Aristoi 1992 xv2.0. This was a mess. Fixed many problems, but some remain.  With thanks and gratitude to Sage Walker, Rebecca Meluch, Wil-Ham F. Wu, Melinda Snodgrass, Pati Nagle, Sally Gwylan, Pat McGraw, Salomon Montoya, Karen McCue, Mr. Bill Packer, Laura J. Mixon, Judith Tarr.   &Walter Jon Williams Readers are encouraged to pronounce the foreign words any way that appeals to them, but those interested in the little squiggles over the words might consider the following: The accent marks indicate nothing more than the stress over the syllable. Therpontes is accented on the second syllable, skiagnos in the third. The horizontal bar over the final vowel of some words (daimMn, therpMn) indicates a long vowel. Note that in the plural (daimones, therpontes) the vowel turns short. 2The words taken from Chinese are transcribed in Pin-yin, not Wade-Giles, and are therefore pronounced more or less as the English-speaking reader finds them, with only two exceptions: the Zh in "Zhenling" is pronounces like the j in "justice," and the word qi is pronounced "chee." As a final note, I should point out that Aristos and Aristoi have their accent on the first syllable. Note Chapter 1 ANIMAL TAMER: BWalk in, walk in to my menagerie 0Full of life and cruelty.  At Graduation, every five or seven or ten years, the Aristoi celebrated in Persepolis. For the most part they celebrated themselves. Persepolis, in the Realized World, was an interesting artifact. It shaded by degrees into "Persepolis," the real place becoming, through its illusory/electronic deeps and towers, an ever-flexible, ever-unfolding megadimensional dream. zPersepolis, the place, had been reconstructed on its original Persian floor plan, and sat on its reconstructed plain at the meeting of the reconstructed Pulvar and Kor, where it took its place as the (largely symbolic) capital of a reconstructed Earth2. The city was inhabited only a few days a year, when Pan Wengong, the most senior of the Aristoi, convened the Terran Sessions. Behind the City of a Hundred Columns loomed Kuh-e-Rahmat, the Mount of Mercy, its grey flanks a contrast to the bright gold, vermilion, ivory, and turquoise that accentuated the city. To the hewn tombs of Achaemenid kings carved into the side of the mountain were added those of many Aristoi, laid to rest in their capital beside the descendants of Kurush the Great, whose tenuous spirits were presumed to be flattered by the comparison. Atop the mountain itself, surrounded by a grove of cypress, was the gold monument to the lost Captain Yuan, a place of homage and worship. F"Persepolis," the dream, was a far more interesting place. Most of the people who came here did not do so in the flesh but through the oneirochronon, and the two palaces superimposed on one another in ways both intricate and obscure. Earth's archons and senators strolled along the corridors, holding conversations with people others could not see. Corridors that dead-ended in reality possessed doors and branches in the oneirochronic world. Some led to palaces, dominions, grottos, and fantasies that did not exist on Earth2, or indeed anywhere, but were instead the special habitats of oneirochronic Aristoi, some of whose bodies were long in the grave. In these palaces the inhabitants danced and discussed and feasted and loved-there had long been competition among them to design the most dazzling sensual experiences for one another, delightful unrealities more striking, more "real," than anything experienced in the flesh. To Persepolis, the dream, came Gabriel. Demons buzzed insistently in his head, but he kept them on a tight rein. For Persepolis was a place where demons, as well as dreams, were shared. fA few days before his arrival in Persepolis, in a shimmering predawn on Illyricum, Gabriel glided through his gardens like a ghost. Perfume rose at his footsteps, lingered in the still air. Sometimes he wanted simply to be himself: his daimones were asleep or busy with their own projects, and all was peaceful, as perfect as the plans of this garden he had once built in the oneirochronon before consummating it in the Realized World. ~Rectangles cut the solemn sky as solar panels in the Residence, the Red Lacquer Gallery, and the Autumn Pavilion slid from concealment and deployed to catch the first rays of dawn on their surfaces, layers of matte-black photoreactive polymer woven with pure gold. The rising sun turned the gold grids to scarlet flame. An English bullterrier, Manfred, trotted silently at Gabriel's heels, absorbing in its own fashion the dawn, the garden, the perfume. The terrier had implanted as a nurse and in another few moments would be assisting Gabriel with some minor surgery. Gabriel climbed the cloudy opal steps of the Autumn Pavilion and stepped into the interior. He seated himself, facing the entrance, on a bench of a black soft-crystal ceramic that reacted to his body heat, yielded and conformed to his shape. Manfred curled up at his feet and yawned. An early bird gave a tentative call. *"Open," Gabriel said. (Silent shutters folded themselves away, inviting the mother-of-pearl dawn. Flower perfume crept into the still building. The Autumn Pavilion featured rooms designed by each of Gabriel's primary daimones, and this room was Horus's contribution: logically eight-sided, the walls covered with Illyrian Workshop ceramic tiles in aspen-yellow and maple-crimson, each featuring a hand-painted harvest scene from preindustrial times. Benevolent Demeter gazed down on all this activity from a ceiling fresco set amid a classic rococo plaster frieze. Tables set beneath the windows were unassuming wrought-iron. Antique vases held dried flowers to the nonexistent wind. fThere was a self-portrait in oils by Horus on one wall, Gabriel's pointed face unusually grave and balanced beneath the curling mass of copper hair, brows a little knit but on the whole approving of what he saw. The startling blue of the eyes was a little deemphasized, the wise epicanthal folds pronounced. Gabriel watched, absorbing the sight, as the spinning globe dropped morning into the garden. Photons' touch caused palati plants to fire pollen from their tube-shaped flowers. Floating particles glowed in the light of the rising sun. (Dawn, in her golden sandals, Gabriel thought, after Sappho. Whatever thought came next drifted away with the palati pollen before he could catch it. jHe was going to impregnate the Black-Eyed Ghost, his lover. He thought for a moment about that, about gametes floating like pollen, about bits of himself set adrift in the universe. fHis various selves seemed at peace with the notion. The dog yawned again. The light, as the sun rose, turned bluer, more precise. Reality took on a hard, photographic edge, qualities for which thousands of artists came to this system, this planet. Illyricum, the World of Clear Light. Gabriel's world. He had built it, designed its effects, contributed to its architecture. Issued decrees to its population, at least when he felt like it, which wasn't often. He had, in fact, owned the whole thing, till he'd given most of it away. |Illyricum was one of several worlds that Gabriel had designed. He liked to think he hadn't made too many mistakes with any of them. For the opening-night reception in Persepolis Gabriel dressed his skiagnos in a forest-green jacket covered with gold brocade, tight breeches of a lighter green with Hungarian-style laces on the thigh-tops, black reflective Hessian boots with gold tassels. The cravat was pinned with a diamond, gem-stones ornamented the fingers, the hair was drawn back with diamond-and-enamel clips. Atop his head Gabriel put a soft bonnet with a diamond pin and dashing feather. He worked some long moments getting his scent precisely the way he wanted it, just the proper combination, a hint of spice and intrigue. The finery was not purely ornamental. None of it existed in the Realized World-the outfit was purely oneirochronic-but it all served as advertising for Gabriel's programming skills. The stiff touch of the brocade had to be plausibly different from the soft feel of the hat, the tickle of the feather, the pliant mass of copper hair, the warm press of Gabriel's flesh. The reflective look of the polished boots was different from the hard, depthless glitter of the stones on his fingers, the cheerful liquid highlights in his eyes, the soft weave of the jacket and the complex patterned loops of the glowing gold brocade. The tassels on the boots were reflected in the boots themselves and cast complex shadows as they danced. It all had to be not simply real, but finer, more real, than reality itself. True reality was often overlooked in its more exact details, and Gabriel did not want to be overlooked. The careful programming put into Gabriel's appearance, the slight exaggeration built into its visual and tactile dimensions, was meant to give it an impact somewhat greater than the real-the Realized-thing. rFor the occasion Gabriel flew up to where his yacht, the Pyrrho, waited. He restrained himself with tethers in a null-gee room and had his face constantly scanned by microwatt laser so that his real expression could be transmitted to the skiagnos and that its facial expressions would be Gabriel's own. In zero-gee he could move his real body in synch with the skiagnos in order to enhance his illusion and the conviction of his performance. The most important people in the Logarchy would be watching. He didn't intend to disappoint them. Gabriel entered the oneirochronon and told his reno to establish a tachline link to Earth2. He materialized his skiagnos in the virtual apartment he'd built in the dream Persepolis and looked about him. The furniture, the hangings, all were as he remembered. Shadow-servants in the shapes of fairy-tale bipedal animals moved toward him, triggered by his appearance. An oneirochronic quintet were frozen in one corner, awaiting only the command to play. Gabriel inspected the servants' livery and made certain it suited their somewhat inhuman shapes. They hadn't been animals at the last Graduation-their shapes (orange tabby, striped Olivian tetrapus, bright-eyed otter) were a more recent whimsy. He made certain the animals' fur possessed the proper warmth, softness, and resilience-there was even a slight crackle of static as he stroked them-then passed on to the quintet. He triggered their action, gauged and adjusted the tone. The interpretation had been borrowed from his own Residence chamber musicians. The musicians were dressed in eighteenth-century Viennese court dress, white wigs and all. Everything seemed ready. Gabriel froze the action and then left the suite through carven jade doors. XThe doors led to an underground corridor in the palace of Darius I that existed both in reality and in the oneirochronic Persepolis. The first person Gabriel saw he recognized: TherpMn Protarchon Akwasibo, who had served under Gabriel decades before, when Gabriel was a very new, very young Aristos. rAs of tomorrow, Akwasibo would be made an Ariste herself. JHer lanky body was clothed in a dress of diamond-shaped mirrors. Invisible spotlights seemed to bounce off the reflective surfaces, casting gold reflections on the walls. Her Ethiopian eyes were rimmed with kohl; her long neck was as supple as that of Nefertiti (and scarcely exaggerated at all, as Gabriel remembered). There was another diamond-shaped mirror set flat in her forehead, and two more dangled from her ears. "Greetings, Gabriel Aristos." Assuming a Posture of Formal Regard. \Gabriel raised a hand. "Hail, newly immortal." FShe smiled. Gabriel embraced her and kissed her hello. Her dream-breath smelled of oranges, and her dream-lips seemed to vibrate slightly, a not unpleasant effect. l"Are you on your way to the reception?" Gabriel asked. "Point of fact, I was on my way to see you. The city's reno told me you'd arrived and I came right over." tGabriel lifted an eyebrow. "Is your business that urgent?" "Depends on your definition of urgent. We can walk to the reception if you like." "Take my arm." "A pleasure." lThey strolled up the corridor. The wall frescoes were a translucent sea blue, and dolphins, gold and white and deep azure, frolicked thereon. The warm Persian wind brought the fresh scent of cypress. It was autumn here, and somehow-that sense had been translated into the oneirochronon. Good programmers, here. FPan Wengong employed only the best. "I wanted simply to thank you," Akwasibo said. "I think you were the Aristos who taught me the most." "I was dreadfully inexperienced. Under thirty, for heaven's sake, and I wasn't that much older than you." "You taught me while you were teaching yourself. Of course it took me over forty years before I could really put it all in practice." Z"But you'll make many fewer mistakes than I." "The only thing I can say with confidence is that they probably won't be the same mistakes." HThe sound of wind chimes floated on the wind, and then the unreal sound of a reed flute. Gabriel and Akwasibo turned toward the Apadana, the great hall of Darius I. Over the dream-city drifted a dream-moon, half full in a mild blue sky. The real Luna after which it was modeled had long been more Realized than most places-its interior had now been transformed, molecule by molecule, into a huge data store, one of many that made up the Hyperlogos, the universal data pool. Save for that under the Seal of the Aristoi, almost every bit and byte of it was accessible, something that contributed more to peace in the Logarchy than all the social engineers in history. "I'm a bit nervous," Akwasibo confessed. "What sort of thing goes on at these receptions?" "Pleasure. Display. Rivalry. Intrigue." Gabriel smiled. "Everything that makes life worth living." NThe palati pollen floated through Illyricum's breathless dawn air. Gabriel rose from the bench, and Manfred picked himself up, stretched, yawned yet again, and followed Gabriel from the pavilion. Fading motes of dawn danced in Gabriel's path as he returned to the main building of the Residence. .As he walked past the Shadow Cloister he heard a mumbled, weary chant, and remembered that he'd received a report that the TherpMn Dekarchon Yaritomo, the demiourgos in charge of tax assessment for one of Illyricum's provinces, had announced he would ere long attempt the ritual of Kavandi. Gabriel told Manfred to wait for him and stepped quietly through a turquoise-encrusted archway to watch the ordeal. :Yaritomo was a stocky man not quite seventeen, a recent graduate of Lincoln College at Illyricum University. He had performed well at the duties that Gabriel had set him in order to acquaint him with the basics of civil administration. Reports from the Psychological Department indicated that Yaritomo's personality had shown a tendency to avoid fragmentation by milder techniques, and Kavandi was his own choice. ^Yaritomo was naked beneath the metal frame he had strapped to his body. The frame held over fifty stainless-steel spears, all surgically sharp, all pointed inward to his skin. 6Above him was the Shadow Mask on its pillar, the giant robot face-gears, pneumatic systems, and hologram projectors-that Gabriel had designed for his play Mask@. The Shadow Mask was set in an expression of harlequin satisfaction, white-featured, thinly smiling, black triangles over the eyes, rosy circles on the cheeks. TGabriel looked from the mask to the dancing boy below, and approved of Yaritomo's choice of place. The Shadow Mask was a symbol resonant with Yaritomo's announced intent. The young TherpMn chanted the Sutra of Captain Yuan over and over as he danced in a circle beneath the mask. He'd probably been at this since the previous evening, and he had worn a weary circle in the patient grass. The spears rattled in their frame, driving of their own weight into his flesh. Sweat fell from his forehead. "Let madness take my mind," he chanted. "Let daimones take my soul." jThere was remarkably little blood. Gabriel noted approvingly that even under severe physical and psychic stress Yaritomo had managed to retain mastery over his narrowed capillaries. "Let the spirit rise through my body. Let the spirit fill me with power." Gabriel, using his Aristos Override, pulsed a query through his reno concerning Yaritomo's pulse rate and blood pressure. His reno connected with the house reno, which queried Yaritomo's own implant. The TherpMn's reno, monitoring his state from its nest at the base of his skull, returned a reassuring answer. Yaritomo was young and in good condition and with the proper focus of concentration could probably keep this up for days. Gabriel inquired again regarding the level of fatigue toxins, but Yaritomo's reno, unlike Gabriel's, didn't have the ability to make that measurement. Certain mental states were aided, sometimes even initiated, by the extreme alterations in body chemistry caused by stress. Yaritomo had doubtless been on a moderate fast for several days, lowering his body's reserves against stress, rearranging his brain chemistry. The dancing, chanting, and extremes of pain would have raised stress and fatigue toxins to a high level while lowering reserves of strength, all intended not as an assault on the body, but on the conscious mind ... Yaritomo, however, wasn't trying to drive himself out of his mind. He was trying to drive himself into it. "Let the daimMn come. Let me wrestle with this daimMn. Let me overcome the daimMn and make him a part of me. Let me take the daimon's power!" The last words were a hoarse, determined cry, a shout of triumph over pain, of mental over physical self. ~Gabriel quietly withdrew. The pain, he knew, was far from over. Vermilion pillars, capped with gold, supported the roof of the Apadana. The walls and pillars were encrusted with both the original Persian script and the complex Involved Ideography of Captain Yuan. Aristoi, plumed and feathered, thronged the room. Sebastian, whose oneirochronic body was a shimmering, floating sphere, was conspicuous by his presence. Entering with Akwasibo, Gabriel acknowledged a few waves and nods. "I wish I could say that I always knew you would achieve this," he said. "But in those days I didn't have the experience to predict these things. And I was too busy to try." *"Well." She smiled. "I'm not certain that I ever knew myself. Not till the last three or four years or so, when all my work started coming together." Akwasibo's route to the rank of Ariste was the more common: decades of hard work followed by a kind of synthesis in which the years of diligence paid off, when the accumulated knowledge and ability reached a transcendent fusion. Gabriel's route was more direct, a blazing vertical ascent that ranked him as an Aristos before the age of thirty. Some had predicted that he'd burn out, but were of course wrong-instead, nearing the age of eighty, he was more productive than he'd ever been. @"Do you know everyone?" Gabriel asked. He glanced over the room again and summoned most of his daimones-dealing with his peers en masse was usually challenging. "Sebastian's hard to miss," Akwasibo said. "I've apprenticed with Coetzee and Tallchief. And I probably know most by sight." "Their real appearances, certainly. But here, if you see a dark, hovering creature, like a bat, it's most likely Dorothy. And Salvador likes to appear as a bird of prey-that bird over there, the"-consulting his reno-"Harris's hawk, that's probably him." (Clich, said Cyrus, voice echoing in Gabriel's head. Boring, said the Welcome Rain.) L"I'm glad I recognized you, at least." "I spent a lot of effort on my physical appearance as well as my oneirochronic one. No sense in altering it now." "I remember your eyes being a different color. And the epicanthal folds ..." x"Give me a sense of wisdom and maturity, I'd like to think." &Akwasibo craned her long neck to a somewhat unnatural angle. (Cyrus and Spring Plum argued back and forth about whether she had slipped up or not.) D"Who else won't I know?" she said. "Shankar will look like someone historical from old Earth1, Abraham Lincoln or Li Po or Charlie Chaplin. Dorothy St.-John, as distinct from Dorothy, likes to surprise people, so she floats around as something small, a moth or mantis or-" "A pair of gold cat's eyes," said a pair of gold cat's eyes that had been gazing from the nearby pillar. Akwasibo couldn't quite hide her start of surprise. Gabriel, who had far more practice at this, efficiently disguised his own. @I hate that! yelped Spring Plum. "Hail, Dorothy St.-John Ariste," Gabriel said, assuming a Posture of Formal Regard. "How're you hanging?" <"Cheshirely, thanks. And you?" "I hang together, not separately," Gabriel said, meaning himself and his daimones. :"Pleased to hear it, Flame." The eyes detached themselves from the lintel and floated between Gabriel and Akwasibo. Cyrus and Spring Plum commented on the eyes' lustrous amber glow; Augenblick lamented the lack of kinesic clues. "Have you heard what Astoreth and her clique are up to?" "No." "They think we're failing in our duty to motivate and educate the Therpontes and the Demos. Or succeeding all too well. They don't seem to be quite certain on that point. But at any rate they want changes made." j"I thought Astoreth's critique was mainly aesthetic." "She or her colleagues seem to have discovered a political dimension to their ideas." ""Who's involved?" V"Astoreth. Ctesias. Precious Jade. Han Fu." r"Except for Astoreth they're mostly young," Gabriel said. "No younger than you. I wouldn't dismiss it as a generational thing." 6"I have no intention of dismissing it as a generational thing or anything else." Gabriel gazed into the slitted pupils. "What do you think of their ideas?" The eyes fluttered like butterfly wings. "They possess a certain merit. But they are expressed with too much force to win over any significant fraction of the Aristoi. The means are too confrontational." H"Astoreth has always been that way." b"She'll regret it eventually. If they'd spent a few decades gathering data, then drawing conclusions, their ideas would have a better foundation-as it is, their notions seem more an artistic impulse than a political creed. If they can't prove their premises, no one's likely to respect their conclusions." "Far be it from me," Gabriel said, "to denigrate artistic impulse." L"I didn't think you would, Flame." The eyes winked. Dorothy St.-John began to flutter away. "I should go adhere to some other surface and see what news I can gather." "Best of luck." "Nice meeting you," Akwasibo said, craning her neck after the golden eyes. (Aha! said Cyrus. Told you it was deliberate.) Akwasibo turned back to Gabriel. "I hadn't heard of any of these political developments." "We have a way of keeping them to ourselves," Gabriel said. "If there's one thing people don't need to see, it's Aristoi yelling at each other." ZAkwasibo's eyes widened slightly. "You yell?" "Not me personally, no. But if you were debating someone like Virtue's Icon or Sebastian, you'd be tempted to, wouldn't you?" &"I see your point." "I should offer my respects to Pan Wengong. Shall I introduce you to him?" "I met him earlier." She looked about her, absorbing the sight of the Apadana. "Quite a place he built, eh?" Gabriel laughed. "You should see what he did for Alexandria, Byzantium, and Peking." Manfred at his heels, Gabriel entered the Residence's Biomedical Wing and walked through its invisible, sterilizing doors. pTherpMn Hextarchon Marcus was stretched comfortably on the padded couch in the circular operating theater with its geometrical black-and-white tiles. There was no audience in the seats above. The simple surgical equipment, concealed in a dark wood cabinet brightened by parquetry and bright inlayed silver, had wheeled itself into place. A vase of fresh-cut sunflowers perched happily stop the cabinet like a beaming visitation from Aries. Marcus wore a dark blue dressing gown over which white birds flocked, in darting flight, through a series of hovering Corinthian columns. His skin was pale, his hair, eyes, and lashes black. Sitting next to him on a stool was Clancy, TherpMn Tritarchon in charge of the Biomedical Wing. She held Marcus's hand. As Gabriel entered, she rose and assumed, from force of Habit, the Second Posture of Formal Regard. Her rosy skin flushed with pleasure. 6Marcus, on his table, attempted an approximation of the same stance. Gabriel kissed them each hello. Affection for Marcus floated warmly through his heart. "I brought you a gift," he said. He removed from his long red hair a pair of ivory-and-silver hair clips and presented them to Marcus. The ivory had been carved into delicate long helixes, resembling DNA, and each DNA curve had been carved with a delicate bas-relief face resembling either Gabriel or Marcus or some blend of the two. "The genetic code of our child has been microscopically inscribed into the silver," Gabriel said. Marcus's pale skin flushed with delight. He kissed Gabriel's hands in thanks, then sat up. Gabriel idly combed his fingers through Marcus's hair. Manfred jumped on the couch between Marcus's legs, and Marcus hugged the dog hello. He stroked Manfred's neck and ears. >"Can I read the code?" he said. "If you like," Gabriel said. He took the hair clips from Marcus and placed the first, frowned, adjusted it more to his liking. "But it will tell you the sex of the child. I thought you didn't want to know." lMarcus frowned. "Perhaps I can just look at the rest." "I created a more-or-less random mixture of our genetics-a classical zygote, if you like. I added nothing, I subtracted nothing-I only assured myself that the embryo would be free of genetic defect. I don't think you'd necessarily learn anything from the study." Gabriel fixed the last of the hair clips in place and studied the result. "Are you nervous?" he asked. L"Not as much as I thought I'd be, no." $Marcus's vital signs indicated that he was nervous, though only mildly so. "Lie back," Gabriel said. "Perhaps the couch could give you a massage." GABRIEL: Reno, give me Marcus's pulse and pressure, please. < Priority 2 > RENO: < Priority 2> < Linking through Biomed reno > < Linking through Marcus's reno > Heartbeat 87, pressure 150 over 88. B"It won't disturb the procedure?" "Not at all." Marcus leaned back on the couch. A faint hum announced he had called up the deep-massage function. Marcus closed his eyes and, with a slight visible effort, summoned his daimones. Gabriel called up those of his own who he thought would have an interest in the procedure. He looked up at Clancy. Sunflowers beamed from over Her shoulder. GABRIEL: Reno, keep that data coming. Horus. Bear. Cyrus. Spring Plum. Psyche. < Priority 2 > Servant. 8BEAR: < Priority 2> Servant. Servant. FSPRING PLUM: < Priority 2> Servant. Servant. "Thank you for your offer of assistance." Gabriel had never actually qualified as a doctor and wanted, for form's sake, to have one at hand. 4"My pleasure." Clancy stroked Marcus's arm through his dressing gown and smiled down at him. "I've performed a number of these myself, back on Darkbloom." `"I hope you will offer advice when it's needed." ,"I doubt I'll be necessary at all," she smiled, and gave a little shake of her head. Cyrus, ever the aesthete, called Gabriel's attention to the pleasant surge of motion through the mass of her hair, to the play of light on its dark sheen. Complex pleasures sang through Gabriel. Clancy was new here. Gabriel had met her several times while discussing this procedure, and found her enthusiasm invigorating. Gabriel turned to Marcus. "You know you'll have to be a little more careful with yourself than you're used to," he said. "Actually carrying a pregnancy to term within the human body is far more hazardous than other methods." "I want it, Gabriel Vissarionovich. I want to know every day that it's there." Gabriel smiled, waved his hands. He found it difficult to refuse anyone a harmless folly, "So be it," he said. Gabriel undid the buttons of Marcus's dressing gown and revealed the smooth, porcelain-skinned body that had caused him to nickname Marcus "The Black-Eyed Ghost." The rain of sensation from Cyrus fell away, replaced by the presence of Spring Plum. Spring Plum was a female Limited Personality, the most complete and self-possessed of his LPs yet revealed to Gabriel, and though she was as complete a connoisseur as Cyrus, she had firmer aesthetic standards for male beauty, standards that shimmered with complex structures of desire. Cyrus, Gabriel found, was forever and in contrast calling his attention to women. Marcus was in his forties but had stabilized his body at the age of twenty, as soon as he had graduated from the Demos to the status of TherpMn. The catlike musculature was distinct, but had a pleasant late-adolescent softness that Gabriel found entrancing. The pale, translucent skin was Marcus's own; the contrasting black hair and lashes were benign genetic tinkering. Marcus had served his previous apprenticeships under Deborah and Saigo, and failed his exams the one time he had taken them. He had put off taking them a second time, but finally, with Gabriel's urging, had prepared himself to try again within the next three years. VSPRING PLUM: "The expression of a well-made man appears not only in his face, It is in his limbs and joints also, it is curiously in the joints of his hips and wrists ..." (GABRIEL: < kisses > SPRING PLUM: "To see him pass conveys as much as the best poem, perhaps more." fCYRUS: < white birds flocking on blue velvet ... > JRENO: Pulse 92, pressure 139 over 90. :BEAR: The boy is too nervous. dCYRUS: < the silver curl of Corinthian caps ... > jGABRIEL: Reno, give me command of the surgical array. :RENO: Do you wish full video? GABRIEL: Yes. CYRUS: < fading > XRENO: < linking with surgical array > Done. GABRIEL: I'm largely blind. Spring Plum, take command of my body. < Priority 1 > jSPRING PLUM: < Priority 1 > At your service, Aristos. xPerhaps Marcus suspected what Gabriel knew: he would never graduate to the ranks of the Aristoi. He was talented, illustrious in his own chosen sphere of industrial design, but he didn't possess the blazing and brittle brilliance, the cold and all-consuming ambition, needed to rise to the highest ranks of humanity. 8Still, Gabriel felt, it would help him to know it, one way or another. Know that he hadn't missed an opportunity, that he was right to be just where he was. It wasn't a coincidence, Gabriel thought, that Marcus's most developed daimMn was a child, an unformed and naive personality who approached the world with delight and transcendent joy. Marcus's aspirations were not those of a steel-willed Aristos, turning the universe to his own account, but those of the talented, ingenuous, warm-hearted young man whose body he had frozen at the age of twenty, and with whom Gabriel had fallen instantly in love. Perhaps the inner knowledge of his upcoming failure was why Marcus suddenly wanted this child-and not any child, but the child of himself and an Aristos he loved. Some palpable memory of Gabriel, some hope that the child would achieve what Marcus would not ... Gabriel had good reason to suspect Marcus's hope. The children of Aristoi did not often achieve their parents' status. None of his other children had-all were talented, but only half had become Therpontes-and the odds were against this one being any different. But Marcus's child-a girl, Gabriel knew-would be loved. Marcus had a stable future as a talented TherpMn and his own child-daimMn would attach the child to him with bonds of affection and shared interest. Gabriel placed a mental finger into the oneirochronon and triggered the surgical cabinet, which rolled forward and deployed its array. He reached into the pocket of his brocade jacket (Spring Plum contrasting Marcus's pale skin and black hair with the black-and-white tiles of the theater), brought out the mechanical egg in which the blastocyst lay. The textured surface impressed itself on Gabriel's fingertips, white porcelain lace on Wedgewood blue. Through his reno's connection with the oneirochronon he ordered the egg to open (Spring Plum showing him brightness gleaming on sliding silver bars as the egg opened, as the blue ceramic turned inward, as he found himself with an open metal lotus in his hand, all gleaming silver petals with the treasure at their center). Gabriel (through Spring Plum) glanced down at Marcus's abdomen, and (through the deploying surgical array and its peritoneoscope) marked a spot just below the navel with a bright spot of low-intensity laser light. "There, Manfred," he said. "Two hundred microns, okay?" The bullterrier leaned forward and began to lick the area, covering it with sterile saliva. Marcus gave a startled laugh. ,"It tickles," he said. The surgical array dipped a two-millimeter peritoneoscope complex into the silver lotus, carefully absorbed the blastocyst, retracted. The egg folded itself inward again, blue and white flashing in Cyrus's appreciative perception, and was extended toward Marcus. ,"A souvenir," he said. zMarcus took the egg, admired it, tried to work the mechanism. Manfred drew his lips back, extended a carbon tooth tipped with nanodiamond, and stabbed Marcus precisely where Gabriel had indicated with the laser spot. Marcus, absorbed in trying to work the egg, failed to notice. Manfred used modified salivary glands to flood the wound with a fast-working local anesthetic, then licked away the tiny crimson droplet that welled up. Gabriel (entering the oneirochronon of the peritoneoscope) homed the fiber-optic complex in on the puncture. It entered (Spring Plum relaying Marcus's startled look as he realized that the operation had actually commenced), and Gabriel's visual centers filled with a fish-eye view of the bright colors of Marcus's dermis. The fiber-optic complex descended between columnar epithelial cells and vascular loops already ruptured by Manfred's diamond incisor. Half-formed fibrin clots were dispersed. Leukocytes tried and failed to come to grips with the seamless surface of the invader. Yellow fat cells swam through Gabriel's perspective. He slipped through the fibrous tissue surrounding lean, cross-woven muscle tissue of the linea alba, descended through tooth-torn myofibril bands. "This feels strange. I can feel myself being ... tugged around down there." Marcus's words came distantly to Gabriel's attention. "Start a relaxation exercise." Bear spoke with Gabriel's voice." Straighten your spine and square your shoulders as much as you can. Inhale through the nose to the count of ten. Hold to the count of fifteen. Exhale through the mouth to the count often." zGABRIEL: Reno, connect me with Clancy, please. < Priority 1 > RENO: < linking with Clancy's reno > Done, Aristos. < Priority 1 > CLANCY: Manfred's done your work for you here. Just follow the puncture to its base. JRENO: Pulse 97. Pressure 139 over 94. nBEAR: The boy is far too nervous. May I speak with him? LGABRIEL: Take my voice. < Priority 2 > HBEAR: < Priority 2 > Done, Aristos. zCLANCY: Careful, here ,.. Take your time. There's your place. CYRUS: < appreciation of the classic geometric array of overlapping muscle tissue > SPRING PLUM: < bemused, slightly alarmed look on Marcus's face > lBEAR: I am commencing a relaxation exercise, Aristos. ,GABRIEL: < approval > ZSPRING PLUM: "The true words do not fail ..." Bear was a comforting, warm presence, a parental embrace in daimonic form. It seemed not to possess gender as Gabriel understood the notion, only endless, universal melting reserves of tenderness, forgiveness, and compassion. @Gabriel pushed through muscle tissue and a layer of fat, encountered the semitransparent peritoneum. Bulbous viscera loomed, perceived indistinctly. Distantly Gabriel heard the whisper of Marcus drawing breath. He skated easily along a semifluid layer of fat between the peritoneum and the interior muscle wall. The world seemed to beat in harmony with Marcus's slowing heartbeat, hum with Bear's comforting phrases. 6There was an audible popping sound as the peritoneum was punctured. ("What was that?"-Marcus's voice, soothed away by Bear.) Fluids pulsed. The yellow fat cells of the omen' turn, bright with blood and oxygen, swam through the oneirochronon. ("I'm being yanked around!" said Marcus.) For generations there had existed a nanologic package designed to alter, over a period of months, an individual's sex. Many men in Marcus's situation would simply have opted to become female for the amount of time it took to carry the child. Marcus, on the other hand, preferred remaining biologically male, a decision that increased the number of technological challenges involved. NGabriel had decided to design the pregnancy package himself. There were standard kits available, but they failed, in Gabriel's view, on one ground or another. Either they depended on brute-force nano to do their work-Gabriel preferred to minimize the amount of nanomachines he actually injected into humans-or they didn't take enough design factors into account. They lacked, in his view, sufficient technological elegance. Gabriel had united the two gametes eight days before; he had wanted the cell package to reach the more vigorous blastocyst stage before implanting. The blastocyst was surrounded by an array of technologies in the form of a flexible biosculpture, a grey corrugated sphere, two millimeters in diameter, that would nestle among the blood-rich cells of the omentum. The outer layer was designed to dissolve over a period of several days, releasing a supply of hormones that would, in the course of the next week, thicken the omentum and build a thick decidual layer between it and the major blood vessels, a stage intended to preempt the usual difficulty with hemorrhages during abdominal pregnancies. Other hormones would increase the blood supply to the omentum and thicken its walls, strengthening it with cross-grained muscle tissue. Gabriel was pleased with this aspect of the design. Hormones would encourage the omentum to strengthen itself, but without the intrusive effects of nano invading each cell and restructuring it by force. He wouldn't have to plant a separate hormone package in Marcus's body; he'd made it part of the biosculpture itself, and it would vanish when its work was done, unlike some nanos, which were (rarely, he must admit) disinclined to dismantle themselves when their schedule called for it. Perhaps because he was the only person on the surface of Illyricum licensed to create nano and use it freely, he employed it only when he must. .The interior of the biosculpture was roughly textured to supply an adequate simulation of the maternal endometrium, providing a firm place for the blastocyst to lodge and the placenta to grow. It would thin and disappear as the placenta grew into the strengthened omentum itself. pGabriel planted the blastocyst, then withdrew the peritoneoscope to view the nesting grey ball. He felt himself soaring, uniting with his daimones in a moment of ringing transcendence. Gabriel listened in glowing awe to the rare voice of Psyche. Her verse was presented in ideogrammatic form, each character presenting a delicate grey brush-drawn picture resonant with visual as well as verbal consequence. Gabriel waited for a moment, letting the dying vibrations echo for a moment in his spirit, and then repeated the words to Marcus. He wished he had brush and paper so that he could show Marcus the form in which the poem had been created. ^PSYCHE: The lotus hovers in flawless awareness NSolipsistic, a solemnity of potential. 6In a nutshell: Shakyamuni. 2SPRING PLUM: < applause > 6CYRUS: Apposite, as always. BEAR: Brava! &CLANCY: Beautiful. HORUS: Proper. PGABRIEL: < the scent of a rose bouquet > Marcus was deep within his breathing regimen and Gabriel suspected that he wouldn't as yet be able to react to Psyche's effort. That didn't matter: one of Marcus's daimones would memorize the verse and recite it when the time was more appropriate. Gabriel moved about the blastocyst, in theory assuring himself as to its well-being but in actuality wanting to prolong the soaring moment as long as possible, then he ordered the peritoneoscope to withdraw. As it moved it exuded minute amounts of a growth hormone that would assist with the repair of any damage it had made. The peritoneoscope slipped from Marcus's abdomen, returned to its housing, and then the housing withdrew into the surgical cabinet. Gabriel moved his daimones to a lower priority level and regained full use of body and sight. He looked down at Marcus's form and smiled. He raised his arms in the Fourth Posture of Exuberance. Joy welled up in him. Psyche's words sang through his mind. \"Congratulations," he said. "You're pregnant." Marcus let go a long breath and looked up. "Thank you," he said. Manfred began to lick Marcus's abdomen again with his sterilizing tongue. "I hope it's what you really wanted," Gabriel said. "You surprised me with how nervous you were. Much more than I would have expected." "I surprised myself, Gabriel. Perhaps I'm a little more divided about this than I thought." "Take the day off," Clancy suggested. "Go up the mountains, to Standing Wave. Talk to yourselves about it." p"Yes." Marcus took Clancy's hand, squeezed it. "I will." HClancy looked at Gabriel. Her face was a little flushed, her eyes bright enough to dim the sunflowers that smiled behind her. "This is almost as fine as a delivery. Gabriel looked at her, surprise rolling through him at the power of her incandescence. "I trust you'll have the pleasure of being at the delivery as well," he said. The child would, of course, be delivered by a surgeon, and Clancy was certainly qualified. "I hope so." She stroked Marcus's hair. "Unless Marcus is an Aristos by then, and off in his capital starting his new empire." TMarcus rose from the table. He gave Clancy a kiss, then hugged Manfred. He turned to Gabriel and held out his arms. Gabriel embraced him and kissed him for a long moment. `GABRIEL: Augenblick. Welcome Rain. < Priority 2> AUGENBLICK: < Priority 2 > At your service, Aristos. < absorbing Clancy > Pulse elevated, skin flushed, eyes dilated, both nipples erect. *WELCOME RAIN: Yours. 2GABRIEL: Thank you. Fini. \AUGENBLICK: Your servant. < Priority 2, end > \WELCOME RAIN: Your servant. < Priority 2, end> ,SCREAM: < Priority 1> Fagil. (HORUS: < Priority 3> dSPRING PLUM: < Priority 3 > Who the hell was that! ness. "I hope you will be happy, Black-Eyed Ghost," Gabriel said. There was a peculiar metallic aftertaste on his tongue. Marcus smiled, touched the ivory surface of one of his hair clips. "I will. Thank you." jCYRUS: < Priority 3> Someone come to spoil the party. XSPRING PLUM: Was that someone new, or ... ? LHORUS: From the paleolithic, I think. 0GABRIEL: Hush, children. Marcus made his way out. Gabriel ordered the surgical cabinet to roll itself back into storage and turned to contemplate Clancy. He raised Spring Plum and Cyrus to a higher level of awareness, and Cyrus called attention to her fine, unaltered bone structure, her translucent complexion, roses ever in bloom. Gabriel's heart warmed. He realized he was in love. "Would you like to have breakfast with me in the Autumn Pavilion?" he asked. v"I'd like that very much. But I'm giving a lecture at ten." "You might give serious thought to canceling it. Perhaps I'll declare a planetary holiday and make it easy for you." She smiled. Her full upper lip formed a series of pleasant arches. She had, he remembered, a consort, someone he'd never met. NSomeone whose life was going to change. Gabriel told Manfred to take the day off, took Clancy's arm, and walked with her out of the Biomedical Wing. As he neared the Shadow Cloister, he found himself listening for the sound of rattling steel spears, for Yaritomo's chanting. He didn't hear anything. tHe and Clancy passed into the cloister and viewed Yaritomo through the cloister's romanesque, turquoise-en-crusted arches. The TherpMn stood still under the bright morning sky, his feet wide apart, sagging under the weight of the spears and their rack. Sweat sheened his skin, and his breath rasped in his throat. His eyes were rolled up into their sockets. The Shadow Mask, a little sinister in the bright light, smiled coldly on the scene. nGabriel kissed Clancy's hand. "Pardon me for a moment." FHe turned to Yaritomo, assumed the First Posture of Confidence, shoulders back, chin high, spine erect, weight distributed evenly on feet that were slightly apart. "Who are you?" Yaritomo's eyes slid down from beneath trembling lids, focused with difficulty. His face worked its way into a sneer. "I am the Burning Tiger," he said. The voice was a deep growl, entirely uh-like Yaritomo's voice. "I see." N"Stay clear!" the Burning Tiger warned. z"I will go where I please," Gabriel said. "I am master here." FThe Burning Tiger growled, made a threatening move toward Gabriel. Gabriel did not respond, and the Burning Tiger hesitated. Steel spears rattled in their harness. `GABRIEL: Augenblick. Welcome Rain. < Priority 2> AUGENBLICK: < Priority 2> < scanning Yaritomo > It's someone else. zWELCOME RAIN: We need further definition. Make it talk to us. AUGENBLICK: Willful, suspicious, powerful. Insensitive, I'd imagine. A fantasy projection of Yaritomo's need for power and control in a stressful situation. But the body language is defeatist. WELCOME RAIN: Burning Paper Tiger! Confront him, and he'll fade. AUGENBLICK: Easy enough for us, but it's TherpMn Yaritomo who has to do the confronting. WELCOME RAIN: It should be easy enough. The Tiger's a berserker-someone who sees only straight ahead is easy enough to trip up from behind. "If you want to intimidate me," Gabriel said, "you must act like a tiger in truth." He glared at the daimMn that inhabited Yaritomo's body. "Is your demeanor that of a tiger or that of a drunkard in a windstorm?" The Burning Tiger's eyes widened. He straightened, throwing out his chest, "I will not bear your insults. You have trespassed on my honor." Augenblick and the Welcome Rain hooted derision from the depths of Gabriel's mind, a verbal echo of the Shadow Mask's mirthless smile. "You're tottering like a broken pin-wheel," Gabriel said. "Stand straight if you want to convince me of your mastery." rThe Burning Tiger growled, but he dragged his body upright. Spears rattled in their harness. Trails of blood coursed down Yaritomo's arms and legs. He inhaled slowly, filling his chest. &Good, Gabriel thought. The breath showed that somewhere beneath the Burning Tiger's surface awareness, Yaritomo's body had remembered its training. "Breathe!" Gabriel affirmed. "Fill your lungs with power! And when you exhale, throw weariness and pain away from you!" dThe Burning Tiger gave a long snarl as he exhaled. Involuntary tremors stormed through the heavy muscles of his thighs. His hands formed fists, held ready near his waist. Gabriel watched from his commanding stance as the Burning Tiger grew in strength, in resolution. "Are you the master, Tiger?" he asked. "Yes!" "Show me your confidence. Imitate my posture!" Gabriel used the Principal Inflection of Command. He drew his right foot back, bent his legs, lowered his stance till his thigh muscles strained, until his center of gravity settled into the swadhishatana chakra in the pit of the abdomen. His spine was still straight and his hands curled into Mudras of Attention and Compulsion. BThe Burning Tiger sneered, but certain behaviors had been programmed into Yaritomo's psyche early, and the Burning Tiger was more dominated by reflex than he would have admitted. Driven by the Principal Inflection he snapped into the stance, perhaps without quite meaning to. The doubting look in his eyes demonstrated his uncertainty, and the Welcome Rain mocked him from inside Gabriel's head. The clear blue light of Illyricum etched the merciless strain on the Tiger's face, in his trembling muscles. Augenblick took it all in, pinpointed every weakness, every strength. The Burning Tiger was so unformed, so open, that Augenblick's dissection was scarcely a challenge. z"Now you seem more a tiger," Gabriel said. "Ready to spring." "Beware me." 8"We will see who is master." j"Beware me." The words were chanted, almost a mantra. Gabriel gave the Tiger a mocking smile resonant with that of the Shadow Mask. "Do you esteem yourself, Tiger?" <"Beware me. I am master here." Gabriel gave a shout, clearing his lungs, and raised himself into the First Posture of Esteem, his body straightened, hands at sides, feet close together, his center of gravity rising to the manipura chakra at the base of the breastbone. The Burning Tiger gave a startled shuffle backward, then blinked, snarled, finned his threatening stance. b"Do you esteem yourself, Tiger?" Gabriel taunted. >In a rattle of spears the Burning Tiger shambled into an imitation of Gabriel's posture. Pain twitched across his features. The Welcome Rain cackled amusement. Gabriel led the Burning Tiger through a series of neural programming exercises designed to firm the Limited Personality's uncertain, newborn character, to give him at least a claim to depth and foundation. Certain stances-codified ages before by Captain Yuan in the Book of Postures-were known to possess coherent psychic resonance within the human mind. Gabriel sought to firm the Burning Tiger's psyche by connecting it to a physical, metalinguistic memory that would strengthen it. Captain Yuan had based his Postures on a straightforward appreciation of the way the human brain was wired to the body that supported and shaped it, and was based on careful study of kinesics as used in classical dance, drama, tantric philosophy, and martial arts. A stance with the legs apart, the center of gravity lowered to the swadhishatana chakra in the abdomen, bespoke confidence and readiness, and did so with a surprising universality, in all surviving human cultures, in all known times. The posture could be made more aggressive by balling the fists or drawing one leg back into a boxer's stance or further back into a classical martial arts pose-all subvariations of the original confident posture, all clearly understood throughout an increasingly divergent humanity. The fingers could form mudras for more psychic impact. The Poses of Esteem were more straight-legged, raised the center of gravity toward the manipura chakra beneath the breastbone. These postures bespoke seriousness, gravity, and self-regard. Raising the arms lifted the center of gravity yet higher, to the anahata chakra, and bespoke Exuberance. Higher still was Glory. On the other end of the scale were the kneeling postures, those of Submission. Precise arm and leg position, the lift and tilt of the head, flexion of the spine, set of the shoulders, all widened the kinesic vocabulary, allowed it greater flexibility of expression. Lowering the head could transfer esteem and respect to others, while raising the chin high cried out Look at me! A vocabulary more important than speech, more fundamental to human nature. Gabriel resumed the First Posture of Confidence. The Burning Tiger, conditioned by now, followed his example. ^"Who are you, Burning Tiger?" Gabriel demanded. 6"I am He-Who-Scorches-with-Flame. I am Power-of-the-Daytime. I am That-Which-Drives-Forward. I am Unstoppable-in-Fury. I am master of this place and time." The growling voice was more confident now, more assured. The fragile Limited Personality had firmed through repeatedly inhabiting kinesics of confidence and strength. If Gabriel advanced on him suddenly, Augenblick advised, the Burning Tiger would not flinch. Welcome Rain advised against closing the distance unless a physical confrontation was desired. P"You are not master here," Gabriel said. ""I am master." The Burning Tiger gestured with one arm, a downward-dropping fist, that emphasized his words. Steel spears quivered in their rack. F"Yaritomo is master," Gabriel said. "Not so." F"It is true. Shall I call him out?" .The Burning Tiger's eyes were dull, inhuman. "Yaritomo will not come," he said. "He is fainthearted. He summoned me to endure that which he could not." ,"I can bring him out." The Burning Tiger raised his chin in a gesture of contempt. "You are a fool." Gabriel shouted again, a cry from the pit of his stomach that set the air ringing, and followed it with an arm thrust forward, the hand forming the Mudra of Compulsion. His voice took on the Inflection of Command. b"TherpMn Yaritomo, come forth! Stand before me!" The Burning Tiger sneered, but there was hesitation in his eyes, an onset of confusion ... `"Yaritomo, stand forth! I want to speak to you." The Burning Tiger's eyes turned blank. His jaw muscles worked with the strain of the battle being fought in his psyche. Then the face cleared, the contemptuous sneer vanishing, replaced by the surprised expression of a bewildered youth. Yaritomo staggered under the weight of his spears, went down to one knee with a crash. He propped himself up with one arm as he panted for breath, then dragged himself to his feet. His eyes managed to focus on Gabriel. L"At your service, Aristos," he gasped. 8"Do you know what happened?" "Yes. I think." Yaritomo panted for breath. "I remember ... someone else." L"He called himself the Burning Tiger." "I ..." Yaritomo passed a hand over his eyes. "I don't remember it very clearly.' I was in another place. I only had an impression of him." P"You're going to have to call him back." :Yaritomo swallowed. "I know." ""And defeat him." "Yes." <"Are you prepared to do that?" Yaritomo shook his head. His voice was barely audible. "I don't know, Aristos. I suppose so." 8"Make yourself ready, then." <He led Yaritomo through the same kinesic exercise he'd used to program the daimMn, then set him to dancing and chanting the Sutra of Captain Yuan again, specifically summoning the Burning Tiger. The Shadow Mask, metaphor for all that took place Here, smiled ruthlessly down on them all. When the Burning Tiger manifested, the desperate rite of chod would begin. Yaritomo and the Burning Tiger would engage in psychic combat for possession of Yaritomo's body and mind, each trying to conquer the other. Gabriel suppressed Augenblick and the Welcome Rain, then withdrew to the covered walk where Clancy waited for him. "Thank you for waiting," he said, and kissed her. Her lips were moist, their touch delicate. Cyrus voiced quiet approval. hShe took his hand. As they left the Shadow Cloister, Clancy looked over her shoulder at the chanting, rattling figure of Yaritomo. Concern ruffled her brow. "Will he be all right?" "I believe so." h"He seems so vulnerable, compared to the ... other." "The Burning Tiger appears powerful, but it's mostly bluster. He's also rather stupid-he's got Yaritomo's intelligence to draw on, but I suspect he doesn't know how. Yaritomo should have little difficulty coping with him. And when Yaritomo finds more useful LPs, he may decide to suppress this one altogether." Gabriel shrugged. "Still, the Tiger'11 do for a start." "I had to go through some fairly intensive hypnotherapy to bring my daimones out-but nothing like that." Looking over her shoulder again. "Nothing like Kavandi." She turned to him. "Did you ever have such difficulty?" Gabriel smiled. "Not at all. The daimones were my friends from an early age." <"You had imaginary playmates." R"Not so imaginary. But yes. And they required scarcely any coaxing at all to cohere into true shadow personalities." The memory of the shouting daimMn rose in his mind. FogX it! "I heard a new voice today," he said. "Someone I didn't know was there. It was rather startling, after all this time. One would have thought I'd know them all by now." "After breakfast I'll look in on Yaritomo. Make certain that his rite of chod is going well." Gabriel felt warmed by her concern. "He's supposed to face his daimMn alone." ."Without even a coach?" "The struggle should be internal. The outward forms are just props." R"But didn't you just coach him yourself?" "Ah, well." He laughed. "I'm an Aristos. I can break the rules if I want to." They emerged into sunlight and delicate flower perfume. Gardeners worked along the patient rows of blossoms. Some, the supervisors, were human, and the rest were either machines or implanted mountain gorillas. The gorillas loved plants above all things, and were good and careful gardeners-also, as a practical point, any harmful grubs or beetles provided them with nourishment. Above, in a sky precise as the oneirochronon, soared two silhouettes, gliders floating on nanological libelulla wings. The acutely organized perceptions of Cyrus and Spring Plum floated through Gabriel's senses. His heart lifted and he recalled: "Early summer, grasses and tall plants Around my house, trees flourishing, Varieties of birds delighted at finding rest." bClancy's face turned abstract for a moment as she queried the Hyperlogos for the source of the quote, found it in Tao Chien. Her eyes glowed as she returned the end of the poem. "I gaze up and down at heaven and earth. Happy? How could I be otherwise?" Gabriel took her in his arms and kissed her. Her body warmed him. The human gardeners, with accustomed professionalism, affected not to notice, :"It's a day for birth," she said, a moment later. "Burning Tiger, and your child with the Black-Eyed Ghost, and-" She finished the thought with another kiss. He took her to Psyche's room in the Autumn Pavilion. It was comfortably small but with a tall arched ceiling, the architecture soaring, reaching skyward, making an acoustic cap that turned sound wonderfully to the ear. The walls were white plaster accented with gold; the floor gold-brown and scarlet tile. There was a bed and two couches, a writing desk of light wood with pens, brushes, and paper. A self-portrait by Psyche hung above the bed-a few feathery touches only, a swirling copper line for the hair, the darker suggestion of a cheekbone, brows but no eyes, a mouth but no chin. Hardly anything at all, yet somehow there was the intimation of a complete personality. Caught on canvas, a soul in flight. Gabriel called for music and made love to Clancy. Melody plucked at his nerves. Cyrus whispered in his inner ear, fine appreciations of skin texture, of curve of limb and breast and abdomen. Spring Plum suggested ways in which Clancy might best be pleasured. The lingering aftertaste of Psyche sang like wine in his consciousness. Once only saints or madmen could speak to the daimones, could hear whispering the personalities that dwelt within their own minds. The condition could be caused by an imbalance in brain chemistry, a history of abuse in early childhood so severe that the personality fragmented, a deliberately induced ordeal, a spiritual agony like Kavandi or the sun dance or sitting for years on a pillar like St. Simeon. The voices were mislabeled: angels, past lives, dead spirits, demons. 0All self. Personalities with their own thoughts, their own capabilities, their own glories, wrapped in the primary personality like swaddled children, ready to come out and play in the fields of the mind ... The ancients had consistently underestimated the glories of their own psyches, preferred to consider these aspects of their own psyches as manifestations of invisible forces, forces divine or demonic. hDaimones. The old Sokratic name resurfaced: the others were all too judgmental, too freighted with obsolete superstition. Daimones, meaning Divinities-the godlets of the liberated mind. The word now freed from the centuries of ignorance and superstition, freed like all the little souls the word represented. 4How many, Gabriel wondered, made love on Psyche's bed? How many, his own daimones and Clancy's, touched the experience with their own enriched perception? ^More than he wanted to count right now, anyway. The voices sang in his mind, floating like grains of pollen in the sky. Chapter 2 PABST: ZStimulus and response, response and stimulus HGet them right, there's little fuss fThey'll do most anything if you pull their strings 4Their response to stimulus.  Aristoi floated through the reception to the sound of a reed flute. Standing near the buffet table Gabriel paid his respects to Pan Wengong, primary architect for the resurrected Earth2. The Eldest Brother was a junior, but sole surviving, member of the first bold generation of Aristoi who had, in the turbulent and dangerous centuries after the Earth1 disaster, coalesced around Captain Yuan and, with their fearless and absolute command of technology, reordered humanity's future. Pan Wengong's appearance belied his millennia. He was a round-faced, round-bodied, cheerful man, secure in his place among the Aristoi and in history, and quite pleased with having escaped the law of averages for so long. His domaine included Earth2 and the inhabited stars around it, and in the centuries since the great reconstruction he'd been taking it easy; his Therpontes did most of the work while the Eldest Brother relaxed in one or another of the pleasure domes he'd built on or about Earth. He was one of the few Aristoi who was actually, physically present in Persepolis, but he was linked with all the others in the oneirochronon and enjoyed the best of both worlds-the company of his peers, and the fact he could eat and drink. Pan had been speaking to Saigo, a dour, saturnine man who usually avoided these receptions. Saigo was a specialist in evolution, both human and stellar, and had broadcast his black-browed skiagnos a greater distance than anyone here-he was well out of inhabited space, in a part of distant space called the Gaal Sphere, pursuing his lonely researches. Saigo saw Gabriel with his melancholy eyes, offered a Posture of Formal Regard, and took his leave. Gabriel and Pan exchanged embraces and the latest jokes. Pan offered Gabriel a ghost drink, and though Gabriel knew the experience would be well crafted, he declined. He avoided eating and drinking while in the oneirochronon-he got only hunger pangs without satisfying his cravings. Others arrived to pay their respects to Pan. Gabriel spoke briefly to Maryandroid, then found himself approached by Cressida. "Aristos kai Athanatos," she began, using the formal title, "forgive me for this interruption." T"Forgiven," said Gabriel, a bit surprised. zCressida was an older Ariste; she had passed her exams over three hundred years ago and had restricted the size of her domaine so as to devote herself more exclusively to research. She was honored, distant, and briskly eccentric, and in their few meetings had treated Gabriel with courtesy but without great patience. She gazed from her black-skinned face with intent bird-like eyes. "TherpMn Protarchon Stephen Rubens y Sedillo, who is in my service, will be visiting Labdakos within a few days to tour the Illyrian Workshop," she said. "I am thinking of setting up a similar academy here on Painter, and I hope you will do me the favor of giving instructions to the Workshop staff to allow him access." "Really?" Cressida had never shown much interest in crafts. "I will be happy to provide any assistance, of course." She had not adorned herself for this reception, but dressed in the modest sky-blue uniform worn by her household-the uniform might have been a romantic touch, Gabriel thought, but the design was too relentlessly practical, with many pockets and no ornamentation or badges of rank. Her hair was salt-and-pepper, cut short in a businesslike way. D"I would consider it a favor," she continued, "if you will also give TherpMn Rubens a private appointment at a time convenient to you so that he can present my personal greetings and thanks." She inclined her head, lowered her eyes, the First Posture of Esteem. "At your service, Aristos." p"At your service," Gabriel murmured. Cressida passed on. ^What the hell was that about? Gabriel inquired. HNeutral but commanding posture, said Augenblick. Neutral expression. No involuntary muscle movement, no alteration in pupil dilation. Formally courteous expression. That's not much. $My apologies, Aristos. Skiagenoi are difficult to read at the best of times, and perhaps she was taking good care not to be read. Most Aristoi do. 8Reno, Gabriel commanded, report on the whereabouts of Stephen Rubens y Sedillo, class TherpMn, rank Protarchon, employed by Cressida Ariste. < Priority 2 > At your service, Aristos. < Priority 2 > < search program initiated > Done. TherpMn Rubens is aboard the yacht Lorenz, currently assuming an orbit about Illyricum. He hailed traffic control four hours ago. The Lorenz is owned by Ariste Cressida. Rubens has sent a message to your mailbox requesting a personal audience. The timing on this is very exact, said the Welcome Rain. There is more here than we see. Gabriel thought for a moment. Reno, he said, how many times has Cressida spoken to me? JFive, Aristos. On four occasions she merely offered polite greetings, and on the other she criticized your behavior at Coetzee's reception following your Graduation- @I remember very well, thank you. 2At your service, Aristos. VHe returned his attention to the reception. ZSomething was afoot. He knew not what it was. He suspected, however, he would enjoy himself while working out the answer. LMusic, angel voices and devil bassoons, eddied in Psyche's perfect acoustic chamber. A piece Gabriel had composed long ago, Sandor Korondi's "Love-Wind" set to music. zAfter a few hours in the Autumn Pavilion with Clancy, Gabriel decided to call her Blushing Rose. She accepted the new name with what seemed a mixture of pleasure and intelligent skepticism. 2She called him Disturber. Clancy lay facedown on the bed in exactly the naive position in which it pleased Louis XV to have his mistresses painted. Gabriel, sitting beside her, found himself completely charmed by the rosy sight of her soles. She was all warm autumn colors, he thought, like this pavilion, like his thoughts, a contrast to the Black-Eyed Ghost, all pallor and midnight. He let his fingertips graze on the rounded knobs of Clancy's spine as the andante movement sang slowly in his heart. \The Carnation Suite, he remembered, was empty. 6"I promised you breakfast," he said. "Shall I tell my reno to order? Kem-Kem, my chef, is an improvisatory genius-he'll cook anything you'd like to order." Clancy propped her chin on one hand and frowned. "Would you mind having a machine deliver the food?" "No. Why?" "Because if Rabjoms is going to find out about this, I'd rather it be from me and not a member of the kitchen staff." p"Ah." He took her hand. "Will that be a problem for you? She looked at him over her shoulder. "The problem is ... tactical. How I should tell him, not ..." @"If I can be of any assistance?" "No. It's my little predicament, I suppose." She gave a tight little smile. "He's an understanding man." ZGABRIEL: Reno. < Priority 2> Query: Rabjoms. RENO: < Priority 2 > Rabjoms. Full name: Thundup Rabjoms Satnbhota. Informal consort to TherpMn Clancy. Age: Thirty-one. Class: Demos. Occupation: Artisan < Second Class >, Lowland Machine Works, Labdakos, Illyricum. Born: Gomo Selung, Kampa Province, Phongdo- 4GABRIEL: Thank you. Fini. ,RENO: At your service. |He looked down at the taut ribbon of knotted muscle that had, in the last few seconds, formed between her shoulder blades, and began to massage it away. The andante sobbed on. Clancy sighed. @"You've been together how long?" |"Six years. Since I came here." She sighed. "He's a good man." xA good man, he thought. Artisan (Second Class), and of. the Demos, not even one of the Therpontes. Rabjoms was certainly not the choice of a rising TherpMn eager for a position of power. ,"Demos," Gabriel said. 2"I'm not ambitious that way." She shrugged. "I'm not ambitious at all. I haven't gone for my exams in nine years, and I don't have any plans to. I like it where I am. Being a doctor. Birth, death, trauma, life, well-being ... everything I really care about, I'm involved with now." 6"You left me off the list." She smiled, looked over her shoulder again. "Should I care for you, Aristos?" t"I love you." Psyche soared through his mind at the words. :"And I you, Aristos." Neatly. He leaned back and considered her. She was not his usual type. Her body was natural-soft, rounded, without the planed, sculpted, perfected look, genetically or surgically augmented, that normally gratified his taste. The attraction was unusual; Gabriel couldn't predict its outcome, or how long it would last. Perhaps (a sliver of doubt entering) it was merely a shared enthusiasm for Marcus's pregnancy. He thought of calling up Augenblick and the Welcome Rain, but decided he didn't want this handled. Not their way. "I never was attached to that great sect, Whose doctrine is that each one should select Out of the crowd a mistress or a friend, And all the rest, though fair and wise, commend To cold oblivion." LShe smiled. "And you're easily bored." ^"That as well." Might as well concede that one. She rolled over and regarded him with wide peridot eyes. "Will you make me your maitresse en titre?" D"Do you want that? I'm surprised." "May I have it?" 8"If that's what you desire." She shook her head, then laughed. "I don't, as it happens. But I needed to know if you'd give it to me." Surprise rolled through him. "Fayre eyes," he said, "the myrrour of my mazed hart, what woundrous venue is con-taynd in you ..." ."I had everything planned. I didn't think"-she considered her words-"this lightning would strike. Not this late." Grinning wryly. "Not this lightning." p"It has struck." He kissed her. "Shall it strike again?" .She fluttered against his lips, "Yes, Aristos. Of course." Propelled by violas and stinging electric guitar, presto followed andante, and so to finale. `Gabriel continued his rounds about the reception, greeted Pristine Way and Prince Stanislaus. He succeeded in avoiding Virtue's Icon. The reed flute wove its way through the throng, accented every conversation. He heard his name spoken, turned, and saw Zhen-ling. Pleasure tingled through his fingertips. d"Hail to the conqueror of Mount Mallory," he said. Zhenling was a slim woman, tall and taut-muscled, with Tatar cheekbones and tilted dark eyes. Her frame was strong with catlike, augmented muscle, her form perfectly sculpted. She wore cherry-red breeches, boots, sky-blue jacket with gold brocade, and a hussar jacket of a darker blue, trimmed with ermine and more brocade and worn over her shoulders. A fur hat was tipped over one ear and was decorated with a spray of silver and pearls. Her dark hair was braided with gemstones and fell over one shoulder, giving her silhouette a pleasant asymmetry. She had been among the Aristoi only a short while, having been promoted twelve years ago. She was, astrographically speaking, Gabriel's neighbor, as her domaine was expanding from an area near Gabriel's. "Thank you," she said. "I've got my next ascent mapped-Mount Trasker this time." vGABRIEL: Reno, statistics on Gregory Bonham, if you please. hRENO: Bonham, formal consort of Zhenling Ariste for the last thirteen years. Failed examinations in this last round, placing thirty-first among those who failed to pass. This is his second failure. He resides in the residential annex of Violet Jade Nanotechnology Laboratories in low orbit around Tienjin ... `GABRIEL: And Zhenling currently resides at ...? RENO: Primary residence is at Jade Garden, Ring Island, Tienjin. SPRING PLUM: < appreciation of contrast between gems and shining hair > CYRUS: "All that sternness amid charm, All that sweetness amid strength." 2SPRING PLUM: < amusement> , "seeks to communicate power; all that is not literature, to communicate knowledge." "Our renos seem to have a very good eighteenth-century index," said Gabriel. "Take my arm; let's talk." "As you like. Though we'll look like a couple of footmen at the Congress of Vienna." "Not footmen. Equerries at least. Or maybe archdukes. I believe there were plenty to spare." Her arm, nonexistent though it was, was quite warm: Augenblick and the Welcome Rain both commented hopefully. "I am told," Gabriel said, "that you and Astoreth are planning to upset our happy galactic order." B"Astoreth intends no such thing." "That begs a question, but I'm afraid I just forswore that mode of discourse." R"Astoreth wants to create a stir so that she can be at the center of attention. And I-?" She looked at him, and Gabriel found himself admiring the program that had created the liquid depths of her eyes. "I'm willing to put some notions forward," she said. "I'm not certain what it would mean yet." "You've followed her program otherwise. Rekindling a spirit of adventure through your personal exploits and so on." "I like climbing mountains and stunting around in submarines. It doesn't have to be someone's program." x"But the problem, as you see it, requires drastic measures." "It requires, first of all, an acknowledgment that there's a problem." 8"If you gathered data . , ." "How much data do we need?" She was impatient. "Out of the thousands of Therpontes who took the exams this time, how many passed? Nine. How many Aristoi died or announced impending retirement in the time between this batch of exams and the last? Six." b"This has been discussed, you know. For decades." *"Since most of us restrict population in our own dominions, the only way many of the Demos can have the children they want is to pioneer in new domaines. And since there will be a net increase of only three domains this time, in essence humanity expands by only three Aristoi." "Of course the Demos can also have children by moving to underpopulated domaines." ~"There's a reason those domaines are underpopulated, you know." "I know perfectly well. I merely felt I should make mention of all the alternatives available." "Okay. So the alternative is to queue up for a new planet, moon, or habitat, which can take decades if not centuries, or to be subjected to intrusive social programming in the justly underpopulated domaines." "I wonder where Pan Aristos got this flute music. It's extraordinary." (Setting his reno on an extended search, < priority 3 >, for a score.) 0Zhenling permitted herself an annoyed look. Gabriel inclined toward her. "I beg your pardon. One train of thought intruded on another. I was listening." *"To me or the music?" ("I can follow both." <"I was hoping to recruit you." "Hence your inquiry into my last year's schedule." He sighed. "I'm disappointed. I was hoping your interest was more personal." Gabriel (and Augenblick) noted that Zhenling didn't seem (or didn't allow herself to seem) as annoyed by this remark as she might have been. n"Isn't your life a little busy without another complication?" she asked. "A child on the way, a new friend moving into the"-her reno floated data along the tachline-"Carnation Suite?" The Welcome Rain gleefully rubbed metaphysical hands together and whispered in Gabriel's antennae. ""We're Aristoi," Gabriel said. "We're capable of handling any number of complications with grace, with joy, with-" z"Without me," said Zhenling. "I have a consort, as you know." 0"Who is not your equal." "He'll pass the exams." Stubbornly. "He came very close this last time." "It's more Aristoi that your group wants." Gabriel stroked his chin skiagenically. "Could that be a coincidence, I wonder?" j"You seem to want more Aristoi in your life as well." "Only one." "What a shame." She paused for a pensive moment, then carefully shrugged. "Think of it as a rare experience. How often do you experience genuine frustration in your life? Cherish it while it lasts." "While it lasts." He attempted to lift her hand and kiss it. She turned her skiagnos insubstantial and his hand passed through hers. He straightened and looked at her, and she burst into laughter. "You should see your face!" she said. "This is rare for you, isn't it?" Gabriel calmed both himself and the Welcome Rain, who was hissing like a kettle. 6"Perhaps we'll kiss later," Zhenling said, which soothed Welcome Rain rather more than Gabriel did. "But right now, I'd like to read your brain chemistry." "My what?" "Levels of vasopressin," numbering on her fingers, "dopamine, serotonin, lecithin, thiamine, norepinephrine, phosphatidylcholine, endorphins ... lots of things. Dozens. Your reno has the capability to analyze your chemistry that way?" "Of course," Gabriel said, "but I'm not certain I'm willing to proceed to that level of intimacy without at least kissing first." Her look was serious. "I'm going to propose tomorrow to inaugurate a study concerning what makes Aristoi into Aristoi." "It's been tried. The category was found to be unquan-tifiable." He gestured with an arm. Pristine Way, looking at the moment as if she were cut from rose-tinted transparent crystal, nodded back. "Look at all these people," Gabriel said. "Each passed exams, each is licensed for certain dangerous technologies, and each controls a domaine-but each is individual, and over the years the domaine conforms to her image ... Citizens with an interest in music or architecture migrate to my domaine, those interested in political theory show up in the Icon's territory or Coetzee's, those who yearn for the consolations of philosophy turn up in Sebastian's, and I imagine you get your share of mountain climbers. You know how eccentric some of us are. What d'you think we have in common?" "I don't think the previous studies were done the right way. Or that they asked the right questions." v"You're an Ariste, of course. You can study what you like." pShe tilted her head. Light danced in her eyes. "Which brings me to my next point. I really would like to get a look at your brain chemistry. In the normal course of things we're surrounded by people who defer to us, who make things easy, who accept our judgments without question. Some of us are even worshiped." "Oh, please." Gabriel held up protesting hands. "I just needed to give my mother something to do after she retired." "Unlike most of us here, I quite believe you. But still, some of us are worshiped. What does that do inside our heads? We're natural leaders-that's one thing we've got in common-and we're still all primates, even the most modified of us. We're more absolute than the leader of any baboon troop ever was. More absolute than Louis the Fourteenth." "I wish you would come up with more cultivated examples. I don't know which of the two I'd prefer as a house-guest-probably the baboon." "Moi aussi, monseigneur. Le roi, c'est l'etat et un cochon. But then, his brain chemistry must have been as abnormal as ours." "I am going to demand a kiss if you're going to discuss my brain chemistry and make odious comparisons." jShe stepped up to him and kissed him quite decisively on the mouth. Her breath had a spicy tint. The Welcome Rain went into ecstasies. The rest of Gabriel wasn't much less affected. Zhenling stepped back, managing to look both teasing and smug. "What I would like to do," she said, "is compare your brain chemistry now with what it is at the end of Graduation, and with what it will be about six months from now. Because what's happening here is that you're interacting with your peers, not what, for lack of a better term, we'll call your inferiors. It's a greater strain, we're not as deferent as the people you're around normally ... It's going to do things to your head." H"Where do you plan to go with this?" "With your head?" She narrowed her tilted eyes, "Very far indeed . , ." Welcome Rain commenced a dance of triumph. "But later, I think." She stepped back, gave him a Posture of Respect subverted by a careless wave. "There are other people I need to speak to. I'm sure we'll be able to see each other at one of the receptions." x"I need to know what you want in the way of brain analysis." b"I'll send you a memo of what I'm interested in." NGabriel watched her leave and listened to the voices in his head. Her metalinguistics were consistently flirtatious. Augenblick's contribution. Rather deliberately so. ^We're in business, boss, said the Welcome Rain. Gabriel continued to drift among the throng. He observed that Dorothy St.-John had pasted her cat's eyes to the forehead of Han Fu, and wondered whether Han knew it. Asterion, whose body had been altered for a subaquatic existence, swam elegantly overhead, webbed hands and turned-out dolphin feet moving gracefully through invisible waters. The music now playing, Gabriel's reno finally reported, is untitled and unpublished, but is by Tunku Iskander. It is unavailable in the Hyperlogos but a recording exists in the archives of Rival Island, where Tunku played it last week for Aristos MacReady. Not in the library, but in obscure records half of human space away-no wonder the search had taken so long, almost four minutes. Tunku Iskander, Gabriel knew, would be installed as an Aristos tomorrow, and had apprenticed under MacReady and Dorothy. Gabriel hadn't ever met him, or heard his music. He told his reno to call up as many recordings as were available and store them for later. ^The reception drifted onward to its conclusion. L Gabriel, hair tied back with golden ribbon, performed wushu alone on the sward behind the Red Lacquer Gallery. Cool morning air brushed over his limbs. His mind was in the oneirochronon, and Spring Plum guided the two-sword form, controlling his body with grace and imagination. The heavy broadswords sliced air, one-two, and the red flags tied to the hilts made supersonic cracking sounds as they wove dragon-back images through the air. Gabriel could feel, dim in his conscious mind, the strain on muscles, the beat of pulse and harshness of breath in the throat, the whirls and leaps and stances of wushu, martial arts abstracted to dance, an aesthetic distillation attuned to Spring Plum's psyche. He could see, if he wanted to, the spears of green grass, the long expanse of the Red Lacquer Gallery, grey upthrust mountain peaks beyond the golden web of Labdakos, all whirling in the focused dance ... but his mind stayed firmly in the oneirochronon, and concentrated on the Involved Ideography of Captain Yuan. Yuan's Ideography was based on the notion that writing had the greater impact the more senses it evoked. Old-style European script was fine for communicating data efficiently, but it had to work hard to achieve the kind of psychic resonance that Yuan desired-not simply to communicate, but to involve. Old Asian scripts were better, insofar as the ideograms not only communicated words but drew (admittedly rather abstract) pictures. They involved more levels of the mind in the translation, and the impact-at least for Yuan's purposes-was greater. Yuan's Intermediate Ideography, in which Psyche had presented her conception-poem for Marcus, was based on age-old Chinese characters but adapted for modern grammar, vocabulary, and expression. FThe Intermediate characters were only a stage on the way to the Involved Ideography. These intricate hieroglyphs, based on the First Aristos's own ideas about the wiring of the human mind and its relationship to information, were another step toward complexity and many levels higher in symbolism. Looking like a peculiarly convoluted incorporation of baroque Mayan glyphs and circuit diagrams, the Involved Ideography's radicals, modalities, and submodalities were de-signed to involve as much of the reasoning cortex as possible. They required intense mental concentration to use or read, but were unexcelled in packing complex information into small packages. The system was incomplete, as Yuan hadn't finished his work when he set on his long, presumably fatal quest toward galactic center, but the ideography continued to evolve more or less randomly at the hands of thousands of individual scholars and information theorists. Gabriel was using the Involved Ideography to design an oneirochronic seal for Clancy, one she could use to get into the secure areas of the Residence.-He would be having breakfast with her shortly, in Spring Plum's room of the Autumn Pavilion, and wanted it ready. XHe used a glyph for rose, a radical for redden, modalities for medicine and music and pleasure and caring ... He wanted to evoke her precisely, create a poem in glyph form. He became aware that Spring Plum had finished the wushu form, that his body was poised in salutation position, swords heavy in his arms. Gabriel had his reno analyze his bodily state. He concluded he'd exercised enough, and he summoned Kouros to perform cool-down exercises. The Kouros daimMn was a child, carefree and happy, innocent of consequence-skipping about the sward and gardens during the cool-down period was something Kouros would find interesting. hHe buried himself in the creating of the hieroglyph. By the time he finished the cool-down period he thought he had finished the seal. He bathed and dressed and had breakfast delivered to Spring Plum's room, where there was a graceful rosewood dining table, and in a matching cabinet a porcelain service rimmed with silver and painted with white plum blossoms. Spring Plum possessed an intent fascination with biological detail: the dark silk wall hangings were covered with exactingly rendered flora, petals, stigmata, anthers, and beaded, glowing droplets of dew. RClancy arrived at the door. Gabriel embraced her and kissed her hello, then led her to the buffet. There was enough food to feed a dozen guests. Clancy took coffee, a scone, and jam, and sat curled in a chair covered in stitched dogwood blossoms. Gabriel took a plate of fruit and sat by her side. dShe cocked an ear at the music. "Tien Jiang Chun." "Yes." "I played it years ago on Darkbloom. In a recital, at university. Accompanying a friend, who sang Li Jingchao's words." Gabriel's reno sifted gently through Clancy's biography. "You play piano, flute, persephone." H"The first poorly, due to a lack of time for practice. The second with a bit too much restraint. The third too cleverly, because modern instruments encourage that." ""Do you compose?" "No." ~"You should. You're bound to find a daimMn that will help you." >"I would be mediocre." She sipped coffee. "I'm an outstanding physician and surgeon, however, and a damn good geneticist." There was defensiveness in her tone. b"I know," gently. He took her hand and kissed it. &"Marcus," she said. "Yes?" 4"Is it ended between you?" "'How am I fallen from myself, for a long time now I have not seen the Prince of Chang in my dreams.'" He smiled. "I'm building him a house." >"A house? An estate, you mean." "An estate, then. And why not? With a stunning view, and a large nursery, and room for all the playthings and gad' gets he likes to build." f"Don't build me such a place, when the time comes." THe sensed the tension in her forearm. He kissed her hand again. "Not if you don't want one, Blushing Rose. But architecture is one of my skills-I hate not to indulge it." She smiled. "Build me a research clinic if you like. On an asteroid, where I can work with nano." ~Gabriel was pleased to discover this hidden thread of ambition. "Tell me where you want it, and what you want in it, and it's yours. Now. It doesn't have to be a parting gift." Clancy blinked at him. "Sometimes I forget that you can do that. Wave your hand, and it's done. As easily as if you were in the oneirochronon." T"It takes a little more effort than that." f"But still. It doesn't cost you anything. Does it?" l"Why should it?" He smiled, took a knife, began to peel a hothouse peach. "I like pleasing people. I have the power to do it. Why shouldn't I indulge myself in harmless benevolence?" She thought about it, then shrugged. "Whyever not?" Another chord chimed briefly. Clancy tilted her head. "I've told Rabjoms." ,"I hope it went well." "I think he's a bit ... overwhelmed." She gave a tight little smile. "So am I, really. Rabjoms doesn't want to resist-part of it's the conditioning, okay, but-" There was an uncertain flutter in her eyes. "Well, I don't want to resist either." Gabriel left his chair, sat cross-legged before her, took her feet into his lap. "I'm pleased, Blushing Rose." Her look turned uncertain. "Should I move into the Residence? Do you want me to?" "I would be pleased to have you near me. The Carnation Suite is open, and its decor would suit your coloring very well." $"I'll move, then." "I've already taken the liberty of designing you an oneirochronic seal that will grant you access to the secure areas and the private passages and galleries in the Residence. I've put it 'in your message box, and instructed the Residence to open its sealed areas to you." There was a glimmer of interest in her eyes. "There are secret passages in the Residence?" "Not secret. Just private. If you want to go somewhere and not have to meet people." He smiled at her. "I find it useful." She gazed at her plate for a moment, then down at him. "Disturber? Can you tell me why I feel sad?" nGabriel could not. "How can I make you happy?" he said. bShe gave a thin smile. "I should return to work." "If that's what you wish. But I can still declare that planetary holiday." ^Her smile broadened. "That won't be necessary." L"Perhaps," he said, "some other time." Chapter 3 LULU: HYou bring them in, you bring them in ZYou pierce their skin, you pierce their skin PThey moan and sigh as you suck them dry .And that is how you win. $LOUISE: (refrain) Bring me a drink!  Gabriel was weary after the reception. It was early morning in Persepolis, but early evening here: looking down from Pyrrho he could see lights winking across the continent below. As he stepped from the Pyrrho into his shuttle-craft he sat in the copilot's seat and gestured to his pilot, White Bear. "Take the gravity drive," he said. "Try not to destroy the planet." "I'll do my best, Aristos," White Bear laughed. He was a man who justified his nickname-burly, bearded, pale-skinned, pale blond hair-and Gabriel could see he was pleased. Gabriel enjoyed doing his own piloting and White Bear almost never got to perform the task he was hired for. Gabriel closed his eyes as White Bear's fingers began to play over the controls for the specially licensed gravity/inertial generator. White Bear spoke to traffic control through his reno, thus sparing Gabriel half of a dull conversation. The shuttle, in complete silence, detached itself from the PyrrhoR and began to drop toward the atmosphere. nSpeculations on Cressida's conspiracy, whatever it was, floated through Gabriel's head. He didn't want to think about it and instead told his reno to let him look through his mailbox. Floating up first came a high-priority message from his mother. He made note of it and did not reply. DThere was Rubens's request for an audience. Gabriel scheduled it for early the next morning, then sent a note about it to Quiller, his lean, beak-nosed secretary. Other messages passed before his view. Administrators requested clarifications, guidance, or sought to pass responsibility upward. Some fawned, some flattered, some expressed bewilderment. He preferred the last to the first two. But the fawning and flattery was, he'd discovered, part of the job-the Demos never seemed to realize that their flattery meant little to an Aristos. The work itself was all routine: he dealt with it quickly and impressed on his people, yet again, that he didn't want to deal with trivialities. Next was a request, from an orchestra director on TTianatogenes in Ariste Dorothy's domaine, to perform some of Gabriel's Music for the Eye. Gabriel absorbed the request and wondered. Music for the Eye had been intended as closet music for score readers-never intended to be performed, just appreciated as a piece of written amusement, full of the sort of theoretical jokes and ideational cleverness that could only be appreciated by those trained to read a score. It was an intellectual exercise, an abstraction of music that bore the Same resemblance to "real" music that a chess problem bore to real chess. (The orchestra director, it seemed, thought otherwise-he made a plausible-sounding case to the effect that actually playing the music would be instructive, and he wanted to provide a way of viewing the score through the oneirochronon simultaneous with the playing of the music. What the hell. Let it be done, whatever good it would do. Gabriel gave his permission, with the proviso that it be made clear to the audience that the music had not been intended to be presented this way. The craft swayed as the atmosphere tugged at it. Butterflies danced in Gabriel's belly. He realized he was putting off calling his mother. He might as well get it over with. 8TherpMn ex-Hextarchon Vashti was one of Gabriel's primary parents-legally speaking, he had six, but shared genes with only the two primaries. She had stabilized her age in her early twenties, several years younger than that of her son. At his decantation Gabriel had supposedly looked like Vashti as a young girl, but both had altered their appearance since childhood and any resemblance had long been obscured. Vashti (skiagnos-image blossoming in Gabriel's mind) possessed sharp, searching eyes, fine clear skin fashionably bronzed by melanin supplements, lofty winged brows intended to create an air of mystery, and white-blond hair braided and piled high atop her crown. Her long hairpins and jeweled clasps bore religious symbols-mandalas, crescents, swastikas, Gabriel's own Eye-of-Thoth. Since her retirement a dozen years ago she had devoted herself to managing Gabriel's official cult. "Good evening," Gabriel said. "Or should I say, Hail, Vashti Qenetevra? I hope this is not a bad time." "It's never a bad time for the Geneteira to be visited by the Kouros Athanatos, her divine offspring." Meaning, Gabriel assumed, she was in public. Her body, wherever it was, would be standing in rapt attention to emanations of the divine, in the company (he presumed) of awed worshippers. He'd bet anything she'd said that last aloud, just so everyone would know she was receiving a visitation. As if billions didn't communicate through the oneirochronon every passing second. |Gabriel shrugged. "Anything I can do to enhance the mystique." The skiagnos of Vashti's face raised its lofty eyebrows. "Come now. It's my job to take this seriously." "It isn't mine." 4"I'm afraid you have little choice, Kouros. Not anymore." She allowed her image to give a cold little oneirochronic smile. "Attendance is up, by the way." 0Gabriel knew that he had let himself in for a certain amount of ridicule when he decided to allow himself to be worshiped. In the end he decided that the precedent of actually forbidding a religion was more distasteful than being plagued by the devout, and he allowed the original organizer, a Demotic woman named Diamond, to organize his faith, all the while trying to make it clear to everyone that it was all her The Demos, Gabriel conceded, desired gods to worship. And, he had to admit, he made a more pleasant god than many he could name. To make certain that his worshippers didn't make him more ridiculous than absolutely necessary, Gabriel had strictly supervised the unimaginatively named Church of the New Thoth. He made certain that any clergy had genuine Credentials as therapists and counselors, and that any spare cash was to be donated to worthwhile efforts, chiefly schools of architecture, music, and design. Though Diamond had not been pleased by these conditions-Gabriel guessed she had other plans entirely, in which she would herself be worshiped as Gabriel's prophet-the result had been a magnificent series of temples and cathedrals in which some very good sacred music was played. Gabriel hoped that the music would be remembered long after his cult had faded. "Attendance is up?" Gabriel said. "Perhaps it's the choir. I think the new director has improved it." DVashti slowly shook her head. "I'm afraid you're a god, dear one. Better get used to it. You make things happen. You can intervene to make ordinary lives better." |"How often do I do it? I grant-what?-a few petitions a month?" "Your mystic interventions are rather more frequent, dear. I hear of miracles every week." Gabriel managed to avoid wincing. "I hope my fellow Aristoi don't hear it." |"They will if they have an interest. Nothing we do is secret." b"Thanks to the restrictions I put on the church." The skiagnos nodded graciously. "Thanks to you. The divine will of our Kouros is all-important to us." She'd probably said that last aloud as well, so her followers would hear. She was, he had to admit, very good at this. Much better than Diamond had been. Vashti's retirement from her administrative duties in Pan Wengong's domaine-despite her ferocious ambition, or perhaps because of it, she'd never risen above Hextarchon-had provided an opportunity for Gabriel to set the Mother of Godhead over the church's founder in the hierarchy. Diamond had assumed that Vashti would take only a ceremonial role, but Gabriel knew his mother better than that. Within weeks Diamond, thoroughly bested, set off on missionary work and never returned. Vashti had never, before or since, had any doubts whether or not she wanted to be worshiped. "I believe you called me?" Gabriel asked. "Was there any particular message?" "Ah. I forgot. The Rites of Inanna are next week. Will you be attending in person?" r"I don't believe so. Intoxication and random copulation-" "-compose a necessary and life-enhancing celebration of the fertility principle." She smiled at him. "That's why I invented the rite." PGabriel sighed. "Have a nice time, Mom." "Perhaps the rites are more suitable for the Geneteira, after all. Though you did just say you'd do anything to enhance the mystique." B"I was not serious. As you know." 4"Could you send a daimMn?" Z"I will probably be dealing with Graduation." "There's sure to be at least one interested in attending. We've got a robot puppet body he could inhabit-the best, quite lifelike." 6"A nonfertile one, I hope?" H"Whatever you wish, omniscient one." 6Any children born as a result of the orgies were considered, for religious if not legal purposes, Gabriel's own offspring. Women organized their fertility around the celebrations, and some lived ever in hope that Gabriel would attend in person and bless them with his divine essence. He had attended once-Vashti had talked him into it-and since felt disinclined to return. He preferred sex more spontaneous, and his partners either less intimidated, less worshipful, or less drunk. "Consult your daimones, then. There will also be the usual requiem service conducted at the Pater's tomb in two days." 6"I won't be there." Firmly. Vashti's brows narrowed. "The service is really quite lovely. I don't understand-" "My private mourning for my father will not become a public spectacle," Gabriel said, "no matter how tasteful." Vashti sighed. "Very well. Whatever you desire, Athanatos Kouros." "Do you really think you should play it up as much as you do? You'd been separated for almost sixty years when he died." "We are forever united," serenely smiling, "by the glory and divinity of our offspring." 4Gabriel gave a hard look at Vashti's skiagnos. The virtual facade was impenetrable. "Sometimes," he said, "I can't tell quite when you're being serious." The smile widened minutely. "And how is pretty Marcus these days?" "Pregnant." "Congratulations. I'm sure he will be a fine father to your child-" "Our child." "Your little godlet. But couldn't you have waited till the Rites of Inanna?" "No." 8Vashti's visage showed mild disappointment. "You might try to make my job easier now and again, you know. Now I'll have to have a revelation to the effect that there will be an increase in the divine family." The skiagnos assumed a hopeful cast. "You'll bring the child for baptism?" R"Not if I have anything to say about it." v"Ah." Vashti smiled. "I'll speak to Marcus about it, then." "Not in the next few days, if you please. He's still adjusting to his condition." Vashti assumed a searching look. "He's lasted a while, your Marcus. Longer than most, at any rate." ,"He has a kind heart." vAn eloquently raised eyebrow dismissed the whole notion of kindheartedness. "It's you who are kindhearted," she said. "Too kindhearted, if you ask me. That palace you're building him ..." >"Standing Wave's not a palace." <"It's a mansion on an estate." X"It's a house your grandchild will live in." vThat stopped her. "Well," grudgingly, "you're the Aristos." b"On the contrary." Gabriel smiled. "I'm the god." \Gabriel ended his conversation with Vashti and opened his eyes. The precise flat grid of the Residence landing field, glowing under spotlights, spread out on the other side of the viewscreen. White Bear had landed, noiselessly and without a jounce, while Gabriel was concentrating on the oneirochronon. "Thank you," Gabriel told him, a bit surprised, and walked toward the Residence while querying its reno for Clancy's location. Clancy, Gabriel was told, was at the hospital in Labdakos, keeping watch over an emergency case-a six-year-old child with a brain infection. |Gabriel queried further, then arranged for ground transport. Traffic-control renos shifted other traffic out of the way, Gabriel's car raced past, and he was by Clancy's side in ten minutes. The hospital had been built as a consciously lighthearted place. The rooms and corridors were airy and, in the daytime, full of sun; there were trees and flowers and patios and galleries; the walls were decorated with artwork from the Red Lacquer Gallery-all copies, but copies exact to the last molecule. The routine work of most hospitals concerned cosmetic, alternative, and implant surgery, all elective, all sending home patients cheered by the decor. tNothing much could be done to make the intensive-care unit cheerful. In it were three cases of Breakdown, all (of course) terminal, and one small child with acute pseudomonas meningitis. Gabriel found Clancy pacing alone in the doctors' lounge. She wore moccasins, soft trousers, an informal dark-green surgical jacket with pockets. The lounge was a small quiet room with music-a Schubert sonata-a full-wall video tuned to soothing vistas, plush furniture, a molecular restoration of The Anatomy of Dr. Tulp, and the scent of flowers. 6None of that helped either. dGabriel entered and kissed her, and then they embraced for a moment. A phantom memory of Zhenling's phantom lips floated through Gabriel's memory, and he reluctantly banished it. "It's times like these," she said, "when I wish I'd gone in for cosmetic surgery, where all the money and clients are." $"What's happened?" "People being stupid," Clancy said. "When are we going to work on a cure for that?" 2"I'll see what I can do." Clancy wasn't amused. "I implanted the boy's reno six days ago," she said. "I told the parents there was a tiny chance of infection, and described the symptoms, and three of them would go off on vacation to Merrick Peak to celebrate the kid's Implant Day, and once there, they didn't want to spoil their vacation just because he started coming down this morning with what they insisted was an ear infection and a case of contrary behavior. Then he got aphasia, but they thought he was just being cute. Playing with words. It wasn't until he started convulsing that they realized their vacation was over." Cold anger snarled through Gabriel's nerves at the appalling tale of neglect. Children were rare: therefore precious, therefore adored. zClancy seemed to sense his mood. "They didn't know what illness looks like. None of the parents-not these three, anyway-has ever been sick with anything, and neither had their first child. Neither had this one till now. That's why," waving arms in frustration, "I'm always so careful to describe any likely symptoms." <"What's being done?" he asked. "We're trying to detonate the bacteria from the inside with hunter-killer virals. The pseudomonas was resistant to the first lot so. I gave him another, but it's too early to tell if ,they're going to work. Spinal fluid and blood cultures have been done, and I linked to Asteroid Semmelweis and put together a nano package that should work-well, it works against this bacteria in the simulation. If the hunter-killers don't start working soon I'll ship the package down, but I don't want to put more damn mechanisms in his brain than he's got already." She gnawed her lip, then glanced up at him. "I'll need your permission to bring the nano package down, of course." z"You'll have it." He called up Horus, then told him to enter the oneirochronon and arrange for the necessary clearances. He also used his Aristos Override to bring the records of the simulation into his reno's memory, where he could look at them and make certain he wasn't importing a deadly mataglap nano by mistake. He knew Clancy was good. But she was in a hurry, and he wanted to be positive. "While I was driving here I checked the data on pseudomonas," Gabriel said, "and discovered that it can enter the patient from water in flowerpots. Do we need to rip all the flowers out of this place?" R"Not once we get something that'll kill it, no. And we don't know if the flowers were the vector of transmission or not. No, it's most likely just some bacterium that's mutated to a new form, and ... Well, we'll check everything thoroughly. The flowers can stay till we know more." She glanced up. "Do you know how rare this actually is? I looked it up. One in every eleven billion people. I've never done a spinal culture outside of training. The hunter-killers I used were all generic-pseudomonas is so rare these days that no one's developed a more specific treatment." Her lips tightened in a thin line. "That's why I want a nano lab, Disturber," she said. "I want to work with these cases that are so rare that nobody's really devised special treatments." He took her hand. "Blushing Rose. You have the lab whenever you want it." "It won't make money, Disturber. One in eleven billion people-that's not a very large client base." "You should see the submissions I get on Nano Day. All the most baroque proposals in the world, building hotels and planets and space habitats from base matter. Hardly any of it has the worth of what you propose. I'll make the investment and-" He smiled. "If I start running out of money, I'll build another planet and sell it." <"Thank you." She embraced him. "'Remember the Green-Skirt Girl,'" he said, after Niu Shiji, "'and everywhere be tender with the grass.'" He sensed a shift in her body, her attention moving elsewhere as daimones spoke to her. She stepped back, looked at him. "There's movement for the better, Disturber. It looks as if the hunter-killers are doing their work. Would you like to see our patient?" ""Yes. Of course." The tiny figure lay on his side and looked sick unto death. He was on a respirator, as the brain stem swelling out of the skull had strangled his breathing centers. His muscles had been paralyzed with drugs in order to forestall the convulsions that wracked him. The scar from the reno implant had not yet been removed after the operation. There was a paper-thin monitor on his jugular vein to keep track of the bacterial population in his blood; there was another 'thin on his spine to monitor spinal fluid. Clancy reached down and brushed the boy's temple lightly with the backs of her knuckles. LImplant Day was one of the two great childhood rites of passage, the moment when the wider universe of the Hyper-logos opened to a young mind. The second, Sterilization Day, occurred in early adolescence and signified the young adult's intention to take responsibility for his own reproduction. "There'll be scarring of the brain, of course," she said. "We'll have to do a lot of rebuilding with nano, with shunts going into the jugular and carotid to carry away the excess heat. And physical therapy to relearn what he's probably lost." She shook her head. "Normally a patient could inhabit the oneirochronon while something like this was going on, but this boy hasn't had his reno long enough and won't have the practice. I wonder if he'll even want his reno after this. It's the one tool he'll most need to survive, and if he develops an aversion to it ... well, I'll have to recommend a very good therapist." She looked up. "Does your reno have a name, Disturber? Have you programmed it with a personality?" "I call mine Reno, and it acts like a machine. I find that refreshing-I've got quite enough personalities in my head as it is." "Mine is named Caroline. I even gave her an appearance. She looks like my sister, if I had a sister-and we're great friends." She looked down at the boy. "I wonder what he will name his. Death?" He took her hand again. "If he has any sense at all, he'll name it after his deliverer. Reno Blushing Rose." Her hand tightened in his. He held it until the boy's vital signs strengthened, until it was obvious that the virus was in retreat. HClancy called off the alert on the nano package, and Gabriel, as long as he was here, visited the other patients in the ward. Breakdown, known as Dorian Gray's disease, was an ugly death and, barring accident or suicide or something very rare like the pseudomonas infection, about the only one avail-able. Every cell in the body revolted against the reprogramming that had kept it young. Cancers erupted overnight, organs suffered massive failure, muscle and neural networks failed ... incurable, unstoppable, Breakdown had at least the mercy of being quick, usually over in a matter of days. The only treatment was to make the patient as comfortable as possible while it was going on. Breakdown happened to everyone sooner or later-it seemed the result of a kind of chaotic process in the body, in which everything swung out of equilibrium at once, toward a strange attractor of sudden decay-but most people saw at least their third century before Breakdown caught up with them, and a few lucky individuals like Pan Wengong lived into their second millennium. `It was better, all in all, than the alternative. HGabriel steeled himself to deal with the patients, none of whom were pleasant to look at. One was in a coma, close to death, but the others were awake and aware: Gabriel felt his heart wring as, recognizing him, they tried to struggle into Attitudes of Respect. Images of his father's death fluttered darkly through his mind as he kissed them in greeting. He spoke quietly and asked the dying if they were comfortable enough. They did not complain-medication had eased their pain and for the most part their minds were journeying in the oneirochronon, where they could meet with their loved ones without either party having to see what was happening to their bodies. Gabriel wished them peace and made his way out to speak to the boy's family, who had just been told by Clancy that the crisis had passed. rThere were seven of them. With the average human life span currently set (according to the Hyperlogos) at 355.8 years, and with human space expanding only with an increase in Aristoi, population growth was necessarily restricted. Part of the reason Gabriel had got so many volunteers to help him pioneer his domaine was his promise that each would be entitled to one child whenever they wished. Now Gabriel still allowed his populations to grow, but at a slower rate, and certain social arrangements had been imported from other domaines. Collective families were common: adults agreed to divide the burdens and expenses of child rearing in exchange for a share of the joys. Some even went so far as to assure that the child herself was a collective, with some genetics contributed by each of the legal parents. As a result of this arrangement the children got all the attention a growing psyche could wish, and often more than was really good for them. As Gabriel arrived he watched relief battle with astonishment on the parents' several faces. R"I came to see your"-Reno supplied the name-"Krishna. Dr. Clancy tells me he will recover and should be up for the Kite-Flying Festival. We've both been very concerned." ZThe Welcome Rain kept sincerity radiating from his face. His concern for Krishna was perfectly genuine; but because he was an Aristos this visit had, at least a little, become politics; and the Welcome Rain, completely insincere and ruthlessly uncaring as he was, was the best politician Gabriel knew. <Caught by surprise, the family babbled. The guilty three were still dressed for their vacation. Gabriel turned stern for a moment, told them they shouldn't have ignored the early symptoms, then made some general remarks about the life of . a child being precious and said his farewells. Beginning with concern, Gabriel thought, composing a poem to himself, it ends with politics. Thus does care become governance. Clancy would be staying by Krishna's bed. Gabriel kissed her and took his car to the Residence. NGabriel slept for three hours, so he must have been tired. Clancy, the house reno informed him, was asleep in the Carnation Suite: she'd left a message that Krishna was doing well. Gabriel dressed, went to his office, and ate breakfast there, off his Louis Quinze desk. He conducted business till dawn silvered the windowpane and Quiller, his gangling, knob-wristed secretary, floated him a message that Rubens had arrived. Gabriel ended his business and thought for a moment about Rubens's purpose in coming here, the intrigue or conspiracy or whatever it was. Thoughts of assassination tingled briefly through his nerves, were dismissed. Cressida had sent Rubens, and sent him obviously, on her own yacht. She would never leave a trail like that if her intentions were violent. Still, Gabriel had his visitor discreetly scanned for weapons before he summoned (first) some of his daimones, then (second) Rubens. Cressida's messenger was an olive-skinned man who had stabilized his age at about thirty. There were gill slits on his neck and nictating membranes that, like a cat's, folded over his eyes at each blink-aquatic modifications, but not as drastic as Asterion's. He wore the practical blue uniform of those In Cressida's service, and his manner and kinesics were polite without being overly refined. 2Gabriel kissed him hello. "Would you walk with me?" Gabriel said. "The morning light is very fine." `Rubens nodded carefully. "As you wish, Aristos." Gabriel's right hand, hidden from Rubens, formed the mudra that opened the private passage to the gallery that connected the rooms of his apartments. Brocade rustled as he took Rubens's arm. Gabriel led him into the passage and down the gallery. Manfred waited there-if this was some hideous plot, Gabriel wanted a dog with diamond teeth and anesthetic saliva on hand. The terrier followed as Gabriel took Rubens out the glass atrium into the gardens. Rubens's nictating membranes partly deployed to protect his eyes from the bright morning light. Augenblick and the Welcome Rain buzzed in Gabriel's head, and Mataglap hovered suspiciously in the background, just in case violence was, after all, the issue. ."I like to conduct business at a brisk walk," Gabriel said. "My reno brings me communication and data, and the rhythm of the walk helps focus my mind." "I often do my business underwater. I have an office on a coral outcrop ten fathoms down." "I'm afraid those with little wind or short legs aren't happy with me, though." Rubens gave a careful smile. "I imagine my clients find my habits inconvenient as well." Despite the months he'd spent in confinement on the yacht, Rubens had no difficulty keeping up as Gabriel set a fast pace down the gravel walks of the Residence gardens. The gill slits on his neck bloomed slightly at each exhalation. His long shoes-no doubt his toes were extended and webbed-showed no sign of cramping him even at a brisk pace. Imperial chrysanthemums blossomed warmly on either hand. Manfred's trotting feet ground on gravel. Above, on the horizon, a score of kites lifted to the mild breeze. People practicing for the Kite-Flying Festival, one of Gabriel's holidays. dHolidays in other domains celebrated the birthdays of prominent men or the anniversary of important occasions. Other than Captain Yuan's birthday, which was more or less required, Gabriel's holidays were devoted to nothing other than pleasure outings, kite-flying, picnicking, family banquets, gift-giving. "I hope your months on the yacht were not burdensome," Gabriel said. "It's a spacious vessel, fully equipped for long voyages. And there was the crew to keep me company and my work to keep me busy." "Your work?" Rubens smiled wryly. "I discovered a new carbon-car-bon-silicon ceramic with a radically high thermal diffusivity. It was"-he shrugged-"one of those lucky accidents; I wasn't looking for it. The product would be ideal for use in heat shieldings, but we've already got shields almost as good, so there's no real demand, and unfortunately the product has a low tensile strength." "Too brittle." "Precisely. But it's ideal for industrial smelters, as well as pottery and so forth, because the high diffusivity means less firing time." R"So you're here to look at the workshop." "With intent to set up something like it, though on a modest scale at first. And I've not given up hope that there's a way of making the product stronger." His gill slits rippled. "So my time on the voyage was spent working on that." 0"Any solution in sight?" "Unfortunately not. But I've learned other things that will prove useful in time. And of course Cressida Ariste assigned me certain duties relating to her Chaos Form studies of interior stellar processes. So I've kept quite busy." LGabriel paused while Mataglap's dire warning echoed through his skull. He didn't think Rubens was an assassin, but there were always weapons too subtle for a nonintrusive scan, the human body itself was of course a weapon, and the situation was unusual enough that precautions seemed justified. j"Do you have the data on this ceramic?" Gabriel said. ."Yes, Gabriel Aristos." @"Send it to me. Perhaps I'd be interested in licensing it for use at the Workshop." Mataglap's homicidal thunderings sent a river of tension up Gabriel's spine. Rubens smiled. "I'd be delighted, Aristos." His expression turned briefly abstract as he made some internal communication. "I've transmitted the data from my ship to your Hyperlogos address. You may absorb it at leisure, Aristos." "You'll be on Illyricum for a few days, yes? I'll try to communicate with you by the end of your stay." *"Thank you, Aristos." Gabriel slowly exhaled, sending the tension from his body. The Welcome Rain's inevitable cynicism was like a chill, refreshing downpour after a humid summer day. The daimMn was a sociopathic manipulator, utterly without conscience, who usually worked in tandem with the intuitive Augenblick-the two were cognates, mirror images of the same personality, the same way that Horus was cognate with Cyrus, who was (in a somewhat more complex fashion) also cognate with Spring Plum. GABRIEL: Can you make him out at all? AUGENBLICK: I'm trying to get a reading. WELCOME RAIN: Keep him talking. Turn the conversation to his own business. We'll get a better idea of his natural manner. And keep holding his arm-we get a superior reading on his body that way. AUGENBLICK: Walking and the outdoors has relaxed him somewhat. There is less tension in his arm and gait. His voice is less strained. He's not thinking about-whatever-it-is. GABRIEL: Can you read him at all? AUGENBLICK: He's a Protarchon TherpMn. The best Cressida could send us without coming herself. If he doesn't want us to read him, it's going to be difficult without the use of extreme measures. Cressida won't like it if we start rummaging in her boy's head. WELCOME RAIN: Keep him talking. We may yet be able to trip him up. MATAGLAP: What was that thing with his gills? A preparation for attack? ~AUGENBLICK: Tensed neck muscles. Increased tension in the arm. MATAGLAP: An attack! Ready your free arm. < Visualization of mid-knuckle strike. > fGABRIEL: Don't be paranoid. < Readying arm anyway > *MATAGLAP: AH people have me in their hearts. Don't forget it. WELCOME RAIN: I don't think it's violence he's after. Something more personal, I think. ^MATAGLAP: What's more personal than violence? After the strike, dazzle him with the Mudra of Domination and get the fuck away from him while Manfred fills him with anesthetic. AUGENBLICK: Neck tension! Arm tension! Spine rigid! Increased respiration! 2MATAGLAP: KILL HIM NOW.' WELCOME RAIN: Shut up and let me think! That's not what's happening here. AUGENBLICK: Relief! Relaxation of tension! Capillary dilation! Low threat potential! WELCOME RAIN: Hah. He just wanted you to make his fortune by buying his ceramic. I thought I smelled self-interest. RGABRIEL: You always smell self-interest. nWELCOME RAIN: There always is self-interest. Let me negotiate the contract. He'll end up with vacuum where his trust fund should be. The least we can do after he scared us like this. "MATAGLAP: AUGENBLICK: Increasing relaxation. Lowered and deeper respiration. Pupil dilation. Nictating membranes withdrawn. jWELCOME RAIN: His guard is down-and he's vulnerable now. Ask him why he's here. He or Cressida could have told you about the ceramic by tachline, so he's here for some other reason. Mataglap, the paranoid, homicidal berserker, was cognate with no one. Gabriel had never needed him, and was happy to keep it that way. "Still," Gabriel said. "You're here on a mission from Ariste Cressida, aren't you?" Gabriel could feel the tension return to Rubens's body. "Yes," he said. "I was to deliver this, in person, to your hand alone." 4Rubens's pace slowed as his free hand reached into one of his uniform pockets. Gabriel mentally shook off another renewed bellow of anxiety from Mataglap. Rubens produced a data wafer. Gabriel stopped, took it with his free hand, and examined it. The wafer was in a transparent polymer coat to keep it from harm, and had Cressida's seal stamped on both sides. Gabriel gave Rubens a sidelong glance. 6"Do you know what's on it?" <"No, Aristos. I was told it was under her seal and will not open to anyone but you." Rubens's face plainly showed a nervous uncertainty. "Cressida's instructions came entirely without warning-she gave me only two days' notice. I'm unaware of Cressida's giving a similar assignment to anyone during the time I've been with her. Usually she's quite thoughtful concerning the people to whom she assigns special duty." AUGENBLICK: Nictating membranes pulsing. Narrowed pupils. Overall increase in tension. ,WELCOME RAIN: Got him. DMATAGLAP: Careful! He'll kill you! 4WELCOME RAIN: Oh, shut up. AUGENBLICK: Stance uncertain. High focus of attention. Low threat potential, but he's thinking about something. >WELCOME RAIN: Keep him talking. BAUGENBLICK: Nictating membranes partially deployed, possibly indicative of deception, but deception is contraindicated by open stance, eye focus, eyelid steadiness, status of capillary dilation. See that? A slight hunch there, a shrug aborted by training. Indication of genuine puzzlement. PGABRIEL: Could his reactions be feigned? bAUGENBLICK: He is highly trained. It is possible. :WELCOME RAIN: We could do it. >GABRIEL: How can we be certain? Gabriel put the wafer in an interior pocket. "So whatever this is about, you have good cause to think it important." |"More important than anything since I've been in her service." T"Were you cautioned on what to say to me?" B"Not at all. Her orders were brief and direct-well, they always are." Rubens's brows furrowed. "I was simply to take the Lorenz to Illyricum, or wherever you were, after which I would inspect the Illyricum Workshop in order to get an idea of what I would need in my own ceramics workshop." "Which of course you could have done through the oneirochronon." " Naturally. And had every intention of doing. Cressida's message was via skiagnos, by the way-I checked." "Very thorough of you." Which meant he wouldn't gain anything by persuading Rubens to let him look at his original message. WELCOME RAIN: Keep him talking. But we'll never know for certain unless we use the Mudra of Compulsion or go to extremes. AUGENBLICK: You could seduce him. Try to woo him from his former allegiance. 2GABRIEL: Is it plausible? AUGENBLICK: His meta-linguistics suggest the possibility. His weight is very slightly adjusted in your direction, opening himself to your influence, and his near leg is just slightly turned out toward you, displaying his genitals. The indications are so slight that they are probably unconscious, but they could of course be feigned, or indicative merely of his willingness to be of assistance to you. I'd get a better idea if you look directly into his eyes for a few seconds. "WELCOME RAIN: Take the fellow. He's well trained. A Protarchon spy would be diverting after this recent dull mingling of sexuality and sincerity. tGABRIEL: I'll view the message first, then think about it. Gabriel paused and glanced about him. They had left the Red Lacquer Gallery and the Autumn Pavilion far behind, and the border of the formal gardens was just ahead. On a flat sward nearby, the sons and daughters of Residence workers who attended the Residence School were going through a Postures class, everyone from five-year-olds to early adolescents wiring their body and mind with the metalinguistic culture of the Logarchy, the common ground on which all humanity communicated. Behind them were forests, canals, and carefully calculated prospects. "Would you like to see the deer park or zoo?" Gabriel asked. "The warrens? Little Venice or the Palazzo?" Rubens glanced back at Manfred. "I imagine your terrier would be happier in the warrens," he said. NGabriel found himself warming to a man who deferred to a dog, even if in the end he turned out to be some kind of spy. "The warrens, then," he said, and set off again. RLater, back in his office, Gabriel sat at his Louis Quinze desk and tapped the scrolled Illyrian Workshop mother-of-pearl inlay on its surface. A square of mahogany rose from the polished desktop. Gabriel took Cressida's data wafer from his pocket, pressed his thumb to the seal on the plastic envelope, broke the seal, and slipped the wafer into the waiting slit on the desk. The mahogany block seamlessly resumed its place. The desk informed him that the data was under the Seal of the Aristoi and that Gabriel's positive identification would be needed to release it. Gabriel tapped mother-of-pearl, pressed his fingers to the desktop, and leaned over it so that embedded microwatts could scan his retinas. The mahogany surface deepened, grew bright. Cressida's skiagnos gazed from its depths with bright brown eyes. t"Enclosed are plans for setting up a direct tachline transmitter between your current location and Painter. I presume you will be able to oblige me by preparing this as soon as possible. "I hope," eyes boring in, "that you will assist me in this matter. I cannot compel you, but I can say that my reasons are of the utmost urgency, and although our present sealed tachline communications through the Hyperlogos may not be compromised, this alternative is the safest. My apologies if this places you at any inconvenience." She's mad, suggested Welcome Ram. One of her daimones is in charge. Cressida? Gabriel wondered. She's been among the Aristoi for centuries-if anyone were firmly in command of her daimones, it should be she. BShe got soft. Couldn't take it anymore. Science, science, science; discipline, discipline, discipline. Had to be in control even over interior stellar processes. jI don't think that's what Chaos Form theory is about. You want proof? She used a skiagnos to communicate with you. She didn't dare use a live vidcam-you'd be able to tell it was a daimMn speaking. HPerhaps there's some genuine danger. From whom? Or what? No ... she's just lost her grip. She's trying to involve you in her delusions. DPerhaps. But in that case, why me? The Welcome Rain didn't have an answer for that. Gabriel called on his other daimones, none of whom contributed any useful analysis. Through his reno he accessed the Hyper-logos via tachline; he went through public and nonpublic biographical data both of Cressida and Rubens. Cressida's data told him nothing he didn't already know. Rubens's showed a steady ascent under Sebastian and Cressida-two Aristoi notoriously difficult to please-and he had failed his exams eight years ago by only a narrow margin. He might well become an Aristos during the next exam cycle. ,So much for biography. Through his reno he called TherpMn Tritarchon Fleta, , who looked after his communications net, and ordered her to set up the tachline rig. "This is confidential, TherpMn," he said. "I don't want anyone to know about this except the people doing the work." "I will arrange for emplacement by robot, Aristos," Fleta purred. "The programming and telemetry, both of the robots and the tachline, I will do myself." She had altered her appearance to that of a fey elflike creature, all smooth curves, wide dark eyes, skin tinted a shiny, rather acrylic blue. She lowered her lashes suggestively. "No one will know but the two of us, Aristos," she said. H"I thank you," Gabriel said. "Fini." Something, he was reminded, had always suggested to him that he save Fleta for later. The body shape, with its wide-eyed innocence mixed with catlike sensuality, was just a little too manipulative, and sent little warning twinges climbing his spine. Gabriel's reno reminded him of appointments waiting, postponed, waiting still. A message from Marcus winked at him. fHe ran the recording of Cressida again. No answers. BELIEVE HER! The voice rolled through his mind. His nerves crackled. Daimones chattered in bewilderment. He told them to be silent and probed gently for the source of the unknown voice. No luck. `The tachline would be set up within a few hours. Soon he'd know. Chapter 4 PABST: @The human will, a plastic thing. , to Zhenling. Perhaps she, too, was looking for diversion. NSomewhat to his surprise, she accepted. 6Gabriel left Horus to look after the graduation ceremonies and materialized a second skiagnos inside his suite. The animal servants began to deploy automatically. There was a knock on the door, and the otter moved to answer while Gabriel triggered a Kurusu piece from the orchestra. `Zhenling, in the electronic moment between the graduation ceremonies and her appearance here, had changed from a formal suit to summery silk trousers and an embroidered jacket. She thanked the tetrapus for his offer of refreshment, but declined. Incense began to burn at a wave of Gabriel's thought, spilling from the eyes and mouth of bronze censers formed in the shape of monkey heads. Gabriel offered Zhenling a seat on the sofa. pAll this compromised? he wondered. Was anyone listening? He doubted it. But he had never heard of Cressida engaged in any intrigue before. None whatever. ("Peace and stability stretching over centuries. The frontiers of humanity, and human knowledge, steadily expanded." Asterion's speech, transmitted by Horus, floated in the back of Gabriel's head.) "Thank you for transmitting the data on your chemistry," Zhenling said. <"You're welcome. Am I normal?" ""Not really, no." V"I'm pleased to hear it. Your conclusions?" She smiled. "Too early for that. A context will develop only when other Aristoi contribute their data." "And will they?" <"No one's turned me down yet." >"That's encouraging." He drew (Augenblick's urging) one foot up under him to encourage informality. "D'you really think you'll find a common thread?" he asked. F"Honestly?" Eyebrows arching. "No." x("Mobile, unrestricted populations. Information-all of it-preserved in its entirety for future generations. Information-all save the most dangerous-available to all, and instantaneously.") x"It seems to me," Gabriel went on, "that you won't discover a great deal about what makes an Aristos. We're primates, admittedly, and no doubt we have primate brain chemistry-but we become Aristoi be/ore all the people around us became so deferent. So you're charting a process that's aberrant right from the start." "I anticipate a long-range process by which similar data are gathered for a wide cross-section of Therpontes and the Demos, some of whom may of course become Aristoi-and then we'll know the difference, if there is one." Zhenling pulled her legs into a cross-legged stance and rested her cheek on a fist. "But for the moment, I'm only gathering data. All data is useful, as Asterion just reminded us. It's too early for conclusions, but it's also too early for the questions. I'm studying Aristoi. Why not? One can't claim it isn't a worthy subject for study." "No. One can't." "And all our genes are mapped, so that's another solid mass of data ..." z"They've also been looked at before. No common thread there." d"I'd like to think I have several new approaches." xGabriel leaned closer. Hundreds of light-years away, in the PyrrhoF, his palate tingled to her scent. The Welcome Rain purred in his ear. "My own focus tends to be a bit narrower," he said. "I'd like to study but a single Ariste." "Study all you like. But I prefer not to think of myself as all that narrow." ("Hostile environments made habitable. Nature itself become an artifact of the human will.") Zhenling cocked her head. "Are you monitoring Asterion's speech? Doesn't it strike you as something of an apolo-gia?" V"He does seem to be reviewing a good deal." `"Perhaps this is the beginning of the reaction." "The reaction?" Gabriel raised His eyebrows. "Is there therefore a revolution? And if so, are you it?" |She smiled. "You'll pardon me. I should pay closer attention." B"I'll see you at the receptions." vThis time she allowed his kiss on the back of her hand. Her skiagnos politely walked from the room instead of merely vanishing, but, he suspected, her consciousness had largely departed. He returned his focus to the Apadana. Torchlight flickered off the intent faces of the new Aristoi. Asterion stood in a calm, imperial posture and spoke with the authority of absolute conviction. "It was Marcus Aurelius who said, 'What is not good for the swarm is not good for the bee.' Nor, I should add, for the queen. Aristoi are granted immense power, verging on the absolute, but the power is not without condition, nor without responsibility. "Our duty is not to ourselves but to the Demos. Our power is granted for their protection, for their advancement. The tragedy that engulfed Earth1 was caused by people ignorant of the consequences of their own work. It is our task never to be ignorant of consequence. Never to be caught off-guard. Always to stand between the Demos and that which threatens their peace and development." 0Asterion's hands formed Mudras of Teaching and Responsiveness. "Our social classes are hierarchies of service. TherpMn originally meant 'servant,' Not a servant to the Aristoi, though that is what is largely assumed, but a servant to the Demos. And the best-the Aristoi-more than the Therpontes, are shackled by bonds of service. If we are believed to be the best, it is because we owe our best to others." Asterion lifted his stance slightly, his center of gravity rising into realms of kinesic uncertainty. "There are critiques of our order. Some believe that the stability and measured growth we have brought to humanity are somehow inhibiting its growth and progress." Gabriel's electric awareness seemed to fill the room. He perceived the firm, approving glance of Virtue's Icon, Zhen-ling's skeptical posture, Astoreth's expression of annoyance, the brooding dark presence of Saigo. The awareness that certain lines were being drawn. Power seemed to flicker around the room, weaving a path from one Aristos to the next. `Asterion lowered his stance to one of greater authority, command lancing through his voice. "Progress? Progress, measured progress, is being made everywhere, on every conceivable frontier. Growth? Uncontrolled growth has caused so many problems in the past-it was uncontrolled growth that killed Earth1!" Well, Gabriel thought. It was out in the open now. How many tens of billions were watching? The reaction, Zhenling had called it. Perhaps it ought to be overreaction. z"What the critics really seem to mean"-Asterion smiled ironically-"is that they are nostalgic for the past. A past that seems much more adventurous and exciting than the present. Let me remind those who hold this view," forming a Mudra of Authority,' 'that the past held one catastrophe after another. That the Demos were afflicted with plague and uncertainty, war and neurosis, an endless degrading struggle for sustenance, resources, and a habitable biosphere. That it was this struggle that made the past interesting." He nodded with calm authority. "If it is not as interesting now, we should be thankful. And perhaps it is not the welfare of the Demos that the critics most have in their hearts." He straightened, took a formal stance. "You nine are chosen foremost in rank, honor, and responsibility. Today, as a reward for struggles made and hardships overcome, each is invested with the title Aristos kai Athanatos. But as your domaines begin to form in your image, as your struggles and hardships intensify and grow in consequence, recall another saying of Marcus Aurelius, one whose burdens and duties were similar to yours. 'Do not waste the remnant of your life in those imaginations concerning others, wherein you do not contribute to the common weal.'" xHe raised his arms. "Ten thousand years to the new Aristoi!" X"Ten thousand years!" All chorused in reply. ,"Ten thousand worlds!" ,"Ten thousand worlds!" He held out a right hand formed in a Mudra of Truth. The webbing between his fingers was translucent against the white marble and rich ornament. "I am granted the privilege of administering the oath that will both liberate your minds to fly6 where they wish, and chain your will to the welfare of humanity. Repeat after me: With honor we, in taking upon ourselves the imperium of the Aristoi ..." What followed tonight, Gabriel thought, was bound to be interesting. Colored spheres fell in ultraslow motion from a high, dark, tented ceiling. The music that filled Tallchief s oneirochronic chamber rippled the spheres' plastic surfaces as if the sound waves were become visible within the fluid medium. When they struck the floor, or the gathered Aristoi, the spheres .burst and scattered intriguing scents, spice, citrus, and sweetness. FThis? Compromised? Gabriel thought. *"Asterion was not forceful enough," said Virtue's Icon. "It is the duty of all Aristoi to protect the Demos from unwholesome revisionist philosophy." 6"Absolutely," Gabriel said. l"There should be an explicit denunciation formulated." F"Certainly. Why don't you do that?" Virtue's Icon was a small, intent woman, plain-featured, with dark hair chopped rudely short at the collar. She wore the plain, unadorned grey tunic that was almost universal within her civil service and very common in her domaine. like Cressida's, only ugly. hHer eyes narrowed as she looked up at Gabriel. Tonight, for the reception, his skiagnos wore, over ruffled shirt and tight chamois trousers, a sleeveless knee-length cassock-coat designed by Spring Plum. It featured her usual floral motifs-intricate red petals pouted against a leafy green background, seed pearls impersonated anthers, and cunning insects glittered with elaborate beadwork as they climbed about the embroidered stalks. l"You will, of course, sign the denunciation yourself." <"I will have to see the text." The Icon's expression flattened. "You are insufficiently serious, Gabriel Aristos." "To the contrary. I am quite serious. I am, however, never solemn." This particular distinction seemed to elude her. She sniffed, about-faced, and went in search of a more appreciative audience. *Gabriel, back in the PyrrhoT, smiled a smile he did not permit his skiagnos to display. Offending Virtue's Icon was something of an art-one wished her to go away, but one did not wish to seem rude. `There were penalties for being rude to the Icon. At least he was not one of her neighbors-she could make them suffer by endless protraction of trade negotiations and bombarding them with endless petitions for the return of the emigrants she persisted in labeling as "fugitives," all because they had decamped without paying back the investment the Commonwealth of Virtue had made in them. All travel within the Logarchy was theoretically unrestricted. Virtue's Icon imposed not "restrictions," but "taxes." It was a distinction that eluded most of those who tried to leave her sphere. The Icon's domaine was the largest in terms of size and habitats, if somewhat underpopulated in terms of those who actually chose to live there. 8There were reasons for that. "How can you stand it?" Akwasibo's head floated on the periphery of Gabriel's perception. Gabriel turned toward her. Her neck, like Alice's, shortened and drew her head back to her shoulders. B"One has practice," Gabriel said. Akwasibo looked after Virtue's Icon and made a face. "Imagine if Stalin had become Pope," she said. dGabriel's daimones collapsed in helpless laughter. r"One should consider," Gabriel said, "that nothing said at this reception is entirely private. The Demos and Therpontes are locked out, of course, but any Ariste can review our words from Hyperlogos memory. And no doubt a few-perhaps the lady concerned." Certainly the lady concerned, if Gabriel knew her at all. n"I don't care. My domaine will be well away from hers." r"That doesn't mean you won't have to deal with her. And, unless you expressly forbid them, there will be Temples of Virtue in every habitat of your domaine, all proselytizing like mad." "Gives you a certain sympathy for Tomas de Torquemada's point of view, doesn't it?" Gabriel decided to change the subject and spare Akwasibo the inevitable, unfortunate consequences of prolonging this conversational topic. Being denounced from every Virtue pulpit, for starters. "Have you chosen your domaine?" She smiled. "Yes. I'm pioneering, as you did. I thought it a shame to waste what I learned from watching you." @"I'm happy to have been of use." "Just three planets to start-I'll be putting my terraform-in team together as soon as we're finished here." xNostalgia drifted through Gabriel as he recalled his own pioneering days, staking out his new domaine on the frontier. Illyricum, Vissarion, Cos, Lascarios, Brightkinde-all planets he had terraformed, adjusted, stabilized, and eventually populated and ruled, along with space habitats and continental shelves. As populations grew, he'd relaxed his direct rule, allowed the Demos to choose their own leaders for all but the most important tasks. Only Brightkinde was still under a Hegemon, a direct appointed governor. And they would elect their own parliament and premier within a matter of weeks, and the Hegemon would surrender his seal of office. And that would be that. The last place where his direct authority was still felt. A surge of remembrance filled his soul. He wasn't nostalgic enough to want to do it all again, however. Building a world from scratch was a lot of work. Akwasibo went on. "I've already received-good God-almost fifty million applications. Even after I sort out the ones I don't want-" ^"You'll get three hundred million more. I did." Dismay touched her for only a second. "Good thing this has been done so many times. It's all there, in the records-exact numbers of how many electricians and plumbers and able seamen and cosmetician robots I'll need in the first wave." She grinned. "Perhaps if I disregarded the past entirely, and made up my own list, I'd be making my life more exciting, like Astoreth wants." Well, Gabriel thought. He'd warned her about indiscreet conversation in this setting, and here she was persisting. Perhaps he shouldn't associate himself with such folly any longer. It wasn't as if she was still his apprentice. "You'll forgive me," he said. "I see someone I should speak to." He drifted through the room and grazed on conversation. He spoke to his host, Tallchief, who showed him the designs of a new habitat. Tallchief s domaine had no planets, only huge flotillas of space habitats that moved from place to place, visiting and trading and then moving on. Tallchief was working his way along the rim of the Logarchy and would be expected in Gabriel's domaine in another seventy or eighty years. Gabriel offered welcome and facilities, and Tallchief smiled and thanked him. Gabriel drifted on. He encountered Cressida moving serenely through the pack. He greeted her with a Posture of Formal Regard. rShe was dressed, as usual, in the simple, practical blue uniform worn by her household. Her skiagnos used a lot of standard programming and did not have the elaborate presence of most. Cressida returned Gabriel's salutation. She assimilated his appearance with her bright, cold eyes. F"Your plumage is bright. As usual." P"One hopes it reflects the soul within." n"Ah." Her tone indicated she had, herself, little hope. 0On the whole, Gabriel knew, Cressida had never had much patience with him. Which made her approach via Rubens even more unusual than it might have been. f"I should thank you for die hospitality you've shown my TherpMn," she said. "You've been very kind, and he's learned a great deal simply from watching the Workshop in operation." \' 'His ceramic might prove very useful to us." She lifted her chin. "You're the best judge of that, I suppose. For the purposes for which it was crafted, it was a failure." Rubens was still on Illyricum, taking in the sights. And, Gabriel assumed, spying as well. `"Do you have the specifications for that carbon-carbon-silicon form?" Cressida asked. "Would you like to look at a model now? Some of the thermal interactions are interesting." Gabriel glanced around, feigned uncertainty. "If you like. I'm not sure-" 8GABRIEL: On alert, everyone. nAUGENBLICK: Skiagenoi are, as I remind, difficult to read. The fact that hers is so standard, without a high degree of individuation, makes it more difficult to read rather than less. "What else could he be up to?"' >"There are hundreds of stars in that sphere. Even Saigo's tampered data shows many with planets capable of supporting life once some terraforming is done. I-" She hesitated. "I think he's creating life out there. Completely new life, or experimenting with human genetics in ways of which we wouldn't approve. He's a specialist in human evolution as well as stellar evolution. He's done a lot of publishing on the human genome." "He could do that sort of thing at home. We might disapprove, but we couldn't stop him." "What he's doing might be dangerous. He might be using mataglap nano." A cold chill rose along Gabriel's spine at the very sound of the word. D"Still," Cressida said, "whatever he's doing, he's tampering with the Seal, and that compromises almost everything in the Logarchy. Almost every tachline communication is routed through the switching system in the Hyperlogos. Even our private sealed communications-the Seal of the Aristoi won't hold once the Hyperlogos Seal is broken. He's got access to everything, and he can tamper with all of it. Our entire civilization is based on free and unlimited access to data. Even the Seal of the Aristoi fades after the Aristos who sealed it dies or retires. Saigo can change data, communications ... history itself. And we don't know if he's doing this alone, or with others." A cold wind blew through the seagrass outside. The sun subsided below the murky horizon. Back on the Pyrrho&, Gabriel shivered. t"Why me?" Gabriel demanded. "Why are you telling me this?" |"You're nearest to the Gaal Sphere. It occurred to me that you could monitor events in the Sphere without Saigo knowing about it. Possibly from your home system, possibly by sending out probes." She gave an uncomfortable smile. "Besides, I had to tell someone. Preferably someone who hasn't been connected with Saigo." Gabriel's reno spun him Saigo's life history. The man was almost six hundred years old and the number of people he'd had contact with was phenomenal. He'd only turned reclusive in the last century or so. v"I don't know what to do, Gabriel," Cressida said. "I'm not a conspirator, a politician, an ideologue. I only want to know the truth when I see it. And Saigo is tampering with the truth.' n"You should present what you've learned to the others." "Which of them are a part of it? What will happen if I send messages through the Hyperlogos to all the Aristoi, and Saigo or one of his hypothetical allies decides to disrupt all communications? What if they decide to take possession of the Hyperlogos for themselves-all human knowledge, controlled by one man or a small group? What if it means war by one group of Aristoi against another?" Back on the Pyrrho, Gabriel felt his mouth turn dry. "We've never had a war," he said. "With the potential weaponry we've got available, with gravity generators that can warp space and matter, with mataglap nano that can eat whole planets the way Earth1 was consumed-what happens to our obligation to the Demos then?" <Gabriel's mind whirled. Daimones cried for attention or driveled hopelessly among themselves. "We need to consider," Gabriel said. "We need to think further." Perhaps, Horus's coldly logical voice, a series of private tachline nets, like the one you and Cressida share. A counter-conspiracy. JBut who to contact? Gabriel wondered. "We've been absent from the reception too long," Cressida said. "I never hid the fact that I recorded that data off the feed-my access codes are right there in the Hyperlogos. And once I found the discrepancy I went into the Hyperlogos and checked the data there very thoroughly, along with a history of who's accessed it. So if Saigo was paying attention, he knows that I know." n"If he was paying attention, he knew three months ago." "As soon as I worked all this out, I withdrew to my orbital lab Sanjay. There are only a few people here and I can control access very well. I've been taking care of business through the oneirochronon, but this can't go on indefinitely." "No." Gabriel was shaken by the thought that Cressida considered herself in danger. She's contaminated us! Augenblick was outraged. If she's imperiled, so are we! She should not have taken us here from the reception, Horus said. This communication should have been private from start to finish. XGabriel thankfully replaced his clothing with his Median cloak. "When we speak again," he said, "we shouldn't switch over to our private line from the Hyperlogos comm net." tCressida's eyes widened. "Oh," she said. "I didn't think-" 2"It may mean nothing. It's been centuries since the decisions were taken regarding the Gaal Sphere. Saigo may have assumed long ago that you'd never look at the raw data once he'd reduced it and made it available in the Hyperlogos." Gabriel's daimones felt free to disbelieve this. "I have no talent for conspiracy. I said that right at the start." B"Find a daimMn who's good at it." &"I've been trying." "Let's set a time for talking again. I want to be able to digest all of this." "They agreed to speak after the next night's reception. Cressida opened the door to the screened porch, and they stepped through to the reception. "A total exaggeration of my position!" Astoreth was saying. "Almost a parody!" She was speaking to a pair of gold cat's eyes adhered to one of Tallchief s slowly falling colored spheres. Feathery plumes swayed about Astoreth's elaborate headdress: her skin was a becoming shade of violet. She turned to Gabriel as he stepped through the door. "I'm outraged!" she said. The falling sphere struck the floor and punctured. Several miniature musical instruments fell out and began to play maniacally, as if trying to get an entire concerto into a three-second burst. They finished, then disappeared with a brief bagpipe honk. HDorothy St.-John's cat's eyes floated up from the burst of chaos. Gabriel turned to Cressida and set his skiagnos into a Posture of Formal Regard. She returned it. <"Outraged!" Astoreth prompted. Gabriel turned to her. "I am heartily distressed on your account, Ariste." "As if I would ever endanger the Demos! My critique is aimed purely at the Aristoi-to urge us to greater and greater exertions! Let the universe ring with the spirit of discovery and adventure, the way that once it did! Where is the spirit of Captain Yuan?" "Lost on a quest to the center of the galaxy," said Gabriel. "Along with the rest of him." ~Astoreth gave him a look. "That wasn't what I meant," she said. "I beg pardon, Ariste. I seem to be inexcusably literal tonight." Somehow his heart wasn't in this. Across the room he saw the looming form of Saigo, bearded, dressed in dark colors, locked in an intent conversation with the shimmering sphere of the Platonist Sebastian. He wondered if Saigo was planning to kill him. P(Horus logically evolved a plan in response to this situation. Gabriel didn't feel quite ready to make preparations as yet. Something in him wanted further convincing.) 8He wanted to fly off into the night and commit himself to something irresponsible, but he made himself stay at the reception until half the guests had left. 6Returning his focus to the Pyrrho, he floated out to the shuttle and told White Bear to take the controls. Something was still tugging at him. He went into the oneirochronon briefly to query the Residence's main reno as to Clancy's whereabouts, and found that she'd been in the Carnation Suite for three hours, presumably sleeping the sleep of the just. Gabriel wanted something more irresponsible than just sleep. He found himself wanting something delinquent. `He told White Bear to take him to Standing Wave. Chapter 5 LOUISE: LWith woolly tongue and throbbing head There was, after all, no hurry. Gabriel rose and bade his father's memory farewell. He opened the door into the interior and stepped out. The recording had switched to Handel. The weathered woman was still deep in meditation, oblivious both to Gabriel and to the two long streams of snot running from her nostrils. Apparently she was an adept of tumo, the art of keeping warm through inner heat and meditation. The other pilgrim, a young man largely concealed by a hooded parka, was sitting on a bench and eating breakfast out of a self-heating tray. He saw Gabriel and his eyes widened. He dropped to his knees and slammed his forehead reverently on the marble floor. "Morning Star!" he babbled, and banged his forehead again. Thoroughly embarrassed, Gabriel cringed. "Child of Glory!" Another bang. <"At ease," Gabriel muttered, before the man could bang his brains out. The poor fellow seemed to have few enough as it was. Gabriel stepped over the strewn offerings-what did people think his father could do with all this stuff?-and into the dawn. Spilled rice grated on his boot soles. The rosy sun hung over the layer of boiling cloud. Exemplary black mountain peaks, webbed with white, stood in perfect solitude above the white vapor plain. The call of a bone trumpet seemed to ring a long note in Gabriel's soaring heart. jHe had, he thought, done well in choosing this place. On pulses of snarling, half-tame gravity Gabriel flew to the Illyrian Workshop. Half a continent away, nine hundred Illyrian nautical miles, in ten minutes, counting the time it took to take off, hover, and land. The workshops themselves, yellow buildings with black photoreactive gabled mansard roofs, all set in a mild green valley, had closed for the day, but he left himself in with the Aristos Override. A few craftsmen, working early or late, seemed surprised to see him prowling the aisles. He intended to find a gift suitable for Rubens to take back to Cressida, but he ended up putting a few other items on his account as well. Cressida's gift was another folding egg puzzle like the one he had given to Marcus, but larger, the size of a pumpkin. Feathered silver Chinese dragons cavorted in relief about its exterior. Gabriel opened the puzzle to its lotus configuration and put inside a small bronze censer. It was ornamented with more dragons, and the incense would pour in a milky cloud from their nostrils. Atop the censer was a large black opal streaked with deep Illyrian blue and swirls of dusky orange. All resonant of ancient myth, little though Cressida would notice. The flight to the Residence outside Labdakos took six minutes. Once there he changed into his brighter morning silks, ordered breakfast, and queried his reno for Yaritomo. The young TherpMn was, not surprisingly, in the Shadow Cloister. Gabriel made his way there and found Yaritomo meditating in a half-lotus beneath the Shadow Mask. Gabriel stepped onto the grass and took a position to one side so that he could watch Yaritomo's profile. The boy's eyes were closed and his lips moved in a soundless dialogue with himself. His hands formed Mudras of Alertness and Receptivity. There was a spot of blood on his shirt where one of his wounds had opened. Above him, the Shadow Mask smiled ambiguously in starlight. vThe morning wind ruffled Gabriel's hair. Yaritomo's nostrils gave a twitch. His eyes opened, and he looked at Gabriel sidelong. He had smelled Gabriel, or sensed his body heat. A jolt of surprise crossed Yaritomo's features, and he tried to rise into an attitude of respect. Gabriel waved him down as he approached. F"I brought you something," he said. The gift was a porcelain Workshop miniature of a rearing tiger standing on a bed of leaping flame. The cat's bright bars glowed orange against the dark sward. The clear blue light of Illyricum gleamed off bared fangs. Gabriel had ordered it from the Workshop after Yaritomo's breakthrough. "Thank you, Aristos." Conforming to the Third Posture of Humility, chin and eyes lowered. "I don't deserve-" "Use it as a focus. It may help you visualize the Burning Tiger." Gabriel crouched by him. "Have you brought him out since your rite of chod?" "Yes." Yaritomo licked his lips. "Twice now. I've found that being here in the cloister helps." "Yes. It would." "I've felt someone else, though. Another." Yaritomo hesitated. "A kind of pressure in my mind." "How have you tried to bring him out?" ~- "I've tried the Sutra of Captain Yuan. Posture exercises. Directed meditation. I even tried just talking to it." He shook his head. "I don't think the other is ready." 6"Continue what you've been doing for another four or five days," Gabriel said. "If it doesn't manifest, simply return to your duties. Try to see what states of mind or activity bring on the intuition that the daimMn is there. And then try to duplicate those conditions deliberately." "Yes, Aristos." |"Send me regular reports. I may be able to suggest something." "Yes, Aristos." d"And your wounds. Are they giving you discomfort?" z"Some." He gave a little grin. "I'm trying to rise above it." "Mental discipline by all means, but not at the expense of your health. You'll check with a doctor soon? Good." Gabriel stood. "I think you've made the necessary breakthrough. Things should start happening quickly now." P"I hope that will be the case, Aristos." "I am promoting you to Hebdomarchon. Your duties of course will be increased." Yaritomo stared at him. "Sir," he said, "I don't know if I have earned-" "If you haven't yet, you will before long. Believe me. You'll need daimones for the work load you'll have." Yaritomo swallowed hard. "I'll try to live up to the trust you have placed in me, Aristos." "You seem a bit nervous. Why don't you try calling up the Burning Tiger? He's a confident sort." ("Ah-yes. Very good." XGabriel withdrew into the darkness. Yaritomo blinked about him for a moment, then took some breaths, focused his attention on the porcelain tiger, and began his invocation. $Gabriel queried the house reno, discovered Clancy was awake, ordered Kem-Kem to deliver breakfast to the Carnation Suite, then went there himself. :The Carnation Suite didn't have floral motifs but rather floral color, eleven different shades of red, with cream plaster-work and glowing rosewood panels. Clancy was playing the piano he'd ordered delivered to the suite. It was a Workshop artifact, mahogany inlaid with rosewood marquetry and flowering vines in mother-of-pearl, bone, and nanobuilt red coral and ivory. Perfect, Gabriel thought, for the setting. Clancy looked up as Gabriel entered but continued her procession through a selection of Mozart's landler. Gabriel approached and stepped behind her. As her fine-boned fingers continued their dance on the keyboard, Gabriel removed her hairpins and slowly sifted her hair through his fingers. He began to braid her hair with ribbons he'd picked up in the Workshop, ribbons holding tiny bells. They were clustered in pale ceramic flower displays, a bell on the end of each stamen. Their sound was clear and distinct, multitoned and right on pitch ... Each turn of Clancy's head would sound a miniature carillon. Clancy began to braid the landier together in the same way that Gabriel was braiding her hair, mixing the statement of one motif with the resolution of another, then progressing to something else, all advancing in stately three-quarter time. Gabriel and Clancy finished at more or less the same time. Chimes rang as Clancy lifted her head to look at him. "This piano is lovely," she said. "The tone is as fine as the finish. Thank you for sending it." >"You said you lacked practice." F"I said I lacked time to practice." 8"The piano is yours anyway." "Mine? Truly?" She put a hand to her throat. "I can't match these gifts, Disturber." D"Not unless you become an Ariste." She laughed. "It's a plot, then. To get me working toward my exams again." "Yes." She narrowed her eyes. "I never know quite when you're being serious." "Deja vu." He smiled. "That's what I said to my mother just yesterday." "Will you join me on the bench? I'll get a stiff neck otherwise." bSilk rustled as he seated himself. "You should try the exams again, you know," he said. "You were in the top twenty percent last time. And there's always need for more Aristoi." Clancy looked down at her hands, placed fingers as if for a minor seventh, then let them hover. "You were at Standing Wave last night." "Yes." She frowned, looked at her hands again, then crossed them on her chest. Bells tinkled in the key of B flat major. ~"I'm still not certain how this is supposed to work," she said. L"It works however we want it to work." She looked at him sidelong. "I suppose I'm not entirely certain what I want. Two days ago, I thought I knew." @"We have world enough and time." "Coyness would not seem to be our problem." She took a breath, held out her hands again, laid them soundlessly on the keyboard. "All right," she said. "If I'm to be a part of things here, I want to know what's happening." "Certainly." "What was it that threw you off? Was it this Rubens person? That confrontational speech Asterion gave at Graduation? Something must have produced that impulse to run off to Marcus. What happened?" lGabriel found himself more pleased by this burst of perception than he was disconcerted by its content. "It's sort of complicated," he said. "I'm not sure what to make of it myself." "Don't evade." "I wasn't evading. I was just pointing out that things are ... ambiguous." He explained the hand-carried message, the messenger's bafflement at the suddenness of his mission, then Cressida's revelation. V"Sounds like Cressida's gaga," Clancy said. "I hope so." ."If she is, what then?" "There hasn't been a mad Aristos in centuries. Not since the Crackling Prince." R"Sebastian and Virtue's Icon aren't mad?" "They're ..." He searched for words. "They're very eccentric, and their domains have become eccentric places. But no, they're not mad. One doesn't see the kind of appalling civil disorder that the Crackling Prince precipitated. Let alone his plan to use gravity generators to refigure planetary terrain with the population still living on it and supposed to be grateful for the change." ."Not yet, one doesn't." 6"Getting back to Cressida." HClancy nodded; bells chimed briefly. "An Ariste can only be removed by a unanimous vote of the other Aristoi. We all have to agree." <"It's never happened, has it?" ^"The Crackling Prince abdicated, but he probably would have been deposed ere long in any case. A commission had already been formed at Persepolis to look into his behavior." He frowned, reached out to caress ivory keys. "I don't believe Cressida is mad, however. I wish I could believe it, but I don't." RHer eyes held his. "And if you're right?" He considered the prospects, then shivered. "I'll cross that lengthy and astonishingly razor-edged bridge when I come to it. My turn to play." ^His hands moved into a familiar pattern, the duet between Lulu and Louise from his unfinished opera Louise Brooks as Lulu-his "long-unfinished" opera, as he now thought of it. lThe duet had been intended as a cynical conversation pointing inexorably to a kind of horrible desolation of spirit. The two women-one fictional, appearing in spirit form, the other a real actress assigned to play the first-would compare biographies, share the opinions of the men who used them and their lives that lunged so frantically out of control. The words were sardonic and witty-both women insisted they really didn't care what happened to them-but building behind the lyrics was a motif that suggested the depths of their own tragedy, their horrible isolation, and their ultimate fate, one dying at the hands of a maniac, the other fading over decades through gin and self-neglect ... JThe opera was perhaps half complete, and the duet was the last piece that Gabriel had completed to his own satisfaction. Something in him quailed from completing it. bAs he played he called through the oneirochronon for the orchestration: from the room's hidden speakers, strings and stabbing brass tarted up the duet's nasty little conclusion. He lifted his hands from the keys, looked at Clancy over his shoulder. "That was sarcastic," she said. "Is it because I asked uncomfortable questions?" "D flat minor dominant," he said, "with an unresolved seventh superimposed on the A flat minor. That's why it sounds so snotty." He rose from the bench and kissed her. "But it wasn't directed toward you. It's part of something unfinished." <"And what is that, Disturber?" He told her. "No wonder it's not finished," she said. "That's the most complex operatic structure I ever heard of. Each of the people in the cast is being led to their doom by a spirit of the 'real' characters they're imitating?" "The phantoms provide an annotation on their reality-or unreality in this case. The same way our daimones provide an annotation for MS." J"I understand the metaphor, Gabriel." `"It's an annotative age we live in. What's the Hyperlogos but an annotation on all the last few thousand years? Well." He shrugged. "I didn't want merely to recapitulate Berg." "He's the only one you're not recapitulating. Except perhaps in terms of not finishing the work." B"The complexity isn't a problem." "What is?" bFLASH. Repeat FLASH. Priority one signal follows. Gabriel held up a hand. A tachline FLASH was the highest possible priority signal-one urgent enough to interrupt even Aristoi at their duties. During his fifty-odd years as an Aristos, Gabriel had received only one such message. Thirty-two years before. pFLASH. Repeat FLASH. Mataglap alert-possible casualties. ^A cold river poured down Gabriel's spine. He could feel himself turn pale. The worst-absolutely the worst-had happened somewhere. As it had last happened thirty-two years ago. rClancy looked at him with wide, concerned eyes. FLASH. Repeat FLASH. Mataglap alert station Sanjay, in orbit above planet Painter, domaine of Cressida Ariste. , Casualties are probable. Gabriel was faintly surprised to find that he could still form words .... "No," he said. "I was right. Cressida isn't mad." Abstractly he watched Clancy put a hand to her throat. "Everything she said is true," Gabriel said. He wondered what it was he was feeling. Then it came to him: something new. He had never felt the universe shatter before. Chapter 6 SCHIQOLCH: '4In Xanadu did Kubla Khan'- @Oh what the hell-the man is gone  Pan Wengong took command of the response to the FLASH alert, but had to cope with an oneirochronic audience of suspenseful, watching Aristoi, ever ready to offer helpful advice. Fortunately for the Eldest Brother's peace, response to a nano attack was fairly standardized and comments were few. Ever since Earth' had disappeared beneath the glistening, bubbling black-caviar wave of Indonesian "mataglap nano," responses had been carefully worked out, and pre-positioned equipment waited at or near every human settlement. At least, Gabriel thought, when they decided to kill Cressida, they hadn't unleashed the stuff on a planet. It had, he thought, to be a They. Saigo was light-centuries away: he must have had an accomplice near Painter. Perhaps not, offered Horus. This could have been set up many years ago, and operated remotely and in realtime through a tachline link. lSomehow Gabriel did not find this thought encouraging. There could be pre-positioned attack nano on every planet, Horus went on. Just in case the Gaal secret got out. You sound like Mataglap, Gabriel said. I think nano is too dangerous to pre-position it everywhere. Not necessarily. One need not pre-position the mataglap itself, but rather nano designed to create the mataglap. hGabriel could do little but hope this was not the case. Things were looking dire enough. He told Horus to commence implementation of the plan that he, Horus, had developed earlier. Meanwhile, under Pan's command, cameras and sensors rocketed from neighboring orbital habitats and took positions around Sanjay. One by one their input was added to the oneirochronic picture of what was taking place. Sanjay was a hollowed-out asteroid, an irregular potato shape set in orbit by a strap-on gravity generator. Another chill ran through Gabriel as he saw that it was covered with what looked like dirty-white foam. Slow-motion bubbles rose >to the surface, burst, left brief hollows soon filled by more glittering nano. Occasionally there was a scintillation, shining Six-sided reflective patterns that formed for only a second in Sunlight, like a diffraction halo that patterned around a dust Speck sitting on a camera lens. IR scanners showed that the surface was hot. The nano 'was still active, still working away at something. RThey will do this to me, Gabriel thought. pPerhaps there were still survivors. If the nano had started Its work from the outside of the station, there might still be .livable areas inside into which the personnel could retreat. The Eldest Brother deployed a solar shield, several kilometers wide, between Sanjay and the sun, just in case the nano was absorbing energy from photons. IR readings showed the surface temperature decreased almost immediately. Pan had slowed the stuff down. Next came the hunter-killer artiphage, one of several varieties of anti-nano designed to tear apart mataglap and reduce it to inert and harmless matter. It was possible this particular artiphage wouldn't work and another variety would have to be tried, but Gabriel thought not. The little hexagonal gleams that the mataglap had been giving off were indicative of a nano type identical or related to that which had destroyed Earth1. That was a clue as to which kind of artiphage to deploy. fSmall solid-fuel rockets boosted into view and splashed down into the white boil. Gabriel held his breath for a moment, watching spectrographic readings. Hydrogen lines wavered, then grew stronger. He sensed a cheer welling through the oneirochronon. The artiphages were turning the nano into free hydrogen. More rockets splashed down. The nano roiled and frothed. Dark streaks spread across it, then widened. Frenetic bubbles of hydrogen burst to the surface. A third wave of artiphages landed in the stew and the dirty-white nano began to break up. BThe danger wasn't quite over. Some of the mataglap might, during the bubbling and splashing, have broken off the main body and gone sailing along the solar wind. Its photo-reactive properties could keep it active and if it encountered something, a ship or satellite or asteroid or moon, it could run mad just as it had done on Sanjay, The entire Painter system would have to remain on a high state of alert for years. :Gabriel listened as Pan Wengong ordered scans of all satellites, habitats, and ships. He also ordered stocks of artiphage to be sent to all distant habitats. TAfter the nano had all been destroyed there was precious little left of the asteroid, a little stone spine, elongated and fragile, like a squab bone partly eaten by acid. No survivors. There were fourteen people known to have been on the station, including Cressida Ariste. vCousins, Pan Wengong broadcast to all Aristoi, there will be a memorial at sixteen hundred hours Persepolis time, followed by a discussion of the disposition of our late cousin's domaine. PHad she living relatives? someone asked. TTwo children and a sister. Two former consorts. Pan provided names and oneirochronic addresses, then posted the names of the other casualties and their survivors as well. Gabriel thought of the dragon egg he'd purchased for Cressida, destined never to be delivered. He should contact Rubens. He left Horus in the oneirochronon to monitor any further business and returned his attention to the Carnation Suite. jHe and Clancy looked at each other. He took her hand. $"I'm going aboard Pyrrhob and leaving the system," he said. "Within the week. That's about the earliest anyone can get any sabotage nano into this system, assuming that Zhenling Ariste, my nearest neighbor, is a conspirator-and that's a very large assumption that I'm willing to make only because I can't absolutely rule her out." "What about the election on Brightkinde? You're scheduled to attend during the transfer ceremonies." J"I'll have to use the oneirochronon." Clancy bit her lip, thought for a long moment. "What do you want me to do?" she asked. `"I would be happy to have you with me," he said. 6She looked down at her lap. "But you must decide what is best for you," he added. He squeezed her hand. "There is a nano lab aboard Pyrrho6, if that helps. Your project to work on packages for rare illnesses can be advanced there, if you can bear to disconnect from your present life entirely." THer eyelid nickered. "I'm in danger here?" Gabriel hesitated. "Probably not. Not if you don't behave in a way that will make them suspicious." She gazed at him gravely. "You seem to be living up to your name, Disturber." D"I didn't mean to. Not this time." <"Yes, very well. I will come." Gabriel took her other hand and kissed her. Little bells rang their tiny changes. "Thank you, Blushing Rose." *"Where do we run to?" $"The Gaal Sphere." vHer eyes flickered. "I thought we'd fly to someplace safe." Z"They won't expect us there. And by the time Pyrrhod arrives, I'll be ready to handle whatever awaits us." He laughed. "It's only Saigo, after all. A gloomy, saturnine gent, unused to dealing with people. I expect we'll have fun." She bit her lip, kissed him again. He put his arms around her. Tiny bells chimed. Floating through his senses came a phantom of receding tide, fading sun, distant gulls. All he knew about Cressida, really, was that she was attached to that specter of her childhood. That and the fact that, for the crime of contacting him, someone had decided to kill her. Gabriel contacted Pan Wengong and told him about the weathered log house by the shore. The Eldest Brother used his Aristos Override to locate the oneirochronic environment in Cressida's personal records and brought the Aristoi to the log house for the memorial. |The Aristoi stood on tide-sodden sand while Pristine Way, a former student and friend, spoke a eulogy. White geese flocked overhead, hundreds of them with roaring wings, bright silver against the sky, streaming shadow on the ground. A pillar of smoke rose tall from the stone chimney into the windless air, a memorial. "A life devoted to knowledge," said the eulogy, "to the advancement of humanity." The fate of Cressida's domaine had already been decided. She had not been ambitious in terms of domaine, preferring to concentrate on scientific pursuits, and her territory consisted of only three planetary systems. One system would be absorbed by each of three neighbors. A single system would not mean a huge increase in their burdens, and it would spare one of the newly made Aristoi from having to commit himself 'to taking over a domaine smaller than his aspirations. "A tragic accident. A moment of carelessness in a nano lab, perhaps on the part of an assistant." VIt had been, Gabriel's reno informed him, thirty-two years since an Ariste had died in a nano accident. In the earlies it had been very common, though as the technology developed the accidents settled down to every twenty years or thereabouts. The current safety record was, on the whole, exemplary. Gabriel forebore from reminding his reno that this had not been an accident. "Let our Sister's work be carried forward. She has shown others the way." After Pristine Way came to a close, Pan Wengong made a brief speech about the dangers of nano. Cressida was known as a careful and meticulous researcher, he said, yet even she in a moment of carelessness had made a simple and obvious mistake, or allowed one of her assistants to make one. A mistake that she should have recognized, because the type of mataglap that had killed her was nothing new. 2What did she die from? Gabriel found himself wondering. What does it feel like to have something eat you atom by atom? Does it feel like anything at all? His mood darkened. Blood loss, he decided. She died of blood loss when the mataglap ate a major artery. Or she smothered when a wave of it overcame her. Or died of asphyxia when the mataglap depressurized the station. Or the heat killed her before the nano even got to her-toward the end, when the little micromachines had really got going, San-jay's surface had been hot enough to boil lead. jThere is ample documentation from the Earth1 catastrophe, Horus reported helpfully. Eight point four billion ,died, many of them while transmitting pictures to the satellites above. @Gabriel hadn't needed reminding. NHe told Horus to shut up. The pattern of Graduation continued-the Persepolis meetings were too important to postpone. Gabriel would have attracted too much attention had he absented himself. He drifted through them, wondering again how much of it was compromised, how much of it really mattered. The reception of Olympia Ariste was not her usual success. Presumably she didn't mind-she'd died (Breakdown) over four hundred years before. But some of her programs still ran in the Hyperlogos files, and the tradition was that one of them threw a soiree on the evening following Graduation. Each party took place in a different oneirochronic locale; each had different music and entertainment and effects. Olympia must have spent tens of thousands of hours designing new environments, or perhaps an equal amount of time creating a program to do it for her. There was no sign that she would run out of new scenarios anytime soon. Or that her (possibly electronic) imagination was in any way flagging. fThis year's event took place inside a giant hypersphere packed with complex interwoven corridors, large rooms with Escherian stairways on which skiagenoi could walk either downside-right or leftside-up, doors that would take you not to the place next door (Euclidianly speaking) but someplace else entirely. And the place kept changing. The same door could take you to any number of places, depending on when you walked through it, and rooms kept shifting shape, though never when anyone was looking. If it hadn't been for a death in the family, everyone would have enjoyed themselves immensely. Gabriel, carrying a fan, drifted through the place, noting its ingenuity but otherwise distracted by cerebrations of mortality. Horus was compiling lists of objects necessary for the expedition to the Gaal Sphere, and several of his other daimones were engaged in a lengthy appreciation of Olympia's new environment. Neither occupied his attention much. He walked through a gateway, was abruptly somewhere other than where he intended, and saw Sebastian and Virtue's Icon too late to avoid them. 0The two fanatics got along, though their respective philosophies were irreconcilable. Perhaps what they found in , common was their utter lack of humor. `Sebastian was again and always in the form of a sphere, one of the Ideal Forms which he had conjured from his Platonic paragon. Although the sphere was eternal, its composition and color were not: tonight it was a reflective silver, which mirrored and distorted the rumpled grey uniform of Virtue's Icon.  "I am more interested in channeling Astoreth's new notions than denouncing them," Sebastian said. "The restless energy she represents should be drawn into a constructive search for the Ideal. Her critique is in essence correct: her Solutions are not." "Her critique," said Virtue's Icon, "is that of a poetasting exhibitionist. She wishes to restructure all humanity to serve her vanity." "Agreed." Colors vibrated over the sphere, little glowing spectra of approval. Spring Plum could not resist pointing out that Sebastian and Virtue's Icon, between the two of them, had done more Restructuring of society than the rest of the Aristoi put together; if that wasn't vanity, she demanded, what was?) Gabriel, concealing amusement, attempted to slip past. "Your pardon, Aristoi," he said. "I beg your opinion, Aristos," Sebastian said. (Gabriel told his reno to have the relevant Platonic texts at hand.) He didn't want-especially now, when he had so much else to think about-to engage himself with these characters. But politeness dictated courtesy. VAt least the Welcome Rain would enjoy this. <Gabriel inclined himself toward the floating sphere. "I have no desire for any massive reconstruction," he said. "The universe suits me well enough as it is." "What have you done to serve the Demos?" Virtue's Icon demanded. "For the most part I let the Demos serve themselves. And of course have provided them the biosystems in which they do it." "It is the duty of the Aristoi to lead, not to merely let things slide along. I spend an average of eighteen hours per day working for the benefit of those who live in my domaine, and I demand those in my service follow my example." 6Micromanaging private lives, muttered Cyrus. From the Welcome Rain, however, came the distinct thought that managing other people was not such a bad thing. r"Ah," Gabriel said. (Reno fed him the latest statistics.) "My own bureaucrats spend almost two hours per day at their tasks, although I tend to load my Therpontes rather more heavily." The Icon's bladelike face brandished itself in Gabriel's direction. "How much of that time is spent teaching the Demos to avoid error? To renounce materialism, walk in the paths of moderation, and serve one another?" "I thought your system was based on materialism?" Gabriel said, and went on to correctly translate (undoing centuries of error) from the original German: "'From each according to his abilities, to each according to his labor.' And if you work eighteen hours per day, surely by your own creed you deserve a few gardens and palaces." X"It is false materialism we renounce. Love of luxury, display, self ..." She eyed Gabriel in his ankle-length brocade robes, fan, and mandarin hat with its peacock feather. Gabriel opened his black lacquer fan, displaying the gold arabesques on its surface. "My garb advertises the Illyricum Workshop," he said. "Which advances, if you like, the dignity of hand labor." |"Labor at the behest of luxury is labor without true dignity." Sebastian's sphere gave a gentle bounce to attract attention. "It would seem," he offered, "that you both concentrate on what in the Republic the Divine Platon called the appetitive dement of society-you, Icon, on basic material needs such as sustenance and shelter; and you, Gabriel, on the aesthetics of pleasure. But this concerns itself entirely with sensible appearances, as opposed to indiscernible genuine Being. Where is Jyavn: concept of society's other goals-the accumulation of wisdom, the metaphysic of the Ideal?" *Sebastian's entire domaine had been ordered along Platonic metaphysical lines. Anyone wishing to advance in Sebastian's system had, at the drop of a hat, to be ready to debate the Theory of Forms as it related to government, technology, education, or the price of beans. Ideal forms, relationships, and harmonies had been relentlessly reduced, catalogued, and subjected to analysis. Endless rhapsodies had been devoted to the Soul and the Good. Temples had been built in ideal geometrical shapes in which proponents of one point of view debated at length with their philosophical adversaries. The Best-the aristos-was sought on every hand; the not-Best avoided. Gabriel disliked Sebastian's style less because of his Search for truth than because it had generated a society of virtuous, windy bores. "Genuine being," said Virtue's Icon flatly, "is nothing but the accumulation of sensible appearances. Nothing else can be proven to exist." B"I would disagree," Gabriel said. The tactics of debating Sebastian, Gabriel had found, were different from those used against the Icon. With the Icon you wanted to offend her into leaving and not bothering you again; with Sebastian, you quoted his own holy writ back at him. l"In Gorgias and elsewhere," he said (reno providing him with appropriate texts), "Platon would seem to argue, through the persona of Sokrates, for an absolute liberty of conscience, which being necessary for a true discernment of truth and morality-this particularly in opposition to Kallikles, whose theories of the will to power would seem to be echoed by our worthy Icon. Am I correct?" 8"Of course," Sebastian said. Gabriel spoke rapidly while Virtue's Icon was still conferring with her daimones about the Gorgios, and before she could raise the objection that Kallikles was a reactionary, Nietzschean scoundrel. "Following Sokrates, then," he said, "I have ordered my domaine. Each member of the Demos is free to develop his conscience and talents as he wills, save only in the use of those technologies which we all agree are dangerous to the body of humanity." "You have abandoned your responsibility to lead them to Virtue," said the Icon. "The Icon and I agree," Sebastian said. "The duty of the statesman is to lead his people toward a revelation of Truth. The statesmen-the Aristoi-direct the executive-our Therpontes-in an effort to bring enlightenment to the Demos. Education is the most important function of the state, as demonstrated in the Republic." "In the Republic," Gabriel said, "Sokrates is made to confess that he knows no absolute method of proving postulates from an ultimate self-evident principle-why then lead the Demos toward an ideal which cannot be shown to be true?" V(Got him there, the Welcome Rain chortled.) $"The transcendent Ideal cannot be comprehended fully," Sebastian said weakly, "but it may be apprehended by those trained in the paths of wisdom." "But can such an apprehension be transmitted through dogma? Or should the conscience be free to find its own method of apprehending the Ideal?" "I am the conscience of my domaine," Virtue's Icon said. "I and no other. It is my duty to impose virtue on the population." "Platon warns of the dangers of autocracy in the Laws," Gabriel said. "Yes." The sphere rippled with color. "He desired a balance between freedom, eleutheria, and monarchia, authority." ~"Platon made many useful suggestions regarding government and property," said Virtue's Icon, "but his metaphysics are preposterous, and fortunately his system can now be considered obsolete." "The Ideal is never obsolete!" Sebastian cried. His sphere flushed an angry blue. Gabriel, having maneuvered the two tedious cranks into I debating each other once again, offered a Posture of Respect, and withdrew, fanning himself as he went. An oneirochronic gate took him to a chamber in which people were set at all angles to one another on looping paths. Some of them were dancing to cheerful music-one of Evan's Three Syncopated Dances. XSomething struck him as being familiar about the pattern of the room, and he stopped to think about it for a moment. A distant radiance, glowing somewhere in his mind, resolved itself into Psyche. The answer rolled from her sunlit spirit and his heart leaped. Psyche withdrew from his conscious mind. He looked about for someone to share the insight with. "Care to dance, Aristos?" Gabriel glanced up and saw Zhenling planted on a pathway above his head. She was wearing a blue-green tartan skirt and a glengarry bonnet, with blue-and-white dicing and the little tails down her neck. "Does the shape of this room remind you of something?" He gestured with his fan. Zhenling gave it her attention. "Something is familiar . about it," she said. "I can't think what." :"It's the Involved Ideographic glyph for dance," Gabriel said. "The room is shaped like a three-dimensional representation of the glyph for movement, and the paths are arranged in the patterns for joyful, rhythm, music, and-I'm not certain what that wall projection is supposed to be." "It's an imperative mark, but you have to look at it from my perspective, not yours." "Ah." *"Very astute of you, Aristos." She gazed at the room with her tilted eyes, then nodded. "Our environment is commanding us to behave in certain ways." dHe looked up at her. "Do you still want to dance?" "No. It's not as much fun when you're ordered onto the floor by someone who's been dead for centuries." "Perhaps, in view of the fact that we've all been to a funeral, it's more appropriate than not." "No. The mood's spoiled." She glanced over the room. "Let's discover what other commands we're being given." Gabriel made an acquiescent gesture with his fan, then took in the topography of the room once more. "I'm not certain how we'll be able to find one another," he said. "There doesn't seem to be a path from where I am to where you are." B"Perhaps if I jump very high ..." P"Let's set out in quest of one another." "Very well. An appropriate metaphor," smiling catlike, "at least from your perspective." She turned, bowed, stepped through a doorway. The door behind Gabriel led to where Sebastian and Virtue's Icon lay in wait for unwary travelers. Calling that room to mind, Gabriel recalled glyphs for debate, controvert, and contend worked into its architecture. Gabriel went along a pathway marked by a wine-red carpet. Woven into the carpet, in almost-invisible silver threads, were glyphs for move, leap, and caper. He chose a door and passed through it. The entrance hall was welcome, the lounge comfort and relaxation, and the bar cheer, happiness, and indiscretion. Gabriel found Zhenling in a room resembling a chapel, a room dark and high and solemn, where the walls seemed made of bricks that, with a subtle difference of shade, commanded reflection and thought. Tatamis were embroidered with the glyph for invocation. There was the muted scent of incense and, depending on where one stood in the room, either the faint sound of voices chanting sutras or the solemn, distant sigh of an organ. Gabriel kissed Zhenling in greeting and told her of his discoveries. The banqueting room, she told him, was savor, the sensorium indulgence, the game room play and luck, and another drawing room joke, laugh, and make merry. ~"No one there," she said. "I don't think many are in the mood." "I'm not, either," Gabriel said. "Though I'd like to visit this place again when I'm in better spirits." "You could call it up out of the Hyperlogos and run it yourself." "I hope Olympia's program isn't offended by our lack of good cheer." h"Do you suppose she compensates for current events?" V"Perhaps I'll look at the program and see." t"Don't spoil the surprise by finding out what comes next." "Of course I won't." He looked behind him. "Shall we return to the festivities?" "I'm not feeling very festive." She turned to him. "There is an opera of yours," she said, "that captures my mood precisely." "Mufarse." |She's familiar with your works, Augenblick noted. A good sign. "And yet when I ask my reno to give me a definition of the word," she said, "I get nothing but-" Her eyes glazed in-feigned boredom as she echoed her reno's tedious voice. "'A quality of melancholy peculiar to the Argentine [Earth/South American] people, particularly those of the Seventh [Blue] Cultural Epoch [Late 19th-Early 20th Century C.E.].' I can follow references through the Hyperlogos but they all seem to lead to popular songs or bad novels." "It's one of those compelling, untranslatable words that forces one to use them. I think of Rilke, who had to start writing in French toward the end of his life because he could find no German equivalent for the French absence." "I don't know what mufarse means, but I feel it." Her eyes lifted to his. "Am I a Blue Epoch Argentinian in my soul, Aristos?" "Possibly. Though on the whole I think you're rather more interesting." "What was it that made them melancholy? Your opera was about a distant settlement cut off after the Earth1 disaster, but the Blue Epoch was well before that, and from my understanding of Argentinian history there was no similar calamity." d"The disaster was more of a psychic than physical nature. If you're interested, I think the nuances of mufarse are best expressed through the dance I reintroduced in that opera." V"The tango. My reno can give me the steps." N"Would you dance it with me, then? If I risk inflicting tedium via my lecture on mufarse, I may at least distract you from boredom through the pleasures of the dance." Zhenling glanced up at the high, arching ceiling, the muted lighting. "In here? Not that the atmosphere is inap-" WELCOME RAIN: Get her dancing. I think that's the best bet. This melancholy can be used. rGABRIEL: Augenblick-if you can read anything at all ... ? AUGENBLICK: Nothing but what she wants us to read, Aristos. She is firmly in control of her skiagnos. LGABRIEL: Her pose remains flirtatious. nAUGENBLICK: Then that is what she wants us to perceive. .MATAGLAP: Why? Why now? GABRIEL: Load the Autumn Pavilion skiagnos. Appropriate to melancholy, but-" b"Allow me to create a more suitable environment." Gabriel waved his fan and an arched wooden cathedral door appeared in the smooth white wall. Zhenling walked toward it and reached for the door handle. Gabriel made swift alterations in the program as he followed her. She opened the door and stepped into the oneirochronic simulation of the Autumn Pavilion's ballroom. Quite suddenly she was in a blue ball gown, ruffled out along the bottom, Latin-style. Her brows were long and winged; her lips red coral; her hair piled elaborately. Her shoulders and arms glowed dusky gold in candlelight. Following close behind, Gabriel stepped through the door himself, the shift in oneirochronic perspective, from the Persepolis program to that of the Residence, accomplishing also a change of costume. He was now in extravagant South American Blue Era fashion: tight trousers with silver coins sewn up the sides, high-heeled boots, ruffled shirt, high-waisted clawhammer jacket. The decor was rather severe, with white walls and black parquet floor of equatorial mahogany from Strange-ways, though the severity was modified by glowing candlelight. Painted muses, washes of grey, danced on the walls next to trompe 1'oeil columns and capitals. The concave band shell at one end was ornamented with diamond-shaped silver mirrors. Above the main entrance hung Cyrus's self-portrait, black and white like everything else-the face was youthful, the brows a bit skeptical, the eyes a little cruel. The young aesthete, rigorous in his critique of the world as he found it. An orchestra played a slow tango from the band shell. Gabriel took Zhenling's hand. :Create a Class One portal from the wall on my right to the north wall of the ballroom. Use the gothic door from the Rustic Chapel in the Vissarion Residence. RENO: < linking through Residence Reno > < linking through Persepolis Master Program > Done, Aristos. rGABRIEL: Door handle: temp ten C. Texture: hammered iron. (RENO: Done, Aristos. GABRIEL: The ballroom will be lit by one thousand candles. Adjust my costume to Iago's from the second act of Mufarse. Put the Latin orchestra from the third act into the band shell. Trigger "Senor Barrasa's Tango." (RENO: Done, Aristos. MATAGLAP: Let me repeat my earlier question. Why! Why is she being so obliging? She never offered encouragement before. \WELCOME RAIN: The time is right for her. Bonham failed his exams again: he'll never be her equal. And there's been a death among the Aristoi-perhaps she's feeling vulnerable. MATAGLAP: Merde. She's a part of it-she may have killed Cressida herself. WELCOME RAIN: Preposterous! Do you really think she's naive enough to actually try to seduce us to her cause? Does she think the blandishments of love will turn us simpleminded? Make us give away our plans, our secrets? &CYRUS: It's an interesting point of view, aesthetically speaking. Who's seducing whom? Who's trying to get to the bottom of whose hidden knowledge? GABRIEL: Children-remember mufarse. Remember what's behind it. And let us dance. \WELCOME RAIN: Absolutely! Let's do this right! hGABRIEL: Temperature of hands: 38.5 C. Texture: dry. hWELCOME RAIN: Good. Let's see if we can warm her up. "The fascination of the tango, he said, at least the earlier, Argentine version, before the French got hold of it and made everyone dance like robots, is that it combines an extreme sensuality with an extreme emotional distance." f"A rose in my teeth wouldn't be appropriate, then?" 6"Behind your ear, perhaps." VOne appeared-blue in color, matching her gown, matching the Seventh Cultural Epoch. Its fragrance wafted gently to Gabriel's nostrils, a nice piece of programmatic detail. (Spring Plum offered an appreciation of her blue gown and blue eye shadow against her pale skin.) JGabriel took her in his arms, began a step. She followed with cool precision. "Blue Epoch Argentina was a masculine frontier culture," he said. "In some places men outnumbered the women five or six to one. This relative rarity gave the women enormous power, which they didn't hesitate to use." f"Good for them," said Zhenling. Beneath Gabriel's hand he felt her spine stiffen in defiance. Augenblick rejoiced at what was, just possibly, his first real piece of kinesic data. "You're getting the idea," he said. "Medialuna here." He swept his outside foot into a half-moon, then back. "Argentina was also an immigrant nation," he went on. "The men were isolated not only from women, but from their native cultures. The result was a terrible loneliness, and a terrible melancholy." "Mufarse." "El ocho." He dropped her arms, turned his back to her, and stepped off into the solo eight-pattern, repeating it four times. Zhenling's shoes clicked lightly as she mirrored his movement. (Cyrus swept into Gabriel's feet, maintaining the pattern intact while Gabriel spoke on.) "The old social order had women subordinate, and that was turned around," he said. "Women picked, chose, and discarded-or were perceived as picking, choosing, and discarding-their partners based on standards of momentary advantage. The discarded men consoled themselves with prostitutes, who offered solace but were even more mercenary, stealing whatever they could. And so the tango originated in brothels, danced between people who were desperately lonely but who couldn't trust each other, whose most earnest desire was for intimacy and trust but who dared not offer either." Gabriel finished el ocho and took her in his arms again. (Cyrus admired the smooth curve of her nape.) She looked up at him with perfect coolness. (Don't trust her, Mataglap said, so absolutely on cue that Gabriel had to restrain himself from smiling.) "Tension," he said, beginning a grapevine step, "longing, melancholy, loneliness." >"Manipulation. Secrets. Masks." "El corte." He swayed her forward, then back, his stance so deep that he brought her, facing him, almost into his lap. "It's a dance for spies," she said, her eyes near his. "And for people with secrets." He raised her again and backed her along the dark mahogany dance floor. Their gazes were directed over one another's right shoulders. "Secrets so desperate," he said, "that only our bodies are allowed to speak them." "Our? I find this shift into the first person plural a bit alarming." 4"A tiny death with gross wings," Gabriel said, improvising off Neruda, "entered into each like a short blade, and siege was laid by bread or by knife ..." "Asediado?" He swept her into el corte again. Her eyes cut to his. "You're beginning to frighten me." Kinesics confirm. The Welcome Rain broadcast pleasure at Augenblick's reading. It's the skiagnos that's frightened, Spring Plum reminded. Whether it mirrors her genuine reaction remains to be seen. Gabriel raised Zhenling and began backing carefully, drawing her after him, toward the center of an imaginary circle, then moved once more through el corte. "Imagine what it must have been like after the death of Earth1," he said. "Imagine the isolation, the desolation, the terror-much greater than that suffered by those poor immigrant Argentines, whose old world still existed, even if they were no longer a part of it. And of course our more remote settlements were dependent for survival on the very nanotech that had betrayed humanity." hThe dance passed through mediacarte to cruzodo. Gabriel put hands on hips and scissored his steps as he backed away. Leading with her hips, Zhenling stalked in pantherlike pursuit. B"And in your opera," she said, "the men in the settlement outnumbered the women greatly. Which never happened in any of the real habitats, by the way-I checked." &"Dramatic license." ("And everyone died." F"That did happen, in a few places." <"I think it's your best work." pHe looked at her with mild surprise. "I was very young." T"I find the subsequent work too mannered." He took her in his arms, spun her, began a scorpion step. "It's a mannered age," he said. B"A mannered age with no secrets." "Supposedly." "You keep hinting around something, but I don't know what it is." Gabriel took her in his arms, backed her away. "Perhaps-I hope to fascinate you." 8"Perhaps you're succeeding." LPoint to us. The Welcome Rain, smugly. H"Ah." Gabriel allowed his skiagnos a small, cold smile. "That brings us back to certain questions related to mufarse. Are you someone I can trust, or are you not?" 6Mediocoite, heels flashing. >"Why would I not be?" she said. N"You would best know, Ariste Zhenling." JGabriel, pleased with the conversation returning so neatly to its point of origin, instructed Cyrus to bring the music to a conclusion at the end of the next phrase. They swept through a final spin, then came to a poised-halt as the orchestra brought the piece to a finish. Zhenling gave him a careful look. "You've succeeded in distracting me from sorrow," she said. "Thank you." She kissed him, violet petals brushing his lips. Phantom fingers swept his lower spine: a pleasant oneirochronic effect. He sent her a gossamer sensation in reply, silken strands drawn along her neck. A thousand candles fluttered at the touch of his mind. hShe stepped back, regarded him. "We will be missed." "The last person to step into a private space with me died badly." pHer winged brows lifted. "Do you perceive a connection?" "Do you?" A thought struck him, chill in his heart: had he endangered her with his hints? He'd have to closet himself away with a number of Aristoi, he thought. Make Zhenling one of many. She hesitated, began a walk toward the door, then turned to glance over her bared, golden shoulder. "'Shadow patterning shadow, dead leaves scattered on ground,'" she said, quoting Cortes, "'the maze of nature, reflected trembling in a pond.'" FGabriel bowed in silence, then watched her leave, her azure silhouette framed in the doorway for a moment before she stepped through to another electronic reality. lHe had reason, he thought, to be pleased with himself. COUNTESS: .Will you dance with me? xLULU: At my wedding? In front of all these people? Of course!  Under Horus's coaxing, atoms moved. Electrons slotted precisely into place. hForming a new machine. A new, purposeful machine ... The newly graduated Aristoi, nine of them, stood on the crest of the Kuh-e-Rahmat. All were in the traditional Iron Horse posture-bent-kneed, slightly pigeon-toed, thighs at strain-all as described millennia before in the BaDuanJmB by Yuan Fei of the Sang Dynasty. Above the Aristoi was another Yuan-the golden image of the First Aristos, commanding the world of Persepolis from atop its golden plinth. Surrounding was the tall cypress grove, 'the sigh and rustle of wind, the gentle waving of boughs. rGabriel's skiagnos was leading the Aristoi in exercises. His students, rooted as the cypress, were following instructions and trying to breathe through their heels. 8"I can offer you employment," Gabriel said, speaking with real-breath through lips of Realized matter. "The Lorenz can return to Painter with its own crew." l"May I have time to consider your offer?" said Rubens. "Are you curious concerning the nature of Cressida's accident? I may be able to offer you satisfaction in that regard." Gabriel was pleased by the shocked flutter of Rubens's gill slits. The exercises on the Kuh-e-Rahmat, from Gabriel's point of view, were not very interesting. He had delegated them to the Welcome Rain, with Augenblick monitoring the students' vital signs. Gabriel was conducting more important business from his office in the Residence. RThe Welcome Rain led the students through arm exercises first, wearying, repetitious punching and blocking and waving, some of it wushu, some dance, some calisthenics designed to exhaust the upper body, stress respiration, and induce, through tedium and exhaustion, a kind of mild hypnotic trance. 6The graduates, on whatever worlds their bodies existed, were actually performing the exercises their skiagenoi were imitating in the electronic Persepolis. Probably they were calling up inner resources, including daimones, to assist them in maintaining control of their own flagging bodies. Gabriel and the Welcome Rain were merely manipulating their skiagnos, and had the advantage of not being tired in body. The Welcome Rain began punching, one-two-three-four, and the graduates mirrored him. After he had set up a long, arm-wearying rhythm, he altered the pattern by thrusting out a hand formed in the Mudra of Domination. hThe graduates stumbled, recovered, looked wild. Augenblick monitored leaps in vital signs. The Welcome Rain resumed the exercise, and gradually the graduates fell back into rhythm. Rubens's shocked form was reflected in the dark jigsaw mirror of Gabriel's Louis Quinze desk. "I'm not certain what you're suggesting," he said. ("I'm not suggesting anything. I'm telling you that your former employer was murdered. I'm telling you that you and I may be next on the list. Any course you choose may lead to danger-perhaps mine more than most. But such protection as I can offer you, you may certainly have." No point in mincing words when one was out of the oneirochronon. No one was recording Gabriel's words. No one heard but Rubens. And Rubens was listening very intently. The Welcome Rain fired the Mudra of Domination again. Hearts leaped, nerves cried, lungs stammered. LPerhaps none of the graduates knew of this particular mudra's existence. Its theory and practice were under the Seal, and the Aristoi, though not forbidden, tended not to talk about it. But whether the graduates knew about it or not, all their education, all their existence had led them to it. The Involved Ideography, as with much of Captain V Yuan's work, was based on his notion of how the body and brain were wired together. Certain patterns, he thought, could be brought to strike the human mind in very precise ways. BReinforce, he insisted. Always reinforce. Stance was meaning, was emotion-someone in a straight-backed, square-shouldered, high-chinned pose could not feel sad or depressed; the body-to-brain wiring wouldn't allow it. A slumped, defeated posture induced melancholy as well as reflected it. Words were slippery things, and needed reinforcement. Stance brought clarity, meaning, as did intonation. Mudras could be used to buttress words, or to provide running comment on them, let the audience know what was important, what was vital, what attitude to take to the text. The Mudra of Domination-the fingers turned just so, and its implication made clear by an appropriate mental attitude and controlling stance drawn from the Book of Postures-was among those symbols which Yuan believed could develop universal resonance. But no symbol is without its context. The mudra would only confuse someone who hadn't been schooled in Yuan's other thought-in the Intermediate and Involved Ideography, in the Book of Postures, in symbols drawn from the Involved Ideography and classical literature and dance, the universal culture that the Aristoi promoted throughout their domaines ... The precise jut of the thumb was meant to imitate the ideographic radical for alarm, which appeared in every sign marking a hazard, be it traffic or biologic, and the set of the middle two fingers was authority, which appeared on every public building, in every classroom, at the beginning of every video instruction or command from a superior, in the seal of every Aristos. The mudra as a whole was supposed to stop people in their tracks, to stun their will, to make them malleable-even if only for an instant. The Mudra of Domination was the last resort of an Aristos in jeopardy. Humanity had not always enjoyed its present tranquility, and at the beginning of the current era there had been resistance, conflict, small-scale insurrection, assassination. Proper use of the Mudra of Domination could cause an enemy to hesitate, could buy time. There were other kinds of conditioning as well, mostly societal and more traditional. The Aristoi cloaked themselves in a mystique of invulnerability, of omniscience, and of inexorable if diversified progress toward the greater good. Most people would not think of contravening a direct order or even questioning it, even when the order-like some of those issued by Virtue's Icon-defied sense. Not even when they knew how the conditioning worked, because many of them did. "I don't understand," Rubens said. "If there's been a crime, why hasn't this fact been revealed? Why isn't there a formal investigation?" "If I'm doing the investigating, that's as formal as it ever gets," Gabriel said. "The murderer, however, is an Aristos. Or perhaps a group of Aristoi, who may have the ability to seriously disrupt or even overturn the Logarchy. Things are therefore ... delicate." Rubens seemed to be trying to decide whether Gabriel had gone mad. &"Allow me to show you the recording you brought from Cressida Ariste," Gabriel said, "and another recording I made of our subsequent conversation." He touched the mother-of-pearl scrollwork on his desk and called up the recordings. 2Which served to convince. Horus's new machine-a chain of atoms smaller than a dust speck-grew slowly, safe aboard the Pyrrho, taking shape under the careful remote prodding of particle beams. Horus was building a parasite. "Fleta," Gabriel said. He nodded to his sylphlike Tritarchon, whose form was wrapped in a red-and-gold-print sari that offset her blue-tinted skin and was mirrored in her vast, wide eyes. "I need a special service of you." She gave an elegant, insinuant bow, looked up through dark lashes. "I will be pleased to be of any service, Aristos." No doubt, Gabriel thought. "I need you to extend the private tachlines you set up between here and Painter. The tachlines can have only a single limited connection with the Hyperlogos or the communal oneirochronon. I need you to devise a series of ciphers that can be changed regularly, all without reference to any already used or listed in the Hyperlogos. I also need an efficient design for a tachline relay satellite." He held out his hand and offered Fleta a wafer. "Here are some suggestions you may find helpful."  "Thank you, Aristos. Of course." One blue-skinned hand rose in a graceful gesture, took the wafer. "Do you require anything else?" <"I thank you, no, Tritarchon." In silence Fleta withdrew. Gabriel consulted with his limited personalities: the Welcome Rain was still leading exercises atop the Kuh-e-Rahmat; Horus was working on his machine; Spring Plum and Cyrus were, at a low priority, orchestrating a piece of melody that Gabriel had tossed off some weeks ago and never had time to work with or place within the spectrum of his current work. Perhaps, Gabriel thought, he'd write some love lyrics to it and dedicate it to Clancy. @Whyever not? He had a few hours. "Gabriel's phantom orchestra played bright music to stimulate wit and aid the digestion. The grave first violinist, a vole in a periwig, took requests. Bipedal badgers and otters, in livery, served oneirochronic treats, complex shimmering gemlike confections that, when placed in the mouth, exploded in a bursting firework of sensation, sometimes triggering a complex pattern of tastes, more substantive, startling, and immediate than real food could ever be, sometimes tweaking the other senses-appearing as a hallucinatory visual shimmer, a lengthy fundamental chord or a scintillation of distant music, a sweet, phantom stimulation of the dorsal hairs ... "Eldest Brother." Gabriel kissed Pan Wengong hello. "I thank you for gracing my reception." The Eldest Aristos wore his usual skullcap and embroidered silk and seemed a little breathless. "Sorry I'm late, Aristos. But I had to go to Sebastian's party-you understand the woeful obligations of my position-and he trapped me into a discussion of Aristotelian heresies. Barely escaped with my life." The Eldest could afford to be rude in public spaces if he wanted. Pan took one of the treats from a plate, tasted it, looked surprised for a moment. "Cinnamon and fireworks. How interesting." "I have real food here if you like," Gabriel said. "Just use your seal on the door behind the spirit screen in the banquet room." "That's kind of you, Gabriel. So many of our colleagues forget that my physical body is present as well." As a courtesy to his guests, Gabriel had underdressed to his own party-they shone in their finery while he played host. He was dressed in a long open-fronted cassock of black velvet trimmed around the buttonholes with silver embroidery in the form of leafy vines. There was subdued lace trim at his throat, cuffs, and boot-tops. He carried a long walking stick, ebony bound in silver, and his long copper hair was caught at the back with a diamond pin. He would release pictures of this outfit later, and the Illyrian Workshops would earn a substantial profit selling the design abroad. It wasn't as extreme as a lot of his clothing and would therefore find an audience among those who weren't as certain as he whether flamboyance was a part of their makeup. Even an Aristos had to have a good sense of the market. Pan tried another treat from the tetrapus's tray and smiled at the result. Gabriel took Pan's arm and walked with him into the room. "If you're not hungry at this moment, Eldest," Gabriel said, "and if you've no pressing business, I should like to beg a private audience." "Provided the matter's nothing dreadfully serious or long, Aristos. Bear in mind I've just come from Sebastian's." >"I'll be brief. My word on it." zHe took the older man to a door, opened it, drew Pan through. Gulls called in the distance. Worn planks sagged underfoot. There was a scent of marsh and the sea in the air. ,Pan looked surprised. N "This is Cressida's place, isn't it?" "Yes." Pan's large head cocked slightly as, for a moment, he listened to inner voices. "What have you done? We're out of the Hyperlogos." ^"We're in my own AI at the Labdakos Residence." Pan frowned. "How odd. If you wanted privacy, we could have placed this conversation under Seal." Neither case, Gabriel knew, would have guaranteed privacy. The Seal was compromised, and even here, in the Residence reno, Pan was still receiving his own sensory impressions through a link with the universal tachline network. But privacy wasn't Gabriel's intention. He wanted to gauge Pan's reaction to this environment, that and provide stimulation to his imagination. "Will you walk with me, Aristos?" He took Pan's arm again and led him into the wide, low-ceilinged main room with its thinning rugs and wood planking, its worn furniture. There was a smell of cedar. A fire burned in the stone fireplace. Gabriel took Pan to the mantel, pointed out the arrangement of silver-framed portraits. "Did you notice these?" he asked. "Cressida's family-her six parents, her sister. Her two children-she limited herself to two, good citizen that she was-her grandchildren and great-grandchildren." vThe portraits moved through their cycle, a series of images of each subject, lost time regained, a variety of poses and themes. Ghostlike, Cressida appeared in each from moment to moment. GABRIEL: All of you on alert, now. I want to see how the Eldest reacts to this. AUGENBLICK: He has a certain amount of pupil dilation. I would say he's genuinely surprised. He would now appear to be listening to daimones. permitted WELCOME RAIN: He also obviously doesn't give a damn whether you know it or not. bHORUS: The Eldest has little to hide, I'd guess. WELCOME RAIN: Don't be ridiculous. Everyone's got something to hide. "You've put her private electronic retreat in your own reno's memory," Pan said. "You surprise me, Gabriel." `"I felt that I never knew her until I saw this place," Gabriel said, brushing the mantel with his fingertips. The varnish was worn with years. "And by that point she was dead." ~"This is very peculiar, Aristos." Pan's brows narrowed. "I understand that Cressida sent you one of her Therpontes before she died, sent him on her own yacht-rather suddenly, it would seem." "TherpMn Rubens had developed a new ceramic that he calculated might be of use to me. I'm negotiating the use of it now." fPan nodded slowly. "That's in the Hyperlogos, yes." f"Cressida was someone we could not afford to lose." xThe Eldest made a Mudra of Reverence. "That is so, Aristos." J"Her death seems uniquely strange and upsetting. The reason I called you here was to tell you that I am going to embark upon a quest to make such deaths impossible." "Indeed?" `"I am going to isolate myself on my yacht for a period of months. During that time I will be working exclusively with nano in hopes that I can work out a new safety mechanism." "Your dedication is commendable, Gabriel. But such a mechanism has eluded us for centuries." "I have some notions that may be of service. And I will have a handpicked crew of assistants, including Rubens TherpMn." AUGENBLICK: A good deal more control has just entered his skiagnos. We've aroused his suspicion. His reno is combing the records. WELCOME RAIN: Fob him off, but only with truth. He'll know otherwise. AUGENBLICK: His look is alert, but passive. He is very controlled. He is waiting for us to make the moves here. HORUS: Be cautious with these hints. The Eldest has been doing this for centuries longer than we. He may be lazy, but he is also acute. AUGENBLICK: He is totally controlled. I would judge we have his interest now. Pan bowed briefly. His eyes scanned the mantel again, the framed images of Cressida's family moving through their sequence. H"I wish you every success, Aristos." lGabriel prolonged the conversation a bit, but the Eldest offered only conventional responses. Pan had seen, had drawn his own conclusions, had said nothing. Gabriel's daimones were disappointed-they always enjoyed it when an Aristos let his mask slip-but Gabriel hadn't expected anything but what Pan gave him. No doubt Pan Wengong's daimones were busy in the oneirochronon, however. Where, if Cressida's surmise was correct, her murderers would be able to keep track of everything he did. Still, it would be a brave Aristos who would attempt the assassination of the Eldest. And a foolhardy one, to attempt it so soon, and by the same means. And were they going to kill everyone with whom Gabriel spoke privately? He was going to make a point of speaking privately to a great many people. He was going to bring them all here, to Cressida's place. But for the present, he took Pan's arm and led him back to Persepolis. dHorus's machine, in the silence and safety of the Pyrrhoh, had been completed. It awaited only a proper test. Gabriel's reception was a success. People enjoyed themselves and Gabriel managed to speak with a startled few in Cressida's house, learning very little other than that some considered the gesture terrible taste. Han Fu had given a start as he'd stepped through the door, but Gabriel couldn't tell whether it was because of a guilty conscience or because Han had just noticed that Dorothy St.-John, disguised as a jeweled scarab, had slipped in clutching his arm with tiny emerald talons-the communications software had sounded the alert the instant they'd all passed through the portal. Gabriel realized that Dorothy St.-John may have picked up some useful information, and decided to speak with her when the opportunity presented itself. At that moment, however, he was too amused by his guests' shocked flutterings. After he showed the last guest to the door, Gabriel left the oneirochronon and took flight for Standing Wave, which he found rose-pink with dawn light. Below, in the shadow of the gorge, he found Marcus sitting in a half-lotus on the sward below the falls, his eyes closed, lips moving silently. Gabriel didn't disturb him and instead watched sunlight slowly move down the walls of the gorge, the strong clear light illuminating in turn strata of red, grey, and green, imaging as well the ever-lengthening rainbow in the hanging mist of the falls. He let Spring Plum rise inside him and call his attention to detail-he hadn't noticed the tiny pink buds on the mosses at the foot of the falls, or the spray of white flowers high on the gorge wall, drenched in sunlight and dew. He and Spring Plum quietly absorbed the scene. Somewhere in his mind a stray melody flowed, the one he would dedicate to Clancy. "Thank you for letting me finish," Marcus said. He had risen and assumed, from conditioning and habit, the Second Posture of Formal Regard. He grinned and walked toward Gabriel. "I was working on a design for a tour bus with a three-hundred-sixty-degree view, all transparent. The problem is the solar panels, which have to be opaque in order for them to work at all, but I realized that if I made the seats transparent I could put the solar panels underneath-" He kissed Gabriel hello. "The passengers would block the sunlight, but not too much, I think, and they won't mind overmuch if their view of the road is hindered. Would you like breakfast?" ""Yes. Very much." |Marcus wore a sleeveless shirt, loose trousers, and his feet were bare. Gabriel followed his footprints up the damp marble stairs to the house, then watched as Marcus prepared omelettes flavored with morels, lean bacon, and shallots from the kitchen garden he'd planted out back. Birdsong floated through open windows. V"You seem to be settling in," Gabriel said. "At least the cabinets are finished. I've got a place to put my pots." Marcus had designed all his own cooking gear and earned royalties on licensed commercial versions. He slid an omelette onto one of Spring Plum's "morning garden" plates-another of her floral patterns-placed it in front of Gabriel, then sat opposite him at the table. Above their heads the water fell away into its own mist and rainbow. "I'll be leaving soon," Gabriel said. "Perhaps for a year or more. A lengthy space journey for purposes of research." "You hate space journeys. You're the worst traveler I've ever met." &"I'm not that bad." "Yes you are. You hate being confined." Marcus considered and ate a bite of egg. "I'll come along, of course." T"I'm not certain it would be appropriate." zWaterfall rainbows reflected in his eyes as Marcus leaned back in his chair. "Why not? Because Clancy will be along? I like Dr. Clancy. We've been talking every day. We get along famously." "On the ship we'll be working with nano. You're not a nano specialist." >"It's precisely nano I need to work on for my exams-you convinced me to try the exams again, remember? And when study gets too strenuous I can do my own work." "There is also-I beg you not to speak of this-there is also danger. It may not be safe where we'll be going." <"There's danger here as well." A cold hum settled into Gabriel's nerves. He regarded Marcus carefully. "What Have you heard?" Marcus smiled. "Nothing. But you're proposing to leave me here on Illyricum with your mother, Gabriel. She's been calling me two or three times every day, trying to get me to move to the temple where she can take charge of me and our child." @"I asked her not to bother you." "The pressure started almost the hour I returned to Standing Wave. She's not going to give up." "Well." Eating the omelette. "My other children escaped her, and ours will as well." 8"I've told the house reno not to take her calls. But now people are starting to leave offerings at the front gate. What am I supposed to do with the stuff?" j"Have the sanitation robots take it away, I suppose." 0"Some of it's valuable." |"Donate it to some worthwhile cause. Or send it to my mother." "I think what I would rather do is fly away till the baby is born. With my doctor, and the child's other parent." bGabriel gazed at Marcus. Birdsong hovered in air. Gabriel always had a hard time refusing people who had a claim on him. And Marcus was right-Gabriel hated space travel, hated confinement, and the unreal comforts of the oneirochronon, being unreal, were of little genuine comfort. Marcus might make the time go faster. And Marcus's most recent apprenticeship had been under Saigo, and his insights might be useful. d"I will try to keep you very, very safe," he said. Gabriel floated through the limitless velvet depths of oneirochrononic space. Above him, atom on giant atom, stretched the long linked fabric of Horus's machine. Electron shells glowed like luminescent planets, color-coded as to energy state; photons buzzed like hornets as they exchanged electromagnetic force; quarks rearranged themselves, like dancers exchanging places, at the hearts of atoms. A new and parasitic form of nano was about to be unleashed throughout human space, and Gabriel was going to release it. But before he did so, he wanted it to be as free from danger as possible. It was the part of his job he took most seriously. Every six months or so he announced a Nano Day, in which he would review the efforts of every nano designer in his do-Maine prior to approving licenses and patents. Gabriel ran the simulations himself, watched the materials grow, then dived into the simulations to watch the nanomechanics themselves at work, the atoms rearranging, recombining, assembling. He forcibly intervened, imposing quantum fluctuations that compelled the nano to mutate into less tractable forms. He found weak points in each design-usually the changeover point where one set of nano had finished its job and was scheduled to alter itself into another form or dissolve-and then forcibly altered the schedule, prolonging the nano well beyond its term or turning it berserk. He assaulted each structure with the special artiphage attack nanos that had been designed, since the death of Earth1, to prevent the stuff from running amuck. And he compared their results with other nano already designed, on file, of proven safety margins and capable of doing the same job. HRelatively few of them actually ran wild even in the event of massive tampering-weaknesses had been recognized long since, and safeguards were built into the software that manipulated the nascent nano as it rested in its Kam Wing containers-but other weaknesses and flaws were often revealed. 6Gabriel was particularly careful with this design. The nature of Horus's machine was that it was going to be constantly exposed to intense solar radiation from which it had to be properly protected-both to keep it in operating order and to keep the stuff from mutating into mataglap. .As a further protection, Horus had carefully built a failure into the design. He had made critical parts of the machine very happy to bond with oxygen. LIn the event that any of the machines were actually propped into the pressurized environment of a habitable biosphere, the machine's active parts would oxidize in a matter of minutes and render themselves both safe and useless. No Working nano would long survive outside of the vacuum of space. Gabriel, floating through the simulation like an angel Enough some newly hatched cosmos, was very pleased with his handiwork. RHis next step would be to test it on the Pyrrho. vGabriel was pleased to tell his mother that neither he nor any of his daimones would be coming to the Rites of Inanna. He was going on a voyage, and the pressure of work would be intense. Vashti disapproved of the voyage, its timing, its suddenness. She was clearly suspicious that some plot was afoot, that Gabriel, flying off with Marcus, Clancy, and his unborn, was trying to put something over on her. It was equally clear that she was going to be driven mad until she figured out what it was. Vashti would be disappointed, Gabriel knew, when she finally found out that, instead of engaging in some plot with herself at the center of it, Gabriel was instead off on some insignificant task regarding the fate of the human race.  "The most generally held view, Flame," said Dorothy St.-John, "is that you're cracked." dSt. John, on walking through the portal into Cressida's Retreat, had assumed a form more-or-less her own: a compact, muscular woman, black-haired, copper-skinned. A jeweled scarab-the one she'd once impersonated-was pinned to her gown. She leaned against the mantel and regarded the portraits as she spoke. R "Astoreth, for example, is convinced that some daimMn has got you. Or that being worshipped has turned your head and that you think you're in one of your own operas. Or that you've managed to go mad all by yourself. Actually she seems to hold all three views at once-which, I must say, is typical of her." She smiled. "Perhaps she's just upset that you-and Cressida-have stolen attention from her dramatic plans for reform." "And your own view?" Gabriel said. He was reclining on the soft, scratchy cushion of a cane chair. "I think you're up to something, though I have no idea what it is. And I can't tell whether Cressida really has something to do with it, or whether she's just someone you've dragged in to disguise what you're really doing. If the latter-" She gestured at the unadorned room. "It's in terrible taste, Flame. I wish you'd stop." :Gabriel simply looked at her. "It's known that Cressida sent someone to you," St.-John said. "But you and she weren't close-no one can figure out what the connection can be. The ceramic story really doesn't make any sense, does it? Rubens could have made his presentation through the oneirochronon." H"What do people say about Cressida?" h"I'd rather you answered my questions for a change." XGabriel smiled at her. "Indulge me. Please." D"You can look through the Hyperlogos recordings. All the meetings and receptions are on file-you can follow everyone around and eavesdrop every word if you like." n"I prefer realtime communication." Because, he thought, the recordings could be edited if the Hyperlogos Seal was compromised. Not that he wouldn't look, anyway, when he had the time. PSt.-John was looking at him skeptically. He adopted a Pose of Humility. "Please, Ariste?" he said. "My time is valuable." :"And mine isn't?" She looked at him, then shrugged and walked over to sit on the couch. She leaned close to him. "No one wants to talk about Cressida, Flame. People just don't. I suspect they suspect Cressida's death might have been arranged. But no one knows why or who, and no one wants to go on the record about it-so instead they talk about you. Why you're behaving this way, why you're leaving your domaine." J"Did I say I was leaving my domaine?" "You're not?" >He shrugged. "Not necessarily." "You're the worst traveler in the Logarchy. Why are you doing this?" <"What else are people saying?" "That's all they'll say in public. What they're saying in private conversations under Seal I can't speak to." RSomeone could, the Welcome Rain reminded. `"Tell me," St.-John said. "What do you suspect?" Better, Gabriel thought, if they started digging around themselves. If he intrigued enough people into conducting their own investigations, the truth might come to light without his having to put any of them in danger. "I think Cressida's death was needless and stupid," Gabriel said. "And I think I owe it to her-" He repeated St.-John's gesture, taking in the rustic surroundings. "I owe it to her to do something about it." "And?" B"And?" he repeated. "That's all." J"Flame." Chiding. "How did Cressida lay this obligation on you? You barely knew her-don't think people haven't gone through the records looking for some connection." 0Gabriel simply shrugged. "And how did you know about this place? The Hyperlogos would have a record of it if you'd been here." F"TherpMn Rubens told me about it." She looked at him closely. Her expression was concerned. "I hope you know what you're doing, Gabriel Aristos Vissarionovich." "So do I." He rose from his chair and offered his arm. "Shall we return to Pristine Way's party?" pShe rose, took his arm, failed to change her expression. N"I thank you for your candor," he said. D"And I don't thank you for yours." He smiled, bowed. "I suppose you'll have to do some more hovering around," "I would in any case. At least now I've got more of a reason to hover than usual." h"You will tell me if you hear anything interesting?" *"I will if you will." "If I find out anything for certain," he said, "you will know it. I promise." Pristine Way's party enveloped Gabriel, and Dorothy St.-John turned into a seal dangling from Gabriel's chain-link belt. He glanced back at the portal before he sealed it and repeated the last words, "I promise." The words were directed behind him, not forward. To the woman who had so carefully constructed the oneirochronic beach house on the waterfront, who had, in her passion for truth, set him on this quest, I promise. &"With ravished ears "The Monarch hears Assumes the god, Affects to nod @And seems to shake the spheres." NGabriel spoke the words, watched them disappear into Beta's transmitter. He purged them from his implant reno, made sure there were no copies of them on file anywhere. >Another backup, another safety. FHe hoped he'd never have to use it. zYaritomo had begun to wear a bare spot in the grass in front of the Shadow Mask. Gabriel, hovering behind one of the turquoise-studded arches, watched as the young TherpMn performed wushu. DBurning Tiger was rather obviously in charge. The movements were aggressive, wrathful, angry. The daimMn growled at each attack, and his eyes glittered with fury. And then his movements altered. A different spirit seemed to pervade them-cranelike, Yaritomo held himself more erect, on the balls of his feet, his neck more elongated, chin lifted. His hand and foot movements became more precise, more delicate, almost fussy. ^Clearly another daimMn had entered the picture. RGabriel entered the Shadow Cloister and walked toward the young man. Yaritomo froze for an instant as he saw Gabriel, his face pursed in an overnice look of suspicion, and then the look dissolved and Yaritimo's presence returned to his body, which relaxed into the Second Posture of Formal Regard. F"Someone new, I see," Gabriel said. 0"They're coming quickly now, Aristos," Yaritomo said. Sweat gleamed on his skin; his chest heaved with exertion. "This was the third-I call him Old Man AliF after the character in the story." &"Very appropriate." Gabriel regarded him. Once Yaritomo discovered the personalities that lived within him, he would have started a partial encoding of their personalities on his implant reno, which would make them easier to access. Space in the reno would also be reserved for the daimones' own activities, so that they could undertake the prioritized duties Yaritomo assigned them. P"I have instructions for you, TherpMn." Yaritomo shifted to the Primary Posture of Formal Regard. "I hear you, Aristos." "In order that you might undertake a special assignment," Gabriel said, "you are hereby relieved of all your normal duties as demiourgos. You will take appropriate belongings and any materials you may need to continue your studies, and bring them to Loading Area Seven of Labdakos Port at oh-nine-hundred in two days' time. You will join other Therpontes in a lengthy space mission aboard the ship Pyrrho. You may expect to be in space for a period of one or two years." Yaritomo struggled to master his thoughts. Gabriel had thought him a suitable candidate for the voyage-he was young, unattached, and therefore free; and a year or two of training directly under an Aristos would do him good. Gabriel assumed a Posture of Authority. "I will leave you, TherpMn. No doubt you have preparations to make." "Yes, Aristos." Gabriel turned and walked from the Shadow Cloister. As he passed under the giant white face on its pillar he glanced up at its ambiguous pneumatic smile, and he hoped he was achieving, in his own business, as masterful an inscrutability as this. Gabriel watched through remotes as Horus's machine assembled itself on the skin of the PyrrhoP, which he had moved to an orbit near the bustling orbital habitat Rhodos. He would test it on his own craft first; if something went wrong, he would be the one to pay. lThe machine was only a few molecules deep and, saving the antenna, less than a centimeter across. It was a low-energy tachline transmitter, solar-powered and capable of reproduction. Wherever the ship went, passive sensors would search the horizon for other ships. When they detected one, a small piece of the machine-a long molecular chain, a seed, sitting on top of a chemical booster so tiny it was almost invisible to the eye-would break away and fire itself toward the target. Once it arrived, the seed would construct a copy of itself. As months passed, the transmitters would be carried to other star systems, then reproduce and be carried further. Gradually they would cover all human space. Gabriel calculated this would take eight or nine months. By use of the machine Gabriel intended to build himself an alternate tachline communications system. He would not have to depend on the compromised system of the Hyperlogos, a system that might conceivably be shut down if he tried to warn the other Aristoi. He would not go on his mission without backup. Fleta's engineering had created a central communications center capable of handling an enormity of realtime communication. Nano had converted the interiors of two asteroids and was in the long, slow process of turning one moonlet into data storage modules, the same way that Earth's moon had once been converted. The storage capacity was vast. At any moment he could activate his alternate system and establish tachline contact with whatever star systems his molecular machine had infiltrated. ZAnd it would happen automatically under certain conditions. If he didn't pulse a coded message to Illyricum at regular intervals, a prerecorded FLASH alert would be transmitted, both on the regular communications channels and his own private system, and all Aristoi would become aware of their danger. Gabriel watched as the machine completed its reproductive task. He activated it briefly, tested its systems, told it to go back to sleep. NIts monitor showed that it had already detected several of the other ships docked at the Haydn habitat. The tiny seed-carrying boosters were already being constructed. 2Gabriel let them proceed. Graduation, and its ceremonies, receptions, and meetings, had at last come to an end. Everything, once again, had been postponed till next time. Gabriel and Zhenling, sharing the oneirochronon, paced along the scarlet-veined marble floors of the Red Lacquer Gallery. Works of art-oneirochronic versions of the molecule-perfect copies that occupied the real wing of the real gallery-gazed at them from the dark-red walls. The facsimile heritage of Earth1, the originals long ago destroyed. ZThis wing offered various exhibits, but at the moment was devoted to Flemish works, and this side gallery to Peter Paul Rubens. Silenus belched blearily from ahead, and next to him Greeks and Amazons, swirls of violence, battle back and forth across an arching bridge. The small and large Last Judgments threatened on either side, cascades of the pink-skinned Damned tumbling down to Hell. There seemed to be acres of rosy flesh. "Do I sense a moralist at work in this grouping.'" Zhen-ling asked, and pointed from one picture to the next. "Judgment, war, insensibility?" "The good old days," Gabriel said. "I thought you wanted to bring them back." X"Nobody wants that, Gabriel. Not at all. I want a transcursion of the good old days through the present and into the future. I want the old adventurous spirit transformed." Her skiagnos wore a version of the harness used when she raced submarines: a strapped black bodysuit that left the arms, shoulders, and legs bare, with a utility belt and soft black booties. Her hair was held up with a tall mother-of-pearl comb; a pair of gloves was thrust though the belt. Gabriel was delighted by the revelation of flowing sculpted muscle in her shoulders, arms, and legs: Augenblick was overjoyed by a superabundance of kinesic clues. She would not, the Welcome Rain reminded, be wearing this outfit unless she wished you to offer more than admiration. *Gabriel put his hands in the big pockets of his embroidered day robe and pretended to study the large Lost Judgment, contrasting the precise articulation of Zhenling's frame with Rubens's pink-fleshed tumblers. "Half these people are damned," Gabriel said, "and the others seem more relieved than happy with their lot. Such a waste-I think we Aristoi have done better than Jehovah, all things considered." Zhenling stepped in front of him, looked at the painting. "He had less to work with in terms of human material." "Appreciated," Gabriel said. He stepped behind her and did what the Welcome Rain had been urging for some time; he slid arms gently around her waist and kissed the juncture of neck and shoulder. The unreal experiential flesh was warm to his lips, not forbidding, and so he repeated the kiss, diving over her shoulder into the inviting shadow of her clavicle, telling Spring Plum to send little oneirological nerve-pulses along the sensitive slopes of Zhenling's neck. Zhenling gently detached herself. "Patience," she said, "if you please." "My vegetable love shall grow vaster than empires, and more slow." She gave him a look over her shoulder. "That was a bit commonplace, don't you think?" He shrugged. "Apt enough, though. At least I didn't go on about time's winged chariot." She padded toward the next room. "Besides, I need to know whether or not you've gone mad." The Welcome Rain tugged at Gabriel to follow; he didn't resist. "I understand that's Astoreth's theory," he said. B"You've been very busy since I last spoke to you alone," Zhenling said. Allegorical peasants roistered around her, genre art by Brouwer in tans and browns. "Your private ship readied, a crew standing by, lots of little quiet meetings, private tangos danced with one partner or another ..." B"I want to say proper good-byes." $"You're not Magellan, for heaven's sake," she said. "You're still going to be hooked into the oneirochronon." She lifted an eyebrow. "Aren't you?" "Yes." ~"Then why the-" She paused, chose words. (Her meta-linguistics are indicative of frustration, Augenblick reported pointlessly.) "You're setting up your own tachline network," she said. "Why?" t"How did you find that out?" Gabriel was mildly surprised. Her brows narrowed. "It took some digging-I had to track the raw materials around. But that sort of thing is what renos are for." At this revelation a paranoid howl from Mataglap was suppressed, and Mataglap with it. "And you started setting the thing up before Cressida died, just to talk to her, but now you're expanding it. Your current capacity is beyond description. How many channels are you expecting to have to use?" "I'm not sure." Zhenling stepped close to him, looked levelly into his eyes. "A claim could be made that your moves are seditious," she said. "The entire Logarchy is based on free and complete access to information. Every transaction, every communication is recorded in the Hyperlogos. Even the data placed under Seal is made available sooner or later. For someone to establish private communication links outside the Logarchy could be thought subversive. You're withdrawing from the civic life of the republic." LGabriel held her gaze, gave Horus control of his face so that nothing could be read into his expression. "Is that the only interpretation that occurs to you, Ariste?" :Zhenling gave a little nod. "No," she said. She bit her lip (or allowed herself to be seen to bite her Up-in any case Augenblick gave a little spasm of joy). ^"I'm setting up my own tachline rig," she said. x"As you wish, Ariste." His words went carefully uninflected. t"When I do, we can have a genuinely private inter-change." "Yes." H"Will you tell me what's happening?" 0Gabriel allowed himself to drift away from her, toward the next gallery. His silk trousers whispered as he walked, a nicely subtle oneirochronic effect. &"I won't," he said. L"Because you think I'll be in danger." V"No. Because I don't know what's going on." "Do you know where you're going in this excursion of yours?" Following him. "Any destination in mind?" "A tour of the neighborhood. Perhaps I'll go visit Earth2-I've never seen it in person." :"Perhaps you could visit me." @"I'd like that." Noncommittally. He didn't think she was a conspirator, but he couldn't absolutely rule her out. He couldn't tell her too much. jThe next gallery opened around him. He had drifted back in time, to Breughel the Elder. He paused in front of the Land of Cockaigne, where a knight, merchant, and peasant lay turn' bled on the ground, stunned by their own gluttony in a land in which the food walked onto their plates and lay down to be eaten. Zhenling approached, spoke softly from behind. "That's us, isn't it? That's the Logarchy. Everything perfect, everything known, everything easy, everything abundant. And there's no reason for it to change." "If everyone chooses to be happy," Gabriel said, "why should you interfere?" "There are degrees of happiness. Why should you choose one over another?" "I don't. The choice is left to the individual. And in the domaines where that doesn't happen, we condemn the Aristoi in charge." She frowned. "Condemn is a little strong. We disapprove, in our own quiet and unobtrusive way." >"Your alternative?" A number of these passed through his mind: institutionalized intolerance, pressure of the muscle-flexing sort, responded to by militarization, cold war, proxy war, hot war. Legions of brainwashed clones advancing with gravity weapons and the latest in attack nano ... 0It was all too possible. "I'd like to expand the human gene pool, for starters," Zhenling said. ,Gabriel was surprised. "But we're doing that," he said as he turned toward her. "Adapting humans for different environments-space, the ocean, even mountain and lowland adaptations. Eliminating hereditary diseases, boosting intelligence, making the human body more efficient ..." She held up a hand. "Listen to what you're saying, Aristos. Yes, we're making functional adaptations for specific environments. But on the whole, human genetics is far less diverse than it was two thousand years ago." B"Much was lost with Earth1, yes." "That's not what I mean. One of the constant features of human genetics is that we never choose our own genes. In ancient times the genetic mix was haphazard; since then our parents, or on occasion the state, choose our genetics for us. We can retroactively alter them with nano, but that's complicated and hazardous and expensive." Breath and speech are more forceful than strictly necessary, reported Augenblick. Eyes slightly dilated, jaw and neck muscles tautened, head thrust forward like a weapon. She is speaking with deep conviction. hThe real Zhenling at last, exulted the Welcome Rain. J"I follow you, Ariste," Gabriel said. "But now that parents can choose the genes of their own children, what are they choosing? Intelligence, yes, always. We can't guarantee genius, we can't guarantee an Ariste, but we can make them bright. Resistance to disease, general physical vigor, specific physiognomies regarded as aesthetically pleasing or interesting. That's all well and good, but what are they leaving out?" Gabriel responded quickly. "Genes for Huntington's chorea, schizophrenia, Tay-Sach's, sickle cell, arthritis ..." Zhenling impatiently waved her hand. "All that's to the better, granted, though an argument could be made that all these exclusions aren't necessarily good-some forms of schizophrenia can result in genius." \"I will be saved from such genius, thank you." "Conceded-my point being that some genetics are associated with both positive and negative features. Some genetics, for example, can create a very impulsive personality. That's wonderful for an athlete, say, or an explorer, or a stunt pilot-but impulsivity can also result in extremes of emotion, including rage and violence. The same genetics that produce a champion athlete can, with different circumstances, also produce a vicious criminal. Or a great soldier." "Which is why attempts have always been made to divert budding criminals into athletics or the army," Gabriel said. "Absolutely. But what is more important to my thesis is that impulsive genes make for difficult children. Aggressive, impetuous, disinclined to sit still. Active, dynamic explorers of their environment, prone to tantrums ... What parents would choose that list of characteristics for their offspring, particularly if they see a sidebar associating that genetic pattern with criminal behavior?" lGabriel looked at her. "It isn't as if those genetics aren't available. People simply don't choose to have such offspring. How many explorers, stunt pilots, and soldiers do we need?" 6"More than we've got, I think. The Demos is composed of bright, polite, scholarly, well-behaved, unaggressive, rather unenterprising people-they're very pleasant, but they're not world-class fire breathers. And the Therpontes and Aristoi are drawn from the population of the Demos." "We all have aggressive, enterprising daimones. Shouldn't that compensate?" ("Firstly, most of the Demos and many Therpontes have limited control over their daimones, and therefore don't get the best use out of them," Zhenling said, "and secondly, although you have aggressive daimones ..." Her gaze was penetrating. "How often do you let yours loose?" dMataglap, Gabriel thought, never. The Welcome Rain only rarely, because he was utterly manipulative and a sociopath-but sometimes it served Gabriel's interest to be manipulative. The others, whose interests were a bit obsessive but on the whole more amiable, were given more free rein. h"In your silence I deduce an answer," said Zhenling. $"I restrict some of my daimones because it is for the general good," Gabriel said. "But you would unleash their material counterparts on society?" "Daimones are Limited Personalities. They aren't well rounded, they're just component aspects of a larger psyche. But children can be brought up well, with fully developed personalities. In a society such as ours, particularly with out multiple-parent institutions, we could raise a host of such children and turn them into a positive force." "And how would you convince parents to host these difficult children?" f"Financial incentives, tax relief, medical and counseling assistance ... there's a host of ways. One declares a certain genotype desirable, and supports it with state assistance." "This isn't something that Persepolis needs to do. You can do it yourself, in your own domaine." "I am." "Oh." v"It happens I think I shouldn't be alone in this endeavor." V"Do you think you'll produce more Aristoi?" There was a hesitation in her expression. "I don't know. Expanding the population of Aristoi may turn out to be a separate problem. But if you look at the genetics of the first generations of Aristoi, there was certainly more diversity than there is now. And diversity, whether in Aristoi or the Demos, would seem to be a good thing." ,"A lot of the early Aristoi died badly, taking chances that we know better than to take today. Look at what happened to Shankaracharya and Ortega. And we still don't know what happened to Captain Yuan-he just went off on his quest and vanished, disappeared from the Hyperlogos." nZhenling shrugged. "They took chances-that's what Aristoi were for. They were the cutting edge, and they experimented on themselves as much as on anything else. Casualties were high." p"We honor them," Gabriel said, "but do we emulate them?" lShe drew back, regarded him. "I don't know," she said. "Is that what you're doing, Gabriel? Setting yourself on some glorious, private adventure, fraught with hazard and enterprise?" Gabriel allowed himself a smile. "Modesty," he said, "forbids an answer." zHer tilted dark eyes hooded, Zhenling was silent for a moment, and then she gave a brief, decisive nod and stepped toward him. She hooked a forearm behind his neck and drew him to her lips. Her kiss was fierce. Gabriel fell in love at once. He put his arms around her and (through his reno) ordered the Red Lacquer Gallery dissolved. A bright exuberant scintillation of colors bled through the walls, evaporating them, and then surrounded the embracing pair, buoyed them up. He felt sculpted, catlike muscle shifting beneath her bodysuit. She seemed content to let him choose the surroundings; he called up the Autumn Pavilion, Psyche's high-arched bedchamber. Zhenling in turn chose music, a pulsing, racing electronic piece whose origin he couldn't place. \Strands of silk seemed to move delicately up his spine. He let a warm mist of musky scent fall from the ceiling, called phantom feathers to brush her neck. He ordered the chrysanthemums on his embroidered day robe to blossom, blossom, blossom, a riot of floral brilliance emerging in time to the music. Lovemaking through the oneirochronon was sufficiently unreal that dullness and monotony were a genuine danger. Sensation had to be instilled, sharpened, focused. Made better. The Realized World had to be improved upon. Gabriel ordered the unreal palms of his hands to grow warmer, peeled away the black bodysuit. Her soft booties, to save anyone's awkward bending, simply dissolved away, one of the advantages of the incorporate sphere. The light fell, turned to rose twilight-Zhenling's work. Shadows contrasted with her glowing skin. Gabriel ordered warm puffs of wind, like a lover's breath, to touch her back, breasts, belly. Invisible hands, an entire harem of caressing, impatient hands, tore away Gabriel's clothing. Zhenling seemed to float out of his arms, her still, poised body moving backwards without visible impulse. Suddenly the room streamed with silken banners, blue, red, yellow, all strong colors that flooded through the air, crackled in a sudden wind. The silks absorbed her body, flowed around it. Soundless lightning played overhead, strobelike flashes that illuminated the chiseled form of Zhenling's body, her pointed breasts, her intent, hungry expression. PGabriel plunged into the flood of bright banners. Their texture was warm and moist. They flowed over his body in a thousand caresses. Lightning flashed again and again, revealing Zhenling just ahead. He threw himself high and flew through the storm of color. The journey seemed to take centuries. He found her, only a few feet away, on the bed. Jewels glowed softly in her unbound hair. She wore a long string of pearls that trailed along her body, outlined her breasts and abdomen, then dipped between her thighs. Gabriel hovered over her for a long, appreciative moment. He altered the nature of the banner storm, creating a tempest of color that whirled around them, the bed a calm eye in the bright rainbow hurricane. Lightning flashed again and again. Gabriel called rain into existence, a silent Heliogabalian cascade of flower petals that fell in thick profusion and spilled off his arms and shoulders. Amid the rain of flowers he descended. Zhenling rose off the bed to meet him, heaped petals sliding off her skin. Her strong arms grappled him; her legs wrapped round his thighs. Individual pearls imprinted themselves on his flesh. Her laugh seemed half a snarl. There was a ferocious quality to it all that surprised him; but the Welcome Rain growled suggestively in his ear and he responded, his arms compressing her waist, bending her backward under the power of his kiss. They tumbled suddenly, landed in a blizzard of petals. Fire kindled in Gabriel's heart. One smile from her, he thought, recalling Li Yien-Nien, would topple a city-two smiles, bring down a nation. Her hips rolled up against him, demanding pleasure. He provided it, took his own. Lightning flashed, colors swirled. |The rain of petals buried them long before they were finished. TWith kisses and promises for the future, Gabriel eased himself out of the oneirochronon. He was lying sprawled on blue-and-gold cushions in his own private apartments. To judge by the state of his clothing, at least one of the oneirochronic orgasms he'd awarded himself had been imitated by nature. 0He called Horus to his mind, checked the recordings of the last few hours of the nanomachine. The transmitter had been functioning as designed. Neither Pyrrho, nor any other ship, had disappeared in a devouring tide of mataglap. Things were going as planned. He checked the time and recalled that he was scheduled to have a private dinner with Clancy tonight, their last in the Autumn Pavilion before embarkation. Anticipation sent pleasure tingling through Gabriel's nerves. ,He called up Spring Plum and Cyrus and reviewed through the orchestration of the melody he intended for Clancy. Cyrus's minimalist elegance clashed in places with Spring Plum's lush, fruitful intimacy, and he reconciled the two, adding touches of his own until he was satisfied. \He went to his wardrobe to change. As he tossed his trousers to the clothing robot, he considered that he'd have to pick up some hormone supplements from his private cabinet. He could still taste a phantom scent of flower petals. The melody ran through his mind. fAll sorts of adventures were beginning, he thought. Chapter 7 Chapter 8 PABST: 4I will be the mastermind, ,I will set the stage, One of Gabriel's students had, as a kind of whim (or possibly as a comment on how pointless these exercises were) sculpted nano to build a battleship. Since her work was theoretical to begin with, she'd designed it to its limits. There was room for a full brigade of combat-ready troops, with shuttles to carry them. The crew quarters were a marvel of Olympian comfort. Camouflage was provided by the fact that the exterior of the asteroid would remain the same: the battleship, except for the odd hatch or antenna, looked just like a piece of rock. The gravity generators on board, once powered, had enough potential power to dismember a planet and possibly even a star. Gabriel liked the idea of a huge ship. It would seem less confining than the PyrrhoL, spacious and comfortable though the Pyrrho was. No doubt, Gabriel thought, his student would be surprised to discover her impressive exercise in theory was actually being deployed. If Gabriel were going into hostile territory, he was going to pack suitable firepower. bAnd then the miracles were really going to start. 4Gabriel's quarters on the Pyrrho were cozy, rather tent-like. The walls were hung with wine-colored felt hangings covered with appliqu of gold and bronze-green; the soft Persian rugs were piled layers thick-Tasseled pillows were tossed around to sit on; there were bronze censers and wrought-iron light fixtures. The overall effect was of being in the interior of a very large yurt. Spoiling the illusion were the glowing ebony piano Gabriel had shipped upwell from the Autumn Pavilion, and the buffet table just brought in from the kitchens. Clancy was late for dinner-her studies and duties were driving her hard. Gabriel struck random chords on the piano and considered answering a < Priority 2 > call from Zhenling. While he waited for Clancy, Gabriel filled the room with voices, bits of his Lulu. Song balanced and harmonized, clashed and spat, wooed and denounced. ^As he played he became aware that Clancy had entered the room and was listening. He waited for the conclusion of a phrase, then banished the sounds. He rose to kiss her hello. :"Your unfinished work again?" He nodded. His silk-clad legs made little singing sounds as he led her to the buffet, life imitating the art of his skiagnos in the red lacquer gallery, that first time with Zhenling. Clancy put cold noodles and pickled vegetables on her plate, then sprinkled them with sesame oil. He filled his bowl with stuffed-cherry soup. j"Complex," she said. "I wouldn't want to attempt it." "The complexity isn't a problem-it just gives me an opportunity for more interesting harmonic arrangements." She sat on a pillow; he curled up at her feet. "Mozart has eight people singing at once in the 'Pian pianin le andro piu presso' section of FigaroZ-all singing different tunes, more or less, but harmonizing wonderfully-but he didn't have the advantage of a reno programmed with harmonic and music theory. Still, he kept the record until Sandor Korondi managed ten. I've got twelve, and it's going to be lovely, and very strange. Listen." He ordered his reno to call up the finale to Act II, the whole cast singing at once. The music was synthesized, because it had never been recorded live, and constituted an ideal a live performance might reach only in dreams, albeit a somewhat sterile one. Clancy glanced up in wonder at the eerie highlights that pervaded the music. Gabriel smiled to see her nape hair rise as if with a charge of static electricity. She looked down at him, eyes wide. "That's the strangest thing I ever heard. How do you get that effect?" ("Some of the voices are up in the ultrasonic, above the range of normal hearing. I call them ultrasopranos, which I suppose is a very obvious name." "A good trick. But if I can't hear them, why do I perceive the effect?" "It's a harmonic. Although you can't hear the singers themselves, the ultrasopranos' voices are generating harmonies with the other singers, a kind of intermediate voice that floats from place to place. So even if you can't hear them directly, their influence still wafts about the stage. You can feel it in your toes when they shift into a minor key." ^"You're planning a live production eventually?" "When my singers come of age, yes." Clancy put her plate down on the cushion beside her and leaned forward to look intently at Gabriel. "Tell." Gabriel bowed. "As you command, Blushing Rose. The idea proved out in simulation, I sculpted some sneticsP to produce the singers capable of performing my music. It involves a second set of vocal cords just above the first-quite tiny ones that are only deployed on command. Breath control is very important, so I strengthened the diaphragm, altered the lungs to efficiently absorb more oxygen, and ..." H"How do they hear their own voices?" "Ear implants." D"And there are how many of these?" Gabriel smiled paternally. "Fifteen adorable little girls in the first generation, all between the ages of eight and eleven. The extra set of vocal cords will form during early adolescence, so they're not really in training yet. Their guardians all come from musical families with very little seniority on the childbearing lists, and were happy to have an early start on child rearing. The girls are ail being given intensive musical educations courtesy of the state. When they mature they'll have their choice of careers, but a career in the musical field will be assured for them should they choose to accept it." "But you haven't finished the work for which they were intended." "No. But when the girls get a little older I'll toss off some choral pieces for them to train on." He looked up at her and thought about Zhenling's reaction to his scheme. "Some, I suppose, would consider the business decadent." Clancy thought for a moment. "What's decadent about it? People have been choosing their children's genetics for hundreds of years. If you want some specialized singers, why not build them? You won't have your security forces standing over them making them become singers; you merely make the opportunity very attractive." "So I thought." He relaxed against her legs and took a spoonful of cherry soup. The cherries had been stuffed with ham to balance the sweetness, and the taste was exquisite. Kem-Kem had achieved another wonder. ^"Still," Clancy pointed out, "their function will become decadent, or at least useless, unless you finish your opera. If it isn't the complexity that's stopping you, what is?" Gabriel dropped his spoon into the soup, watched as red cherries and pale bamboo shoots floated through the emerald-green lily-leaf broth. "It's the hideous people I'm writing about," he said finally. "The entire cast is headed toward self-destruction without a thought for themselves or one another. And I don't know what makes them work." vClancy leaned forward again, began playing with his long, curling red hair. "You have a fine grasp of psychology," she said. "I've seen you use it. You've used it on me, for that matter." "Have I? I hope you don't mind overmuch. But whatever knowledge I have is of contemporary psyches. Disciplined minds, well educated, with a common culture, a society that provides for the material and mental welfare of its members ... I've got that aiding me here. "But these people are primitives. Savages. Their drives are alien and destructive. Their parents and their culture bred them, tortured them without mercy for years, then threw diem away. I have a theoretical knowledge of their motivations-Louise Brooks was sexually abused when young, therefore grew up with little self-esteem, threw herself into compulsive alcohol abuse and negative sexual impulses in order to escape her real problems, et cetera ... I can write a psychological profile of her without trouble, but I can't get into her head. There are demons in there, and the demons aren't our sort. And in order for the music to be true I've got to crack her skull and get inside, and that goes for the rest of the cast, too." vThere was a moment of silence. "It occurs to me," Clancy said, "that those little girls will have their work cut out. Perhaps you should write something a little lighter for their debut." FGabriel smiled. "Perhaps I should." "Something with fairies singing at the bottom of a gar-" den. No suicides, no throat-cutting. Okay?" He kissed her hand. "As you wish. You can compose it, ; if you like." "I have quite enough to do. You talked me into going for the exams again, remember?" "You still need to work toward the Humanitas part of the exams. Composition is as good a way as any." He finished his soup and returned to the buffet for some curry. "Tomorrow," he said, "I'll have to tell the crew what we're really doing out here. I've implied that building the battleship was an exotic nano experiment-which I suppose it is-but when we actually move into our new flagship, I'll have to explain why we're making the shift." "Ah." She picked up her noodle plate, started eating again. "A chance to exercise your powers of contemporary psychology." 2"I'm going to have to censor their communications," Gabriel said. "No realtime tachline chats with loved ones back home. They're not going to like that." 8"No." Frowning. "We're not." L"I hope you understand the necessity." She sipped some noodles and frowned. "It will cause talk among the loved ones in question." "Good." H"If that's what you're after, then." V"I want people to wonder what we're doing." N"So long as they don't actually guess." He curled up at her feet again. "So long as they don't actually guess," he said. "Correct." "Forward," he said, and thrust a fist into the air, "to the heart of the mystery!" He had the crew cheering, stamping, clapping their hands, jumping atop tables in the Pyrrho's lounge. Amid the din, White Bear sang the "Excelsior March" from Gabriel's Knights of Sfiinano in a fine, light tenor. Amid all the enthusiasm the censorship decrees passed without comment. One miracle among many, Gabriel thought. He must have outdone himself. 0He named the battleship Cressida. FThe parade of miracles marched on. Pyrrho" was grappled to Cressida and, as gravity waves beat time, the expedition set out for the supposed supernova Gaal 97, the heart of the Gaal Sphere, at ninety percent of its maximum speed. Obedient robots and implanted chimpanzees transferred personal belongings to the flagship. PyrrhoX, with a much-reduced crew, separated every so often to drop more communications buoys in out-of-the-way star systems, catching up by boosting its own speed to the maximum. Robot probes leaped ahead, accelerating to the limits of gravity drive. Gabriel was of two minds about them-if they arrived too far in advance and were discovered, they could give away his intentions. But small probes were difficult to detect, and if Saigo and any other conspirators could find them, they could surely detect Cressida as it came storming in. Intelligence concerning Gaal would be very valuable, Gabriel thought, and even if Saigo discovered one of the probes, it wouldn't necessarily prove that Gabriel was coming himself-he could have sent it from Illyricum. VThe voyage out would take four long months. Gabriel anticipated boredom. He knew he was a very bad passenger. HHe would require diversion ere long. "The hell with you," said Louise Brooks. She was drinking bathtub gin straight from the bottle. "The hell with everyone." She smiled, the famous beautiful sparkling smile on the famous beautiful sparkling face. She slammed back another load of gin, wiped her mouth, smiled the famous smile again. "And the hell with me," she said. zGabriel froze the simulation. He had built Louise Brooks and the others in the oneirochronon, using modern psychological modeling programs and techniques. Looking for answers, finding none. $He could talk to Louise and Lulu and Pabst and the others-even the fictional creations would stay in character, would act scenes with one another. VWhat they couldn't do was surprise Gabriel. (He had gone back to Lulu, hoping that he would have developed greater insight. He hadn't; he was just finding another way to occupy himself when bored. He banished Brooks and the others. No music sang in his head. Manfred snored in his lap. Gabriel looked at the felt wall hangings and realized that he was sick of them. |Reconfiguring his suite took another half-day out of the trip. The troika sped across a rolling plain of white. The sky was an illumined azure; evergreen forests cut graceful curves across the landscape. Cold air nipped Gabriel's cheeks as if in teasing love-play, but under his fur coat and hat he was perfectly warm. Runners growled lightly over the snow, and harness bells jingled-Gabriel recalled the beadlike bells he'd strung in Clancy's hair. 8Zhenling wore a coat and hat of glossy sable fur and shared with Gabriel a bearskin comforter. The hand that Gabriel held was warm as toast. Gabriel never saw the face of the driver perched on his box out front, but the man had white mustaches flaring wide on either side of his ears. "Thank you," he said. "I got so tired of my quarters that I had them completely redone, just so I have something different to look at." "You could visit me at Schloss Eiger," Zhenling said. "I'm planning a classical ascent of Mount Trasker-you could join me." "I'm dedicated to conquering the mountain of quantum uncertainty at the moment, Madame Sable. Perhaps another time." "Madame Sable?" She brushed her sable hat with her free hand and looked pleased. "I rather like the name." ,"Take it. It's yours." $The troika's runners grated over hard snow. A wide frozen lake was visible ahead, a white dacha with an onion-domed tower visible on the far side. "I hope you're enjoying the entertainment," Zhenling said. "This is presumably something indulged in by your Kamanev ancestors." z"Those that survived your ancestors when they came up out of the Gobi, yes." He looked out over the white low hills. The sun was so bright it seemed the snow was on fire. "Getting out into the country was a splendid idea," he said. "We seem to spend all our time together in one or another simulation of the indoors." "Bedrooms are getting too small for us," she said. Zhen-ling's dark eyes glanced up from under her long lashes, and Gabriel felt an answering pulse of flame up his spine. She took his hand and drew it into her sable coat. He felt heated flesh, taut muscle, a pointed breast that nestled like a bird in the hollow of his hand. rHe resisted the impulse to glance at the silent figure of the coachman. Let that oneirochronic figure, he decided, stand for Saigo or whatever other eavesdropper had broken the Seal ... X"I'm in need of diversion myself," she said. She stretched luxuriously against the pressure of his hand. "Greg left this morning to take up his apprenticeship with Han Fu." ~"Is that so?" Gabriel said. His hand slid down her sleek flank. *He was prevaricating. He knew perfectly well that Gregory Bonham, Zhenling's consort, had left the Violet Jade labs and Tienjin and taken out an indenture with Aristos Han Fu. Bonham remained her legal consort, but had committed himself to living apart from Zhenling for years. "Should I offer congratulations," hand moving, "or condolences?" She looked up into his eyes. "Would the condolences be sincere?" His hand dipped low, she gave a sudden gasp. "No," he said. "Then say nothing at all." Her lips brushed his. He tasted Orange and spice. She drew herself away and closed her coat about her. Gabriel, savoring his brief taste, returned his attention to the landscape. The dacha on the far side of the lake was covered with lacy white gingerbread and the onion dome was painted crimson and gold. Vanity wanted him to claim credit for Bonham's departure, but Gabriel judged vanity to be mistaken. Zhenling and Bonham had, he thought, been coming apart for years, ever since Zhenling had passed her exams and he, with two tries, had not. "It's difficult for an Ariste to find an equal, isn't it?" she said. A bright wink of snow-covered landscape was reflected in her eyes. >"There are only other Aristoi." "And that doesn't work out very often, does it? In the past Mehmet AliB and Castor, and now Maryandroid and Maximilian." The troika grated over ice as it began moving over the frozen lake. With the flat terrain the wind speed rose, carried tiny grains of ice that raised tears in Gabriel's eyes. She turned toward him. "Have you ever loved an Ariste, Gabriel?" &"Twice before you." 0"Dorothy St.-John, yes?" "When I was indentured to her. But I was a TherpMn at the time. And then again with Pristine Way, but that was more of an aesthetic collaboration-we were working on a play-and it didn't last long." J"Why don't we Aristoi stay together?" 2"We're very busy people." "Greg and I were busy, too-we're pioneering, remember. Four new systems to be terraformed and populated. It's something more than merely being busy. I suppose we Aristoi are too intense, too dominating, too self-willed to succeed very often with one another ..." She turned to him suddenly. "Do you find our time together a strain?" ~"No. Of course not." Gabriel declined to smile at the question. "Of course you won't see me as often as I'd like. Too busy with your conspiracies." |"The longer the interval," he said, "the sharper our de-sire." P"As long as it's not too long, Gabriel." "'Sweetest love,'" he said, "'I do not go/For weariness of thee.'" She sighed, took his hand. The troika grated briefly over bare ice, then rose smoothly onto snow again. "Forgive these questions. It's been such a long time since I've had to wonder about any of these issues. Since I've been involved with anyone new." d"There is no need for me to forgive you anything." "Whereas you," continuing the former train of thought, "seem to find someone new at every turn." "I love easily." Her eyes turned to his. "You fall in love with all of them? Truly?" "I do. It's not hard." He smiled. "They're good people. I don't choose badly." Her gaze turned suspicious. "And where do I fit into this seraglio? One among the many?" "You're different. Sharp as a sword, brilliant as diamond, challenging as one of your mountains ..."He smiled, looked into her eyes. "I wanted you the first time I met you, at your Graduation." p"Greg and I were new then. Your attentions were obnoxious." There was a secret glow in her eyes; the wind had burned her cheeks, a nicely done effect. "But most flattering," she added. "I like it when I can flatter someone and do it with such absolute truth and sincerity." 0Zhenling had the modesty at least to pretend skepticism. The troika lurched as it rose onto the lake's opposite bank. On the unreal air floated the taste of woodsmoke. The dacha rose on the right, all onion dome, glass, and white gingerbread. Icicles hung from the jigsaw tracery. $"Stop here, Gury." |Though strictly speaking unnecessary, the words maintained the illusion. The troika jingled to a stop. Steam rose from the horses' muzzles. Zhenling threw off the lap robe and stepped out of the vehicle. The lightly built conveyance swayed as Gabriel swung himself out; she took his hand and led him into the building. TThe entry hall was paneled in light wood. The window-panes and a marble entryway table glittered with rime. Zhenling led Gabriel through a room with a long table set for a banquet, white tablecloth, white china, crystal glasses etched with frost. Another room had plush, fussy Yellow Epoch furniture, all in shades of white, silver, and ice-blue, and an ornate iron stove in which was a flickering ivory flame, like ice afire. The programming skills displayed were splendid. Gabriel's mind buzzed with pleasure. 0Zhenling led him to a second-story bedroom illuminated by a pale sun that shone through wide French windows scored with fractal curves of frost. Outside was a gingerbread balcony. Icons gazed down from the corners, saints and madonnas with unearthly eyes, their images partly covered by sleeves of gold brocade set with white pearls. Delicate lace hangings wreathed the bed. Frosty mirrors hung on the walls. pAn ermine coverlet was stretched over the bed. Zhenling turned and opened her arms wide, sable against white. Gabriel stepped toward her, slid his arms inside her coat, and kissed her. pThe only warmth in the room was hers. He placed her on the bed, black hair on pale body on sable on ermine. The mirrors reflected his movement through distorting mist. The opposites, hot and cold, black and frost, sent a memory of the Black-Eyed Ghost along Gabriel's spine, and then a hunger for more contrasts. pA notion drifted through his thoughts, solidified there. 0Something he hadn't done since he was very young. He had mastered the art, then lost interest. Like riding a bicycle, he thought, one shouldn't forget. (GABRIEL: Reno, location of Dr. Clancy. x(RENO: Dr. Clancy is still asleep in her quarters, Aristos.) The ship's schedules were complex and at variance with Zhenling's day in Tienjin in any case. It was fortunate under the circumstances that Gabriel needed only two or three hours sleep per night. He stretched out alongside Zhenling, stroked her skin that was stippled with cold. Gabriel needed to delay this until he got the second feature in place. He tongued Zhenling's nipples, then called a warm breeze into life that played over her skin, evaporating the saliva his tongue had left on her, turning the nipples first cool, then hot. He felt a hand on his cheek. "Stop," she said. "This is my fantasy, built for you. No extraneous effects, please." 6"As you wish, Madam Sable." He rose up above Zhenling and tented his coat over both of them. He kissed the hollow of her left clavicle, let his lips browse down the of her body until he pressed his lips to the high, fine arch of her instep. Warm human smells rose. Gabriel's lips grazed upward, slid along the smooth inner thigh. He felt an involuntary muscle twitch, heard a startled gasp of laughter. :Carefully Gabriel tasted her. jHer oneirochronic liquor awarded him a taste of fire. His consciousness slid from the oneirochronon to his body. Cyrus was perfectly capable of handling this part. Zhenling gasped, shuddered. Strong fingers clutched at Gabriel's scalp. Liquid nitrogen cold flowed from her fingertips, pierced his skull with daggers of ice; then they turned warm, sources of light that licked at his senses with laser fire. @Energy flooded along his nerves. Gabriel moved Cyrus aside, overlapped one set of perceptions on the other. He rose, threw off the fur tent, regarded Zhenling's pale body against the midnight-colored sable. Mirrors echoed her in infinite image. The ghost of Blushing Rose lGABRIEL: Cyrus, navigate my body to Clancy's quarters. He rose from his couch, cinched on his dressing gown, and strolled to Clancy's quarters. The doors parted for him. It was morning for her, as near to her normal time of rising as no matter. Clancy was curled on her disordered bed. She sighed as she felt Gabriel's presence, turned her head blindly toward him. PCyrus's astringent, youthful perceptions floated through Gabriel's mind. Cyrus moved Gabriel's body into the bed, slid close up behind Clancy, gently kissed her throat. P"Behold how goodly my faire hue does ly &In proud humility." Spenser's words, Cyrus's choosing, Gabriel's voice. Pleasure shimmered through Gabriel at the interwoven perceptions. t"Disturber?" Sleep grated in her voice. "What time is it?" "You were scheduled to wake soon, Blushing Rose," Cyrus said. "I thought I'd try to make your waking more ... arousing." ~Clancy drowsily considered this while Gabriel's consciousness slipped into the waiting glove of his body. He slid a hand into her embroidered bed jacket, cupped one warm breast. Clancy turned toward him, raised a hand to stroke his hair. He bent, kissed a nipple, tongued it until it swelled and turned rosy with blood. dHe knelt over Clancy and pushed Cyrus from the oneirochronic body, ordering the ghost body, in the unreal dacha on the edge of the unreal lake, to take its cues from his shell of flesh. The contrast, rose flesh superimposed on old yellowed ivory, struck his mind like a poem, overlapped his perceptions, a prann6-colored image in his mind. He entered her and felt a warmth enclose him followed by a surprising sensation of cold that gripped him at the root, then traveled down the length of his engorged focus like a deliberate caress. The sensation paralyzed him for a moment, then it was repeated and took his breath away. He ordered a slight decrease in the intensity with which he was receiving the sensory input, found he could tolerate the sensation. 2He let his physical body setB the pattern and rhythm. Zhenling0 adapted effortlessly to  his lead. Pleasure floated through him at the success of this, the precise art of simultaneous pleasuring. The swift iteration of warm and cold caresses continued, like the iteration of black and white, 'Ivory and rose ...' A rose blossomed in his heart, his mind. Roses pierced him with thorns of frigid cold and tore his fraud asunder. His cries seemed to echo through a million mirrors. TZhenling rolled away, wrapping herself in hern sable coat. Gabriel was still propped above her on his Ipughing arms. Clancy reached up, touched Gabriel's forehead. It was dotted with sweat. Sensations of heat and cold were still shooting up his spine. D"That was very intense," she said. He couldn't quite locate any words of answer and stretched out beside her in the bed, nestled close to her, inhaled her scent. He wished he could work her a miracle here, in the Realized World, as he could in the oneirochronon. 4Clancy was silent. There was a thoughtful glow in her eyes. "'Our love white as snow on mountain peak,'" she quoted, "'Brilliant as moon between clouds.'" White as snow, Gabriel thought. How appropriate. As if the spirit of the thing, the super impositions, had somehow communicated itself to her. 0Clancy rose and stepped toward the bathroom. He heard water gush from the tap. Gabriel turned his body over to Cyrus and faded entirely into the dacha, He entered her, felt her pelvis lift to welcome him. Supporting himself on his hands, he looked down into her drowsy peridot eyes, felt as well the glittering touch of Precious Jade's slitted, calculating glance. hHe gasped. She touched his cheek. "Something wrong?" Gabriel shook his head. "Overcome with poetry," he said, which was true enough. Love continued in its fond, fanciful way. A few times he had to gasp from what the oneirochronon was doing to him; other times found him slowing in order to prevent sensory overload or a premature explosion. White heat rose up his spine, touched his brain with daggers of ice, White mist floated from her mouth and nostrils. Gabriel reached out with his mind and the frost traceries on the windows and mirrors expanded, uncoiled, traced the images of vines and roses on the pane. The rose petals were red-tipped with, snow-white centers, Snow Queen and Red Lady in one. "My fantasy, remember?" Zhenling said. "You're not supposed to do that." She reached to the pane, translated a rose into three dimensions, plucked it and held it in her hand. She inhaled its bouquet and smiled. "But still," she said. "Very nice." She glanced up at him, her eyes intent. He heard the sound of dripping water. He looked at the mirrors and saw that the frost was melting, water drops, as they descended, outlining the frost patterns on the glass. Warmth rose in the room like a flush rising to a young girl's cheek. Colors, green and red and blazing orange, began to blossom through the white-and-blue wallpaper, turning the walls spring-like. Outside, through the window, Gabriel could see spring roll over the landscape like a carpet. Another miracle, he thought. Birds began calling from the eaves. He turned to Zhenling, saw her dressed in a long Yellow Epoch spring dress, covered with beadwork in floral patterns. The sable fur had vanished from the bed, replaced by a scattering of the white-and-scarlet roses. Zhenling rose gracefully from the bed. "Shall we drive?" she said. Spring Plum chose a costume for Gabriel, a white linen suit, cravat, straw hat with floral ribbon. "Certainly," he said. He took her arm, led her down to the entrance. The soft carpet was plum-red, a brilliant fire blazed in the cast-iron stove, the plates in the dining room held ripe fruit, and the goblets brimmed with wine. Zhenling took an umbrella from the stand by the door. Outside, Gury the coachman stood next to a berline drawn by four horses with flower plumes nodding from their forelocks. The top of the coach had been folded down. The sun was low on the horizon. Presumably it was morning, since there was a heavy dew and the scent of freshly mowed lawns. In a far-off valley Gabriel could see a brush-stroke of mist. FGury took off his top hat and opened the door of the coach. Gabriel got a look at his face for the first time, saw that behind the spreading white mustachios, beneath the bald crown, Gury looked as much a Tatar as Zhenling. There was familiarity to the visage, but Gabriel couldn't place it. Gury bowed and Gabriel handed Zhenling up into the coach, then joined her. She unfurled her parasol and held it gracefully over one shoulder so that its lacy fabric cast sun dapples on her skin. Gury took his place on the box and took the reins. "Your fantasy is peerless, Madame Sable," Gabriel said. put one arm through his. "I hope I have distracted you from your cares. Whatever may be." H"You've succeeded most wonderfully." "You're a wonderful lover," she said, "even if the oneirochronon gives you certain advantages that nature may not. Not that Gregory wasn't fine in bed," she added dutifully, "but there's a difference. More in style and texture, I suppose, than technique." She nestled closer to him; Gabriel felt warmth stir in his loins. "I would like to meet you in the flesh, Gabriel," she said. R"You will. When my current task is over." "The matter of style intrigues me." She looked up at him. "May I ask a question?" TGabriel smiled indulgently. "If you must." >"You love men, too, don't you?" "Yes." `"Is that a matter of style and texture as well?" p"I suppose. Mostly a matter of love, I'd like to think." "But you've never been involved with any of the male Aristoi, even though some are inclined that way." 0"They don't attract me." P"Not Salvador? With those eyes, that skin? A man who has to appear as a hawk in the oneirochronon to protect himself from unwanted attention? He certainly attracts me." Gabriel shrugged. Zhenling looked at him again, eyes narrowed. He smiled. ^"You're going to analyze me again, aren't you?" $"Forgive me, yes." "'Why then should I accoumpt of little pain, that endlesse pleasure shall vnto me gaine.'" An amused light sparkled in her eyes. Her hands were warm on his. "I'll try to keep the pain at a minimum." &"And the pleasure?" H"I think it's your brain chemistry." x"Determining sexual preference? Of course. That's not news." "Not that. You're so buffered, you see, and deferred to and so on." Gabriel permitted a tiny degree of impatience to settle into his expression. "I believe we've been over this." LA forceful enthusiasm had entered her tone. "But it's significant, isn't it, that your partner selection is different with Aristoi and non-Aristoi? When you're involved with what for the sake of argument we will call your equals, you choose only women. With your inferiors, men and women both." tClear enough where this was leading. "I would say your database is a little small, isn't it? Besides, I didn't wait till I became an Aristos before I started jumping into bed with boys." 0"But how many of the boys became Aristoi? Whatever their social class, they were still your inferiors, and with your inferiors, gender doesn't matter to you. You don't distinguish between men and women, because what makes them desirable is that they're in a subordinate position." P"I'd say there is more to it than that." "I'm sure there is. I never said there wasn't." She laid her cheek on his shoulder. f"I don't know whether that's a compliment or not." She looked off into the horizon for a moment before a reply rose to her lips. "I don't know that I meant it either way." An hour or so later the ride was over and Gabriel was in his bath musing over his morning. Our love white as snow on mountain peak, he recalled Clancy's words after love, taken from an old Han Dynasty poem by Jo Wenjun. BBrilliant as moon between clouds. BI'm told you have another lover. The next line. He'd forgotten it till now. A chill went up his back. Jo's poem had been about a woman saying good-bye to her faithless partner. For a moment he considered the possibilities. Gabriel wondered if Clancy had meant it as farewell, or if the poem had merely been meant as a signal that she knew of his other involvement, a little reminder to call him back to the Realized World. *FLASH < Priority 1 >. A jet of terror shot through Gabriel. Someone else, he thought, had been killed. 8He hoped it wasn't Zhenling. Aristos, this is Rubens TherpMn. The probe sent to Gaal 97 is halfway through its in-system pass. I've been monitoring the feed, and the data is unmistakable. Forgive the FLASH, but the matter is important. Gabriel calmed himself. This wasn't another mataglap strike. Report, TherpMn Rubens. The fourth planet around Gaal 97 has been terraformed. Preliminary data indicates that it's inhabited by tens of millions of people, though their level of technology would seem to be rather low. Orange Epoch or worse. There's a lot of burning biomass down there. NSurprise rolled through Gabriel's mind. Where did he get them? Gabriel wondered. Where did Saigo get all those people? He couldn't have exported them from the Logarchy without both immense logistical problems and other Aristoi discovering the fact. He made them. The answer came with awesome force. Gabriel felt his mind stagger with sickness and awe. 0Saigo had built these people, the same way he'd built the ecosystem off which they lived. Built the atmosphere, the trees, the life in the oceans and on the land. Built the entire population-tens of millions-and then left them here to struggle at a barbarized level of technology. :Totally at odds with the Aristoi's ideal of service to humanity. The most loathsome thing of which Gabriel had ever heard. The greatest crime in all history. Release the nano to build more probes, he told Rubens. Including those with interatmosphere capability. We're going to need a lot of them. 2At your service, Aristos. 0I will see the data now. At your service. tGabriel was going to have to come to the rescue, and fast. Chapter 9 ANIMAL TAMER: LMadness kindles madness in the people JMadness kindles madness in the heart dThe animals will rage when the meat is in the cage TAnd blood drives them together, then apart.  The probe was shooting through the Gaal 97 system at about one-fifth the speed of light. Its gravity generators were off, to avoid detection, and Gabriel ruled against a change in course this close to an inhabited area. The gravity waves might be observed. rStill, such data as the probe revealed was compelling. The planet had been half shadowed when the probe shot by, and the lit side showed bright swirls of blue ocean and silver cloud, white upthrust mountain ranges and green vegetation, all a far cry from the sultry, sulfurous atmosphere reported by first probes. There was a continuous respectful babble in the oneirochronon as more and more of the Cressida 's crew came on line to observe. Gabriel asked for a list of those currently in the oneirochronoic environment. Clancy was among them. Dr. Clancy. Will you make an estimate of the public health and sanitary conditions on the planet? I will do what I can, Aristos. But the status of hospitals and sewers is difficult to estimate from the data available. 6I ask only what's possible. BYes, Aristos. I'll do what I can. >Gabriel sorted the rest out into teams and gave each team an assignment, then busied himself with his own speculations until the team reports began to roll in. The night side showed a scattering of light, faint spots that marked human habitations. Spectrography revealed that it was biomass or oil that was burning, not gas or electric light-but even with that limitation, some of the glows were quite substantial, revealing cities with populations in the hundreds of thousands and enough sophistication and wealth to light their streets at night. This was confirmed by another look at the daylit hemisphere. Following the glittering tracks of rivers from the oceans Gabriel came upon more cities, marked more often than not by the grey-black smudge of chimney smoke. Where visibility hadn't been degraded by pollution or weather, individual people could be seen in streets. Rubens quickly wrote a program to estimate the population of the cities by applying an algorithm to the number of streets and a density sampling gained by counting individuals. The largest of the visible cities seemed to be in the vicinity of a million people. Apparently at least some social systems were working well. ROther areas, arid or covered with jungle canopy, seemed to have little population at all, although whole civilizations could in theory be concealed beneath the treetops. Gabriel's observation teams provided more detail: wind-and oar-powered vessels on the water, the largest in the neighborhood of eighty meters from stem to stern; draft animals at work in the fields; wagons, riders, and coaches moving on primitive roads. Castles overlooked rivers, star-shaped fortresses guarded cities and invisible borders, regiments inarched on drill fields. DSaigo apparently allowed his creatures to fight one another, world-sized gladiatorial games. Thousands could die, shot or hacked to bits by primitive weaponry, and collateral casualties among civilians would be even more appalling. Gabriel was staggered by the brazen callousness of it all. There was no sign of any engine more powerful than a windmill. These poor nanobuilt inhabitants had been deliberately barbarized. DWhile Gabriel and the crew of the Cressida were examining the data, their probe had swept through the Gaal 97 system and was now on the opposite side of the sun from the inhabited planet. None of its data indicated any further habitation of the system. Gabriel issued it orders to swing around on a long curve and return. Its course correction would be timed to coincide with the probe's eclipsing a distant quasi-stellar radio source in another galaxy: if there were detectors set up on Saigo's planet, perhaps they would believe the burst of gravity waves came from the quasar instead. Other probes were being readied in Cressidaj's nano-chambers, being linked together atom by atom. ~Gabriel withdrew from the oneirochronon, leaving the Rain behind to monitor any further developments. He found the Realized World uncomfortably damp: while he'd been focused on Gaal 97 he'd left his bath and thrown himself on his bed without toweling himself off. He seemed hyperalert; his brain was racing faster than Cressida. His pulse and breathing were elevated. He realized he was dehydrated and hungry. He rose, toweled, put on a day gown, poured fruit juice, and sent a message to Kem-Kem to prepare food. >NOW IT BEGINS. The imponderable voice rolled through his mind, leaving (to his surprise) no sense of surprise behind. There was a taste of metal on his tongue. Gabriel paused, waiting for another pronouncement, sensed nothing. The Voice (capitals coming to his mind) had Spoken. Silly Voice. He was going to have to do a lot of thinking, and he hoped the Voice would shut up while he was doing it. And despite what sense and thought recommended, Gabriel knew he would have to put that planet under his feet. Taste its air, drink its water, watch its inhabitants struggle with their appalling lives. He wouldn't be able to stop himself. However hideous, Saigo's planet was still the greatest marvel of the age. Gabriel had to experience it. *But all in good time. Backup, always backup. The data was shot via tachline to Gabriel's new communications setup: it would be held in simultaneous storage in several of Gabriel's data banks. Nothing but an all-out mataglap strike would destroy it, and a strike of that dimension would give away the conspirators far more decisively than anything Gabriel could do. Nothing but Gabriel's sending Fleta a code, once every seventy-two hours, could prevent the data from being released. XThe probe's return floated more data to the Cressidab: it only confirmed the first. The planet's population was estimated as being between 1.1 and 2.0 billion, a number that would be more fully refined as more information came in. VAfter sending the data packet and the preliminary team reports, Gabriel returned to the oneirochronon, listened for a moment to the hyperintelligent murmuring of his crew. @Gabriel Aristos? Marcus's voice. Good morning. I was about to ask you to evaluate the design potential- May I see you? Now? He made an Olympian survey of the study teams he'd set up, concluded his presence was no longer strictly necessary. If you like, he said. He welcomed the Black-Eyed Ghost into his redesigned quarters-Palladian-style pillars and plasterwork, sixteen shades of apricot paint, all applied by implanted chimpanzees working meticulously to Gabriel's design. Marcus offered a Posture of Formal Regard, then kissed Gabriel hello. Gabriel pressed his hand over the omental fetus. "You are well?" "A little crazed with unaccustomed hormones, but all right. And very happy." "I'm pleased, Black-Eyed Ghost. Does my mother still plague you?" "Increasingly. Vashti Geneteira questions your sanity, and mine, with increasing frequency." d"I believe it's now the fashion in many quarters." Manfred trotted up: Marcus knelt to greet the terrier and let Manfred lick his face. Gabriel dropped onto an apricot-and-silver sofa and offered tea. Marcus asked for orange juice and seated himself. "I've come about Clancy," he said. Manfred jumped onto the sofa next to him. P"Ah," Gabriel said. "She is displeased?" L"At some point she recognized what you were doing. She had a former partner who was prone to the practice, and she feels software sex partners are hideous bad taste." tEnlightenment descended upon Gabriel. "No wonder she's upset!" he said. "A software partner would have been poor style indeed. But my partner was real, linked through the oneirochronon." "Ah." "My performance was more than adequate, far as I can judge. As long as both were pleased, where's the harm?" Marcus considered this. "Perhaps you should ask Clancy. She's afraid you've grown bored with her." zGabriel was surprised. "I'll have to set that right. She is," tactfully, "one of most interesting and accomplished partners I've had in a great while, and I adore her utterly." Marcus looked at him for a moment, then nodded. "So do I, and I hate to see her upset." "She was monogamous for a number of years-perhaps old reflexes came to the fore." Marcus permitted a severe look to cross his face. "Tastes in these matters differ, you know. And no doubt the realization was an unpleasant shock, coining as an unpleasant reminder of a former relationship that did not end well." $Every so often, Gabriel reflected, he had to be reminded that though Marcus chose to look eighteen he really was thirty-odd years older than that. ("True," he conceded. B"You should have asked, Gabriel." "I should. I will ask her to breakfast and beg her forgiveness." "I hope you will." Marcus gave the terrier a final pat, then rose from the couch. "You wanted me to analyze something?" `"Industrial capacity and design, such as it is." ."As you wish, Aristos." Marcus offered Formal Regard, then left. Gabriel floated back into the oneirochronon, checked the progress of his teams. Among the messages waiting in his stack was a note from Clancy that her preliminary report was ready. FHave you had breakfast? he queried. $Coffee and a plum. That sounds an adequate first line for a poem, but insufficient for a meal. Will you join me? 0She hesitated, said yes. When will the river run dry? he added, a line from Li Jiyi, the poem that began I live at the river head, you at the mouth. FDrinking the same water, but apart. bHe ordered something digestive in the way of music. Kem-Kem's assistant delivered the usual banquet under heavy silver covers, and Clancy arrived shortly thereafter. Gabriel fed Manfred some boar sausage, then helped himself to woodcock in pastry and a shirred egg flavored with thyme and sweet basil. Clancy had fruit, cold salmon in aspic, more coffee. He admired Her skillful hands as she peeled a kiwi with a little curved knife. j"Have we been speaking overmuch in poetry?" he asked. "Prose, then." She studied the kiwi, raised both brows. "Are you bored?" "No." $"Three hours ago?" D"Restless. Frustrated. Not bored." "I don't want to be part of something you continue with because you're having a dull time, and there's no other adequate diversion." "That's not the case." Gabriel could feel the pressure of the Welcome Rain in his skull, wanting to manipulate this situation in his usual capable, inhuman manner. He always tried to keep the Welcome Rain away from anyone he cared about; but the Welcome Rain was a part of him, as much a part as any other component of his personality, and the part couldn't be banished totally. He threw himself to his knees before her and took both her feet in his hands. She looked down at him in well-bred surprise. "You aren't a diversion," he said, "or something to fill empty moments in time. You're someone I need." 6"And the other? The thing?" >"Not a thing. Zhenling Ariste." The knife hesitated in midpeel. "I'm impressed," she said finally. :"She's an impressive person." 8"The lives of the Aristoi are so intricate," she said. "I've watched you for months now, but I can't begin to comprehend it all. I only have a part of you." ("An important part." @"Can she share more than I can?" "Probably not. The Aristoi are too territorial to make good partners." Slices of kiwi began to fall onto her plate. "I'm surprised you're still interested in me at all. I can't hold a candle to an Ariste." She looked up at him. Her voice softened. "Rabjoms couldn't hold a candle to you." L"Will you come to the planet with me?" "Hundreds. Thousands, perhaps." PSo Saigo had been able to tap the brainpower of his most brilliant subordinates, and all without telling most of them that their inventions would have an immediate use. Other theories rose, were debated, were shelved until further data arrived. Gabriel called an end to the meeting and rose to his feet. The others saluted him and began to leave. Clancy called out to him. "Yes, TherpMn?" "I wanted to tell you I've finished the search-and-destroy nano for the meningitis virus," Clancy said. "It's a much more elegant version of the one I cobbled together when Krishna was ill, far more efficient and less dangerous for the patient-it '-sweeps up all the bacteria DNA instead of just exploding it and permitting it to foul the patient's bloodstream. Shall I wait for the next Nano Day to submit-it for approval, or will you want to look at it before that?" "I'll look at it within the hour," Gabriel said. "Congratulations." "I'm also well advanced on a package that may be useful in case of Lodestone's disease." Gabriel took her in his arms and kissed her. "I'm obviously not giving you enough work." "You'll make up for that soon. Assuming the plan to land on Saigo's planet is still in the works." "It is-" :Her look turned reflective. "I'm learning a great deal, and you've awakened such stirrings of ambition ..." She sighed. "Life was once so simple, Disturber." "Blushing Rose," Gabriel smiled, "I've always found simplicity overrated." Cressida sailed on, aimed like a bullet for the heart of Gaal 97. The meningitis cure, and later the Lodestone package, were patented under Clancy's name and released to the Logarchy. Two more inhabited planets were discovered, along with another that was still in the process of being terraformed. Back at Gabriel's domaine, on Brightkinde, the election campaign was in full swing. TThe second wave of probes hit Gaal 97. Some perched on asteroids to replicate themselves, others dived straight for Saigo's planet. Of these, some orbited at a respectful distance, sensors deployed, while others dove into the atmosphere. Most looked like ordinary objects, very often a simple nail or paving stone that could burrow into a building or roadway and record everything it observed for transmission later. Information was sent in short, unobtrusive bursts, each packed with data, each directed to relay satellites on the far edge of the system. It was hoped they would remain undetected, even those that dropped straight into population centers to sample the inhabitants. Some of whom turned out to speak something related to Latin, a descendant about as far removed from its original source, though in another direction, as Provencal. Others spoke a Khmer derivative. Others something else that sounded like a Navajo dialect. The replicant probes followed and with them came more data on languages. There were several hundred language families, fully as many as had been present during the Yellow Epoch of old Earth1 precedents. The broadcast images showed that existence, even for the better-off, more than justified Thomas Hobbes's remarks on life being nasty, brutish, and short. Heads were observed stuck on pikes above city gates; bodies that showed signs of pitiless torture swung in cages over city streets. Filthy children slept in gutters while disinterested oligarchs in their finery were carried in chairs over the starving bodies. Diseases were various, unimpeded by rational treatment, and often fatal. Disfigurement was even more prevalent: seemingly healthy individuals were often revolting ugly, a fact that disturbed Cressida's cultured, gene-enhanced observers almost as much as anything else. In the country, wandering families of laborers and gleaners slept under haystacks while those with property largely slept with their animals. Famine seemed fairly commonplace-banditry, much of it under the guise of warfare, even more so. The style of warfare destroyed whole provinces. Campaigns were under way in many corners of the globe, and economic despair, rising populations, and the collateral effects of war itself seeded the armies with more volunteers than could be fed. The primitive firearms available in the more civilized countries increased the soldiers' abilities to terrorize and extort the population, but gave little power to the civilians' abilities to resist. Only those who could afford large and costly fortifications could guarantee any degree of safety to the local populations, and this was almost everywhere a king, emperor, or despot. The result, everywhere, was tyranny, a tyranny as total as the tyrants' limited grasp of technology permitted. Not a breath of political freedom was to be discovered except in very isolated rural populations, or most often in neolithic cultures living in areas of environmental extremity, polar chill or tropical jungle. rIt was mass chaos, mass hardship, mass death. The lives of the aristocracy were enviable only in comparison to those of the Demos. The cumulative impact of the probes' images staggered Cressida^'s crew. Rubens and Yaritomo took to spending several hours each day in tranquil meditation; others buried themselves in work or sport; Clancy took refuge in unremitting fury. 2"Sadist, did I say?" she said. "De Sade was a piker by comparison! Hitler was a trifle maladjusted, Stalin a blunderer, and Chingiz Khan a mere amateur!" She pushed her half-eaten breakfast away. "If you see any sign of Saigo," she said, "I want you to sterilize his location to half a solar unit." 6Probe images floated through Gabriel's mind. Red-armed washerwomen, drunken young men carrying weapons, a legless beggar with a coating of artfully applied filth. All speaking plausibly derived variations of Earth' languages-Saigo's de-sign was fascinating in its baroque complexity. \"This is the end of him, you know," Gabriel said. "Once these images are seen, Saigo's finished. Even his own people will be appalled-he'll face a revolt in his own domaine." "It can't happen too soon." She reached out, took his-hand. "You can't release the data now, can you?" NHe shook his head. He remembered another scene: a marketplace, pop-eyed merchants arguing over the price of vegetables while a wide-eyed girl-child expertly filched a cabbage( behind their backs. "We've got to be absolutely safe," he said. "The communications setup won't be complete for another five or six months." "The amount of human suffering down there is so appalling ... Can't something be done?" "By all appearances it's been going on for hundreds of years. Another six months won't make much difference in those poor people's lives." J"Except in the number of their dead." Gabriel recalled a scene of naked children playing some kind of game, screaming as they ran through the streets, ducking under the hooves of carnage horses. He had never in his life seen children play with such abandon, or as dangerously. NThey are daimones, he thought. Not complete personalities at all. That's why everyone on the planet seemed so intense: it was as if they had the Burning Tiger in them, along with Kouros and Mataglap, and no overarching personality to control them, just switching from one to the other, reactive. Not really self-aware. Just essences. Strong perfumes, bitter, sweet, or heady. T"Disturber?" Clancy's voice was tentative. Gabriel snapped to the present. "I beg your pardon," he said. "I was thinking of something I'd seen on the planet." 6"So was I. The cemeteries." f"We've become redundant, it occurs to me," Gabriel said. "We've got the data in our comm network, we've got a communications system growing throughout the Logarchy. If we and the Cressida disappear now, the data will be released-not to everyone, not completely, but to enough of the Aristoi to result in effective action. Our task from this point is to gather more data, and to make certain that the timing is right for its release." jClancy smiled thinly. "And to stay alive, I presume." F"Yes," Gabriel agreed. "That, too." The oneirochronon, the ballroom, the dance. Mediacorte, demduna, cruzado. Apologies. `"Apologies," Gabriel said. "I'm neglecting you." 8Distantly she moved within the circle of his arms. The stack of messages from Zhenling had grown to alarming proportions. He had wanted to construct an oneirochronic fantasy for her, like her troika ride, but he hadn't the time. The best he could do was repeat himself, take her here. "The work is taking all my time," he said. "I've made a breakthrough." "Congratulations." Her eyes were focused at a point 'somewhere behind his right shoulder. "And you?" \"I'm in a base camp halfway up Mount Trasker." ("You're doing well?" "Got over a couple of moraines successfully, but the hard part's yet to come. You know-where the mountain turns vertical." Gabriel thought of a mountain range he'd seen on Saigo's planet, volcanic tuff soft enough that the inhabitants could dig in it with their primitive stone tools, building themselves eyries halfway up the mountainside. The way humans seemed to adapt to every ecosystem even without the technology available in the Logarchy. "That was humor," Zhenling said. "You might have acknowledged the attempt, even if it wasn't that amusing." "I'm sorry, Madame Sable," Gabriel said. "I must be the worst of companions." FLASH. Screaming in his head. FLASH. < Priority 1 > Gabriel Aristos, we have detected a tachline communication from Saigo's planet. "A poor companion," Gabriel said, "and I'm about to be a worse one." Her tilted eyes turned to his. "No kind of companion at all," she said, "if I'm any judge." "You are, madame, the greatest and wisest of judges," Gabriel said. "And I crave your pardon." Zhenling smiled, a bit coldly. "I'll pass sentence later," she said. A coded tachline burst had been intercepted by one of Gabriel's cut-system satellites, which through sheer coincidence had just happened to pass between the transmitter and receiver. Apparently the transmission was aimed at Earth2, right for the data store that was Luna, Saigo was using the Hyperlogos without anyone knowing. Cressida's suspicions had been proved absolutely correct. Gabriel ordered one of his satellites to hover perpetually between Saigo's planet and Luna and intercept any further communications. The burst's origin was very precisely pinpointed: a large mansion in one of the largest cities centered in a temperate zone of one of the two southern continents. The city had a population of around three-quarters of a million people and was the capital of a large, thriving, expanding kingdom, ruled by the typical vainglorious despot with, in this case, more-than-typical efficiency. It was also the only place that had shown any evidence whatever of modern technology. ~Concentrate the next generation of probes there, Gabriel ordered. We'll want data on language, customs, dress, social organization. He called up the aerial survey maps of the city and smiled. HThat's where we'll go, Gabriel said. Chapter 10 PABST: TI will pit the actors one against another LI will drive them mad with my demands pWhat reaction will I get from this savage, half-tame pet XWhen I lash her with my whip and my commands?  Welcome new scents rose gloriously to Gabriel's senses: leather, damp soil, horse sweat, vegetation thriving after recent rain, and always manure. Red wildflowers flashed past the windows, were reflected in the silver butts of bandit-deterring snaphaan pistols, hopelessly awkward and long as his forearm, stuck in embroidered, tasseled window-side holsters. The uncovered wheels flung up little rainbows of spray as they thundered through puddles left in the two-rut highway. The sensation was all of a complexity that only the most careful oneirochronic programming could hope to simulate. Even Zhenling's dacha hadn't been this good. Gabriel's heart soared at the reality of it all. He was off the Cressida@ at last, and moving across the surface of Saigo's planet-Terrina, as it was called locally. Gabriel squeezed Clancy's hand and laughed out of sheer exuberance. TThis was going to be a glorious adventure. It had started out adventurously enough, slamming through the atmosphere in a glowing aerodynamic shell that streamed fire from its trailing edges as it battled with thickening air ... Rubens's new heat shield ceramic performed as advertised. Gabriel hadn't dared bring Cressidaz too far into the system, so he and his party had shitted to Pyrrho*, sending the smaller yacht on a looping trajectory that would pass near Saigo's planet without having to use its gravity generators while in-system. 0The shell, once free of Pyrrho and braked by the atmosphere to a subsonic velocity, altered its shape to permit a slow glide to the target, a pasture near what passed locally for a major highway. Backup chemical rockets were provided in case an abort proved necessary, but they weren't used: there was no gravity generator to emit detectable waves. When the glider had disgorged its passengers and cargo, little nanos dissolved the structure, turning it within minutes to crumbling, windblown powder. The coach was a careful copy of the most advanced version on Terrina's roads-unsprung, dangerously top-heavy, but gorgeously ornamented with landscape paintings on the rear and sides (copies of Canalettos from the London period), and otherwise covered with elaborate wood carvings, glowing nymphs, and fabulous beasts, all covered in gold leaf. The four horses were matched black "modern" Friesians-as all old equine stock had perished with Earth1, modern horses were re-creations, based on old records and creative reinterpretation. The four were absolutely matched in this case, since they were identical quads, grown in vats from the same genetic design and implanted with renos so that White Bear, the inexperienced coachman, could better control them through the oneirochronon. The massive horses, with their synchronized high-stepping gait, were an awesome prologue to the gold-leaf coach that followed. TherpMn Yaritomo sat next to White Bear on the top, a musketoon standing upright between his knees. Two riding horses, genetically "modern" Polish-Arabs, trotted behind the coach for use in town and country. On the bench at the rear of the coach, legs dangling over Canaletto's view of the Thames near Hampton Court, was the lean form of Quiller, a cloak and wide-brimmed hat protecting his servant's livery. A sheathed sword and a pair of pistols were ready near his hand. The ancient weapons were just for show. Gabriel and his company were well protected by other arms that were neither as clumsy nor as apparent. The five adventurers called themselves the Surveyors, as opposed to the thirty Synthesists who remained behind in Cressida. Manfred thrust his head out the window, sniffing the air, and Gabriel followed suit. Anvil-shaped cumulonimbus floated distantly, threatening a late-afternoon drenching. A thatch-roofed half-timbered farmhouse pressed against the side of the road, its narrow bulls-eye windows thrown open. Barley stood breastbone-high in the early summer fields, most of it probably destined for the brewhouses. $Occasionally White Bear exercised his fine tenor. A ruined castle, covered with ivy, stood on a nearby hill, overlooking a group of grazing sheep. vSaigo had gone so far as to populate his world with ruins, ruins supposed to belong to earlier civilizations that had never actually existed. He had given his cultures an artificial past. dThe carriage slowed as it topped a rise, then gained speed as the road descended into a valley. There was a gap in the foliage, and Gabriel caught a view of a wide, tranquil vale, a silver-blue river winding as gently as the Thames in Canaletto's view, small towns-suburbs really, of the capital beyond-clustered on either side of the broad, placid river ... a view as perfect, peaceful, and symmetrical as any of Canaletto's caprice. The road dropped, met another, and widened. New gravel crunched under the wheels, and a gibbet passed by. Hanging from it, in a rusty cage of iron straps, was a decaying bandit transfixed by the rusting cleaver-like sword that Had disemboweled him. An old greybeard in a pot helm, armed with a long staff, stood guard over the body. \No, Gabriel thought. Not Canaletto. Not quite. BStop at an inn for luncheon, Aristos? An oneirochronic inquiry, relayed through the reno and transmitter concealed in-built into, really-one of Gabriel's trunks. hVery well. Gabriel missed Kem-Kem's cooking already. Perhaps it was better to test the impersonation in a small town before they attempted it in the city. The town smelled of manure and consisted of neat whitewashed stone houses, narrow and tall on either side of the narrow road, each with flowery window boxes. White Bear pulled the team into the courtyard of the inn; ostlers bustled to feed and water the horses; a grey-bearded servant in some vague sort of uniform opened Gabriel's door and placed beneath it a stepstool. "Grazame." Gabriel hitched his sword around and stepped out. His small stiff shoes balanced awkwardly on cobbles. He suppressed an urge to repair the scars and wens on the greybeard's face, and turned to give his hand to Clancy. The basic feminine costume consisted of oppressive layers of skirts over perfectly adequate pantaloons, but Clancy had practiced aboard Cressida and now moved as gracefully as if born to it. She wore a wide hat with the brim rolled fore-and-aft and decorated with silk flowers. Her breast was flattened by a kind of polished hardwood stomacher on which was usually painted some prototype of feminine accomplishment-a flower arrangement, for example, or the tools of a lacemaker. *Clancy's was a flute. .Gabriel was dressed in the same open-fronted black velvet cassock he'd worn, oneirochronically, in his Persepolis party. The fashions were close enough-his own distinctions just marked him as a foreigner. All he'd needed to add was a wide hat with the brim pinned up on one side. And he'd altered his appearance. His hair was now jet-black, longer, and straight, his eyes brown. He'd left the epicanthal folds-they weren't entirely unknown here, and he was supposed to be a foreigner anyway. NClancy exited the coach without mishap, and she and Gabriel glided toward the entrance to the inn. The servant looked up at Gabriel and smiled with pitted brown teeth. \"Sas ekhselencias requirn refresco?" he asked. Gabriel favored him with a gracious inclination of the head and spoke with an aristocratic drawl. "Pet' merendas solement'. No mi impelero frettero bar la capital'." Odd use of the reflexive, that, Gabriel thought. We are myself-driving in haste to the capital. The greybeard affected to be impressed. He turned to the ostlers and shouted "Gitme, gitme" to speed them about their work. Above the door of the inn were plaster reliefs of horrid monsters that glared at incomers with red basilisk orbs. In-side, the whitewashed walls were painted with an appetizing religious allegory of sinners being dragged to Hell. While their "little luncheon"-pet' merendas, as opposed to the more elaborate gran merendas-was being prepared, Gabriel and Clancy were served a sauce of garlic, onions, and peppers on little round slices of bread. White Bear, Quiller, and Yaritomo dined in the servants' hall. The beer was toasty and rich; the luncheon, when it came, was simple but hearty. The Damned in Hell gazed at the food with longing eyes. Gabriel was disappointed that no one asked him who he was. He had his story all ready. The country was officially called Beukhomana, but its inhabitants usually referred to it as Ter'Madrona, Motherland. It was one of a number of nations in which a Romance language was spoken-if not for the supposition that the whole biosphere had existed for, at the most, a few centuries, this could have been taken as evidence for a large Earth'-style Latin empire in the planet's history. Instead it merely demonstrated design economies on the part of Saigo and his team, who had simply grafted variants onto already-existing language stocks. @Saigo's economies also meant that Gabriel's microprobes could listen to the Beukhomanan language and have an excellent chance of understanding and analyzing it. The inhabitants of Ter'Madrona were largely dolichocephalic Caucasians, though according to their own history they had been overrun three or four centuries previously by Turkic-speaking brachycephalic Mongolian conquerors. These had only recently been ejected in a series of wars of liberation that had, once Beukhomana had been united and militarized, evolved into wars of conquest and religion. The Latinate language now included a number of Turkic phrases and grammatical turns, and there were. Mongolian genes in the population, especially in the ruling classes. Gabriel and Yaritomo, with their epicanthal folds, were not out of place, and they were impersonating foreigners in any case-Beukhomana held commerce with any number of nations inhabited by "Asian" types. Despite the economies of race and language, Gabriel found any resemblance between this Terrina's "Latins" and "Turks" and the "Europeans" and "Asians" of Earth1's own history to be largely coincidental. The Caucasians inhabited an area larger and less well-defined than "Europe" ever was, and lived in the southern hemisphere; the Mongolians lived to the north and west of them, and straddled three continents; the Negroids had two smallish continents all their own, both equatorial, and monopolized the thriving ocean trade between them. $Still, with all the changes, Terrina was the most recognizable of Saigo's inhabited worlds-perhaps it had been the first, and the designers felt freer to experiment with subsequent creations. Another planet featured one neolithic culture that lived in pyramid-shaped concrete-and-stone apartment blocks and spoke a completely artificial language, one with no referent in human history. The reno aboard Cressida was using much of its massive capacity to analyze its structure, so far without great success. BAnother of Saigo's worlds featured both aquatic humanoids with gills and high-mountain peoples with super-efficient lungs. Yet another was inhabited by humans with genetically boosted intelligence. All these creations were at low levels of technology, ranging from Grey Epoch neolithic to Orange Epoch savages-with-guns-the more intelligent ones didn't seem to be faring any better than their brethren in that regard. Nine planets altogether, at least as far as Gabriel's probes " had reached. And of those, there had been one single intercepted signal-here, from Terrina, from the capital of Beukhomana, the city called Vila Real. The capital. Are you realistic? That's how the rental agent's question came across to Gabriel. I wouldn't want to lease to anyone not realistic. The word was actually realistico. From real, Gabriel realized, "royal." As in Vila Real, Royal City. But the agent wasn't asking if Gabriel was a royalist; instead he referred to Iuso Rex, Jesus the King. bAre you a Christian? That was what the man meant. |The Christianity he referred to, and its basic documents, were specific to Terrina-it was Christianity without any reference to the Jews. Saigo, or whoever had developed this culture, had apparently concluded that Judaism was so unique to its original setting that it couldn't be transplanted-at least not without more work than he wanted to undergo. Gabriel's electronic spies had got a good look at the Beukhomanans' Bible and found that, except for some highly altered texts anticipating the arrival of the Messiah, most of the Old Testament had been expunged. The fundamental New Testament was much the same, with references to Jews, Pharisees, and Romans altered to fit the planet's phony history. Sloppy work, Gabriel thought. He could, given the opportunity, have done better. RThere were Muslims on Terrina, too, but their holy book had fared better in translation, came almost straight across. Such was the advantage of inspiration over history. VThe Realisticos had no Pope to set doctrine-or rather there were too many, in too many nations, and none of their ecclesiastical writs ran in Beukhomana, which had instead its council of bishops appointed by the king. Variant faiths and schisms sprang in profusion, some authorized and some not. Heresy was punishable by death, but it was difficult, in this confused background, to tell who was heretic and who merely confused. >"Of course I'm realistic." Gabriel drew himself up, pretended to slight offense. "The Gospel has long reached our shores. I'm as Christian as the day is long." PThe agent had a stiff neck that tilted his head at an angle, and a strange, mask-like cast to his face that kept flitting on and off. "I beg Your Excellency's pardon," the agent said. "The Argosy Vassals are ever active within the confines of the city. You'd do well to stomach it out in church." "I shall," Gabriel said. His reno failed to provide him any clear data on the Argosy Vassals, but the stomach business seemed clear enough. D"Take care to be seen." A warning. The agent eyed Clancy-across the room looking at the plasterwork-then sidled closer to Gabriel. His voice was pitched low. "If you should wish to rent a small, discreet cabinet in Santa Leofra's quarter of the city, I'm your man." Gabriel steeled himself against the man's breath. He had yet to make the acquaintance here of anyone with good teeth. "I do not believe such a place will be required," Gabriel said, "but if I see the need, I shall inform you." l"You will need servants. I can make the arrangements." "Tomorrow." Gabriel took the man's arm, steered him toward the door. "I thank you, senator. My man Quil Lhur will pay you." In fine coins of solid nanobuilt gold, not the debased wreckage that passed for Beukhomanan coin of the realm. "Tertiary syphilis," Clancy said, after the man had gone. "The stiff neck? The parkinsonian mask flitting on and off? You saw?" Before leaving Cressidan she had loaded her reno with data on extinct diseases. *"I saw and wondered." H"Fourth case I've seen today. Saigo has blessed Terrina with so much ..." Her voice trailed away. She strolled to the window, crossed her arms, looked out. "Saigo would have had to recreate it-the original spirochete died with Earth1. We've seen smallpox in the hospitals, and cholera, and typhus. All reinvented, so that he could inflict it on the people here." She took a breath, let it out slowly. "Such loving work." *Gabriel approached from behind, put his arms around her. He could feel the tension in her. "Another few months," he said, "we make them all go away." "Perhaps we could invite him over along with the servants he's sending," Clancy said. "I could drop an antibiotic _ into his beer." 2"At least we're protected." With rebuilt immune systems about two thousand percent more efficient than the local variety, and that was just for starters. "Into all their beers. Into the vats at the brewery. All the breweries ..." Her voice, and the fantasy, died away. Gabriel swayed back and forth with Clancy in his arms as he gazed down at the cobbled street. Their apartment was in a wealthy suburb called Santo Georgio, halfway between the royal palace and the capital city, and the street was fairly wide and fairly empty. Only a few servants were seen, some pushing barrows as they headed to the market on behalf of their masters. Beggars perched unobtrusively in doorways, each assigned a place-so the agent had said-by the beggarmaker, their syndic, who often altered them with crude surgeries in order to make them more pitiable and worthy of charity. |Gabriel's eyes rose from the streets to the rooflines. The district was fairly new, built of a gold-brown stone that would glow a fine shade of red at sunset. The buildings featured gracefully curved gables and false fronts, vaguely baroque in style, that somehow suggested their plump, wealthy, satisfied inhabitants. Over every door and window was the carving of a fabulous beast, fangs and talons bared, threatening anyone in the street below. The symbol was universal-even the poorest hovel had a crude painting of a snake or dragon above the door. BGabriel's eyes sought a particular silhouette of dormer and chimney on the horizon. There-five gables, leaded roof, brick chimneys twisted artfully into spirals. jThe only place on Terrina, so far as he knew, that possessed greater technology than that of the Orange Culture Epoch. The precise location from which the transmission had occurred. He needed to see it. That was why he had chosen Santo Georgio as a place to live. "I should present my credentials down at the Saffron Monopoly," he said. "Would you wish to accompany me?" .Clancy sighed. "You're supposed to be the foreign lord-I'm just a glorified servant. Won't this saffron person think it a bit strange if I'm with you?" p"Perhaps. But foreign lords are supposed to be strange." r"I think I will occupy myself with domestic matters today. I want to check the kitchens and cisterns to make certain we're not going to be poisoned the second we have a sip of water or bite of supper." She sighed again. "And I'll want to spray the bedding to make certain we're clean of bedbugs, lice, and fleas." .He knew her reluctance wasn't simply an uncharacteristic fit of domesticity: she simply didn't want to go out into the streets and encounter the disfigured hordes whom Saigo had inflicted with the diseases she knew she could cure if she had the chance. Her gaze was fixed down in the street. Looking, he knew, at the beggars, the ones who had chosen mutilating surgery in order to guarantee a secure living. 4Today was their second on Terrina. The previous night, in the midst of the promised rainstorm, they'd stayed at an inn across from the Martyrs' Cathedral, a gloomy half-built church, built on the site of a famous massacre, that hulked over its district like a vast grey beast squatting on its haunches. From their tiny oval upstairs window Gabriel and Clancy could see the church portals, around which clustered gory bas-reliefs of barbarian quasi-Turks slaughtering Beu-khomanan zealots. The supposed bones of the zealots in question (pilgrims informed Gabriel over dinner) were Wall-mounted in artful geometric designs and displayed in a side chapel. Praying to them was supposed to be good for a number of ailments, including (if the cause was just) ridding oneself of troublesome neighbors. Gabriel wanted to see the bones, but in the morning there just wasn't time. He looked down from his apartment window and saw the agent hurrying away, his neck still tilted at that odd angle. A cure in his drink, Gabriel thought: good. Though his , wife or mistress would probably reinfect him before the week was out. He kissed Clancy's cheek and left the apartment after Strapping on his sword-the straight double-edged "female" broadsword used in wushu, not the longer, heavier instrument brandished locally. The stable boy (employed by the landlord) saddled an Arab for him. He dropped a coin into the lap of the legless beggar on his doorstep and rode away. The beggar wore a steel helmet, meant to imply that he'd lost his legs in one of the king's wars, but as he rode past Gabriel couldn't help but wonder if the stumps were the work of the beggarmaker. ""Prince Ghibreel?" The monopolist in his darkened room looked at Gabriel with eyes rheumed by cataract. "You are a relative of the Nanchan king?" "I am a Kinsman of the Twenty-Third Degree," Gabriel said.' 'His Omniscience the emperor and I share a great-grandfather." N"Emperor, not king. I beg your pardon." "Nanchan is far away, Highness. There is no reason why those here should concern themselves with its court etiquette." >Or so Gabriel hoped. The twin islands of Nanchan were on the other side of the planet, in the northern hemisphere, and Beukhomana had little contact with them. The monopolist's look was sharp, though a little eerie since his cataract-ridden eyes were focused over one of Gabriel's shoulders. The man was in his forties and looked much older. His hair and iron-frizzed beard were white, his cheeks reddened with rouge applied over a white-lead cosmetic that was probably doing unspeakable things to his liver. His eyebrows were shaved and redrawn halfway up his forehead in quizzical half-circles. His teeth were black, possibly the result of syphilis. His lips were reddened with betel-he imported the stuff and was trying to make it fashionable. Heavy crepe was drawn over the windows to keep the room dark, so that his pupils would widen around the cataracts and permit him a degree of vision. "We receive Nanchan nutmeg and cloves," Adrian said. "The crop was abundant, last you knew?" &"The signs favored a good harvest. But I'm not in that business-I'm from the northern island, and my family's for-tune is based on the salt trade." The monopolist gave a little rightward jerk of his chin, an affirmative gesture. "Always reliable." "That is the case, Lord be praised." Saffron House was deep in the heart of the city, on the Royal Canal. There the great monopolist Prince Adrian spent his afternoons overseeing the trade awarded his grandfather in return for forgiving a loan to the then-king. Adrian's wealth and title were based on commerce, not royal descent. Gabriel had been faintly surprised that the business wasn't left to deputies, but apparently the prince was obsessive about the family business and, despite decaying vision, kept his nose in the books. Prince Adrian glanced at the (perfectly forged) letter of introduction allegedly written him by a family member in Kundzara, a saffron-trading station five long months away by sea. He put it down next to the gift Gabriel had presented him, a small silver chest decorated with enamel inlays of mythological scenes-a copy of a fine work done originally, eons ago, by Cellini. Gabriel was disappointed that Adrian hadn't paid much attention to it. Perhaps it was too exquisite, he thought-maybe he just should have covered the thing with crudely cut '. hunks of precious stone. "You wish an introduction to society, my prince?" he said. "Very well. There is a reception tomorrow evening at Count Rhombert's, in honor of the engagement of his niece to old General Baiazd-another voice in favor of Rhombert's reentry to Court, you see." :"I'm afraid not, Excellence." "That isn't necessary." Sharply. "What is necessary are the conditions of my presenting you." nGabriel leaned forward. "I am all attention, Highness." "You will shun the party of the Piscopos Ignatio. We support Peregrino in doctrinal matters-you are realistico, are you not?" 0"Of course, Excellence." "You had better be, and orthodox, too." Adrian pointed a heavy-ringed finger at him. "You will also avoid the ex-chancellor's party, the so-called Velitos. They will all be wearing copper mourning medals, as His Majesty decided, at my recommendation"-the monopolist smiled-"to have the old bastard disemboweled. And thirdly, you will refuse to acknowledge so much as the existence of the Old Horse Faction, particularly Duke Tenzin. Since Ladimero's death, they've become the real threat." Gabriel considered this. Another of his forged letters of introduction was to this selfsame Tenzin. But still, he reckoned, Adrian would do. \"How shall I know them, Excellence?" he asked. Adrian gave a satisfied smile. "They shall be the ones to whom I shall not introduce you." Gabriel started to nod, but his reno reminded him to give the little rightward jerk of the chin instead. 6"I understand, Excellence." :"These terms are acceptable?" 0"Of course, Excellence." Adrian took the letter of introduction, glanced at the seals again, then put the letter in a pile of other correspondence. "Come to my house in the Via Maximilianus tomorrow at the third gong of the evening watch, and we will proceed from there. Do not bring your own coach or companions-tomorrow night I will introduce you, and at some future date you may introduce them." $"Yes, Excellence." "Very well, my young prince." Adrian smiled with his strong black teeth. "You may take your leave." Gabriel rose from his padded leather chair into a Posture of Formal Regard, then went to one knee-a servant had earlier provided a pillow for this purpose-bent his head, and placed the palm of his right hand to his forehead. Adrian jerked his chin. "Good afternoon, prince. God speed you." "And you." Saffron House was in the oldest part of the city, the commercial district. The ancient streets were clogged with wagons, handcarts, and barrows. Life bubbled all round Gabriel, eccentric, driven, and ferocious. "Hey!" some broken-nosed old woman hailed. "That horse got any brains, with that dished-in face?" Gabriel laughed in delight at this-the woman was as colorful as a character in a romance. Scowling, beribboned men, carrying swords and stepping right out of the same fantasy, offered to beat the woman for a consideration: Gabriel, who noted that their right wrists, used to dandle swords, were twice as big around as the left, declined. Drunken, dirty-faced children reeled after him, begging for coins-"for beer," one said, as if Gabriel was supposed to approve of this ambition. He decided not to feed their appetites. They abused him in vile terms and bent for cobblestones to throw. Gabriel accelerated and crossed over a bridge. Below, narrow canal barges brought commerce to the warehouses. The cobbles fell short. \Yet just a short distance away from these scenes, past a decayed old city gate now used as a jail, was a pleasant quarter of large houses and old tree-lined avenues, among them the Via Maximilianus on which Adrian had his house. Here were the ancestral mansions of many of the old families of the city. Gabriel rode through the district on his way home. Like his own suburb, the area was strictly residential and the streets were largely empty save for messengers, servants, and beggars. He considered what such a district would be like in his own time: there would be restaurants, boutiques, parks, galleries, perhaps a concert hall or theater. FHere there was nothing. The streets were dangerous at night, even here, so there was no night life, nothing approximating cafe society or even a good restaurant. Polite society dined at home, at the home of a friend, or (if traveling) at an inn, behind a stout door bolted against intruders. The nobility who controlled the country, court appointments, and the civil administration belonged to fewer than three hundred families. A stranger wishing to move in their circles would have to provide letters of introduction from one of their number to another. Hence Gabriel's forged introductions. It appeared that, simply by presenting one of them, he'd involved himself in the hopeless puzzle of court politics, an intricate maze so convoluted that even Cressidaz's omnipresent eavesdroppers failed to make much sense of it. Velitos? Old Horse Faction? Was that the same as the Old Court Party, of which the eavesdroppers had also heard? Perhaps it was best, in the event, to be guided by Prince Adrian. The monopolist had, after all, survived and prospered amid all this. He returned to Santo Georgia, to a fine if improvised vegetarian dinner-the meat at the market had not enticed-some flute music from Clancy, a privy of unspeakable vileness, and a bed big enough for both a king and a fair-sized harem. His reno reviewed everything the eavesdroppers had learned about local politics. There were listening spikes in Adrian's office and home, and Gabriel was interested to know what the monopolist thought of his visitor. Nothing at all, apparently. Once Gabriel took his leave, Adrian never mentioned Prince Ghibreel to any of his associates. Gabriel was disappointed. He would have thought an Aristos was worth at least a mention. "Count Gerius," Adrian said, "the Knot Secretary. Countess Fidellia. His Excellency Prince Ghibreel of Nanchan." There wasn't room enough at the packed reception for formal bows-people were jammed together in a sweating, reeking mass, with new arrivals still packing themselves in. Gabriel was the tallest person present: his view of the Beu-khomanan elite was largely confined to views of long, carefully curled hair and sweating foreheads. Prince Adrian's enormous prestige created a respectful distance around his armchair, and only this allowed Gabriel to cross his palms over his breast and incline his torso respectfully toward Gerius and his lady. The countess was heavily pregnant and looked about sixteen years of age. The Knot Secretary had a grey-streaked beard and wore more cosmetic than his wife. He had the heavy shoulders and thick wrist of a swordsman, and the sword as well. V"Is that a toy sword you've got?" he asked. \"It is the sword of my country," Gabriel said. B"Looks light enough for a woman." "It is-that's why it's called a 'female sword,' or sometimes 'scholar sword.'" "Which are you?" Gabriel looked into Gerius's eyes and saw a savage daimMn, perhaps a little drunk, glowing there. t"Female," Gerius prompted, "or scholar?" In case Gabriel had missed the point. It wasn't clear to Gabriel why either category was supposed to be insulting, but in context it clearly was. Gabriel inflated his chest with a breath, straightened his legs to raise his center of gravity above that of the count, to the First Posture of Esteem. He used the Principal Inflection of Command. "I am a prince of my country," he said, "and a master of the Eighteen Warlike Techniques." He glided forward slightly, intruding subtly into the count's space, and ended in the catlike Second Posture. His voice lowered to diminish the threat. "Which of these are you?" Gerius swayed back slightly. He hadn't actually taken a step back, but even that slight retreat had lost the battle, and his only option at this point was to overtrump, to escalate all the way to violence. nWhich, Gabriel was fairly certain, he wouldn't do here. (But Mataglap made his preparations, just in case. They involved the classic O-Lo-Dzai of the Mantis Style, Hook-Grapple-Pluck, ideal for close confines, but Gabriel wasn't really paying attention to the specifics.) bGerius blinked. Then he smiled-took, rather, a conscious decision to smile-and clapped Gabriel on the shoulder. "Bravo, my bull!" he said, making a joke of it. "We must practice together one time. My sword master is Senator Osano in the Old Sailmaker's Courtyard. I am in his loft on Mariaday afternoons." @"I will be honored, Excellence." 8"In three days' time, then!" "Gerius smiled, clown-like in white-lead cosmetic with rouged cheeks and painted-on eyebrows; he bowed to Adrian and towed his pregnant wife away. The countess's vacant expression had not changed throughout the encounter. Gabriel was pleased with himself. An Aristos, he thought, can do anything. If he stayed here, he thought, he'd be running this kingdom in three years. <Prince Adrian laid a hand on Gabriel's arm and smiled with betel-stained lips, "That was well done, princeling," he said. "Though it wouldn't have come to a fight-Gerius's fighting days are over, if he wants to keep his court appointment. He was merely testing the size of your stones." "His wife seemed charming." A suitably neutral change of subject. >"That vacant-eyed heifer? His fourth. He married her for the dowry: her father's a bourgeois anxious for court influence and a corporate exemption from taxes." ""Will he get it?" "Probably not-Gerius has the dowry now, and other schemes with which to plague the king. He can afford to let his countess die in childbirth, as the others did, and go in search of another bourgeois father with another dowry." Another pair approached to pay their respects to Adrian, a little baroness and her pale-faced duenna. The younger of the two had not shaved her eyebrows: Gabriel had noticed that in this matter the young did not always follow their elders. Gabriel was introduced, and bowed, and filed their names away in his reno so that he would remember them. pIt was becoming his job, and on the whole a tedious one. The only thing that was keeping this interesting was the thought, however improbable, that he'd meet Saigo. And if that happened, he was ready. TThe room was well lit and Adrian couldn't see much through his rheumy eyes: he had a nephew standing next to his chair, whispering names to him on each person's approach. Gabriel found himself beginning to like Adrian. The monopolist was the closest thing to a whole person he'd met-Gabriel had the idea that there was more in his skull than a bunch of unruly reactive daimones. 4But still, the standing and bowing to one group of strangers after another was dull. Gabriel wondered whether the reception would amount to anything else. Still, it was probably better than watching the election results on Brightkinde, the other task to which duty called him. At some point an inner door was thrown open and the crowd surged toward a buffet. A distant orchestra began to tune. Adrian waited for the room to clear and then rose from his chair and let his nephew lead him toward refreshment. "Now business will begin, my prince," he said. "You will find this tedious-by all means seek out some of your new acquaintances and spend a few pleasant hours." >Gabriel was happy to slip away. The buffet had been laid out in a ballroom, though there was no dancing going on as yet. The fine hardwood floor glowed in the light of brass chandeliers. The walls were "gold paint," which meant a gold varnish over a white base, without actual gold. Plasterwork allegories stalked pompously across the ceiling. People juggled plates and cups while candles in the chandeliers dripped scented wax down their necks. Overhead punkahs, manipulated by invisible servants, stirred the air in a haphazard way. A twelve-person orchestra began to play-isorhythmic polyphony, fortunately, but there were odd discordant bits thrown in that were, in Gabriel's opinion, either too much or not enough. He wandered the room, eavesdropping. "Sir Leo took the sausage in grip; sawed it, but caught horn in flank." A grizzled, one-armed noble to a young cleric, the oldster's remaining hand making gnashing movements. It took a few moments for Gabriel to realize they were describing the disemboweling of a bull by a pack of dogs. By that time the oldster had become aware of Gabriel's presence. \"Are you keen, Excellence? D'you keep a pack?" :"I'm afraid not, Excellence." "The finest sport on God's earth, at any rate this side of the Loiontan frontier, where cutting neck's the thing." The single hand made a slashing movement. "Curse the king's unholy peace, anyway." jGabriel said something noncommittal and drifted away. The orchestra finished its tune and a pudgy man stood up on a box and began to sing in a clear, shivering soprano. Gabriel had never seen a castrate before and wandered over to have a look. No one seemed to find it incongruous that a man incapable of physical response was nevertheless singing a passionate love ballad. The singer wrung his plump hands while sweat popped out on his forehead, his eyes leapt out of their sockets, and hopefuls of both sexes stood in a half-circle around him and gazed at him with daimMn-ridden lustful eyes. Gabriel disassociated himself from this company and floated back toward the buffet. Boredom swathed him in its muffling cloak. What passed here for cultured society compared unfavorably with being stuck on the Cressida. And the guests of honor had yet to arrive, so this would probably go on forever. He glanced up and above the crowd of heads saw someone nearly as tall as he-or perhaps as tall, but for poor posture. The man was young, twenty perhaps, clean-shaven, with red-gold hair, deep green eyes, long delicate fingers at the ends of powerful arms. He wore a deep green cassock embroidered with gold thread, and had kept his eyebrows. He was talking with a man Gabriel had just met through Adrian, the king's Master of the Theater, Duke Orsino. (Gabriel, at the introduction, had been pleased to meet a character from Shakespeare.) The young man's eyes rose from Orsino, met Gabriel's, blinked, and looked away. VPerhaps the evening would turn interesting. Gabriel glided toward the pair. Augenblick and the Welcome Rain analyzed stance, blush response, pupil dilation. DIndeed yes, said the Welcome Rain. Orsino blinked. "Prince-Ghibreel, is it? This is Lord Remmy, second son of Duke Maximilian of Zhagala." Remmy had good skin-for this place-fine gold hair on die back of his hands, and miraculously good teeth. Gabriel crossed his hands over his breast and made a formal bow. >"Pleased to meet you," he said. Chapter 11 SCHON: 8What is the meaning of this? VLULU: The meaning? The knife and your death!  By morning Gabriel was in love. The remorseless Welcome Rain had stalked Remmy through the reception like Vronski pursuing Anna through the train-wedging through chinks in armor, provoking, proposing, turning away softly every repudiation, consistently inferring, through the haze of Remmy's denial, Remmy's own nature ... Gabriel had left the reception in Remmy's coach, driven to his cabinet in Santa Leofra's quarter, the Welcome Rain savoring his triumph in Gabriel's skull. All because Gabriel knew how the psyche worked, how it was mirrored by the body. How to trump every stance, every pose, every physical mode; how to pursue an inevitable course through another's mind. These people, with their fragmented psyches, could not resist a whole human being who wished to direct his entire force against them. PAn Aristos could do anything here. Gabriel wondered if Saigo had discovered this, and had found it to his liking-a small cosmos where he would find nothing but victims. Lucky for everyone, Gabriel thought, that he, Gabriel, had no real vices. Remmy slept. Gabriel finished his usual two hours' rest, then drew on his cassock and went prowling through the apartment. The place was small, only three rooms stacked vertically around the building's corner staircase, bedroom on top, parlor in the middle, entryway and servant's room on the bottom. It was elegantly decorated in green and apricot, with glossy hardwood floors. There were icons, crosses, and a small shrine-Remmy had amused Gabriel by kneeling and saying prayers before sleep. Hand-colored prints shared the walls with musical instruments. A kind of cembalo stood on four stout legs in the second-floor parlor. vGabriel peered out the window into predawn, saw only workmen heading for their jobs, the usual poor sleeping in the usual doorways, and one fashionably dressed man, cloaked, hooded, and very well armed, leaving a rendezvous. The buildings were a curious mixture of stately, imposing buildings and crowded tenements. Santa Leofra's quarter. This seemed to be where the various classes of the city came together. Still, even if they were here they weren't doing anything interesting. Boredom settled onto Gabriel again. He considered trying to contact the Cressida& and deal with correspondence and matters from his domaine, but he decided he was too for from the long-range relay transmitter in his luggage. Not that he couldn't reach it, but the transmission would have to cross too many city blocks: Saigo or his minions might detect it. jGabriel looked at the instruments again. They didn't seem6 of high quality, but then this wasn't Remmy's official home, either. He took a five-stringed guitarlike instrument down the wall, strummed it, found it needed tuning. There was mother-of-pearl inlay on the face, but otherwise it was rather battered. Gabriel sat on a sofa, tuned, and played. There were no frets on the neck, but Gabriel experimented, built reflexes into and through his reno, and soon managed (Cyrus transcribing for the new instrument just ahead of Gabriel's fingers) a competent Bach sonata. He heard a creak on the stair and looked up as Remmy stepped through the door from the stair. He was in a satin dressing gown covered with appliqu embroidery in the local "Turkish" style. He looked puzzled. *"What is that music?" $"From my country." "But on an instrument of my country." Remmy entered, then hesitated. The Bach sonata wound on undeterred. Remmy assumed a stern expression. "I apologize for the poor quality of the instrument. Everything in this cabinet is cheap, because sooner or later it will be stolen." He looked disapproving. "You're not even looking at it when you play." <"I'm concentrating very hard." "You've tuned it in a strange way." Severely. "And you're supposed to play it with a slide." He walked toward a commode, opened it, genuflected to the little shrine set therein. "There's a slide here, in the top drawer." Gabriel's fingers ceased their motion. "Have I offended you in some way?" Remmy opened the drawer, hesitated again, closed it. His back was still toward Gabriel. "You've encouraged me to surrender to a weakness," he said. That reflexive again: you are myself-encouraging ... Gabriel put the instrument down, rose from the sofa. "I'd like to think that I'd allowed you to express your heart," he said. H"My heart." Remmy turned, leaned back against the commode, looked down at the polished floor. His words came in an affected upper-class style, mocking himself and the style both; there was a context to it all that Gabriel couldn't read. "My heart is in one realm; my duty as a man in another. vI had sworn a holy oath to Santo Lorenzo that I wouldn't use this place for anything but-" A spasm ran across his face. "The accepted vices," he finished. "Good God! I wasn't even drunk." Remmy's tone sank in: Gabriel realized that the phrase about his heart and manly duty was a quote. Gabriel wondered if he was dealing with a young man's overexaggerated sense of guilt, or whether people in this set were actually intolerant. Historically (his reno informed him) the upper classes were usually fairly liberal in matters of preference. "It's a large ... world," Gabriel said. He'd almost said universe. "It's only here that such things are a vice." "It's only here that I live." Remmy looked stern. "And I'm a loyal son of the Church." How to explain, Gabriel wondered, that in another year or so this wouldn't matter-there would be Logarchy ships filling the skies, engaged in freeing these people from their prejudices, their unhappiness, their murderous habits. Gabriel approached Remmy, lifted a hand, touched his neck. The other man wouldn't look at him. "You are who you are," he said. "Suppressing one's inner nature is torture and bitterness." Remmy looked up at him. "Perhaps it's different in Nanchan. But here sodomy's considered a Ketshana vice, not something a true Beukhomanan would do." Ketshan was one of the pseudo-Turkish kingdoms that, in that possibly illusory past, had once been established here. "If it matters," Gabriel said, "what we did wasn't technically sodomy." Remmy gave a little laugh. "That's significant, you know. The difference between prison and burning. Perhaps." &Gabriel drew the other man close, embraced him, then to the sofa and picked up his instrument again. His fingers browsed along the strings. "I'm a foreigner," he said. "These local prejudices are incomprehensible to me. Why interfere between a human being and his happiness?" <"Happiness rightly belongs only to true Beukhomanans, not half-breeds, not half-men. Not heathen Ketshanese, or the damned." He peeled back one sleeve of his dressing gown. "See? Evidence of a few too many dark-skinned ancestors, of heresy and degeneracy. The veins aren't blue enough." "I thought they were very nice veins," Gabriel said. Programmed fingers shifting key. Remmy flushed. "There are political reasons as well," he mumbled. "Would you like to hear?" "Of course." "My father may be a duke, but he's not a rich one. The family needs money, but the Old Court Party is out of favor and my father with it. My elder brother is the heir, but I'm important to Dad's schemes-I'm to marry some poor child with a dowry rich enough both to advance me in the army and provide sufficient display so that royal favor may be directed my way, at least once the Orthodox Party oversteps and our faction comes back ... Meanwhile the Orthodox will be looking for someone to discredit in order to keep themselves in power-look what they did to the chancellor. And my getting cooked on a griddle would not do me, my family, or my party any good." He looked up at Gabriel from under his brows. "Does this make any sense to you?" "Yes. A question: is the Old Court Party the same as the Old Horse Faction?" ~Remmy gave a faint smile. "Yes. That's what our rivals callus." Remmy straightened, took a breath. "There are other reasons, too. I'm to marry soon-my father tells me-and I don't want to bring a life of misery to my bride, as my father did to my mother for altogether different reasons. I'm perfectly capable of finding pleasure with women. So I will love this girl if I can, and try not to bring some horrid disease to her wedding bed, or-" He turned, fingered a crucifix on the wall: Christ dying, half naked, swanlike. "Habits too ingrained to break." Let me handle this, the Welcome Rain suggested. I'll have him adjusted in no time. Gabriel considered for a moment. He stopped playing, damped the strings, put the instrument down. He rose deliberately from the sofa, approached Remy, clasped his hands behind the other man's neck, and told the Welcome Rain to vanish. @"Your duty to your family and your party and your God and your bride is clear," Gabriel said. "But what duty do you owe yourself? What contentment is your lot?" DRemmy looked thoroughly miserable. "I will offer you this thought," Gabriel said. "You owe yourself happiness, not misery. What you owe your family, or family-to-be, is caution and discretion. But they owe you something as well, and that is understanding." Gabriel dropped his arms, returned to the sofa, began to play again. Remmy looked unhappy. He sighed, walked to the sofa, sat down, and stared at the ceiling. "Where did you learn to speak Beukhomanan like that?" he asked. "You have an accent, but you're far too eloquent for anyone's good." p"I learned it on board ship, sailing to this continent." B"Sailors don't talk like you do." "I'm a good mimic. I picked it up somewhere, just like I picked up this instrument." 0"It's called a larozzo." "Tell me about the Old Court Party. And the Orthodox. And the Velitos." Remmy made a flipping gesture of the hands that signified a kind of stylized bafflement, like a profound shrug. "Once the labels meant something. The Old Court Party was the nobles, and the Orthodox the church, and the Velitos were the ... hard to say. They're the ones left over. But none of that means anything anymore-it's just who's in power, and who's not. The Orthodox are in power right now, but when they overreach, or if we get into another war, the king will have nowhere else to turn but to us." L"So the Old Court is pushing for war?" N"We're always pushing for war. It means employment for us, and plunder." He smiled thinly. "And a job for me at the head of a squadron of cavalry, perhaps a regiment." ."And Piscopos Ignacio?" "Ah." He smiled faintly. "Father Ignacio is Piscopos to the Chapel Royal. I like him-he's counseled me now and again. A great mind to whom no one listens. He believes Christians should prove their loyalty by following the teachings of Christ instead of slaughtering those whose perfection might be suspect. He's widely respected, but no one in power can afford to follow his advice." DThe Erasmian wing, Gabriel thought. Ignacio might be someone with whom Gabriel Aristos could deal once responsible people started dealing with the Gaal holocaust. "Peregrine?" bRemmy straightened, shuddered, crossed himself. "He's the fellow who'll burn the both of us if he catches us. Piscopos of the Martyrs' Cathedral and head of the Argosy Vassals." "Who are the ..." Gabriel hesitated. He wanted to use the phrase "church police," but realized the word for "police" wasn't in his vocabulary. His reno cast back to the Latin politia and he made a guess. "Politia dommica?" he finished. "Polittcia, you mean." Remmy smiled. "You know, that's the first error I think I've heard you make. Still-" He laughed. "Police. What an odd notion. There aren't any police here-there are only gangs who serve important people. The Argosy Vassals are the murderers and ruffians who serve the church and the royal authority. They root out subversives and heretics-one and the same, in Peregrine's opinion-and have their headquarters and prison at the Old Temple. In front of which the late chancellor had his bowels ripped-the Orthodox used Peregrine to do their dirty work." t"I saw Peregrine's Martyrs' Cathedral. It's not finished." "Anyone wishing to stay on Peregrine's good side will donate a reliquary or stained-glass window." The thin smile came again. "It's been known to hold off an investigation. Most people feel the investment well made." There was a screeching from outside the shutters. Gabriel rose from the couch and peered out the window. A half-dressed woman, hurling abuse, was pursuing a harassed-looking swordsman down the street. The swordsman was trying his best to ignore her. Passersby annotated the dispute with their own comments. The swordsman said nothing but increased his pace. Just like a scene in a comic opera. Gabriel watched, thoroughly entertained, then turned from the window. "Tell me about Santa Leofra's quarter. Someone offered to rent me an apartment here." "Many people with a reason to be discreet have cabinets here. Santa Leofra's quarter is part of the Principality of Pontanus, which is a royal domain mostly in the northeast, but with little additions here and there. The civil authorities have no authority here unless they're serving a Yellow Warrant with Knot and Seal, which can only come from the king. So the place is full of foreigners, criminals, whores, fugitives, debtors, heretics-" He made the flipping gesture with his hands again. "And well-off people like me who probably ought to know better." ,"It seems to be the most intriguing district I've seen thus far." Gabriel turned back to the window and looked out, hopeful of seeing something interesting. He hadn't ever seen anyone behave as had the woman and the swordsman, and the whole episode was tinted with a theatrical quality he found delightful. Not, he admitted dutifully, but that there wasn't probably some horrid tragedy at the bottom of it. The predawn street had returned to normality. Disappointed, Gabriel returned to the sofa and sat next to Remmy. N"I think I like your country," he said. Remmy gave his tight little smile again. "That's only because you don't know it well." Gabriel put his palm over Remmy's gold-backed hand. "I know some parts well, and still like them enough to want to know them better." Remmy sat up on the couch, looked at the hand that covered his own. A smile twitched at the corners of his lips. "Well," he said. "If I'm to be burned, I may as well thoroughly deserve it." &Remmy's carriage returned at the appointed hour of mid-morning, just as the fourth gong of the forenoon watch was being struck. Gabriel told Remmy where he lived in Santo Georgio, and was told that Remmy lived there as well, in his father's house with the rest of his family. As they entered the suburb Gabriel pretended to lose his way and directed the carriage down the street from which the transmission had originated. He called up his daimones and watched as the big house moved past ... big gables overhanging the walled yard, fluted chimneys, the bas-relief monster over the door. Shuttered windows, so perhaps no one was home. "There's a fine house," Gabriel pointed out. "I admired it yesterday." j"Duke Sergius's place." Remmy didn't seem interested. Gabriel, feigning confusion, leaned his head out the window. "I seem to have misled you," he said, trying to keep the building in sight. "Perhaps-" He raised his voice for the coachman. "If we turned left at this next street." He turned to Remmy again. "Tell me about this Sergius," he said. "I've heard the name somewhere." "I don't know much about him," Remmy said, "though he's well-placed enough. A philosopher and friend of the king, and of the Piscopos Ignacio. I've hardly ever seen him-he spends most of his time at his estate in the country." jOr in another part of the Orion Arm, Gabriel thought. "He has a fabulous house out there," Remmy said. "Quite unlike anything ever done." "Perhaps I've seen him," Gabriel said. "What does he look like?" "A big dark man. Older. Slant eyes, like yours. Rather gloomy looking." (Saigo, clear enough. "Remmy looked up at Gabriel in some surprise. "And now that I turn my mind to him, I find he reminds me of you. Why do you suppose that might be?" j"I've no idea. We don't seem to look anything alike." "Do you think you and he might," Remmy hinting delicately, "share certain tastes?" Gabriel concealed his amusement at this idea. "Why do you think so?" "Because-" Remmy turned puzzled. "No idea, really. He's unmarried, but I've never heard any hint of-" He frowned. "He always struck me as standing and moving in an interesting fashion. Stylized, posing almost, like a dancer. And you carry yourself in a similar way." The Book of Postures, Gabriel thought. Further confirmation, were it needed. "And he knows the king, you say?" "Oh yes. He's said to be one of the king's most intimate advisers. He's fabulously wealthy, and he's made it known he'll never accept office and will never join a party, so for the most part there aren't any knives out for him." Fabulously wealthy. Easy enough when you can assemble " gold from base matter. 4Like a clockmaker god, Gabriel thought, Saigo had built this place and set it running. But once he had it going he hadn't been able to resist interfering. Wealthy and prestigious. Advisor to the king. Grey eminence, most likely, to the whole damn planet, if not the entire Gaal Sphere. Gabriel was thrilled to have a genius of Saigo's caliber for his enemy. VNothing else could ever be more flattering. One of Gabriel's half-dozen new servants opened the door for him. He hadn't realized he would need so many servants in the house: Clancy required two maidservants just to lace her into her formal clothing. Gabriel wrote a short apology to Prince Adrian, then sent one of his new footmen to Adrian's place to collect his horse. He climbed two flights of wide, creaking wooden stairs to his apartment and entered. He found Clancy in the parlor, sitting in an armchair and staring vaguely at the rooftops visible through the open window. She was dressed in a native blouse and her own baggy trousers. zDoubtless the new servants were scandalized by this ensemble. fShe rose as he came in and kissed him hello. Her face had a fluttering kind of gaiety in it, and she moved with a lilting, tossing motion unlike the Clancy Gabriel knew. A daimMn. "Hello. I'm Falling Water." The voice was bright, the light in her eyes flirtatious. *"Is Dr. Clancy busy?" "Yes, she's working on a project. I can call her if the need is urgent." "No. I'll wait." N"Would you like breakfast? I can ring." ,"I'll do it." Ringing. "There is a message for you, an invitation to a reception this evening at Count Bertram's." Gabriel found the invitation waiting on a tray; he'd met Bertram last night, a smiling porcine predator in white-lead cosmetic. He'd go, he thought. He could introduce Clancy to some of these people. If it was boring they could simply leave. He wrote an acceptance and sent it with the servant he was sending to Adrian. "Would you like me to play the flute for you?" Falling Water asked. "If you could do it without bothering Clancy, that would be nice." Falling Water tilted her head, smiled, and fluttered her lashes at him. "No problem at all," she said. Gabriel had a gran merendas of some forcing-house fruit along with an egg dish that seemed a benevolent, if bland, combination of pancake, omelette, and custard. He then closed his eyes and listened to Falling Water play a Sher Bahadur sonata while he contacted Cressida& and used the ship as a relay to his domaine. He dealt with correspondence and administrative matters, and postponed (again) contacting his mother. There was another stack of messages from Zhenling. He decided to postpone answering that as well. ,Lastly he sent his encrypted password on to his new communications net, giving him another three days before the news of the Gaal Sphere was released. Disturber? I'd like you to look at something, if you're not busy. The voice was Clancy's, but the contact oneirochronic rather than in the Realized World, where Falling Water's flute continued without missing a note. 0If you'll hold a moment. He concluded the most important matter-certifying election results on Brightkinde-and told Horus to finish the rest. Clancy was waiting in a comfortable oneirochronic office: padded leather chairs, shelves with reference works, three-D projectors, facsimile printer, beautifully calligraphed diplomas, a shelf that held a collection of ancient seals. "I need you to tell me if I'm on the right track," she said. Gabriel's oneirochronic ghost kissed Clancy, then sat in one of the chairs and heard a pneumatic hiss as the chair adjusted itself. A nice touch, that. 4"What are you working on?" "A holding container for nano, with built-in stepped artiphages in case the nano goes bad." <"Like the Kam Wing container." "Yes and no." 4He smiled. "Tell me more." A safe container for nano had been a goal for centuries. A container that somehow held a counter-nano artiphage had been an obvious idea, but had been subjected to a number of limitations. Artiphages were fairly carnivorous themselves-they were designed to eat mataglap, and they could devour other things while they were at it. And no single artiphage was good for all species of mataglap. Kam Wing, known as the Aristos Knight for his elaborate courtesy, noble behavior, and single-minded dedication to human betterment, had centuries ago designed a container for nano that featured multiple liners, with artiphage nano sandwiched between layers of neutral substance. If the nano went mataglap it would eat through the neutral lining to the artiphage, which would then be liberated to destroy the mataglap in turn. If the first layer of artiphage didn't stop it, the second might, and so on. But there had always been limitations. The process could produce so much heat and/or gas that the container would rupture. The neutral substances had to be carefully chosen so that the artiphages wouldn't eat them but the nano could, further so that the artiphages wouldn't devour each other, and additionally so that the neutral substances would bond properly with their neighbors. Stable artiphages had to be chosen, so that they wouldn't mutate to undesirable forms. So thorough had been Kam Wing's design that, although it had been altered for different conditions or different varieties of mataglap, the basic work had not really been improved upon. "This morning I was doing what I hoped was the last work on the Lodestone hunter-killer," Clancy said. A model of the Lodestone virus appeared over her shoulder as she spoke, a nasty little bundle of sugar-protein that could lie dormant for years in the parenchyma of the pancreas before emerging to interfere disastrously with secretion of amylase, a process that, by fatal coincidence, produced a waste product that was itself a vicious nerve toxin. The patient could die either from nerve shutdown or wild swings in blood-sugar levels. Usually a doctor wouldn't look for both. The disease itself was so rare that the vector was completely unknown. Probably Lodestone was a slow-motion mataglap, a bit of mutated nano that had somehow escaped into the human environment. ^"The easiest way to attack the Lodestone is when it's shed its protein sheath and invaded the parenchymal cells," Clancy said. "Before that stage, no one looks for it anyway." A strand of the Lodestone uncoiled and enlarged so that Gabriel could see individual molecules arranged in their long strands. The ends stretched out into infinity. Another long molecule appeared, an array of lithium atoms arranged along its length like fangs. "I've devised a hunter-killer that will steal the hydrogen bonds from the target DNA," Clancy said. "It's smaller than the virus, a kind of pseudo-RNA, and it should be nonpolar until it actually encounters the Lodestone." The hydrogen-hungry lithium fangs quietly absorbed the hydrogen atoms holding the target's nitrogenous bases together; bits of the Lodestone strand began to fly apart. "In order that the fragments won't recombine into something equally deadly, I've added little functional groups that will attract fragments of the Lodestone DNA." The Lodestone fragments bounced through the simulation, then discovered the sections of the hunter-killer meant to attract them. The hunter-killer's functional groups slotted into the Lodestone's nitrogenous bases like keys sliding into tumbler locks. "Very nice," Gabriel said. "What happens to the hunter-killer then?" "The simulation says it should be passed with pancreatic fluid into the digestive tract, and thence from the body. At that stage it should be completely inert. But of course that's only what the simulation says. Further testing is needed." Gabriel ran the simulation back and forth several times. Dimly he was aware of Spring Plum's approval of both Sher Bahadur's adagio movement and Falling Water's interpretation of it. The hunter-killer performed as advertised. "I'm impressed, Blushing Rose," he said. "This is admirable. Do you wish to submit it formally?" There was a hesitation in her reply. "I think so. Give me a little more time." "As you like. But what does this have to do with the Kam Wing system?" &"As part of my double-check routine I combed the Hyperlogos to find whether this particular cut-and-lock system had been used before. It hadn't-not quite-but what I found out was that the target, the Lodestone virus, had qualities similar to Brilliant Emerald-type mataglap." "Indeed?" 8"Perhaps one is a mutation of the other. I checked, and with a small adaptation the hunter-killer could be turned into an anti-Brilliant Emerald artiphage." "There already are Brilliant Emerald artiphages. Romance1 and its descendant, Romance2." "Yes, and Romance2 was used by the Aristos Knight as the centerpiece of his container system." A glowing model of Kam Wing's container, red and green and gold, appeared in place of the first simulation. Clancy demonstrated how the Romance series worked by subverting the target like a virus does a target cell, an obviously attractive feature. But, because Romance2 degraded under high temperature, Kam Wing Had to include a heavy insulating layer in his containers to keep the Romance artiphage from being destroyed by the heat-producing Devouring Web mataglap. <"That's not a problem with my design," Clancy said. Simulations blossomed over her shoulder. Her ghost voice turned rapid. "I started by modifying the Lodestone hunter-killer into a Brilliant Emerald artiphage. The result-" She smiled. "I've had the temerity to call it Blushing Rose1." Blushing Rose1 was less efficient than the Romance series-its destruction of the target was less elegant-but it was stable at higher temperatures and didn't require heat shielding. She could therefore sandwich it between a resinous polymer that would react well with the Summer Surprise artiphage, and a doped Carbon- fullerene of sufficient slickness so that the Big Kiss artiphage couldn't get a grip. Between the three artiphages, seventy-nine percent of the known mataglaps were covered. Gabriel absorbed the displays, had Horus and Cyrus run simulations, received their reports. "It's nothing short of brilliant," he said finally. "You've gone back to first principles and produced a marvel." "The Aristos Knight didn't have the advantage of knowing about the Summer Surprise artiphage. It would have simplified his work." r"Still, this is staggering. How long has this taken you?" 8"Since a little after dawn." R"Dawn ..." Gabriel repeated. His skiagnos held out his cupped hands, palms up. A glow began there, a shining rose-hearted gold radiance. The glow lifted from Gabriel's nesting hands, crossed the room, settled onto Clancy's head. A halo surrounded her; dazzling laserlike beams shot from her brow. "The dawn is in your eyes, Blushing Rose," Gabriel said. "This is magic itself, and a wonder." Gabriel handed over the control of the halo to Cyrus: immediately it became more formal, a silvered neoclassical rainbow. <Clancy permitted scarlet to touch the cheeks of her skiagnos. "Thank you, Aristos," she said. "But I remind you that this system is untested and incomplete." Spring Plum floated Gabriel a joyous echo of Sher Bahadur's triumphant finale, la rejouissance. "You have done the most complete and elegant design in decades," Gabriel said. "The rest is details." Gabriel gazed at Clancy's shining skiagnos and evaluated her in terms of its new light. Without doubt she would achieve the rank of Ariste: the long-latent synthesis, the tumbling-together of ideas, had begun. The integrative thinking of the Aristoi, wherein each thought, each skill and idea, began to expand and multiply and reinforce the other. Psyche sang in his heart, a wordless poem of joy. "Watching you has been of great benefit," Clancy said. "I'd never been close enough to see how these things were done before." "I doubt there's anything left for me to show you," Gabriel said. "I think, after this, you will find the technical part of the exams no mystery. The humanitas sections are the only ones that need give you concern-you should probably try to develop a daimMn to help you with composition or civic design or some other creative art." pShe frowned. "I don't know if I'm creative in that way." "Creativity is a resource that can be applied to any art, once the art itself is sufficiently understood." XShe lowered her lashes. "Yes, Aristos. But-" Z"You don't know if you want to be an Ariste?" TClancy's eyes rose to meet his. "Correct." "Blushing Rose," he said, "once the thing happens, you won't be able to stop yourself." "Ah." "We dominate humanity because we can't help it, and because the others couldn't stop it even if they wanted to. When the form of the new container created itself in your mind> could you stop yourself from working the thing out?" H"No. But that's a little different." 8"You'll find that it's not." Gabriel felt his heart lift, soaring with Psyche, with la rejouissance. His mind was already working with Clancy's innovation, daimones plodding at low priority, taking over unused portions of his reno to run simulations and test new innovations. He could sense other ideas, notions unrelated to Clancy's project, fluttering at a lower level. Clancy's burst of inspiration had started a long, complex pattern of association running deep in the less organized portions of his mind, conceptions formed by things less organized than daimones, vague elements of ideation buried deep below conscious thought. rHe'd have to undergo deep meditation to bring it all out. \This was shaping into a very creative morning. Gabriel would concentrate on the less formed ideas for , the moment, since he didn't want to disturb Clancy's work until she was finished. He wanted her synthesis-burst to run _ itself out, and then perhaps he'd help with the final details. "This is all absolutely right," he said. "I don't think you J need my assistance at this point." B"I suppose I wanted reassurance." |"You have it, and my honor and admiration as well. You also have your fortune made-you'll be able to afford your own asteroid lab when we return. Finish the work, TherpMn, then contact me." zHe bowed his head in a Posture of Humility, then faded from the oneirochronon. Falling Water had commenced an-r other flute sonata; her eyes dallied with him through fluttering dark lashes. *Gabriel's left hand was drawing with the point of a knife on the breakfast table in front of him. He looked at it in surprise. The hand kept drawing. Gabriel leaned forward for a closer look. There was a peculiar metallic taste on his tongue. The knife's dull point had impressed a character into the fine linen tablecloth, the Intermediate Iconography glyph for Beware. 0The hand shuddered and dropped the knife. It rang against porcelain with a clang. Gabriel ordered the hand to make a fist and move off the table: the orders were obeyed. Gabriel used his reno to provide a quick mental inventory of his daimones. His primary personality was right-handed, as were most of his daimones; Cyrus and Augenblick were the only exceptions. Both denied being responsible for the glyph. xSpring Plum had been controlling his body while she listened to Falling Water's flute, and she was right-handed. While her attention was diverted, some Limited Personality had taken control of the left side of the body. Beware. The style, the one-word ominous message, was familiar enough. Silly Voice. Resourceful Voice. The Voice had been ingenious enough to take control of his body when he was otherwise engaged. This deserved some thought. But not now. Gabriel rose from his seat, locked his hands behind his back, paced the room. His mind was in ferment, and he had no desire for further distraction. "Welcome, Prince Ghibreel. What a lovely companion you have brought. From your native country?" r"My personal physician," Gabriel said. "Dr. Okhlanu-Sai." This was, unfortunately, the nearest phonetic Nanchan equivalent to "Clancy." BCount Bertram's eyebrows, had they not been painted high on his bald forehead, would doubtless have risen. "A physician? Have they female physicians in Nanchan?" "At least one, my lord," Clancy said, and dipped gracefully into a long formal bow, hands crossed on her breast. Bertram was amused at what he presumed to be an unusual affectation. He smiled with tiny predator teeth: another diverting animal for his petting zoo. "Splendid! Excellent! Welcome to my house, Dr., ah ..." t"Perhaps Clansai would suit your tongue better," smoothly. "You do not mind if I shorten it? Santa Marcia bless you, child." He turned to Gabriel. "You are lovers, of course?" "Of course." `Somehow, for Bertram, that explained everything. ,Gabriel presented a gift to his host, an enameled gold 'perfume bottle that contained a glorious scent, and he and Clancy entered Bertram's hall. People, standing in front of old, murky landscape paintings, gazed at the newcomers with well-bred curiosity. At the far end of the room a young girl sang in a fine mezzo voice to the accompaniment of a cembalo. Voices murmured; the room glowed in candlelight. jThis wasn't a formal, public reception, as last night's at Count Rhombert's had been-this was a more intimate occasion, a gathering of friends and people presumed to be interesting. NPerhaps it wouldn't be dull, after all. zGabriel had been reluctant to go: the day's cascade of invention had been too exciting to leave behind. But he had sworn to investigate things here, and he'd already told Bertram he'd come. Horus was still laboring away on new designs, along with Cyrus and a high-priority call on the reno. Clancy's daimones were equally busy-her bolt of inspiration had bogged down in a nasty mass of detail that would require hard slogging before they were dealt with. &The journey of the Cressida had been justified by this last day alone, never mind what happened in the Gaal Sphere. The soprano's voice echoed interestingly off the paneled walls. Gabriel made his way along the large room, introducing Clancy to people he'd met at Rhombert's. Prince Adrian's nephew was among them, the young man who had stood at Adrian's elbow the previous evening and whispered the names of those come to pay their respects. fGabriel looked at him, and the nephew cut him dead. The servant sent to collect his horse from Adrian's house in the Via Maximilianus had returned both with the horse and with the silver Cellini chest, the gift Gabriel had presented to the prince. It appeared that Adrian had severed his relationship with his new client. Gabriel felt a touch of regret at the loss. He had quite liked the cynical old man. Pity. But that didn't seem to affect his relationship with anyone else in the room, all of whom received him quite civilly. pHe set about the business of making himself interesting. The task was easy enough in this circumstance: he floated about the room and made comments. For the most part he simply cribbed from the great wits of history, safe in the knowledge that his audience hadn't heard Sheridan or Wilde or Ben Jonson. The mezzo-some lord's daughter, Gabriel discovered, demonstrating her accomplishment by way of searching for a husband-bowed and withdrew to general applause. Her performance, Gabriel thought, deserved a better audience, one less diverted. A quintet replaced her-they were quite good, given the wretched quality of their instruments: Count Bertram either had a good ear or good taste in advisers. (Clancy, introductions having been performed, moved about the reception on her own. Young men loitered around her, absorbed in her flawless face and hands, her rose complexion. From what Gabriel could hear, she seemed to be keeping them at bay by discoursing on medical topics. "Experience," said Gabriel, sampling the buffet and paraphrasing Oscar, "is the name people give to their mistakes." lHis audience, two young men and a cynical old lady, laughed. A man standing behind them, tall and long-armed, face made cartoonish with cosmetic, seemed absorbed in his own business. Gabriel lifted a pastry from the buffet, sampled it, put it unfinished on his plate. Too sweet. He found himself wishing they had coffee here. Even the teas were insipid. He reached for a glass of wine he'd placed on the table. $"Mock me, do you?" The voice was drawling, heavy with menace, almost a parody of itself. Gabriel's audience gasped audibly. Gabriel looked up and gazed into the eyes of the long-armed man who had been standing contemplating the buffet. Gabriel collected his daimones, drew himself into the First Posture of Esteem. The tall man met his gaze levelly. "Mock you, sir?" Gabriel said. "I do not mock you, I do not even know you." (The man stepped forward. Gabriel's audience made way for him, all save the old woman, who held her ground. He had to make a small detour around her. ,Heavy use of cosmetic had made the man's face dead-white. His beard and long hair had been frizzed with curling irons. His lips had been painted on in red, and two red spots formed perfect circles on his cheeks. His painted eyebrows narrowed in a ferocious, scowling expression. x"You deny that you bit the pastry and put it down?" he said. r"I deny that I did it with any intention of mocking you." Something peculiar here, Augenblick reported. He's not interested in this-it's like a recitation. Mataglap advised Gabriel to draw the right leg back and take the Third Posture of Confidence as a ready stance. Gabriel concurred and did so. Silence grew in the room. The quintet played on, eyes focused on Gabriel's drama instead of their music. F"I ate just such a pastry a moment ago," the man said. "You picked up the pastry and put it down after taking a single bite. Such an action can only be a mockery." "It was not." The man smiled with delicately painted lips. The smile was soulless, disinterested. "You have just called me a liar, foreigner." He's not interested, Augenblick said. This is all pro forma. He doesn't care about the pastry; that's just an excuse. This man is committing suicide, remarked the Welcome Rain. He didn't seem repulsed by the notion. TGabriel, without real hope, attempted to turn the situation away from where it was headed, trump the man's behavior by raising the level of the dialogue to another level. ^"Why are you provoking this?" he asked frankly. Instead the man hawked and spat on the floor. He put the toe of his right shoe into the blob of saliva, then drew an X with it. There were gasps from the onlookers. Out of the corner of his eye, Gabriel saw Clancy drifting closer, her attention locked on the painted man. Shall I take him out? Clancy's voice, over the oneirochronon. Not unless he attempts violence. Thank you, TherpMn. Gabriel rose into the First Posture of Esteem. He turned away from the man and addressed the bystanders. "I'm a foreigner, I'm afraid, and don't understand these customs," he said. "What do I do now?" "Name your friend," the man said. "My friend will call upon him." Gabriel feigned a moment's thought before naming Count Gerius, the Knot Secretary. The most useful name he could think of. JThe man jerked his chin. "Very well." Gabriel glided forward another few inches, taking the Second Posture. "May I ask your name?" he said. ,"The Knight Silvanus." The word was Equito. There were more gasps from the crowd: apparently the name was known. Silvanus smiled. A daimMn, hot and aroused, glowed in his humid eyes. There's feeling in it now, Augenblick said. He's not just reciting. F"Never heard of you," Gabriel said. The daimMn vanished without a blink. Silvanus's face turned blank. He turned to the host, Count Bertram, and bowed. \"I thank you, my lord, for a delightful time." Bertram gave a short bow in return. Silvanus made his way out, and Gabriel frowned after him. FWho set him on us? Clancy wondered. xGabriel wondered if it was Saigo. He hoped it wasn't Adrian. &Beware, he thought. NBertram was at his elbow. "I would not invite such a man here," he said quickly. "He must have come in company." His face was flushed under its layers of cosmetic; the encounter had made him breathless. And it had made his party a social success, since people would be talking about it for days. |Gabriel took his arm. "Think nothing of it, my lord," he said. HHis mind was turned to other things. hHe had no doubt that he would survive any encounter. pThe problem was to find out why it was happening at all. Chapter 12 ANIMAL TAMER: :In their visage you will see 2Animals like you and me.  "Silvanus? Are you serious?" Count Gerius frowned. "You must flee the country, Highness." "Flee from such a fellow?" Gabriel patted the man's arm. "Don't be absurd." "He'll kill you. He's been the victor in over two hundred fights." J"So many? No wonder, if he fights over pastry." Gabriel found himself mildly impressed. He made the local hand-flipping gesture. "Has nothing been done to stop him?" X"There are laws, but who will enforce them?" $"Perhaps I shall." Gerius folded his arms. They stood in his parlor, illuminated only by a single candle brought in by a servant. Gerius was wearing his Turkish-style dressing gown and an embroidered pillbox nightcap with tassel: Gabriel had interrupted him after his official debotter. "He chooses his fights very carefully," Gerius said. "He knows you don't have a chance. You must flee." "Shan't." Gabriel smiled. "I will show him a thing or two, and spare his life if I can." Gerius closed his eyes and shook his head sadly. "You'll make a brave corpse, Highness. Unless you run." "All men would be cowards, if they dared." After Lord Rochester-his index of wit was still on the surface of his reno. Gerius jerked his chin. "I can't have anything to do with this," he said. "My position at court won't allow it. But I'll give you an introduction to a martial nephew of mine-he'll do you well." 0"I thank your lordship." vGerius picked up the candle and walked to his writing desk. "Pity I won't have a chance to know you better, Highness," he said. JGabriel smiled. "I'll win, you know." ,Gerius did not answer. 2Clancy, seated thoughtfully in the corner, watched as Gabriel climbed back into his coach and sat next to her. He took her hand, kissed it, and sent an oneirochronic message to White Bear to take the route to the rooms in the waterfront city where Gerius's nephew had his lodgings. ^"I'm fascinated by this country," Gabriel said. "You were out all night," she said. "Clearly you found something worthy of fascination." $"Someone, rather." She looked at him sidelong. "I assumed so. But I haven't seen anyone here appealing to your taste-the people are so unattractive." $"Not all of them." The coach lurched as the four black Friesians stepped out in unison. Iron-shod wheels growled as they rolled over cobbles. "The intensity here is bewitching," Gabriel said. "Such people!" "Their lives are so brief. Perhaps they must live intensely in order to live at all." "Yet they're so careless with their existence. Sacrificing their lives for the most trivial of reasons." Clancy knit her brows. "That's because they're mad, Aristos. They can't control themselves at all-they have no more knowledge of their own minds than a newborn child. Did you see that daimMn surfacing in Silvanus?" "Yes. His personality has been fragmented, but not like ours-shattered, not dissected. He doesn't know how to control his daimones." He shuddered. "It was strange, facing that nameless thing I could see in his eyes. I knew it, and it couldn't know me. I wonder if it wondered what I was ..." His voice trailed away. A tune was floating through his mind. Clancy frowned. "Probably the result of abuse in early childhood. Or paranoid schizophrenia." "Or syphilis. Or all three." Gabriel shook his head. "Yet the man survives. As does the race, from generation to generation. Look at Adrian-all those handicaps, cataracts, bad teeth, whatever the lead-based cosmetic's done to his liver, possible syphilis ... Yet the fellow functions, and dominates most of those around him." p"In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king." D"Or the man with cataracts." The carriage lurched; White Bear shouted at someone blocking the narrow street. Clancy clutched at a strap to avoid pitching forward. :"What will you do?" she said. "Defeat him, I expect." The mental tune shifted into a minor key, turned ominous. J"I know that. What I meant was, how?" J"Using what weapons, you mean? I expect I'll have to fight him fairly-our own weapons, the real stuff, would produce results the locals would think pretty peculiar." H"Can you do it without hurting him?" "I'll have you there, should surgery be necessary. But if I can injure that sword arm of his, he won't be provoking many more fights." z "He'll probably just turn to murdering people in alleyways." Gabriel recognized the tune still floating through his mind: the "Ripper" theme from his own Louise Brooks as Lulu. Yes, he thought. Exactly. 0Count Gerius's nephew was called the Knight Gerius, one of several in the family: he called himself Gerius of Retorno to distinguish himself from the others. Gabriel found him awake and half-drunk in his attic lodgings. Four of his friends were with him, all cadets in the Elira Foot, a not-very-fashionable Regiment quartered, to its luck, in the capital. The army did not extend to anything quite so formal as uniforms, but there was nevertheless a kind of regimental style that ran, as far as Gabriel could see, to supple brown leather and dirty linen in about equal proportions. It was equally clear that the style did not encompass either sobriety or bathing. The Equito Gerius scanned the letter his uncle had written, then sadly shook his head. "A fight with Silvanus? I'd run for it." His comrades booed. Gabriel wanted to crack with his thumbnails the lice he could see running in Gerius's collar. f"I'm not leaving," Gabriel said. "I'll fight him." *The cadets cheered and poured him a drink. Gerius looked at the sword hanging at Gabriel's waist. "You're not planning on using that thing, are you?" "Certainly." Gerius shook his head. "No, Highness. Against the rules. You'll have to use one of ours." "I'm a foreigner, and the challenged party. Don't I get choice of weapons?" j"Choice of weapons, Highness? A foreign notion, surely. The weapons-weapon, rather-is specified in the published rules." He reached for a sword that hung from a rafter by a nail and drew it from its battered leather scabbard. "Longer and heavier than yours," he said. "You'll do more damage with it, I think." The weapon was a kind of backsword, the bottom edge sharp along its length, the top edge sharp about halfway. There was an egg-shaped pommel, a simple crossguard, and a hilt long enough to be used two-handed. The point was perfectly serviceable. Gabriel hefted it dubiously. The thing hung like a bar of iron at the end of his arm. Gerius watched him with small keen eyes. "You'll be able to afford a better, Highness," he said. "A little lighter, and of better temper." 0"It seems very awkward." *"Not as awkward as the heavy broadsword we use in battle." Gerius smiled and took the weapon in his own right hand. He made a few clumsy passes in the air, his thick swordsman's wrist straining under the weight of the blade. "You see? It's for fine work. A gentleman's weapon." J"Oh yes," Gabriel said. "Absolutely." Gerius drew his arm back, let the point drop to the floorboards. It landed with a thunk. "Tomorrow, after I see Silvanus's friend, I'll call on you and arrange with my sword-master to give you a lesson. Will that suit?" Z"Yes," Gabriel said. "I think it had better." ,He drained the drink they gave him and went on his way. On the stairway, going down, he heard them toasting both his bravery and his inevitable death. The Knight Gerius's sword master was a giant Turk named Brutus, a professional attached to the regiment. His upper body was round-shouldered with heavy muscle, and he had a ferocious scar that ran from one eye-ridge to his chin. He had won over forty combats, some against professional opponents of his own class. He taught in a long attic above a military barracks, with skylights open to the air. He eyed Gabriel's slim frame and said, well, he would do what he could. jGerius's fellow cadets had heard of the encounter; a p of them hung on the fringes, commenting and cheering the action. fThe duelists' garb was specified in the rules, a copy of which Gabriel never actually saw. Both arms were clothed in iron chain, and both hands wore gauntlets backed with metal but with a leather palm. A chain-mail skirt covered the thighs and groin, and heavy leather boots protected the shins and feet. The trunk, throat, and head were open to attack; the rest of the body protected. Any successful strike was likely to be fatal one. 8That seemed to be the point. There was also, Gabriel discovered, a specific prohibition against wearing amulets and charms. In action, the combattants were turned about forty-five degrees from their opponents, sword arm at near-full extension with the hand pronated, the armored off-hand held near the face, ready to parry. The combattants carefully circled each other until they saw an opening. The weapons were too clumsy to admit of much play, which mostly consisted of a cut made in conjunction with the front foot stepping forward to put the weight of the body into the strike. In order for the cut to be effective, the whole arm and shoulder had to be engaged. Thrusts were for finishing off an enemy after a cut or slash had staggered him. Brutus went through a repertoire of guard positions, strikes, and footwork: Gabriel's reno memorized the lot. Gabriel pleased Brutus by repeating the movements very precisely, including the slight exaggeration the master added by way of effect. ZAfterwards Brutus and Gabriel fought with blunt weapons. Gabriel did well enough until his arm got tired of holding the heavy weapon at guard position: at that point Brutus slid^ in and dropped his edge on Gabriel's shoulder. ^"You'll have to end it quickly, Highness," he said. "You're simply not used to holding a sword out for a long amount of time. Most fights are lost when one man's point drops." Gabriel rubbed his sore shoulder. His daimones were involved in a long analysis of the fighting style. "Is it permitted to strike Silvanus with hands or feet?" he asked. ^Brutus jerked his chin. "It's not good form-people will say the blow was foul-but in a real fight, what's that matter? You've got armor on your free fist, after all. May as well use it if you can." He shook his head. "I'd make a real swordsman out of you, given time. Pity your career will be so short." Gabriel flipped his hands. "Why does everyone seem to think I'll lose?" XBrutus clapped Gabriel on the shoulder. "That's the spirit, my bull! Never cry mercy!" A glint entered his eye. "Pity there's no time to teach you some more of my secrets." *"And those would be?" ^"Tricks such as are too good for them." Jerking his head towards the cadets. "Masters' secrets. Taught only to my best clients." He jerked his chin. "They can run into money." &"Really? How much?" Brutus smiled-he'd lost several teeth in front, possibly to fists in armored gloves-and rubbed his chin with one swart hand. "Secrets like these have been sold for as much as ten thousand crowns." Gabriel smiled and called on Augenblick and the Welcome Ram. "Ah," he said, "but consider how your reputation is involved." X"Yes. If you lose, my reputation goes down." "Hardly. I'd be considered some ignorant foreigner who lost to a master swordsman despite your doing your best in a few hours' lessons. But should I win, all credit will of course go to you, and your secrets will be all that much more valuable." Brutus pretended to consider. Augenblick dissected pupil dilation, pulse rate, respiration. Push a little more, said the Welcome Rain. \"Reckon it, senator," Gabriel said. "Your price would rise to the heavens once it became clear that one of your students beat Silvanus after only a single day's instruction." Brutus settled for a hundred fifty crowns-gold, un-clipped currency-for each of his three secret thrusts. Gabriel sent a note to Clancy for the money, and when it came Brutus chased the cadets from the loft and got to business. The first secret consisted of a drop to one knee in conjunction with a two-handed upward thrust. The second was the notorious, uncouth, but practical botte du paysan, converting the weapon into a bayonet by seizing one's own blade halfway down with the free hand, batting the opponent's guard out of the way, and plunging the point, spearlike, into the enemy's vitals. Gabriel was perfectly familiar with these attacks. He just needed to know whether they were known in Ter'Madrona. The third technique was ridiculous, based on a complex pattern of footwork designed to mirror the Six Realms of Heaven, intended to call angelic forces to aid the downward hack that followed. Gabriel could only hope that Silvanus would try to use it. l"Tell me, master," he said. "Are these parries known?" His blade-tip sketched two half-circles in the air, the French semicircular parry. Brutus frowned. "Known, yes. But too weak-a brisk bang with the forte's better. And with your little wrists, I wouldn't even think of it." "Perhaps this?" He drew two diagonal lines, the "destroying" parry of the Hungarian school. "Never seen that. Can't see why you'd use it, either, though I suppose it's stronger than that other." ,"I thank you, master." Gabriel flashed his blade in the salute. Brutus stepped to the table where Gabriel's gold crowns, stacked neatly, were waiting. He scooped them into a bag. "Where'd you get money like this?" he said. "I haven't seen this many unclipped crowns in my life." "I suppose my secretary would know," Gabriel said, all offhand. "From the king's treasury, I suppose." "It's the treasury that's clipping the money," Brutus said. "It's His Majesty's idea of thrift." "Well." Gabriel flipped his hands. "I'm afraid I don't know where they're from, then." How to report that he owned a philosopher's stone, a portable nanomachine that knit gold coins at the atomic level? Perhaps, in order not to stand out, he should instruct it to make debased currency instead. Brutus accompanied him down the stairs that led to the courtyard. As Gabriel placed his new dueling gear in his saddlebags, he looked up at the coiled, snarling serpent placed over the doorway. "Why do your people put those creatures over their doors?" he asked. "That?" Brutus looked over his shoulder at the sinister figure. "It's a ward against demons, Highness." "Does it work?" Gabriel asked, as the Welcome Rain chortled in his head. Brutus grinned with his broken teeth. "It must. I haven't seen a demon yet." HYou'd be surprised, Gabriel thought. Chords thundered in his head as he rode home. His opera was taking shape.