obligation' or 'debt' of mine."

"Well, it's rather complicated…"

"Things generally are, with you," Sarnac interjected drily.

"… so let me begin at the beginning. You recall my little lecture to you
and Tiraena on my people's experiences with time travel and the various
theories we'd developed and then discarded concerning the nature of
reality and the potential effect of time travelers upon it?" Sarnac nodded,
and Tylar resumed, clearly uncomfortable. "Well, it turns out that our
most recent theory still needs some fine-tuning."
***

An awkward moment passed as Sarnac waited for an explanation of


that statement, so fraught with disturbing implications. When none was
forthcoming, he broke the silence. "You mean that time travelers can't
affect history at certain critical times after all? But Tylar, that would
invalidate the whole rationale for your people's policing of the past…"

"Oh, no," the time traveler cut in emphatically, seeming to look around
for something to mop his brow with as he waved away Sarnac's
near-obscene suggestion. "Absolutely not! That's not what I mean. That
aspect of the theory is still good. As I explained to you and Tiraena,
throughout most of history reality possesses a very strong 'fabric,'
impervious to being 'torn' even by seemingly brutal applications of force."
He shifted into discursive mode. "Remember I mentioned that we have
research tools beyond your understanding, whereby we can extrapolate
the outcomes of theoretical interventions in history? Well, we used these
methods to plot out one of the favorite daydreams of early time-travel
theorists: going back and killing Adolf Hitler in his cradle. You'd be
surprised how little would have changed. The Germans of the post-World
War I era would have found somebody else like him. Likewise, doing the
same to the infant Christopher Columbus would accomplish little except
to satisfy certain American Indian revanchists. The European discovery of
America around that time was inevitable. Oh, some unimportant things
would have been different; the Spanish language might have become less
widespread, Portuguese and Dutch perhaps more so. But the Native
American societies were doomed."

"At the same time," Sarnac said, in an effort to get Tylar back on track,
"you told us that at certain points history has a weak, frayed 'fabric' that
can be torn with minimum effort. You indicated that Artorius' Gallic
campaign that we were mixed up in was one of those points in history."

"Indeed it was. History was at a turning point, and its momentum


could have been deflected by the lightest touch and sent careening off onto
a whole new course."

"But it wasn't" Sarnac stated. "Your policing operation was a complete


success, wasn't it? You told us as much. So what's the big deal?"
"Well, it seems that some areas of 'weak fabric' in the historical
tapestry are even weaker than others, and that your conversation with
Artorius in Bourges represented a moment of extraordinary—perhaps
unique—weakness. Our theorists don't understand why—there's so much
we don't understand!—but evidently reality can only tolerate that degree of
instability for the briefest instant; it only lasted a few seconds after you
spoke to Artorius, while he wavered. But for that moment in time, the
future teetered on a knife-edge!"

"Scary," Sarnac admitted. "But, again, so what? The moment passed,


Artorius decided as history said he did, and that was that 'God's in his
heaven, alls right with the world.'"

"Well… yes and no. You see, the discovery of that area of unprecedented
weak 'fabric' led us to the realization that our theories held the flaw to
which I alluded earlier." He seemed to gather himself. "Remember my
mentioning that 'branches of time' are fantasy, and that any given act can
have but one outcome?"

"Yeah. Too bad; no 'parallel universes' with 'alternate histories.' I've


always been a science-fiction fan—the classic stuff from the twentieth
century—and they used to dream up some…" His voice came to a horrified
halt. "Wait a minute, Tylar! Are you about to tell me that…"

"Oh, the theory is still good—under almost all circumstances. But it


turns out that truly extreme weakness in the 'fabric' of reality does, after
all, allow the same event to have multiple outcomes, all of equal
mathematical validity. We'd never had occasion to become aware of this
feet because we'd never encountered such conditions before. That moment
with you and Artorius in Bourges may have been unique. I devoutly hope
so." This time Tylar did mop his brow, using his sleeve.

"So you're saying," Sarnac continued faintly, "that there's an alternate


reality in which Artorius decided, at that moment, not to deploy his forces
into Berry? And that… ?"

"Yes." Tylar nodded. "And the resulting changes in history were at least
as momentous as I had speculated."

"But," Sarnac continued, head spinning, "in that case there must be
alternate versions of me and Tiraena! Or were, in the fifth century of this
alternate universe, with God knows what happening to them!"
"By no means. The two of you, and I, ceased to exist in the alternate
universe at the instant it branched off from our own. For in that universe,
my people can never come into existence; the history that culminates in us
is stillborn. Hence, there are no Raehaniv; we weren't there, thirty
thousand years before your time, to plant their ancestors on Raehan."

"I imagine," Artorius put in, "the alternate Artorius wondered what
had become of you."

Sarnac's head was starting to ache. "But, Tylar, how can you be sure of
all this? How can you know about this alternate universe?"

"Because," Tylar answered gravely, "we've received a visitor from it. Or


we will, that is, in the twenty-ninth century. He will come from the
twenty-ninth century of his universe seeking help—for, to repeat, my fears
concerning the consequences of a victory by our friend here turn out to
have erred on the conservative side."

"Seeking help? You mean… ?" Sarnac didn't finish the question because
he didn't really want to hear the answer. Tylar supplied it anyway.

"Yes. The Korvaasha. Remember, in the alternate universe there are no


Raehaniv. Hence no Varien hle'Morna—and no technologically advanced
civilization on twenty-first century Earth for him to have found even if he
had existed."

Sarnac's head felt as though someone was driving a railroad spike


upward between his left eyeball and the frontal bone. "Tylar, I think I can
see where this is heading. You're going to say that I'm responsible for the
existence of this alternate reality because I shot off my mouth to
Artorius…"

"Not altogether. Not even primarily. As I admitted earlier, the principal


fault is mine. If not for me, you wouldn't have been there in the fifth
century at all. Nevertheless, to a certain extent you share my
responsibility. Therefore," he continued, the inexplicable look of
self-satisfaction back at full force, "instead of simply proceeding on my
own— with Artorius' help, of course—to set things right, I came to this era
first, to make you aware of your debt and enable you to pay it."

Sarnac wasn't even fully aware of his headache as he groped for a


handhold on reality. "Uh, Tylar, let me make sure I'm clear on the
situation. Our own history, in our own universe, came out okay, right?"

"Oh, certainly! As I explained…"

"Then," Sarnac pressed on, "whatever has happened, or is happening,


or will happen in this alternate universe isn't real from our standpoint, is
it? So, why should you or I feel this moral obligation? I mean, so what?"

The time traveler spoke in the puzzled tones of a man encountering


unexpected difficulties in explaining the obvious. "You don't seem to
understand, my dear fellow. In the context of its own metrical frame, the
alternate universe is as 'real'—however one chooses to define the term—as
our own. The historical development it has followed is an… abomination.
A wrongness. The ethical responsibility borne by those who—however
unwittingly— called it into being is, of course, intuitively clear to anyone of
moral sensibility, regardless of cultural background." Artorius gave Sarnac
a covert wink of commiseration. "So surely," Tylar continued, "you can
see… can't you?" He seemed to deflate. "Well, perhaps it isn't as
self-evident as I supposed. But surely you can at least see that the people of
the alternate universe are as human as you or I, as capable of feeling pain.
Surely you can grasp the reality of their tragedy. If nothing else, the one
who has visited us should make their common humanity obvious."

"Oh, yeah," Sarnac temporized. "This visitor you mentioned. How can it
be possible for him to be in our reality?"

"Why don't we let him explain that?" Tylar beamed.

"Huh? You mean he's here now?"

"Quite. I thought a little preparation would be in order before letting


you meet him, so I asked him to wait." He drained his wineglass and rose
to his feet. "Shall we go?"
CHAPTER THREE
Andreas Ducas was thirtyish, olive-complexioned, regular-featured,
solidly built, clad in a utilitarian one-piece garment on loan from Tylar. As
he rose to greet them in the lakeside pavilion, Sarnac couldn't avoid the
irrational feeling that someone from the future of an alternate timeline
ought to have something just a little bit out of the ordinary in his
appearance. But Andreas didn't.
Nor was there anything remarkable about the fact that he had been
born on Alpha Centauri A III. "We've known for some time that there was
a planet with water and free oxygen at Alpha Centauri," Sarnac explained
to him after the introductions were complete. "But since there's no
displacement point there… uh, are you familiar with displacement
points?"

Andreas nodded—up and down for affirmation, Sarnac noted with


relief; he'd once tried to communicate with a Bulgarian. "Yes, Tylar has
explained the concept to me." He spoke in the fifth-century military Latin
that was the only language they had in common. He had acquired it
courtesy of the same kind of implant which had, fifteen years before,
conferred it on Sarnac. Tylar had decided against cluttering his mind with
unnecessary languages like Standard International English. "It accounted
for what happened almost three centuries before my time. But continue,
Admiral Sarnac."

" 'Robert,' please. Well, until fifteen years ago that was the only means
of interstellar travel available to us. Then we acquired the
continuous-displacement drive from the Raehaniv… uh…"

"Yes," Andreas smiled encouragingly. "Tylar explained about them too.


And about the drive."

"Then you know it freed us from dependence on displacement points.


There's now a thriving infant colony on your planet… or what is, or will be,
your planet in your reality." Sarnac's head was starting to throb again.

"Yes," Tylar put in. "It will be quite an important place by the
twenty-ninth century. We'll have a kind of listening post in the outer
system, and it will…" He stopped and shook his head in annoyance. "Latin
is even more impossible for discussions of time travel than Standard
International English, you know—the same lack of several requisite tenses,
including 'subjective-past,' which is what I should be using now. I'll have
to use past tense. Better still, I'll let you use it, Andreas. Why don't you
explain matters to Robert, starring with an overview of your history?"

"I'll try, but as you know I'm no historian." Andreas frowned with
concentration as he organized his thoughts. 'Tylar has described your
history to me, so I know that by the twenty-first century your Earth was
engaged in interplanetary exploration. We were only up to steam pumps
and black powder firearms at that time—sixteen centuries after the
Restorer."

"The Restorer?" Sarnac glanced at Artorius, who gave a rueful nod. "So,
Tylar, you were right after all…"

"Yes. Instead of messy but technologically fruitful political disunity,


Europe got a reunited and expanded Roman Empire which imposed a
kind of… Byzantine Mandarinism is as good a term as any. It was as
deadly to innovation as the restored Chinese Empire in the same era of
both timelines. The result was as Andreas has described. Naturally, none
of this affected the Korvaash Unity in any way—except that there were no
Raehaniv for it to encounter, and no Raehaniv navigational data for it to
capture. So its expansion in Earth's direction was somewhat slower in the
years before the great realignment of the displacement network. Pardon
me, Andreas—do continue."

"Of course we knew nothing of these events beyond the solar system.
But in the subsequent five centuries, we mastered the scientific method
and began to forge ahead technologically." His voice held a kind of forlorn,
defensive pride. Sarnac belatedly understood that he was looking at a man
who had been cast, all alone, among strangers whose kindliness only
underlined the fact that they wielded powers beyond the dreams of gods.
"By the twenty-sixth century," he continued, "we were ready to launch our
first interstellar expedition, toward Alpha Centauri."

Tylars face took on the abstracted expression that, Sarnac had come to
realize, meant he was in whatever unimaginable linkage he maintained
with his sentient machines. The image of a space vessel appeared in
midair above the table around which they sat, although there was no
apparent holo projection equipment nor anyplace for it to be concealed
Sarnac couldn't worry about that as he stared in fascination.

It was like what Jules Verne might have visualized had the notion of an
STL interstellar snip ever occurred to him.

Tylar seemed to read his thoughts. "Yes. The technology of the alternate
Earth developed in ways that were idiosyncratic to say the least, from your
standpoint or mine. Those divergences make a fascinating story in
themselves."

"It looks big," was all Sarnac could say, even though he had no familiar
objects to give a sense of scale.
"Indeed," Tylar affirmed. "It had to be, for it was what those science
fiction writers of whom you're so fond called a 'generation ship.' It
required a century to reach Alpha Centauri, and one of the things of which
its builders were ignorant was cryogenic suspension. Given those builders'
capabilities, it was really a technological tour de force, and like all such
was incredibly expensive. I gather it was at least in part a symbol, carrying
with it the prestige of the Empire—which included the Americas and large
parts of Africa and Russia as well as all of Europe and the Near East, and
was locked in rivalry with its Chinese counterpart."

"Sort of like the mid-twentieth-century space programs," Sarnac


opined.

"It was expensive," Andreas acknowledged. "But it turned out to be a


better investment than its builders imagined, for it put a small portion of
the human race out of reach of what happened twenty-five years into its
voyage. That was when the Korvaash ships inexplicably appeared in the
outer Solar System and descended on Earth."

"The Realm of Tarzhgul?" Sarnac made it as much a statement as a


question.

Tylar nodded. "Remember, the displacement network is the same in


both universes. And the Realm arose in the same manner after the
disruption of that network put an end to the Unity."

"Yeah," Sarnac grinned crookedly. "Founded by a Korvaash dissident


who thought the Unity's problem was that it was being run by a bunch of
bleeding-heart liberals. After the displacement points went blooey and his
planet found itself cut off from its higher-ups, he and his disciples were in
a position to step into the power vacuum. They may have heard, in our
universe, the news that something funny was going on at Raehan; but that
had nothing important to do with their takeover. It would have happened
anyway."

"Precisely," Tylar affirmed. "Later, with no Solar Union to oppose diem,


the Korvaasha of the Realm expanded slowly along the displacement
chains, taking until the twenty-sixth century to reach an Earth that could
not hope to resist them."

"The generation ship's occupants could only listen in horror to the


broadcasts from Sol," Andreas resumed. 'They continued on their
predetermined course to Alpha Centauri, constantly expecting the
Korvaasha to pursue them using whatever mysterious space drive had
brought them to Sol. After all, the Korvaasha must have learned about the
expedition after occupying Earth, where it was common knowledge. But
even after the ship arrived at Alpha Centauri seventy-five years later,
nothing happened."

"Naturally," Tylar interjected. "As in our universe, Alpha Centauri has


no displacement points in the current epoch. Clearly, the alternate Realm
of Tarzhgul had not discovered the continuous-displacement drive in the
twenty-sixth century, and still has not in the twenty-ninth.

"But," he continued somberly, "that is no guarantee for the future. The


continuous-displacement drive is merely an application of the same
gravitic technology that allows displacement-point transit No matter how
uninventive the Korvaasha of Tarzhgul are, they'll stumble onto it
eventually. And they'll remember the hitherto-inaccessible human colony
at Alpha Centauri."

"Even if they never discover it," Artorius interjected, "don't forget the
other Korvaash successor-state that's come to light in Roberts era. It must
also exist in the alternate universe. And those Korvaasha are more
inventive than they're supposed to be! I may as well tell you, Robert, that
they don't have the drive in your time. But with no Pan-Human League to
run up against, they're bound to discover it eventually. For all we know,
they've already discovered it by Andreas' lifetime and are gradually
expanding toward an inevitable meeting with the Realm of Tarzhgul.
Whether that meeting results in amalgamation or war makes no
difference to Andreas' people. They're living on borrowed time."

Andreas' face gleamed with a sheen of sweat in the simulated sunlight


and he licked his lips before continuing. "We didn't know any of this, of
course. But for the entire two centuries since the landfall on Chiron—that's
what we call the third planet of Alpha Centauri A—our lives have been
built around preparation for the eventual arrival of the Korvaasha. Among
other things, we've tried to develop a means of faster-than-light travel. But
we ve never discovered the secret of artificial gravity; that's one of the
many ways in which our courses of development have differed since your
timeline branched off." He looked around at the other three as though
challenging anyone to take exception to that particular phraseology, but
no one did. "Our efforts were aimed at translating a ship into a parallel
space in which the speed of light was higher, or ignorable altogether."

"Oho!" Sarnac smiled. "The old 'hyperspace' idea. It was a favorite with
Terran science-fiction writers before the discovery of displacement
points."

"The Chironites were wrong about faster-than-light travel," Tylar said.


"But in pursuing their erroneous theory they blundered onto something
concerning which not even my people have ever had an inkling: the ability
to access an alternate reality. Tell him what happened, Andreas."

"Theory predicted that our experimental drive would not work deep in
a gravity well, so the experiments were carried on in the outer reaches of
the Alpha Centauri system. At last a robot probe was launched—with
apparent success, for it vanished and later reappeared on schedule at the
same location. But its recorded data showed that it had emerged in
exactly the same spot in the outer Alpha Centauri system! But not the
same Alpha Centauri system, for all the regular communications channels
were dead. Instead, there was an enormous volume of incomprehensible
broadcasts from Chiron."

Lirauva, Sarnac mentally corrected him. That's what we call Alpha


Centauri A III, because Varien hle'Morna's daughter Aelanni named it
that when she used it as her base for studying twenty-first-century
Earth, back in the days when Alpha Centauri had a displacement point.

"Nowadays, being a nice place and just a short


continuous-displacement hop from Sol, it's a rapidly growing colony.
What will it be like in the twenty-ninth century?

"At first we thought we had inadvertently discovered time travel,"


Andreas was saying. "But the probes photographic record showed
absolutely no difference in the relative positions of the stars. Only one
conclusion was possible: our probe had traveled not up or down the
timestream but across to the same point of a different timestream."

"A conclusion that showed great intellectual courage and flexibility,"


Tylar approved.

"I suppose becoming hidebound is one of the many luxuries we've never
been able to afford. At any rate, the video broadcasts the probe had picked
up showed that the inhabitants of Chiron—the other Chiron—were
human. Their language was indecipherable, although one of our more
eccentric philologists claimed to discern, in part of the vocabulary, a
remote kinship with the languages spoken by the barbarians of northwest
Europe before their final incorporation into the Empire. Of more
immediate concern was the fact that they possessed technology beyond
our utmost horizons. We resolved to contact diem and seek their help
against the Korvaasha, perhaps enlisting their aid in liberating Earth.

"The energy cost of the transtemporal breakthrough is enormous, and


the generating machinery is almost prohibitively massive relative to the
payload. It was out of the question to send more than one emissary,
especially given the tonnage of life-support equipment he'd need for the
voyage insystem to Chiron… or whatever you call it. The competition for
that posting was fierce, despite the danger; we had no way of knowing for
certain that a living organism could survive the transposition. Senior
government officials were generally too old or otherwise disqualified. So
they turned to those of us who had been in training for the projected
faster-than-light interstellar expeditions. In the end, I was selected for
good physical and mental health, lack of ties to my own world—I have no
living relatives— and broad-based scientific knowledge. Not for historical
expertise, as Tylar can attest!

"As it turned out, I successfully made the transit and emerged into your
reality. Then, just after I had set a course for Chiron, I was met by a ship
which made even the technology of the alternate Chiron seem primitive."

"You," Sarnac stated flatly to Tylar.

"Yes. The emergence of the unmanned probe had set up a kind of


dimensional fluctuation which our listening post could not fail to detect.
The energy flux was quite unprecedented; we had no idea what was
happening. So I was sent for. We were fully prepared for Andreas'
appearance. We couldn't allow him to contact the twenty-ninth-century
inhabitants of Lirauva, of course; our own history said nothing about any
such contact. It was clearly a case where intervention was required to keep
history on its proper course—the course that eventuates in us. So we
picked him up."

"I can imagine that scene," Sarnac remarked. He really could. ("Oh I'm
so sorry about this dreadful mixup, my dear fellow.…")

"It soon became clear what had happened," Tylar continued, oblivious,
"as incredible as it all seemed. The next step, of course, was to determine
the exact point at which the two histories had diverged. Andreas, as he
has admitted, is no historian. But he has an educated man's familiarity
with the salient events and personalities. He knew that in the late fifth
century the Roman Empire was being reunified. And he knew who had
done it."

"Yes," Andreas said. "The man who bestrides the ages. When I met him
..." He gazed across the table at Artorius. "Of course, I know that he isn't
really Artorius Augustus the Restorer, that in your history he died—or was
supposed to have died—at the same time he was winning the Battle of
Bourges in mine. But still… do you know I was born in a city on Chiron
called 'Artoriopolis'?" Artorius gave a gesture that was all offhand
graciousness, while Sarnac tried to imagine meeting a George Washington
who had been hanged by Lord North and lived on in legend.

"Given this information," Tylar resumed, "I accessed Roberts recorded


memories of that period. It wasn't hard to pinpoint that brief
conversation."

"Wait a minute, Tylar," Sarnac protested. "Are you really sure that for
just those few moments the future was teetering on such a knife-edge, as
you said earlier, that a few words from me could have tipped the balance?"

"Yes," Tylar stated shortly. "Those moments may have been unique in
all the timestream. I devoutly hope so. But at any rate, the inarguable fact
is that an alternate timeline was created, by application of precisely the
right stimulus at precisely the right instant. Our subsequent researches
leave no room for doubt on the matter."

After a few heartbeats, Sarnac decided it was incumbent on him to


break the silence. "So, Tylar, what do you propose to do? Take me back to
that same place and time and make sure that I keep my big mouth shut?"

"Oh, no. I'm afraid it doesn't work that way. We've had a chance to
investigate these matters in some depth, and while there's much we don't
understand, one thing is clear: once an alternate timeline branches off, it
can't be unmade."

Sarnac felt that sensation of groping for an understanding of the basic


fundamentals that was all too familiar when dealing with Tylar. "Uh, I
don't quite get it. If what happened can't be undone, then what's the use of
all this?"

"Andreas' timeline can't be obliterated, true. But it can be altered


under the right circumstances, just as ours can. It's precisely what my
people and I are constantly on guard against, in our own reality. Well, in
the alternate reality I'll have to bring about that which I've dedicated my
life to preventing, and change history so as to assure that by the
twenty-sixth century the alternate Earth is prepared to defend itself
against the Korvaasha. I fear I'll be hard put to manage with equanimity
such a… reversal of orientation."

"So you're saying we should enter the alternate reality and go back to a
point in time just after the branching-off, and talk the alternate Artorius
into changing his mind? Well, it shouldn't be too hard." He turned to
Artorius. "The decision you made was entirely reasonable, given the
information available to you at the time."

"So I've frequently assured myself," the former High King said drily.

"Ah, I'm afraid it's not quite that simple." Tylar sounded apologetic.
"You see, after the crucial turning point the 'fabric' of the alternate reality
becomes very strong for some time, as one decision leads with inexorable
logic to the next. We've investigated the matter thoroughly, and the next
area of 'weak fabric' when history can be changed occurs twenty-one years
later, in the alternate year 491 A.D."

"What? But that's a lot of time, Tylar—time enough for a lot of water to
have flowed over the dam. Won't the changes that lead to Andreas' world
have accumulated a lot of, uh, momentum by then?"

"Indubitably. There will be certain difficulties, and I anticipate an


extended stay in the alternate universe to assure ourselves that matters
are proceeding as planned. But," he added brightly, "anything worth doing
is worth doing properly, as someone once said."

"Your mother," Sarnac supplied. If you had one, he didn't add.

"Ahem! Well, to business! You'll need to be supplied, via implant, with


updated knowledge that Artorius and Andreas already possess. Then these
data will have to be supplemented with a conventional briefing concerning
the precise state of affairs at the moment when we'll—"
"Tylar." Sarnacs tone achieved the not-inconsiderable feat of stopping
the time traveler in his verbal tracks. "Look, I think I understand all this,
at least on a superficial level.

And I'm not blind to the ethical implications—I'm willing to admit a


degree of responsibility. But like all adult human beings, I have to balance
my responsibilities. And, as you know, I'm in command of a naval force
that is shortly going into battle against some very dangerous enemies of
the human race—our human race." His glance at Andreas was rueful but
not apologetic. "That has to be my first priority." - "But, my dear fellow,
there's no conflict! As I explained, after your obligations are fulfilled I'll
return you to your office at the precise time we left it."

"Yeah, if I'm still alive! You've implied that changing the alternate
history is going to involve a lot of difficulty and danger as well as an
'extended stay,' and I know from experience how rough that era can be."
He took a deep breath. "Look, I'm not afraid of personal risk—not as an
individual. But my life isn't strictly my own to risk. I'm not even talking
about the fact that I've got a wife and children; I'm talking about—"

"… the just cause which is entrusted to you to defend," Tylar finished
for him. It sounded like a quotation, but Sarnac couldn't quite place it.
"Yes, I can respect that. But I cannot let it weigh in the balance against
the fate of an entire reality—a reality in which the human race is doomed
to be slaves and meat-animals for all that remains of its existence. You
are, at this point in time, the guardian of an ephemeral polity called the
Pan-Human League. I am the guardian of universal reality!"

Memories of which he had been robbed not once but twice came back
to Sarnac, for once before, in this very place, Tylar's eyes and voice had
seemed to fill this artificial continuum of his own creation. And now, once
again, the eyes and the voice were all that was or could be, and he was in
free fall through a bottomless cosmos of the incomprehensible…

But then there was something else. There was a face in which the blood
of Earth and Raehan blended into a harmony of coppery skin and dark-red
hair and features which held all that that was worthwhile in Sarnac's
personal universe. And all at once he knew where he was and who he was.

"Tylar." He heard his own voice as though from a great distance.


"Tylar!" he shouted—or at least the rasping in his throat told him he was
shouting. Abruptly, all was as before in the elegant lakeside pavilion.
Artorius and Andreas looked on in silence, and Tylar smiled slightly.

"You've grown up," the time traveler observed. Then he leaned back,
head tilted to one side, as though inviting Sarnac to speak.

Sarnac forced steadiness on himself. 'Tylar, I know there's no point in


trying to refuse you. So I'll go along—on one condition. Tiraena comes
too."

Tylar's eyebrows lifted. "But that's really not necessary. She bears no
part of the responsibility; she was in Britain at the time when…"

"Yes, I know. But that's not the point. The half-memories you left in my
subconscious but not in hers have been like a… a fault line between us. I
don't want to take the chance of that happening again. And besides,
Tylar—you owe her! I won't let you give me back my memories of what we
went through together without giving them back to her as well, even if it's
only for a little while for both of us." He took a deep breath and plunged
ahead. "You may be able to compel my cooperation—but you can't compel
my willing cooperation! The only way you're going to get that is by going
along with me on this!"

There was a moments silence, while Andreas looked lost and Artorius'
face wore an expression that Sarnac had never thought to see there. Tylar
finally spoke in a conversational tone. "How can you be sure she'll want to
go along on this expedition?"

"I can't. But it has to be her choice. You have to give her memories back
to her and then let her decide. So help me, that's the only way you're going
to get my wholehearted participation."

There was another pause. When Tylar spoke, it was at least half to
himself, and with seeming irrelevance. "My work requires me to violate
my own ethics far too much as it is, you know. In your case, I think I've
already violated them quite enough." He seemed to reach an inner
decision. "I believe what you request can be arranged."
CHAPTER FOUR
The grav raft swept in out of the red sunset, knifing through the mists
under the ghostly outline of the giant close moon that hung where it
always hung over this planet whose rotation it had long ago halted.
Tiraena zho'Daeriel DiFalco-Sarnac watched the Survey base come into
view as the raft slid silently over the flatlands. It lay near the estuary of
Naeruil II's greatest river, surrounded by native dwellings that had sprung
up around it. The Naeruilhiv were at least the equal of their human
discoverers in their appetite for novelty, and had little attachment to a
particular place to deter them from moving close to where that appetite
might best be satisfied. Maybe their disinclination to stay in one place
long enough to form elaborately stratified societies had contributed to
keeping them in the Bronze Age despite their high intelligence—it seemed
to get higher every time the neural-scanner technicians recalibrated their
equipment.

Of course, it wasn't easy to measure the intelligence of a race that


consisted of two symbiotic species, so that each "individual" was, in fact, a
duality. By the same token, it gave them a natural gift for
communication…

"Cleared for landing," the pilot broke into her thoughts. She nodded
absently and the native settlements (Camps?

Something else?) vanished behind structures that seemed to rise up as


they settled like a falling feather onto the landing stage.

"Very smooth, Nicky," she approved. Nicole Hunyadi grinned in


response.

"Hard to go wrong with these new models," the pilot admitted, slapping
the console affectionately. "My dad— he used to pilot the old Solar Union
drop shuttles during the war—keeps telling me that my generation's got it
soft."

"Well, you do," Tiraena stated firmly. Hunyadis grin was unabated in
its infectiousness, and it duly infected Tiraena. She found it easy to share
the pilots irreverence, having grown up with the kind of refined grav
repulsion to which the peoples of the former Solar Union were still
adjusting.

Still, she thought, have a little respect! I'm more than old enough to be
your mother. But, she assured herself as she swung herself out of the raft
under Naeruil II's 1.18 G pull, she didn't feel it, nor look it. She had, from
birth, had access to the best bioscience Raehaniv money could buy, and at
fifty-four Terran years her hair was as darkly auburn and her body as lithe
as ever. Though chronologically older than Bob, she was almost certain to
outlive him. It was a dilemma that linked her with her great-grandmother
Aelanni zho'Morma, and they had both made the same decision.

She swung her satchel over her shoulder, waved goodbye to Nicky, and
started toward the headquarters building with the cautious stride that
was her natural gaits compromise with the local gravity. The sun seemed
almost as stationary as the moon—this planet's sidereal day was longer
than four of Earth's—but it was setting, and there was some relief from
the heat that had, over the last few watches, made Tiraena thankful for
her utility suit's ability to "breathe." Soon would come the long night when
it would get as close to cold as Naeruil II ever got. The enormous moon
kept this hemisphere's night from being very dark, but still it was good to
get as much done as possible in daylight. Which, she told her conscience,
is a perfectly valid reason for me to go out and pitch in with the field
work, rather than spend my whole time back here doing my
administrative chores like a good little station director. Plenty of time
during the night to catch up on all that rhylieu shit.

Rationalization completed, she grinned to herself as she checked in at


her office and proceeded on to her quarters, thinking back over all the
wonders she had seen in the hinterlands. The universe was full of planets
with the right conditions for life, but most had not yet existed long enough
to bring it forth. Earths Sol and Raehan's Tareil were exceptionally old
members of that exclusive club of F, G, and K type main-sequence stars
which could sire living worlds. Prebiotic planets were everywhere, readily
terraformable but as yet barren. And of the life-bearing worlds, most held
only primitive marine microorganisms that made scummy the seas that
lapped their landmasses of naked sand and rock. A planet with a mature,
highly developed and richly diversified biosphere was a rare and precious
thing. And rarest and most precious of all were the worlds which had
brought forth sentience—like this one. Every one of the sentient races
we've found has been a new adventure—a new perspective on reality.
Every one of them has been unique, showing us one more road that leads
beyond what we had thought were the boundaries of the possible.

And then, came a thought like a blighting chill, there were the
Korvaasha—the living confirmation of Goethe (she had learned of him
during the last fifteen years) for they showed that sentience can enable its
possessor to become beastlier than any beast.
The thought led her consciousness back to Bob, where she had resolved
not to let it wander. The details hadn't made their way across the
Pan-Human League yet— messages were limited to the speed at which the
combination of displacement points and continuous-displacement drive
would allow a ship to carry them; humanity left instantaneous
communications behind when it emerged onto the interstellar stage. But
it was clear enough that the mysterious menace that had emerged from
the unexplored spaces beyond Loriima was yet another surviving fragment
of the old Korvaash Unity. (How many more? some inner self that had
never left girlhood behind asked God.) And Bob was now on the far side of
the League organizing humankind's resistance…

She shook her head, for she knew the futility of wishing to be with him
at this moment. They had learned to live with the long separations their
careers mandated, and the realities of space travel had made humanity
relearn the patience of the Age of Sail. And it wouldn't really matter if it
weren't for the sense of something unresolved, of feelings he has that are
always hidden from me, a part of him in which I can't share. If it weren't
for that I could face the possibility of never seeing him again without
this gnawing feeling of incompletion. Her thoughts remained far away as
she entered her small suite of rooms and dropped her satchel on the bed.

"Hello, Tiraena."

She whirled around at the impossible voice, her sense of reality reeling.
"Bob?!" She knew it came out as a ridiculous squeak, but she could no
more worry about that than she could doubt that it was really him—she
had known him too long for the idea of an imposter to even enter her
consciousness. Then she was in his arms and for an instant no mysteries
or impossibilities existed… or, at least, mattered. But only for an instant.
She disengaged and held him at arm's length so she could look at him. It
was only then that she noticed the other man, also in Fleet uniform.

"Ah, Tiraena, this is my operations officer, Captain Geoffrey Draco."

"Charmed," she said mechanically. "Bob, what are you doing here? How
did you get here?" The figures for the voyage from Loriima ran through
her head, and she didn't even have to activate her implanted calculator to
see that he couldn't be here.

"Tiraena," he said with apparent evasiveness, "you don't know Captain


Draco, do you?"
She looked at the ops officer closely for the first time. "No..Should I?"

"We've only met once, Ms. DiFalco-Sarnac. And I wasn't at my best at


the time—in fact, I was only semi-conscious. You see, I was dying. Prior to
that you may have gotten a bad impression of me, since you knew my wife,
from whom I was estranged." •

"Well, there're always two sides to these things," Tiraena said with
ritual politeness. "And I'm glad you got to the regen tank in time." She
turned back to Sarnac. "Bob, you didn't answer me. What's this all about?
How could you have gotten here from Loriima? And why didn't anyone tell
me you were here? And how did you even get into this suite… ?"

"Tiraena," Sarnac stemmed the flood of questions, "you remember the


recurring dreams I've had—the ones that didn't really seem like dreams at
all, but rather like incomplete memories?"

She blinked twice. "Of course. In fact, I was only just thinking of it. I
know they've been getting worse."

"Well, they were fragments of memory, Tiraena. Memories that were


taken from me. Memories of incredible experiences we went through
fifteen years ago. You see, the memories were taken from both of us by
someone you don't remember named Tylar." A crooked smile. "It's just
that in your case he did it right. So there's been more to our lives together
than we knew—more than you still know. But I've had the memories
restored, so I know that part of our lives together has been missing,
without us even knowing it was missing. Only, I think we did know it was
missing, on some level beyond even Tylar's understanding. That's why
there's always been—let's be honest—a kind of incompleteness about our
life together, something we both knew was absent."

Tiraena started to speak, but then her mind flew back over the last
fifteen years—the heady days after their arrival at Sol, the end of the war,
the children, everything—and her mouth closed again and she nodded
slowly.

"Now," Sarnac continued, "you can also regain those memories. It


won't be easy, I can tell you. But its very important to me that you do it. I
don't want it to come between us again, this… this lack that we can't even
put a name to. Especially since I've got to do something for Tylar now, and
I need very badly for you to be a part of it. For that, you're going to need
your memories back."

For a time they looked levelly into each others eyes— they were almost
exactly the same height. When Tiraena finally spoke, her words awoke in
Sarnac the joyful realization that he did know her after all, for they held
neither fear nor confusion nor doubt.

"Who's this 'Tylar'?" was all she said.

"Let's go meet him," Sarnac replied with a smile.

She smiled back. "Well, as long as we don't have to go too far—I have a
ton of work waiting for me, you know. I can't exactly go to Loriima with
you!"

"Oh, no, we're not going to Loriima. Just to Sol."

Her smile vanished, for he had spoken deadpan. "You're serious, aren't
you? Bob, didn't you hear me? I've got work to do here…"

"And I've got a war to fight," he cut in. 'Tiraena, you're just going to
have to take my word that this isn't going to interfere with our duties.
Don't ask me to explain—you'll understand when you have your memories
again."

She visibly kept a thousand questions penned within her, only releasing
one. "Well, how are we going to get there? You never did explain how you
got here, you know!"

"There's a ship waiting for us, outside this base." Sarnac gestured to
the mysterious Captain Draco, who placed a device unfamiliar to Tiraena
on the floor. What followed didn't register at first, for the luminously
bordered hole in the universe was too far beyond what was right and
ordinary and proper. But then Sarnac had stepped through it, then turned
and beckoned. Without stopping to consult reason, she followed. There
was a slight resistance as she entered what lay beyond—it was the inside of
an artificial construct, but there was nothing to identify it to her mind as
a spacecraft. Equally unfamiliar was the late-middle-aged man who
stepped forward to greet her. "Tiraena, my name is Tylar…"

Sarnac was the first through the door and at her bedside when she had
awakened and was able to receive visitors.
"Tiraena, darling, it's me. Are you all right?" He desperately wished for
something besides banality. But, contrary to the opinion of innumerable
generations of playwrights, intense and genuine emotion poses for most
people an impassable barrier to style.

Her eyelids fluttered open and she gave a drowsy smile. "Yes, I'm fine,"
she assured him. 'The disorientation was bad at first, but I've had time to
integrate it all. And you were right—there has been something missing all
these years, and I could never even identify a gap, much less know what
belonged there. And," she continued, reaching out a hand and grasping
his with all the strength she could manage, "you're the only thing these
new-old memories have in common with the ones I've had all along. That's
why I know they're genuine."

Sarnac felt himself nodding as he returned the pressure of her hand.


"Yes. Naturally it occurred to me to wonder if the memories were
fake—but I never seriously considered it for a minute. You see, I already
knew exactly what it felt like to fall in love with you—I'd done it in the life I
already remembered. And now I know I've done it twice, never knowing
the second time that it was the second time. And you know what? It felt
exactly the same both times. Not even Tylar could fake that."

As though illustrating the old adage about speaking of the Devil, Tylar's
voice came from near the door. "Yes, I'm sure she'll recover faster than you
did. In her case the process was not complicated by residual scraps of
memory to which extraneous recollection had accreted from the dreams in
which they had been incorporated for years. So you see, my dear, it was
simplicity itself by comparison."

Tiraena looked up at him. "Hello, Tylar. Yes, you and your people
obviously did a superlative job. And," she continued, still smiling sweetly,
"the first time you tell us you haven't been entirely candid with us, I'm
going to personally wring your scrawny neck, you lying old grolofv!

"Yup," Sarnac drawled, with a wicked grin at the time traveler. "No
question about it She remembers everything!"

"I can already see one problem."

The four men at the table turned toward Tiraena, their heads moving
against the backdrop of star-blazing blackness. Three walls of the meeting
room in Tylars villa had vanished to show the view outside the ship that
was bearing them toward Sol at a speed that gave the closer stars a visible
relative motion.

Tylar had explained that the ship generated around itself a bubble of
accelerated time, within which a modest velocity became incredible
multiples of c relative to the outside universe. Sarnac could believe it,
having once utilized the effect on an individual scale, and his intellect was
able to assure the rest of him that God hadn't really rescinded general
relativity and the Doppler phenomena.

Still, his skin prickled as he watched what looked to be a type A giant


give new meaning to the term "shooting star," hurtling impossibly past
and dwindling astern.

"What problem is that, my dear?" Tylar asked.

"Well," Tiraena said, "as I understand it, you intend to go back to the
late fifth century A.D. of the alternate timeline and change things so that
its future will turn out differently. I can provisionally accept the possibility
of doing that.

But if we succeed, then what happens to Andreas?" She gave the young
transtemporal voyager a smile that Sarnac sternly reminded himself was
maternal. "I mean, if we wipe out his history…"

"I assure you that the philosophical problems have been taken into
consideration. In particular, the fact that Andreas himself will be one of
the people doing it makes the situation reminiscent of the 'grandfather
paradox' that time-travel theorists were raising centuries before your
time. Nevertheless, it is our considered opinion that his existence will be
placed in no danger."

"But Tylar," Sarnac protested, "didn't you tell me that you and I and
Tiraena ceased to exist in the alternate history the instant it branched off,
because its future couldn't have produced us?"

"The present situation is entirely different. We're not going to be


creating yet a third timeline, which would hardly fulfill our ethical
obligation to Andreas' people and which, as I've pointed out, is almost
never possible. Instead, we're going to be changing the future course of an
existing one, which we believe is possible at certain times in history. And
we believe that the 'grandfather paradox' is chimerical, that one who
travels back along his own timestream as Andreas will be doing possesses
a personal existence rooted in a reality which cannot be affected by any
history-altering actions he takes. The future in which Andreas was born
came 'before'—in some absolute sense—the 'new' future in which he will
never be born."

Through his developing headache, Sarnac heard Tiraena speak


challengingly. "But you can't really be sure, can you? Andreas, has he
made all this clear to you?"

The emissary of a desperate reality looked at her gravely. "He has


explained it, Tiraena. I don't pretend to understand the theory, but the
possible consequences are clear enough. I'm willing to take the risk." He
gave one of his infrequent smiles. "It's no more of a risk than I took when I
ventured into your reality!"

"But," Tiraena persisted, "even if Tylar's right about your personal


existence, we'll be wiping out your world. It has to be your decision."

Andreas seemed to gather himself. "As I've told Robert, I have few close
ties with my world. It's one of the reasons I volunteered for the mission.
And… my world isn't worth having close ties with." He kept pushing the
words out, despite what each of them obviously cost him. "We've lived our
lives knowing what's been happening on Earth for almost three
centuries—the last furtive broadcasts after the Korvaasha landed made it
clear enough—and knowing that sooner or later it will happen to us or our
descendants. Do you have any idea what that does to a society? You hardly
ever hear even children laugh on Chiron—it affects them early. Not that
there are as many children as there used to be! There is a growing
movement among us, men who emulate certain ancient orders of fanatical
monks and—" he looked at Tiraena and blushed "—render themselves
incapable of siring children. They claim it is a sin to bring new lives into a
universe where Satan obviously reigns triumphant. Its hard to argue with
them. We constantly wonder what the human race has become on Earth,
if they're still human at all in any but the biological sense. But we also
have to wonder how much worse they can be than ourselves."

For a moment he could not continue, and no one else broke the silence.
Sarnac stole a glance at Tiraena, whose Raehaniv ancestors had endured a
mere few years of Korvaash rule, and saw her jaw muscles clench.

Finally, Andreas recovered his usual self-possession and spoke in an


unwavering voice. "My world is a world without hope, without joy, and
without a future for humanity save as a species of livestock that won't even
be allowed the mercy of extinction. There are only a few people in it who I
care about, but I know they would all join with me in saying to you: 'Erase
it, if there's any chance at all of replacing it with something better!' "

There was another silence as the simulated stars streamed by. Then
Sarnac drawled, "Well, what about it, Tylar? How exactly do we go about
the erasing? Since you're not worried about preserving history, and in fact
setting out to change it, I suppose we can just go in and use all the
high-tech goodies we want."

"By no means! Any blatant display of magical-seeming technology


would blight and distort the alternate Earth's subsequent development,
giving rise to unforeseeable social pathologies. An open announcement of
our presence, implying the existence of alternate realities and time travel,
would be even worse. No, we must be at least as subtle and inconspicuous
as we were before."

"Uh-huh!" Sarnac nodded fatalistically. "I don't suppose this has


anything to do with those little 'difficulties' you mentioned to me before,
Tylar?"

"Ah, well, I'm afraid I haven't…" Tylar saw Tiraenas expression and
caught himself just in time. "As you pointed out, my dear fellow,
twenty-two years of the alternate timeline will have passed by the time
change becomes feasible. History will have diverged too much for us to
have any hope of forcing it onto the exact road ours traveled. Instead, we
must set in motion events that result, not in Western history as it
transpired in our timeline, but in a similar state of political pluralism that
is equally conducive to uncontrolled technological innovation. The
ultimate aim, of course, is an advanced civilization capable of standing
alone against the Korvaasha in a universe without the Raehaniv.
Hopefully, Terran humanity will have built an interstellar empire of its
own which will crush the Realm of Tarzhgul long before the latter reaches
Earth in the twenty-sixth century." He smiled, and a K type orange dwarf
star that must have been very close to their course to be visible at all
whizzed mischievously past his head. "I daresay the alternate world's
future historians will devise theories of 'historical inevitability' to account
for what we will have done! If they do, then we will have succeeded, for the
course their history has taken will seem entirely natural— the 'only
possible' one."

"Okay, so how do we accomplish this subtle nudging? How can you be


clear on the details of Andreas' history, about which he doesn't claim to be
an expert?"

"He's not—but we were able to access his memories, including all the
history he was ever taught, whether or not he consciously retained it. Most
of it was valueless, as is generally true of the history that filters down to
educational bureaucrats for dissemination in required courses. But one
fact stood out: when the Restorer died in 491, his adopted successor was
assassinated. I'll let Artorius trace the steps our research has taken from
there."

"You'll be pleased to know, Robert," Artorius smiled, "that our inquiries


led us to the alternate version of an old acquaintance of yours: Sidonius
Apollinaris."

"Oh, yeah, Sidonius! He seemed much too nice a guy for the lousy fate
Tylar told me was in store for him."

"Well, his fate was a happier one in the alternate reality— up to a point.
In 483 he was elected Pope."

"Pope! Uh, did that mean as much then as… ?"

"Perhaps not officially; the Bishop of Rome was elected locally like any
other bishop of the period. Until the early fourth century, he was known as
just that: Bishop of Rome. But then, in the bishopric of Silvester, the
pontifical title was added as a recognition of the primacy he had always
been accorded as successor of Saint Peter. So the election was a matter of
wide importance, and Artorius…" Artorius trailed to a rueful halt. "Let's
call him 'the Restorer' to avoid confusion. The Restorer took steps to
assure the election of his loyal supporter, Bishop Sidonius of Clermont.
Then, in 491—"

"Wait a minute!" Sarnac sifted through his new-old memories. "Tylar,


didn't you tell me that Sidonius died at age forty-eight? Wouldn't that
come to 480 or so?"

"Ah, but that was in our reality, in which he endured appalling


hardships withstanding several Visigothic sieges of Clermont, only to be
sold out by the Western Empire for which he had held the Auvergne—one
of that empires final sellouts before its richly merited demise. And
afterwards he was imprisoned for years by the Visigoths. It's scarcely
surprising that he lost his will to live. In the alternate timeline there were
no sieges, no imprisonment, and no heartbreak at witnessing the death of
the empire in which he'd believed."

"I'm glad somebody had a better life in my history," Andreas said


bitterly. Then he remembered himself and gave the former High King an
apprehensive look. But Artorius took it with his usual affability.

"Actually, quite a lot of people did. My counterpart forestalled the Dark


Ages, which was certainly a good thing in the short run. Of course, after
witnessing enough history one grows skeptical of good things in the short
run."

"Didn't somebody once say, 'In the long run, we're all dead'?" Sarnac
couldn't resist putting in.

"John Maynard Keynes," Artorius replied unhesitatingly. "Author of an


economic theory which infallibly bankrupted any nation that embraced it
and led directly to the fall of the West little more than a century after his
time. You'll forgive me if I view his aphorisms with a degree of irreverence.
But, to continue, the alternate Sidonius was only better off until 491, when
he was killed by an aristocratic clique with its own ideas about who should
succeed to the purple. Killing the Pope hadn't been part of their plans; he
just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, with his
brother-in-law the heir."

"Brother-in-law?"

"Yes. You'll recall that I was childless," Artorius continued evenly. "So
to secure the succession, the Restorer revived the custom of the Antonine
emperors and adopted an heir. He chose Ecdicius, one of his top cavalry
generals."

"Anybody I know?" Sarnac asked, reviewing his memories.

"No. I never met him, myself, although I knew of him as the brother of
Sidonius' wife Papianilla. They were the children of Avitus, who had been
Augustus of the West from 455 to 457. After my… departure, he formed a
small private unit of cavalry, financed by the income of his own estates, to
resist the Visigoths. His aggressive, hit-and-run operations were the
reason it took King Euric five years to conquer the Auvergne. On one
occasion, he lifted one of the sieges of Clermont with only eighteen men!"

"Sounds like quite a guy," Sarnac remarked, summoning up from his


own land's history the image of Nathan Bedford Forrest.

"Indeed," Tylar nodded. "He was a swashbuckler born long before his
time—a proto-Musketeer. By sheer gallantry, he held back the night for a
little while. But he could not halt it. In the end, he escaped into the land of
the Burgundians and entered their service. His struggle had been hopeless
from the first."

"I like him more and more," Sarnac said. "Blame it on my background.
Where I come from, we've always been suckers for lost causes."

"Yes, his was a lost cause—in our reality. In the alternate timeline…
well, imagine what the man who fought the Visigoths to a standstill for
five years with no resources except his own private ones could have
accomplished on the winning side, with the full support of a triumphantly
resurgent empire!"

Sarnac thought about it. Tylar observed his expression and nodded.
'The alternate Ecdicius led his band of cavalry to join the alternate
Artorius in time to help smash the Visigoths before the walls of Bourges."

"All right!" Sarnac exclaimed, carried away. Tiraena rolled her eyes
heavenward.

"In the subsequent campaigns he became the Restorer's right-hand


man," Tylar continued. "His military prestige plus his connections—son of
an Augustus and brother-in-law of the Pope—made him the logical choice
as the adopted heir. The fact that he wasn't a Briton also helped; the
Restorer needed to broaden his base of support. And then in 491, with the
Restorer on his deathbed, Ecdicius was assassinated."

Sarnacs face fell. Tylar continued relentlessly. "This is the point at


which it is possible, using minimal overt force, to effect a change in the
alternate history's course. We will save Ecdicius and Sidonius from death."

"Wait a minute, Tylar," Sarnac said hesitantly. "Don't get me wrong;


from everything you've told me about Ecdicius, I'd like nothing better than
to save his life. But how is this going to fundamentally change the course
of the alternate history? I mean, if Ecdicius survives he'll just succeed to
the throne of the reunified Roman Empire you want to torpedo!"

"Oh, my! I see I haven't made matters altogether clear." Tylar seemed
to gather his forces. "You see, my dear fellow, we're going to have to lay a
bit of groundwork first, to assure that Ecdicius, after having been saved,
will be more than willing to act as our instrument to set in motion the
changes we want."

"Just what changes do we want?" Tiraena wanted to know.

"Consider: in our reality, the Roman Empire split into Eastern and
Western halves, and subsequently the Western part devolved further into
the competing nation-states in which the scientific and industrial
revolutions could occur. In the alternate history, the Restorer aborted this
process by reuniting East and West. Well, we're going to make sure the
process resumes. Ecdicius is going to lead the West into secession!"
CHAPTER FIVE
The transtemporal vehicle traced its cold, dark orbit through regions
where Sol was just another zero-magnitude star. Its remoteness, as much
as the stealth technology of Tylar's people, had concealed it from the
sensors that kept watch on the borderlands of one of the Pan-Human
Leagues two capital systems.

They gazed at it in silence, standing on the immaterial force-field floor


of what Sarnac had decided to think of as the observation deck of Tylar's
ship. The spherical chamber had, at the touch of the time travelers
thoughts, seemed to vanish. Their eyes told them that they stood,
impossibly, in empty space, silhouetted against the star-fields. But from
some unidentifiable source came enough light to see each other and the
mammoth construct they were approaching.

"We decided it would be most straightforward to equip it with a


time-distortion drive—not a very efficient one, but it only had to travel
from Alpha Centauri to Sol," Tylar explained. 'Then we brought it back
from the twenty-ninth century to the twenty-third when we came to fetch
you."

"Gee," Sarnac attempted lightness. "A temportal just for little old me!"
"Scarcely," Tylar said deflatingly. "We already had one at Sol at this
particular time—a rather crucial time, given the discovery of a second
Korvaash successor-state, though not to be compared with fifteen years
ago. So we decided to use it. Can't just go anywhen, you know!"

"So that's why you picked me up fifteen of my years later, and not right
after our last acquaintance when I was still young and full of beans. I'd
wondered about that."

"Also," Tiraena spoke up from the semidarkness, "it explains why you
moved this monstrosity to Sol instead of just leaving it at Alpha Centauri,
which in our time is just a newly established colony that doubtless doesn't
rate a temportal."

"Precisely," Tylar affirmed. "Temportals are quite expensive—even for


us. Having to emplace one in 485 A.D. expressly for this operation was
bad enough."

"485 A.D… ?" Sarnac began on an interrogatory note. But Tylar hurried
on in his patented question-deflecting way.

"We then equipped this vehicle with our power sources so it can
operate with a lower probability of failure— Andreas was very lucky to
survive the transition to our reality! Fortunately, we didn't have to rebuild
it to carry a larger payload, since this ship is actually smaller than the
one-man craft that was to have carried Andreas to the inner system of
Alpha Centauri A. Still, it's been through a few changes.

"I can tell." Sarnac couldn't take his eyes off the huge artifact toward
which they seemed to be magically gliding through open space. The
original structure was like a colossal junk-sculpture representing
pathologically overcomplex technology. But the Baroque massiveness was
here and there overlaid by the jarringly contrasting additions of Tylars
people, which like all their machines didn't look like machines, having
been grown in nanotechnological embryos. As Sarnac watched, one of
them reconfigured, its unfamiliar metal writhing as it shape-shifted to
perform the next stage of the preparations for departure.

"I hardly recognize it." Andreas sounded lost.

Then they seemed to swoop around it and begin their approach,


entering a kind of open latticework funnel that reminded Sarnac of the
front end of a twentieth-century artists conception of a Bussard
ramscoop—one of the many concepts that unanticipated discoveries had
left behind in realms of the hypothetical and the irrelevant. The
massiveness of that delicate-seeming framework became apparent as they
settled into its enclosure, which easily held the ship that, despite the
evidence of their eyes, surrounded them.

"And now," Tylar said briskly, "we can proceed to the temportal."

There was no sensation of motion. But the stars precessed around


them, and ahead Sarnac could see that which he had uncomprehendingly
glimpsed fifteen years earlier: a torus of space-distorting force, visible only
by the wavering and twinkling of the stars beyond it. It began to grow as
the transtemporal vehicle that held their ship in this clenched
magnetohydrodynamic hand accelerated toward it under the reactionless
drive he kept meaning to ask Tylar to explain.

"Must be a tight fit," he remarked, gesturing aft at the stupendous


mass of the construct that bore them.

"Not really," Tylar assured him. "You'd be surprised at the temportals


diameter."

In fact, the barely perceptible circle was enclosing more and more of
the sky as they neared it. They were moving slowly compared to the
Korvaash battlecruiser aboard which Sarnac had previously made such an
approach, and he had time to brace himself for what he knew was coming.

It was as bad as he remembered—like the disorientation that


accompanied a displacement transition, only worse. The sensation of
wrongness was somehow only heightened by the fact that the sky was still
the familiar one of Sol, not the new one that greeted one who emerged
from a displacement point into a different stellar system.

But not quite the same sky. A before-and-after photographic


comparison would have shown the slight changes wrought by eighteen
centuries of random stellar motion. And as he regained his mental
equilibrium his eyes swung toward Canis Major. Yes, its brightest star was
even brighter than it was supposed to be… and it was red, not blue-white.
What Sarnacs epoch knew as Sirius B had not yet collapsed into the white
dwarf stage, bequeathing some of its mass to its companion. Far
outshining the future Sirius A, it was still the red giant that the ancient
astronomers had observed. And he knew that at this moment, far
sunward, lay an Earth whose people still believed the sun and planets and
stars revolved around it. An Earth where the Western Roman Empire had
met its overdue end nine years earlier and Europe was a swirling barbaric
chaos within which the future gestated—at least in this, his own familiar
reality.

As though reading his thoughts, Tylar harrumphed. 'The next step is


the transition to the point in the alternate timeline congruent to this one.
Robert and Tiraena, I should warn you to expect the same phenomena we
just experienced, only in intensified form."

"Oh, shit!" Sarnac breathed.

"You have almost a minute to prepare yourselves," the time traveler


assured them. "It takes that long for our power sources to charge the
capacitors that make up most of this vehicles mass, making possible the
truly titanic power surge required."

"It took us days," came Andreas' faint voice. No one else commented.
The silence stretched. Sarnac's left hand felt the pressure of Tiraenas grip.
He returned it.

"It is time," Tylar stated. And within Sarnacs head, Creation went mad.

When he could think again, he found himself crouched on the


immaterial floor, staring at the stars light-years beneath him. They were
unchanged. And Sirius was still as ruddy as when he had last glanced at it.
But there was no room for doubt that something had happened.

" Intensified form' my left one," he muttered as he got to his feet, noting
with sour satisfaction that Tylar was recovering his composure with as
much difficulty as the rest of them—except Andreas, who was seemingly
unaffected.

"Andreas, didn't you feel that?"

"Oh, I know what you just experienced. It affected me when I entered


your reality. But no, this time there was nothing."

"You see," Tylar explained, back in form, "Andreas is returning to the


place in which he belongs. The psychic sensation of outraged reality only
seems to affect someone making a transition to a timeline other than his
own."

"So we won't feel it on our return?" Tiraena asked.

"No, you won't. By the same token, you'll find that a transposition via
temportal back to your own twenty-third century—which you've never
done in a state of consciousness—will be less unpleasant than one to an era
foreign to you. And no, we don't understand the 'why' of it."

"To hell with the 'why' of it," Sarnac grunted, "as long as we've got some
light at the end of the tunnel." He turned to Tiraena. "What did you feel?"

"It's hard' to describe." She shook her head slowly. "Sometimes, at the
moment you wake up from a deep sleep it's as though you're looking at
yourself from the outside. You remember your name, and the face in the
mirror, but for the barest instant you wonder: Who is this person?' Well,
this was like that… but for the universe."

The last aftershocks ceased reverberating around Sarnacs skull, and he


noted that they were no longer surrounded by the vast metal basket
Instead, the Brobdingnagian mass of hybrid technology that had brought
them to this reality was falling away astern. The starry firmament seemed
to rotate around them as their ship realigned itself. Then the bright
yellow-white star that was the alternate Sol lay dead ahead.

"Now," Tylar announced briskly, "we can proceed to Earth."

There was, as always, no sense of motion. But the transtemporal vehicle


seemed to recede from them with impossible rapidity, vanishing from
sight before Sarnac could even try to calculate their velocity. The tiny
flame of Sol began to grow perceptibly brighter.

"We should be entering Earth orbit in a few hours," Tylar explained.


"We may as well stop wasting time by talking of the 'alternate Earth' and
the alternate this and the alternate that. As for the alternate Artorius, I
suggest we adopt Artorius' suggestion and refer to him as 'the Restorer.'
At any rate, we have time for—"

"For listening to you answer a few questions," Sarnac cut in. "For
openers, why have we come to the year 485 A.D.? You've been saying all
along that 491 is the first year when the course of this timelines history
can be changed."

"Ah, but we want it to stay changed. And for that, it will be necessary
for us to lay a bit of groundwork, as I mentioned before."

"Groundwork?" Tiraena queried suspiciously. "Yes, I remember you


saying something about assuring that this Ecdicius would be inclined to
do what you want him to do…"

"Yes: break up the Empire by setting up a separate Western Empire.


But there must be more behind the breakup than one man's
understandable annoyance at being almost assassinated. Ecdicius will
merely provide the leadership for a movement with a genuine East-West
incompatibility behind it."

"What 'incompatibility' is that?"

"In our own history, what sundered the two halves of the Empire
irrevocably was the schism between their two forms of Christianity. This
suggests our obvious avenue of approach."

"Uh, hold on, Tylar," Sarnac said hesitantly. "I'm no history buff, but I
do know that the religious wars in European history were pretty damned
nasty. Is that what we're going to be starting here?"

"Oh, we won't be starting it, my dear fellow. It started before the


timelines branched off, at the moment the Empire took the road of
intolerantly exclusive monotheism. Andreas' history doesn't include the
Thirty Years' War, but you can be sure that it holds comparable horrors."

"He's right," the young transtemporal explorer admitted. "Instead of


wars between sovereign nations espousing different religions—Tylar told
me about those—we've had repeated, bloody suppressions of embryonic
heresies. Whole ethnic groups were exterminated because they had been
'infected with error.' Doctrinal unity has always been seen as a pillar of
Imperial unity, and no challenge to it has ever been tolerated."

Tiraena shook her head. "I still have trouble imagining this kind of
thing, in either version. I never heard much about it as a child—I suppose
it was something my Terran ancestors weren't proud of in their heritage.
And while the history of Raehan has its share of stupidities and
brutalities, the Raehaniv have never been inclined to slaughter each other
over their various religions."

"The religious atmosphere on Raehan has always been more like that of
eastern Asia," Tylar explained. "It was once said that a Chinese gentleman
was a Confucian in public and a Taoist in private. But after he died, he
expected to enter a Buddhist afterlife. And he was always careful to
sacrifice to Animist deities. All, be it noted, with complete sincerity. This
seems odd to a Westerner—but no odder than formulations like Thou shalt
have no other gods before Me' or There is no god but Allah' seem to a
Chinese… or a Raehaniv."

"My background is Western," Sarnac said defensively,

"and I'm not intolerant of anybody's religion, or lack of it."

"Of course not. You're a modern, secularized Westerner, a product of


the scientific and industrial revolutions and their resultant social
disintegration, otherwise known as 'freedom.' We're going to make that
possible here. But it will take more preliminary work than I may have
indicated. And now—" he indicated Sol, grown to the proportions of a sun
"—we have much to do and little time, so you must forego further
explanations until after we land."

Sarnac had approached the night side of fifth-century Earth once


before, and no longer felt a bottom-dropping-out-of-the-stomach
sensation at the nighttime blackness of an Earth innocent of electric
lighting.

The ship dropped down and settled like a feather. It was stealthed
against all sensors, including the Mark One Eyeball and Mark One
Eardrum that were the only sensors currently available to humans. But
Tylar made sure there was no one present to see the hatchway open before
he let them step through and emerge into the moonlit spring night beside
the old Roman road.

As soon as the hatchway closed behind them, Tylar took out a small
device and regarded it silently for a moment. Then they felt a breeze of
displaced air as the invisible ship soared silently upward into the low orbit
where it would patiently await recall. Then they looked around at each
other.

They were all in the same kind of nondescript contemporary clothing,


including Tiraena. Tylar had decided that for the moment it would be
simplest for her to masquerade as a young man—a simple matter for her
in this ill-nourished milieu. She was of average height for a
twenty-third-century Raehaniv woman, which made her tall on the
standards of her Terran female contemporaries and taller than the
average man of the fifth century. She had acquiesced with no good grace.
Sarnac, for his part, was looking forward to the newly remembered
sensation of being a big guy—it was restful, somehow.

He activated his light-gathering contact lenses, and the moonlit scene


became as clear as though seen by daylight. The road ran northeast
toward Constantinople, their destination. Off to one side was what had
been a roadside shrine to Hermes, long since desecrated by the Christians
and its idol removed. The moonlight had invested the crumbling little
structure with a flesh-prickling aura of romantic, mysterious antiquity. In
the pitiless clarity of the optics, it was merely dilapidated. To the other
side, a low cliff overlooked the Sea of Marmara.

The device in Tylar's hands shape-shifted, stretching out to form a staff


such as a middle-aged man might use when journeying on foot. A quick
calculation told Sarnac that its total volume had increased significantly; it
was probably less dense than the wood it now appeared to be.

"Where are we?" Tiraena wanted to know. "I thought we were going to
Constantinople."

"As I intimated, we've been researching this era—the temportal we used


has been in place for over a year. This is as close to Constantinople as I
thought it prudent to land, so I had the portal device left here. We've also
infiltrated an agent into the city, with whom I've already been in contact."
He didn't say how.

"An agent?" Andreas looked puzzled. "I thought we were going to be on


our own."

"In operational terms, we are. Quite simply, I can't risk involving any of
my own people except Artorius, whose background is unique. I'm not at all
certain of their ability to function effectively in a mission which flies in the
face of all their training and conditioning. Imagine a dedicated veteran
museum custodian who was suddenly ordered to start smashing the
exhibits! But for reasons which will become apparent, we need a contact.
So I'm using one of my best men in a supporting capacity. We're to meet
him this morning. We'll have a bit of a walk, but we should reach the city
just after dawn."

Tiraena ran a hand through her hair, cut even shorter than its norm.
"Tylar, should we be traveling in the dark like this? Aren't you worried
about, uh, highwaymen, or dacoits, or whatever they're called in this part
of Earth?"

"No, I expect no such trouble this close to the capital of an empire as


vigorous and effective as this one has become. And if we do encounter any
unpleasantness, our ability to see in the dark plus these—" he took from
the pouch at his side a slim metallic tube such as they all carried "—should
give us whatever advantage we need." He set out along the road, and the
other four followed, moving slowly along the coastline of what would one
day be called Turkish Thrace in their reality. What it would be called in
this reality—and, indeed, everything else about the future of this
reality—was about to become unpredictable.

They first glimpsed Constantinople silhouetted against the dawn. By


the time they reached the Golden Gate, the city had awoken to roaring life.

They passed through a polyglot throng as they crossed over the


sixty-foot-wide moat—dry now, as was normal— and through the
outermost of the three-mile-long triple walls Theodosius II had built early
in this century to protect a city that had long since outgrown Constantines
original wall. They continued on up a ramp through the twenty-seven-foot
second wall, and before them stood the real wall of Constantinople, with
its massive seventy-foot towers, thick and solid enough to withstand the
discharge of the torsion-powered missile-throwers atop them.

Sarnacs experience of the fifth century was limited to the provinces of


western Europe, whose rusticity was seldom varied by even so much as a
town. Perhaps that was why he—child of a civilization which tamed the
energies that powered the suns and the gravity that shaped space—found
himself impressed by these walls, remains of which could still be seen in
his timeline. In that history, nothing had overcome them for a thousand
years… and even then it had taken the gunpowder artillery of which
Theodosius II had never dreamed. He tried to imagine what the
construction of these walls had meant to a society on this technological
level, but soon gave up.

"Artorius," he asked the former High King, who was wearing a hood
lest anyone should notice that his profile was the one on all the coins, "how
did your counterpart ever take this place?"

"He didn't. He defeated Zeno in the field. Afterwards, Zeno died during
the retreat, and the Sacred Consistory— that's sort of the Emperor's
cabinet—unanimously concluded that the Augustus of the West was his
late enemy's undoubted heir apparent The Senate ratified the decision,
which is its only remaining function, and the Restorer made a triumphal
entry through this very gate."

Sarnac shook his head. "So it was as though the civil war had never
happened. This must be a pettifogging lawyers paradise—as bad as
twentieth-century North America!"

"Oh, I don't know if I'd go that far. But it's true that the Roman
Empire, from its inception, had no clear-cut law of succession. The
Tetrarchy' scheme that Diocletian set up in the third century only
muddied the waters. So it's always been necessary to come up with
rationalizations for the current power grab—especially since the Empire
became Christian. Its believed that the emperor holds office by virtue of
God's will… and who's to say how He'll express His will? Nowhere is it
written that He has to act through heredity! So whoever currently
occupies the throne, however he got there, is by definition the rightful
emperor." He paused. "The Restorer is trying to solve this problem by
returning to the system of adoptive heirs that worked for a little while in
Rome's great days. In Andreas' history, he succeeds."

They continued on, wending their way through obviously new


construction to the Old Golden Gate in what was left of the Wall of
Constantine, largely cannibalized for its stones. Then they proceeded along
Middle Street, the greatest of the thoroughfares that crisscrossed the
dense mass of narrow, crooked streets— urban footpaths, really—that
made up most of Constantinople. The teeming warrens were visible
beyond the porticoes that lined Middle Street. Sarnac's implanted
knowledge included a map showing only the main routes; he wondered if
one even existed which showed every detail of what might jokingly be
called a street plan—it would have looked like a plate of spaghetti.

The deeper they penetrated into the city the harder they had to push
through a colorfully dressed crowd which was as diverse socially as
racially. Glancing to left and right, Sarnac saw that the dwellings of rich
and poor interpenetrated as thoroughly as did their occupants. That was
something else he "remembered": Constantinople, unique among big
cities (including those of his own twenty-third century) had no fashionable
residential districts. Of course, the rich didn't have to huddle together to
find privacy from the rabble—the architecture of their homes, organized
around a central court and presenting a blank stone face to the tenements
around them, saw to that. But Sarnac wondered if there might be
something more to it, in this empire which recognized only the
god-emperor and his subjects, of whom the richest was as much a slave as
the poorest.

As they walked on through the urban throng, the only certain


indication that they were getting anywhere was the series of squares onto
which Middle Street unexpectedly opened—the Forum of Arcadius, the
Forum Bovi, the Amastrianum, the Forum of Theodosius, and finally the
oval Forum of Constantine, with its red porphyry column topped by a
colossal statue of the city's founder.

"Constantine was in pretty good shape," Tiraena observed, eyeing the


statue's classically perfect body.

"Actually," Artorius explained, "It's a statue of the god Apollo, with the
head knocked off and replaced by Constantine's—badly, as you can see. He
was vain as the devil. I imagine nobody ever dared to tell him that the
locals call the statue 'old dirty neck.'"

Tiraena sputtered with laughter, which Sarnac was glad to see. It was
the first sign that she was thawing where Artorius was concerned. She'd
never been precisely hostile toward the former High King since regaining
her memories… just cool and distant. Artorius might not even have
noticed—he'd certainly given no indication of noticing—but Sarnac knew
how utterly unlike her it was. He wondered what her problem was, but
there had never been just the right opportunity to ask her—and there still
wasn't. Instead, he addressed Artorius.

"What did the Christians have to say about this statue? I mean, isn't it
sort of, uh, blasphemous?"

"Where their imperial patron was concerned," Artorius deadpanned,


"the Christians were prone to uncharacteristic tolerance."

Then they were out of the forum, and soon the massive bulk of the
Hippodrome loomed up ahead and to their right Beyond it, Sarnac knew,
the Sacred Palace sprawled in all its labyrinthine profusion of buildings,
courtyards and gardens down to the Sea of Marmara. A little further and
they emerged into the Augustaeum, the colonnaded public square
bounded on the southwest by the main entrance to the Sacred Palace, over
which floated the sleeve-like blood-red dragon standard that Artorius the
Restorer had brought from Britain. At right angles to the palace, and
appropriately dwarfed by it, was the Senate house. To the northeast was
the church of Saint Sophia—impressive enough, but nothing like the
transcendent edifice Justinian would raise in its place in the other reality.

Already, under the porticoes and around the central statue of


Constantines mother Helena, the Augustaeum was filling with lawyers,
officials, and everyone who wanted to meet someone. A figure detached
itself from the crowd and started toward them.

"Koreel!" Tiraena exclaimed, at the sight of the familiar face.

"Ventidius," Tylar corrected. "Remember, cover names! He's still using


the same one he did when he was your fiance. It's safe enough, as he's
quite a distance from Britain and unlikely to meet anyone who'll want an
explanation of the alternate Ventidius' abrupt disappearance twenty-two
years ago."

"You haven't changed," Sarnac told Koreel after the greetings were
completed "Of course, I only met you once."

"Yes, I remember the night Tiraena and I departed for Britain." He had
arranged for her a position in the household of Artorius' consort, where he
himself was established as a merchant and distant cousin of
Tylar/Tertullian. "But now," he said to Tylar, "we'd better get to my house.
You'll want to eat and rest, and later we can discuss plans for getting you
into the Sacred Palace."

They left the Augustaeum and moved northward through a maze of


narrow streets toward the Phosphorion Harbor on the Golden Horn.
Sarnac quickened his pace and got alongside Tylar. "Get us into the
palace?" he queried. "What are you and Koreel up to, Tylar? Is this the
'groundwork' you've been so mysterious about?"

"Precisely! We're going to meet none other than the Restorer himself.
You see, we need to secure his cooperation."
"You're going to ask for his cooperation in undoing his own life's work?
That ought to go over like a turd in a punchbowl, Tylar."

"Granted, I wouldn't expect him to listen to me. But we have one with
us who may very well be able to persuade him."

Sarnac -stole a backward glance. Within his hood, Artorius' face was
unreadable.
CHAPTER SIX
The house of Koreel/Ventidius was typical of the dwellings of the
moderately well-off: a wooden two-storied structure with balconies like
the one Sarnac now stood on in the late afternoon. The house blocked his
view of the sunset, but he could see to the east, where the hill that had
been the acropolis of the old Greek city-state of Byzantion rose above the
maze of roofs. By leaning over the railing, he could glimpse the hills
beyond Pera to the north, on the other side of the Golden Horn. Directly
below him was one of the narrow alleys that he couldn't bring himself to
call streets, thronged with people as usual.

Sarnac had confidently expected some vague similarities of overall


outline to his worlds Istanbul that would confer a comforting familiarity
on this city. His expectations had been dashed—if anything, his
disorientation was worse than it would have been if he had never had
them. He should have approached fifth-century Constantinople as he
would have approached contemporary Ctesiphon or Ch'ang-an, which it
might as well have been for all he recognized of it.

He heard a rustle behind him. "Hi, Philogius," he greeted with a smile.


Tiraena snorted at the name Tylar had decreed for the tall teenaged boy
that was her current cover identity—a nephew of "Ventidius" and distant
cousin of "Tertullian." All were members of the rather mysterious
merchant family of remote Indian origin that was the time travelers'
device for explaining their ethnically unidentifiable looks. It was more
than sufficient in the hayseed West, and should work even in this
cosmopolitan city. Artorius was a business associate from Gaul, and
Sarnac and Andreas were bodyguards.

"At least I'm not semi-barbarian hired muscle, Bedwyr," she gibed as
she settled in beside him on the balcony and looked around. 'Taking in the
view?"
"Yeah. I was just thinking how little good my knowledge of this city in
our time is doing me. You've never been here, of course. I was, in the dim
mists of my youth." (Another more-or-less ladylike snort.) "It'll be called
Istanbul then."

"Somebody conquers it?"

"Yes—in our reality. But there's a lot of diverging history between that
city and this one. I've got a list of questions I want to ask Artorius. You
know, if he lived in our time and didn't go into politics or the Fleet, he'd be
a natural as a tour guide!"

Her face instantly lost some of its mobility. "Yes. Artorius." There was a
couple of heartbeats' worth of silence. Then she turned. "The sun's setting.
We'd better get inside."

"Hold on a minute. We need to talk about this. You never knew


Artorius before—never even met him, just saw him once. And he couldn't
have done anything to piss you off then, he was too busy dying. But it's
pretty obvious you've got a problem where he's concerned."

"I've never…" She stopped abruptly and her mouth snapped shut,
cutting off any pointless denials. After a moment's stiffness in which she
seemed to collect her thoughts, she relaxed and even gave a crooked smile.
'The truth is, I find myself liking him more than I expected to."

"Huh?" Sarnac shook his head. "How could anybody not like him?"

"You've got a different perspective. You and he were comrades-in-arms


of a sort. And I don't think you can separate him in your mind from the
legendary figure he became in our timeline. The culture you grew up in
made that figure its personification of nobility and greatness and human
aspiration. To meet the living original of that figure and find he's as
affable as this character… Well, I can see how it must be an irresistible
combination."

"It's not just that," Sarnac insisted. "Even in his own time, when he was
just another warlord and didn't carry any mythic clout, people could feel
his personal magnetism. It was so strong that it left a permanent imprint
on legend."

"Yes… with a little unwitting help from you and a lot of very witting
help from Tylar. But, yes, I know what you mean. And what he—in his
alternate version—has done in this timeline speaks for itself about his
abilities."

"So," Sarnac asked, perplexed to the point of exasperation, "what's the


problem?"

"You were never in Britain," she answered obliquely. "You never met
Gwenhwyvaer."

"Uh," he began cautiously, "whatever you may have heard from her,
you've got to discount it for bitterness."

"Oh, no! She wasn't bitter about him. In fact, she was still very much in
love with him. Yes, she had other men, in the lonely years after he drifted
away from her. And that fixed her role in legend, with the help of
Ambrosius Aurelianus, who was a prick on wheels." Her years on Earth
had done wonders for her vocabulary, Sarnac thought, not for the first
time.

"No," she continued, "the problem wasn't hers. It was mine." She gazed
moodily out over the darkening city, and Sarnac didn't interrupt her
thoughts. "Sexual equality has been taken for granted on Raehan for a lot
longer than it has on Earth. Or it will! Or… something." Her smile was like
the sun through a rift in clouds. "Give me a good, swift kick the first time
you hear Tylar-like noises about tenses! But you know what I mean.
And…"

Abruptly, the clouds were back. "I don't think you ever fully understood
what a shock fifth-century Earth was for me. If, bike you, I'd at least had a
clear idea that things had once been that way, I might have been able to
use the dry historical facts as emotional antibodies. But the whole thing
hit me without warning. And Gwenhwyvaer focused it for me. So I
suppose this faceless figure of Artorius, who'd apparently lost interest in
her when she failed to produce an heir for him—naturally it was the
woman's 'failure'—became, for me, the symbol of everything I didn't like
about this milieu."

"He didn't invent the culture he was born into," Sarnac pointed out.
"And, for what it's worth, I think you're talking about a problem that
would have existed in any era. Artorius can charm the 'gators out of a
swamp, but he's a political animal to the core. Given an objective, he has a
kind of focus that excludes a lot of really deep human attachments. People
like this—I won't say men like this, although most of them for most of
history have been men, if only for reasons of opportunity—don't tend to
have very secure personal relationships, whatever kind of society they live
in. So I hope you can accept it as simply being the way he is, and not
resent him as a symbol of this age, which would make working with him
pretty difficult."

"Oh, I think I can work with him. I just can't stop thinking about
Gwenhwyvaer. I wish you could have met her, Bob! What makes their
story such a damned shame is that they were really so well-matched. She
was a remarkable woman…"

"Actually," came the diffident voice from within the curtained entrance,
"you shouldn't speak of her in the past tense. She's very much alive this
very evening. Not as young as she once was, of course… but who among us
is?"

"How long have you been eavesdropping, Tylar?" Tiraena inquired with
a glare.

"Oh, not long at all. I'd just come to collect the two of you for a final
briefing. We'll be entering the Sacred Palace tonight."

"I need to be certain," Tylar addressed the group, "that everyone


remembers the implanted data concerning this timeline's recent history,
especially the circumstances surrounding the Restorers final break with
the Eastern Emperor Zeno."

It was a reasonable question. The synthetic memories were like things


actually experienced… but that wasn't necessarily the same thing as
remembering them, unless one was blessed (cursed?) with total recall.
Sarnac frowned with concentration.

"Well, there had been a lot of accumulating friction. But wasn't the
final straw something to do with a religious dispute… the, uh, Declaration
of Union?"

"Precisely. In the year 482 of both realities, Zeno promulgated the


Henotikon, which was really the work of Acacius, Patriarch of
Constantinople. And in both realities it caused a religious crisis by
compromising with the Monophysite heresy which dominated Zeno's
Eastern provinces but which the Council of Chalcedon had anathematized
in 451."

"The Mono… uh… ?"

"Essentially, the Monophysite position is that Christ had only one


nature, the divine, after His incarnation. In our reality, Pope Felix III, who
took office the following year, excommunicated Acacius for deviating from
the doctrine of Christ's dual nature, in which the divine and human
components are separate but commingled; and Acacius then
excommunicated the Pope. In this reality, the Restorer took up the
cudgels of orthodoxy and, after becoming sole Augustus later the same
year, deposed Acacius as Patriarch."

Tiraena shook her head. "I simply can't believe that anyone would go to
war over such insane metaphysical hairsplitting!"

"Oh, you'd be surprised," Artorius said, almost too softly to be heard.

"It is hairsplitting," Tylar acknowledged. "But in this era, cultural or


ethnic conflicts generally come disguised as abstruse theological disputes.
Monophysitism seems to be an early expression of a Near Eastern
tendency toward a kind of austere monotheism foreign to the West. In our
reality, this impulse will find its ultimate expression in Islam, and
Monopnysite Christianity will die of terminal irrelevance while the Eastern
and Western churches move toward their final break in the eighth-century
Iconoclastic controversy—another reflection of the same basic East-West
dichotomy."

"In my history," Andreas spoke up, "the Restorers prestige plus his
close relationship with Pope Gaius II— your old friend Sidonius
Apollinaris—were sufficient to impose universal orthodoxy, with the
Church as an arm of the Empire. The Popes were so delighted at not
having to share ecclesiastical primacy with the Patriarchs of
Constantinople that they scarcely noticed their total subordination to the
Emperors." He smiled disarmingly at the others around the table. "No, I
didn't really remember all that until Tylars people retrieved it from my
unconscious."

"Tonight," Tylar said, "all that is going to start to change."

"Right," Sarnac said decisively. "So lets get down to the practicalities of
how we're going to change it. I gather we have to get the Restorer alone.
That's surely going to take some doing in itself."

"Quite. The Augustus follows a rigidly prescribed daily round of ritual


and ceremony designed to emphasize his remoteness from ordinary
mortals and surround him with a semi-divine aura that, hopefully,
discourages would-be assassins and usurpers. And he's never alone…
except when he sleeps. That's why we're going in at night."

"Which leads to the question of how we're going to get into the Sacred
Palace. I mean, that place must be guarded like you wouldn't believe. And
you've made it clear that we can't simply use your technology to reduce
any local opposition to a grease spot."

"Ventidius," Tylar yielded the floor to Koreel.

"Through my business contacts, I managed to get myself admitted to


one of the Restorers semi-public audiences. Once inside the palace, I
proceeded inward toward the imperial apartments."

"Just like that?" Sarnac didn't even try to keep incredulity out of his
voice.

"You'd be surprised how easy it is to infiltrate a place if you don't need


to be concerned with getting out afterwards," Koreel smiled. "Admittedly,
it also helped that I was wearing a field-generator that bends incoming
light one hundred and eighty degrees around itself, thus conferring
invisibility. I got as close to the imperial apartments as possible, emplaced
the portal device I was carrying, and used it to return to this house. The
guards were left very puzzled, of course, and security was tightened up.
But it all died down after a while."

"So," Tiraena said, "you simply left this device in the palace? I can't
believe no ones found it."

"This is a rather special device. After I departed, it activated an


invisibility field of its own. The only way anyone in the palace would find it
would be by stubbing a toe on it. And it can avoid that—it has a limited
self-motive capability, and it's sentient. You will be wearing similar
invisibility devices tonight."

"And," Sarnac drawled, "hopefully we're also sentient."


Unseen in an alcove in a deserted corridor, the immaterial doorway
opened and two segments of reality came into dimensional congruency.
Sarnac emerged, stepping from Koreels house into the heart of the Sacred
Palace. He looked around, trying to see as much as possible of the fabled
magnificence of which the pillaging Crusaders and Turks of his history
would leave not a trace.

But he could only see it in blurry shades of gray—his magic cloak of


invisibility had a little drawback Tylar had neglected to mention until the
last minute. (The time traveler had blandly expressed surprise at his lack
of gratitude for the compensating effect that enabled him to see at all
from within the field.) And, of course, he couldn't see other wearers of the
field-generators at all.

All of which meant that they were going to have to do without the
gizmo as much as possible.

The portal vanished, and Tylar winked into existence beside him. "Well,
we're evidently alone in this corridor, so we can deactivate our stealth
fields." Sarnac did so— his, like Tiraena's and Andreas', was manually
operated— and all five of them stood revealed. The corridor was dark, but
the light-gathering optics enabled them to see it in all its ornateness,
stretching endlessly off to both sides. Sarnac called up his implanted
infobase, and a floor plan seemed to float before his eyes. A cluster of five
red dots showed their location.

"This way," Tylar commanded. They set out toward the right, keeping
close to the wall, and the red dots began to move.

They hadn't gone far before Tylar motioned them to a halt. The time
traveler then sidled forward to a corner and reactivated his stealth field.
Sarnac heard the disturbed-beehive sound of a stunner. Then Tylar
reappeared and motioned them forward. Rounding the corner, Sarnac saw
two Scholarian Guards lying motionless before elaborately carved double
doors.

"This is the entrance to the imperial apartments. They're not as heavily


guarded as you might think, as it's normally impossible to get this far
without passing through many outer layers of security." He brought a
small instrument to bear on the lock, and soon the doors swung
ponderously open.
"This is too easy," Tiraena whispered as they passed through spacious
outer chambers. "I mean, in a society where an assassin is the legitimate
successor as long as he can prove its 'Gods will' by making it stick…"

"I know what you mean," Sarnac whispered in reply. "But we've got to
assume Tylar knows what he's doing."

"You've got to be kidding!" she muttered.

Then they were at a second door. "The imperial bedchamber," Tylar


announced. He brought the little instrument to bear. "This should only
take a moment."

They waited—with no good grace, at least in Sarnac's case. Tiraena's


words had awakened worries he hadn't let himself contemplate. He hadn't
had a migraine for years— his era's medicine was up to dealing with
them—but he wondered if one might be coming on, for the pseudo-light of
the optics was starting to hurt his eyes, as though with an intensifying
glare…

The glare became blinding at the same instant as the shouts rang out,
and the guards were on them.

Sarnac frantically deactivated his optics at the same time he fumbled


to get out his stunner. Yeah, some detached part of him took a split
second to think, that's the trouble with light-gathering technology. When
it's got a lot of light to gather-—like that lantern this patrol is
carrying—they can blind you. These guys must have just found the
unconscious guards outside the outer door and followed us in here.

Then there was no time to do anything but react. He stopped trying to


tug the stunner out and brought up his left arm to catch the
downward-chopping sword. The impact jarred through his shoulder, but
the material of his sleeve stiffened into a hardness exceeding that of steel
at the touch of the sword-edge. His right arm brought a fist up into the
stunned guards gut. Good thing the Scholarians don't wear body armor
with their palace-service white, he thought within his inner storm center.
But then a second guard was on top of him from behind. As he struggled
in the man's grip, he caught a glimpse of the total scene. Tiraena and
Andreas had managed to bring their stunners to bear and were scything
down their assailants—Tiraena got the lantern-bearer, and managed to
catch the thing as it fell from his limp hand. She almost stumbled over the
man Sarnac had punched, and put an end to his gasping with her stunner.
Artorius was on the floor, throttling the guard he was atop. Tylar was
standing strangely aloof from it all… but his expression told Sarnac he was
up to something. But then he could spare no thought for anything except
fumbling with his stunner and jamming it up against the disconcertingly
strong guard whose arm was around his neck.

He had just managed it and felt the weight on his back go limp, and
simultaneously saw Andreas' last attacker fall stunned, when the
bedchamber doors crashed open.

"What's this?" roared the man who stood there, clad in a nightgown
but with a very businesslike sword in his hand. He took in the scene in a
glance, then drew a breath. "Guards! To me!" he thundered. He might be
old for this era—fifty-eight, Sarnac automatically calculated—but there
was nothing wrong with his lungs.

Tylar faced him equably. "No one can hear you, Augustus. I have… well,
suffice it to say that no sound can escape these chambers."

The dark eyes narrowed. "Witchcraft? Ha! Save it to frighten children,


assassin! In the meantime, come and get me!" He raised his sword and fell
into what Sarnac remembered as correct fighting stance.

"We mean you no harm, Augustus." The words came from across the
room in the same baritone. Artorius stood up from the unconscious guard
and faced the Emperor of Rome.

For a time that lasted so long that Sarnac began to suspect Tylar of
using some sort of temporal-distortion trick, the tableau held. Then the
Restorers sword lowered inch by inch until the point scraped the floor.
Then his features firmed and the sword came up again.

"So, you plan to substitute an imposter for me, do you?

Well, as plotters go you're a poor breed! You might have gotten a man
old enough, and not clean-shaven!" Then his face took on a thoughtful look
and he addressed Artorius. "Ah! I see. You're to pose as a long-lost son of
mine, a by-blow of my youth, after I'm dead. Well, I'm not dead yet,
mountebank! Come for me, or are you as gutless as you are faithless?"

Artorius stepped closer, heedless of the sword, until their faces were
only a few feet apart, like mirror images save for the emperor's beard,
wrinkles and uniformly gray hair. "You don't really think that, Augustus,"
he said softly. "You know—oh, yes, you know!"

Again, time seemed to freeze as the two identical profiles faced each
other and no one else dared break the silence that had congealed around
them.

"No," the emperor finally whispered. "It can't be possible."

Artorius sighed. "What shall I tell you of, Augustus? Of the little mole
on the inside of Gwenhwyvaer's left thigh? Or of your fourteenth summer,
when you went riding with the men into the hills southwest of Ribchester
to buy horses from the Ordovices, and at night while your father was
dickering with the chieftain a roan-haired girl whose name you never
learned led you off beyond the campfires and…"

"Stop," the Restorer croaked.

"Or shall I go further back and tell you of your childhood friend
Perdius, who you later watched bleed his life out through the gash of a
Saxon throwing-axe? Of the time you and Perdius…" Artorius stopped and
swallowed hard. When he resumed, his words were like soldiers advancing
to face whetted steel, first hesitantly, then in a rush. "Of the time you and
Perdius—no longer really children, though you didn't understand that just
yet—were wrestling, and all at once your eyes met his, and you knew he
was feeling the same strange, frightening things you were, and without a
word you both…"

"As God is my witness, that was the only time in my entire life…!" The
Restorers voice shuddered to a halt. For a long moment his eyes stared
wildly into Artorius'. Then he smashed a fist against the door-frame. "No
dream," he muttered to himself. "Am I mad, then. Or dead and in a hell of
madness? Or… ?" He faced Artorius with a strange calm. "Can a man see
his own ghost while yet living? Is that what you are—the spirit of my own
younger self?"

"No, Augustus. I'm older than I look. I am not truly yourself,


although…" He hesitated, as though realizing the inadequacy of all their
planning for this moment. "I am the same man as you, but in a world
which is a… a different thought in the mind of God."
The Restorer shook his head slowly, looking every day of his age and
more. "You talk of things I can't understand, spirit. This is madness
indeed, for if you speak truly then the world itself is mad and no man can
say for certain that he himself is sane." He shook his head again. "I believe
I'll continue to think of you as a spirit, for I own that I lack the courage to
face the alternative!"

"Very well, Augustus. You may even be right; perhaps I am a spirit of


the air to you, as you are to me. Some would explain it otherwise and
speak of quantum mechanics and superposition of functions, but it's all
one. For now, let it suffice that my world, and my life in it, ran the same
course as yours until your forty-third year, when you waited with your
army in Bourges until Syagrius of Soissons arrived with his forces and
those of his Frankish allies, and together you smashed King Euric's
Visigoths."

"Ah, yes!" The Restorers eyes gleamed with memory. "Syagrius! He was
a faithful ally! His death before Bourges almost made the victory too
costly."

Even though with his dying breath he made you his heir to the
Kingdom of Soissons, and your power base was secure, Sarnac thought
with his implanted knowledge. Now, now, let's not be cynical. Maybe he
really was sorry to see Syagrius go. Who am I to say otherwise? But
then Artorius was speaking again.

"Know, Augustus, that in my reality I advanced from Bourges and


placed my own army in a forward position in Berry, not knowing that our
plans had been betrayed to Euric by Arvandus, former Prefect of Gaul. At
a place called Bourg-de-Deols the Visigoths came against us in
overwhelming force. We gave better than we got in the course of a long
afternoon's slaughter, but in the end the army of Britain was routed and I
was mortally wounded. Six years later, that Odoacer who you defeated in
your world deposed the last Western emperor, and Europe descended into
chaos."

The Restorers eyes grew round. "Again, spirit, you speak madness! If
you were mortally wounded fifteen years ago in this spirit-world of yours,
how come you to stand here now looking, I'll swear, no older than I did
then?"

"I was saved from death, and later from the ravages of time, through
the mercy of God." (Sarnac searched Tylar's face in vain for any trace of
embarrassment.) "But I was… called away from the affairs of my world
after that. There are others here who can attest to what happened in those
days in my past." He motioned Tylar and Sarnac forward. The Restorer's
eyes widened still further.

"Tertullian! I remember you—Sidonius' secretary. And Bedwyr! of


course I remember you. You saved my life in a Saxon ambush just before
the Battle of Angers, where you did good service." He looked bewildered.
'Tertullian, you look the same as you did then, like…" He waved vaguely in
Artorius' direction. Then he smiled at Sarnac. "At least you, Bedwyr, look
somewhat older now, as is proper!" You could have gone all night without
saying that, Your Imperial Majesty, Sarnac thought sourly.

"Augustus," Tylar interjected, "do you recall what made you decide to
stay in Bourges, that spring of 470, and wait for the reinforcements from
Soissons?"

The Restorer looked blank for a heartbeat, then blinked. "Of course! I
hadn't thought of it in years, but seeing Bedwyr reminded me. Yes, a few
words I had with him as we were preparing to advance into Berry. He
didn't really tell me anything I didn't already know—his words just
crystallized certain doubts I had had all along." Suddenly, his eyes
widened and he rounded on Artorius. "Are you telling me, spirit, that
those few words made the difference between the real world and this
nightmare spirit world of yours? That the merest instant of wavering on
my part separated the empire from oblivion… ?" He came abruptly to a
halt, silenced by what he had seen on Artorius' face. For he, and he alone,
knew with a knowledge beyond the need for thought what the expressions
of that face meant.

"Augustus," Artorius said slowly, "I've asked you to accept much this
night. Now I must ask you to believe one more thing that defies belief.
Since my… departure from the world, I have been vouchsafed a vision of
the future—the future of my world and also of yours." The Restorer crossed
himself, while Artorius gathered himself to say that which he knew he
himself would once have found unacceptable. "You have achieved all that I
once dreamed of—no, more than I ever dared dream of. I swear that my
ambitions stopped with making the British High Kingship secure…"

"Yes, I swear," whispered the Restorer.


"… but I can't deny that in my private moments, in my thoughts that I
never shared with Gwenhwyvaer or anyone, I saw myself as the
world-restorer that all my teachers had held up as the ideal. Well, you are
that ideal. And now I know that what you have done—what I would have
done but for one blunder—will blight the future beyond redemption,
dooming it to…"

"No!" The Restorer drew back, and his sword came up again. "Now I
know you for what you are, spirit: a demon, sent to sow the seeds of doubt!
But you confound yourself out of your own lying mouth, for you admit that
what I've done saved the empire…"

"Yes," Artorius said flatly. "You saved it, as I would have in your place.
And now you've seen it at its core. Are you certain that it really ought to be
saved?"

"More madness," the Restorer said, but unsteadily, not with a roar of
full-blooded outrage. "Oh, aye, I've seen the corruption, and the waste, and
the way the emperor has been made into a gilded idol served by a
fat-gutted priesthood of officials and eunuchs… I've seen it all, and tried to
change it, only to find that its like the scaffolding that can't be changed
without bringing the whole house crashing down." His voice took on
something like a beseeching note. "And it must stand! If what you say is
true, you saw everything I saw up to the Battle of Bourges. You saw what
the barbarians leave of a town they sack. You saw…"

"Augustus, I of all people know what you were trying to accomplish.


I—you—grew to manhood knowing only empire or chaos. But since my life
sundered from yours I've learned that there are other ways. I've also
learned a very wise saying: 'Be careful what you wish for—you may get it.' "
Artorius drew a deep breath. "In my world, the fall of the empire was so
complete that men lost sight of the truth of my life. But that only let them
read whatever meaning into my story they wanted or needed. And because
I had failed, they didn't have to face the reality of what my victory would
have meant… what yours will mean, as you've come to suspect in the
innermost secret places of your heart. Instead, they made me the
embodiment of all their aspirations for the unattainable. So I lived on in
memory, not as I really was but as men needed to believe I had been. God
knows I was unworthy of what my name came to mean… but I like to think
the legend they made of me helped light their way through the dark years
after Rome's fall."
A long time passed before the Restorer spoke. "So, spirit, we both live
on—I in history, for I gave Rome back to the world, and you as a fable in a
world that will have to do without Rome…"

"Aye, Pan-Tarkan" Artorius cut in, shifting to the British tongue and to
the title of the hereditary commander of that originally Sarmatian cavalry
unit which now included the Britons on whose tongues it sounded
something like Pendragon. "And my empire of woodsmoke and fairy-light,
unlike yours of stone and laws, will let that world grow into something
Rome could never have allowed."

"Aye, it's in my heart that you've the right of it," the Restorer said in
the same tongue, barely above a whisper. "But what was I to do? What am
I to do? For whatever the future may hold, there are many this night who
are sleeping under their whole roofs in the knowledge that they can reap a
whole harvest tomorrow. What of diem?"

"Leave mem in the peace you've given them, Pan-Tarkan. Let them
raise their children behind your shield. But for the sake of those children,
and their children for more generations than you can know, I ask you to
do one thing. In the name of all that we share—a sharing beyond ordinary
ken—I ask this of you." He made a smooth transition back to Latin.
"Reinstate Acacius as Patriarch of Constantinople."

"What?! But it was only three years ago that I sent him packing! I'd
never hear the end of it from Sidonius, from all my Western supporters…"

"That's precisely the point, Augustus," Tylar cut in. 'The West must go
its own way. This will make it want to do so. And Ecdicius will lead it."

"Ecdicius!" The Restorer's eyes shone. "I have no son, but he makes me
feel…" He stopped. "But you say he's to lead the West into rebellion ?"

"He won't see it that way, Augustus. He'll be barred from succeeding
you by conspirators. He'll simply be doing the only possible thing—as you
did for all those years following the Battle of Bourges."

"Yes." The Restorer nodded slowly. "Yes. Well, spirit," he addressed


Artorius with the famous grin, "if I can't trust you, who can I trust? But it
can't be at once. What about the current Patriarch, who I appointed to
replace him?"
"The world knows that the old man was just a transitional
appointment, Augustus. He'll not live to see another summer. Wait until
he's gone and then call Acacius back."

"Well, I suppose I can come up with some kind of reasonable pretext to


do it. And I suppose you'll want me to give him the same kind of support I
would a Patriarch of my own choice?"

-"Just so, Augustus." Artorius' grin was like a mirror of the others. "It
shouldn't be too hard. We both know how much you really care about
doctrinal disputes!" He gestured at the unconscious Scholarians. "When
we leave, summon more guards and tell them that your cry for help
frightened off the intruders who fought these. I fear the palace will be
turned upside down for a few days' searching."

"Very well." The Restorer looked at him long and hard, one more time,
and then said, simply, "Farewell." Then he turned to Tylar and Sarnac.
"Tertullian and Bedwyr! I never knew what became of you two. No one
could find you at the time of the Battle of Bourges. But yes, Bedwyr, I do
remember talking to you shortly before that…" He seemed about to say
more, but Tylar forestalled him.

"Don't brood overmuch about what has passed before this night,
Augustus. Just remember that your place in history, and in the hearts of
the people for whom you won a time of peace, is secure. And now we must
go. In fact, we must leave Constantinople. But our companion Andronicus
will remain in the city." He indicated Andreas, who had been gaping. "He
will be in contact with you from time to time over the next few
years—after which we may well see you again."

"Will you be going far?" the Restorer asked. "I can give you a pass to
use the imperial post."

"It is better if we travel in our own way, Augustus, though we must


indeed journey far. All the way to Britain, in fact."

"Britain!" The imperial face wore a look as far-off as that misty island.
"Its been so many years… Will you, perhaps, see the Regent?"

"It is entirely possible that we will see the lady Gwenhwyvaer,


Augustus," Tylar said smoothly. "Is there any message you would like us to
convey?"
"Tell her…" The glow went out of the Restorer's eyes, and he gave
Artorius an odd look. "Tell her only that… I wish it had been better with
us."

Artorius returned the look gravely. Tiraena regarded them both with an
expression Sarnac could not read.
CHAPTER SEVEN
"Are you sure Andreas will be all right?"

"Oh, quite." Tylar responded to Sarnac's anxious question in an


abstracted manner, standing in the field beside the old Roman road
beside the derelict shrine of Hermes and guiding his ship in by mental
command. "He'll stay at Koreels house and get regular reports on
developments over the next six years. It won't be a tedious wait for him;
Koreel has a stasis chamber which will allow him to skip the intervening
periods. By the time we see him again, in 491, only a month or so of
subjective time will have passed for him—and, hopefully, even less for us.
Ah!"

"Hopefully?" Tiraenas worried query was cut short by the breeze from
the descending spacecraft. Dawn was breaking over the Sea of Marmara,
and even without their light-gathering optics they could see the grass
being pressed flat over a wide expanse of meadow.

"Well," Tylar remarked offhandedly, "one can never be absolutely sure


about these things, however carefully one tries to plan them." A portal
appeared, with the ship's interior visible beyond it. They hurried aboard.
The portal vanished, a sudden breeze caused the grasses to sway, and the
abandoned shrine of Hermes was left to its decay.

They proceeded at moderate altitude and leisurely velocity—no need to


spread rumors of Judgement Day with a sonic boom—on a west-northwest
heading, keeping pace with the dawn. The land unfurled beneath them,
growing more and more corrugated as they passed over the Balkan
Mountains and what would, for a little while in their reality, be called
Yugoslavia. Then they were over the titanic masses of the Dinaric Alps. On
they went, over mightier and mightier snow-capped ranges that held nary
a ski chalet, until somewhere below were the headwaters of the Rhine.
Then they were over the middle reaches of that river on both of whose
banks Rome's writ now ran, for the Restorer had incorporated the Franks
and fulfilled the dream of the first Augustus by advancing the imperial
frontier to the Elbe.

Sarnac knew better than to look for engineering works visible from this
altitude. There was an occasional glimpse of a line too straight to be
anything but a Roman road, but there was nothing like the artificial
environment that clothed his Earth. For all he could see, this might as well
have been the year 485 a.d. of his own history, with West Rome nine years
fallen. But he fancied that he could sense something of the quickening
imperial life in the regions below him, over which dawn continuously
broke as they flew west.

"How did he do it?" he asked Tylar. "Oh sure, he put down the
barbarians. But that wasn't what was fundamentally wrong with the
empire."

"Don't underestimate the importance of stopping the constant


depredations," the time traveler told him. "But you're right; what's really
been causing civilization in the West to collapse into feudalism is a tax
system that shortsightedly treated the Western cities as revenue sources,
killing a fragile yearling by trying to use it as a beast of burden. Under
such circumstances, the cities died and their inhabitants attached
themselves to some powerful landlord or other, who could protect them
from the states taxgatherers. In our reality, the process continued, with
the Roman landowning class being replaced by a Teutonic one. The
Restorers fiscal reforms have been far more important than the battles the
chroniclers will record."

Tylar gazed at the sunrise for a moment and then continued. "Also,
there's the matter of timing. The Huns have withdrawn to the steppes,
where their clans bicker over the sorry remnants of Attila's empire. And
the Avars won't arrive in Europe for another generation or two. So Europe
is getting a respite from central Asian invaders while the imperial
structure is still just barely salvageable. That's why this period is so
uniquely crucial—why the fabric of reality is so very weak."

They swept on over the Flemish lowlands and out over the channel. The
sun had caught up with them, and far below gleamed the white cliffs of
Dover.

"Silence! In the name of God and of the Augustus, I will have order
here!"
The shouting and fist-brandishing halted, and in the sudden silence the
two groups of men on opposite sides of the long table turned to the woman
at its head. She had risen from her high seat to shout them down, and now
she stood glaring at them, silently defying anyone to disobey her. None
did.

Gwenhwyvaer, wife (albeit long-separated) of Artorius Augustus and


his regent here in Britain, was still magnificent in her fiftieth year. She
still stood regally erect to the full stature that had, in her youth, reminded
old men of her great-grandfather Magnus Maximus. The red-gold blaze of
her hair had been damped down by the invasion of gray. But her eyes were
still the same vivid blue which now flashed dangerously at the Britons to
her right and the Saxons to her left. Seeing her, these men saw the visible
presence of the empire.

The visible presence of the empire! What a colossal irony! Ambrosius,


I hope you're watching now from whatever corner of Hell is reserved for
censorious prigs— you, who always saw me as a separatist enemy of the
Borne you worshipped, and hated me for it. Gwenhwyvaer's features
stiffened as usual at the thought of the general who had been Artorius'
regent until his death; but then they relaxed just a bit, and a slight smile
crept out. And yet, you old bastard, the greatest irony of all is that now
that I sit in this seat I almost wish I had you back. Not quite … but
almost.

She shook her head to clear it of old memories. Ambrosius' victories


over the rebelling Saxon foederatii had laid the groundwork for Artorius
to restore the High Kingship that Ambrosius himself had refused to
accept. But marrying a descendant of Maximus had given the young High
King legitimacy, in this land with its matrilinear traditions that the
Romans called "Celtic" but which dated back to forgotten peoples before
the coming of the Celts. So, to the Britons at least, she represented not just
the Augustus of Rome but the High King as well. As for the Saxons… well,
they had only recently settled into the role of imperial subjects, and the
British High Kingship meant nothing to them. But the name of Artorius
did. And they knew her for an ally.

More irony, she thought. By trying to smooth the Saxons' assimilation


into Britain, I've alienated my own natural supporters, the British
diehards. She turned to those diehards' leader.

"Cador, I see that I was wise to order all weapons turned over to my
guards at the start of these conferences. I know it's folly to expect young
hotheads to hold their tempers— but you? At your age?"

"Forgive me, Lady," Cador of the Dumnonii mumbled. "But I'm not too
old to stand up for what we fought for under Ambrosius and your husband
the High King… er, the Augustus. Nor will I be, as long as I'm above the
ground!"

"Nor are some of us too young!" Cador's son Constantine was a younger
replica of his father in his dark fieriness. "We've heard from our sires and
grandsires the tale of how the Saxons broke their faith and ravaged this
land for years. And now that Artorius stands triumphant, first here in
Britain and then in the Empire beyond…" All at once his hurt showed and
he seemed as young as he was. "Is this what we Britons fought and bled
for? Bad enough that these pigs continue to wallow in the eastern lands
that they'd already seized. Are we now to let more of them in?"

"And give them lands all too close to Dumnonia?" his father put in,
glaring across the table at the two relatively new arrivals who led the
Saxon delegation.

"Pigs, is it?" Aelle of the South Saxons spoke in Latin even more heavily
accented than usual, and his lined face grew florid behind its luxuriant
growth of gray-blond mustache. "Our folk had held those eastern lands, as
loyal allies of Rome, for generations. Why do you think the old Romans
named that land the 'Saxon Shore'? But then your own High King
Vortigern brought in the Jutish freebooter Hengist and his cutthroats! If
you knew anything about our lands beyond the North and Narrow Seas,
you'd know that a younger son of a jarl who wants to go raiding can
always gather a crew of men outside any family—the kind of scum who can
be found in any nation!"

"All Saxons are scum!" Cador leaned forward, gesturing his son back.
"And if they held the Saxon Shore for generations, it was only to breed
mongrels with our women!" He glared directly at the young man beside
Aelle—very young to be an ealdorman among the Saxons, but more and
more prominent in their councils since his arrival in Britain the previous
year.

Cerdic of the West Saxons smiled at him easily, then responded in


fluent British. "Well, now, I'm thinking that in my case at least you've the
wrong shore for mongrel-breeding, Cador of the Dumnonii. And the wrong
men doing it! My mother was of those Saxons who've settled along the
lower Loire, in Gaul. She always told me my father was a Briton, which
was why she'd given me a name of his people. That was after Artorius had
broken her people—and yet she and hers were among those families
which, through his intervention, weren't moved off their land afterwards
to serve Childeric the pig-king of the Franks! Ah, Lady," he addressed
Gwenhwyvaer, "I could find it in me to pray to your cross-god if he'd grant
me the boon of having known that man before he moved on to Romaburg,
far beyond the ken of the likes of me… and of you also, Cador, so you
needn't be so high and mighty! And," he added with a flash in his eyes that
was pure Celtic, "if it's Saxons stealing your women that worries you, you
might well ask yourself why they're willing to be stolen!"

"You damned pagan half-breed!" Cador yelled, groping instinctively at


his side for the weapon that wasn't there.

"Enough!" Gwenhwyvaer's voice cut across the rising hubbub like a


sword-slash. "Cerdic, your mouth will talk you into trouble yet. And you,
Cador—and all your house!— whether you wish it or not, the Saxons are
here to stay, however or whenever they first came. Whatever future Britain
is to have, they will be a part of it. All those of their race who now live in
this island are citizens or allies of Rome; to strike at them is to strike at
Rome—and at Artorius who is Rome! Will you defy him, Cador?" The
western chieftain dropped his eyes. After almost a decade and a half, the
memory of how Artorius had dealt with the rebellious Silures was still
fresh. Yes, irony piled upon irony! Ambrosias, are you listening to me
invoke the iron fist of Rome? Is that your ghost I can almost see, looking
too stunned to haunt? Or could it be the ghost of my own younger self?

All at once exasperation overtook her. "We will meet again tomorrow
and see if you fools can attend to the business at hand. And know this: I
will have an end to this endless paying of blood-debts, before there's no
blood left to be paid! In the meantime, remember my ban on all
quarreling within these walls and for five miles around! This conference is
adjourned." They all rose to their feet as she swept out, followed by her
guards.

"I need to breathe air that isn't thick with stale old hates," she declared.
"I'm going riding."

"I'D summon an escort, Lady," the guard captain said.


"The Devil take escorts! I need a time by myself."

"But, Lady, alone… ?"

"Sweet Jesu! Will no one obey me this day?" The captain inclined his
head. He belonged to the Artoriani, the elite heavy cavalry Artorius had
commanded by right of birth before he had become High King, much less
Augustus. A small detachment of them remained stationed here, a
reminder that he had not forgotten the island of his birth.

A few minutes later, she was cantering away from the stables, her full
ankle-length skirt hitched up so that she could use the stirrups that
Artorius' Sarmatian ancestors had brought from the steppes long ago. He
had taught her how when they'd been young, in the years that seemed a
solid blaze of happiness in her memory against which all the hurtful
wrongnesses since were silhouetted like dead trees against the sunset. I
wonder how much longer I'll be able to do this, she thought. I'm not
getting any younger. But compared to most women my age… ! Of
course, they're mostly worn out from childbearing. . . . Automatically,
from long practice, she thrust the thought back down into the cavern
where it dwelled.

She rode through the southwest gate, under the tower Ambrosius had
designed to resemble a work of Rome, and down the hillslope past the four
rings of earthworks that attested to this place's past as a Celtic hill-fort.
Today, she had to thread her way among encampments—the chieftains
had brought far too many retainers for Ambrosius' walls to hold. Ahead,
the River Cam snaked among the scattered stands of trees, ablaze with the
reflected afternoon sun. She wanted none of the old Roman road to the
north of the hill, where travelers would distract her with their salutes. No,
she would seek the old trail alongside the Cam, where she might find
solitude—and remembrance.

But the days cares would not leave her. Yes, Artorius, you were right.
The things that drove the Saxons to this island—too many mouths to feed
from too poor a land— didn't stop driving them when you conquered
that land. So where they once came as raiders, you let them come as
immigrants to join their kindred already here—most recently Cerdic and
his fellows from the Loire. Yes, it has been as you commanded. But not
even you can command old blood-feuds to quietly die. Not from your
golden City of Constantine,faraway beyond the sunrise.
She tried to imagine what the City must be like—she'd heard
descriptions, but discounted them as typical travelers' exaggerations—as
she rode slowly along the trail, dappled with late-afternoon sun that
slanted through the trees. Then, up ahead she saw a group approaching on
foot. She urged her horse forward to see them more clearly, and they
halted. The leader—a tall middle-aged man whose exotic appearance
reminded her of someone, she knew not who— motioned his three
companions to a halt with his walking staff. One of them was a tall lad,
also foreign-looking, who Gwenhwyvaer felt she ought to know. Another
was a big, dark, rakishly good-looking man in the prime of life, evidently a
bodyguard but seeming in an indefinable way to be something more than
your typical hiresword. And finally there was a powerfully built man whose
face was obscured within a hood.

All in all a decidedly odd group of wayfarers, Gwenhwyvaer decided.


And something about the hooded man—was it a movement he had made,
or the way he held himself?—caused her to feel, just below the level of
thought, a shuddering fear that was absurd in the absence of any
threatening or hostile move from these men. Indeed, the leader bowed
with every evidence of respect and addressed her in cultured Latin.

"Greetings, Lady. I am Tertullian, cousin to Ventidius, known to you of


old."

Ventidius! Of course this man had looked familiar. "Yes, I remember


now, although it was… what? Fifteen years ago? He was a merchant, close
to my household. In feet… yes, his fiancee was briefly one of my
ladies-in-waiting. But then they both disappeared abruptly. It was quite a
mystery. What ever became of them?"

"Alas, Lady, they were never seen again. They must have fallen afoul of
brigands. It was a terrible blow to our family. But I've come trying to
rebuild our British business. That's why I've brought my young kinsman
Philogius—time he was learning something of the world." The
maddeningly familiar-looking boy bowed. "And this," Tertullian
continued, indicating the hooded man, "is Gerontius, a business associate
who met us after our arrival from Constantinople."

Gwenhwyvaer's eyes widened. "Constantinople? You've come all the way


from the City? What news of… of the Augustus?"

"The divine Augustus was, God be praised, very well at the time of our
departure. In feet, I was privileged beyond measure to be presented to the
Sacred Presence. He commanded me to convey his greetings to you, and to
deliver certain messages."

"Well, then, you must stay with us this night! We'll talk on the
morrow."

"You are too kind, Lady. But surely there's no room for us. We've heard
since our arrival that you are hosting a great gathering…"

"Yes, to discuss border adjustments to accommodate the latest Saxon


arrivals." Her expression momentarily darkened. "But no matter. We'll
find room for someone who brings word from the Augustus! Your
bodyguard can be lodged with my personal troops."

She turned her horse around, leading them back toward the hill at a
slow walk. Tertullian walked beside her, answering her avid questions. If
she had torn her attention from him and looked back, she might have seen
the bodyguard—who Tertullian naturally hadn't introduced— move up
alongside the youth Philogius and mutter in an unfamiliar tongue.

"This is something I've been meaning to take up with Tylar," Sarnac


groused. "Why is it that you always end up hobnobbing with the social
elite while I'm billeted with the grunts?"

"Seems reasonable to me," Tiraena replied judiciously.

They proceeded up the hill of Cadbury, passing through the concentric


rings of earthworks and the camps; they got stared at by what Sarnac
thought were some very tough-looking hombres. Then they were at the
summit with its twenty-foot-thick rampart of stone-faced earth topped
with a timber palisade.

"This gate-tower is a damned clever design," said Sarnac, who fancied


himself an authority on low-tech military engineering since his last
sojourn in this century, as they entered the fortress.

"Yes," Tiraena nodded. "But from the standpoint of Ambrosius


Aurelianus, who designed it, it was even more important that it reflect
Roman patterns, and even incorporate some recycled Roman structural
elements. He was a fanatic, you see—a brilliant fanatic, but a fanatic."
They entered the enclosure. "I guess this all looks familiar to you,"
Sarnac remarked.

"Mostly," Tiraena acknowledged. "But I was here fifteen years ago,


before the timelines branched off. There have been a few changes. That
proto-Byzantine cruciform church, for instance. I remember it as little
more than a foundation. It never got finished in our timeline, or so I
gather from the implanted historical data I've now gotten back."

They approached the timbered hall that had been the primary
headquarters for Artorius as High King of the Britons and for his
viceroys—first Ambrosius and now Gwenhwyvaer. It was the nucleus of
this stronghold at the summit of Cadbury, already known by the name
which, a millennium later in their timeline, the Tudor antiquary John
Leland would hear from the local people and make famous: Camalat.

"So you were at the Battle of Angers?" The youngster in the


red-and-white uniform of the Artoriani gawked at Sarnac. "Did you know
my father Caradoc?"

"I did indeed," Sarnac said truthfully. "Does he still live?"

"No," the young cataphract replied with the fatalism of an era when
death usually came early. "Disease took him during the campaign against
Odoacer in Italy. I can barely remember him, for I had not long been
weaned when he departed for Gaul with the Pan-Tarkan." This reality's
Artorius might be Emperor of Rome, but these men would always call him
by the title that they alone were privileged to use.

A somewhat older man looked at Sarnac narrowly. "You hardly seem


old enough to have fought at Angers, Bedwyr."

In point of coincidental fact, Sarnac had spent just about the same
amount of subjective time since his participation in that battle as had
elapsed in this timeline. But a decade and a half meant for less to one with
access to twenty-third century bioscience than it did to these men. "Well, I
was little more than a stripling then. My parents, settlers in Armorica, had
been killed by the Saxons. I had some training in arms, and a mercenary
who knew my family took me on. He'd just been hired as a bodyguard by
the Bishop of Clermont's secretary, who was traveling with the High King.
It got confusing—his name was Bedwyr too." To his relief, no one reacted.
He'd been counting on this era's mortality rate to assure that none of the
men he'd served alongside—or, rather, their counterparts—would still be
on active service. And nobody had, it seemed, heard of him. There'll be no
Sir Bedivere in this world's legends. Bummer.

"But what about the later campaigns?" the young man persisted. "I've
heard that at Bourges…"

"Sorry," Sarnac shook his head. Now came the tricky part. "Just before
the Battle of Bourges, our employer was called back to Clermont by the
Bishop—now His Holiness Pope Gaius, you know—and we had to go with
him. After that there was plenty of employment for us in the south of Gaul
as the old Visigothic kingdom broke up and bands of their survivors were
everywhere. But now," he said firmly, "I've got to take a trip outside." The
facilities were holes in the ground. He didn't really feel a need to use them,
but his head needed a respite from the hot, smoky interior. This common
room was used for sleeping and all other purposes, including cooking at
the fire that was kept smoldering under a hole in the roof through which
the smoke would rise when the wind was right. Tonight it wasn't.

He stepped out into a night which, like the day that had just ended, was
unusually clear for this land; he could actually see some of the stars to
which he had voyaged. On impulse, he ascended the rampart and leaned
on the timber palisade, looking out over the darkened landscape. Yes,
there were more stars visible up here above the scattering of torches that
gave some illumination to the enclosure.

He heard a rustle from below and looked down. A cloaked man, his
head not far below the level of Sarnac's feet, had emerged from the
shadows and was proceeding toward the gate tower from the direction of
the great hall. Then three other figures stepped unsteadily from the
shadows and crossed his path. One of then staggered into a collision with
the cloaked figure—Sarnac couldn't tell whether or not it was
intentional—then sprang back, glowering. "Who do you think you're
running down, dog?" he said in alcohol-slurred British.

"Your pardon," came the reply in the same language. "The night is
dark." The cloaked man made to go around, but the trio moved to block
his path.

"Oho! The Saxon pig can grunt in a human tongue," another of them
said in the careful way of a drunk who is trying to convey a particular
tone—in this case, sarcasm.
"He still needs to be taught manners," said a bystander who, like the
drunks, belonged to the visiting tribal contingents and not to the Regents
guards.

The Saxon, as he evidently was despite his facility with the British
language, spoke calmly. "I'll remind you that the Lady Gwenhwyvaer has
forbidden all fights within these walls." The bystanders were gathering, in
a way that bore an odd resemblance to an attempt to surround him.

"Aye," one of them said. "So it's too bad you started one by attacking
Brychan here." The man who'd collided with the Saxon nodded with
drunken profundity, endeavoring to look very much the injured party.

The Saxon looked around. "You may be too drunk to fear the Regent,
but my men—who, fortunately for you brave lads, are camped outside the
walk—will come looking for you. On that you have the word of Cerdic of
the West Saxons."

It was evidently the wrong thing to say, because an ugly rumbling arose
in which Sarnac could pick out the phrase "half-breed." Suddenly, the
Briton who'd been doing the talking lunged for Cerdic. The latter's sturdily
shod left foot shot out and caught him below the belt. Then the Saxon
twisted around and fed another attacker a knuckle sandwich before
disappearing under a knot of kicking, punching men.

Sarnac reminded himself that he had only one purpose in being here,
and that any actions that might jeopardize the mission were to be avoided
at all costs. He reminded himself that the rights and wrongs of the local
residents' disputes could not be his concern. He even reminded himself
that he didn't have all that much use for Saxons.

He was still telling himself all these things as he leaped off the parapet
and landed feet-first on the back of one of Cerdic's attackers.

He scrambled to his feet and waded in, pulling two men off Cerdic and
bringing their heads together with an authoritative clunk. It gave the
Saxon the break he needed to get free of the tangle, and he began laying
about with swings that were as powerful as they were unscientific. Nobody
here knew the deadly hybrid form of unarmed combat that the PHL
military taught its people, and Sarnac had enough presence of mind to
avoid using it.
All at once, Sarnac felt a brain-rattling jolt against his jaw and the
world turned to spinning galaxies of stars. He managed to get his right
arm up in time to block a second powerful but clumsy blow, and his head
cleared enough to recognize his opponent as Brychan. With all the force he
could muster, he drove his left fist into the boozy Briton's gut. Brychan
doubled over and proceeded to rid himself of his battered stomach's
contents. At the same time, Sarnac took a blow from behind to the
kidneys. Scarcely noticing the pain, he thrust backward with his right
elbow, connecting with something, then spun around and squared off with
his new foe, wishing he was wearing the impact armor on which the fellow
would have broken his knuckles. I'm getting too old for this shit, he
thought. Why didn't I think to remind myself of that?

"Halt! Enough, I say!"

As though by magic, the clarion-like voice transformed the scene into a


still life. Everyone still conscious—except Brychan, who continued
retching—turned slowly toward the approaching group of torch-carrying
guards and the tall woman who strode forward at their head.

"By all the demons of hell! Did I, speaking with the voice of Artorius
Augustus, not prohibit all brawling?" Gwenhwyvaer was in a splendid
fury, and as her blazing blue eyes swept the scene, nobody met them.
Instead, these hulking warriors studied the ground, looking exactly like
boys who'd been caught playing with their pee-pees.

"Er, it's his fault, Lady," somebody finally managed, pointing at Cerdic.
"The Saxon. He attacked Brychan, over there."

"Bullshit!" Sarnac remembered to say it in British. "Brychan and two


others, all drunk out of their minds, decided to pick on Cerdic. The rest
joined the fun." Brychan had reached the dry-heaves stage and was in no
condition to give evidence.

Gwenhwyvaer stepped closer and recognized the young Saxon through


the battering he'd taken. "Cerdic! What in Gods name have you done
now?"

Cerdic gave a grin which obviously cost him some pain. "It's as this
man says, Lady. By the way, friend, what's your name?"

"Bedwyr," Sarnac muttered, hoping Gwenhwyvaer wouldn't make any


connections.

"Well, Bedwyr, if you ever need a favor, remember that Cerdic of the
West Saxons owes you a rather large one. You did me quite a good turn,
even though your name couldn't be more British. But, then, neither could
mine___"

"Shut up, Cerdic!" Gwenhwyvaer muttered through clenched teeth.


Then she stepped closer to Sarnac. "Haven't I seen you before? Aren't
you… ?"

"My bodyguard, Lady," Tylar finished for her. He hurried forward into
the torchlight, followed by Tiraena in full "Philogius" kit. Following behind
came the hooded figure of Gerontius."

"Well, Tertullian," Gwenhwyvaer said imperiously, "he knew the ban on


fighting. He must be turned over to the guard captain for judgment."

"I beg you to be merciful, Lady. I've known this man for some time, and
I'm certain he would not have disobeyed your commands had it not been
in defense of himself or others."

"He claims he was defending the ealdorman Cerdic of the West Saxons
here against an unprovoked attack. These others say it was Cerdic who did
the attacking."

"Well, Lady, I appeal to your common sense. How likely is it that the
ealdorman would, in the teeth of your prohibition, single-handedly begin
a fight in the stronghold of his people's blood-enemies? He would have had
to be either mad or a fool, and I have yet to hear that he is either."

Gwenhwyvaer said nothing and neither did anyone else. Again her eyes
swept the group, and again none met diem. For once, Cerdic left well
enough alone.

Tiraena stepped forward. She was wearing a broad-brimmed hat which


helped her carry off the "Philogius" role. "I, too, beg you to show Bedwyr
mercy, Lady. He's a rough, common fellow, but he means well." (You'll pay
, Sarnac thought darkly.) "And I ask it as a favor, for you've known me
before."

"When have I ever known you, lad?" Gwenhwyvaer asked, puzzled.


Instead of answering, Tiraena took off the hat and relaxed from
simulating the body-language of an adolescent male. For a lone moment,
the two women stared at each other in the firelight and the silence.

"Lucasta," Gwenhwyvaer finally whispered. "But you're…"

"Lady," Tylar broke in quietly but firmly, "we need to speak to you in
private. There is more at stake here than you perhaps realize."

At first it seemed that Gwenhwyvaer hadn't heard Then she nodded.


"Yes… There are many questions that must be answered. Come with me to
the hall." She turned to the puzzled onlookers. 'The rest of you, disperse.
Guards, see to it."

"Ah, perhaps I'd best be getting back to my men's camp, Lady." Cerdic
began to sidle off.

"Ha! So the sight of your face can stir them to anger? No, you'll come to
the hall as well, you can sleep there. We'll send a messenger to let them
know you're spending the night" Without even waiting for an
acknowledgment, she swept off. The four time travelers followed.

By the time they'd entered her private chambers and she'd shooed out a
gaggle of ladies-in-waiting,

Gwenhwyvaer's self-possession had returned. She turned to face them


unflinchingly. "I know not what's afoot here, but you cannot be Lucasta,
however loudly my mind shouts that you are, for you look no more that a
few years older than you… than she did fifteen summers ago. I'll know the
truth! And you, Gerontius or whatever your name is: remove that hood!"

"Is that my lady's command?" came the deep baritone.

For a time beyond time, there was absolute stillness as terror and
denial and emotions less easily defined struggled back and forth across the
battlefield of Gwenhwyvaer's face. Then she amazed all of them by
speaking firmly. "Remove it."

The hood fell from Artorius' face. Sarnac managed to catch


Gwenhwyvaer as she fainted.
CHAPTER EIGHT
She didn't entirely lose consciousness, at least not for more than a
moment. Artorius was instantly at her side, and he and Sarnac got her to
a chair. She blinked only a few times before her eyes steadied and her face
lost its disorientation. Sarnac wondered at her lack of hysterics. Well,
Tiraena said she's a remarkable woman. And maybe this era's people
find all this easier to take than those of my time would. After all, they
don't think they understand the universe. For them, the world is full of
unexplained mysteries, so what's one more?

Finally, Gwenhwyvaer extended a hand—not altogether steady, Sarnac


was oddly relieved to note—and touched Artorius' cheek where the nascent
facial hair had reached the bristly stage. "I'd almost forgotten what you
look like without a beard," she whispered as though thinking out loud.
"It's been so long… we were young then…" She shook her head again and
her voice firmed. "But otherwise you look much the way you did the last
time I saw you, on your return to put down the western rebels after the
Battle of Bourges. Not long after I last saw you, Lucasta." A smile flickered
to tremulous life. "Does the journey from Constantinople restore one's
youth, then? Perhaps I should try it."

"Gwen," Artorius began, "you must believe me, even though what I
speak sounds like madness. On this night, Artorius Augustus lies abed in
his palace in Constantinople."

"You… an imposter? No! I know you, Artorius—I think I knew you when
I first saw you cloaked and hooded on the trail by the Cam where we
once… No! Unless I am mad indeed, it is you."

"Yes, I am Artorius—but I last saw you before leaving for Gaul in 469."

"Madness," Gwenhwyvaer began. But Artorius pressed on, overriding


her attempts to speak.

"I have, indeed, come from Constantinople—where I spoke to Artorius


the Restorer. I tell you now what I told him: that I'm the same man as he,
but in a world in which God ordered events differently. In my world, I was
delivered by treason into the hands of the Visigoths. And a few years later,
Rome-in-the-West ceased to be. Men believed I'd died. Then they made a
legend that I was not dead but merely waiting until I was needed again;
and they were right, but not in the way they thought. For, though I was
grievously wounded, a most unlikely manifestation of God's mercy had
spared me and also preserved my appearance as it was then."
"But," Gwenhwyvaer finally got in, "you say that you met me just before
leaving on your expedition against the Saxons and Visigoths in Gaul in
469…"

"Yes. For you see, Gwen, this world and the world I've been speaking of
weren't sundered from one another until the spring of 470, shortly before
the Battle of Bourges in this one. Until then, I was in truth the man you
knew, and you were the woman I knew. But at that moment, my life and
memories parted from those of him who this world knows as Artorius
Augustus, the Restorer."

Gwenhwyvaer's eyes grew haunted. "If what you say is true—and I


believe it must be, for no one could invent a tale so strange—then there
must be another of me as well, living in this shadow-world you speak of,
who heard of your death even as I was celebrating your triumph at
Bourges! What of her? Does she still live?"

"I know not, Gwen. It may be so. In my world, Britain took a while to go
down into the dark, and she may well have lived on. But I can't say for
certain."

She stood up, eyes aflame. "What? Do you mean to say that you
escaped death, unknown to all, and left me… her to continue to believe
herself a widow? That you never even took the trouble to learn if she was
dead, or living in degradation? By God, I swear you'd show more interest
in a favorite horse!" As though with the breaking of a petcock, decades of
bottled-up hurt began to gush out. "I know your love died years ago, as
well I should, having watched it die while trying in vain to give you the
heir who might have kept it alive—"

"No, Gwen, no," Artorius whispered.

"—but I'd have thought that the very memory of love would have made
you go to Britain, or send someone, to learn how it went with her who you
once called—" She remembered the others in the room and cut herself off
before resuming. "The loss of love I'd long come to accept. But hatred and
contempt? Dear God, Artorius, what have you even been doing for these
fifteen years in your world?"

And that, Sarnac thought, is going to be a tough one to answer in


terms she can understand and accept, especially considering that it's
been a hell of a lot more than fifteen subjective years for him. She's taken
all this amazingly well so far—but time travel… P He watched as the man
who looked to be in his early forties raised his head and locked eyes with
the woman of fifty who had been born eight years later than he.

"You ve the right of it, Gwen; I could have found out how it fared with
my Gwenhwyvaer. Tertullian here could have found out for me. And I
never let him." She took a sharply indrawn breath. He hurried on. "You
ask why? It wasn't because my love for you had died. Indeed, I don't think
it ever truly died."

"Don't lie to me, Artorius," she said in a voice almost too small to be
heard. "Not that."

"It's no lie, Gwen. I sometimes wish I had lost my love, or never had it
at all. Either would have been more merciful than feeling it but never
being able to give it as much of myself as it deserved and needed."

"What do you mean?"

"In Constantinople I told the Emperor of Rome, who is my own self,


that he gave Rome back to the world while I gave a legend to a world that
had to do without Rome. But in both worlds, my life has been what
posterity required it to be, not what I might have wished."

"I married a man, not a Purpose!"

"Did you, now?" Artorius' eyes hardened. "Don't you lie to me Gwen,
nor to yourself! You fell in love with what you saw in me. And you
knew—or should have known— that the man you saw could never be
purely yours. Be honest: could you have loved a man who would have been
satisfied with a life which held you and naught else?"

"I was just a girl!" she stormed. "I understood nothing of such things."

"Oh, I think you did… and do. For we're alike in this, Gwen. Remember
what I just said, about the legend people in my own world will make of me,
when they think I'm gone? Well, you're in it too. You reign forever in men's
minds as Guinevere, queen of a wondrous city called Camelot where, for
just a little while, men attained the unattainable." His gaze gentled. "So
we're both caught in the same doom, Gwen my love. We were put in this
world to fill not our own needs but those of unborn generations."
She slumped into the chair again and ran a hand through hair that had
once been the color of flame. "I understand none of this," she muttered.
"I'm old and tired and lonely, and anyone who believes I reigned over some
ideal kingdom conjured up by bards from hot air and heather beer will be
an even greater fool than I am for continuing to love you all these years!
All I understand is that you never sent this Tertullian to inquire after me
in a world where I might have been dead, or some barbarian's slave…"

"Don't you see? That's the very reason I couldn't ask how you fared! If
I'd learned my Gwen was in peril or in want I'd not have been able to do
otherwise than come to her aid—which wouldn't have been possible. You
asked what I've been doing in my world in the years since I… departed
from men's knowledge. Well, all I can tell you is that I've been in a kind of
indenture, working off the debt I owe for my rescue from death. And I
won't pretend that I haven't enjoyed the work, for I've seen things that
make all the legends of magic and wizardry seem insipid. But it carries a
curse: I can't take any action that would change the appointed course of
my world's future. If I'd learned that Gwen must die, I'd have had to stand
by and let it happen."

She crossed herself. "This has a pagan ring to it, Artorius—like the
Fates of Roman myth and the tapestry they weave, or the Norns the
Saxons tell of. I like it not."

"No more do I, Gwen, for I've always held that men make their own
destiny. But now I've learned that things aren't always so simple. I've
accepted that… but I couldn't face the possibility of having to let you die.
For it would have been you, Gwen, in whatever world."

"Ah, Artorius!" Again she reached out and touched his cheek. "Is that
truly the reason?"

"Truly, Gwen. The bards will lie about your having been queen of an
enchanted many-towered city, but they'll speak (lie truth about one thing:
you were always queen of my soul."

She smiled, allowing them all an instant's glimpse of what the young
Artorius had once seen. "You always did have the power to move me with
words, you scoundrel! like the time… But no, I'll not let myself recall that
which lies beyond the veil of years. For it's all done with now, isn't it? Oh,
Artorius, what a waste! All those years of living, as you say, the lives the
future required…"
"Gwen," Artorius cut in gently, "I've come to you this night to tell you
that we're not through doing it." She stiffened. "I must ask you to believe
what I asked Artorius the Restorer to believe: that I've been vouchsafed a
vision of the future, and—"

She rose abruptly. "You ask too much of me… at least without further
explanation in private, without these others. Come." She led the way
toward her inner chamber. He followed.

Left to their own devices in the antechamber, Sarnac, Tylar and


Tiraena sat down on whatever was available. Sarnac squirmed
uncomfortably on a stool obviously intended for a lady-in-waiting, his
bruised kidneys protesting. After a time he spoke.

"Well, er, Tylar, I suppose they're, uh…"

"I'm sure they're discussing the possible geopolitical options," Tylar


stated blandly.

"No doubt! All in pursuit of whatever your objective is here in


Britain—about which you've never been 'entirely candid,' as usual!"

"It's straightforward enough. We need to make Gwenhwyvaer aware


that The Restorer has only a few years left to live, and that when he dies a
usurping tyranny will seize power at Constantinople. The time will then be
ripe for her to make her bid for British independence."

"Huh! But why? I thought you were betting on Ecdicius to set up a


separate Western empire. Won't a British rebellion just be an extra
headache for him?"

"All will become clear in good time," Tylar intoned. Sarnac was about
to wax sarcastic, but Tiraena spoke up.

"Tylar, does he mean it? Or is he just bullshitting her?"

"Oh, he means it. I've heard him on the subject often enough over the
years. And I've come to know him very well. He's quite capable of
'bullshitting,' as you so elegantly put it. But I can tell when he's not."

"Then he never really stopped loving her." Tiraena shook her head
slowly. "I suppose I should be glad that we gave this night to her, but I
can't help thinking about the other Gwenhwyvaer, who may still be
alive…"

"She's not." Tylar's flat declarative took them both by surprise. "In
point of fact, she died two years ago in our reality, and now lies buried on
Glastonbury Tor, in a tomb beside which the abbey will one day stand.
And Artorius lies beside her."

The last sentence didn't even register at first. When it did, Sarnac
spoke cautiously. "Uh, Tylar, I think I must have misunderstood you…"

"Artorius will live quite a long time on your standards," Tylar said
obliquely. "But not very long on mine. He was introduced to civilized
medical care only after having spent his first forty-two years among…
this." Tylar's gesture encompassed fifth-century Earth. "Eventually, he'll
grow old. And when he does, I'll take him back to the early 480s of our
timeline, while he and Gwenhwyvaer still have life in them. The monks of
Glastonbury will lay them to rest together. Their tomb will be rediscovered
in the twelfth century. Later it will be generally written off as a hoax,
despite certain annoying facts that will stubbornly defy explanation." He
blinked. "Dear me, I must be growing garrulous with age! I must, of
course, insist that you not mention any of this to…" He gestured at the
door through which Artorius had passed.

Tiraena spoke while Sarnac was trying to find his tongue. 'Tylar, how
can you know you'll do this?"

"Oh, my! The problem of tenses again! You see, in terms of my own
subjective consciousness I've already done it. Just another bit of historical
policing, you know; history required that those bones be found in the
abbey graveyard at Glastonbury. But there's no regulation that prohibits
me from sometimes enjoying my work—or from doing a good turn for a
valued associate." He settled back with a faint smile and composed
himself to wait, politely ignoring the other two's expressions.

Presently, the door opened. Artorius and Gwenhwyvaer emerged in


mid-sentence. "… but it still can't work," she was saying. "It comes to grief
on the same hard reality that defeated Carausius two centuries ago."

My God, Sarnac thought, they really did find time to talk politics!

"You mean the inability of Britain to survive a serious attempt at


reconquest?" Artorius said—Artorius whose corpse lay beside his Gwen's
on a hill twelve miles northwest of here this very night in his native reality.
It was, Sarnac thought, like looking at a ghost.

"Yes. Any usurper who arises in Britain must either conquer the
Western Empire or be conquered by it. Maximus tried and failed.
Constantine the Great succeeded. But Britain can't remain aloof in a state
of… of…"

"Splendid isolation?" Tylar offered with a smile. "The situation will be


different this time, Lady."

"In what respect?" Gwenhwyvaer asked, gazing at him narrowly. "I


don't know who you are, Tertullian, but there's clearly more to you than I
can see, or understand. Speak!"

"Artorius has already told you that after the Restorer dies his
designated heir Ecdicius will be prevented by usurpers from coming into
his inheritance and will lead the West into separation. In exchange for
your recognition of his legitimacy as Augustus of the West, he will
acknowledge Britain's independence."

Mighty free with Ecdicius' commitments, aren't we Tylar? thought


Sarnac. Gwenhwyvaer looked thoughtful. "Ecdicius," she said with a slight
frown.

"You can rely on him, Lady. And without his guarantee, your dreams of
an independent Britain are only dreams." Tylar looked Gwenhwyvaer
unflinchingly in the eyes. "Don't hold it against him that he's the
Restorer's heir in place of the son you never had."

The Regents eyes flashed blue fire, but Tylar's continued to hold them.
The flames subsided, and she said only "How can you know this?"

"As to that, Lady, I can only ask you to trust me. As you yourself have
admitted, there are mysteries here that are beyond ordinary
understanding. But… he will vouch for me." Artorius nodded. "And this
much is no mystery: the Restorer cannot live forever. Even if I'm wrong
about the nature of the storms that will follow his passing, you'll want to
prepare against some such storms. During the next few years, Lucasta will
visit you from time to time with counsel concerning those preparations."
Sarnac started, for he hadn't been told about this part of the plan. But
Tiraena evidently had, for she showed no surprise. She and Gwenhwyvaer
regarded each other levelly.

"So you are in truth Lucasta. Indeed, there is a mystery here that I
cannot fathom." Gwenhwyvaer spoke with the fatalism of all the ages
before humankind had begun to expect to be able to fathom mysteries.

Abruptly, the outer door swung open. "Oh, am I interrupting? Your


pardon, Lady, but I was anxious to know if the messenger had assured my
men that I'm all right within these walls. My son Cynric is out there, and
he's only seen eight winters…"

"They have been informed, ealdorman" Tylar said smoothly while


everyone else wondered how to handle the new arrival. "By the way, I am
Tertullian, employer of Bedwyr, who I believe is already known to you."

"He is indeed!" Cerdic stepped all the way into the room, walking a
little stiffly and beginning to show a spectacular mouse under one eye but
managing a certain raffishness. "And this gentleman?" He indicated
Artorius.

"My associate Gerontius." Tylar spoke quickly and firmly, forestalling


everyone else. "And now, ealdorman, I suggest you close the door, for we
are discussing matters which are not for every ear. I believe, however, that
they are for yours."

Cerdic gave Gwenhwyvaer an uncertain look. "Lady… ?"

"Do it, Cerdic," she sighed. "I don't know how Tertullian finds things
out, but since he knows so much else he probably knows how deeply you
are in my counsels regarding the future of Britain."

Sarnac took his first close look at Cerdic of the West Saxons. He was in
his mid-twenties, dressed in a version of his peoples standard
tunic-and-trousers garb that was less drab than most. He was darker than
most Saxons— Sarnac recalled hearing that he was half-British—but had
the sturdy build and sweeping mustaches that typified them. And his
quietly thoughtful expression would have surprised most of those who
knew him.

"Well, Tertullian," he finally said, "however you may have learned it, its
true. The Regent has tried to smooth my peoples path in this island, so
that we may perhaps—" he seemed amused at the thought"—become a
new sort of Britons ourselves. And I'm with her." He grinned in his usual
public way. "If all my thoughts were widely aired, I know not whether my
own people or the Britons would bellow the loudest. At least it would give
them something to agree on!"

"No," said Gwenhwyvaer. "It would just give them one more thing to
fight over: the right to hang you! And it would probably serve you right.
But I have no heir, and the Britain that is to be will need leaders. Sooner
or later you're going to have to become a Christian, of course— and spare
me that pained look! Quite a lot of your people have been receiving
baptism. It has to come, you know. We need all the sources of unity we can
get. All the more so given Tertullian's news. I'll call for some wine, then
you can hear it yourself."

The wine level was a good deal lower by the time Tylar finished his
account of what was to be, carefully hedged about with "in all probability"
and "I have reason to believe." Cerdic silently sipped his wine. ("Don't tell
my men I've turned traitor to ale!" he'd joked.) Then he cocked one
eyebrow at Gwenhwyvaer.

"I don't suppose I need to ask what your course will be, do I?"

"The question is," she retorted, "what will yours be?"

Instead of answering, he turned to Tylar. "What if the East reconquers


the West and then turns on us?"

"That could be," Tylar admitted. "And even if Ecdicius wins in the end,
you may well suffer an invasion in the course of the war that's bound to
come. I can't promise you that these things won't happen. But I can
promise you this: you'll never see a more auspicious moment to make your
bid for British independence. Such an opportunity will not come again."

"Well," Cerdic said after a moments silence, "a little invasion might do
wonders for unity in this island. And my people have known Rome for too
short a while to have developed much attachment. But," he turned to
Gwenhwyvaer, "what of the Britons?"

"Remember, we were independent of Rome for a pair of generations,


after Honorius graciously permitted us to arm ourselves against the
invaders Rome was no longer able to keep from our shores. For the last
few years, we've convinced ourselves that Borne rejoined us since it was
our High King who restored the empire." She shook her head in rueful
acknowledgment of the Celtic genius for self-deception. "As long as he
lives, you'll not find a more loyal set of imperial subjects. But after he dies"
—an involuntary side-glance at Artorius— "and especially if Tertullian is
right and his heir is denied the purple by a usurper… yes. If I know men
like Cador and his son, they'll be ripe for rebellion."

"Well, is there no end to this nights surprises?" Cerdic grinned through


his mustache. "I've found something in common with Constantine of
Cador! For I, too, have no stomach for rebellion against an empire that
still has Artorius the Restorer on its throne."

"And why would that be?" asked "Gerontius," speaking for the first
time. "Did he not smash your people by the banks of the Loire?"

"So he did. But that was war. Oh, yes, I hated him then—

I was only a lad of eleven, and his name was used to frighten us
children. Actually, I hated Britons in general, for I'd learned early enough
that my mother had been used by one of them—you can be sure the other
boys let me know from whence I'd come! When my mother and I were
forced to leave our home, I could have killed him. But later I learned that
we'd been moved to keep us out of the clutches of the Franks. Still later, he
allowed our people to emigrate to join our kin in Britain. And as I grew to
manhood I followed the tale of his rise to empire. It was like a hero-saga
that was really happening! I suppose that was why I felt more and more
drawn to him, and wished with all my heart that I could meet him." He
shook his head. "I know that can never be. And I know that after he's gone
the Empire of Rome will have no hold on my loyalty. Yes, Lady I'm with
you." He reached for the amphora and refilled his winecup. "Shall we
drink to a war that will see Briton and Saxon on the same side?" As they
drank, Sarnac sought to read Artorius' expression. But there was none to
be read.

"So Tylar's set up a temporal stasis device for you?" Sarnac kept his
voice down even though he and Tiraena were probably out of earshot of
the others. Tylar and Artorius talked with Gwenhwyvaer and Cerdic where
the latter two sat their horses a good distance ahead on this little-used
stretch of road.
"You'd better believe it. There's no way I would have spent six
subjective years here! My 'periodic visits' will be between spells in stasis.
At that, I'll be aging several months more than you will, since you won't
emerge from stasis until 491."

"Seems only reasonable to me," he quoted. She dug him in the ribs.

Tylar had spoken the truth Always a first time for everything, Sarnac
thought) about the limitations of his people's time travel technology. Their
temporal vehicles, used for emplacing temportals, incorporated a
hideously expensive, highly specialized capability which Tylar's ship did
not possess. But the temporal stasis field was, in effect, a kind of passive,
strictly one-way time travel into the future. While the field was activated,
no time passed within it (well, maybe a second for every billion years of
the larger universe) and its contents were invisible and impalpable from
the outside—in effect, it dug a hole in the space-time continuum and
pulled the dirt in over it.

"Where is this gizmo?" he asked.

"A very convenient spot: a cave near the base of Cadbury, not far from
the River Cam." Tiraena smiled. "Artorius mentioned that in our reality
there'll be a local legend that that cave is where King Arthur is sleeping,
waiting until Britain needs him."

"Could Tylar's little activities possibly have anything to do with getting


that story started?" Sarnac wondered out loud.

"He also mentioned," she continued, "that the Cam is the root of the
name Camlann, the place where, in the 530s of our reality, the last of the
Artoriani will effectively wipe themselves out in internecine fighting. By
then they'll just be a well-armed band of freelance brigands. The High
Kingship will have ended with him." She sighed. "This landscape holds a
lot of sadness for him, knowing what he knows now."

"I gather you've resolved your feelings about him by now."

"Oh, yes. If Gwenhwyvaer can do it, I can do it!" She smiled wanly. They
fell silent, both thinking of that dim battle beside the Cam, the last battle
of those cataphractarii who, as King Arthur's knights, would ride their
richly caparisoned steeds into legend. Somebody named Medraut would
incite them to slaughter each other over God knew what quarrel—some
tribal feud, someone's wronged sister— within sight of Glastonbury Tor,
where they would never dream that Artorius lay with his lady.

Up ahead, Tylar motioned them forward. "I fear we must part company
here," he told Gwenhwyvaer. "We have business which requires us to
return to Constantinople." Which, Sarnac reflected, was true as far as it
went, as Tylar's statements so often were.

"I still can't believe you wouldn't let us give you some horses," Cerdic
remarked. "Will you be returning to Britain?"

"I think not. But remember, I'll be sending messages to you through
Lucasta, whom you'll be seeing from time to time. I have means of getting
information to her." Do you ever! Sarnac thought.

"Then this is farewell, Tertullian," Gwenhwyvaer said. "And… and you,


too, Gerontius." She and Artorius held each others' eyes for a length of
time that Cerdic couldn't have missed, although he gave no sign. Sarnac
wondered what he made of it, in his ignorance of who "Gerontius" was.
Tylar could have invented the tern "need to know," he thought. Come to
think of it, I wonder if he did?

"Farewell, Lady. And…" Tylar hesitated. "As we've all acknowledged,


Britain may not be allowed to go its own way in peace. You can depend on
Ecdicius' guarantee for the Western Empire, but he may not be able to
shield you from the East. So the peoples of this island may need inspiring
to arise in the common defense. I've taken the liberty of loosely translating
certain possible sources of rhetorical inspiration for you, including a
speech given by a queen who found herself in a position not unlike yours."
He reached into a pouch and withdrew two scrolls of the Egyptian papyrus
which, along with parchment and vellum, served this world in place of the
paper that had not yet made its way west from China. He handed one of
them to Gwenhwyvaer. "It helped to unite her people. And, ealdorman" he
added, handing Cerdic the other scroll, "I thought you might find this
useful. It was used to inspire an army to fight and win against seemingly
impossible odds."

"Thank you," Gwenhwyvaer said, putting her scroll away. Cerdic


examined his with frank curiosity—having become one of the few Saxons
to have mastered the written word, he couldn't get enough of it. "When
you get to Constantinople," she continued, taking out a scroll of her own
from her saddlebag and proffering it not to Tylar but to Artorius, "give
this to Artorius." For an interval whose silence no one felt inclined to
break, two pairs of eyes once again held each other, blind to all else. The
byplay, including her use of the name rather than the honorific
"Augustus," was lost on Cerdic, who had become absorbed in his scroll.

With a final gaze, Gwenhwyvaer straightened in her saddle and turned


her horse around. "Come, Cerdic."

Cerdic came up for air from the scroll and made to follow her. Then he
halted his horse and turned to Tylar, holding up the papyrus. "You know,
Tertullian, this isn't bad. 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.' Yes,
I like that! Of course, it can be improved. I'll work on it." He nudged his
horse forward, and he and Gwenhwyvaer vanished around a turn in the
road.

Sarnac stared at Tylar. "What did you give her?"

"Oh, this and that. And now…" His walking staff shape-shifted into the
recall device. Presently there came the faint breeze which was the only
announcement the ship gave of its arrival.

"This device," Tylar told Tiraena after the portal that would allow them
ingress into the ship had formed, "will reconfigure into a staff after we've
passed through. Take it to the cave and leave it with the stasis generator.
And now we must be going."

Sarnac and Tiraena clasped hands. "Hey," she said, "it'll only be a few
subjective months—even fewer for you. We've been apart that long lots of
times."

"Yeah, I know. But the fact that it's really going to be six years as far as
the rest of the universe is concerned makes it different, somehow." He
sought for something brilliant to say, but only managed: 'Take care of
yourself."

"Come, come," Tylar fidgeted. "Someone might happen along this


road." He and Artorius stepped through the portal into the ship. Sarnac
followed.

Once aboard, Artorius excused himself and went off—to read


Gwenhwyvaer's scroll, Sarnac suspected. He himself followed Tylar to the
"observation deck," where they seemed to be standing in mid-air a few
yards above the ground. Tiraena was still beside the road, holding the
nondescript walking staff and gazing toward the ship she could not see.
Then she gave the self-conscious wave of one who can't be sure if the
gesture is being seen, and turned to go. Feeling foolish, Sarnac waved
back.

"Well," Tylar said conversationally, "the ships stasis field should finish
building any time…"

In less than an eyeblink, Tiraenas retreating figure vanished from the


panoramic outside view, the leaves disappeared from the trees, and the
ground acquired a covering of snow.

"… now." His sentence finished, Tylar looked concernedly at Sarnac's


face. "Oh, dear! I should have warned you of what to expect."

Sarnac shook his head, mental equilibrium reasserting itself. "No… it's
all right. I had no reason to expect anything else, I suppose—I've been told
often enough that no time passes inside a stasis field." He took a deep
breath. "So it's now… ?"

"February of 491," Tylar confirmed. "We haven't been able to pinpoint


the exact date of Ecdicius' assassination. But various facts allow us to infer
that it's no earlier in the year than March, and probably later. So…"In
response to his silent command, the ship rose in the air and swung around
into an eastward course. Looking aft, Sarnac glimpsed Cadbury before it
receded into the distance.

"Tylar, do you think they'll pull it off?"

"Oh, yes. Gwenhwyvaer is, as you'll have gathered, formidable. And


she's been wise to groom Cerdic for leadership of the future ethnically
mixed Britain."

"Yeah, Cerdic's a character. Uh, I suppose that, like everybody else, he


also existed in our reality."

"Indeed! He's the Cerdic. Cerdic of Wessex." Tylar looked at Sarnac


expectantly but saw only blankness. "Hmm. I keep forgetting that your
knowledge of history isn't all it might be. Well, in our timeline Cerdic
didn't arrive in Britain until 495. Aided by his son Cynric—an adult by
that time— he carved out the kingdom of Wessex which would later unify
England. All subsequent English royalty have claimed descent from him."

"Huh? You mean James III… ?"

"Oh, yes, that's right; they had restored the Stuarts by your lifetime,
hadn't they? But yes, he's a descendant— although the connection will be
extremely tenuous by then."

"Well, well!" Sarnac shook his head. "All from an illegitimate son
fathered on a Saxon girl by some Briton…"

"Yes. It was in the course of his first Saxon-fighting expedition to


Armorica."

"Uh, what do you mean, Tylar?" Sarnac couldn't make any connection
between the bland statement and what they were talking about.

"Artorius," Tylar said patiently. "It was in 457, three years after he
became High King."

For a second or two, Sarnac still didn't get it. Then little things he
should have noticed before—a certain way of cocking the head, a peculiar
outward flare to the eyebrows, the body build—began to come to him.
"Wait a minute, Tylar! Are you telling me… ?"

"It's not uncommon in this era," Tylar said pedantically, "for victorious
troops to share out the women of the vanquished after a battle. An old
Roman custom, in fact, which includes the proviso that the commander
gets a share. Artorius didn't take advantage of it very often— usually he'd
pick some child and set her free. But he's only human, after all, and he was
in the process of adjusting to the fact that Gwenhwyvaer couldn't bear
him children. And I have reason to think the Saxon woman in question
was exceptionally beautiful."

I wonder, was all Sarnac could think. Did she tell her son stories about
Artorius the ogre who ate naughty Saxon children with horseradish?
Did she even know who the father had been?

"Tylar," he finally asked, "does Artorius know?"

"No, and I'll be obliged if you don't tell him. It might prejudice his
judgment at some crucial time."
"But…" Sarnac glanced aft, where the British landscape had yielded to
the gray winter sea. "Does she know?"

"Gwenhwyvaer? She hasn't been told, if that's what you mean. But… oh,
yes, I think she knows."
CHAPTER NINE
The merchant Ventidius had servants because it would have seemed
odd for him not to have them. They cleared away the remains of a meal
that bore little resemblance to Sarnac's recollections of Greek cuisine
(except perhaps for the prevalence of olive oil) and withdrew, leaving their
kindly but mysterious master alone with his guests.

Koreel activated the device that would safeguard them against


eavesdropping. Then he settled back with a sigh and poured more wine all
around—not retsina, to Sarnacs relief.

"So," Tylar asked Andreas, "his health seems to be getting steadily


worse since he restored Acacius to the Patriarchate? I fear the Western
clergy will see that as divine justice!"

"Well," the young transtemporal voyager replied, "the deterioration


hasn't really been steady. But the trend is downhill. Nevertheless, nobody
thinks his life is in any immediate danger, and there's been no talk of
recalling Ecdicius from the Danube."

"Given what passes for medical science here, that's not too reassuring,"
Sarnac said dourly. "A turn for the worse could kill him in no time."

"That's true," Andreas acknowledged. "I don't think I'll ever get used to
watching what these people endure under the name of medical care." But
his tone was that of a man admitting a flaw in a milieu to which he
seemed to have taken like a duck to water. He'd changed dramatically in
the time since they'd been apart—cheerier and generally more alive. Of
course, Sarnac reminded himself, it had been a considerably longer
subjective time for Andreas than for the rest of them. But he wondered
what had happened during that time to banish the moody, withdrawn
Andreas he remembered.

"Nevertheless," Tylar put in, "we can't be taken by surprise even if that
should happen. We don't know many of the details, but we do know that
the Restorer doesn't die until after Ecdicius returns to Constantinople and
is assassinated. Speaking of Ecdicius, I trust you've gained the confidence
of his family as we'd planned."

"Oh, yes," Andreas nodded. "The Restorer introduced me to them as a


nobleman from Bithynia, in Asia Minor. I could get away with it because
Ecdicius' wife Faustina is also from Gaul and this is the furthest east she's
ever been. In the years since then, I've gotten to know them well on my
various 'visits to Constantinople' between spells in stasis. I don't mind
telling you it's bothered me, deceiving them. Faustinas a true lady. And
Julia—that's the oldest child, eighteen now—is so charming that…! Well,
you've met her, haven't you, Koreel? You know the way she…"

Aha! thought Sarnac.

Tylar dragged Andreas back to earth. "Now, now! Remember, all the
dissembling is in a good cause."

"Of course! We can't leave them behind in Constantinople when we get


Ecdicius out!"

"Indeed not," Tylar affirmed. "If captured, they could be used as


hostages, giving the usurpers potentially disastrous leverage with
Ecdicius." Andreas blinked; he clearly hadn't been thinking of that aspect
of things. "Which leads to my next question: how are the preparations for
our flight progressing?"

"On schedule," Koreel said. 'The Restorer has let us use the Boucoleon
Harbor, adjacent to the Sacred Palace. I've bought a ship, allegedly for my
'trading fleet,' and quietly moored it there. The Restorer secretly supplied
a crew; they're all Britons, old salts from the Saxon Shore Fleet but with a
lot of experience in these waters. Just as importantly, they're personally
loyal to him. All they know is that they're to perform a mission of vital
importance to him,"and that's enough for them. They'll keep their mouths
shut and ask no questions. We're holding them on standby; money's no
object, of course."

"It seems you've both done well," Tylar approved. "And now comes the
most difficult part for all of us: waiting for Ecdicius to return to
Constantinople. As soon as he does, we must activate the plan and get him
out at once, for we've no idea how long he's in the city before the assassins
strike. So some of us at least must be active and on watch at all times. We
can use stasis to alleviate the tedium, but only in shifts."

For a moment they all sipped their wine in silence. Then Artorius
finished his, set the cup down with a click and excused himself. If Andreas
had become more animated, the former High King had become less so.
Sarnac wondered if it was related to reawakened feelings where
Gwenhwyvaer was concerned and a too-brief reunion. But his moroseness
didn't seem precisely of that sort. Then understanding came, and Sarnac
bit his tongue at the thought of his earlier "sudden death" remark as he
belatedly recalled whose death was under discussion.

Presently Koreel and Andreas also said their goodnights. Sarnac, who
didn't feel sleepy and got the impression that Tylar didn't either, poured
another round of wine for the two of them. The time traveler inclined his
head in grave thanks and they regarded each other in the wretched light of
the room's oil lamps. People must wear their eyes out young, trying to
read in what this era uses for artificial light, Sarnac thought. And
spectacles won't be invented for another eight hundred years in my
timeline, God knows when in this one. Well, it's not a problem for the
majority, I suppose; they're illiterate.

"Well," he broke the silence after a moment, "we've settled one


question." Tylar raised an interrogatory eyebrow. "Andreas," Sarnac
amplified. "He's still with us. He didn't vanish with a pop or anything like
that the instant we first changed this timeline. And we have changed it,
you know."

"Our program of directing this history's flow into a desired channel is


very far from completed," Tylar cautioned. "Indeed, it's barely
commenced."

"Yeah, I know. If we dropped dead tonight, the divergences from


recorded history as Andreas knows it would be unpredictable. But there
would be divergences! Acacius' restoration to the Patriarchy in 486 and
the Restorers subsequent pro-Monophysite moves didn't happen
according to Andreas' history books. And we've planted the notion of
separation in Gwenhwyvaer and Cerdic."

"There's no way to know whether those changes are sufficient to


preclude Andreas' existence, on the assumption that it can be precluded.
But I'm quibbling. In general terms, you're right. This history has, to some
extent at least, been irrevocably changed. It is now up to us to direct the
change."

"Tylar," Sarnac said after a pause, "you mentioned earlier that most of
your people wouldn't be able to handle this mission, which flies in the face
of their whole history-preserving orientation. How are you handling it?"

"Better than I expected," the time traveler answered briskly,


"considering that my life has, as you say, been devoted to preserving the
past. We were firmly convinced that alternate realities were
impossible—and I continue to believe that this is the only one in existence.
But it does exist, and in it the rationale for my life's work doesn't obtain. I
can… it's almost… well, I hardly know how to describe it. There's
something deliciously wicked about it."

"Hey," Sarnac said, alarmed, "this isn't going to become habit-forming,


is it?"

"Oh, no." Beneath Tylar's reassuring tones, Sarnac detected a faint sigh.
"I'm doing this to fulfill an ethical obligation, as you know. But I can't
claim I'm sorry to have come." He gave Sarnac a look whose sharpness was
visible in the room's dimness. "And what about you, Robert? Are you glad
you came?"

The quietly spoken question was so unlike Tylar that it took Sarnac
aback. He hadn't often had conversations like this with the time traveler,
for his awareness of the gulf between them was a barrier to intimacy. My
supply of conversation openers has always been kind of limited. "What's
your world like, Tylar?" doesn't quite make it. Could I go back fifty
thousand years, sit down at a camp fire and tell the Cro-Magnons about
the twenty-third century? But now Tylar had, uncharacteristically, come
forward with a question about his own thoughts and feelings.

"Yes," he finally said. "I think I am. And I'll tell you why. You once said
that your people always had to suppress any impulse to take sides,
regardless of what they witnessed in history. You explained that this
wasn't just because history as recorded was sacrosanct, but also because
your projections of probable outcomes suggested that things generally
seemed to work out for the best in the long run. So intervening on the side
of the good guys was as likely as not to have catastrophic long-term
consequences."

"Yes, I recall commenting on the irony involved. Of course," Tylar


continued, settling back into his accustomed pedantic mode, "you must
bear in mind that it's difficult to generalize on the subject. Historically,
the 'good guys' have won so seldom that the total of such instances doesn't
make for a very meaningful statistical universe."

"Yeah, so I'd gathered. Well, I accepted what you said. But I didn't have
to like it! Now, this time…" He leaned forward, and the disconcertingly
light-blue eyes in his dark face held Tylar—and all at once the time
traveler understood why the human race had endured long enough to give
birth to his own people.

"This time," Sarnac repeated, "the good guys are going to win! They're
going to win, and there's going to be no ambiguity about the consequences
of their victory. We're going to make history do something right, for a
change— and we're going to make history like it! I personally guarantee it,
Tylar!" The cold flame that shone through his eyes died down and he
spoke more softly. "Yeah, I'm glad I came."

Winter gave way to spring and the Restorer's health continued to fail.
Pope Gaius came to Constantinople to be present at the end—Sarnac
glimpsed his arrival from among the street crowd and observed that
Sidonius Apollinaris had put on weight. And the death watch, as he
thought of it, went on.

At least the weather's better for it now, he thought as he swung over


the gunwale of their ship and gazed around at the Boucoleon Harbor and
the imperial gardens that rose in terraces above it to the Sacred Palace's
eastern front. He'd had the good fortune to spend most of March in stasis.
Now, the arrival of the Pope—who they knew had been around for the
assassination—had set off warning bells, and Tylar had decreed that only
one of them could be in stasis at any given time. At the moment the
carefully hidden device held Artorius.

He considered the ship with the eye of one who'd done some sailing in
his youth. She was a hundred-footer, whose twenty-five-foot beam gave
her the stubby lines typical of Roman merchantmen. Many such ships
were over twice as large in both dimensions, but Nereid's Wake was large
enough for their needs, and would attract less attention at what was
basically a yacht harbor than would one of the massive grain ships. She
lacked the mizzenmast possessed by some larger ships, having only a
mainmast with a large square sail and two little triangular topsails, and a
rakishly forward-slanted artemon foremast that was more for steering
than anything else. Despite her tubby dimensions, Nereid's Wake had a
certain grace of line, with her sternpost rising in a smooth curve to a
carved swan-head.

"Quite a beauty, isn't she?" he remarked to Andreas as the latter


climbed up from below decks. 'In spite of…" His gesture took in a paint job
and assorted decorations that were, from his standpoint, typical of the
place and time: garish and overdone.

"No doubt," Andreas replied in carefully neutral tones. The colonists of


Chiron had had neither time nor wealth to spend on recreational revivals
of obsolete technology, and he'd never set foot on a sailing vessel in his life.
At least, Sarnac thought, he'd never experienced seasickness and was
therefore blissfully ignorant of what he was in for.

Tylar had explained why they had to use this kind of transportation.
Meeting the younger image of Artorius was the sort of marvel Ecdicius
and Sidonius could be made to accept; but as for stepping through a
glowing door from Constantinople into Italy… no. The miracles to which
they would be exposed must be held to a minimum, to avoid
contamination of this worlds intellectual development The scientific
mind-set is born of the dawning realization that the universe is orderly
and predictable, subject to laws which can be understood; it might well be
aborted if these people had their noses rubbed in things too far beyond
their horizons (Or mine, Sarnac thought ruefully) to be fitted into a
rational world-picture. The last thing Tylar wanted was to revive the
notion that the world is a terrifying chaos of incomprehensible forces
wielded by capricious deities.

Still, Andreas looked as though he had some vague idea of how little he
was going to like this voyage.

"Aw, come on!" Sarnac jollied him, leaning against the gunwale and
grasping a shroud just above the deadeyes— a Roman invention, he
recalled Tylar saying. 'It's a beautiful afternoon, everything's in readiness,
and we can relax for a while."

Naturally, it was at that moment that the emergency chime of his


implant communicator tolled inside his skull.

He and Andreas exchanged a sharp look—the other had clearly been


signaled also—and he glanced around the deck. The only crew member
aboard was old Corineus, the skipper. He wasn't paying any particular
attention, so he must not have noticed their startlement. But there was,
Sarnac decided, no need to arouse the Briton's curiosity by appearing to
talk to himself. He activated the communicator and subvocalized.

"What is it,Tylar?"

"It's happened." The time traveler's voice held an uncharacteristic


repressed excitement "Ecdicius has arrived in the city. He should be
arriving at the sacred palace shortly."

So all the "pieces are in place, Sarnac thought. Let the games begin.

"We have no idea how much or how little time we have before the
assassins make their move," Tylar went on. "So we'd best set the plan in
motion at once. I'll deactivate the stasis field. Are any of the crewmen
immediately available?"

"Yeah. Corineus is aboard."

"Excellent. Send him to gather the rest of the crew. Artorius and I will
be aboard shortly."

"Right." Sarnac broke the connection and spoke aloud in British.


"Corineus, Tertullian sent me to tell you that we'll be departing sooner
than we expected. Go ashore and round up the rest of the lads."

"Aye, Bedwyr." Like most contemporary people over thirty or so,


Corineus looked older than he was. He also looked tough as well-aged oak,
and the Mediterranean sun had burned his skin a like color. Given the
right clothes and the right language, he would have fit in aboard a pirate
ship of the seventeenth-century Spanish Main like part of the rigging.
"Will we be departing this night? If so, I'll have to find some rowers to
warp us out of this harbor."

"I can't say for certain, but probably so. Ask Tertullian. He should be
here by the time you get back, and Gerontius." They had used Artorius'
cover name with the crew, adding the detail that he was a relative of the
Restorer. The imperial face was too well known for them not to notice a
close family resemblance. But these weren't exactly men who moved in the
Emperors social circles; they wouldn't realize that it was too close.
"Aye," Corineus repeated, and clambered over the gunwale onto the
pier. As soon as he was gone, Sarnac and Andreas went below decks to the
cabin that the crew had been told, in no uncertain terms, was off-limits.
They had barely entered when the portal glowed into existence. Tylar and
Artorius emerged.

"That's cutting it pretty close," Sarnac observed. "Corineus only just


left."

"No doubt." Tylar didn't sound too concerned. "But we have no time to
lose. I want you and Andreas to proceed to the heir's apartments and
bring his family back to this ship. Artorius and I will enter the palace and
make contact with Ecdicius when the time seems ripe."

"Faustina and the children may not be willing to come with me,"
Andreas protested, "if I just show up unannounced and—"

"You must persuade them!" Tylars voice was charged with urgency.
"We have no time to lose. And when the conspirators move against
Ecdicius, you can be sure they'll attend to his children as well. As I've
already explained, we can't let them become hostages for Ecdicius' good
behavior."

Of course, Sarnac did not say, if they were dead rather than captured
they wouldn't provide the usurpers with any leverage. In fact, their
deaths would just get Ecdicius seriously mad—which might well be to
our advantage. I'm proud of you, Tylar, for not mentioning that. I'd be
even prouder if I thought it had never crossed your mind.

I think there was a time when it wouldn't have crossed mine. He was
still thinking about it as they made their way through the gardens and
entered the palace complex. "Andronicus" was evidently known to the few
people they encountered, and no one questioned their presence. Twilight
was gathering when they reached the courtyard-surrounding outbuilding
that housed the heir's family.

An elderly male servant opened the door. Andreas cut off his greeting.
"I must speak to your mistress, Chares. It's urgent."

"But, but," the old fellow sputtered, "the Lady Faustina is awaiting the
return of the Noblissimus Ecdicius. We've received word that he has
already entered the city…"
"What is it, Chares?" The voice was followed by Faustina herself,
coming around a corner into the entrance hall followed by her three
children. Andreas pushed past the outraged Chares with Sarnac in his
wake. "Why, Andronicus! We didn't know you were in Constantinople!
And this other gentleman… ?"

Faustina was younger than her husband—not uncommon, when a


woman's life expectancy was considerably less than a man's provided that
the latter avoided violent death. But she was in her late thirties, and had
begun to put on weight as the women of this place and time tended to
after a decade or two of repeated childbearing. Faustina had had another
three children and buried them in early infancy, as was normal—so
normal that for most of history people hadn't dared to let themselves
become too attached to children. Tylar once mentioned that in the late
twentieth century, when it was first becoming possible to live like a
human being, intellectuals used to bleat about the "dehumanizing"' effect
of advanced technology, Sarnac recalled. God, what silly jerk-offs they
were in those days!

Still, Faustina remained a handsome woman, reflected in the slender


eighteen-year-old replica who peeked over her shoulder and smiled at
Andreas. The latter surprised Sarnac by not becoming tongue-tied.

"Lady Faustina, this is Bedwyr, a cavalry officer of your husbands


staff." Gee, not a hired bodyguard for once, Sarnac thought. Can it be
that I'm picking up a little class? "He's not in uniform because the
Noblissimus Ecdicius and his escort have had to enter the city unnoticed,"
Andreas improvised freely. "We have reason to believe his life is in danger,
now that the Divine Augustus is—I must speak bluntly—dying. The
vultures are gathering, as must be expected. You know what this city is
like."

"Oh, yes—how I know!" sighed the woman from the provinces.

"Is… is father all right?" Julia asked in a trembling voice.


Eight-year-old Helena began to whimper, and ten-year-old Avitus strove
to look like the man of the house.

"He is," Andreas assured them. "But he's sent Bedwyr to take all of you
to a ship in the harbor, where he'll be meeting you soon. It's necessary for
all of you to return to Italy."
"Leave Constantinople? With the Augustus on his deathbed?" Faustina
shook her head in confusion. "Andronicus, what's your part in all this? I
never knew you'd even met Ecdicius!"

Andreas was opening his mouth, and Sarnac was wondering what
would come out of it, when a choked scream brought all their heads
around to stare at old Chares, still standing in the doorway. He toppled
forward, a dagger-hilt protruding from between his shoulder blades. The
first of the bravos followed him through the door.

Sarnac and Andreas fumbled for their stunners, but the attackers
swamped them. Andreas was clouted on the head and fell to his hands and
knees. Sarnac managed to get the harmless-looking little rod out, only to
have it knocked from his hand and sent spinning across the floor by a
bravo who shoved him against a wall and leveled a short sword at his
midriff. He forced calmness on himself and looked around the entrance
hall, crowded with intruders. One stood over the slowly recovering
Andreas, idly swinging a cudgel. Three others had Faustina and her
children backed into a corner. One of this group seemed to be the leader.

"What do we do with these two?" the man pointing the sword at Sarnac
asked. The common Greek was one of the languages "Bedwyr" had picked
up a smattering of in his mercenary days in the East.

"They may be wanted for questioning or something," the leader replied.


"We'd better take them along with these." He indicated the three children
and the woman trying to shield them.

"Nobody said anything about any big hurry to bring them back, did
they?" another bravo asked with a leer in the direction of Helena. The
child stood sucking her ringers in numb shock, as unable as her mother
and siblings to understand a word of the gutter argot.

"Ah, you rotten bastard," the leader joshed indulgently. Tour crazy yen
for young stuff has always gotten you in trouble! Now there's what a real
man wants!" He swept the shrieking Faustina aside with one arm and
lunged at Julia. "Come here, bitch!"

Julia screamed and twisted away from the groping hand. Avitus flung
himself at the bravo, who smashed him aside with a backhand slap to the
laughs and cheers of his comrades. Then he advanced, grinning, toward
Julia, whose back was to a wall. Suddenly the girl's groping hand closed
over a vase on a side-table. With a convulsive motion, she flung it at her
tormentors head. It missed him, but hit the man guarding Sarnac.

As the momentarily stunned bravo staggered, Sarnac kicked out at the


short sword, sending it frying. Then he flung himself sideways and rolled
along the floor toward his stun rod. He had just enough time after
grabbing it to thrust it practically into the face of his nearest pursuer.
Then he swept its beam across two others. As they collapsed in a heap, he
had a split second to see that Andreas had revived and was grappling with
the cudgel-wielding bravo, before the one remaining opponent got in
under his stunner.

Sarnac let trained reflexes think for him. He dropped the useless
stunner, blocked a blow with his left forearm and formed his right hand
into a blade which he thrust into the man's solar plexus. As the bravo
collapsed with a thin, whistling shriek, Sarnac clasped his hands behind
his head and forced it down while bringing a knee up, hard. It was the
man who'd indicated an interest in Helena. Sarnac brought his knee up
twice more for good measure, feeling facial bones splinter. As he let the
body fall to the floor, he saw Andreas release his grip from his motionless
opponents throat and stand up.

Helena's eyes were marbled with shock—hysteria might come later, but
Sarnac was quite prepared to use the stunner. Julia stood against the wall,
heaving as she sought to bring her breathing under control. Andreas ran
to her, and in his arms she gave way to gasping sobs. Faustina looked up
from Avitus, who was regaining consciousness, and gave Sarnac a calmer
look than he would have believed possible.

"What is that?" she asked steadily, pointing at the stun rod.

"That's unimportant, Lady. At least, you don't need to know it just now.
What you do need to do at once is get yourself and your children to our
ship. Surely you can see now that there's no time to waste."

"Yes," she said matter-of-factly. "Come, children." She gathered them


up and herded them out the door, shushing complaints of favorite toys left
behind. Before the two of them left, Sarnac noted that Andreas gave each
merely unconscious bravo a hard kick to the temple. He felt not even an
abstract objection, though he would have rather left them to face their
employers' displeasure at their failure. Don't tell Andreas he's done them a
favor, he cautioned himself. Why ruin his day?
As they proceeded through the darkling palace grounds,

Sarnac reported to Tylar via implant communicator. "Oh, dear!" the


time traveler exclaimed. "Was it really necessary to use the stunners? I
fear that will take some explaining!"

"Tylar!" Sarnac saw Faustinas quizzical look and realized he'd spoken
aloud. "We weren't exactly in a position to worry about 'intellectual
contamination,' you know," he subvocalized. "It might have helped if you'd
monitored us with your life-form sensor and let us know that those thugs
were approaching!"

"Quite right, my dear fellow. I am in the process of remedying that


omission even now." Sarnac could visualize the process, although he didn't
pretend to understand it. The device Tylar was readying displayed on a
small screen the returns generated as a byproduct by neural activity above
a certain level. And it could tag the returns of individuals for whom it had
a genetic scan—a simple, non-invasive matter for the time travelers
technology.

"Ah," came Tylar's voice after a moment. "Yes, I can identify you and
Andreas, and the four with you. And… wait a moment." There was silence
inside Sarnac's skull, then the voice resumed, this time in tones of
repressed alarm. "I've also picked up the returns of Ecdicius and Sidonius,
walking toward the Daphne Palace—they must have set out practically the
instant Ecdicius arrived." Sarnac wondered how Tylar had obtained the
genetic readings of heir and Pope, but he knew he'd get only evasion if he
asked. "And seven unidentified individuals taking up positions alongside
the pathway they're using! Robert, this is terrible—we weren't expecting
matters to reach a crisis so quickly!"

Jesus Christ, what else can go wrong? Sarnac chopped the thought off
and subvocalized hurriedly. "Tylar, get a grip on yourself! Are we in a
position to get to them before they reach the assassins, from where we are
now?"

"No," Tylar replied. "But if you hurry you should be able to reach the
location of the ambush shortly after they do."

"Give me the bearing."

"I'll do better. Turn about seventy degrees south of your present route."
Sarnac stopped and did so, ignoring his companions' stares. A red dot
seemed to appear in mid-air in front of his eyes. "I'm downloading data to
your contact-lens display," Tylar explained. "As long as you're proceeding
in the right direction, you'll see the dot. Send Ecdicius' family on ahead.
I'll come as quickly as possible—I may be able to persuade Sidonius of the
need for immediate flight."

"Faustina," Sarnac said aloud, "can you make it the rest of the way to
the harbor?" He pointed ahead. The woman lacked his light-gathering
contact lenses, but she could see the harbor lights through the trees. She
nodded. "Good. Get the children down there—someone will meet you on
the dock." He hoped they'd be too disoriented to recognize Artorius—this
was not the time for lengthy explanations! "Andronicus and I have
business, but we'll be along soon."

Faustina nodded again and shepherded the children along after a last
eye-contact between Julia and Andreas. Sarnac slapped the latter on the
shoulder, none too gently. "Come on! I'll explain as we go."

They ran through the gloom of the gardens, well-illuminated for them,
and the ghostly dot seemed to constantly recede before Sarnac's eyes.
Presently they heard shouts and clashing steel, and soon they saw Ecdicius
hauling Sidonius away from the bravo he'd sapped with a rock and
backing the two of them up against a tall thick hedge. Three bravos were
on the ground, but four others closed in on the pair, clearly unconcerned
by Sidonius' call for help.

Sarnac pulled out his stun rod "Well, shall we?" Andreas nodded and
they stepped forward.
CHAPTER TEN
Homer had sung of the "wine-dark sea," and Sarnac could see exactly
what he'd meant as he looked into the swirling, foaming Aegean depths far
below.

He stood on the footropes that the ever-practical Romans had first


strung behind yards, and wrapped one arm around the swaying mast. The
mainsail was taken up as per Corineus' orders and he could take a
moment to gaze around from his high vantage, shielding his eyes from the
Mediterranean sun with his free hand and letting the warm wind blow
through his hair. The brilliance and clarity of the day, and the blueness of
the sky, were just short of hurtful. Off the starboard bow he could glimpse
Cape Sounion, its cliff topped by the white temple that was now in the
first stages of the decay that would eventually leave only a few stark
columns, lovingly preserved in his day because the worship of beauty had
outlived that of Poseidon.

"Can we get down now?" Andreas pleaded. He stood on the other side of
the mast, grasping the yard for dear life and resolutely not looking down
at the ship—and the world—that seemed to swing back and forth like a
pendulum. They had departed Constantinople in haste minus a couple of
crew members; and when Sarnac had volunteered to help take up the
slack the younger man had swallowed hard and stepped forward beside
him. By now he'd learned enough to be useful, and his experience with
other forms of motion sickness had helped ease him past his initial mal de
mer. But he'd never like it.

"Sure," Sarnac said reluctantly, grasping a shroud and sliding down to


the deck. Andreas followed more slowly, just as a wave buffeted the ship.
He succeeded in hanging on; the fact that Julia was watching from below
might have had something to do with it.

Sarnac surveyed the deck, looking aft where the steersmen stood in the
projections at the quarters. They had already made the course change
needed to round Cape Sounion in response to Corineus' commands; now
they kept the handles of their rudders steady (not even the Chinese had
the stern-post rudder yet) while the skipper held Avitus and Helena
spellbound with imaginative lies about his youthful sea-fights with
Saxons, Frisians and the occasional monster. Yup, Sarnac thought, all he
needs is a parrot and a wooden leg. Between the steering stations was the
long deckhouse that held most of the living quarters. Sarnac entered it
and descended the ladder to the sanctum.

Tylar, Artorius, Ecdicius and Sidonius sat around the little table in the
lamplight. Ecdicius fidgeted in the cramped space. On learning of the
attack on his family he'd been all for going back ashore and spilling blood
in large quantities, even before his own wound was tended to. But
Faustina had been able to calm him down, and their departure hadn't
been too delayed. Afterwards, when Artorius had given him and Sidonius
the same story they'd used on the Restorer, he had accepted it more
readily than Sarnac had dared hope. Clearly, Ecdicius was one of those
fortunate souls with the ability to file apparent miracles away under the
heading "Inexplicable—not to be worried about" and get on with
practicalities.

Sidonius, though, was still deeply troubled.

"But is it not heresy?" he was asking as Sarnac entered and closed the
hatch. "Surely there can be no warrant in the scriptures for supposing two
Saviors! So is one of these worlds of which you speak not irrevocably
damned?"

"No, Sidonius," Artorius spoke patiently. He'd grown up in this century,


and knew the depths of what Sidonius was undergoing while Sarnac could
only glimpse the surface. "Remember, the forking of the roads I've spoken
of happened twenty-one years ago—four hundred and seventy years after
the birth of our Savior, and almost four hundred and forty after His
resurrection. So all men, whichever history they are playing out, are
redeemed."

Sidonius wrung his hands in anguish. "But now, after these 'roads' of
which you speak have indeed parted, are there two trinities? How could
the divine essence be so subdivided?" Sarnac tried to imagine what a
nightmare this must be for Sidonius, in an age when so much ink and
blood had been spilled over the precise nature of one trinity. He himself
couldn't feel these concerns, but he knew distress of soul when he saw it.

"Not at all, Sidonius," Artorius assured him. 'The Father, being infinite,
is well able to comprehend two—or, for that matter, infinitely
numerous—realities." The former High King had had to become
something of an amateur theologian to deal with this problem, which
they'd known was coming. Luckily, doctrine had never been Sidonius'
strong point. He'd started his ecclesiastical career at age thirty-eight as a
political bishop. A trained theologian would have been a lot harder to deal
with.

Ecdicius squirmed. 'This is all very well, but the question now is what
we are to do! You say these damned conspirators were part of a
Monophysite plot?"

"Well, Noblissimus," said Tylar, "it stands to reason, doesn't it? In view
of your well-known fidelity to the true Catholic faith, the Monophysites
could hardly have welcomed the prospect of your accession, could they?"
Sarnac shot the time traveler a sharp glance, but Tylar continued without
a break. "Their obvious objective would be to bestow the purple on an
openly Monophysite emperor, one who would call a new Council which
would undo Chalcedon and make the Monophysite position canonical,
anathematizing all others. One might also suppose that they would wish to
elevate the Patriarchy of Constantinople to supreme primacy, reducing
Rome to the kind of subordinate position now occupied by Antioch and
Alexandria."

Ecdicius and Sidonius had been showing signs of gradually rising blood
pressure throughout, but the last sentence brought the latter surging to
his feet, doctrinal concerns forgotten. "What! But everyone knows that our
Lord explicitly gave into the hands of Saint Peter…"

Ecdicius wasn't far behind him. He stood up with a roar, trying to draw
his spatha and banging his funny bone against a bulkhead of the little
cabin, which did his mood no good at all. "By the mercy of Christ, when I
return to Constantinople to claim my inheritance my horse will walk
fetlock-deep in the blood of these damned traitors and heretics!"

"Noblissimus," Tylar smiled, "are you absolutely certain you want to


return to Constantinople?"

"What are you saying, Tertullian? I'm the rightful heir to Artorius the
Restorer!"

"And," Sidonius added, "he is our only hope for crushing this foul
conspiracy and the Monophysites behind it! Otherwise, the usurpers will
impose their devil-begotten heresy on the West, and we will all face
damnation."

"Yes! When I'm back in Constantinople with the support of the West,
like…"

"Like the Restorer was." Tylar's quiet interjection stopped Ecdicius


short, and he and Sidonius were suddenly quiet. Tylar smiled.
"Noblissimus, I don't question the legal rightfulness of your claim to the
purple. But we must consider reality. And reality is that the East, with its
multitudes and its wealth, will always dominate a unified empire. This is
so even if the Augustus comes from the West and bases his power on
Western arms."

"My people," Sarnac put in, "have a saying about the tail wagging the
dog."

" The tail wagging the…' Ha! Good one, Bedwyr! I'll have to remember
that!" Ecdicius' mercurial mood-changes no longer caught Sarnac
flat-footed. "All right, Tertullian, what are you advising me to do?"

"If the West is to stand as the stronghold of the true faith, Noblissimus,
it must stand alone. Once in Italy, declare the resumption of Constantine's
division of the empire. Your troops will eagerly proclaim you Augustus of
the West, for yourself as well as for the love they bear the Restorer, whose
choice of a successor is well known to them. And you, Your Holiness, can
lend your support by anathematizing the Eastern Church and
excommunicating anyone who adheres to the Henotikon."

"Yes," Sidonious nodded. "And specifically excommunicating the


Patriarch Acacius and whoever the conspirators set up as Augustus." He
turned to his brother-in-law. "Ecdicius, I believe Tertullian is right. We
can't save the East from error, but we can…" He sought for a word, but of
course his world held no such concept as quarantine. "I've watched what
the East has done to my old friend. The reunified empire of which he—all
of us— dreamed can never be anything more than a Greater Eastern
Empire, with the West as a set of provinces. I see that clearly now. I think
I've seen it for years. But no old fool ever wants to admit that his youthful
ideals have been discredited, or were mistaken in the first place, for that
admission is the final relinquishment of youth." He sighed deeply, in a
silence which no one cared to break, then gathered himself and actually
smiled. "Ecdicius, I'm still enough of an old fool to believe that we can
preserve what is of value in Rome's heritage. But we can only do it in a
separate Western Empire." He smiled again, with infinite sadness. "I hope
Virgil will understand," he whispered.

After a space, Ecdicius cleared his throat. "All well and good, but
there's one practical point we have to dispose of first." He looked Artorius
unflinchingly in the eye. 'The Restorer adopted me as his heir in the belief
that he had no heir of his body, indeed no close blood-relatives who might
be able to set up rival claims. Now, as I understand it, you and he are
closer in blood relation than any men have ever dreamed of being." Sarnac
thought he could see a sheen of sweat in the lamplight, of a kind that had
nothing to do with the cabin's stuffiness. But Ecdicius pressed on, as
fearless in the face of the unknowable as he had ever been in battle.
"Indeed, unless I misunderstand; you are…"
Artorius raised his hand. "Set your mind at rest, Ecdicius. It's true that
for my first forty-two years I was one and the same as he who adopted you
as his heir. But now I belong to another world—or, perhaps, another story
of the same world—and as soon as may be I mean to return to it. I have no
intention of seeking to rule this one. I could give you a written statement
of support for your claim to the Principate of the West if you like, but it
would be a meaningless formality. Let me instead tell you this: I know of
what you've done, and what he who you became in my world has done in
that world." Ecdicius crossed himself, in a way that Sarnac recognized as
something more than mere conventional piety, for which Ecdicius had
never been particularly noted anyway. "And I tell you now that had my life
followed the same course as that of the Artorius you know, I'd have chosen
the same heir he did."

Tylar let the two men regard each other for a moment before filling the
silence. "So, Noblissimus, you see that there will be no difficulties in this
regard. Furthermore, you will have an ally. Gwenhwyvaer, wife of Artorius
the Restorer and his regent in Britain. I'm empowered to tell you that she
will support your claim—on one condition."

"Condition… ?"

"Only one. You must agree to accept Britain's independence from the
Western Empire." Sarnac gave Tylar another sharp glance, but held his
tongue. "In exchange, she will recognize you as legitimate Augustus of the
West."

Ecdicius frowned. "Independence? Tertullian, I can't set a precedent


like that! Britain has been a Roman province since the time of Claudius…"

"Once again, Noblissimus, let us leave the legalisms to the lawyers."


Ecdicius' eyes flashed dangerously, but Tylar hurried on. "Practically
speaking, Britain has been independent since 410, when the Emperor
Honorius gave permission for the provincials there to see to their own
defense. Everyone recognized that as a de facto abandonment of the
island, for an armed Britain would inevitably be a self-ruling Britain. And
remember how the Restorer came to Gaul in 469 as High King of the
Britons, ally of the Western Emperor Anthemius, who dealt with him as
the separate sovereign he was. So you can acknowledge this accomplished
fact with no loss of dignity."

"But, Tertullian, the precedent! What if other provinces start getting


ideas?"

"Given the uniqueness of Britain's history over the last eighty years,"
Tylar said smoothly, "no valid precedent will be created. So the matter
need not concern you, Noblissimus; rather, you should concern yourself
with the implications of having a hostile Britain to your west at the same
time you're facing an attempt at reconquest from the east."

"Hmmm…" Ecdicius stroked his not-inconsiderable nose thoughtfully.


He didn't look happy, but he gave a slow nod. "Very well—so be it. I'll pay
Gwenhwyvaer's price." He stood up and stretched, catlike. "Plenty of time
to work out the details later. I need a turn on deck." He paused at the
hatch and looked back at Sarnac. "The tail wagging the dog!" He shook his
head and chuckled as he left the stifling cabin, followed by the others. But
Sarnac touched Tylar's sleeve, and the two of them remained.

"I seem to recall you saying," Sarnac began without preamble, "that the
plotters who tried to assassinate Ecdicius were an aristocratic clique
motivated solely by power politics. You never mentioned anything about
them being a bunch of Monophysite fanatics."

"Quite." Tylar pursed his lips. "Strictly speaking, I never actually told
Ecdicius that the assassins were Monophysite conspirators, did I? I merely
pointed out that their course of action would be a logical one for
Monophysite conspirators to take. If he chose to jump to conclusions…"

"Also," Sarnac interrupted, "I remember you telling Gwenhwyvaer that


Ecdicius would accept British independence on condition of her
recognizing him as Augustus of the West—which is exactly the reverse of
what you just told him."

"Ah, well, I'm afraid you have me there. But look at it this way, my dear
fellow: each of them will get what he or she wants from the other. And
these, um, hypothetical conditions will cancel each other out, as it were.
So in the end…"

"In short," Sarnac cut in again, "you've been lying your ass off, as
usual!"

"It could be argued that I haven't been entirely candid with them. But
it's all for the best, you know. In fact, it's necessary if all we've done isn't to
go for nought. Ecdicius must be provoked into a separation from the East,
not into an attempt to assert his right to the throne of a unified empire
which he'd probably succeed in keeping unified, as the usurpers did in
Andreas' history. And Britain's independence must be assured."

"You ve never explained that. Why is an independent Britain so crucial


to your plans?"

"Isn't it obvious? Our whole object here is to bring about the kind of
political pluralism that arose in our world and prevented any one
entrenched power structure from stifling scientific innovation to preserve
the status quo. The division of the Roman Empire into East and West is a
start—but it isn't enough; the two empires might reach some kind of
rapprochement in the coming centuries. In our history, Europe was
carved into nation-states by the invading barbarian tribes. Our friend the
Restorer put a stop to that here. So the same result must be obtained
through provincial separatism. With the example of an independent
Britain…"

"But you just told Ecdicius that Britain is a special case and won't
constitute a precedent!"

""That's quite true—in the legal sense." (Sarnac snorted.) "But in men's
minds, the empire will have irrevocably given up its claim to universality.
Britain will stand as irrefutable proof that political existence apart from
Rome is possible, that chaos is not the only alternative to imperial
centralization."

"I still think it's a rotten trick to play on Ecdicius."

"Oh, the long-term effects won't manifest themselves in his lifetime.


Probably not even in his son's. But his more remote successors will, I
think, be living in interesting times, to quote the old Chinese curse."

"I suppose," Sarnac said slowly, "that bringing 'interesting times' to


this world is what we're here for."

"Well put. And now we need to confront another problem: Artorius'


emotional state."

"Oh, yeah. I could tell he's been down in the dumps because his
counterpart is dying."
"Is dead," Tylar corrected bluntly. "Koreel informed me last night. We
can't let Ecdicius and Sidonius know, of course. But Artorius knows."

They had passed between the Peloponnese and Crete and set a
westward course into the Ionian Sea when Sarnac found Artorius standing
alone in the bows, one arm draped around the artemon mast, staring
fixedly ahead into the setting sun.

He'd been present when Tylar had tried to help the erstwhile High King
past the news from Constantinople. But this was the first time he'd found
himself alone with the man who, alone of all the human race in all the
ages, knew the feelings he now felt. Well, Sarnac reflected, he always had
something unique about him.

He searched desperately for something brilliant to say, but Artorius


came to his rescue by noticing him and smiling. "Ah, Bedwyr," came the
musical British, "it's a rare fine sunset, is it not?"

"It's all of that," Sarnac replied in the same tongue. For a while he
gazed at the sun toward which Nereid's Wake seemed to be steering.
When its lower edge touched the watery horizon, he gathered himself.
"Look, Artorius, I realize I can't possibly know what you're experiencing…"

"No, you can't." Artorius gave his head a shake of self-reproach. "Sorry,
old man. I know how that must have sounded. And I can't claim I didn't
have time to prepare myself; I've known from the first that this was going
to happen while we were here. But…" He shook his head again. "I've lost
friends in plenty, and relatives, and parents. We never used to let ourselves
be bothered too much by death; it came so easily, and so early for most
people. A human life can only hold so much tragedy. Besides, we believed
the dead were only passing on to a better world. We really did believe it,
you know. Even I believed it, and I was never especially devout Since then,
of course… the things I've seen, the things I've learned…" His voice trailed
off, then firmed up again. "And besides, another person, however
well-loved, is still someone different. He doesn't remember what my
mothers loom looked like when the afternoon sunlight came through the
window, aswarm with dust-motes, as I played at her feet. He doesn't know
how a remark someone made when I was twelve felt. He doesn't know the
innermost thoughts and feeling that can never be shared with anyone, for
they define the true self that none of us ever really reveals. Well, that
man—" he gestured vaguely toward the northeast, toward Constantinople
where Artorius the Restorer lay in state "—held all of that in his head. And
when he died, it all vanished" He smiled wryly. "Or whatever it does. I
don't know, anymore. Not even Tylar's people know."

"That universe of memory he held within him hasn't really been snuffed
out," Sarnac said cautiously. "Not as long as you hold it And he wasn't
really you—not anymore. He had a different destiny. In our world, you
passed into legend. In this one, he'll be locked into mere history, like' an
insect in amber."

The sun had sunk into the Ionian Sea, and Artorius' expression was
hard to read. "Yes; very astute of me to fail before emerging from
obscurity, leaving posterity to fill the vacuum with fables I wouldn't have
dared invent myself! I constantly amaze myself with my own cleverness!"
Sarnac started to say something reassuring, but thought better of it. He'd
never seen Artorius in this mood. Then he was relieved to see a smile flash
in the light of the ships lanterns. "Ah, well, you've the right of it: the poor
sod that I became in this world is stranded in documented history, of all
the dreary things! So the least we can do is make that history better!"
Artorius stood up straight and clapped Sarnac on the shoulder. "Instead of
mourning my own death, I should be seeing to my future reputation!"

They entered the Tiber and landed at Ostia, the seaport of Rome, amid
dumbfounded jubilation.

The news of the Restorers death had reached Italy overland, along with
rumors of the death of the Pope and the Heir. A pall of depression had
hung over this land and radiated outward through the Western provinces
at the speed of couriers' horses. When they established their identity, it
was like a summer thunderstorm over Ostia that dissipated a stifling,
stagnant closeness.

"You say there's a new emperor in Constantinople?" Sidonius had to


shout at his secretary Gelasius to make himself heard over the ecstatic
roar of the crowd that hemmed them in, straining for a glimpse, as they
left the harbor.

"Yes, as we only just learned," Gelasius shouted back. He was a native


of North Africa, dark to the point of duskiness, with tightly curled
iron-gray hair. It was sheer good fortune that he was in Ostia on business,
though the local clergy could have provided positive identification of
Sidonius. "Since the Augustus died, the conspirators who tried to murder
you have seized the initiative and now dominate the Sacred Consistory. At
first they squabbled among themselves, trying to agree on a successor. But
now they've agreed to bestow the purple on Wilhelmus, governor of
Illyricum."

"Wilhelmus!" Ecdicius exploded. "But he's a joke! A nobody! The army


will never accept him—everyone knows he's a coward who used influence
to avoid military service in his youth."

"And," Sidonius put in, "everyone also knows that his word means
nothing—even if anyone could divine what his word is, under all the
qualifiers that obscure everything he says!"

"Perhaps," Tylar put in diffidently, "that's precisely why the


conspirators settled on him as a compromise choice. Since no one is ever
quite clear as to what he's saying, everyone distrusts him equally. And,
being weak, he should be controllable."

"Maybe that's what they think," Ecdicius replied. "But they're wrong if
they think they can control him. They'll find they've just turned the empire
over to his rabid bitch of a wife!"

Koreel had notified Tylar two nights before that the power struggle in
Constantinople was over. But of course they couldn't reveal that
knowledge. Instead, Sarnac subvocalized to Tylar via implant
communicator. "Gelasius seems pretty well informed, given the comm
technology—or lack of it—he has available."

"Quite. A most impressive man. It's easy to see why he became Pope in
our history."

"He what?!"

"Oh, yes. He was secretary to Felix III, who was Pope from 483 to 492,
and was elected to the pontificate after Felix died. In this world, he serves
the same secretarial function for Sidonius, and it's entirely possible that
he may become Pope when Sidonius is gone. I certainly wouldn't
disapprove. He's death on heretics—he originally fled from Africa to
escape the rule of the Arian Vandals, you' see. And he's an intellectual
champion of papal supremacy within the church, including the Eastern
church. In short, he's precisely the sort of man we want in the position in
the immediate future."
They and the prudently hooded Artorius stayed in the background as
they made their way through the cheering crowd, with the local
troops—whose commander had recognized Ecdicius—running
interference. Ahead of them, Gelasius talked animatedly. "No one in Rome
knew what to do when the demand for homage to Wilhelmus arrived.
Everyone thought you were dead, though there was no proof. But now that
you've been returned to us through God's mercy, the armies of Italy will
rise as one man and acclaim the Restorers adopted heir as Augustus.
Especially when they hear what a vipers nest of Monophysite heretics were
behind the attempt on his life—and that of the Holy Father! You must
proceed to Rome without delay."

"Yes," Ecdicius nodded. "And we must send word to Gaul."

"Of course, Noblissimus… er, Augustus" Gelasius agreed From some


men it would have been blatant brown-nosing, but from Gelasius it wasn't.
"Being your native land, Gaul will be the center of your support."

"And we have to get it consolidated as quickly as possible. It's only a


matter of time before it has to face the Army of Germania."

Sarnac knew what he meant. The newly organized province of


Germania, between the Rhine and the Elbe, was now Rome's first line of
defense against Europe's unconquered barbarians, and accordingly it held
an army that was in a different class from the garrison troops of Gaul and
the other Western provinces. He quickened his step and touched Ecdicius'
arm.

"Any chance of getting the support of that army's commander?"

"I wish to God there were. He's a good man, and a friend." Ecdicius
shook his head regretfully. "But those snakes in Constantinople know how
crucial he is, and I'm sure they've already sent word to him. We can't
possibly get to him first. And they'll play on his loyalty to the Restorer.
They'll lie and say they're carrying on the work of the man he worshipped.
Yes, that will be the way to win Kai over…"

He talked on, but Sarnac heard nothing more. Nor did he see the
thronged streets of Ostia, for he was suddenly beside a forest lake in the
Burgundian uplands watching the sword he'd thrown flash in the
afternoon sun as it tumbled end over end through the air into legend. And
beside him was bluff, honest, decent Kai, who'd subsequently carried the
tale home to Britain.

After awhile he became aware of Artorius' grave regard. "I don't


suppose you knew, did you? I never thought to mention it. But I remember
that he was your friend."

Sarnac nodded mutely. Well, what did you expect? he asked himself.
What made you think he didn't exist in this world as well, like everybody
else? He shook free of the thought. "So he's made general here?"

"Indeed," Tylar affirmed. "He's become an important man in this


timeline. And I fear you and he are going to find yourselves on opposite
sides of the war that's coming."

The chamberlain Nicoles entered the imperial dressing-room, bowing


profoundly as was proper when entering the Sacred Presence. Wilhelmus
Augustus acknowledged him absently, most of his attention on the shapely
servant-girl who was bringing more of the regalia that would be draped
over the somewhat overweight imperial form. The pudgy face formed the
vacant smile that seemed to ooze insincerity like a kind of pus.

"Ah, Nicoles. What do you think of the adjustments they've made to the
coronation regalia for me? It's very important that everything be just so,
don't you agree? Especially in light of…" He gestured vaguely, leaving the
circumstances of his accession unstated.

Wilhelmus' ancestors had been among those Teutonic soldiers who had
come to dominate the empire late in the last century—the Romanized
German name was typical of his family. A classic case, the chamberlain
decided, of passage from barbarism to decadence with no intervening
phase of civilization. Aloud, Nicoles spoke in the voice that had been
carefully trained to be pleasing. "Rest assured, Lord" —Wilhelmus
preferred this form of address to "Augustus"— "that your coronation will
be…" Nicoles hesitated, then reminded himself that no flattery was too
blatant for this creature. "Your coronation will be Rome's next moment of
greatness."

Wilhelmus considered this and nodded. "Yes, I rather like that.


Although, of course, I would not in any way denigrate my illustrious
predecessor. But on the other hand…"

Good God, he even does it in private! It must be sheer habit by now,


Nicoles thought, and composed himself to listen until the Lord of the
World had finished qualifying all trace of meaning out of what he'd said.
He was saved by the arrival of the empires ruler.

"Augusta," he murmured, bowing particularly low.

Hilaria acknowledged with a nod as she swept into the room, and
Nicoles raised his head. She wore her usual fixed smile. Most people never
saw her closely enough to be startled by the way that expression extended
no higher than the mouth. Nicoles, who was taken aback by very little, was
still stunned by the distilled bitterness in those eyes.

"Ah, my dear," Wilhelmus said, hastily waving the servant girl away.
"I'd sent for the chamberlain to receive his report concerning the courier
who's just returned from General… ah, General…"

"Kai, Lord," Nicoles prompted. "A difficult name to remember, of


course. He's a Briton, an old follower of the late emperor Artorius—and,
like him, descended in part from Sarmatian cavalry auxiliaries, which is
the origin of the name."

"Yes, yes," Hilaria cut in, forestalling her husband. "But what was his
response to our message?"

"Favorable on the whole, Augusta." Nicoles decided to dispense with


the middleman and address her directly. "His personal loyalty to Artorius
extended to his adopted heir, so he had searching questions concerning
Ecdicius' fate. But the courier reports that he's provisionally accepted our
story, and is prepared to give his allegiance to y… to the Augustus."

"Excellent," Wilhelmus spoke up, reentering the conversation. 'The


Western provinces are still wavering, and it may well become imperative
for the Army of Germania to intervene in Gaul and Britain to… assure an
orderly transition. Naturally, we hope that none of our subjects will be
harmed any more than necessary. In fact—" he paused momentarily and
sought for just the right phrase "—I feel their pain. Nevertheless, any
disturbances that might arise would probably work even greater harm, so
it is our Christian duty to maintain order in this difficult period. But at
the same time…"

Hilaria's schooled smile had begun to resemble a rictus. "Run along,


Wilhelmus," she got out through gritted teeth. The Lord of the World
complied with visible relief, exiting by the same door the servant girl had
used. Hilaria's eyes followed him with an expression that was no more
venomous than usual. She doesn't hate him, except to the extent that she
hates everyone, Nicoles reflected. Indeed, in many ways it was a marriage
made in heaven. She, so eaten away by the lust for power that nothing else
was left inside her, had always egged him on to rise higher and higher up
the ladder of office; which suited him well enough, if only for the access to
women that came with exalted status.

"Now, Nicoles," she said briskly, "given our inability to locate Ecdicius
and his family since those stupid thugs failed to kill them, and the
persistent rumors that he is in Italy or en route there, it is necessary that
we move without delay to stamp out any possible spark of rebellion in the
West. The armies of the East will be concentrated at Sirmium and then
move to secure Italy. In the meantime, I want you to go to Germania and
meet with Kai personally."

"Germania, Augusta?" Nicoles squeaked in horror.

"Germania," she repeated with a malice that was as habitual as her


husbands compulsive equivocation. "You must impress upon him the
importance of acting with total ruthlessness in pacifying the West. We are
confident that, with your well-known powers of eloquence and
persuasiveness, you will be able to make these matters clear to him—in
spite of…" She let the sentence fall off into a well of innuendo.

In spite of being a eunuch, Nicoles thought behind the seamless mask


of his face. Why don't you come out and say it, you demented bitch? "But
Augusta," he said aloud, "surely the word of a fellow military man would
carry more weight with the general!"

"Unfortunately, we cannot be certain of the… enthusiasm of most


professional officers for the Augustus. Many of them are still troubled by
his youthful military record. On the other hand, your absolute
commitment to us is unquestionable." She left the reason unsaid: having
been deeply involved in the plot, he now lived or died on Wilhelmus'
sufferance—meaning Hilarias.

"Afterwards," she resumed, "you will accompany Kai and make sure he
remembers that his duty to the Augustus supersedes any loyalty he may
feel toward his old comrades-in-arms in the Western provinces. Naturally,
Kai himself—along with the Britons under his command— should
attend to Gaul and leave Britain to a subordinate." Nicoles nodded; this
was standard imperial practice. "Also, I understand that you and the
Master of the Offices have been making arrangements to employ
barbarian auxiliaries."

"Yes, Augusta." Nicoles, knowing the matter was closed, had resigned
himself to the hardships of the Germanian forests. "Our agents have been
active among the savages of Hibernia. It should be possible to arrange an
invasion of Britain from that direction to coincide with our own landing
there. You may rest assured that that island, and Gaul, will be devastated
beyond any hope of mounting a successful defiance of your Lord's divinely
appointed authority. And any other potential rebels should be deterred by
the slaughter there."

For once, Hilarias smile was one of unaffected happiness. There was,
Nicoles thought, something oddly pure about it.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
They rode north along the Via Ostiensis past the Basilica of Saint
Paul-without-the-Walls toward Rome, and the word of their coming sped
ahead of diem. By the time they passed through the gateway in an angle of
the Wall of Aurelian, in the shadow of the Pyramid of Cestius to the left, a
large crowd had gathered to greet the Pope who seemed to have returned
to them from the dead, and to get what was for most of them their first
sight of Ecdicius, who was as much a hero here as he was throughout the
West.

They proceeded north through the cheering multitudes. Sidonius would


eventually resume residence at the Lateran Palace, where the popes had
dwelled since Constantine had presented it to Miltiades. But first they
would proceed directly to the Arch of Constantine, where Ecdicius would
dramatically reveal the treachery from which he had escaped, the local
troops would proclaim him Augustus in a spontaneous display
(prearranged via courier before they'd left Ostia), and Sidonius would give
his blessing. Later would come the opening shots in the salvo of
anathemas Sidonius would hurl in the direction of Constantinople.

Sarnac, riding some distance behind the men of the hour, contented
himself with sightseeing. Presently the titanic mass of the Circus Maximus
loomed up ahead and to their left. Beyond and above rose the awesome
imperial edifices of the Palatine Hill, which had given its name to all
palaces.

As they rounded the eastern end of the Circus, he could glimpse the
Colosseum far ahead. Everywhere was dense cityscape above which
towered the teeming insulae or apartment blocks that housed the
deafening mobs lining the streets.

"I hadn't expected Rome to be like this," he observed to Tylar. "Didn't


the Vandals do a job on this place in 455? Has the Restorer put it back on
its feet in the last decade?"

"He's done some rebuilding," came Tylar's voice inside his head. "But
even in our history, the city recovered promptly from the Vandal sack, as
Sidonius' letters from the 460s attest. It's sheer romanticism to think
Rome went directly from classical grandeur to picturesque ruins in 455.
The chariot races still draw capacity crowds over there." Tylar covertly
indicated the Circus Maximus. "What really wrecked Rome in our
timeline was the endless sixth-century war of siege and counter-siege as
Justinian's generals tried to reconquer Italy from the Ostrogoths."

As though in confirmation of the time travelers words, the Colosseum


rose before them to the right, still in good repair and not overtaken by its
medieval fate (in Sarnac's world) of serving as a rock quarry and as a
ready made fortress for the local mafiosi. The gladiatorial games had
passed into history as the empire had turned Christian, but the
amphitheater still hosted wild beast shows. Then they were at the Arch of
Constantine, where the city's garrison stood at attention. Ecdicius spurred
his horse forward and the cheering rose to a crescendo.

The fortress stood on a crag overlooking the Wesser, hugely timbered


above a pedestal-like foundation of local stone, looming over this darkly
forested land like the power of Rome which it represented. For this was
the headquarters of the Army of Germania, as new and rough-hewn as the
province itself, as elementally strong as the army which was now putting
itself on display in the level area at the foot of the crag for the emperors
chamberlain.

The river barge grounded and, in comical contrast to the austere


martial setting, the chamberlain's litter made its wobbly way ashore on
the shoulders of bearers who seemed only too aware that every one of the
thousands of waiting troops were silently praying for them to drop their
burden into the shallows. But they didn't. Kai muttered his
disappointment under his breath as he stepped forward.

The chamberlain Nicoles got unsteadily out of the litter, rouge running
and carefully curled hair plastered to his head, fanning himself theatrically
against the summer heat. Despite all that, he didn't really fit Kai's image
of a eunuch; though visibly soft, he wasn't obese as they generally became
after years of compensatory gluttony. Well, he thought, I know men who
can eat like pigs and not get fat. So why not a half-man as well?

He got through his greeting to the chamberlain, who acknowledged in


his pleasant voice. That, at least, was typical of eunuchs. As Kai knew from
his mercifully brief time in Constantinople, they seldom spoke in the
high-pitched screech of popular imagination. And those in high court
positions had to be especially careful to make themselves personally
agreeable; they cultivated pleasing voices just as they stayed scrupulously
diapered.

"I trust your journey was pleasant, Chamberlain," Kai said after the
formalities were over. He knew damned well it hadn't been, and wasn't
particularly pleased with himself for his minor malice. It wasn't usual for
him—but things had ceased to be usual on the day the news of the
Pan-Tarkan's death had arrived.

Nicoles fanned even more energetically, flinching from the ubiquitous


insects. "Ah, my dear general, the journey has been enlightening if nothing
else. I'd imagined Germania to be a land of snow and ice and freezing
winds!"

"Had you come in the winter, Chamberlain, that's exactly how you
would have found it." And I wish to God you had! "But this is unusually
hot even for a summer afternoon. Why don't we proceed to the fort? At
least the insects aren't as bad as they are down here by the river."

"But of course." Nicoles gazed up at the brooding walls. Then his eyes
swept around, surveying the massed troops. Kai had been warned that this
was no fool.

Nicoles' eyes ran over the ranks of helmeted heavy infantry with their
large shields and short ring-mail loricae hamata. He also observed the
unarmored javelin-men and archers. Some of the latter carried the oddly
long bows that had appeared in Artorius' army after his rebel-quelling
interlude in western Britain following the Battle of Bourges in 470. Many
of the units, he knew, drew their recruits from the local population. But
there were also Isaurians from Asia Minor, Franks and Gauls from the
other side of the Rhine, and not a few Britons. And the formation his eyes
finally settled on was predominantly British.

Sitting astride the horses that had been specially bred to carry heavy
cavalry, the Artoriani seemed to embody irresistible force at rest. The
history of the last three decades said the impression was not a false one.
Artorius had built on the foundation of the Sarmatian cataphractarii
from whom he was partly descended to create a force of armored shock
cavalry that knew no equal, at just the time when such cavalry was coming
to dominate the battlefield. Nicoles surveyed the uniformly red cloaks, the
scale armor, the long lances (except for the minority of specialist mounted
javelin-throwers), and the blood-red dragon standard that barely stirred
in this stifling stillness; and he knew he was looking at the instrument
which, wielded in precisely the right way at precisely the right time, had
won Artorius the purple.

"Most impressive, General," he said to Kai. "But now, I believe I'll avail
myself of your hospitality."
***

Kai let the scroll close with a faint snap. He had learned to read late in
life, but what he had just read left no room for ambiguity as to its
meaning. Wilhelmus couldn't possibly have dictated it.

He raised his eyes to Nicoles. After the initial reception and dinner,
they had retired to his office and the chamberlain had presented his
credentials and the commands of Wilhelmus Augustus—a combination of
name and title on which Kai still gagged. That craven sack of gonads and
blubber, planting his fat bottom on the throne of Artorius! Of course he
said nothing, for to do so would have been at least as much as his life was
worth. But he might as well have shouted it for all his feelings were
concealed from Nicoles.

Gazing blandly from across the table, the chamberlain saw a man in his
forties, starting to put on a little weight but still mostly muscle. His hair
and beard were coppery, but the latter—closely trimmed as was generally
the case with men who had to wear the standard cavalry helmet with its
adjustable cheek-pieces—was now shot through with gray, which was
advancing inexorably up his temples. His ruddy, open face could hardly
have been more Celtic-looking; those features held not a memory of the
Sarmarian horsemen from whom he was remotely descended.

"Well, Chamberlain," he finally said, "my instructions are clear enough.


And I begin to understand why you came here immediately after entering
the province, before calling on the governor."

"Officially, General," Nicoles said ingratiatingly, "the reason is that the


governor is headquartered further west, on the Rhine, so my route
brought me here first. But I must confess that the geography was most
fortuitous from my standpoint. The governor need not be concerned. Your
army is now under direct imperial direction." He delicately indicated the
scroll that Kai had allowed to fall to the tabletop. "I am here to help
resolve any difficulties that may arise in interpreting the commands of the
Augustus. You may speak quite frankly, putting any questions or concerns
to me that you wish."

Kai felt a tug of conflicting emotions as his distrust of the


chamberlain's word warred with his nature, which inclined him to accept
any invitation to openness. "Well," he began cautiously, "my first concern
is the effect these orders will have on the security of Germania. After all,
I'm being ordered to strip the garrisons of the Elbe of their best troops
and take them into Gaul and Britain. How will the tribes to the east
react?"

"The Augustus has been given to understand that the Elbe is quiet at
present, thanks to your glorious victories."

Spoken like a true courtier, Kai sneered inwardly. But he couldn't deny
that it was basically true. Those Saxons, Thuringians and Rugians who
hadn't submitted had been pushed east, where they were now reclaiming
their old lands between the Elbe and the Oder from the Slavs who had
filled the vacuum when the Teutons had moved west. They wouldn't make
trouble, at least not immediately.

"All well and good," he said aloud, "but there may be other difficulties."
His need to be frank overcame his caution. "Chamberlain, many of my
officers and men are confused… and I share their confusion. We were all
loyal to Artorius, and were prepared to be loyal to his chosen successor.
Where is he now?"
Nicoles allowed himself a slight smile. This would sound good at Kai's
treason trial. Not that such a trial would occur for another year or two.
Right now, they needed this guileless simpleton to break the Wests
resistance. Afterwards, as the Augusta consolidated her power, weeding
out everyone linked with the previous reign… "As yet, General, we can't be
certain. There are, however, unconfirmed reports that he's surfaced in
Italy. This is why it is imperative that the Army of Germania, led by an
officer of your undoubted loyalty, move without delay to secure the West
and forestall any attempt at usurpation by the traitor who conspired
against his adoptive father, Artorius Augustus of revered memory."

"Yes, yes, I know. The courier brought word that he'd done that." Kai's
face was like a theatrical mask representing inner agony. "But it's hard for
those of us who knew him to believe it. And why would he have wanted to?
The Pan-Tarkan was dying! All Ecdicius had to do was wait, and all
would've been his."

"Perhaps, General, the late Artorius Augustus wasn't dying quite fast
enough for Ecdicius." Kai's head jerked up and his green eyes went wide.
Nicoles nodded gravely. "Yes. We have reason to suspect that he may have
hastened the end by poison. Does not his flight from Constantinople fairly
shout his guilt?"

Nicoles fell silent, shrewdly leaving Kai alone with his own torment.

Could it be possible? Ecdicius? Well, ambition does strange things to


men; I've seen it. Besides, when all's said and done the fact remains that
he is a Gaul.

And do I really have any choice? With the Pan-Tarkan dead and his
heir vanished, all that's left to me is the restored empire that we fought
for, that he wanted. If I don't stay loyal to that, then what will my life
have meant?

"Well, Chamberlain," he finally said, "I'll do my best to allay my officers'


misgivings. It may not be easy, considering… Well, you asked me to be
frank. And the fact is, the new Augustus isn't too highly regarded by the
army."

Nicoles smiled again. Better and better! Really, the man was like a
child—he didn't even have to be maneuvered into incriminating himself.
He formed an expression that counterfeited sincerity. "Actually, that
unfortunate business in Wilhelmus' youth has been widely
misrepresented. Remember, he was a student then, at the university
Artorius Augustus had recently founded." Kai remembered the
Pan-Tarkan's enthusiasm for the project, early in his reign. Theodosius I
had closed the old University of Athens for its pagan associations, so
Artorius had set out to create a Christian successor, dedicating a new
university on the island of Rhodes. "So," Nicoles went on, "he had a
legitimate reason for not taking up his family's traditional military calling,
being at the time a Rhodes scholar. Also, I assure you he was motivated
not by fear for his personal safety but by genuine misgivings about the
wisdom and righteousness of the war we were waging with Persia then.
So, you see, far from showing cowardice he displayed genuine moral
courage."

Well, Kai reflected, I thought I'd heard all the forms human hypocrisy
can take! At least it's harmless, for no one could ever he taken in by such
transparent self-justification. Could they? But a resurgent caution made
him hold his tongue. "No doubt, Chamberlain, no doubt. But for now, lets
turn to the actual plan. I see that we're commanded to secure Britain at
the same time as Gaul."

"Rest assured, General, that the Augustus does not require from you or
your British troops any such display of loyalty as an invasion of your native
country. Indeed, I am commanded to suggest that the securing of Britain
would best be left to a trusted subordinate of non-British origin,
commanding troops from other areas of the empire. Your loyalty is, of
course, beyond question. But some of your British troops might experience
certain… emotional conflicts which would prevent them from proceeding
with the full rigor which law and religion alike prescribe for subjects who
rebel against their rightful emperor."

Kai made no reply. Instead, he listened to a little voice he didn't want to


near: Is this what we fought for?

"Also," Nicoles went on, "I am in a position to assure you that your
forces' landing in Britain will have the advantage of coinciding with
incursions from other quarters into that notoriously rebellious island."

"What?" Kai glared at him. "Barbarians, you mean?"

"Of course." Nicoles was all blandness. "There are innumerable


precedents for hiring barbarians, not just to fight their fellow barbarians
but also to chastise disobedient provincials."

"So where have the agents of the Master of the Offices been nosing
about?" Kai inquired, naming the powerful official who controlled, among
much else, the secret service.

"Hibernia, General. I am assured that a large-scale raid by the savages


there can be arranged. Also…" Nicoles hesitated, and for the first time Kai
thought to detect a crack in his courtier's facade, through which could be
glimpsed the terrors of a thousand generations of ancestors who had stood
naked to forces beyond their understanding. "The agents have been in
contact with a tribe in the southwest of that island called the Formorians.
In exchange for an additional subsidy, they have undertaken to supply a
giant one-eyed monster!"

"What?" Kai barked laughter. "Oh, come, Chamberlain! Don't tell me


the agent has been listening to some smooth-talking tribal chieftain.
They've probably got some very big, very ugly old warrior who lost an eye
in battle long ago and now frightens the local children!"

"Ordinarily, General, I'd be the first to agree with you. Only… I happen
to know the agent in question. He wouldn't be taken in by some village
bogeyman! I've read his report myself, and I wouldn't have believed it
possible that he could have written such a document. I can only suppose
that we're dealing with something beyond common understanding."

For a space, they sat in silence, their differences momentarily dwarfed


by their common flesh-prickling fear in the face of the great darkness
beyond their world's little campfire of the known. Nicoles finally shattered
the brittle quiet with a nervous laugh.

"At any rate, General, I'm absolutely convinced of this: anything that
can unnerve this agent can certainly terrify the Britons! We don't need the
powers of darkness; a normal barbarian ravaging should suffice to remind
these provincials where their rightful loyalty lies!"

Kai said nothing. He was still asking himself the same unanswerable
question.

Sarnac leaned on the balustrade of the artificial terrace at the


northeast corner of the Palatine Hill, looking out over the Forum. In the
future of his timeline when the Palatine had become a place of romantic
gardens, grottoes and archaeological digs, the Barberini Vineyards would
cover this monumental architectural crag. Here and now, it still supported
the Temple of the Deified Emperors (he couldn't remember the new name
the Christians had assigned to it) and afforded the stunning view of Rome
he'd been enjoying. He turned to look at the temple, and reflected that it
was looking somewhat run-down; it had obviously had a low priority in
the Restorer's program of rebuilding and repairing the imperial
residences. Beyond it rose the palaces themselves like range upon range of
mountainous architectural overload beneath whose weight it seemed the
Palatine must surely sink into the Earth's crust.

He continued his turning motion and saw an approaching figure. "You


sightseeing too?" he called out. "I'd have thought this was all old hat to
you."

"Actually," Artorius admitted, "it's as new to me as it is to you. I never


saw Rome in my own century. In fact, my counterpart didn't either."

"Huh? Wasn't he Augustus of the West for a few years before the civil
war with Zeno?" ,

"Oh, yes. But the imperial residence was at Ravenna. He never got
around to visiting Rome. Later, after the reunification, he ordered the
refurbishing of these palaces— which, in our history, Theodoric the
Ostrogoth did in the early sixth century. Wouldn't do to have the one-time
imperial palace become dilapidated, however little it's used now. So
Ecdicius at least has tip-top quarters!"

"I didn't realize you had so much in-depth knowledge about the
Restorers reign."

"I've been making it my business to acquire it. I talked to Koreel, who


got to know him better while we were in Britain and in stasis. And lately
I've been picking Sidonius' memories. You see, I wanted to learn just
exactly how he won his way to the sole emperorship. I think I've gotten a
pretty good idea by now—and it may stand you in good stead in Gaul."

"Gaul? Am I going there?"

"I think you can count on it." The man who bestrode legend grinned,
took a final look around, then grasped Sarnac's shoulder. "Come on. It's
time for our meeting with Ecdicius. Can't stand here taking in the scenery
all day, you know!"

They walked south past the temple and entered the Area Palatina, the
only open space left on this hill whose every cranny was filled with
temples, residences, baths and warehouses. To the right were the palace
edifices of early emperors. But ahead was the truly colossal labyrinth of
colonnaded halls, sunken gardens, cloistered peristyles and polychrome
marble walls raised by Domitian, who'd been too paranoid to enjoy it.
Looking up at the raised portico which fronted the palace's entire looming
facade, Sarnac was suddenly reminded of the Vatican Palaces of his own
era's Rome, so magnificent inside and yet jammed together in such
disharmonious juxtaposition that their exteriors could hardly even be
glimpsed, much less comprehended.

They bypassed the official palace and passed through the private
quarters—if the term could be applied to such an architectural
wonderland, organized around upper-and lower-level peristyles—to the
stadium Domitian had insisted upon. It was almost five hundred feet long,
surrounded by double-level porticoes. Here, Tylar had informed them,
Ecdicius had wanted to meet. And he was just dismounting from his horse
after his daily exercise—he clearly considered the stadium to represent the
supreme inspiration of Domitians architects—as they arrived. Tylar and
Andreas were waiting in the shade of the porticoes.

"Ah," Tylar greeted them, "you're just in time. I've gotten word from
Koreel that the Army of Germania has already started to move. Of course,
it will still be making its way through Germania now." Sarnac, child of an
interstellar society whose messages had to be carried by ship, knew all
about information lags over long distances; he was less frustrated by this
era's state of communications than his twentieth-century ancestors would
have been. Koreel could communicate instantaneously with Tylar, but the
news he had available to communicate was limited to what couriers had
brought to Constantinople. "Of course, we can't tell Ecdicius this. But he
already knows that the command to invade Gaul was sent by Wilhelmus…"

"Wilhelmus!" Ecdicius had only heard the last word as he approached,


toweling his head free of sweat, and he snorted in derision. "I still can't get
used to the idea of him as emperor. He's such a… a…" Words failed him,
and Sarnac restrained himself from suggesting nebbish, knowing he'd get
a blank stare of incomprehension for his pains. "Let's get out of the heat,"
Ecdicius continued, and led the way into the passageway that led, via
stairway, up to the lower peristyle of the private residence. There they
reemerged into a sunlight ameliorated by shade trees. Sidonius waited for
them.

"Let's get right to the point," Ecdicius said, pacing in his lionish way.
"Unless Kai tells the emperor—and her husband!—to go to hell, which he
almost certainly won't, Gaul is looking at an invasion. Now, I think the
West is quiet enough that my presence here isn't required." They all
nodded. Spain and Mauretania had been informed of the plot against
Ecdicius that had brought Wilhelmus to the throne, and of Sidonius'
excommunication of the plotters. Those provinces had already weighed in
with their support of Ecdicius' claim. "So I think it best that I go to Gaul."

"I think that's wise, Augustus," Tylar nodded. "You can raise your
native country against invaders as no one else can."

"Still," Sidonius said worriedly, "Italy isn't safe either. Have we not
heard rumors of a major mobilization in Illyricum?"

"Nevertheless, Your Holiness," Artorius spoke up, "the greatest threat is


coming out of Germania into Gaul. And Ecdicius is uniquely able to meet
it there. I'll do all I can to help organize the defense of Italy—I have some
ideas on the subject. Of course I'll stay behind the scenes, in my
'Gerontius' identity, as an obscure kinsman of the Restorer. And you can
inspire the people here to rise in the country's defense against an invader
behind whom stand heresy and eternal damnation." Sidonius nodded
slowly, and Sarnac reminded himself that this elderly, overweight cleric
was the same man as that Bishop of Clermont who had, in the other
history, led his flock in withstanding repeated Visigothic sieges in the
name of a dying empire, with no outside help save Ecdicius and his merry
men.

"I'll also remain in Italy, Your Holiness," Tylar added, "to lend whatever
aid and counsel I can."

Ecdicius frowned. "I'd hoped to have you with me in Gaul, Tertullian. I


don't pretend to understand everything about you… Hell, anything about
you! But I know you have sources of knowledge denied to most of us."

"I fear, Augustus, that I'd only slow you down on your journey—I'm not
as young as I once was. Instead, if you wish, I'll send Bedwyr and
Andronicus to accompany you."
Sarnac caught Andreas' stricken look. Ecdicius would naturally leave
his family in the relative safety of Rome when he took to the field. But the
young transtemporal explorer held his tongue.

Ecdicius smiled. He'd never be accused of handsomeness, but that


smile transfigured his face. He placed a hand on Sarnac's right shoulder
and another on Andreas' left. "Good! Tertullian, no counsel you could give
me could be as great a boon as the companions you're placing at my side!
Bedwyr, I understand you knew Kai once."

"I did, Augustus." Sarnac trotted out his story of having been a youth at
the Battle of Angers, and Ecdicius nodded.

"Well, I fought by his side at Bourges and Pavia and on to


Constantinople. It doesn't sit well to be fighting against him now, I can tell
you. But between us, maybe we can read his thoughts and foresee his
plans." Ecdicius gave Sarnac's shoulder a final squeeze. "It's settled, then.
We'll be leaving as soon as arrangements can be made. And now, if you'll
all excuse me, His Holiness and I have business before he returns to the
Lateran." He and Sidonius departed, and Tylar restrained Sarnac with a
light touch to his sleeve.

"I'll have a number of items for you to take along. But the most
important is this." He handed Sarnac what appeared to be a long dagger
or short sword.

"Oho! I remember this thing. But are you going to teach me how you
get it to do its tricks?"

"I'm afraid that would call for a good deal of background orientation
which you have no time to acquire. This is a special model, designed to be
useable by—ahem!—one of your background."

"Must have taken some doing," Sarnac deadpanned.

"The key," Tylar went on, oblivious to sarcasm, "is what appears to be a
kind of bolt here at the pommel. Twist it clockwise, and the device
reconfigures into a communicator." He didn't demonstrate, in case
someone should intrude on them. "It has sufficient range to reach me here
in Italy—and, incidentally, Tiraena in Britain. As you know, it can trigger
the short-range implants into signaling for attention."
This got Sarnac's undivided attention. He and Tiraena would no longer
be limited to second-hand messages relayed through Tylar. "I guess she's
permanently out of stasis by now?" he asked, attempting offhandedness.

"Oh, yes—and hearing some disturbing rumors." Tylar himself looked


disturbed, which was so rare an occurrence as to be alarming. But the
time traveler proceeded before he could ask any questions.

"As I say, there's more. But we'll have time to go into that before your
departure. What's most important just now is how you're going to deal
with the military threat to Gaul. In these matters I will, of course, defer to
Artorius."

The former High King seated himself on a marble bench, and they all
followed suit. "Remember, Robert, that I mentioned I've been making a
study of my counterpart's reign? I wanted to pinpoint what gave him his
military edge in the post-470 period."

"I've wondered about that myself. I know how good you… er, he was.
And having served with the Artoriani, I know how good they were. But he
was up against some top-flight opposition in Italy and later in the Eastern
Empire, including lots of professional heavy cavalry."

"Ah, but before that—just after the diverging of the timelines and his
defeat of the Visigoths at Bourges—he was called back to Britain to put
down raiders from the western region known to you as Wales. Naturally,
he recruited among the friendly tribes there; and on his return to the
continent, with some of those recruits in tow, it was widely noted that his
army's archery had improved dramatically. Does this suggest anything to
you?"

"No," Sarnac replied, clueless. "Oh, sure, I remember how mediocre the
archery was at Bourg-de-Deols. In fact, it had nowhere to go but up! But I
don't see the connection between an improvement and the Restorer's
rebel-bashing in Wales."

"Perhaps, Robert," Tylar prompted, "you're not aware that the English
longbowmen of our history's Middle Ages—and their weapon—came from
the Welsh marches."

Sarnac started to open his mouth, then closed it and was silent for a
space. "Uh, but didn't that come a whole lot later than this?" he finally
asked.

"To be sure," Tylar nodded "But it's fallacious to suppose that the
English longbow suddenly appeared, in the hands of men who were
experts in its use, just in time for Crecy and Agincourt. There was, I
believe, a medieval adage which held: To train a bowman, begin by
training his grandfather.'"

"Still," Artorius said to Sarnac, "you're right up to a point. We're not


talking about the fully developed archery that flattened the
fourteenth-century French chivalry. But that archery built on a very old
tradition in parts of Wales. We now know just how old. They're using
bows almost six feet long. And they've learned to draw them to the cheek,
not to the chest." He saw Sarnac's expression and nodded. "The Restorer
encountered this kind of archery in 470 and" —a self-deprecating
grimace— "immediately saw its possibilities. He developed tactics for
employing it in conjunction with his heavy shock cavalry…"

"… which was already pretty much in a class by itself," Sarnac finished
for him. "Jesus Christ! Now I can see why the Restorer went through
Europe like beans through a Gringo! The Artoriani, supported by archers
who know what they're doing, is not something I'd want to see from the
receiving end!

"But you're going to see it, Robert," Tylar said quietly. "You and
Ecdicius. Your old comrade-in-arms Kai is about to lead the army you've
just described into Gaul. And you're going to have to stop it."

After a while, Sarnac became aware that his mouth was open. He
closed it, swallowed, and decided to speak calmly and reasonably. That,
he'd heard somewhere, was the way to deal with a lunatic. "Tylar, I don't
suppose it would do any good to ask if I can use high-tech stuff."

"Absolutely not! As I've repeatedly explained…"

"Okay. Okay." Remember, calmly and reasonably! Screaming and


jumping up and down would probably be counterproductive. "So my job
is to stop what's currently the best army on this planet, without any
technological edge. Fine. I'm completely open to suggestions." A slight
pause. "Uh… you do have suggestions, don't you?"

"Actually," Artorius said, "I do have one. It's something readily


available to Ecdicius. In fact, it's so obvious that I wonder why I never
thought of it, back when…" He gave a vague you-know-what-I-mean
gesture. "What I want you to propose to Ecdicius is…"
CHAPTER TWELVE
They were descending from the high pass, with the Alps looming
behind them, when they heard the commotion from the baggage train.

"What now?" Ecdicius muttered, signaling a halt and turning his


horses head around. Sarnac and Andreas followed him, as did the
standard bearer, and they rode back uphill alongside the column with the
red dragon standard streaming in the brisk upland air.

They hadn't been able to bring many troops from Italy— Gaul would
have to defend itself with its own resources— but there were enough to
discourage the remaining bandit gangs in the Alpine passes. (Twenty
years earlier, Ecdicius would have had to pay them tribute for safe
passage.) Behind the soldiers were the pack animals laden with
good-quality weapons and armor as well as their own provisions. Here an
altercation was underway, with several of the drovers yelling and
gesticulating with Italian fervor at one of the others, a boy. As they neared
the scene, one of the men grabbed the youth by an arm.

"Hold!" Ecdicius shouted. "What is this?"

The boy twisted free and whirled to face them… and Sarnac saw that
she wasn't a boy. It took him another instant to recognize her, behind the
smudged face and hacked-off hair. By then, Ecdicius' face was a mask of
fury, and Andreas' one of joy.

"Julia!" Ecdicius looked like he was going to have a stroke. "What…


what… ?"

"I was going to tell you tonight, when we came to our first halt in Gaul,
father." She faced Ecdicius unflinchingly. "Don't worry about mother—I
left a letter telling her where I am."

"But, but… how… ?"

The chief drover looked acutely miserable. "He… er, she joined us at the
last minute in Rome, Augustus. She's pretty much kept to herself the
whole way, and it wasn't till now that any of us had any idea. So nothing
has… well, you know, happened, if you take my meaning…"

"It's true, father. Don't blame these men; they knew nothing. It was all
my idea." All at once her facade began to crumble, and she looked even
younger than her years. "I couldn't stay behind in Rome and do nothing,
father! And I knew you'd say no if I asked you…"

"That's God's own truth!" Ecdicius leaned forward on his saddle-bow


and glared down at her. "And Rome is exactly where you're going, young
lady! I'm sending you back at once!"

Her lower lip trembled a little, but she looked her father straight in the
eye. Sarnac had never noticed before how much like him she was. His beak
was, in her, softened into a gentle aquiline curve, and she had her mothers
lighter complexion and chestnut hair. But for sheer determination, there
was little to choose between in those two faces.

"How, father?' she asked. "You can't send enough men back to keep me
safe from the bandits in the mountains."

"It's true, Augustus," Andreas put in helpfully. "She's safer with us."

Ecdicius seemed about to explode, but he gradually subsided. "Very


well," he grated. "You can come with us, until—and only until—I can find
some proper lodging for you. In the meantime, now that everyone knows
you're not a boy…" He gestured vaguely in Andreas' direction.
"Andronicus, I want you to guard her, and try to keep her out of trouble!"

"I'll do my best, Augustus," Andreas replied, all dutiful resolve to carry


out his orders, however distasteful. He looked like a Roman recruiting
poster would have, if they'd used them. Sarnac somehow managed not to
burst out laughing.

"And now," Ecdicius continued grimly, "let's proceed. We've wasted


enough time as it is." As he turned his horse around, he gave Julia a final
glare—or what was intended to be a glare but fooled no one. Then he
shook his head. "Where you get your stubbornness and boldness from is
beyond my comprehension!"

Sarnac continued to keep a straight face, nearly rupturing himself in


the process.
A group of riders came out from the Arvernian villa to meet them.
Ecdicius shouted a greeting to their leader and spurred his horse forward.
Sarnac followed, urging his horse into a gallop.

He'd done a little riding in his youth, which combined with the trained
reflexes conferred by Tylar's implants to make him an above-average
horseman of this era. He was, in fact, just good enough to recognize
greatness when he saw it, as he did when Ecdicius mounted a horse and
they became a single organism with a single will. There were, he reflected,
a few sights in the world that were in a special class by themselves. A
clipper ship running before the wind under full sail. A cheetah building up
to full speed as it pursued an antelope. A stooping hawk. Ecdicius on
horseback.

They met the party from the villa, and its leader dismounted and
saluted. "Ave, Augustus."

Ecdicius flung himself from the saddle and embraced the man. "Ah,
enough of titles, Basileus! It's been too long." He held Basileus at arm's
length and examined him with mock disapproval. "You've gone to fat since
we rode together against the Visigoths! You must breed strong horses in
these parts, to find one that can carry you!"

Basileus—about Ecdicius' age, and not noticeably overweight—grinned


amid the general laughter. "You'll find I can still ride, Ecdicius. So can all
of us. I've sent word to others of the old Brotherhood, and several are on
their way here now. We'll ride again, this time for the rightful heir of
Artorius Augustus!" His men broke into a cheer, even the younger ones,
who knew Ecdicius only from their elders' stories.

"Splendid! We've been spreading the word that we're all to rendezvous
at Clermont next month.It'll be a reunion of the Brotherhood, Basileus."

They had first passed through the Burgundian lands and made sure of
the allegiance of those Roman allies. Then they had moved on into the
Auvergne, stopping at the estates of Ecdicius' fellow cavaliers whom he'd
led to the victory of Bourges, not on a hopeless exercise in gallantry as in
Sarnac's history. They were mostly men in their late forties like the new
Augustus of the West, but Basileus was right: they could still ride like
centaurs. And the response had been the same everywhere. Clearly,
Ecdicius would be able to throw limitless gallantry and elan at the
hardbitten professionalism of Kai's veterans. Sarnac wondered if it would
be enough.

Ecdicius remounted, using the stirrups Artorius and his men had
inherited from that Sarmatian lump in the British melting-pot from
which they were descended. In Sarnac's history they had been lost sight of
after Artorius' downfall, vanishing from Europe until reintroduced by the
Avars a century later. Here, of course, they were part of the standard
heavy cavalry kit by now. So as far as cavalry technique went, it would be a
wash between them and Kai.

Kai. The image of his onetime friend, soon to be his enemy, came
crowding in. Does this Kai remember me at all? If he does, it's probably
as a damned deserter! He must have wondered what became of Bedwyr
and his mysterious employer Tertullian shortly before the Battle of
Bourges.

He hauled his mind back to this late-summer day in Gaul, to this field
he was riding across at Ecdicius' side. The rest of their party had joined
them, and as they rode toward the villa Ecdicius was undergoing the
embarrassment of introducing his daughter to Basileus. It wasn't as bad
as it had been their first few stops; they'd gotten her some socially
acceptable clothes, and her hair was growing back.

Ecdicius turned to him and smiled. "Look at them, Bedwyr," he said,


swinging his arm in a circle to indicate Basileus and his retainers. "Have
you ever seen such a crew of madmen? Kai will know he's been in a fight!"
Then he turned serious, and seemed to echo Sarnacs earlier thoughts.
"What courage and love of country can do, we'll do. But I can't stop
thinking of what we're going to have to face. If it were just cavalry against
cavalry, I'd face it willingly. But Kai's a master at using those damned
longbowmen of his in conjunction with his cavalry. They can break up a
formation, blunt a countercharge…"

Now's as good a time as any, Sarnac decided. "Augustus, it seems to


me that we must match him with archery of our own."

Ecdicius' brows drew together. "But how, Bedwyr? We can't just copy
the idea of longer bows; it takes time to learn to use them properly. Those
men Artorius brought back from western Britain had been doing it since
they were boys! You can't duplicate that kind of skill overnight."

"True, Augustus; it takes time to train a longbowman. But…" He turned


toward one of Basileus' men, who looked like he was just back from
hunting, and pointed at that which hung from the saddle-bow. "It doesn't
take long to learn how to use one of those, does it?"

"Why of course not." Ecdicius looked blank. "Anybody can learn to use
a crossbow; there's little skill to it, you sight along it and pull on the
handle. Every lad in Gaul uses them for shooting game. But what's that got
to do with… ?

Artorius had warned Sarnac to expect this. The Romans had had
crossbows for a long time, and they were as popular for hunting as
Ecdicius had indicated, not just for the relative ease of learning how to use
them but also for the fact that you could leave the quarrel nocked
indefinitely while stalking game and be ready to get off a quick shot as
your prey broke cover. But the thought of using them in war had never
occurred to anyone. They were hunting weapons, period. Why? Because
that was what they'd always been. It would have surprised Sarnac before
his previous brush with the fifth century, but now he knew about the
conservatism of preindustrial societies.

"Since so many Gallic men know how to use them, Augustus, or can be
quickly taught to do so, why not form a corps of them to give our men
some missile support? Kai's longbowmen would have the advantage in
range, but as you've said he has only a small number of them. We could
put masses of crossbowmen into the field."

Ecdicius' expression had gone from inability to understand what


Sarnac was talking about to rejection of an obvious absurdity, and then to
dawning interest. "Massed crossbows in battle," he finally said, very
slowly, and shook his head. "But nobody ever…" He trailed to a halt and
thought for another moment. Then, with one of the dizzyingly abrupt
movements that typified him, he leaned over in his saddle toward the man
with the crossbow and asked to see it. Then he inspected the weapon in
silence. When he spoke again his voice was matter-of-fact. "What about
the disparity in rates of fire? A trained longbowman can release arrows a
lot faster than any crossbowman can get off quarrels."

Sarnac released a quiet breath of relief. It was going more smoothly


than he'd dared hope. But, then, this was Ecdicius. "I have an idea on that,
Augustus. Perhaps you'll let me demonstrate it later." Actually, it wasn't
his idea.
The semi-historical Sun Pin had thought of it eight centuries before,
when the newly invented crossbow was coming to dominate the
battlefields of the Warring States, and Tylar had passed it on. (Sarnac had
once rhetorically asked his old friend Liu Natalya if the Chinese had
invented everything. She'd pretended to think about it for a decent
interval before nodding judiciously.)

He examined the weapon. It was nothing like the steel arbalests of his
history's Late Medieval Europe. Those things were designed to pierce the
high-quality plate armor of their own era; here and now, that kind of
steel-smashing power wasn't needed. And, by the same token, it didn't
require any elaborate mechanical gizmos to draw it—and therein lay the
practicality of his third-hand idea for overcoming the problem of its slow
rate of fire. (Nobody in Europe would ever dream up a repeating
crossbow like the Chinese chu-ko-nu, and there was no time to introduce
it.)

They had reached the villa and were dismounting when a dusty courier
rode in from the east. Basileus had a brief colloquy with him, then
gestured to Ecdicius to join them. The three of them talked for a few
moments, then Ecdicius returned to where Sarnac waited. His face really
was hopelessly expressive; it told Sarnac what the message was before he
even opened his mouth.

"The provincial border guards on the Rhine at Strasbourg report that


the lead elements of the Army of Germania are within sight of the river.
They'll be crossing over soon." Ecdicius' face abruptly transformed itself
with a grin. "Maybe you'd better show me your idea for using crossbows
this very evening!"

The barges passed back and forth in stately lines, depositing their loads
of troops on the Gallic side of the Rhine and then going back to the
eastern bank for more. Kai stood on a bluff overlooking the Gallic bank
and the formations that were taking shape. It would have looked like
chaos to a civilian, but Kai looked it over with a professional's eye and
nodded.

Somewhere nearby, he'd heard, was the field where the Emperor
Julian—a good general, for all his apostasy— had smashed the barbarians
at the Battle of Strasbourg and saved Gaul, over a hundred and thirty
years before. But Kai had no time for sightseeing. He had to deal with a
constant procession of aides with requests from his officers for orders,
clarifications and resolutions of disputes. He kept things in order with half
his mind. The other half was on the riverside village he'd seen. Or what
had once been a village.

He hadn't crossed over with the vanguard; there had been too much
organizational work yet to do on the Germanian side. But one of Nicoles'
troop of officials had. Kai couldn't really blame the officer who'd allowed
himself to be led by the man, who after all claimed to speak with the voice
of the Augustus. But…

He became aware of Nicoles' litter, coming up the path to the bluff. The
bearers set it down, and the chamberlain emerged. "Ah, General! An
inspiring sight, is it not?" Nicoles swept an arm out, indicating the
coalescing army. 'The unstoppable might of Rome, on the march!" He
noticed Kai's expression and reined in his enthusiasm. "I understand that
you had some questions concerning the activities of my underchamberlain
Theophanes."

"I don't recall ever giving him permission to cross over with the first
wave," Kai said stonily.

"Oh I do apologize, general! Doubtless we violated military protocol by


not soliciting your permission. But I felt it was important to get a personal
representative of the Augustus onto Gallic soil without delay. I would have
done it myself, but I'm under instructions from the Augustus—and the
Augusta, whose compassion is exceeded only by her beauty and
wisdom—to avoid exposing myself to undue danger. And Theophanes is an
excellent official, if occasionally prone to overzealousness."

"But… was that necessary?" Kai gestured vaguely in the direction of the
charnel house that had been a riverside village.

"Oh, that." Nicoles made a little moue. "Most distasteful, I agree. But
Theophanes assures me that the villagers displayed insufficient
enthusiasm—indeed, outright surliness—when he raised the image of
Wilhelmus Augustus. They actually offered violence to the image! He felt
that an example should be made. Coming immediately after our entry into
Gaul, it should have a salutary effect Your own officer, I should add, came
to agree; he was, no doubt, looking to the future—and his own career." For
the barest instant, Nicoles' expression slipped, and Kai glimpsed
something other than courtliness in his eyes. "Great changes are coming,
General. Indeed, 'change' is the Augustus' watchword. There are even
those" —an insinuating smile, seeming to say "Oh, aren't we being just
too, too wicked?"— "who feel he uses it to excess." Kai had become used to
this kind of ploy, and declined to rise to the bait. "At any rate," Nicoles
went on, "we must all be prepared to bend with the shifting winds,
General. AH of us."

For a moment they looked at each other in silence, for nothing needed
to be said; they both understood matters perfectly. Then Nicoles spoke
briskly. "I understand your lieutenant Marcellus has completed his
preparations for the landing in Britain."

"Yes. He's assembled all our available shipping at his base, near the
Rhine's mouth, and built all the barges he needs." Kai didn't add that in
the old days the Britons would have smashed the invasion at sea. But with
the Saxons and other sea-raiders conquered and incorporated, the Saxon
Shore Fleet had been allowed to rot away. Marcellus would have an
unopposed voyage, he thought, carefully not trying to define his own
feelings.

"Excellent! If all has gone according to plan, the Irish raiders should
have already begun attacking from the west. So my last correspondence
from our agent there assured me. He also assured me…" Nicoles hesitated
uncharacteristically, and swallowed. "He assures me that the Fomorians
have kept their bargain—in all respects." Kai felt his neck hairs prickle.
"You mean the… ?"

"Yes. By the way, the agent has learned the beings name…"

"Balor, Lady. That's what they call him. I saw him with my own eyes! I
saw him as I lay in a ditch hiding while they passed by. May God strike me
dead if I didn't!"

The Ordovician chieftain sat a the focus of a half-circle of listeners in


the great hall at Cadbury, trembling in the grip of exhaustion and
memory. His skin gleamed with sweat under the flaring torches.

The word had only just come that the Irish raiders, so long held at bay
by the terror of Artorius' name, had crossed over in their leather curraghs
and were spreading terror in Gwynedd. Just behind the news had come
this man, fleeing south from his villages destruction. Now they listened to
him with varying expressions: Gwenhwyvaer's unreadable, Cerdic's
worried, Constantine's scornful, and Tiraena's perplexed as she tried to
recall where she'd heard that name.

"So, fellow," Constantine said condescendingly, "you tell us that the


Irish are led by some gigantic one-eyed man, eh?" Old Cador had died last
year, leaving his son as chief of the Dumnonii. He was in an uncomfortable
tangle of conflicting moods these days, afire with enthusiasm for
Gwenhwyvaer's declaration of British independence but seething with
resentment at having to fight alongside Saxons in defense of that
independence. On one' point he was absolutely certain: they needed to
focus their attention on meeting the invasion everyone knew was coming
from the Germanian coast. His tone left no doubt about what he thought
of the distraction posed by this yokel and his wild tales.

But the man stood his ground, clearly not about to be intimidated by
any Dumnonian princeling. "No! A giant indeed—half again the height of
a man, and squatty for all that. And, yes, one eye—huge, glowing with an
unsanctified light in the middle of his head. But he was not a man!" He
shuddered with a fear that had nothing to do with Constantine, then took
command of himself. "He stood upright on two legs, and had two arms,
but there was nothing about him that was like a man—or anything of this
world! It wasn't his ugliness. It was…" The shakes took him again. He
turned to Gwenhwyvaer. "Lady, it was his wrongness! He's something that
doesn't belong in God's creation!"

Cerdic leaned forward, frowning. "You're saying he's a… demon?" The


ealdorman had finally received baptism—without noticeable
improvement, Constantine had been heard to mutter. The Teutonic
paganism he'd left behind had held giants. He would have preferred one of
them to a denizen of the Christian hell.

"Well," Constantine said with forced heartiness, "if he is, we've nothing
to fear. The priests can send him shrieking back down into the pit from
whence he came!"

"Oh, I fear not," the man said in a near-whisper. Exhaustion was


quickly taking him, but he smiled up at Constantine grimly. "A priest—I'd
known the old fellow, but never dreamed he had the courage of any two
warriors—advanced on Balor, crying out the formula of exorcism. The
savages drew back, for they fear all holy men. But Balor smashed him to
the earth with the great club he carries, then grasped him by his two
ankles and pulled…" He couldn't continue. This was a man who had lived
his life on the semibarbarous fringes of this brutal world, but he was
obviously gagging on rising vomit. But he again mastered himself and
continued. "And through it all, the monster was silent as always."

"What?" Gwenhwyvaer cocked her head to one side. "You say this Balor
is mute? How, then, does he give his commands to the raiders?"

"No one ever heard him speak, Lady. But he wears an amulet of curious
design around his neck, from which come words in a strange tongue,
sounding as though spoken by a throat of metal…"

"Oh, this is too much!" Constantine flung himself back in his chair.
"Talking amulets indeed! Must we waste any more time listening to this? I
ask, you, Lady…" He turned toward Gwenhwyvaer, then stopped short, for
beyond her he saw Tiraena. They all followed his gaze. She was sitting like
a statue, with an expression none of them could read, in a silence none of
them disturbed.

Over the last six years she had been an occasional visitor to Cadbury,
known to be in Gwenhwyvaer's special favor. Most people made
surreptitious signs when they saw the foreign-looking woman, for it was
whispered that she gave counsels beyond the common knowledge of men.
(Gwenhwyvaer had known about Artorius' death, and thus been able to
begin implementing her declaration of independence, before anyone else
had heard the news; and the tall woman had just arrived on one of her
visits at the time.) Some claimed to have seen her standing distracted, as
though listening to voices she alone could hear. And… she never seemed to
grow any older.

And now she stared straight ahead at ghosts beyond their imaginings.

At length, Gwenhwyvaer reached out and touched her arm. "Lucasta,


what is it?"

Tiraena blinked and seemed to awake from nightmare. "I… can't be


certain yet, Lady. But I think this man speaks the truth."

"What?" Constantine blurted.

Gwenhwyvaer shushed him. "Go on, Lucasta."

Tiraena shook her head. "I can say no more until I'm certain. I must
ride north and see for myself."
"No!" Cerdic started to protest, then stopped. The mysterious Lucasta
went where and when she would.

Gwenhwyvaer looked at her gravely. "At least take Peredur and Cynric
with you. Since I've assigned them to you as bodyguards, they'd feel
disgraced if they weren't allowed to go along."

And you'd just send them after me anyway, Tiraena reflected. She
glanced at Cerdic, whose son Cynric would be going into danger for the
first time. "Very well, Lady. But I leave at first light. There's no time to
waste."

And, she added silently, pray to your God that I'm wrong!

They stopped briefly at the town of Wroxeter, where troops from the
old legionary fort at Chester stood guard against the raiders operating to
the northwest. Tiraena, finding little in the way of reliable eyewitnesses
among the refugees huddling there, pressed on into the hills of Gwynedd.

Her unique mystery-woman status had enabled her to get away with
wearing a practical riding outfit. And she'd been able to hone with
practice her neurally implanted equestrian skills in the few subjective
months she'd spent in Britain between spells in stasis over the last six
years. So she could set her two bodyguards a stiff pace. It still bothered
her to be taking them to face that for which their background had never
prepared them, for she genuinely liked them.

It had been typical of Gwenhwyvaer to assign her a Briton and a Saxon.


Peredur, quiet and self-contained, was in his early twenties and already a
veteran of the Artoriani. Cynric Cerdicson, fourteen and therefore old
enough to be a warrior in his culture, looked on the older man with
something akin to awe but wasn't about to show it. His adolescent pride at
being given his first responsible charge had bloomed into a fierce
protectiveness which left Tiraena uncertain whether to laugh or cry but
determined to do neither within the sight of those worshipful blue eyes.

They topped a ridge and gazed westward. There was, she'd been told, a
village beyond the next rise, which the Irish marauders shouldn't have
reached yet and which would probably be sheltering refugees from further
west. She urged her horse ahead of her guards and studied the skyline…
and saw the rising smoke that told her that the raiders had, in fact,
reached that village…
She was thinking about it when, with flesh-prickling shrieks, the Irish
rose from concealment in the brush around them.

They swarmed in from both sides, cutting Tiraena off. These


proto-Celtic people, the Fomorians, belonged to an earlier ethnic stratum
than the Gaelic-speakers who had taken over most of Ireland. But they
were equipped much like them: unarmored save for small leather shields,
and armed with short poor-quality iron swords or the kind of club which
would one day be known as a shillelagh. Gwenhwyvaer's troops would have
eaten them alive in a stand-up fight—a fact that wasn't much comfort as
one of them seized Tiraena's reins near the bit and jerked upward. Her
horse reared, throwing her. She managed to land with a roll to minimize
the impact, and was on her feet before the Fomorians had reached her.

Looking beyond them, she saw Peredur and Cynric trying to cut their
way through to her. But the press of raiders around them prevented them
from building up the momentum that would have ridden their foes down;
it was all they could do to stay on their horses, striking downward with
their spathas, as the barbarians crowded around and tried to dismount
them. And, off to one side, she could see more of the Fomorians running
up to cut the two horsemen off.

"Peredur!" she shouted over the barbarians' cries. "Get away—you'll be


surrounded! Go to Chester and get help."

Their eyes met. This was no knight-errant, and his eyes told her he
knew he was looking at no damsel in distress but at a fellow soldier, and
his on-scene commander. He gave a quick nod. "Cynric! Let's go!"

"No!" The young voice caught on a sob.

Peredur's voice was like a whip-crack. "I said get moving, boy!"

It was just what the doctor ordered for getting Cynric moving. His eyes
flashed blue fire at the one imputation that no adolescent male can
endure, and he took it out on his attackers, splitting the skull of one and
kicking another in the face as he turned his horses head around and broke
free of the press. Tiraena had time to see him and Peredur get away before
a big Fomorian crashed into her.

She went over, pulling her attacker with her, and brought a knee up
into his groin. As he doubled over with a gasp, she scrambled to her feet,
upended the nearest Fomorian with a sweeping circular kick, and ran in
the only direction open to her: up a slope toward thick woods. Good, she
thought. If I can get in among the trees maybe I can lose them. …

Then her legs stopped pumping as they were tackled from behind, and
she fell heavily to the ground. Half-stunned, she kicked out at the cluster of
Fomorians who piled onto her. She saw a warrior raise his shillelagh
two-handed above his head and bring it sweeping down. Then the world
dissolved in pain and swirling lights before being swallowed up by
darkness.

She wasn't sure at first that she'd awakened, for the sickening pain and
the scene around her seemed but a continuation of her evil dreams.

It was night, and the torchlight revealed the ruins of a village. It also
revealed other things… and for an instant, reality wavered. Are they right
after all? flashed through her reeling mind. Am I dead and in the hell the
Christians believe in? Her consciousness focused on one detail of the
scene: a little girl, no more than four, her lifeless face frozen in a mask of
transcendent agony and her naked childish body in a position as
grotesque as any of the other impaled forms. Then the spasms began, and
after everything was gone from her stomach Tiraena kept trying to retch,
as her entire being sought to reject what she was seeing.

When she finally looked up, a man was standing before her, dressed in
a hooded robe of coarsely woven fabric. He regarded her for a moment,
then turned to the left and spoke two words. At first they didn't register on
Tiraena, not so much because of their mangled pronunciation as because
of their sheer impossibility.

There could be no doubt, though. The words had been: "Her awake."
This fifth century Irish savage had spoken in a crude parody of
twenty-third century Standard International English.

"Good." This was pronounced clearly, but in a tinny, mechanical voice.


A vast shadow fell across her, cast by the monstrous figure that trod into
her range of vision and blocked out the torchlight.

Tiraena looked up at the Interrogator and knew she was not in the
Christian hell after all. She wished she could have taken refuge there.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
"You," she finally breathed.

There was a long pause. Then the Korvaasha motioned to the robed
man to depart, which he did with no apparent good grace. Once he was
out of earshot, the translating voder pendant hanging around the alien's
long thick neck began producing the human-range sounds its breathing/
vocalizing slits could not The artificial voice was as horribly inflectionless
as she remembered, but with a new scratchiness.

"So you speak Standard International English. I could tell from your
physical appearance that you do not belong to the same ethnic type as the
inferior beings native to these islands. But since the language does not
currently exist, you must be a time traveler, as I now know to be possible."

"You don't remember me, do you?" Tiraena stared up into the single
eye—huge, faceted, even more disturbing to humans than everything else
about the Korvaasha. She was trained to see past alienness and recognize
individual members of nonhuman races, and this was definitely the
Interrogator, though he was twenty-plus years older and his thick,
wrinkled hide showed an unpleasant looseness. Not that there had ever
been any doubt as to his identity, for there could be no other Korvaasha on
this planet in this century. "You captured me on Danu—just before my
people's fleet arrived and smashed yours," she added pointedly.
"Afterwards, your ship overhauled mine and captured me and my
companions again. Then we were all taken by…"

"Yes, I remember you now. In my subsequent imprisonment, I had time


to reflect. I came to the conclusion that your male companion had been
right, impossible though it seemed: our ship had somehow traveled back
in time. After I escaped and my captured gravitic vehicle crashed, my
observations confirmed this. The planet was inhabited by your species, in
a primitive state of technology, and therefore could only be pre-spaceflight
Earth."

Tiraena found herself thinking with odd clarity in the midst of pain and
horror. The Korvaasha, she knew, was being positively garrulous for one of
his race. Naturally, she reflected. He's had nobody to tell his story to for
twenty years! So I ought to be able to keep him going… . "So," she said
aloud, "you must have terrorized the locals at first. But later, some of them
tried to make contact with you, and you decided it might be to your
advantage to reciprocate. But of course your translator is only
programmed for Standard International English, so you had to teach them
an elementary version of the language."

"It was a laborious process, as they were primitives as well as belonging


to your contemptible species. But I cultivated certain ones who were
teachable, and who were prepared to do my bidding in all things in
exchange for power over their fellows." He indicated the man Tiraena had
first seen, who was standing with a small group of others, similarly robed,
in the torchlight. "They became my…"

"Priesthood," Tiraena supplied.

There was a moments pause while the Korvaasha digested the pendants
interpretation of this. "Most perceptive of you. Through them, I was able
to mold their originally useless tribe to my purposes."

"Like this?" Tiraena looked around.

"Yes, I have introduced certain refinements. My priests have taken to


them most enthusiastically. There has been some reluctance in other
quarters. But after the local Druids were exterminated and their gods
degraded, the warriors mostly recognized that following me was the way
to victories and plunder. Their rudimentary minds are incapable of
thinking further."

Yes, she thought, with a sickness that had nothing to do with the pain
in her head. She glanced at the robed figures. The Fomorians were just an
ordinary, clean sort of savage before. Is there any limit to the
degradation some humans—the power-junkies—will undergo for a
promise of control over other humans? And must that particular sort of
scum always float to the top? Then an obvious question occurred to her.
"How is it that your voder still works?"

"It is powered by a photoelectric cell, and was designed to last under


primitive conditions. Nevertheless, it is showing signs of deterioration. I
am developing a form of written language for communicating with the
priests after it finally ceases to function."

Tiraena nodded slowly. Even that caused her head to hurt. "It sounds
like you've done very nicely where you were. So why have you led your
followers here?"

"When the imperial agents arrived and the priests explained their
purpose to me, I saw at once that my opportunity had arrived. I will
establish myself here, after this island is conquered. Later, I will widen my
power base. Eventually, I will take over this empire, clearly a more
advanced society than the mud-squatting primitives with whom I
currently have to work. Then I will force the development of a technology
capable of space flight and displacement-point transit…"

What is this? Tiraena thought. He can't be joking. No Korvaasha has a


sense of humor—the very concept is incomprehensible to them. But he
must know that this is all nonsense! All the Fomorians have going for
them is the terror of his appearance, and that's bound to wear off. But
even if they could conquer Rome, and even if he was a walking
compendium of technical knowledge, an Iron Age culture simply couldn't
be made to jump so many intervening developmental stages in
whatever's left of his lifetime.

"… and then I will go looking for my race, which must now be
expanding through this spiral arm under the aegis of the old Unity, but
which has not yet reached this galactic neighborhood. I will lead them
here, and we will exterminate the human race long before it can become
our nemesis. I will personally oversee the slaughter, on a vast scale. I will
...

He's mad. The belated realization burst on Tiraena. His brain has
turned to onion dip. The flat, expressionless machine-voice of the voder
had disguised it at first—the thing simply couldn't rave. And besides, she
thought, teetering so close to the edge of hysteria that she had to suppress
a giggle, it's like a bad joke. "An insane Korvaasha? How can you tell?"

But these megalomaniac fantasies left no doubt. The years of loneliness


and squalor, among a race he hated but on which he depended for
survival, had worn the Interrogators sanity away. She wondered how
much the "priests" even bothered communicating with him any more,
except when the tribe was at war.

"This is why I ordered you spared." Tiraenas awareness of the metallic


drone returned. 'Tour distinctive appearance suggested foreign—and
possibly more advanced—origins. In fact, you are something even better: a
time traveler from my own era. With your advanced technical knowledge,
you will play a useful role in my plan. Thus you will have the opportunity
to earn a quick, humane death. Of course you realize that you cannot be
left alive, any more than can any of your species—this must be self-evident
even to inferior beings. But by helping to implement my plan you will be
serving a higher purpose than any to which vermin like yourself could ever
have realistically aspired. For by aiding in your races extirpation, you will
be helping it atone for its great crime: hindering the eventual
Korvaasha-directed unification toward which all galactic life, unless
perverse, unconsciously strives…"

Tiraena no longer tried to restrain herself. She threw back her head,
heedless of pain, and loosed a peal of laughter that was a defiant clarion in
that scene out of hell. "You fucking lunatic! 'Hindered' you my ass! In my
grandparents' day we kicked you off my homeworld of Raehan and were
getting ready to rid the cosmos of your perverse Unity, just before the
great realignment of the displacement network. And in my own time, the
time you came from, we've crushed your Realm of Tarzhgul out of
existence. Oh, a few of its worlds are left—genocide would lower us to your
level, if possible. But orbital stations keep them under surveillance and
vaporize anything more advanced than black-powder artillery and
coal-burning steam pumps. And as for you personally…" She laughed
again and staggered to her feet. "I've got news for you: your 'escape' was
orchestrated by the time travelers who'd brought us to this era—human
time travelers, from an age when the Korvaasha aren't even a bad
memory. They let you go because their job is to preserve the
past—including the 'Balor' of the Irish legends. So you've spent the last
twenty-one years making sure a certain body of Terran myth turns out the
way future human history books say it did! How's that for 'serving a
higher purpose,' dipshit?"

She felt her arms being grasped from behind by two unseen guards, but
she hardly noticed. For she had, in the past, seen the Interrogator in what
she had sworn was the grip of an intense emotion of some land—and that
paled beside what she saw now. The massive frame shook, and the
neck-slits practically rippled as they vocalized below the human auditory
range. But no sound came from the voder, which could only translate
coherent verbalizations with Standard English counterparts. Finally he
subsided, and the mechanical voice came with its unvarying
expressionlessness.

"You will not be suitable for the role I had in mind. In the morning you
will be used for a different purpose: a reward for the warriors. If you
survive, the priests will use your body as a medium for honing their skills
at techniques I have taught them to appreciate. In feet, they have already
become quite expert at prolonging death."

The guards jerked on her arms and began to haul her away. But for an
instant she twisted herself around and faced the Interrogator again. "Oh, I
almost forgot to tell you: this is a parallel reality and you're nothing but a
quantum-shadow of your counterpart in the universe from which you and
I both come. There, you'll eventually be killed by some Gaelic hero, and
your crazy plan will come to nothing. As it will in this universe, regardless
of who kills you here!"

For a moment, she thought the Interrogator was going to kill her on the
spot. But one of the "priests" stepped forward and spoke to him in
mock-obsequious tones, in an English so mangled as to be
incomprehensible to her. The guards hustled her away hurriedly—she
could smell their acrid sweat—to a post that was all that remained of some
village structure. They backed her up to it, twisted her arms around
behind it, and tied the wrists roughly together. Then they tied her ankles
to the posts base. By the time they were done, their spirits seemed to have
risen—or perhaps they needed to banish what they had felt in the presence
of the Interrogator and his votaries/manipulators, for their laughter and
rib-elbowing as they felt and squeezed her bound form seemed somehow
too raucous. She took it, using mental discipline techniques to remove
herself temporarily from her body. After a while they tired of their play
and swaggered off, slapping each other on the back a few too many times,
and she was alone in the darkness.

She took stock. Her long-range communicator lay deactivated in the


cave near the banks of the Cam, with the stasis-field generator and the
rest of Tylar's goodies. She didn't have all that many—just things she
absolutely needed and which could function in the field, like the supply of
nondescript little pills that could stimulate the body to heal just about
anything within reason, although you slept a lot while it was happening
and were very weak and hungry afterwards. It was nothing compared to
the infirmary aboard Tylar's ship, where nanoids simply took an injured
body apart at the molecular level and put it back together, uninjured.
(Reassembling it in an improved form was sternly interdicted. Tiraena
gathered that Tylar's civilization had had some bad experiences with that
sort of thing.) But that required elaborate equipment; the pills were
Tylar's idea of very crude first-aid, and he'd cautioned her that they, like
everything else, must be kept from the locals lest their cultural
development be distorted. But it was all back in the cave which the folk
around Cadbury had come to superstitiously shun. Just as well; the
Interrogator couldn't possibly be so far gone that he wouldn't recognize
high-tech artifacts for what they were. She still had the implant
communicator, of course, but it wasn't doing her much good.

But that wasn't the only implant in her body. She was a survey
specialist and had been given various biotechnic edges over the primitive
environments she must face. There was one in particular…

She twisted her shoulders, raising one and lowering the other as she
tried to shift the hands the guards had tied behind the post. She could feel
skin being rubbed raw by the rope, but she had to get that left forefinger
pointed at the knot between her wrists, and she had to do it by feel alone.
And it had to be pointing down, not up, which would have been relatively
easy.

Finally the fingertip rested against the knot. She wasn't sure of the
angle, and she'd have only one chance. Well, she thought as she strained to
hold herself in the miserably uncomfortable position, no time like the
present. She took a deep breath against what she knew was coming and
gave a carefully trained mental command.

The almost-microscopic superconductor loop just under the tip of the


finger yielded up its hoarded energy, and the tiny crystal surrounding it
projected that energy as a beam of coherent photons. There was the
snapping sound of air rushing in to fill the vacuum drilled through it by a
weapon-grade laser. That laser left a sparkling frail of ionization which
would have been visible even by daylight and which someone would surely
have seen if it had flashed upward into the darkness. But it merely seared
the ground, without searing her butt in the process. She clenched her
teeth to hold in a cry of agony as the beam burned the flesh on the inside
of her right wrist. Piled atop the throbbing pain of her battered head, it
sent a wave of nausea through her. Then it all subsided a little and she
gingerly tried her bonds. The laser hadn't burned away as much of the
knot as she'd hoped, but after a little work the last strands parted and her
hands came free. After she'd untied her feet she spared a moment to feel
that fingertip, where the fortunately insensitive artificial skin had been
burned away.

Good thing I resisted the temptation to use the thing on my attackers


—or later on the Interrogator, she thought. It was strictly a one-shot
capability; she would never have gotten out alive. She took a deep
shuddering breath—that right wrist still hurt like all the devils of
hell—then slipped away through the night.

No one was keeping watch over her, securely bound as they knew her to
be. She avoided any still-wakeful Fomorians and was soon clear of the
village. She didn't have her light-gathering contacts, but it was—wonder of
wonders—a clear night over Britain, and a three-quarter moon was up.
And the constellations weren't significantly different from those of the
twenty-third century Earth she had come to know. She located Ursa Minor
and set her course east.

The normal British overcast and drizzle reasserted themselves by


morning. I knew it was too good to last, Tiraena thought in her
fatigue-dulled and hunger-tormented brain as she continued toiling
eastward in the dreary daylight.

She had spent the entire night putting as much distance as possible
between herself and her erstwhile captors. Shortly before dawn she'd
stumbled onto what this milieu was pleased to call a road. She had no idea
which road it was, but it ran in a more or less east-west direction, and a
map summoned up on her neural display showed all such roads in these
parts converging on Chester. And it beat scrambling up and down the hills
that comprised the local topography. She struggled on, trying not to let
herself think about pain, or food.

By the time the cavalry column appeared to the east, she was almost
beyond noticing it. Only when Peredur and Cynric were supporting her
cad she let herself collapse.

"So that's the story," Tiraena concluded. "It's the Interrogator, beyond a
doubt. Raving mad, but still dangerous. Still capable of inflicting a lot of
harm, in both timelines." Her face clouded as unwanted recollections
thrust themselves upward from the storehouse of nightmares into her
consciousness. "Remind me to give Tylar a piece of my mind about some
of the shit he inflicts on people— primitives, yes, but still people—in the
course of 'policing events.'"

"I'm also going to have a few things to take up with him," Sarnac said
as he studied her face in the little holographically projected display screen
that hovered in midair just above his communicator. He knew that
expression, and it didn't occur to him even momentarily to doubt her.
"Just before I left Rome he made some typically vague noises about
'disturbing rumors' you'd been hearing." He forced himself to defer that
for later. "I never considered that he'd be here. But it makes sense; he
escaped to Ireland before the divergence of the timelines."

"It did occur to me, once. But I dismissed it out of hand, thinking he
couldn't possibly have lasted this long."

"Well, it's too late to worry about that. The important thing is that
you're all right now. You are, aren't you?"

"Oh, yes. My first-aid kit took care of the laser burn, though of course
I'm keeping the wrist bandaged—it has no business being healed so fast,
from the local standpoint. I'm also keeping my left index finger bound up.
With that little hole burned through it, the artificial skin looks artificial.
And I'm over the exhaustion. The really important question is whether the
local troops will hold when they see a Korvaasha coming at them."

"And when he gets in among them," Sarnac added grimly. The


Korvaasha, evolutionary products of a high-gravity planet, were even
stronger relative to humans than they were larger. The Interrogator might
be getting along in years, but…

"I'll do what I can, of course," Tiraena said. "I'll explain to


Gwenhwyvaer's troops that he isn't a demon or any other supernatural
being, and that he isn't deathless. I don't have much time, though. This
General Marcellus—a subordinate of your old friend Kai, isn't he?—has
landed at Richborough and is advancing up the Thames valley. He's been
sending couriers to the Fomorians, and we're sure we haven't succeeded in
intercepting all of them. The raiders are starting to move south. They're
light troops, with no discipline, but they could cause us trouble if they
show up at our rear while we're engaged with the imperials."

"Yeah, yeah, right," Sarnac said, distracted. "Absolutely.

That makes it even more urgent for me to get in touch with Tylar."

"Tylar? Why?"

"To get you the hell out of Britain, that's why! Its going to get very
dangerous there. So there's no point in you…"

"No!" Tiraena's tone stopped Sarnac in his rhetorical tracks. "I'm


staying in Britain."

"What?" Sarnac took a deep breath. "Look, in case you've forgotten,


your implanted skills don't include any fifth-century combat,abilities.
You're not supposed to be a soldier in this milieu! So what good do you
think you can do when push comes to shove?"

"I don't know," she admitted. "But I can't help thinking that there must
be something I can do, even though I'm not allowed to use any advanced
technology. And as long as there's any possibility of that… Bob, I need to
stay."

Sarnac hesitated before speaking, for he knew her well enough to know
that this was nothing to be spoken of lightly. "Tiraena, I know you admire
Gwenhwyvaer. And maybe you've started to take Tylar's system of
trans-dimensional ethics seriously. But…"

"I couldn't care less about Tylar's umpteen-thousand-years-distant


notions! And its not just Gwenhwyvaer. It's all of them." She sought for the
words with which to verbalize what was self-evident to her. "They're barely
half a step above savagery. And they're laboring under more than their fair
share of political stupidity. But if you could just be here and know them,
Bob! And I'm not talking about the rulers, I'm talking about people like…
oh, the two bodyguards Gwenhwyvaer has assigned to me. You'd like
them, Bob: Peredur—he's one of the Artoriani; and Cynric, the son of
Cerdic of the West Saxons."

"Oh, yeah, I remember. So he's the grandson of…" Sarnac belatedly


recalled his promise to Tylar and cut himself off.

"What?"

"Never mind," Sarnac said hastily. But then he remembered it was only
Artorius that Tylar wanted kept in the dark. Oh, what the hell? He
proceeded to tell Tiraena the truth of Cerdic's parentage.

"Oho!" she said softly when he was done. 'This explains a lot about
Gwenhwyvaer's feelings toward Cerdic. Typical of her, you know. Some
women would hate Cerdic, in her position. But not Gwenhwyvaer. As
Artorius' son, he's the closest thing to a son she'll ever have."

"You're probably right. And I understand what you're saying: these


people deserve a break. Well, so do a lot of people throughout history. But
you can't give it to them! You've done your part by passing on the advance
information Tylar transmitted to you."

"That's just it: all I've done is pass information along! I need to do
something!"

Sarnac tried to keep his tone reasonable. "But, Tiraena, in light of


what's about to happen there… Tiraena, you could get killed!"

She grinned. "This, from a guy who was getting ready to go into battle
against a Korvaash successor-state more advanced than the Realm of
Tarzhgul?" There was dead silence while he sought for a reply.

"Well," he finally said, "that was my duty." Come on! he gibed at


himself. Is that the best you can do? If you really try, you can come up
with something even more stilted!

"This is my duty—to myself! And to these people. I know it's irrational


to feel guilty for having been born into a better era than theirs. But I can't
escape a sense of obligation to them. It's part of me, Bob, so it's part of
whatever it is you love in me. I have to stick it out for the duration! Tylar
may send his ship here, but I won't willingly go aboard. I'll stay as much in
the thick of things as I can get, so Tylar won't be able to snatch me
without tipping his technological hand!"

Their eyes held each other in silence, but it was a communion and not a
confrontation. Then Sarnac smiled.

"Hey, if you need to do this, then do it. I'll tell Tylar not to try to pull
you out until you're good and ready."

"Thanks, Bob," she said softly.

Sarnacs smile blossomed into his trademark raffish grin, and he was
once again the young smart-ass she'd saved from the Korvaasha in the
wilderness of Danu. "Hey, it's just the kind of guy I am!" She made a
flatulent noise with her mouth. "Just promise me you'll stay in touch—
and that you'll be careful."

"Aren't I always?" She signed off, her smile seeming to linger like the
Cheshire cats, before he could think of a retort.
Well, he thought as he deactivated the communicator and the intruder
alarm he was careful to employ whenever he was using anachronistic
equipment in his tent, hopefully that little turn of the good-ole-Bob
routine was what she needed right now. Too bad it's all bullshit. But he'd
done rightly, he decided. He wouldn't burden her with the knowledge that
he was worried sick about her, separated from savages only by troops
who'd probably bolt like scared rabbits when they saw the Interrogator.
No, there's no point in undermining her morale. A sudden flash of
self-pity: Wish somebody'd do something for my morale!

He shook free of the thought as he left the tent and strolled toward the
field where the crossbowmen were honing their tactics under Ecdicius'
eye. The new Western Emperor noticed him and waved.

"Ah, Bedwyr, I think these farm boys are beginning to get the point of
your idea—or at least starting to follow orders with a snap! For whatever
reason, we're getting off half again as many flights of quarrels each minute
as we were when we first tried your idea."

"Good!" In response to their call they'd gotten more hunting crossbows,


and men who knew how to use them, than they needed or could effectively
use. The problem, as Ecdicius had instantly seen, was the things' slow rate
of fire. He'd also seen the possibilities in Sarnacs third-hand idea, and had
issued a call for the strongest men in the army. (That point had been
emphasized, for it lent prestige to an unglamorous job.) They had become
loaders, staying behind the fighting line and constantly cocking the
surplus crossbows, which were then passed on to the crossbowmen by
relays of boys who brought the discharged weapons back to be readied
again.

In the armies of China's Warring States, Artorius had told him, the
loaders had lain on their backs, braced both feet against the back of the
bow with one on each side of the stock, and pulled the string down toward
the chest with both hands while straightening the legs. That wasn't
absolutely necessary with these crossbows, which weren't as stiff as the
Chinese originals had been. But experiments had shown it to be the fastest
loading technique, so Ecdicius had rammed it through past all the
obstacles outraged conservatism could erect.

Of course, it made for an immobile formation. Artorius had expounded


from historical knowledge that now extended far beyond his old horizons.
'There's an ongoing debate," he'd told Sarnac over wine one night in
Rome. "What would have happened if Alexander the Great had advanced
eastward to China? One school of thought holds that he wouldn't have
stood a chance against the armies of the Warring States, with their
massed crossbows that could have made colanders of Macedonian shields.
I disagree, partly because he would have had no trouble finding local
allies—those warlords were incapable of uniting against a common threat,
which was why Shih Huang-Ti conquered them all in the end But there's a
strictly military reason as well. You see, all that firepower was locked into
rigid, inflexible formations. The only really mobile troops were the cavalry,
who were just scouts and skirmishers; they had nothing like Alexanders
Companions, who were the closest thing to heavy shock cavalry before
stirrups. I have a theory about that: in the West, the cavalry has always
been the prestige arm, through which the aristocracy displayed its
prowess, while Chinese cavalry were just… just…"

"Grunts on horses," Sarnac had suggested.

"Precisely. If anything, the cavalry was socially tainted by the barbarian


origins of its equipment, techniques and, frequently, personnel. So while
an army of the Warring States could have slaughtered the Macedonian
phalanx if Alexander had been obliging enough to march it up in front of
them, they wouldn't have known how to respond if the Companions had
hit them from an unexpected direction."

"That doesn't sound too good for our side, does it? Kai's going to be
able to send the Artoriani against us."

"It means that high-density crossbow fire is probably going to work for
you only once," Artorius had allowed. "After that, Kai will know how to
deal with it. You and Ecdicius are going to have to bring him to a single
decisive battle under optimum conditions for a defensive action."

They had tried, even before Ecdicius had thought they were really
ready, for they'd heard news of what the invaders were inflicting on
east-central Gaul as they advanced west along the Roman road from
Strasbourg to Toul, things that sounded nothing like the Kai Sarnac
remembered. Finally, Ecdicius had found what he considered the ideal site
to give battle—the gap in the Val d'Ane hills west of Toul— and Kai had
neatly maneuvered them out of position. It was a typically cautious duel of
generals who knew each other, with the main armies moving warily
behind screens of scouting, skirmishing light cavalry. Still, Kai's hesitancy
was beyond what might have been expected, given that he commanded
the clearly superior force. Sarnac had wondered about it out loud via
communicator, and Artorius had explained: the Briton led unenthusiastic
troops. Kai had been able to hold their allegiance for Wilhelmus, but he
couldn't infuse them with a fanatical loyalty to the faux emperor which he
doubtless didn't feel himself.

So the cat-and-mouse game went on. Ecdicius wasn't entirely


displeased; at least the invaders weren't advancing any further into Gaul,
and he had more time to polish his new crossbow tactics. In fact, Sarnac
was surprised he was adapting so well to a war so different from his
swashbuckling norm. But sometimes, when his officers and allies weren't
around, he could be seen pacing like a caged lion.

Now he turned from the crossbow practice and started to speak to


Sarnac, only to stop a frown. "What is it, Bedwyr? You seem distracted."

God, am I concealing it that badly? "Oh, I'm just worried about my


wife in Britain, Augustus. After all, not knowing what's going on there…"
He couldn't know it, not officially, in this world whose messages moved at
the speed of a horseman rather than that of light.

"Yes, you told me about your wife. Attached to Gwenhwyvaer's court,


isn't she? I know you must be worried. Thank God Faustinas in Rome."
Ecdicius' face clouded. "Not that Rome's safety is certain. The latest word
is that the Balkan armies have finally gotten moving and are advancing on
Aquileia."

And have taken it, Sarnac didn't say, for it was something else he had
no business knowing. He'd learned only last night that the important city
at the head of the Adriatic, only just recovering from its sack by Attila
forty years earlier, had fallen. Now an invasion of Italy was imminent, and
Tylar and Artorius were preparing to head north from Rome to do what
they could.

"Yes, I almost wish Faustina were here," Ecdicius continued. "Nowhere


is safe, and I'd have her with me. But of course the children need her in
Rotne."

"At least, Augustus, you have Julia here where you can keep an eye on
her." Sarnac couldn't resist remarking.

"Yes, I certainly do! The young vixen!" Ecdicius' daughter had managed
to find some logically irrefutable objection to every villa and town they'd
passed through, and was still traveling with them. Now, with Kai's light
horsemen roving far and wide, there was no alternative but to keep her
with the army, which had adopted her as a mascot anyway. But Ecdicius'
scowl was still comical.

"I'm sure she'll be safe, Augustus," Sarnac assured him. "Andronicus


will guard her well." Which, he reflected, was an understatement.

"Yes… Andronicus." Ecdicius' expression softened. "A fine young man.


Although there's something about him—something that makes him hard
to place as to his origins. Like you, Bedwyr." The last was spoken casually,
but the dark eyes grew disconcertingly shrewd.

Alarm bells went off in Sarnac. Ecdicius had been content to accept the
mysterious origins of Tylar and Artorius. But in keeping with Tylar's rule
of keeping mystery to a minimum, Sarnac and Andreas had stuck to their
original cover stories, and Ecdicius had seemed to accept those too. "Why,
he's from Bithynia, Augustus…"

"… and you're from Armorica. Yes, I know. But there's something I can't
quite put my finger on… Still, far be it from me to pry, Bedwyr!" He
clapped Sarnac on the shoulder and dazzled him with a grin. "If, for your
own reasons or Tertullian's, you need to pose as a simple mercenary, then
so be it. And now, I've got to go iron out some dispute between the
Frankish and Burguncban troops." And he was off, leaving Sarnac
thinking: That's two.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
A stiff west wind, chilly with advancing autumn, was blowing in off the
Bristol Channel, and the torch-flames whipped and spat showers of sparks
as Gwenhwyvaer looked out over the massed troops. The torchlight melted
away the ravages of fifty-six winters and ignited the last remaining
embers of flame in her hair, and it was Boadicea who stood before them, it
was Bellonathe goddess of horses and war.

The priests had blessed them earlier for the morrows battle, but there
was nothing Christian about this nights scene. No cross loomed behind
Gwenhwyvaer and her captains; the blood-red dragon standard of
Artorius streamed in the wind beneath the stars, and his widow spoke
words fit to summon up the elemental spirits of the land.
Tiraena, standing inconspicuously off to one side, knew where some of
those words had come from.

"… I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let
tyrants fear!… I am come amongst you… being resolved, in the midst
and heat of battle, to live or die amongst you all, and to lay down for my
God and for my people, my honor and my blood, even in the dust. I know
I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and
stomach of a king, and of a king of Britain too, and think foul scorn that
Wilhelmus or Balor or any emperor or monster should dare to invade the
borders of my realm. …"

Tiraena grinned inside the hood of her cloak. Now where have I heard
that before? Eat your heart out, Queen Bess!

Good selection on Tylar's part. This country's always seemed to do


best under female rulers: Elizabeth I, Victoria, Margaret Thatcher… She
became aware that Gwenhwyvaer was telling them of…

"… this happy breed of men, this little world, this precious stone set in
the silver sea… This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this Britain…"

Shakespeare, of course. No surprise, knowing Tylar. What next?


Tiraena wondered. "We will fight them on the beaches" isn't exactly
appropriate; it's a little late for that.

But Gwenhwyvaer managed to speak of their finest hour before the


cheering of the troops grew too thunderous for her to be heard.

The wind was unabated at midmorning, and had begun to bring clouds
scudding in off the Atlantic, sending waves of shadow sweeping across the
hillsides of this rolling country near the source of the Thames.

Standing atop the highest hill in the neighborhood and facing eastward
toward the dark, distant masses of the imperial army, Tiraena gazed down
to her right into the gap where the Saxons waited, their flanks secured by
hills where light-armed archers and slingers waited among the trees. The
valley to the east was like a funnel down which the invaders would pour, to
meet the shield-wall. It must hold until the time was right to commit the
cavalry that waited in the shelter of the hill, to Tiraenas left.

And there, thought Tiraena with her newly stimulated recollections of


Shakespeare, was the rub. Cerdic, who led the shield-wall, and
Constantine, who would command the cavalry, were no more able to agree
on when the time would be right than they were on anything else.

"Will you wait, then, until all my carles are dead before beginning your
charge?" Cerdic demanded.

"The entire main body of the enemy must be locked in battle with you
before the cavalry circles the hill and takes them in the rear. Otherwise,
our plan's for nought. Are you Saxons too cowardly to uphold your part of
it?" The hell of it is, Tiraena reflected, Constantine is right. Too bad he
has to be such a gigantic prick about it.

Cerdic's glare smoothed itself out into a mocking grin. "Who was given
the pass to hold while your infantry take their ease behind?" He swept an
arm out toward their rear, where beyond a defile at the base of this hill a
ridge line curved away to the southwest. The Briton foot lined that ridge
facing north, against the possible appearance of the Fomorians from that
direction. Outriders had brought word of their advance, and the terror
that spread before it.

Constantine flushed. "It's important that our rear be secured, lest we be


caught between two foes."

"Aye, your footmen should be able to deal with naked Irish savages well
enough," Cerdic taunted. Tension didn't bring out the best in him. "But
have a care who you call cowards, Welshman!"

Constantine's flush grew scarlet and his hand dropped to the hilt of his
spatha. The Britons didn't like that word, and Tiraena could see their
point. It was pretty raw, being called by the Saxon word for "foreigner" in
your own country.

"For that, Saxon half-breed, I'll see the color of your guts…"

"Have done!" Gwenhwyvaer stepped between them. "Will you madmen


fall to fighting among yourselves within sight of the enemy? I forbid all
personal quarrels until the battle is over. And I will give the signal for the
cavalry to charge."

"Very well, Lady." Constantine mounted his horse. "But we'll take this
up later, Saxon!" He descended the hill to put himself at the head of the
cavalry that waited in its shadow to the north.

"That we will," Cerdic called after him. He looked at Cynric, where the
latter stood guard with Peredur behind Tiraena, and gave a quick wink.
Then he trotted off down the southern slope to join his men, who cheered
him— he'd given them their own dose of edited Shakespeare last night.

"Sweet Jesu!" Gwenhwyvaer fumed to Tiraena. "Why do the imperials


even bother invading this island? Why don't they just sit back and watch
us kill each other off?"

They grew silent as the enemy advanced in an ominous silence. That


army included few heavy cavalry; they'd been deemed unnecessary, for
Britain held only a small detachment of the Artoriani, whose main body
was stationed in Germania whence Kai had now led them into Gaul.
(Where Bob will be facing them, Tiraena ordered herself not to
remember.) But this was a formidable force, the center composed of heavy
infantry—Isaurians from Asia Minor for the most part, but also including
many of the Franks that Kai didn't want in Gaul for the same reason he
hadn't sent Britons here to face their own countrymen. On the flanks, light
cavalry backed up the light-armed infantry. Behind the center were those
cataphractarii Marcellus had.

They came on with contemptuous directness—Marcellus had


encountered little resistance so far except harrying by militia, and he
might well be suffering from overconfidence by now. But this was no
blundering onrush. As they reached the "neck" of the "funnel" the flanking
elements began to advance up the hill slopes, skirmishing with the Britons
whose arrows had begun to sprinkle the imperial formations. The center
continued to advance and with a blare of trumpets, hurled itself forward.

Tiraena imagined she could feel an earth-tremor as the first enemy


wave crashed into the shield-wall. A hellish din, compounded of shouts,
screams, weapon-impacts and shield-bosses grinding together, assaulted
her. After an eternal interval, the enemy drew back, a retreating tide that
left a wrack of corpses. The Saxons adjusted their line to fill the gaps left
by their own dead. They hadn't given an inch.

-The imperials regrouped, and Tiraena could see a coming and going of
couriers. A new attack wave, more massive than the first, formed itself
and advanced with seemingly unstoppable momentum. Again, the contact
of the fighting-fronts was like a palpable blow even where Tiraena stood,
looking down from above the pain and blood. Surely, it seemed, the
narrow steel band of the shield-wall must snap under the sheer weight of
men bearing down on it and the impact of swords and axes that beat on it
like blacksmith's hammers. She could sense Cynric fidgeting behind her—
his father was fighting in the front line as tradition demanded—but he
made no sound.

Finally, incredibly, the attack drew back over ground made treacherous
by the heaped dead. The Saxons, their line thinner now, stood in what
wasn't really silence— there were too many wounded for that—but seemed
like it after the abrupt cessation of the hideous cacophony that had gone
before. They stood exactly where they had stood before, waiting. And all at
once Tiraena knew, beyond any possibility of doubt, that if the day went
against them there would be an unbroken shield-wall of the dead down
there. They could be killed, but they could not be moved.

I've heard the Saxons called dull, she thought in her awe. Maybe it's
true. That much sheer guts can't possibly leave room for much else.

"I can't give the signal yet," Gwenhwyvaer said to no one in particular.
She had mounted her horse, the better to be seen by those below, and they
had all followed suit. Now she sat in her saddle looking like a knife was
twisting in her guts. "Marcellus is still holding his heavy cavalry in reserve.
They'd be able to counter our own cavalry" Tiraena looked down the hill to
the north where the British cavalry waited, the red cloaks of the Artoriani
vivid among the tribal contingents. The riders' impatience was infecting
the horses, she could see even from here. But Gwenhwyvaer was right.

She swept her eyes over the rest of the field. The imperial flanks had
gotten bogged down in disorganized fighting on the wooded slopes. And
within their main body, something was happening.

Then, with a new note of trumpets, the imperial cataphractarii moved


forward in all their armored ponderousness, and the infantry parted ranks
to let them pass. Tiraena turned toward Gwenhwyvaer and started to open
her mouth, but what she saw closed it. The queen was staring fixedly
ahead, as though in communion with the ebb and flow of battle, awaiting
some certain knowledge that the moment had come.

The imperial cavalry built up to a charge and Tiraena silently pleaded


with her to give the word. But her expression remained unchanged even as
the armored riders smashed into the shield wall with a force that caused it
to buckle, though not to break. Evidently someone thought it had broken,
for a shout arose from the enemy infantry and they advanced to support
the shock cavalry.

At that instant, Gwenhwyvaer sprang from her motionlessness and


flung up an arm. The trumpeters blared out the signal, and in the hidden
area behind the hill to their left, a horse and rider—Tiraena was sure it
was Constantine—sprang forward. The entire cavalry formation followed
as one, riding like the Wild Hunt.

They had a goodly way to go—any further would have tired the horses
too much at such a gallop—as they rounded the hill. If the shield-wall
could only hold until they appeared in the rear of the now fully engaged
imperials, the enemy would be caught between the Saxon anvil and the
Briton hammer…

It was at that moment that the west wind brought to their ears the
weird war-cries of the Fomorians.

Tiraena twisted around in her saddle just in time to see the tribesmen
appear at the crest of a lower ridge just to the northwest of the one topped
by the British infantry line. It was too distant to make out details of the
figures, but there was no mistaking the gigantic one in their midst.

-In growing horror, she watched the British line begin to waver. Never
mind what the mysterious wise-woman Lucasta had told them; they knew
the supernatural when they saw it. A few men began to run, and it was like
the first few drops of leaking water that presage the full torrent into the
hold of a doomed ship, for more and more of their comrades joined them,
then the whole line dissolved in panic.

Oh, God, it's the worst possible time. If the Fomorians hit the
shield-wall from the rear while the situation is still fluid…. Without a
word and without further thought, Tiraena turned her horse around and
plunged down the hill's western slope.

"Lucasta, wait!" Gwenhwyvaer's dwindling voice didn't register on her,


for her entire consciousness had narrowed to the task of controlling her
horses wild career down the steep slope. She belatedly remembered that
her implanted riding skills were only minimal, and supplemented by
actual practice in only her last few subjective months, as she descended
the hill at breakneck speed. Well, she found a fraction of a second to
think, I finally know what that expression means. Breaking my neck is
exactly what I'm going to do! Then she was in the defile, forcing her
mount to scramble up the ridge. Soon she was among the fleeing troops.

"Stand, damn you!" she shouted as she rode among them. The British
tongue was another subject on which she'd worked at improving
"Lucastas" minimal knowledge, and few of these men understood Latin.
"He's mortal, I tell you! He can be killed!"

"Listen to her, you cowardly sods!" She heard Peredur's voice behind
her and stole a glance over her shoulder. Yes, he and Cynric had followed
her. He rode among the milling foot troops, beating at them with the flat
of his spatha. "By God, do you need a woman to take you by the hands and
lead you into battle? Well, here she is! Maybe she'll wipe your bottoms for
you too!" An angry growling arose, but the rout slowed. "Get back up to
the crest of the ridge before the Irish gain it!"

Good thought, Tiraena realized "Follow me," she yelled, and urged her
horse up the slope. She saw that Cynric was with her. Yes, there it was just
ahead, the top of the ridge…

They reached it just in time to come face to face with the Interrogator.

Their horses reared uncontrollably, shrieking with panic at the sight


and smell, and threw them. Tiraena managed a rolling landing that
absorbed most of the impact. She shook her head violently to clear it and
raised herself to a crouch. The Fomorians were scrambling up to the
ridgeline, and the Interrogator was advancing toward her. He carried the
great club she'd heard about in one hand; the other held a sword that
must have been specially made for four mutually opposable digits, and
was far too long and heavy for a human to wield anyway. It couldn't be any
good, forged as it was from the low-grade iron available in Ireland. But
that didn't help her much, for she had no weapons, nor any implanted skill
at using them if she had.

A Saxon war-cry rang out, and Cynric rushed past her and interposed
himself between her and her attacker, holding aloft his shield and
brandishing the spatha he used in lieu of his own people's traditional
weapons when on horseback. He shouted his defiance again, and the
adolescent voice quavered and broke.

With a force beyond that of human muscles, the Interrogator brought


his club down. Cynric screamed and went to one knee as his
iron-reinforced wooden shield, and the arm holding it, shattered. Then the
Korvaasha thrust with his sword at the youth's midriff. The Saxon
ring-mail was surprisingly good, but the power behind that thrust sent the
crude iron sword crashing through the rings. Cynric screamed again with
the torment of a pierced liver and dropped his spatha. The Interrogator
pulled his sword free and raised it for a final slash.

Tiraena was on her feet, moving through a world of horror. "No!" She
shouted in Standard International English. "I'm the one you want, you
Korvaash bastard!"

Because she had spoken words his translator could handle, he heard
her. He redirected his sword as it descended, slewing it toward her. It
sliced through the flesh and muscle of her right thigh. The leg gave way
under her and she crashed to the ground and rolled a few paces. Looking
up through a crimson haze of agony, she saw the Interrogator advancing
ponderously toward her. Idiotically, her foremost thought was: Bob will be
so worried. . .

There was a whinny and a shout, and Peredur, keeping his charging
mount under control with the horsemanship for which the Artoriani were
renowned, sideswiped the Interrogator and sent the Korvaasha staggering.
The Briton brought his horse around and hauled on the reins, bringing the
animal rearing up. The flailing hooves momentarily held the massive alien
at bay. Then Peredur brought his spatha down. The Interrogator parried
with his own sword and, with a metallic crack, the brittle iron gave way
and the blade snapped But then the Korvaasha thrust his club at the
horse's exposed belly. Off-balance, the animal went over, crushing
Peredur's left leg. The Interrogator stood over the immobile Briton and
pointed the remaining length of his broken sword downward. With the full
mountainous weight of a Korvaasha behind it, it punched through the
scale armor and the Briton's chest. There was an obscene amount of blood.

Yet even at that moment, Peredur brought up the spatha he'd somehow
kept in his grip. The thrust lacked the force to pierce that thick hard
integument, but it slid along a leg, bringing the distinctive Korvaash
blood—like human blood mixed with clear syrup—welling up.

The Interrogator made no audible sound, of course, but he was less


than steady as he turned from the lifeless Briton and advanced on Tiraena,
gripping his club in both hands.
Tiraena felt something hard against the tips of her fingers. It was the
hilt of the spatha Cynric had dropped. Her grip closed around it, and she
struggled to her feet. The transcendent pain that started in her right thigh
and flooded her entire being seemed to burn away some impediment to
clarity, for all at once reality consisted of the tormented face of an impaled
little girl. But then the girl's blue eyes turned dark, the skin shaded from
pale to coppery, the features shifted, and it was a little Raehaniv girl who
stood terrified in a dimly lit place of horror created by the Korvaasha, a
little girl who also bore the name Tiraena.

The moment ended—it had lasted no more than a millisecond. Tiraena


felt no pain anymore, only a calm certainty that she was about to do that
for which she had been born. As though in slow motion, the Interrogator
swung his club in a stroke that would have taken off her head. She dodged
the blow with an unreal ease and grasped her sword in both hands—the
spatha wasn't intended for it, but it could be done. She rotated almost a
full three hundred and sixty degrees as she brought the blade around in a
perfect drawing cut, into what would have been the belly of a human.

Tiraena already knew that the Korvaasha could, with difficulty, produce
a sound in the human auditory range. An extremely high-pitched
Korvaash scream sounded like a distant foghorn. The Interrogator emitted
a loud foghorn sound as he doubled over. Recovering, Tiraena brought the
spatha down on the long neck, where the hide wasn't quite so thick.

No human strength—not even Tiraena's as it was at this


moment—could have actually severed the neck with one of this eras
blades. But the Interrogators head flopped grotesquely and the
unpleasant-looking Koryaash blood fountained forth as he sank to the
ground.

Tiraena collapsed with a gasp of returning pain. Funny, she thought:


she hadn't noticed that a wide circle of spectators had formed around this
combat, half Briton and half Fomorian, all of them now standing with
their mouths hanging comically open. Then the tableau broke as the
Fomorian half of the circle disintegrated, fleeing with howls of panic. The
Britons followed in pursuit, striking at their country's invaders as they
could not strike at their own shame. Tiraena was left alone with the dead
and dying.

She tore a strip of cloth from a sleeve and used it to bind her wounded
thigh. Then, using her left leg and both arms, she dragged herself painfully
over to Cynric. He was breathing but unconscious; she could do nothing
for him but stanch the flow of blood with a wad of cloth. Finally, she made
her way to the place where Peredur lay pinned to the ground by the
Interrogator's broken sword, staring sightlessly at the sky. She reached out
and closed his eyes.

Was it you, Peredur? she wondered. Were you the Peredur who, in my
reality, made the name of Sir Percival a byword for all that's best in
men? I think it must have been you. And I hope you found your Grail.

Time passed and the distant voice of battle gradually diminished. Then
she heard a clatter of hooves and looked up at Gwenhwyvaer and her
attendants. The expression on the queens face told her all she needed to
know, but she asked anyway. "The battle… ?"

"Yes. Constantine struck at just the right instant, and Cerdic's Saxons
held. The imperials were crammed together so tightly they couldn't even
use their weapons. It was a butchery. We couldn't pen them all in, of
course, but the survivors are no longer an army. Our militia can harry
them back down the Thames." Even as she told the tale, Gwenhwyvaer's
eyes kept shifting to the carcass of the Interrogator, and several of the
attendants crossed themselves as their horses shied nervously away.

"I suppose we should bury it…" someone began.

Tiraena stood up, heedless of pain. "No! You don't want him anywhere
in your food chain!" She saw their puzzled expressions and forced herself
to concentrate long enough to speak words they'd understand.

"Burn him! This earth was never meant to bear his weight Burn him!
And beg your Gods forgiveness as the smoke of that burning rises into His
sky!"

It was all she had left in her. She collapsed into unconsciousness. A
heartbeat of dead silence passed before men started running in search of
firewood.

Tiraena lay in the torchlight beside Cynric, who they'd carried back to
the camp with her even though his wound was clearly mortal. Cerdic stood
looking down at his son, tears making runnels in the blood and grime that
caked his face. Cynric was no child, but a man according to his peoples
lights, and therefore a fit subject for mourning.
Gwenhwyvaer stood nearby, looking at Cerdic and his son with an
expression Tiraena now understood. For her own part, she was waiting for
an opportunity to pop one of the little pills in the pouch at her waist Her
wound would heal anyway, but there was no reason not to speed things
along.

A horse approached, and its rider dismounted. Cerdic turned and


glared at him. "Well, Constantine ap Cador, here I am, and the battles
over. Have what you will of me!"

Gwenhwyvaer seemed ready to intervene, but Constantine shook his


head and looked at Cynric, who lay alternately sleeping and awakening
into agony. "No, Cerdic. There's not a man alive I'd seek a quarrel with at
such a time. And besides…" He hesitated, then continued with the
awkwardness of a man saying something very difficult. "I saw the line of
piled Saxon corpses that marks where the shield-wall stood." They'd all
seen it from atop the hill before the sun had set, and Tiraena had thought
of redcoats lying dead in square on the field of Waterloo.

"Spilled Saxon blood should be no novelty to you," Cerdic said,


unmoved. "You Britons have spilled it in plenty."

"Aye, when you came as ravagers of these shores. But this day's Saxon
blood was shed in defense of this land, and your dead will be buried in the
soil they died guarding. So whatever has gone before, for good or ill, your
people are part of Britain and it's part of you, from now until the ending of
the world." And he extended his hand.

He still wouldn't want his sister to marry one, Tiraena knew. But it's a
start—a start!

Cerdic met Constantine's eyes, and looked at the extended hand. Then
he took it, in the Roman fashion. Gwenhwyvaer smiled, and laid a hand
atop the clasped forearms.

But Gwenhwyvaer remained, and turned to Tiraena with a smile. "Well,


Lucasta, what are the bards going to do with you? How are they going to
deal with the fact, witnessed by so many, that it was a woman—and a
foreign woman at that—who slew the monster?"

I imagine, Tiraena thought, that hero-tales are going to have to


accommodate a little more variety in this timeline. Good. She started to
say something about it, but Gwenhwyvaer was gazing down at Cynric, now
mercifully unconscious, with an expression that would have puzzled
Tiraena once. Then she looked up with a bitter little smile. "Ah, Cerdic,"
she whispered. "I think I can understand how it is—how it must be for
those who can have children!"

So that still rankles. Aloud, Tiraena addressed the queen in British


rather than their customary Latin. "Leave all thoughts of barrenness,
Lady. For it's in my heart that you've given birth to a nation!"

Gwenhwyvaer gazed at her for a time before replying in the same


tongue. "Oh, a nation's been born, right enough. God knows there's been
sufficient pain and blood this day for the birth of a giant! But…" Her voice
dropped to a near-whisper. "But it wasn't I who gave it life. It created
itself. At most, I'm the foster-mother."

She seemed about to say more, but men started arriving, asking
questions and needing decisions made. A final quick smile for Tiraena,
and Gwenhwyvaer was off to tend her infant titan.

Alone for the moment, Tiraena slipped one of the little pills out of her
pouch and swallowed. She'd just washed it down with wine from the jug
that had been left beside her when Flavian, the only surgeon for this army
of thousands, arrived from his rounds. He gave Tiraena a smile which
vanished when he looked at Cynric.

"There's no hope, is there?" she asked, unnecessarily.

"No." The fine-boned face, clearly more Roman than Celtic, wore an
expression compounded of exhaustion and despair. 'The liver is pierced.
He'll die before morning. I can do nothing for him." His features stiffened
with bitterness, and he swept his arm out over the whole camp with its
moaning rows of the wounded. "I can do nothing for any of them except
try to ease their pain. I can't stop them from dying, because while we
know well enough what death and sickness look like we don't really know
why a man is alive one moment and dead the next. We know nothing.
Nothing!" He clenched his fists in helpless fury, for he took all the
suffering and death in the world as a personal affront.

Why aren't all doctors like this one? Tiraena asked the God in whom
she did not believe. And why doesn't this one have the tools and
knowledge he needs? The universe gave no answer, but she hadn't really
expected one.

Flavian departed to fight and lose yet another battle in his hopeless
personal war, and Tiraena looked at Cynric where he lay beside her. He
was awake again, and moaning softly. As she studied his profile—yes,
there was some of his grandfather there if you knew what to look for—

Tylar's words played themselves over and over in her head. "All obvious
manifestations of advanced science and technology must be kept hidden
from the inhabitants of this milieu, lest the culture's future intellectual
development be distorted. It is all for the greater long-range good.…"

She became aware that her hand, as though actuated by a will of its
own, was fumbling in the pouch, withdrawing one of the
recovery-stimulating pills. She turned to Cynric and spoke urgently, for
soon sleep would take her.

"Cynric!"

The youth turned his head and recognized her. "Yes, Lady?"

"Cynric, I want you to do something for me." She took the hand of his
good arm and pressed the pill into it. "I want you to swallow this."

"Swallow it?" Cynric stared dubiously at the tiny ovoid, so


disconcertingly unnatural, made from no substance he'd ever seen. "Why,
Lady?"

"Never mind," Tiraena said, fighting off the oncoming waves of sleep.
"Just do it."

"Er… can't I just hold it?"

Tiraena took a deep breath. "Cynric, you must trust me. This is a very
sacred object, blessed by a holy man in—" her mind flew back to one of the
twentieth-century flat movies for which Bob had a perverse fondness
"—Antioch. Its virtue is that it cures seemingly mortal wounds. But you
must take it into your body, like… like the Holy Communion. Will you do it
for me, Cynric?"

The blue eyes took on an expression that sent a realization of her own
unworthiness washing over her like a wave. "For you, Lady," he breathed.
Then he crossed himself and popped the pill into his mouth.

She poured a swallow of wine into him, and he lay back with a smile.
Sleep came almost immediately, and his features relaxed into those of the
boy he still was. She made absolutely certain he was unconscious before
reaching out and tousling the blond hair.

Flavian returned and saw that Cynric was motionless. "Is he… ?"

"No." Though rapidly drifting off, Tiraena managed a head-shake. "He's


going to be all right."

"What? No, Lady. It's not possible."

"Flavian, believe me. I've had a… a vision. Just keep an eye on him. He's
gone into a deep, healing sleep that will last a long time. When he awakes,
give him all the food he wants, because he'll be… very hungry. So will I."
She roused herself for a final sentence. "And tell Cerdic… I think he'll want
to know…" She slid into a semiconscious state where speech was
impossible.

The surgeon leaned over and examined Cynric. Yes, the lad was
breathing—and breathing deeply and regularly! He was sleeping
peacefully, and his color actually seemed to be better.

Flavian stood up and gazed at the woman Lucasta, now sinking rapidly
into a deep sleep of her own, and his flesh prickled. She had a Power in her
that was beyond his understanding, beyond even his desire to understand.
But it could not be a thing of evil. What, he wondered, could be the
thoughts behind that serene, almost beatific smile her face wore?

Fuck you, Tylar, she thought just before letting sleep take her.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
"Tylar, what the hell's happening? I need to know!"

"Compose yourself." In Sarnacs ghostly holo display screen, the time


travelers visage was as infuriatingly calm as ever. "I also have been unable
to make contact with Tiraena. This may mean simply that she is presently
unable to access her long-range communicator, which, in turn, could have
any of a number of relatively benign explanations—"
The tent-flap flew open, revealing Andreas in full battle array save for
the helmet he still held in the crook of his left arm. "Come on, Bob! Things
are moving!"

"All right, all right! I'll be along!" He instantly regretted snapping at


Andreas, but he had to find out whatever Tylar knew. The young
transtemporal voyager seemed to understand.

"I'll tell Ecdicius something or other, Bob. But hurry!" And Andreas was
gone, plunging back into the turmoil of the camp.

"Look, Tylar, I haven't got much time, so cut the crap! What do you
know about Tiraena's status?"

"I was just coming to that, my dear fellow. Finding myself unable to
contact her, I investigated the state of affairs in Britain using surveillance
satellites."

"Huh? What surveillance satellites?"

"Sentient devices the ship deployed into orbit as we approached, as a


matter of routine procedure. Didn't I mention them? At any rate, you can
set your mind at rest. The crisis is past in Britain. The invasion has been
broken, and the Interrogator is dead."

"Thank God for that," Sarnac breathed.

"Dead by Tiraena's own hand, no less! Of course, she sustained some


damage in the process—"

"What?!"

"Calm yourself! She's in no danger. But she's still recovering with the
aid of the field pharmacopeia I supplied to you both. So she's been in no
position to initiate long-range communications. And now" —he glanced
over his shoulder at something unseen— "I must go. Matters are coming
to a head here."

Here, Sarnac knew, meant the marshes shielding Ravenna, and he


abruptly felt guilty for keeping Tylar distracted so long from the task of
blocking the Eastern armies that sought to penetrate to the city. "Uh,
yeah, of course. Good luck to you and Artorius."
"I'll convey your message to him when I see him again, but he's rather
heavily engaged just now." Tylar paused before signing off. "Oh, yes, I
almost forgot. Be sure to keep your long-range communicator in your
possession at all times."

Sarnac looked skeptically at the oblong device that fit into a


custom-made pouch of authentic local leather. Carrying it would be a
nuisance, but it could be done.

"Well…" he began.

"Splendid. Remember, it's very important." And Tylar's image


vanished.

Sarnac was already outfitted. He wore a scale-armor hauberk.because


it was expected; he couldn't get away with going into battle in what
appeared to be mere quilted cloth as he had in the good old days. Too
bad—the hauberk blocked the impact armor's microscopic sensors,
leaving his "cloth"-clad arms and legs considerably better protected than
his torso. He attached the communicators leather carrying case—not
unlike a Civil War era cartridge box—to his belt. Then he put on his
cavalry helmet and joined the cheek-pieces under his chin, and stepped
out into the campground. It was an unseasonably warm day for late
autumn, but blustery with the promise of rain-squalls later. He paused to
take in the panoramic view of what was to be today's battlefield.

Kai had finally forced a break in the deadlock. He'd struck out boldly,
advancing westward from Toul, ignoring the road system and using his
superb engineering corps to ford the upper reaches of the Marne and the
Aube. He'd never read Sun Tzu, but he understood instinctively the way to
force engagement: "When I wish to give battle, my enemy… cannot help
but engage me, for I attack a position he must succor." Toul had been
expendable; the vital road-hub of Troyes was not.

Ecdicius had countermarched at a pace that had almost driven his


army beyond endurance. But now they lay interposed between Kai and
Troyes. It wasn't a defensive position Ecdicius would have preferred; this
low plateau where the fortified camp lay should have anchored their left
flank, but thanks to Kai's preliminary maneuvering it must hold their
center. In front of Sarnac, a line of spearmen faced the dauntingly massive
formation of Kai's infantry center to the northeast, beyond which rose the
hill—the highest one hereabouts—where the enemy command center lay.
Behind the spearmen, and a little above them on the slope to shoot over
their heads, were the crossbowmen on whom so much had been staked.

To the left, where the plateau was lower, was a line of relatively
light-armed local cavalry levies led by Basileus. Opposite them was a large
enemy cavalry formation, behind which could be seen the array of red
cloaks that marked the Artoriani. To the right, below a shoulder of the
plateau, Ecdicius led the pick of his cavalry: heavy cataphractarii,
including most of his old Brotherhood from the Visigothic wars and many
of their sons. They confronted a formidable infantry formation in
defensive posture.

The dangers in having the commander-in-chief on the lower ground to


the right where he couldn't oversee the battle were obvious even in this
era, with its rudimentary notions of command-and-control. But Ecdicius
could see no alternative; he must lead the heavy cavalry in person, in an
effort to break through and create the kind of fluid battle he liked.

Hopefully, the two advisers "Tertullian" had lent him would be able to
help in that area…

"Are you receiving?" Sarnac subvocalized.

"Loud and clear," Andreas replied from his position with the right
wing. "Ecdicius is still wondering why you requested to be assigned to the
left wing rather than with him and the heavy cavalry."

Sarnac mounted up. He readjusted the communicator on his belt so it


wouldn't dig into his ribs and cursed Tylar mechanically. "But he bought
my explanation that I could do the most good where the Artoriani are
going to hit us, didn't he?"

"Oh, yes. He could see the sense in it. And he was obviously impressed
by your guts."

"Nice to be appreciated." Sarnac rode toward the left, down to the


lower ground. Here, it wasn't really a plateau, just a rise. Still, what little
slope there was to the northeast would be in their favor. The bad news was
that they couldn't just let momentum carry them downhill, lest a gap open
between them and the infantry center on the bluffs to their right.

"Ho, Bedwyr!" Basileus greeted him. "What kept you?"


"I was… praying for my wife in Britain."

"Ah, of course. But don't worry—I'm sure she's fine." Suddenly, a noise
of trumpets from the imperial formation cut short the veteran's attempts
at encouragement.

"They're advancing," Basileus observed. He signaled his own


trumpeters, and the lines of mostly leather-armored light cavalry began to
move.

Looking beyond the enemy battle-front, Sarnac saw that the Artoriani
were advancing more slowly than the lead elements. Glancing to the right,
he saw the dense masses of imperial infantry moving forward,
juggernaut-like. They included longbowmen, so Ecdicius' center would
have to take some nasty missile-fire before being able to respond with
crossbows.

Then his attention snapped back to his own part of the battle, as the
enemy horse drew closer with hideous speed. Both sides' ranks included
some mounted archers. They weren't much compared to what was even
now standard on the Eurasian steppe, and Genghis Khan's boys would
have reacted with a disdainful "Oh, puh-leeze!" or its equivalent. But they
could discharge arrows, some of which found their marks in
flesh—generally that of horses. So the momentum of charge and
countercharge had been blunted by the time the two met head to head.

From the twentieth century on, military historians had tried to


reconstruct what such a meeting must have been like. They'd agreed that
two formations of horsemen couldn't have simply ridden into each other
at full tilt. Even if men—and, with more difficulty, horses—could have been
prevailed upon to do it, the only result would have been a chaos of
shattered human and equine bodies. Sarnac couldn't answer the question
from past experience, for in his sole cavalry-on-cavalry clash the Artoriani
had taken the Visigothic horse on the flank. But now he learned precisely
what happened, and why for centuries the only answer to the knight on
the battlefield had been another knight.

At the moment of contact, as though by common consent, there was a


general slewing to the right, so men presented their shielded left sides to
each other and began jabbing with lances and hewing with swords. Amid
the hell of noise and weapon-impacts, Sarnac found a millisecond to
reflect that these were light cavalry; the same dynamics must apply even
more to a collision of heavy cataphractarii. Charging directly forward
with lances at rest was for riding down mobs of undisciplined footsloggers.

Even without his high-tech goodies, Sarnac was more heavily armored
than most in this company. He made the most of it, laying about him with
his spatha and stealing a look to the right. The enemy infantry had
reached the spear-front of Ecdicius' center, but was unable to bring its full
weight of numbers to bear, for it advanced across ground broken by heaps
of its own dead. The massed crossbowmen had done fearful execution, and
the large wooden shields being held over their heads were protecting them
from the sleet of longbow shafts that arched over from behind the enemy
front Sarnac's heart leapt with the thought that the center would hold.

Suddenly, he felt as much as saw a shift in the battle-pattern, as the


enemy formation partially disengaged and began to part. Then, with a
roar of trumpets and throats, a squadron of the Artoriani thundered into
the fray and rocked Basileus' lighter-armed horsemen back. Sarnac gave
ground with the rest of the struggling crush of men and horses, and as he
did he saw with dawning horror that a gap had opened between them and
the center. Very good, Kai, he thought, guiltily aware that he shouldn't be
feeling proud of his old friend. It was with no surprise at all that he caught
sight of the column of hard-riding red-cloaked figures heading unerringly
for the empty space from which they could curve around and take the
immobile infantry mass of the center in the rear.

But they'd been aware of the danger of sacrificing mobility for


firepower by tying their main infantry body to the vulnerable
crossbow-loaders. Shouted commands rang out from the high ground, and
the center's left flank bent itself rearward, shielding the loaders. The
charging Artoriani, like an incoming tide flowing around a seaside cliff,
thundered past the solid infantry wall toward the lightly defended camp.

"Basileus!" Sarnac yelled across a few yards of hell. "Pull back to the
camp—you'll be cut off if you stay here. I'm going back now." He wrenched
his horse around, freeing himself from the melee, and galloped south.
Looking to his left, he could see the flying column of the Artoriani, riding
parallel with him; their leading elements would reach the camp before he
did. Beyond and above them, the infantry was reconfiguring its formation
with greater smoothness than he would have thought possible. They
wouldn't be taken in the rear, so hope still remained. Still further in the
distance to the northeast rose the hill from which Kai must be overseeing
the battle. To its left were more red cloaks on horses; a squadron of the
Artoriani were still being held in reserve.

"Andreas, Kai's pulled a fast one: he used some of the Artoriani to push
our light cavalry back and open a space between our left wing and our
center, then sent most of the rest of the Artoriani through the hole.
They're headed for the camp." Where Julia is, he didn't add. "I'm
following them, and Basileus is going to pull back. But it'll take him time
to disengage…"

"Understood. We've pushed the enemy left wing back, but not as far as
we'd hoped—they've got some longbowmen here, and they blunted our
charge. I'll borrow a squadron from Ecdicius and head back to relieve the
camp." The steadiness of Andreas' voice as transmitted through Sarnac's
mastoid by the implant communicator would have fooled most people.

"Make it quick! Signing off." Sarnac ascended the slope to the camp,
where the defenders recognized him and let him through the palisade.
Without pausing, he turned his horse's head leftward toward the noise of
battle.

Some of the red-cloaked riders had broken through and were riding
among the tents and shacks. Sarnac found himself exchanging blows with
one of them. His control of his mount slipped momentarily, and as he was
regaining it a sword-slash connected with his thigh, only to glance the hole
that had been torn in the camp's defenses. But there were still these guys
who'd already gotten in to deal with. Now they had reached the innermost
parts of the camp, and various noncombatants were running or trying to
defend themselves—like the slender, chestnut-haired young girl who stood
behind a tumble of baggage, swinging a poker from the nearby smithy in
great circles to fend off the red-cloaked riders.

"Julia!" he yelled, knowing she probably couldn't hear him. "Get away!"
He fought frantically to reach her, but the man he was fighting was very
good, maneuvering his horse with his knees to minimize the force of blows
while striking shrewdly with his own spatha. Sarnac forced himself to
fight clear-headedly as he watched Julia lose her footing and go down,
while the enemy swarmed around her and began to dismount.

At a speed that was reckless amid the camp-clutter, a horse and rider
burst into the fight, bowling over one of the still-mounted men around
Julia and sideswiping one of the dismounted ones. The others turned their
attention from the supine girl to the new arrival, and one of them chopped
viciously at the horses hocks. The animal went down with a scream, and
Andreas rolled free. He got to his feet and hastily wrapped his cloak
around his left arm while using his right hand to menace his foes with his
spatha.

off as the impact-armor leggings stiffened to a hardness exceeding steel


at the moment of impact. Taking advantage of his opponents
dumbfounded immobility, Sarnac lunged. You couldn't see much of a
man's face with these helmets— the whole idea of the cheekpieces was to
leave as little of it exposed as possible. But Sarnac could see that it was a
young man's face just before the point of his spatha destroyed it. For an
instant that was like a nerve-pain of the soul, he wondered if he'd served
with the lad's father. Then he was swept along as the fight swirled on into
the camp. Somehow—perhaps it was the precise tenor of the shouting—he
knew that the perimeter guards had sealed.

They hesitated—Andreas was a very big man on the standards of this


milieu, and obviously in no mild humor— while Julia got up into a
semi-crouch and scrambled behind him. Then they rushed. Without
waiting to receive the attack, he waded into them, bellowing in what
Sarnac supposed must be his native language.

Deflecting a cut with his left arm, he disemboweled one attacker and
continued the motion to cut a leg out from under a second one, then used
his shoulder to batter a third aside. A fourth got in behind him, and
slashed; but Andreas was wearing his round shield strapped to his back,
often the most useful place for it in this kind of fighting, and the cut which
might have severed his spine glanced off it. Andreas whirled around and
brought his blade down on the man's head, crashing through helmet and
skull. Then another man's spatha banged against his own helmet. It held,
of course—like Sarnac's, it had a little field generator that strengthened
the iron's atomic bonds—but the impact staggered him and he fell over
backwards. The attacker rushed forward for a second, killing blow. But
Julia clumsily flung the poker she still held at his legs, and he stumbled
forward… directly onto the point of the spatha that Andreas had managed
to bring up. He continued his forward motion, and the sword-point
emerged from his back, accompanied by a gout of blood. But he managed
to bring his own point down, and it pierced Andreas' shoulder, where the
Model 491 scale armor covered the impact armors sensors. Blood flowed,
and Andreas emitted a scream which caused Sarnac to redouble his
efforts to fight his way past his unreasonably skilled opponent.

Then two streams of horsemen converged on the scene: Basileus' men


who'd fallen back on the camp, and Andreas' relief column which he'd
outrun. Sarnac was separated from the man he'd been fighting, and he
broke through the press to Andreas, who was lying in the death-grip of the
man who'd wounded him; Sarnac rolled the corpse off him while Julia
cradled his head.

"You'll be all right," Sarnac said as he bound up Andreas' shoulder and


poured a slug of the army's vin extremely ordinaire into him. He couldn't
mention Tylar's "field pharmacopeia" with Julia present. The fighting
moved away as the remaining intruders were mopped up, but sounds of
battle continued unabated from the camp's northern perimeter, where
enemy cavalry waves beat against the palisade whose defenders were now
reinforced by Basileus' dismounted men. The left end of the infantry
center had completed its bending-back and was now linked with the camp
defenses, so the front was unbroken again. It was also a purely defensive
front—any hope of victory must ride with Ecdicius' cavalry on the right.

Andreas seemed to read his thoughts. "Get to Ecdicius," he croaked.


"He needs all the help he can get. I'll… be with you in my thoughts." The
circumlocution was for Julia's benefit, but the point was well taken: the
army's left was now anchored on the camp, and Andreas was hors de
combat there, so Sarnac had better get his tail to the right so they'd be
able to continue their communication function.

"All right," he said, mounting his horse. "Keep your spirits up."
(Translation: Stay conscious.) "I'll tell Julia's father she's all right." And he
was off toward the east, riding out of the camp under a sky whose
cloudiness was growing. An occasional spatter of rain wet his face.

Approaching the right flank, he saw that Ecdicius had indeed gained
some ground there even as his left flank had been driven back to the camp.
So the fighting front had rotated almost one hundred and eighty degrees,
pivoting on the immovable center. So now the infantry facing Ecdicius
fought with their backs to the southern slopes of Kai's headquarters hill.

He found Ecdicius organizing his riders for yet another charge.


"Bedwyr! What news? Andronicus somehow learned that the camp was
threatened… Amazing, the way you two find things out. By the way, what
brings you here?"
In a few swift sentences, Sarnac described what had happened on the
left. "And Julia's all right, thanks to Andronicus," he concluded. Ecdicius
kept his outward composure, but slowly released his breath. "He fought
like a lion to protect her. He was wounded, but he'll live."

"He'll live to receive my gratitude—if any of us live through this day."


Ecdicius kept his voice low, for there were others around. He gazed
forward, beyond the enemy front at the hill. Then he turned toward one of
his lieutenants. "Ancelius!" he shouted, with the lightheartedness of a man
out hunting. "Remember when we broke that Visigothic raiding party
outside Clermont, back before you got old and lazy?"

The man, one of the veterans of the old Brotherhood— he looked slightly
younger than Ecdicius—grinned back. "Aye, Augustus! That was a great
day. They were drawn up at the foot of a slope, like…" His voice trailed off
and his eyes went to the formation they were facing.

"Precisely!" Ecdicius grinned like a boy. "And that fat-gutted chieftain


of theirs was looking down from the top of that slope!" He wheeled his
horse around, calling to several other old war-dogs. "Continue drawing
back for a fresh charge as you're already doing. But divide the center
like…"

"like we did that day, Augustus?" Ancelius asked eagerly.

"Not quite. Instead of two elements, I want three. The one in the very
center I'll lead myself. It will consist of all of you—delegate command of
your own squadrons—and a few other picked men. After the front is
broken, we're going to charge straight uphill. Our objective is to kill or
capture Kai!"

All their mouths hung open. "But, but Ecdicius," Ancelius stammered,
"you're the Augustus of the West! You can't risk the imperial person…"

"Hell, Ancelius, if we don't carry the day my imperial person won't be


worth an imperial damn! Have you forgotten how to hazard everything on
a single throw?"

He swept them all with flashing eyes. "There's far more at stake now
than when we rode against the Visigoths… and it seemed hopeless then."

"We were young then, Ecdicius," Ancelius said sadly.


"Yes, and can you remember what that was like? Can you remember
how it was in those days? The world we'd known seemed to be coming to
an end, as though the pagan Fates had turned malevolent with senility,
and we rode forth to do one worthwhile thing before the dark closed in
over us. And then Artorius came, carrying the dawn in his hands and
saving the world another chance!" Ecdicius met all their eyes, and what
passed between those eyes was like an electric arc. "Now the world needs
yet another chance—and Artorius is gone. But I am his heir, and in his
name, and in the name of everything that was ever dear to those young
men of the Auvergne who still live inside you, I call on you to follow me.
The Brotherhood rides one last time!"

Sarnac heard the storm of cheers as though from a distance, for he was
seeing these grizzled, thickening men as they must have been two decades
ago, just before the timelines diverged. In my reality, they did indeed go
down into the dark, after performing a gesture of magnificent, gallant
futility.

I said it to Tylar and I meant it: in this reality, gallantry is not going
to be futile.

He urged his horse forward through the crowd to Ecdicius' side.


"Augustus, I'd like to be with you in the center."

Ecdicius flashed his transfiguring smile. "I wouldn't have you anywhere
else, Bedwyr. And now, let's get ready to ride, before it starts raining in
earnest and the ground turns to mud."

They charged with two elite units in full cataphract rig in the middle of
the onrushing line of horsemen. Just behind them came Ecdicius and his
picked squadron: what was left of the Brotherhood, the best of the younger
men, and Rear Admiral Robert Sarnac, PHLN. Over Ecdicius streamed
the blood-red dragon standard he carried as the Restorers heir, twin to
the one that floated above Kai's tent.

The enemy infantry they faced in this part of the line were Franks,
stationed here and not in the center where they might have found
themselves opposing their ethnic relatives, as per time-honored imperial
practice. They'd long since expended the throwing axes that were their
favorite weapons, but their courage was unabated. And the few
longbowmen who backed them up kept up an arrow-flight that sent men
and horses pitching forward to the ground. Along most of the front, the
Franks held solid against Ecdicius' weakened charge.

But at its midpoint, under the concentrated impact of two squadrons of


armored horsemen, that line strained, heaved, and finally gave way. The
riders pressed their advantage, pushing the snarling Franks back to left
and right in a maelstrom of stamping hooves and thrusting lances, and
the gap widened.

Sarnac, approaching that gap with the rest of Ecdicius' chosen men,
visualized how this tactic must have been used against the Visigoths, with
the two breakthrough units continuing on and then wheeling around and
striking their shaken enemies from the rear. But on this day, their purpose
was simply to open up the emptiness he now saw yawning ahead. Then
they were through, with nothing but hill-slope beyond and the battle-din
receding behind them. With a shout, Ecdicius spurred his mount forward
into a full gallop, and it became a mad race up the slope to the sound of
hunting-horns.

Up ahead, Sarnac saw a spreading confusion along the ridge-line. He


also heard trumpet-signals he remembered, and he knew that Kai had
summoned his last carefully hoarded reserve of the Artoriani. So it really
is a race, he thought as he lowered his freshly issued lance and braced his
feet against his stirrups. They'll be riding up this hill from their position
on the far side, and whoever gets to the top first will have the advantage.
We've got a head start, since it took Kai a little while to grasp what
Ecdicius is up to. But they and their horses are rested…

Then they were scrambling up the last few yards to the hilltop, and
there was no time for further thought, no time for anything except
weapon-impacts, noise and blood. The infantry line they encountered was
a hastily improvised thing, and these were headquarters troops. They
smashed through with scarcely a pause and were into the encampment
beyond Ecdicius and his standard-bearer led the way toward the
command tent, toward a fratricidal meeting of dragons.

The day finally fulfilled its promise with a crash of thunder and a
pelting rain. Sarnac was telling himself that the Artoriani would be slowed
in their progress up the hills opposite side, when the first of the
red-cloaked riders topped the ridge and bore down on the camp. There
could be no thought of tactics now, as horsemen met among the tents in a
swirl of single and small-group combats.
Sarnac had left his lance in the belly of an infantryman, and now he let
implanted reflexes wield his spatha for him as he let the maelstrom of
combat carry him on through the camp. All at once, he was free of the
latest struggling knot of riders in which he'd been entangled. He found
himself in a large open space in front of the dragon-surmounted command
tent—it must have been a parade ground or something, for there was a
kind of rostrum behind which an obvious noncombatant cowered. The
battle-pattern, such as it was, had left the space clear, save for a rider in
high-ranking officers armor who was engaged with one of Ecdicius' men.
The officer sent his opponent reeling to the ground with a sword-stroke,
then looked around for fresh enemies, and his eyes met Sarnac's through
the rain. And Sarnac felt a resistless tide of inevitability take hold of him
as he recognized those green eyes.

"Kai," he croaked.

The enemy general walked his horse forward, never breaking eye
contact, and gave him a puzzled look. "I know you from somewhere. It was
long ago…"

"Yes, Kai. I fought beside you at Angers." And later at Bourg-de-Deols,


Sarnac didn't add. And afterwards you were with me when I threw a
sword into a lake, and you carried the tale back to Britain. But that was
in another universe.

"Bedwyr," Kai breathed. "It's you! So many times I've wondered what
became of you. You just seemed to vanish, shortly before the Battle of
Bourges. Ah, if only you'd been there, when we smashed the Visigoths!" A
dull hurt entered his voice. "You didn't seem the kind to desert, Bedwyr."

The battle had moved away from them, but it hardly mattered, for they
were as oblivious to it as they were to the rain that drenched them. Sarnac
was peripherally aware that the foppish figure behind the rostrum had
stood up and was staring at them in bewilderment, his courtiers makeup
running in the downpour.

"I didn't desert, Kai. I…" I didn't go anywhere, Kai. This entire
continuum veered off, taking you with it, leaving me with a Kai who had
to live in a world without Artorius, a Kai who never became a general of
a resurgent empire. But how do I explain that to you? "It's a long story,
Kai, and you wouldn't believe it anyway. But believe this: I never deserted
Artorius, which is why I'm here today, fighting for his heir."
Kai stiffened in his saddle. "His heir? Ecdicius? That damned traitor
who murdered the Pan-Tarkan?"

Sarnac recoiled as though from a slap. "What are you talking about
Kai?"

"He explained it to me." Kai pointed at the bedraggled courtier. "The


Chamberlain Nicoles. He told me how Ecdicius couldn't wait for Artorius
to die, so he poisoned the man to whom he owed everything!"

"No, Kai! You've been told lies. I was there, in Constantinople, and I tell
you that the men who've seized power there tried to murder Ecdicius.
That's why he had to flee. Join us, Kai! The East is lost, but you can help
Artorius' heir come into the Western half of his inheritance at least."

Kai's eyes fled from Sarnac to Nicoles and back again, as though
seeking refuge from an insoluble dilemma. Finding none, they squeezed
shut, and his entire body shook convulsively. Then a crash of thunder
seemed to crystallize something inside him, and the green eyes snapped
open. "No! Defend yourself, Bedwyr!" And he spurred his horse forward
over the few yards that separated them.

Sarnac barely had time to get his shield up and deflect the
downward-sweeping spatha. He struck back, maneuvering for an opening,
slashing and parrying through a fog of unreality. This is Kai, and if there
was anything even resembling a God in the universe we'd be on the same
side. Then they broke apart and came together again with a clash of
swords, horses rearing. Sarnacs mount foundered in the mud, and he
threw himself free. Then he slithered to his feet as Kai bore down on him,
striking from above. He fended off several downward blows, then dropped
his spatha and rushed in, holding his shield over his head and grasping
Kai's belt with his free hand. He tugged with all his strength, and Kai
toppled from the saddle. They fell to the mud in a tangle, with Kai on top.

For an instant they wrestled clumsily. Then Sarnac slid free and
retrieved his blade. They both got to their feet in the mud and faced each
other warily.

Sarnac felt an odd sensation at his midriff, like a small animal wiggling
against him, an animal of metallic hardness. He looked down at the
carrying case on his belt, and saw that the communicator it contained was
reconfiguring.
The instant of distraction was all Kai needed.

Sarnac was just looking up when his opponent's shield pushed his own
aside, and a sword-blade connected with his helmet, filling his eyes with
Roman candles and sending him staggering backwards. Kai pressed his
advantage, and Sarnac reeled under a hail of blows, finally going over on
his back. Kai was instantly atop him, drawing back his spatha for a killing
stroke… and stopped.

Sarnac's first thought was that it had stopped raining. But it hadn't—at
least not outside the invisible hemisphere that surrounded them. That
hemispheres boundaries were clearly marked by the still-falling rain that
hung frozen outside it, each drop motionless. Within the hemisphere,
there was a faint splattering sound, and the puddles of water settled into
calmness after the impacts of the few raindrops that had been within the
field at the nanosecond in which it had formed.

But Kai had eyes for none of this. He was staring fixedly at the glowing
immaterial portal that had appeared in the middle of the parade ground,
and at the two figures that had emerged from it and were advancing
toward him.

"Pan-Tarkan," he whispered as the first of them approached him.

"Hello, Kai," Artorius said. His face was smeared with the grime of
battle, and his smile was like the sun breaking through clouds.

Sarnac, unnoticed, took the carrying case off his belt and carefully laid
it on the ground. Then he got up and stalked over to the second new
arrival.

"What kept you?" he asked Tylar grumpily.

"Oh, I'm frightfully sorry, my dear fellow. But we were rather busy.
You'll be glad to know that the invasion of Italy has been stopped. As soon
as the pursuit was well in hand and Artorius could be spared, we came
here without delay."

"Yeah, by means of that 'communicator'—which evidently has a few


little features you forgot to tell me about."

"Ah, yes. It is a rather special device. In its current configuration, it can


project a portal at a distance of several yards, as you can see."

"That's not all, it seems." Sarnac gazed up at the dome of motionless


rain, and beyond the parade ground at the battling figures who stood like
living statues. In the distance, a lightning bolt stood suspended, moving at
the speed of electricity and therefore effectively stationary in terms of the
rate at which time was moving inside this immaterial hemisphere.

"True, it also generates a reverse-stasis field. You may recall this kind of
time-accelerating effect, which you experienced once before."

"Vividly. But those devices you'd implanted in us only produced a field


that surrounded a single person."

"This device is a good deal more powerful. I anticipated that it might


be necessary to create what is in effect a zone of privacy." He indicated the
scene around them. Artorius was giving Kai a version of the same story
he'd used on the Restorer, and Nicoles was standing in openmouthed
immobility. "What transpires within the field will occupy only a
nanosecond or two from the standpoint of the outside universe, so
Artorius and I will never be seen."

"Except by Kai and Nicoles, here."

"Yes, their presence was a problem. But it was unavoidable, for only
Artorius can persuade Kai to do as we wish. And the surveillance satellite
currently in a position to observe this battlefield reported that the battle
had reached a crisis. And, incidentally, that you were in some personal
danger."

"Sweet of you to care." Sarnac turned his attention to Artorius and Kai.
The latter had fallen to his knees and removed his helmet, and seemed
oblivious to the wizardry that held frozen the rain and the battling figures
in the camp around them. He was listening to Artorius with the air of a
man who understands nothing but needs no understanding to believe.

"But, Pan- Tarkan" he stammered, using the title he knew this man,
who had by his own account never been Augustus, was entitled to, "I was
told that Ecdicius had poisoned you…"

"No, Kai. Bedwyr has spoken the truth. The traitors who've put that
poltroon Wilhelmus on the throne sought Ecdicius' life because he was the
legitimate heir. And now…" He pointed toward the camp. Ecdicius had
broken free of the battle and started toward them at a gallop in which he
and his horse were now suspended. "Now I've been allowed to come to you
and speak to you in this bubble snatched from time so I can tell you that
he is carrying forward my work by leading the West along its own true
path."

"But, Pan-Tarkan, we fought to restore the empire."

"And you won, Kai. And now you've seen the result." Artorius spoke
with enormous gentleness. "We fought like men, Kai; nothing can take
that away from us. But it has pleased God to so order things in this world
that right action can sometimes give birth to wrongness. And that which
dwells in Constantinople is an enormous wrongness, Kai. Ecdicius knows
that. I think you know it. And I call on you in the name of what you know
to be true to give your allegiance to Ecdicius as Augustus of the West."

"NO!"

Nicoles' quavering scream shattered the silence into which Artorius'


final word had dropped. Before anyone could move, the eunuch drew a
dagger from his belt and sprang forward toward Artorius' back,
continuing to scream in a voice from which all sanity had fled.

Sarnac still held his sword. Without time for anything fancy, he lunged
past the paralyzed Tylar, thrusting as far as his arm would reach. Nicoles,
with eyes only for his target, ran onto the outthrust point, which slid into
his gut.

Simultaneously, Kai rushed past Artorius before the latter could turn
around, raising his spatha and bringing it down with all his strength and
all his skill in a form of swordplay which, like a crude kendo, aimed at
putting the maximum possible force behind a sword-edge. His blade
connected with the base of Nicoles' neck at an angle, slicing inward. Blood
spurted. The eunuch's mouth opened to scream but expelled a retching
sound and a red spray. His body sank to the ground with both their
swords still in it, and Sarnac and Kai met each others eyes over it. Slowly,
they both released their hilts.

Artorius stepped up behind Kai and grasped his shoulder. "Will you do
as I ask, Kai?"
"I understand none of this wizardry, Pan-Tarkan," Kai said, turning to
face him. "But I know you, for you've come striding out of my very
memories. You may say I'm not yours to command in this time and place,
but I know better. And Ecdicius is your true heir."

Artorius clasped Kai in his arms—this Kai who was to all appearances
his own age. "I have one other… not command, Kai, but request. Tell no
one of this meeting we've been permitted. There are things men are better
off not knowing."

"That's an easy one, Pan-Tarkan," Kai grinned. "Nobody'd believe me


anyway!" And with that grin, Sarnac knew this man to be his old
friend—Kai with a few more pounds and some gray hairs, but still Kai.
And the world seemed mended.

Artorius smiled back and they embraced one last time. Then the former
High King turned and strode toward the portal.

"You'd better stay for now," Tylar murmured to Sarnac. "Your abrupt
disappearance would be hard to explain. We'll come back for you and
Andreas as originally planned." He followed Artorius through the portal,
which vanished. At the instant of its vanishing, the rain resumed its
descent onto the parade ground, pelting them, and the .stationary figures
throughout the camp crashed back into battle. Ecdicius plunged forward,
seeming to reacquire his momentum toward them. Then he reined in,
puzzled, as Kai knelt before him.

"Bedwyr, the lightning must have dazzled me—I didn't see you get up.
And Kai… ?"

The erstwhile enemy commander extended his spatha hilt-first with his
left hand while giving the Roman salute with the right. "Hail Ecdicius
Augustus!" he shouted. "Accept my allegiance, and the Army of
Germania!"

Ecdicius' jaw dropped. Sarnac grinned weakly as the accumulated


exhaustion of this day began to overtake him. "We'd better have the
trumpeters signal 'Truce' and send some heralds out to stop the fighting.
And let's get in out of this damned rain!"
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
They rounded the remembered bend in the road and Sarnac saw the
three approaching riders, coming from the direction of Cadbury. He
bounded ahead of Tylar and Artorius as Tiraena sprang from her horse
and ran to him. After a while, they heard a harrumph.

"Ah, you forgot your horse," Cerdic said. He was holding the bridle
Tiraena had abandoned.

"Thank you," Tiraena smiled.

"No," the ealdorman said with a vehement headshake. "Let you never
have any thought of owing me thanks, Lady. The rest of my life will be
spent in your debt for the life of my son." He dismounted and, to Tiraenas
obvious consternation, fell to his knees at her feet.

"Cerdic!" she exclaimed, voice rising to a falsetto squeak.

"I know not where you're going, Lady, or whether you'll ever return. But
if ever you're in need of a Me, the life of Cerdic of the West Saxons is
yours."

Tiraena's coppery face turned a dark-red shade new to Sarnac—it came


to him that he'd never seen her blush before. "Aw, come on, Cerdic," she
stammered. "I'm just glad Cynric is all right." She'd said goodbye to her
young erstwhile bodyguard before leaving Cadbury, where he lay raising
the roof with his demands to be allowed out of bed after a recovery that
had the entire countryside talking of miracles. ''That's all the thanks I
need. Now please get up!"

"As you command, Lady." Cerdic rose with a smile. "My debt to you is
yours to release me from. But my honor, and that of my house, is
mine—and you'll never want for a shield and a sword in this land!"

Gwenhwyvaer rescued Tiraena from her tongue-tied misery. "Ride on


back, Cerdic. I'll catch up. There are things I must say in private."

"Aye, Lady." Cerdic mounted and rode off, leading Tiraena's horse.
Silence settled over those who remained. Gwenhwyvaer walked forward
until she was within less than an arm's reach of Artorius. Silence stretched
as she gazed into the face, seemingly in its forties, of him who'd died in his
sixties in Constantinople last spring. The late afternoon chill deepened, for
winter was coming on, but neither of them showed any signs of noticing.
"So," the queen finally said, "you're off—to a land I've never heard of,
Lucasta tells me, and I can well believe it. Indeed, if I understand aright,
to another world, a world of dream where you're a legend! So I've lost you
twice, first to death and now to what must be magic, however much you
deny it."

"Remember what I told you: you share in the legend in that world. But
think not of that, Gwen. For you've grown far beyond me—beyond what I
became in this world, beyond what fable made of me in the other. You've
grown into what I could never have imagined, for I never took the time to
truly know you." He sighed deeply and took her hands. "Ah, Gwen, the
waste!"

Tylar cleared his throat softly. "We really should be getting along," he
said to Sarnac and Tiraena. "We'll wait for you," he added to Artorius,
who nodded abstractedly.

"What was all that about with Cerdic?" Sarnac asked after they'd
rounded the bend in the road.

"A long story," Tiraena replied. "I'll tell you about it once we're all
aboard the ship."
***

Sarnac gasped for breath and held his aching sides. "The Holy Pill of
Antioch!" he whooped. "I love it!" Then another gust of uncontrollable
laughter took him.

Tylar didn't share his amusement. "You really shouldn't have, you
know," he told Tiraena primly. "Still, it probably won't do any harm.
There'll be so many legends associated with that battle that one more
won't matter. Future generations will assume that Cynric's wound wasn't
really as serious as it was initially thought to be."

"And remember," Sarnac gasped, having gotten his breath back again,
"you owe her one for making sure they burned the Interrogators body
instead of burying it."

"True. A Korvaash skeleton, dug up by a later scientifically oriented


age, would have been impossible to explain away. As it is, with no physical
evidence, he'll be written off as just one more myth. That was well done on
your part."

"I wasn't thinking in those terms at the time," Tiraena admitted. "To be
honest, I don't clearly remember what I was thinking." She stared moodily
out at the panorama revealed by the "observation deck" where they
reclined on the extrudable furniture that an invisible magic carpet seemed
to be carrying over the English Channel under gray skies. Then she shook
herself and smiled. "Anyway, Tylar, you must admit I've been punished for
my little transgression." She gestured aft, toward the receding British
coastline. "I think I've just proven experimentally that it's not possible to
literally die of embarrassment!"

Artorius, hitherto quiet, spoke up in an odd voice. "I'm afraid, Tiraena,


that you're not quite through doing it." And, before anyone could react, he
was on one knee before her, seeming to kneel in midair.

"Artorius?!" This time, Tiraena's voice rose above falsetto on the last
syllable.

"I know not what meaning the name of King Arthur holds for you,
Tiraena, for your blood is of many nations and worlds. But for whatever
it's worth, you have his undying gratitude for the life of his grandson."

For the first time since Sarnac had known him, Tylar was
dumbfounded to the point of being completely inarticulate. When he
finally closed his mouth and opened it again, all that emerged was "But,
but, but…"

Artorius turned to the time traveler with a crocodilian grin and spoke
very clearly and distinctly, like a man who'd been waiting for years to
deliver a line. "I'm afraid I haven't been entirely candid with you."

"So you're really going to stay?" Sarnac had been surprised at first, but
on reflection he couldn't imagine why.

Andreas nodded. They'd left him in this Gallic villa to recuperate from
his wound while they'd gone to Britain. Now the two of them strolled
through its courtyard in the unseasonably warm afternoon sun. His
recovery was now complete, thanks to Tylars medical resources and Julia's
TLC. And his spirit was clearly as whole as his body.

"Yes. The world I came from no longer exists, far in the future of this
timeline. And I wouldn't want to go back to it even if I could."

"Are you sure you'll be able to get used to this world, though?" Sarnac
asked, half-jokingly. "No electric lighting, no computers, no toilet paper…"

Andreas smiled. "The only thing I'd really miss is advanced medicine,
and Tylar's agreed to supply me with some of that. Otherwise, I'll not be
losing anything that can compare with what I've found here."

"Oh, yeah: Julia. Great kid. I don't imagine you two had any problem
getting Ecdicius' blessing."

"No. All he asked was that we go back to Italy with him before the
wedding. That was fine with us—it's not every couple who have their
marriage solemnized by the pope! And," he added, deadpan, "I think I'll
get over the loss of my estate in Bithynia."

He really does have a sense of humor, Sarnac realized. It was just


overlaid by the concrete of his conditioning in the world he came from.
And now that that world is receding into the realms of fading
nightmare, it's growing toward the sun like a flower through a cracked
pavement.

"But it's not just Julia," Andreas continued. "Its what I can do here. In
my old world, all we had was a twilight struggle to hold back the night.
But now I'm at this worlds dawn. I can make a difference to its future."

"Hmm? You mean you're going to continue to work for Tylar?"

"Indeed," came the time traveler's voice as he approached with Tiraena


in tow. "As the son-in-law of the Augustus of the West, Andreas will be in
a position to give the course of history an occasional nudge in the right
direction over the coming years. Hell be in contact with Koreel, who'll be
staying on for a while in the Eastern Empire—which is going to be going
through interesting times over the next few years. Wilhelmus and his, er,
lady have been discredited by the total failure of their attempt to
reconquer the West; I doubt if they'll survive for long."

"So you plan to continue keeping an eye on this timeline, then?" Sarnac
asked.

"Certainly. From our perspective, it's an absolutely unique research


opportunity. A twentieth-century astronomer, long before the days of
interstellar probes, remarked that humanity would never really know
anything about its own planetary system until it was able to study some
others. Something similar applies to the study of history. At the same
time, we'll have to guard against the temptation to intervene excessively."

"Yeah, I remember you telling me about the sensation of morally


sanctioned interference with events. Quite a rush, I gathered."

"And you, as I recall, expressed concern that it might become


habit-forming. I assure you that it won't. The intervention we've just
concluded was justified only by dire necessity. Now, this Earth must take
care of itself; the fundamental responsibility of human beings for the
consequences of their own actions must remain absolute. Any society that
loses sight of that ceases to be viable— as the history of your own North
American ancestors demonstrates, Robert. And," Tylar continued briskly,
"it goes without saying that our own timeline's past remains sacrosanct;
we must continue to safeguard it as we always have."

Tiraena spoke up. 'Tylar, in that connection, Bob and I have been
meaning to talk to you. Andreas, would you excuse us?"

"Of course. I need to talk to Artorius anyway." He departed with a


wave, leaving the other three alone in the courtyard. Tylar seated himself
on a bench and raised an interrogative eyebrow, waiting.

Sarnac and Tiraena looked at each other awkwardly. The latter finally
took the lead. 'Tylar, we know you can't allow us to keep our memories of
all this, any more than you could last time. We haven't let ourselves dwell
on it, but we haven't forgotten it either. So, since it's about time for us to
return to our own reality and our own era, we just wanted to say that…
that…"

"That there are no hard feelings," Sarnac finished for her. "We
understand that there's no alternative, and we ve accepted that."

"An extremely commendable attitude. However, I've been doing some


thinking myself." Tylar gazed up at them over steepled fingers. "You've
both done nobly in fulfilling an ethical obligation which you, Robert, never
really understood; and in which you, Tiraena, didn't share. So you have, I
think, gone beyond paying your debt. Indeed, you've placed me in your
debt—a debt which I believe I'll pay by foregoing memory erasure on this
occasion."

There was dead silence as the reality of what he'd said sank home.
Sarnac finally broke it. "But… but you can't, Tylar! I mean, if we go back
to our own world knowing what we know now, it would change your
history and wipe out the future that includes you. Wouldn't it?"

"I assure you that I've given these matters much thought. Consider: you
really have no detailed knowledge of events in the remainder of your own
lifetimes, do you? I've never told you, for example, who's going to win the
next election for Terra's representative to the PHL Grand Council."

"But, Tylar," Tiraena protested, "we know the answer to the greatest
enigma of our age: how the human species appeared on Raehan thirty
thousand years before spaceflight! We know there's such a thing as time
travel! We know time travelers from the remote future are policing
history! We know…"

"Yes," Tylar interrupted gently. "You know a great many things. And I
think you also know what the reaction would be if you were to announce
your knowledge to the human race at large." The silence returned. Tylar
smiled. "You're both intelligent people—too intelligent, I'm sure, to want
to bring yourselves into disrepute."

"So," Sarnac said slowly, "you're saying we're powerless to change


history because nobody would believe us?"

"That's one way to put it." Tylar stood up and regarded them gravely.
"With this decision I am, let us say, pushing the envelope of my authority.
But I believe I can justify it, when called upon to do so. You can make no
practical use of this gift I'm making you. All you can do is cherish the
knowledge that you were part of a legend you yourselves learned as
children, and that you saved the future of an entire reality. That will have
to be enough." Then he smiled in his slightly befuddled way, and was
again an ordinary middle-aged human. "And now, if you'll excuse me,
there are still a few matters which need my attention before we depart."

"I still wish we could have stayed for Andreas' wedding," Tiraena
remarked.

"Yeah. I'll bet Sidonius pulled out all the stops for them."
Most of Sarnacs attention was on Loriima III, whose night side
occluded more and more of the stars as they approached it.

As Tylar had promised, the transitions between timelines had been less
unpleasant when returning to the reality wherein they belonged. They'd
likewise negotiated the temportal in the outer reaches of the solar system
with ease, and Sarnac had been surprised by the lump that had formed in
his throat when he'd sought out Sirius and found a blue-white star of
apparent magnitude -1.43. Then had come the soul-shakingly brief voyage
to Loriima, and yet another temportal transit. They emerged into the very
night on which a Robert Sarnac whose memories had held a large hole
had departed with a mysterious character calling himself Tylar. Now he
had an embarrassing notion of how much it must have cost to have
emplaced a temportal simply to get him back to that night. At least, no
such expensive expedient would be required for Tiraena at Naeruil II;
Tylar would simply take her there at a pseudo-velocity calculated to get
her there on the night of her own departure.

Tylar joined them. "We're now stationary relative to the base, and
within range," he informed them. A portal blinked into ghostly existence.
Within it, Sarnac recognized his office suite. "Shall we go?"

They'd had time for extended goodbyes during the voyage. Now they
exchanged a quick embrace. "Hey," Sarnac said, "someday we should tell
Claude and Liranni the unvarnished truth about all this. They'll think their
parents are crazy old coots!"

"They already think that, Bob," Tiraena informed him as gently as


possible. She gave him another squeeze. 'Take care. You've still got a war
to attend to, you know."

"Huh! Piece of cake!" A final kiss, then he turned and stepped through
the portal with Tylar.

They were in the outer office. Tylar led the way into Sarnac's inner
sanctum. "You'll find that only an insignificant amount of time has
elapsed locally since your departure," Tylar said. Then: "Well, I suppose
that's it."

Sarnac took a deep breath and asked the question for which he'd
awaited this time when they'd be alone. "Tylar, are you a god?"
There was a barely perceptible pause. "As you'll recall," the time
traveler said mildly, "Tiraena asked me that question once, fifteen of your
subjective years ago. You'll also recall that I responded in the negative."

"I know," Sarnac said flatly. "I also know you lie a lot."

Again, Tylar hesitated for such a brief instant that it was impossible to
be certain he had hesitated at all. Then he spread his hands diffidently.

"My dear fellow, does the answer really matter? Indeed, does the
question itself not become meaningless if it has to be asked at all? I leave
you with that thought." He turned to go, then paused and faced Sarnac
one last time. "I will answer your question to this extent: whatever I am,
and whatever label you choose to apply to what I am, I emphatically am
not the unknowable One, Who is as unknowable to me as to you." His face
broke into a mischievous grin that made it unrecognizable. "On this point,
I am being entirely candid with you!" And Tylar was gone.

Sarnac was left standing in the midnight dimness of his office of


Loriima III. He glanced at the desk chrono—yes, it was the same date and
time. Then he heard movement behind him. He whirled around, then
relaxed at the sight of the figure in Fleet uniform.

"Well, Artorius—or is it Captain Draco?" he drawled. "What are you


doing here? I thought you'd be with Tylar."

"Actually, Admiral, I asked him for an extended leave of absence, which


he granted."

"Huh? Why?"

"Well," said the onetime High King of the Britons, "you did me a good
turn, which I feel I should repay. And I've always hated to begin a job and
not finish it. And… well, I have some ideas for the coming campaign
against the Korvaasha. Its a bloody interesting tactical problem." Sarnac
smiled and draped an arm over the others shoulders. "Captain Draco, I
think this is the start of a beautiful friendship."
HISTORICAL NOTE

It's seldom advisable to take Tylar at his word, but his real-world
biographical asides concerning Sidonius Apollinaris, Ecdicius, the
Patriarch Acacius, and Pope Gelasius are accurate. The same is true of
Cerdic of the West Saxons and his son Cynric, up to a point. The
semi-historical Cerdic's personal background is, of necessity, a matter of
inference. That he was part-British can be taken as a given, in light of his
name. That he was from the Saxon settlements on the lower Loire is
speculation, albeit a reasonable one. His parentage as herein set forth is
sheer fancy.

Other fifth-century characters who actually lived include the British


High King documented on the continent under the honorific "Riothamus"
rather than his given name, and Constantine of the Dumnonii, although
I've taken minor liberties with his dates. Many of the rest, including
Gwenhwyvaer, Kai and Peredur—and, for that matter, Bedwyr and
Balor—have some kind of basis in legend. The imperial couple Wilhelmus
and Hilaria, and the eunuch Nicoles, are, of course, purely fictitious.

I've followed a common practice by using "Saxon" as a catchall for the


various tribes of Low German speakers— Saxons, Angles, Jutes and
Frisians—who migrated into Britain in the fifth century. It would be
anachronistic to call them "English." The Irish were actually called Scotti
by the Romano-Britons. This doesn't mean they came from Scotland, but
rather that Scotland (Caledonia in the fifth century) was later named after
them because some of them settled there, although Ireland, where most of
them stayed, is of course not called "Scotland." It's all too confusing, and
too Celtic. In these pages, the Irish are called the Irish. The tribal
designation "Fomorian" is drawn from legend.

As in Legacy, I've generally used modern place names (Chester,


Bourges, Troyes) rather than ancient ones (Deva, Avaricum,
Augustobona), accepting anachronism as the price of clarity. But
whenever a modern name is jarringly inappropriate (France, Istanbul)
and the ancient one is well-known (Gaul, Constantinople), I haven't
hesitated to opt for the latter. Likewise, years are given according to the
present system of Anno Domini dating, which didn't become standard
until the sixth century.

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