"QUEEN OF CANDESCE Karl Schroeder * * * * Being literally thrown into an unfamiliar environment forces a person to adapt-and familiar ways of doing that may not be enough. * * * * Prologue lGarth Diamandis looked up, and saw a woman in the sky. The balcony swayed under him; distant trees wavered in the hot afternoon air though there was no breeze. A twist of little clouds pirouetted far overhead, just beneath the glitter and darkness of the city that had exiled Gareth to this place so many years ago. Well below the city, only a thousand feet up at this point, a single human form had appeared out of the light. ^She rotated up out of Garth's view and he had to wait several minutes for her to come back around. Then, there she was: gliding with supernatural grace over the tall, ragged wall that rimmed the world at its nearer end. Behind her, infinite air beckoned, forever out of reach of Garth and the others like him. Ahead of the silent woman, a likely tumble into quickly moving trees, broken limbs and death. If she wasn't dead already. .Someone tried to escape, he thought-an act that always ended in gunshots or bloody thrashing beneath a swarm of piranhawks. This one must have been shot cleanly by the day watch for she was spiraling across the sky alone, not attended by a retinue of blood droplets. And now the spin-gale was teasing the fringes of her outlandish garment, slowing her; bringing her down. Garth frowned, for a moment forgetting the aches and pains that bedeviled him all day and all night. The hovering woman's clothes had been too bright and fluttered too easily to be made of the traditional leather and metal of Spyre. ~As the world turned the woman receded into the distance, frustrating Garth's attempt to see more. The ground under his perch was rotating up and away along with the whole cylindrical world; the black-haired woman was not moving with it but rather sailing in majestically from one of the world's open ends. But Spyre made its own winds as it turned, and those winds would pull her to its surface before she had a chance to drift out the other side. She would have sped up by that time, but not enough to match Spyre's rotation. Garth well knew what happened when someone began clipping the treetops and towers at several hundred miles per hour. He'd be finding pieces of her for weeks. *The ground undulated again. Frantic horns began echoing in the distance-an urgent conversation between the inner surface of Spyre and the city above. DWatching the woman had been an idle pastime, since it looked as though she was going to come down along the rail line. People with more firepower and muscle than Garth owned that; they would see her in a few moments and bring her down. Her valuable possessions and clothes would not be his. But the horns were insistent. Something was wrong with the very fabric of Spyre, an oscillation building. He could see it in the far distance now: the land heaved minutely up and down. The slow ripple was making its way in his direction; he'd better get off this parapet. The archway opening onto the balcony had empty air behind it and a twenty-foot drop to tumbled stones. Garth hopped over the rail without hesitation, counting as he fell. "One pilot, two pilot, three-" He landed among upthrusts of stabbing weed and the cloud-like brambles that had taken over this ancient mansion. Three seconds? Well, gravity hadn't changed, at least not noticeably. DHis muscles creaked as he stood up, but climbing and jumping were part of his daily constitutional, a grim routine aimed at convincing himself he was still a man. He stalked over the crackling grit that painted a tiled dance floor. Railway ties were laid callously across the fine pallasite stones; the line cleaved the former Nation of Arbath like a whip-mark. Garth stepped onto the track daringly and stared down it. The great family of Arbath had not reached an accommodation with the preservationists and had been displaced or killed, he couldn't remember which. Rubble, ruins, and new walls sided the tracks; at one spot an abandoned sniper tower loomed above the strip. It swayed now uneasily. The tracks converged in perspective but also rose with the land itself, a long graceful curve that became vertical if he followed it far enough. He didn't look that far, but focused on a scramble of activity taking place about a mile distant. &The Preservation Society had planted one of their oil-soaked sidings there like an obscene graffito. Some of the preservationists were pouring alcohol into the tanks of a big turbine engine that squatted on the tracks like an idol to industrialism. Others had started a tug and were shunting in cars loaded with iron plating and rubble. They were responding to the codes brayed out by the distant horns. They were so busy doing all this that none had noticed what was happening overhead. b'You're crazy, Garth." He hopped from foot to foot, twisting his hands together. When he was younger he wouldn't have hesitated. There was a time when he'd lived for escapades like this. Cursing his own cowardice, Garth lurched into a half run down the tracks-in the direction of the preservationist camp. 0He had to prove himself more and more often these days. Garth still sported the black cap and long sideburns that rakes had worn in his day, but he was acutely aware that the day had come and gone. His long leather coat was brindled with cracks and dappled with stains. Though he still wore the twin holsters that had once held the most expensive and stylish dueling pistols available in Spyre, nowadays he just carried odd objects in them. His breath ratcheted in his chest and if his head didn't hurt, his legs did, or his hands. Pain followed him everywhere; it had made crow's-feet where once he'd outlined his eyes in black to show the ladies his long lashes. ,The preservationist's engine started up. It was coming his way so Garth prudently left the track and hunkered down beneath some bushes to let it pass. He was in disputed land, so no one would accost him here, but he might be casually shot from a window of the train and no one would care. While he waited he watched the dot of the slowly falling woman, trying to verify his initial guess at her trajectory. Garth made it the rest of the way to the preservationist camp without attracting attention. Pandemonium still reigned inside the camp, with shaven-headed men in stiff leather coats crawling like ants over a second, rust-softened engine, under the curses of a supervisor. The first train was miles up the curve of the world now, and if Garth bothered to look down the length of Spyre, he was sure he would see many other trains on the move as well. But that wasn't his interest. Pieces of the world fell off all the time. It wasn't his problem. He crept between two teetering stacks of railway ties until he was next to a pile of catch-nets the preservationists had dumped here. Using a stick he'd picked up along the way, he snagged one of the nets and dragged it into the shadows. Under full gravity it would have weighed several hundred pounds; as it was, he staggered under the weight as he carried it to a nearby line of trees. FShe was going by again, lower now and fast in her long spiral. The woman's clothes were tearing in the headwind, and her dark hair bannered behind her. When Garth saw that her exposed skin was bright red he stopped in surprise, then redoubled his efforts to reach the nearest vertical cable. The interior of Spyre was spoked by thousands of these cables; some rose at low angles to reattach themselves to the skin of the world just a few miles away. Some shot straight up to touch down on the opposite side of the cylinder. All were under tremendous tension and every now and then one snapped; then the world ran like a bell for an hour or two and shifted, and more pieces fell off of it. Aside from keeping the world together, the cables served numerous purposes. Some carried elevators. The one Garth approached had smaller lines draped and coiled around its frayed black surface-some old, rusted, and disused pulley system. The main cable was anchored to a corroded metal cone that jutted out of the earth. He clipped two corners of the roll of netting to the old pulley. Then he jogged away from the tracks, unreeling the net behind him. It took far too long to connect a third corner of the huge net to a corroded flagpole. Sweating and suffering palpitations, he ran back to the flagpole one more time. As he did she came by again. She was a bullet. In fact, it was the land that was speeding by below her and pulling the air with it. If she'd been alive earlier she might be dead now; he doubted whether anyone could breathe in such a gale. As soon as she shot past, Garth began hauling on the pulleys. The net lurched into the air a foot at a time. Too slow! He cursed and redoubled his effort, expecting to hear shouts from the preservationist camp at any moment. With agonizing slowness, a triangle of netting rose. One end was anchored to the flagpole; two more were on their way up the cable. Had he judged her trajectory right? It didn't matter; this was the only attachment point for hundreds of yards, and by now she was too low. Air resistance was yanking her down, and in moments she would be tumbled to pieces on the ground. Here she came. Garth wiped sweat out of his eyes and pulled with bloody hands. At that moment the shriek of a steam whistle sounded from the preservationist camp. The rusted engine was on the move. NThe mysterious woman arrowed in just above the highest trees. Garth thought for sure she was going to miss his net. Then, just as the rusted engine sailed by on the tracks-he caught snapshot glimpses of surprised preservationist faces and open mouths-she hit the net and yanked it off the cable. |A twirling screw hit Garth in the nose and he sat down. Sparks shot from screaming brakes on the tracks, and the black tangling form of the falling woman passed between the Y-uprights of a jagged tree, the trailing net catching branches and snapping them as she bounced with astonishing gentleness into a bed of weeds. Garth was there in seconds, cutting through the netting with his knife. Her clothes marked her as a foreigner, so her ransom potential might be low. He probably couldn't even get much for her clothes; cloth like that had no business being worn in Spyre. Oh well; maybe she had some adornments that might fetch enough to buy him food for a few weeks. Just in case, he put a hand on her neck-and felt a pulse. Garth cursed in astonishment. Jubilantly he slashed away the rest of the strands and pulled her out as a warning shot cracked through the air. Unable to resist, he teased back the wave of black hair that fell across her face. The woman was fairly young-in her twenties-and had fine, sharp features with well-defined black eyebrows and full lips. The symmetry of her face was broken only by a star-shaped scar on her jaw. Her skin would have been quite fair were it not deeply sunburnt. 4She only weighed twenty pounds or so. It was easy to sling her over his shoulder and run for the deep bush that marked the boundary of the disputed lands. He pushed his way through the branches and onto private land. The preservationists pulled up short, cursing, just shy of the bushes. Garth Diamandis laughed as he ran; and for a precious few minutes, he felt like he was twenty years old again. * * * * 1 :A low-beamed ceiling swam into focus. Venera Fanning frowned at it, then winced as pain shot through her jaw. She was definitely alive, she decided ruefully. fShe was-but was Chaison Fanning also among the living, or was Venera now a widow? That was it, she had been trying to get back to her husband, Chaison Fanning. Trying to get home- Sitting up proved impossible. The slightest motion sent waves of pain through her; she felt like she'd been skinned. She moaned involuntarily. 2'You're awake?" The thickly accented words had the crackle of age to them. She turned her head gingerly and made out a dim form moving to sit next to her. She was lying on a bed-probably-and he was on a stool or something. She blinked, trying to take in more of the long, low room. 'Don't try to move," said the old man. "You've got severe sunburn and sunstroke, too. Plus a few cuts and bruises. I've been wetting down the sheets to give you some relief. Gave you water, too. Don't know what else to do." 'Th-thanks." Then she looked down at herself. "Where are my clothes?" His face cracked in a smile, and for a second he looked much younger. He had slab-like features, with prominent cheekbones and piercing gray eyes. Eyes like that could send chills through you, and from his confident grin he seemed to know it. But as he shifted in the firelight, she saw that lines of care and disappointment had cut away much of his handsomeness. L'Your clothes are here," he said, patting a chair or table nearby. "Don't worry, I've done nothing to you-not out of virtue, mind, I'm not a big fan of virtue, mine or anyone else's. No, you can thank arthritis, old wounds, and age for your safety." He grinned again. "I'm Garth Diamandis. And you$ are a foreigner." Venera sighed listlessly. "Probably. What does that mean around here?" Diamandis leaned back, crossing his arms. "Much, or nothing, depending." 'And here is...?" "'Spyre," he said. "'Spyre..." She thought she should remember that name. But Venera was already falling asleep. She let herself do it; after all, it was so cool here... `When she awoke again it was to find herself propped half upright in a chair. Her forehead, upper body, and arms were draped with moist sheets. Blankets swaddled her below that. rVenera was facing a leaded-glass window. Outside, green foliage made a sunlit screen. She heard birds. That suggested the kind of garden you only got in the bigger towns-a gravity-bound garden where trees grew short and squat, and soil stayed in one place. Such things were rare-and that, in turn, implied wealth. But this room... As she turned her head her hopes faded. This was a hovel, for all that it too seemed built for gravity. The floor was the relentless iron of a town foundation, though surprisingly she could feel no vibration from engines or slipstream vanes through her feet. The silence was uncanny, in fact. The chamber itself was oddly cantilevered, as though hollowed out of the foundations of some much larger structure. Boxes, chests, and empty birdcages were jammed or piled everywhere, a few narrow paths worn between them. The only clear area was the spot where her overstuffed armchair sat. She located the bed to her left, some tables, and a fireplace that looked like it had been clumsily dug into the wall by the window. There were several tables here and the clutter had infected them as well; they were covered with framed pictures. Venera leaned forward, catching up the sheet at her throat. A sizzle of pain went through her arms and shoulders, and she extended her left arm, snarling. She was sunburned a deep brick red, which was already starting to peel. How long had she been here? The pictures. Gingerly, she reached out to turn one in the light. It was of a young lady holding a pair of collapsible wrist-fins. She wore a strange, stiff-looking black bodice, and her backdrop was indistinct but might have been clouds. All the portraits were of women, some two dozen by her estimation. Some were young, some older; all the ladies seemed well-off from their various elaborate hairdos. Their clothes were outlandish, though, made of sweeping chrome and leather, clearly heavy and doubtless uncomfortable. There was, she realized, a complete absence of cloth in these photos. @'Ah, you're awake!" Diamandis shuffled his way through the towering stacks of junk. He was holding a limp bird by the neck; now he waved it cheerfully. "Lunch!" B'I demand to know where I am." She started to stand and found herself propelled nearly to the ceiling. Gravity was very low here. Recovering with a wince, she coiled the damp sheet around her for modesty. It didn't help; Diamandis frankly admired her form anyway, and probably would have stared even if she'd been sheathed in plate armor. It seemed to be his way, and there was, strangely, nothing offensive about it. F'You are a guest of the Principality of Spyre," said Diamandis. He sat down at a low table and began plucking the bird. "But I regret to have to inform you that you've landed on the wrong part of our illustrious nation. This is Greater Spyre, where I've lived now for, oh... twenty-odd years." She held up the picture she had been looking at. "You were a busy man, I see." He looked over and laughed in delight. "Very! And why not? The world is full of wonders, and I wanted to meet them all." Venera touched the stone wall and now felt a faint thrum, but very slight. "You say this is a town? An old one... and you've turned gravity way down." Then she turned to look at Diamandis. "What did you mean, 'regret to inform me'? What's wrong with this Greater Spyre?" He looked over at her, and now he seemed very old. "Come. If you can walk, I'll show you your new home." Venera bit back a sharp retort. Instead, she sullenly followed him through the stacks. "My temporary residence, you mean," she said to the cracked leather back of his coat. "I am making my way back to the court at Slipstream. If ransom is required, you will be paid handsomely for my safe return..." He laughed, somewhat sadly. ^'Ah, but that it were possible to do that," he murmured. He exited up a low flight of steps into bright light. She followed, feeling the old scar on her jaw starting to throb. The roofless square building had been built of stone and steel I-beams, perhaps centuries ago. Now devoid of top and floors, it had become a kind of open box, thirty feet on a side. Wild plants grew in profusion throughout the rubble-strewn interior. The hole leading to Diamandis's home was in one corner of the place; there was no other way in or out as far as she could see. Venera stared at the grass. She'd never seen wild plants under gravity before. Every square foot was accounted for in the rotating ring-shaped structures she called towns. They were seldom more than a mile in diameter, after all, often built of mere rope and planking. There was no other way to feel gravity than to visit a town. bShe scanned the sky past the stone walls. In some ways it looked right: the endless vistas of Virga were blocked by some sort of structure. But the perspective seemed all wrong. 'Come." Diamandis was gesturing to her from a nearly invisible set of steps that ran up one wall. She scowled, but followed him up to a level area just below the top of the wall. If she stood on tiptoe, she could look over. So she did. Venera had never known one could feel so small. Spyre was a rotating habitat, like those she had grown up in. But that was all she could have said to connect it to the worlds she had known. Diamandis's little tower sat among forlorn trees and scrub-grass in an empty plain that stretched to forest a mile or more in each direction. In any sane world, this much land under gravity would have been crammed with buildings; those empty plazas and tumbled-down villas should have been awash with humanity. TPast the trees, the landscape became a maze of walls, towers, open fields, and sharp-edged forests. And it went on and on to a dizzying, impossible distance. Diamandis's tower was one tiny mote on the inside surface of a cylinder that must be ten or twelve miles in diameter and half again as long. 6Sunlight angled in from somewhere behind her; Venera turned quickly, needing the reassurance of something familiar. Beyond the open ends of the great cylinder, the reassuring cloudscapes of the normal world turned slowly; she had not left all sense and reason behind. But the scale of this town-wheel was impossible for any engineering she knew. The energy needed to keep it turning in the unstable airs of Virga would beggar any normal nation. Yet the place looked ancient, as evidenced by the many overgrown ruins and furzes of wild forest. In fact, she could see gaps in the surface here and there through which she could glimpse distant flickers of cloud and sky. 'Are those holes?" she asked, pointing at a nearby crater. Leaves, twigs, and grit fogged the air above it, and all the topsoil for yards around had been stripped away revealing a stained metal skin that must underlie everything here. Garth scowled as if she'd committed some indiscretion by pointing out the hole. "Yes," he said grudgingly. "Spyre is ancient and decaying, and it's under an awful strain. Tears like that open up all the time. It's everyone's nightmare that one day, such a rip might not stop. If the world should ever come to an end, it will start with a tear like that one." LFaintly alarmed, Venera looked around at the many other tears that dotted the landscape. Garth laughed. "Don't worry, if it's serious the patch gangs will be here in a day or two to fix it-dodging bullets from the local gentry all the while. They were out doing just that when I picked you up." Venera looked straight up. "I suppose if this is greater Spyre" she said, pointing, "then that is Lesser Spyre?" xThe empty space that the cylinder rotated around was filled with conventional town-wheels. Uncoupled from the larger structure, these rings spun grandly in midair, miles above her. Some were 'geared' towns whose rims touched, while others turned in solitary majesty. A puff of smaller buildings surrounded the towns. BThe wheels weren't entirely disconnected from Greater Spyre. Venera saw cables standing up at various angles every mile or so throughout the giant cylinder. Some angled across the world to anchor in the ground again far up Spyre's curve. Some went straight past the axis and down to an opposite point; if you climbed one of these lines, you could get to the city that hung like an iron cloud half a dozen miles above. She didn't see any elevator traffic on the nearest cables. Most were tethered inside the maze-like grounds of the estates that dotted the land. Would anyone have a right to use those cables but the owners? hWhen Diamandis didn't reply, Venera glanced over at him. He was gazing up at the distant towns, his expression shifting between empty adoration and anger. He seemed lost in memory. Then he blinked and looked down at her. "Lesser Spyre, yes. My home, from which I am exiled for life. Always visible, never to be achieved again." He shook his head. "Unlucky you to have landed here, lady." 'My name," she said, "is Venera Fanning." She looked out again. The nearer end of the great cylinder began to curve upward less than a mile away. It rose for a mile or two, then ended in open air. "I don't understand," she said. "What's to prevent me-or you-from leaving? Just step off that rim yonder and you'll be in free flight in the skies of Virga. You could go anywhere." Diamandis looked where she was pointing. Now his smile was condescending. "Ejected at four hundred miles per hour, Lady Fanning, you'll be unconscious in seconds for lack of breath. Before you slow enough to awake you'll either suffocate or be eaten alive by the piranhawks. Or be shot by the sentries. Or be eviscerated by the razor wire clouds, or hit a mine... 'No, it was a miracle that you drifted unconscious through all of that, to land here. A once-in-a-million feat. n'Now that you're among us, you will never leave again." * * * * Diamandis's words might have alarmed Venera had she not recently survived a number of impossible situations-not only that, he was manifestly wrong about the threat the piranhawks represented; after all, hadn't she sailed blithely through them all? These things in mind, she followed him down to his hovel, where he began to prepare a meal. 0The bird was pathetically small; they would each get a couple of mouthfuls out of it if they were lucky. "I'm grateful for your help," Venera said as she lowered herself painfully back into the armchair. "But you obviously don't have very much. What do you get out of helping me?" 'The warmth of your gratitude," said Diamandis. In the shadow of the stone fireplace, it was impossible to make out his expression. zVenera chose to laugh. "Is that all? What if I'd been a man?" Z'I'd have left you without a second thought." 'I see." She reached over to her piled clothes and rummaged through them. "As I suspected. I've not come through unscathed, have I?" The jewelry that had filled her flight jacket's inner pockets was gone. She looked under the table and immediately spotted something: it looked like a metal door in the floor, with a rope loop as its handle. Her feet had been resting on it earlier. n'No, it's not down there," said Diamandis with a smile. Venera shrugged. The two most important objects in her possession were still inside her jacket. She could feel the spent bullet through the lining. As to the other-Venera slipped her hand in to touch the scuffed white cylinder that she and her husband had fought their way across half the world to collect. It didn't look like it was worth anything, so Diamandis had apparently ignored it. Venera left it where it was and straightened to find Diamandis watching her. 'Consider those trinkets to be payment for my rescuing you," he said. "I can live for years on what you had in your pockets." 'So could I," she said levelly. "In fact, I was counting on using those valuables to barter my way home, if I had to." t'I've left you a pair of earrings and a bracelet," he said, pointing. There they were, sitting on the table next to her toeless deck shoes. "The rest is hidden, so don't bother looking." DSeething but too tired to fight, Venera leaned back, carefully draping the moist sheet over herself. "If I felt better, old man, I'd whip you for your impudence." He laughed out loud. "Spoken like a true aristocrat! I knew you were a woman of quality by the softness of your hands. So what were you doing floating alone in the skies of Virga? Was your ship beset by pirates? Or did you fall overboard?" She grimaced. "Either one makes a good story. Take your pick. Oh, don't look at me like that, I'll tell you, but first you have to tell meb where we are. What is Spyre? How could such a place exist? From the heat outside I'd say we're still near the sun of suns. Is this place one of the principalities of Candesce?" Diamandis shrugged. He bent over his dinner pot for a minute, then straightened and said, "Spyre's the whole world to those of us who live here. I'm told there's no other place like it in all of Virga. We were here at the founding of the world, and most people think we'll be here at its end. But I've also heard that once, there were dozens of Spyres, and that all the rest crumbled and spun apart over the ages... So I believe we live in a mortal world. Like me, Spyre is showing its age." He brought two plates. Venera was impressed: he'd added some cooked roots and a handful of boiled grains and made a passable meal of the bird. She was ravenous and dug in; he watched in amusement. 'As to what Spyre is..." He thought for a moment. "In the cold-blooded language of the engineers, you could say that we live on an open-ended rotating cylinder made of metal and miraculously strong cables. About six miles from here there's a giant engine that powers the electric jets. It is the same kind of engine that runs the suns. Once, we had hundreds of jets to keep us spinning, and Spyre's outer skin was smooth and didn't catch the wind. Gravity was stronger then. The jets are failing, one by one, and wind resistance pulls at the skin like the fingers of a demon. The old aristocrats refuse to see the decay that surrounds them, even when pieces of Spyre fall away and the whole world becomes unbalanced in its turning. When that happens, the preservationist society's rail engines start up and they haul as many tons as needed around the circle of the world to reestablish the balance. 'The nobles fought a civil war against the creation of the preservation society. That was a hundred years ago, but some of them are still fighting. The rest have been hunkered down on their estates for five centuries now, slowly breeding heritable insanities in the quiet of their shuttered parlors. They're so isolated that they hardly speak the same language anymore. They'll shoot anyone who crosses their land, yet they continue to live, because they can export objects and creatures that can only be made here." Venera frowned at him. "You must not be one of them. You're making sense as far as I can tell." 'Me? I'm from the city." He pointed upward. "Up there, we still trade with the rest of the principalities. We have to, we've got no agriculture of our own. But the hereditary nobles own us because they control the industries down here." The bitterness in his voice was plain. "So, Garth Diamandis, if you're a city person, what are you doing living in a hole in the ground in Greater Spyre?" She said it lightly, though she was aware the question must cause him more pain. He did look away before smiling ruefully at her. "I made the cardinal mistake of all gigolos: I cultivated popularity among women only. I bedded one too many princesses, you see. I was kindly not killed nor castrated for it, but I was sent here." 'But I don't understand," she said. "Why is it impossible to leave? You said something about defenses... but why are they there?" Diamandis guffawed. "Spyre is a treasure! At its height, this place was the equal of any nation in Virga, with gravity for all and wonders you couldn't get anywhere else. Why, we had horses! Have you heard of horses? And dogs and cats. You understand? We had here all the plants and animals that were brought from Earth at the very beginning of the world. Animals that were never altered to live in weightlessness. Even now, a breeding pair of house cats costs a king's ransom. An orange is worth its weight in platinum. We had to defend ourselves and prevent our treasures being stolen. So for centuries now Spyre has been ringed with razors and bombs to prevent attack-and to prevent anyone smuggling anything out. And believe me, when all else has descended to madness and decadence, that is the one policy that will remain in place." He hung his head. R'But surely one person, traveling alone-" 'Could carry a cargo of swallowed seeds. Or a dormant infant animal in a capsule sewn under the skin. Both have been tried. Oh, travel is still possible, for nobles of Lesser Spyre and their attendants, but there are body scans and examinations, interrogations, and quarantines. And anyone who's recently been on Greater Spyre comes under even more suspicion." \'I... see." Venera decided not to believe him. She would be more cheerful that way. She did her best to shrug off the black mood his words had inspired and focused on her meal. They ate in silence for a while, then he said, "And you? Pirates or a fall overboard?" 'Both and neither," said Venera. How much should she tell? There was no question that lying would be necessary, but one must always strike the right balance. The best lies were built of pieces of truth woven together in the right way. Also, it would do her no good to deny her status or origins; after all, if the paranoid rulers of Spyre needed money, then Venera Fanning herself could fetch a good price. Her husband would buy her back, or reduce this strange wheel to metal flinders. She had only to get word back to him. 'I was a princess of the kingdom of Hale," she told Diamandis. "I married at a young age, he is Chaison Fanning, the admiral of the migratory nation of Slipstream. Our countries lie far from here-hundreds or thousands of miles, I don't know-far from the light of Candesce. We have our own suns, which light a few hundred miles of open air that we farm. Our civilizations are bounded by darkness, unlike you who bask in the permanent glory of the sun of suns..." Some audiences would need more-not all people knew that the whole vast world of Virga was artificial, a balloon thousands of miles in diameter that hung alone in the cosmos. Lacking any gravity save that made by its own inner air, Virga was a weightless environment whose extent could easily seem infinite to those who lived within it. Heat and light were provided not by any outside star but by artificial suns, of which Candesce was the oldest and brightest. Even the ignorant knew it was a manmade sun that warmed their faces and lit the crops they grew on millions of slowly tumbling clods of earth. But the world itself? One glance up from your own drudge-work might encompass vast, cloud-wreathed spheres of water, miles in extent, their surfaces scaled with mirror-bright ripples; thunderheads the size of nations, which made no rain because rain required gravity but rather condensed balls of water the size of houses, of cities, then threw them at you; and a glance down would reveal depths of air painted every delicate shade by the absorption and attenuation of the light of a dozen distant suns. How could such a place have an end? How could it have been made by people? Venera had seen the outer skin of the world, watched icebergs calve off its cold black surface. She had visited the region of machine-life and incandescent heat that was Candesce. The world was an artifact, and fragile. In her coat pocket was something that could destroy it all, if you but knew what it was and how to use it. PThere were things she could tell no one. A thing she could tell was that her adopted home of Slipstream had been attacked by a neighboring power, Mavery. Missiles had flashed out of the night, blossoming like red flowers on the inner surface of the town-wheels of Rush. The city had been shocked into action, a punitive expedition mounted with her husband leading it. She explained to Diamandis that Mavery's assault had been a feint. He listened in mesmerized silence as she described the brittle dystopia known as Falcon Formation, another neighbor of Slipstream. Falcon had conspired with Mavery to draw Slipstream's navy away from Rush. Once the capital was undefended, Falcon Formation was to move in and crush it. nThe true story was that Venera's own spy network had alerted them to this plot. Chaison and Venera Fanning had taken seven ships from the fleet and left on a secret mission to find a weapon powerful enough to stop Falcon. The story she told Diamandis now was that her flagship and its escort were pursued by Falcon raiders, chased right out of the lit air of civilization into the darkness of permanent winter that permeated most of Virga. 4That had been a month ago. After that, more things she could tell: a battle with pirates, being captured by same; escape, and more adventures near the skin of the world. She told Diamandis that they had sailed toward Candesce in search of help for their beleaguered country. She did not tell him that their goal was not any of the ancient principalities that ringed the sun. They were after a pirate's treasure, in particular the one seemingly insignificant piece of it that now rested in Venera's jacket. They had come seeking the key to Candesce itself. In Venera's version, the Slipstream expedition had been met with hostility and chased into the furnace-like regions around Candesce. Her ships had been set upon and half of them destroyed by treacherous marauders of the nation of Gehellen. In fact, she and her husband had orchestrated the theft of the pirate's treasure from under the noses of the Gehellens and then fled with it-he, back to Slipstream and her, into the sun of suns. There she had temporarily disabled one of Candesce's systems. While it was down, Chaison Fanning was to lead a surprise attack on the fleet of Falcon Formation. Slipstream's little expeditionary force was no match for the might of Falcon-normally. For one night, the tables should have been turned. Venera had no idea whether the whole gambit had been successful or not. She would not tell Diamandis-would not have told anyone-that she feared her husband was dead, the force destroyed, and that Falcon cruisers ringed the Pilot's palace at Rush. ('I was lost overboard when the Gehellens attacked," she said. "Like much of the crew. We were close to the sun of suns and as dawn came, we burned... I had foot-fins, and at first I was able to fly away, but I lost one fin, then the other. I don't remember anything after that." Diamandis nodded. "You drifted here. Luckily, the winds were in your favor. Had you circulated back into Candesce you'd have been incinerated." &That much, at least, was true. Venera suppressed a shudder and sank back in her chair. She was infinitely weary all of a sudden. "I need to sleep." 'By all means. Here, we'll get you to the bed." He touched her arm and she hissed in pain. Diamandis stepped back, concern eloquent on his face. 'There are treatments-creams, salves... I'm going to go out and see what I can get for you. For now you have to rest. You've been through a lot." (Venera was not about to argue. She eased herself down on the bed, and despite being awash in burning soreness, fell asleep before hearing him leave. * * * * 2 |Near dawn, the lands of Greater Spyre were lit only by the glitter of city lights high overhead. In the faint glow, the ancient towers and forests seemed as insubstantial as clouds. Garth paused in the black absence beneath a willow tree. He had run the last hundred yards, and it was all he could do to keep his feet. FSilhouettes bobbed against the gray outline of a tower. Whoever they were, they were still following him. It was unprecedented: he had snuck through the hedgerows and fields of six hereditary barons, each holding no more than a square mile or so of territory but as fanatical about their boundaries as any empire. Garth knew how to get past their guards and dogs, he did it all the time. Apparently, these men did also. It must have been somebody at the Goodwill Free Clinic. They'd waited until he was gone and then signaled someone. If that was so, Garth would no longer be able to count on the neutrality of the Kingdom of Hallimel-all six acres of it. He moved on cautiously, padding quietly onto a closely cropped lawn dotted with ridiculously heroic statues. It was quiet as a tomb here; and certainly nobody had any business being out. He allowed himself a little righteous indignation at whoever it was that was following him. They were trespassers; they should be shot. It would be most satisfying to raise the alarm and see what happened-a cascade of genetically crazed hounds from the doorway of yon manor house, perhaps, or spotlights and a sniper on the roof. The trouble was, Garth himself was a known and tolerated ghost in only a few of these places, and certainly not the one he was passing through now. So he remained discreet. A high stone wall loomed over the garden of statues. Its bricks were crumbling and made an easy ladder for Garth in the low gravity. As he rolled over the top he heard voices behind him-someone exclaiming something. He must have been visible against the sky. He landed in brambles. From here on, the country was wild. This was disputed territory, owned by now-extinct families, its provenance tied up in generations-old court cases that would probably drag on until the end of the world. Most of the disputed lands were due to the railway allotments created by the preservationists; they had needed clearances that ran completely around the world, and they had gotten them, for a price of blood. This section of land had been abandoned for other reasons, though what they were Garth didn't know. He didn't care, either, as long as the square tower he called home was left in peace. His intention was to reach it so that he could warn the lady Fanning that they had company-but halfway across the open grassland he heard thuds behind him as half a dozen bodies hit the ground on his side of the wall. They were catching up, and quickly. He flattened and rolled to one side. Grass swished as dark figures passed by, only feet away. Garth cursed under his breath, wishing there were some way to warn Venera Fanning that six heavily-armed men were about to pay her a visit. * * * * Venera heard them coming. The darkness wasn't total-Diamandis had left a candle burning-so she wasn't completely disoriented when she awoke to voices saying, "Circle around the other side," and "this must be his bolt-hole." A flush of adrenalin brought her completely awake as she heard scratching and scuffling just outside the hovel's door. She rolled out of bed, heedless of the pain, and ran to the table where she snatched up a knife. "Down here!" someone shouted. Where were her clothes? Her jacket lay draped across a chair, and on the table were the bracelet and earrings Diamandis had left her. She cast about for her other things, but Diamandis had apparently moved them. There they were, on another table-next to the opening door. Venera's first inclination would normally be to draw herself up to her full five foot seven and stare these men down when they entered. They were servants, after all, even if they were armed. If she could speak and make eye contact, Venera was completely confident in her ability to control members of the lower classes. At least, she used to be. Recent events-particularly her unwelcome dalliance with captain Dentius of the winter pirates-had made her more cautious. In addition, she was sore all over and had a pounding headache. So Venera snatched up the candle, her jacket, and the jewelry and knelt under the table. The rope ring scraped her raw skin as she yanked on it; after a few tugs the mysterious hatch lifted. She felt down with her foot, making contact with a metal step. As men blundered into Diamandis's home, she billowed the damp sheet behind her, with luck to drape over the hatch and hide it. The candle guttered and nearly went out. Venera cupped a hand around it and cautiously felt for the next step. She counted seven before finding herself standing in an icy draft on metal flooring. A constant low roar made it hard to hear what was going on above. RThis small chamber was oval, wider at the ceiling than at the floor, and ringed with windows. All the panes were flush with the wall, but a couple vibrated at a high speed, making a low braying sound. They seemed to be sucking air out of the room; it was the walls that soaked cold into the place. ^Diamandis evidently used the room for storage because there were boxes piled everywhere. Venera was able to make her way among them to the far end, where a metal chair was bolted to the floor. The windows here were impressive: floor-to-ceiling, made of some resilient material she had never seen before. The candlelight seemed to show a dense weave of leaves on the other side of the glass. She was going to freeze unless she found something to wear. Venera ransacked the boxes, alternately cursing and puffing out her cheeks in wonder at the strange horde of broken clocks, worn-out shoes, rusted hinges, frayed quills, moldy sewing kits, left socks, and buckles. One crate contained nothing but the dust jackets of books, all their pages having been systematically ripped out. It was a small library's worth of intriguing but useless titles. Another was full of decaying military apparel, including holsters and scabbards, all of it bearing the same coat of arms. At least the activity was keeping her warm, she reasoned. The faint clomp of boots above continued, so she moved on to a new stack of boxes. This time she was rewarded when she found it packed with clothing. After dumping most of that onto the floor she discovered a pair of stiff leather pants, too small for Diamandis but sufficient for her. Getting into them wasn't easy, though-the material scoured her already-raw skin so that it hurt to move. The leather cut out the wind, however. Once she had done up the flight jacket, Venera sat down in the metal chair to wait for whatever happened next. This was much harder; it wasn't in Venera's nature to remain still. Staying still made you think, and thinking led to feeling, which was seldom good. HShe drew her knees up and wrapped her arms around her shins. It came to her that if they took away Diamandis and she couldn't get out of here, she would die and no one would ever know what had happened to her. Few would care, either, and some would rejoice. Venera knew she wasn't well liked. More stomping up above. She shivered. How far away was her home in Slipstream? Three thousand miles? Four? An ocean of air separated her from her husband, and in that ocean gyred the nations of enemies, rising, lowering, drifting with the unpredictable airs of Virga. Awaiting her out there were the freezing abysses of winter, full of feathered sharks and pirates. Before the sun of suns had roasted her into unconsciousness, she had been determined and sure of her own ability to cross those daunting distances alone. She had leaped from the cargo nets of Hayden Griffin's jet and soared for a time like a solitary eagle in the skies of Virga. But the sun had caught up to her and now she was here, trapped and in pain hardly any distance from where she'd started. She climbed off the chair, fighting a wave of nausea. Better to surrender herself to whoever waited above than die here alone, she thought-and she almost ran up the steps and surrendered. It was a pulse of pain through her jaw that stopped her. Venera drew her fingertips across the scar that adorned her chin, and then she backed away from the steps. Her heel caught the edge of a box she'd dropped, and she stumbled back against the icy windows. Cursing, she straightened up, but as she did she noticed a gleam of light welling up through the glass. She put her cheek to it-which dampened the pain a bit-and squinted. The windows were covered with a long-leafed form of ivy. The stuff was vibrating with uncanny speed-so quickly that the leaves' edges were blurred. Diamandis had said that Spyre rotated very fast; was she looking into the air outside? Of course. This oval chamber stuck out of the bottom of the world. It was an aerodynamic blister on the outside of the rotating cylinder, and that chair might have once fronted the controls of a heavy machine gun or artillery piece mounted outside. It still might. Frowning, Venera clambered over the mounds of junk back to the metal seat and examined it. There was indeed a set of handles and levers below the chair, and more between the windows. She didn't touch them but peered out through the glass there, as light continued to well through the close-set leaves. Candesce was waking up. The sun of suns lit a zone hundreds of miles in diameter here at the center of Virga. Past the trembling leaves, Venera could see a carousel of mauve and peach-painted cloud tumbling past with disorienting speed; but she could also see more. The oval blister was mounted into a ceiling of riveted metal, as she'd expected. That ceiling was the hull of Spyre. Covering this surface in long runnels and triangles was the strange ivy. Its leaves were like knives, sharp and long, and they all aligned in the flow of the wind. Venera had heard of something called "speed ivy"; maybe that's what this was. jThe ivy seemed to prefer growing on things that projected into the airstream. Sheets of metal skin were missing here and there-in fact, there were outright holes everywhere-and the ivy clustered on the leading and trailing edges of these, smoothing the airflow in those places. Maybe that was what it was for. JThis view of Spyre was not reassuring. The place was showing its age-dangling sheets of titanium whirred in the wind and huge I-beams thrust down into the dawn-tinted air, whole sagging acres just waiting to peel off the bottom of the world. It was amazing that the place kept itself together. ZNext to the blister, a rusted machine gun was mounted on the surface. It faced stoically into the wind, and didn't move when Venera tried the controls in front of the chair. .Well. All this was interesting, but not too interesting. She headed back to the stairs, but the light coming through the ranked leaves was considerable now, and she could see more of the blister's interior. So the little passage that opened out behind the stairs was now obvious. >Venera gnawed her lip and rolled her eyes to look at the closed hatch overhead. One hand was on her hip; even here, with no audience, she posed as she thought. 8She needed shoes, but she'd recovered the important items, the key to Candesce and her bullet. Venera was quite aware that she was obsessed with that bullet, and who wouldn't be, she usually reasoned, if one like it had flown a thousand miles or more across Virga to randomly spike through a window and into their jaw? This particular projectile had been fired in some distant war or hunting party and missed its target; since there was no gravity nor solid ground to stop it, the thing had kept going and going until it met her. From that encounter Venera had gained a scar, regular crippling headaches, and something to blame for her own meanness. She'd kept the bullet and over time had become consumed with the need to know where it had come from. It was not, she would admit, a healthy need. jShe patted the jacket, feeling the heavy shape inside it; then she slipped past the steps and into the narrow passage, and left Diamandis and his invaders to their own little drama. * * * * It was more of a crawlway than a corridor. Venera walked bent over, gasping as the old leather chafed her hips and knees. Why didn't these people dress sensibly? Lit only by intermittent portholes, the passage wormed its way a hundred yards or so before ending in a round metal door. It was all so obviously abandoned-stinking of rust and inorganic decay-that Venera didn't bother knocking on the door, but turned the little wheel in the middle of it and pushed. She stepped down into a mirror image of the blister she had just left. She half expected to find another maze of boxes on the other side of the steps, with another junk-framed hovel and another Garth Diamandis waiting for her above. But no, the blister was empty save for a half foot of stagnant water and a truly revolting gallery of fungus and cobwebs. The windows were hazed over but provided enough light for a tiny forest that was trying to conquer the metal chair at the far end. The stairs were jammed with soil and roots. The prospect of dipping her bare feet into that horrid water nearly made her turn back. What stopped her was a tiny chink of light visible in the midst of the soil plug. After wading cautiously and with revulsion through the stinking stuff, she reached up and pulled at the roots. Gradually, in little showers of dirt, worms, and fibrous tubers, she widened a hole big enough for her to shimmy through. A minute later she dragged herself up out and into the middle of a grassy field. Too bad about Diamandis, but with luck he was still off on his errand and the interlopers wouldn't be there when he got back. Anyway, he'd been more than compensated for taking care of her; that had been a pilot's ransom of gems and faience he'd taken from her jacket. She half hoped those loud burglars found the stuff-it would serve him right. Venera's own destination was clear. Spyre being a cylinder, it had ends, and one of those was only half a mile away. There the artificial land curved up hundreds of feet in a gesture that would close off the end if continued. The curve ended in a broad gallery above and beyond which the winds of Virga shuddered. She had only to make it up that slope and hop off the edge and Venera would be in free flight again. She would take her chances with the piranhawks and snipers. She doubted any of them could hit one small woman leaving Spyre at four hundred miles per hour. fIn this case, wearing leather would serve her well. zBetween Venera and the edge of the world lay a chessboard of estates. Each had its tottering stone walls, high hedges, towers, and moats to defend its two or three acres from the ravages of greedy neighbors. Constrained by space and what Venera sensed was deep paranoia, the estates had evolved into similar designs-the larger ones walled, with groves surrounding open fields and a jumble of towers, annexes, and greenhouses at the center; small ones often just a single square building that took up the entire demesne. These edifices were utterly windowless on the outside, but higher up the curve of the world she could see that most contained courtyards crammed with trees, fountains, and statuary. bThe walls of some estates were separated by no more than twenty feet of no-man's land. She ran through these weed-choked alleys, dodging young trees, past iron-faced pillbox gates that faced one another across the minor space like boxy suits of armor. The footing was treacherous, and she suspected traps. Venera was used to higher gravity than Spyre's. Tired and sore though she was, it was easy for her to leap ten feet to the top of a stone wall and run its length before dropping to the grass beyond. Her feet barely felt brick, root, and stone as she wove in and out of the trees, sprinted around open ponds under windows that were just beginning to gleam yellow in the light of Candesce. As she ran she marveled that such distances could exist; she had never run so far in a straight line and could hardly believe it possible. The birds were the only ones making sound, but as she ran Venera began to notice a deep rushing roar that came from ahead of her. It was the sound of the edge of the world, and with it there came the beginnings of a breeze. .She heard surprised shouts as she crossed one fanatically perfect lawn, bare feet kissing wet grass. Glancing to the side, Venera caught a glimpse of a small party of men and women sitting on curlicued iron chairs in the morning light. They were sipping tea or something similar. $They stood up-stiff ornamented garments ratcheting into their standing configurations like portcullises slamming down-and the three men howled "intruders!" as if Venera were an entire army of pirates. After a moment, sirens sounded inside the looming stone pile behind them. 'Oh, come on!T" She was panting with exhaustion now, her head swimming. But there were only two more estates to pass, and then she would be on the slope to the world's edge. With a burst of speed she raced by more lighting windows and opening doors, noting abstractly that the considerable mob of soldiers who had spilled out of the first place's doors had stopped at the edge of their property as if they'd slammed into an invisible fence. 2So she only had to outrace the alarm in each particular property. It could be a game, and Venera actually would have enjoyed the chase if she hadn't been on the verge of fainting from exhaustion and residual heatstroke. If only she had the breath to taunt the idiots on the way by! pGunshots cut the air as she passed the last estate. This was one of the big single-building affairs, all gray asteroidal stone drizzled with veins of bright metal. Its only external windows were murder slits that started fifteen feet up, and she saw no doors. Empty upward-curving fields beckoned on the other side of the edifice; she staggered onto what Diamandis had called 'disputed territory' and paused to catch her breath. "Ha! Safe!" The wind was now a harsh constant moan, flickering past her in gusts. It spun in little permanent tornadoes over gaps and holes in Spyre's skin. There were more and more such holes as the slope rose to the edge. The edge itself was ragged, a crenellation of collapsed galleries, up-thrusting spars and flapping plates that added to the din. She heard something else, too. A regular creaking sound seemed to be coming from overhead. Venera looked up. <Six wooden platforms had been lowered over the top of the stone cube and were being winched down. Each was crowded with men in tall steel helmets and outlandish spiked armor. They clutched pikes and rifles with barrels longer than they were tall. Several were pointing at her excitedly. Venera swore and took off up the rubble-strewn slope. The wind was at her back, and it became stronger the closer she got to the edge. Several gusts lifted her off her feet. Venera noticed that the metal skin of Spyre was completely exposed in the final yards leading up to the edge. Only fair-sized rocks inhabited the area behind it. As she watched, a stone the size of her foot rolled up the metal and spun off into the air. A few more yards and the wind would take her, too. vHer foot sank into the slope and Venera fell in ridiculous slow-motion. As she pried herself upright again she saw that the metal plate bent by her foot was vibrating madly in the square hole it had made. Then with a loud pop it disappeared and suddenly a hurricane was howling into the bright aperture it had left. Venera was sucked down and slid forward until she was right over the hole. She reached out and braced her hands on either side while the air screamed past her. It was trying to escape Spyre with even more passion than hers. For a few seconds she could only stare down and see what faced her if she made it to the edge and jumped. Many long flagpole-like beams thrust out below the edge of the world. They trailed wire nets into the furious wind; anyone caught on those nets would suffocate before they could be pulled up. Far beneath the nets, where scudding clouds spun past, Venera glimpsed thousands of black specks and grayish veins in the air. Mines? More razor wire? Diamandis had not been lying, after all. N'Damn! Shit!" She tried to scream more curses-every one she could think of-but the air was being pulled out of her lungs. She was about to faint into the hole and die. Strong hands took her by the arms and legs and hauled her back. Venera was hoisted onto someone's back and unceremoniously toted back down the slope. With every jolting step escape, and home, and Chaison receded past the frame of her grasping fingers. * * * * 3 Although he was her favorite uncle, Venera never saw much of Prince Albard. He was a mysterious figure on the periphery of the court, sweeping into Hale in his yacht to regale her with tales of strange cities and the outlandish women he'd met there (always sighing when he talked of them). His face was split down the center by a saber scar, putting his lips into a permanent twist that made it look like he was smirking. Unlike most of the people who encountered him, Venera knew that he was smirking-laughing inside at all the pointless desperation and petty recrimination of life. In that regard he was the polar opposite of her father, a man with a mind focused by a single lens of suspicion; maybe that was why she clung to Albard's knees when he did appear, and treasured the odd-shaped dolls and toys he brought. They recognized each other, this vagabond prince in his motley and the pouting princess in clothes she systematically tattered as soon as she was in them. So maybe it was natural that when the time came, it was in her bedroom that Albard barricaded himself. 0He only noticed her after he had dragged her wardrobe across the door and piled some chairs and tables around it. "Damn, girl, what are you doing here?" Venera had cocked her head and squinted at him. "This is my room." z'I know it's your room, dammit. Shouldn't you be at lessons?" 'I bit the tutor." Banished and bored, she had (not out of anger but a more scientific impulse) been beheading some of her dolls when Albard swept in. Venera had assumed that he was there to talk to her and had politely waited, limp headless body in one hand, while he proceeded to move all the furniture. So he wasn't there to see her? What, then, was this all about? 'Oh, never mind," he said irritably, "just stay out of sight. This could get ugly." Now she could hear shouting outside, sounds of people running. "What did you do?" she asked. \He was leaning back against the pile of furniture as though trying to propel it out the room. "I bit someone, too," he said. "Or, rather, I was about to, and they found out." Venera came and sat down on the fuchsia carpet near him. "My father, right?" bHis eyebrows rose comically. "How did you guess?" Venera thought about this for a while. Then she said, "Does that mean that everybody who makes Father mad has to come to this room?" Albard laughed. "Niece, if that were true, the whole damn kingdom would be in here with us." B'Oh." She was slightly reassured. P'Give it up, Albard!" someone shouted from outside. It sounded like her father. There was some sort of mumbling discussion, then: "Is, uh... is Venera in there with you?" 'No!" The prince put a finger to his lips and knelt next to her. "The one thing I absolutely will not do," he said gently, "is use you as a bargaining chip. If you want to leave, I will tear down this barricade and let you go." 6'What will they do to you?" 4'Put me in chains, take me away... then it all depends on your father's mood. There's a black cloud behind his eyes lately, have you seen it?" She nodded vigorously. "It's getting bigger and bigger, that cloud, and I think it's starting to crowd out everything else. That worries me." .'I know what you mean." 'I daresay you do." There followed a long interval during which Albard negotiated with the people on the other side of the furniture. Venera retreated to the window, but she was far from bored now. At last Albard blew out his cheeks and turned to her. L'Things are not going well," he said. "Do you have a pen and some writing material?" She pointed to the desk that perched on top of the barricade. "Ah. Much obliged." He clambered up and retrieved a pen and some paper. Then, frowning, he dropped the paper. He went to his knees and began hunting around for something, while Venera watched closely. He came up with one of her dolls, a favorite that had a porcelain head and cloth body. 'Do you mind if I borrow this for a minute?" he asked her. She shrugged. 0Albard rubbed the doll's face against the stone floor for a while, while crashing sounds started from the hallway. The barricade shook. Holding the doll up critically, the prince grunted in satisfaction. Then he hunched over and began delicately pressing the pen against its face. He was standing in the center of the room with his hands behind his back when the barricade finally fell. A dozen solders came in, and they marched him out; he only had time to look back and wink at Venera before he was gone. After they'd taken him away, some members of the secret police ransacked her room. (That it looked substantially the same when they left as before Albard had arrived was a testament to her own habits.) They seized everything that could write or be written on, even prying the plaster off the wall where she'd scribbled on it. Venera herself was frisked several times, and then they swirled out, all clinking metal and bandoliers, leaving her sitting in the exact spot where he had been standing. Neither she, nor anyone she would later meet, ever saw Albard again. Eventually, she moved over to the window and picked up a particular doll. Its tunic was ripped where the secret policemen had cut it open looking for hidden notes. Venera held it up to the window and frowned. So that was what he'd been doing. Albard had rubbed its eyebrows off against the stone. Then, in meticulous tiny lines and curls, he had repainted them. From a distance of more than a few inches they seemed normal. Up close, though, she could see what they were made of: Letters. * * * * DThe nation of Liris curled around its interior courtyard as though doubled up in pain. Every window stared down at that courtyard. Every balcony overhung it. The bottom of this well would be in permanent shadow if not for the giant mirrors mounted on the roof, which were aimed at Candesce. Venera could plainly see that the courtyard was the focus of everything-but she couldn't see what was down there. For the first two days of her stay she was shuttled from small room to small room, all of them lined up in a short hallway painted institution green. After a brief interview in each chamber she was taken back to a drab waiting room, where she sat and ate and slept fitfully on the benches. She was startled awake every morning by a single gunshot sounding somewhere nearby. Morning executions? It seemed unlikely; she was the sole inhabitant of this little prison. Prison it clearly was. She had to fill out forms just to use the one washroom, a cold cube with wooden stalls defaced by centuries of carven graffiti. Its high, grated windows gave her a view of the upper stories of the inner courtyard. They hinted at freedom. 'B-b-back to waking?" Venera sat up warily on the third morning and tried to smile at her jailor. He was tall, athletically muscled, and possessed the sort of chiseled good looks one saw in actors, career diplomats, or con artists. As dapper as could be expected for a man dressed in iron and creaking leather, he might have melted any lady's heart-provided she never looked in his eyes or heard him speak. Either of those maneuvers would have revealed the awful truth about Moss: his mind was damaged somehow. He seemed more marionette than man and, sadly, appeared to be painfully aware of his deficit. Just as he had yesterday, Moss carried a stack of forms in one hand, bearing it as though it were a silver platter. Venera sighed when she saw this. "How long is it going to take to process me into your prison?" she asked as he clattered to a stop in front of her. 'P-p-prison?" Moss gaped at her. Carefully, as though they were gold, he placed the papers on the peeling bench. His metal clothing gnashed quietly as he straightened up. "You're n-not in p-p-prison, my lady." l'Then what is this place?" She gestured around at the sound-deadening plaster walls, the smoke-stained light sconces and battered benches. "Why am I here? When do I get my things back?" They'd gone through her jacket and taken its contents-jewelry, key, and bullet. She wasn't sure which loss worried her most. Moss's face never changed expression as he spoke, but his eyes radiated some sort of desperate plea. They always did, even if he was staring at the wall. Those eyes seemed eloquent, but Venera was beginning to think that nothing about Moss's looks or demeanor meant anything about his inner state. Now he said, in his intensely flat way, "This is the im-immigration department of the g-g-government of Liris. You were brought here to't-t-take your citizenship-ip exams." 'Citizenship?" But now it all made sense-the forms, the sense of being processed, and the succession of minor officials who'd taken up hours of her time over the past days. They had grilled her mercilessly, but not about how or why she had come here, or about what her plans or allegiances might be. They didn't even want to know about her peeling sunburns. No, they'd wanted to know the medical histories of her extended family, whether there was madness in her line (a question that had made her laugh), and what was the incidence of criminality among her relatives. F'Well, my father stole a country once," she had answered. She had of course asked them to let her go, in perhaps a dozen different ways. Her assumption was that she would be ransomed or otherwise used as a bargaining chip. With this in mind, she had sat anxiously for hours, wondering about her value to this or that state or person. It had never occurred to Venera that she might be adopted by Liris as one of its own. hNow as she realized what was going on, Venera had one of the strangest moments of her life. She felt, for just a second, relief at the prospect of spending the rest of her life hidden away here, like a jewel in a safe. She shook herself, and the moment passed. Disturbed, she stood and turned away from Moss. z'B-b-but the news is good," said Moss, who looked like he was begging for death as he said it. "D-don't fret. You have p-p-passed all the't-t-tests so far. J-just one set of forms to g-go." Venera gnawed at her knuckle, each bite sending little pulses of pain up her jaw. "What if I don't want to be a citizen of Liris?" Moss proceeded to laugh, and Venera swore to herself she would do anything to avoid seeing thatr again. "F-Fill these out," he said. "A-and you're done." It wasn't eagerness to become a citizen of a nation the size of a garden that made her sign the papers. Venera just wanted to get her things back-and get out of the waiting room. What she'd felt a moment ago was just a craving for anonymity, she told herself. Citizenship of any nation meant nothing to her, except as a sign of lowly status. Her father was hardly a citizen of Hale, after all; he was Hale, and other people were citizens of him. Venera had grown up believing she, too, was above such categories. 'Come," was all Moss said when she was finished. He led her out into the hallway, and at its end, he unlocked the great metal door with its wire-mesh window. Before pushing the portal open, he picked up an open-topped box and held it out to her. Inside were the necklace and earrings he'd confiscated from her jacket when she arrived. Rolling next to them was her bullet. DThe key to Candesce was not there. Venera frowned but decided not to press the matter just now. Moss gestured with one hand and she edged past him into her new country. Shafts of dusty sunlight silhouetted tall stone pillars. Their arched capitals were muted in shadow, but the polished floors gleamed like mirrors. Save for a wall where the edge of the courtyard should be, the whole bottom floor of the great cubic building seemed open. Filling the space were dozens and dozens of cubicles, desks, worktables, and stalls. Indeed, it seemed as if all the roles of a midsized town were duplicated here-tailor over here, doctor there, carpenters on this side, bricklayers on that-but all gathered in one room. Bolts of cloth were stacked with bags of cement. Drying racks and looms had been folded up under the ceiling to make way for chopping blocks and flour-covered counters. And working in determined silence throughout this shadow-cut space was a small army of silent, focused people. Each was isolated at some chair or desk, and Venera had the startled impression that these work stations had grown up and around some of the people, like shells secreted around water creatures. It must have taken years for that man there to build the small ziggurat of green bottles that reared above his desk; nearby a woman had buried herself in a miniature jungle of ferns. Mirrors on stands and hanging from strings cunningly directed every stray beam of light within ten feet at her green fronds. Each position had its eruption of individuality or downright eccentricity, but their limits were strictly kept; nobody's keepsakes and oddities spilled beyond an invisible line about five feet in radius. Moss led her to an outer wall, where he opened a dim chamber that reminded her of Diamandis's warren. Here were crates and boxes full of what looked like armor-except she knew it for what it was. "You are required to wear four hundred and fifty p-p-pounds of mass during the day," said Moss. "That will offset our r-reduced g-gravity and maintain the health of your bones." He stood back, arms crossed, while Venera rooted through the mess looking for something suitable. It seemed that Spyre's tailors were an unimaginative lot. The room contained an abundance of blouses, dresses and skirts, pants and jackets, but all were done in intricately tooled and hinged metal. Only undergarments-those directly in contact with the skin-were made of suppler materials, mostly leather, though to her relief she did find some cloth. Venera tried on a vest made of verdigrised copper scales, added a skirt made of overlapping iron plates and weighed herself. Barely one hundred pounds. She went back and found greaves and wrist bracers, a platinum torque, and a steel jacket with tails. Better, but still too light. Moss waited patiently while she layered herself like a battleship. Finally when she topped the scales at one hundred pounds weight-five hundred pounds mass-he grunted in satisfaction. "B-but you need a h-h-hat," he said. 'What?" She glared at him. He had something like a belaying pin tied to his head; it wobbled when he moved. "Isn't all this humiliating enough?" 'We m-must put p-p-pressure on the's-spine. For l-long-term health." V'Oh, all right." She hunted through a cache of ridiculous alternatives, ranging from flowerpots with chinstraps to a glass fish bowl, currently empty but encrusted with rime. Finally she settled on the least offensive piece, a chrome helmet with earflaps and crow's wings mounted behind the temples. With all of this on her, Venera's feet made a satisfactory smack when they hit the ground. She could feel the weight and it was indeed nearly normal, but spread all over her surface instead of internally. And she quickly discovered that it took a good hard push to start walking and that turning and stopping were not operations to be taken lightly. She had a quarter-ton of inertia now. After walking into several walls and doorjambs, she started to get the hang of it. 'N-now," said Moss in evident satisfaction, "you are f-fit to see the B-B-Botanist." p'The what?" He threaded his way among the pillars without further comment. Venera nodded and smiled at the men and women who were putting down their work to openly stare as she passed. She tried to unobtrusively discern what they were working on, but the light here was too uneven. Shadow and glare thwarted her. Sunlight reflecting off the polished floor washed out whatever was ahead. Venera glanced back one more time before entering the lit area. Blackness and curving arches framed a dozen white ovals-faces-all turned toward her. On those faces she read every emotion: amazement, curiosity, anger, fear. None avoided her gaze. They goggled at her as though they'd never seen a stranger before. &Maybe they hadn't. Venera's scalp prickled, but Moss was waving her ahead. Blinking, she stepped from the dark gallery into the courtyard of Liris. For a moment it seemed as if she'd entered one of the paintings on the ceiling of her father's chapel. This one came complete with scented pink clouds. She reached out a hand to touch one of these and heard the sharp click of a weapon being cocked. Venera froze. 'It would be very unwise of you to complete that gesture," drawled a voice from somewhere ahead. Slowly, Venera retracted her hand. As her eyes adjusted to the brightness, she saw the barrels of three antique-looking rifles aimed her way. Grim men in iron held them. The soldiers made a shocking contrast to their setting. The entire courtyard was full of trees, all of one type, all in full flower. The scent and color of the millions of blossoms was overwhelming. It took Venera a moment to notice that the branches of many of the trees were hung with jewels, and gold rings encircled some of the trunks. It took her another moment to realize that a throne sat in the sole bare patch at the center of the courtyard. The woman lounging there was watching her with obvious amusement. PHer gown was of gold, silver, and platinum; on her head was a crown touched with gems of all shades that flashed in the concentrated light of Candesce. She appeared to be in early middle age, but was still beautiful; a cascade of hair dyed the same color as the blossoms wound down her shoulders. 'You seem reluctant to step into sunlight," she said with evident amusement. "I can see why." She tapped her own cheeks, eyes twinkling. Venera eyed the soldiers, thought about it, and walked over. Since this was evidently a throne room of sorts, she bowed deeply. "Your... majesty?" l'Oh. Oh no." The woman chuckled. "I am no queen." She waved a hand dismissively. "We are a meritocracy in Liris. You'll learn. My name is Margit, and I am Liris's resident botanist." 'Botanist..." Venera straightened and looked around at the trees. "This is your crop." 'Please." The lady Margit frowned. "We don't refer to the treasure of Liris in such prosaic terms. These beings are Liris. They sustain us, they give us meaning. They are our soul." 'Pardon, m'lady," said Venera with another bow. "But... what exactly are they?" p'Of course." Margit's eyes grew wide. "You would never have seen one before. You are so lucky to gaze upon them for the first time when they are in flower. These, Citizen Fanning, are cherry trees." Why was that word so familiar? There'd been a ball once, and her beloved uncle had approached her with something in his hand... a treat. v'What are cherries?" she asked as guilelessly as she could. 'An indulgence of the powerful," said Margit with a smile. "A delicacy so rare that it evidently never made it to your father's court." 'About that," said Venera. "The court, I mean. My family is fantastically rich. Why make me a... citizen of this place, when you could just ransom me back? You could get a boatload of treasure for me." Margit scoffed. "If you were the princess of a true nation then perhaps we would consider it. But you're not even from the principalities! By your own admission during the interviews, you come from the windswept wastes of Outer Virga. There's nothing there, and I find it hard to believe your people could own anything that would be of interest to us." Venera narrowed her eyes. "Not even a fleet of battle cruisers capable of reducing this place to kindling from twenty miles away?" Not only Margit laughed at this; the soldiers did as well. "Nobody threatens Spyre, young lady. We're impregnable." Margit said this so smugly that Venera swore she would find a way to throw her words back at her. Margit snapped her fingers, and Moss stepped forward. "Acquaint her with her new duties," said the botanist. hMoss stared at her, slack jawed. "W-what are those?" 'She knows the languages and cultures of other places. She'll be an interpreter for the trade delegation. Go introduce her." Margit turned away, lifting her chin with her eyes closed so that a beam of sunlight flooded her face. * * * * On her seventeenth birthday, Venera snuck out of the palace for the first time, acquired the means to blackmail her father, killed her first person, and met the man she was destined to marry. She would later tell people that "it all just sort of happened." The capital of Hale was a collection of six town-wheels-spinning rings, each two thousand feet in diameter-surrounded by an ever-shifting cloud of weightless buildings and smaller rings. The main sound in the city was the rumbling of jet engines, as various rings and large municipal structures struggled to keep their spin and to avoid colliding. The scent of kerosene hung in the air; underlying it were other industrial and biological odors, just as under the rumbling of the engines you could hear shouts, horns, and the laughter of dolphins. &Venera had grown up watching the city life from afar. When she traveled between the town-wheels it was usually in a closed taxi. Sometimes one or another of the nobility hosted weightless balls; then she and the other ingenues donned fabulous wings that were powered by stirrups, and flew intricate dances in the warm evening air. But that flight always took place within careful limits. Nobody strayed. She was of marriageable age now-and had recently come to realize that in Hale, marriageable also meant murderable. Venera had three sisters and had once had three brothers. Now she had two of those, and the once-close girls of the family were starting to actively plot against one another. With the boys, it was all about succession; with the girls, marriage. Someone had used a marvelous word at a dinner party just a few days before: leverage<. Leverage was what she needed, Venera had decided. And so her thoughts had turned to old family tragedies, and the mysteries that had consumed her as a girl. Today she was dressed in the brown blouse and pantaloons of a servant-girl, and the wings on her back were not butterfly orange or feathered pink, but beige canvas. Her hair was tied down with a drab cloth, and she soared the air of the city barefoot. In her waist bag she carried some money, a pistol, and a porcelain-headed doll. She knew where she was going. RThe bad neighborhoods started remarkably close to the palace. This fact might have had something to do with the royal habit of simply dumping waste off the palace-wheel without regard to trajectory or velocity. The upper classes couldn't be entirely blamed for the stench that wafted at Venera as she flapped toward her destination, however. She wasn't disgusted; on the contrary, the smell and the sound of arguing, shouting people made her heart pound with excitement. Since she was little she'd sat for hours with her eye glued to a telescope, watching these citizens and this neighborhood roll by as the palace turned past it. She knew the place-she had simply never been here. What Venera approached looked like nothing so much as an explosion frozen in time. Even the smoke (of which there was plenty) was motionless or rather, it moved only as quickly as the air that oozed slowly between the hundreds of cubes, balls, and disheveled shapes that counted as buildings here. Anything not tied down hung in the air and drifted gradually, and that meant trash, animal hair, balls of dirty water, splinters, and scraps of cloth all contributed to the cloud. When the doldrums of summer broke and a stiff wind finally did snake through the place, half the mass of the neighborhood was going to simply blow away, like chaff. For now it roiled around Venera as she ducked and dove toward the gray blockhouse that was her destination. Her business in the building was brief, but every detail of the transaction seemed etched in extraordinary detail-for here were people who didn't know who she was. It was marvelous to be treated as servants and ordinary folk treated one another, for a change-marvelous and eye opening. Nobody opened the door to the place for her; she had to do it herself. Nobody announced her presence, she had to clear her throat and ask the man behind the counter to help her. And she had to pay*, with her own money! 'The contents of locker six sixty-four," she said, holding out the sheet of paper she'd written the information on. The paper was for his benefit, not hers, for she'd memorized the brief string of letters and numbers years ago. Deciphering the letters Uncle Albard had penned on her doll's forehead had been one of her primary motivations to learn to read. zThe keeper of the storage lockers merely grunted and said, "Get 'em yourself. If you've got the combination, you get in, that's the rule." He pointed to a doorway at the end of the counter. She made to go that way, and he said, "Back pay's owing on that one. Six hundred." He grinned like a shark. "We were about to clear it out." Venera opened her bag, letting him see the pistol as she rummaged for the cash. He took it without comment and waved her through the door. The only thing in the dingy locker was a water-stained file folder. As she stood in the half light, flipping through it, Venera decided it was all she needed. The documents were from the College of Succession at the University of Candesce, two thousand miles away. They included DNA analyses that proved her father was not of the royal line. She barely saw the tumbled buildings as she left the blockhouse; maybe that's why she got turned around. But suddenly Venera snapped to attention and realized she was in a narrow chute formed by five clapboard structures, on her way down, not up toward the palace. Frowning, she grabbed a handy rope to steady herself and turned to go back the way she'd come. `'Don't." The voice was quiet, and came from above and to the left. Venera flipped over to orient herself to the speaker. In the gray reflected light from shingle and tar paper, she saw a youth-perhaps no older than herself-with tangled red hair and the long bones of someone raised in too little gravity. He smiled toothily at her and said, "Bad men coming behind you. Keep going and take your first hard right, and you'll be safe." She hesitated, and he scowled. "Not shittin' ya. Get going if you know what's good for you." Venera flipped again, planted her feet on the rope, and kicked off down the chute. As she reached the corner the boy had indicated, she heard voices coming from the far end of the chute-opposite the way he'd said the bad men were coming from. This side way led quickly to well-traveled airspace and had no niches or doors out of which someone could spring. Feeling momentarily safe, Venera peeked around the corner of the chute. Three men were flying slowly up from the left. D'I really think you've gotten us lost this time," said the one in the lead. He was in his late twenties and obviously noble or rich from his dress and demeanor. One of his companions was similarly dressed, but the third man looked like a commoner. She couldn't see much more in the dim light. "The palace is definitely not this way," continued the leader. "My appointment is at two o'clock, I can't afford to be late." fTwo o'clock? She remembered one of the courtiers telling her that an admiral from some neighboring country would be calling on her father in the early afternoon. Was this the man? RSuddenly one of the other men shouted, "Hey!" He had barely writhed out of the way of a sword that had suddenly appeared in the third one's hand. "Chaison, it's a trap!" Four men shot down the chute from the right. They were rough-looking, the sort of thug Venera had watched roaming the neighborhood through her spyglass and sometimes fantasized about. All had drawn swords and none spoke as they set upon their two victims. The one named Chaison whirled his cloak into the air between himself and the attackers and drew his sword as his friend parried a thrust from their erstwhile guide. After the initial warning from Chaison's friend, nobody spoke. In a free-fall swordfight, the blade was as much propulsion as weapon. Each of the men found purchase in wall or rope or opponent with hand, foot, shoulder, or blade as they could. Each impact sent them in a new direction, and they tumbled and spun as they slashed at one another. Venera had watched men practice with swords and had even witnessed duels, but this was totally different. There was nothing mannered about it; the fight was swift and brutal. The men's movements were beautiful, viscerally thrilling and almost too fast to take in. One of the attackers was hanging back. As his face intersected a shaft of light, she realized it was the boy who had warned her. He held his sword up, wavering, in front of his face and ducked away from the embattled older men. It took Venera a few seconds to realize that two of the men bouncing from wall to wall were now dead. There were black beads dotting the air-blood-and more was trailing the bodies, which continued to move, but only languidly, from momentum. One was the guide who had brought the two noblemen here; another was one of the attackers. <'Stand down!" Chaison's voice startled Venera so much that she nearly lost her grip on the wall. The remaining three attackers paused, holding onto ropes and bent shingles, and stared at their dead compatriots. The boy looked sick. Then one of his companions roared in anger and jumped. dHe spun away, slashed in the face by Chaison's companion. The other man had his sword knocked out of his hand by Chaison, who finished the uppercut motion with a blow to his jaw. The boy was hanging in midair with his sword held out in front of him. Chaison glimpsed him out of the corner of his eye, spun, and-stopped. The blade trembled an inch from the boy's nose. He went white as a sheet. ,'I'm not going to hurt you," said Chaison. His voice was soft, soothing-in total contrast to the bellow he had given moments ago. "Who sent you here?" rThe boy gulped and, seeing that he still held his sword, he let go of it spasmodically. As it drifted away, he said, "B-big man from palace. Red feather in his hat. Didn't give a name." Chaison made a sour face. "All right. Now off with you. Find another line of work-oh, and some better friends." He reached for his companion's wrist and they locked arms to coordinate their flight. Together they turned to leave. The man who'd been struck in the chin suddenly snapped his head up and raised his arm. A snub-nosed pistol gleamed in his grimy fist. The boy gasped as he aimed it point-blank at the back of Chaison's head. Bang!l A spray of blood filled the air and the boy shrieked. 0Venera peered through the blue cloud of gunsmoke. Chaison's would-be assassin was twitching in the air, and both noblemen were staring past him, at her. 2She returned the pistol to her carrying bag. "I-I saw you were in trouble," she said, surprised at how calm she sounded. "There was no time to warn you." Chaison glided over. He looked impressed. "Thank you, madam," he said, graciously ducking his head. "I owe you my life." In her fantasies, Venera always had a perfect comeback line at moments like this. What she actually said was, "Oh, I don't know about that." He laughed. Then he extended his hand. "Come. We'll need to explain ourselves to the local police." Venera flushed and backed away. She couldn't be caught out here-quite apart from the scandal, her father would ask too many questions. The papers she had just recovered might come to his attention, and then she was as good as dead. 'I can't," she said and turning, kicked off from the corner as hard as she could. She heard him shouting for her to stop, but Venera kept on and didn't look back until she had passed through three crowded markets and slipped down five narrow alleys between soon-to-collide buildings. Cautiously, she worked her way back to the palace and changed in the guardroom while the man she'd bribed to let her out and in again waited nervously outside. HThe next time she saw Chaison Fanning it would be two nights later, at a formal ball. He told her much later that his astonishment when he recognized her completely drove out all thoughts of the new treaty with Hale that he was celebrating. Certainly the expression on his face was priceless. Venera had her own reason to smile, as she had learned who had tried to have this handsome young admiral killed. And as she danced with Chaison Fanning, she mused about what exact words she would use when she confronted her father. She already knew what it was she would be asking him for in exchange for her silence regarding his nonroyal origins. 6For the first time in her young life, Venera Fanning began to conceive of an existence for herself away from the intrigue and cruelty of the Court of Hale. * * * * 4 8A thick cable rose from the roof of the Nation of Liris. Venera squinted at it, then at the blunderbusses the soldiers cradled. Another, larger blunderbuss was mounted on a pivot under a little roof nearby. That must be the damnable gun whose firing kept waking her up in the morning. None of those ancient arms looked very accurate. She could probably just jump off the roof and run for it... but run where? Chances were she'd be snapped up by some neighbor worse than these people. She decided-for the tenth time today-to remain patient and see what happened. No one in Liris seemed to have any immediate desire to harm her. Her best strategy was to play along with them until the moment came when she could escape. <'Now pay attention," whined Samson Odess. The fish-faced little man had been introduced yesterday as her new boss. The very idea of a commoner giving her orders without an immediate threat to back them up struck Venera as both bizarre and funny. She had so far done the things he had asked, but Odess seemed to sense that she wasn't taking him seriously. He was becoming ever more defensive as the morning wore on. B'This is our lifeline to Lesser Spyre," Odess said, slapping the cable. Venera saw that he stood on a low platform, at the center of which was a boxy machine that clamped the cable with big ratchet wheels. "By means of this engine, we can rise to the city above, where the Great Fair is held once a week. Visitors from everywhere in Virga come to the Fair. It is the trade delegation's sacred task to ensure that we conduct the most advantageous transactions in the name of Liris." As he spoke, the rest of the delegation popped up through the roof's one hatch. Four heavily armed men bracketed an iron box that must have held pitted cherries. Flanking them were two men and two women, the women veiled like Venera and dressed in ceremonial robes of highly polished silver, inlaid with crimson enamel. 'Is the gravity the same up there as it is here?" Venera asked. If it was a standard g,> they wouldn't be able to move. "Odess shook his head vigorously. "You can see the spin-rate from down here. We'll shed our heavy vestments for city clothes once we're up there." ^'Why not change down here?" she asked, puzzled. Odess goggled at her in astonishment. He'd stared exactly that way yesterday, when he was first introduced. Moss had taken Venera to Odess's office, a glorified closet that made her wonder if Diamandis's pack-rat ways might not be the rule here, rather than the exception. Odess had filled the small space over the years, perhaps his whole lifetime, with oddments and souvenirs that likely made sense to no one but him. What was the significance of that single shoe, mounted as though it were a trophy and given its own little niche in the wall? Could anyone read the faded text on those certificates hung behind his chair? And was that some sort of exotic mobile that drooled from the dimness overhead, or the hanging mummified remains of some sort of animal? Books were stacked everywhere, and a pile of dishes three feet tall teetered next to a rolled-up mattress. Odess's first words were addressed to Moss, not Venera. "You expect us to accept this... this outsider in our midst?" l'Is th-that not what you d-do?" Moss had asked. "G-go outside?" Startled, Venera had sent him a sidelong look. Was there somebody home behind those glazed eyes, after all? R'B-besides, the b-botanist commanded it." 'Oh, God." Odess had put his head in his hands. "She thinks she can do anything now." Any slight deviation from routine or custom threw Odess into a panic. Venera's very presence was upsetting him, though the rest of the delegation had been pathetically happy to meet her. They would have partied till dawn if she hadn't begged off early, pointing out that she had not yet seen the room where she was expected to sleep for the rest of her life. 8Eilen, Mistress of Scales and Measures, had shown Venera to a closet just outside the delegation's long, cabinet-lined office. The closet was seven feet on a side-its walls of whitewashed stone-and nearly twelve feet high. There was room for a bed and a small table, and there was no window. "You can put your chest under the bed," Eilen said, "when you get one. Your clothes you can hang on those pegs for now." And that was all. If Venera were inclined to sympathy with other people, she would have been saddened at the thought that Eilen, Odess, and the others accepted conditions like these as the norm. After all, they had likely been born and raised in such tiny chambers. Their playgrounds were dusty servants' ways, their schoolrooms window niches. Yet of all the citizens of Liris, they were the privileged ones, for as members of the delegation they were allowed to see something of the world outside their walls. While Odess sputtered and tried to explain why tradition demanded that they rise to Lesser Spyre in full ceremonial gear, Venera watched the soldiers deposit their precious cargo on the platform. After the rest of the delegation was on board, they flipped up railings on all sides (to her relief) and one bent to examine the archaic engine. This was what really interested her. 'If we're all ready, we will sing the Hymn of Ascension," said Odess, portentously. BVenera looked around. "The what?" He looked as though he'd been slapped-but Eilen put a hand on his arm. "We didn't tell her about it, so how would she know?" 'Anyone in Spyre could see us arise, hear the..." He realized his mistake. "Ah yes. A true foreigner." Shaking himself, he put both hands on the rail and puffed out his cheeks. "Listen, then, and learn the ways of a civilized society." 0While they sang their little ditty, Venera watched the soldier spark the hulking rotary engine into life. Its chattering roar immediately drowned out the miniature choir, who didn't seem to notice. The wheel turned, gripping the cable, and the platform inched slowly into the air. The purpose of the railings soon became clear. Only a few yards above the rooftop they caught the edge of the howling gale that swept toward the open end of Spyre. This steady hurricane was produced by the rotation of the great cylinder, Venera knew; she'd seen its like in smaller wheels like those of Rush. A wind came in at the cylinder's axis of rotation and shot out again along the rim. If she simply jumped off the platform at this point, she would be propelled out of Spyre entirely, and at goodly force. @The four soldiers were here to shoot anyone who tried that. And now that they were higher up she could see other guarantors of obedience: gun emplacements were suspended in the middle air by more cables, and some of them were visibly manned. Hanging in the sunny clouds beyond the wheel were more bunkers and turrets. It seemed a miracle now that she had, unconscious, threaded her way between them all to land here. Z'Father would love this place," she muttered. Chaison Fanning, her missing husband, would probably consider Spyre a moral obscenity, and would want to blow it up. They rose some miles, through filigrees of cloud, puffballs that hovered like anxious angels between the incoming and outblowing gales; past houses and pillboxes bolted to other cables, whose glittering windows revealed nothing of what might be taking place inside them. The lands of Greater Spyre widened and widened below Venera, their patchwork estates becoming a mesmerizing labyrinth: the blockhouses of a dozen, a hundred and more Nations of Liris, it seemed, painted the inside of the cylinder. Slicing through these, leaving ruin and wildflowers on their sidings, were the railways of the preservationists. PAll the while, Lesser Spyre came closer. zVenera had seen a geared town once before-in the dead hollow heart of Leaf's Choir, Chaison Fanning's ships had moored next to the asphyxiated city of Carlinth. But Carlinth's pale grandeur couldn't match the wonder of Lesser Spyre because that other city had been motionless in death, and Lesser Spyre lived. Its great wheel-shaped habitats, each a half mile or more in diameter, turned edge to angled edge like the meshwork of a vast clock. The citizen of one wheel could stroll to its edge and simply step onto the surface of another as their rims came within touching distance. The wheels were kept in configuration by a lattice of giant spars and thick cables, from which black banners fluttered. For all this cunning and motion, Lesser Spyre did not look inviting. There were some houses and streeets, but most of the wheels were dominated on their inside surface by one or two sprawling buildings. The Admiralty at Rush had been like that, as had the Pilot's palace. But also in Rush there were wheels weeded with taverns, towers, and twisting streets, as organic and inviting as a party. Lesser Spyre was monolithic, self-contained, and controlled. Almost nothing stuck out. 8The cable car eluded gravity entirely after a while, and its passengers clipped their metal costumes to the railing and waited until their destination hove into sight. The cable terminated in a knot of dozens of others, at a complicated cagework that threaded the axle of a town-wheel. Venera could see other people embarking and disembarking there. They moved in small groups that gave one another a wide berth. RShe saw something else, though, that gave her hope for the first time in days: ships were berthed here. Sleek yachts, for the most part, of many different designs and flying diverse colors-but all foreign. They signaled the possibility of escape, real escape, for the first time since her arrival. zShe tapped Odess's tin shoulder and pointed. "Our customers?" PHe nodded. "Pilgrims from all the principalities of Candesce come to us, hoping to leave again with some trinket or token of ours. Do you recognize any of those ships?" Venera nodded. "That one is from Gehellen." It was the only one she knew, but Odess was obviously impressed. "I know that we'll trade them cherries," she went on. "But what do the rest of Spyre's countries sell?" He laughed, and just then the platform came to rest at its terminus. As they clambered over to the axle like so many iron spiders, Odess said, "What do they trade? You ask that with refreshing innocence. If we knew what half our neighbors traded, we might arrange some extra advantage for Liris. The fame of many of Spyre's commodities is spread far and wide-but not all. There are sections of the fair no stranger can enter without providing a guarantee of circumspection." 'A what?" 'A hostage, sometimes," said Eilen. They had entered a long cylindrical chamber with many small doors spiraling up its interior. Odess found one of these and, producing a massive key, unlocked it. Inside was a slot-shaped locker, its walls encrusted with rust and cobwebs, with one incongruously bright mirror at the far end. Odess and the others proceeded to strip off their metal shells, trading them for ornately tooled leather equivalents-except that in place of veils, each costume came with an elaborate mask. Odess passed a kit to Venera, and she turned her back modestly to change. Her mask had a falcon's beak. 4'There are nations," Odess said, "that average one customer every ten years. Whatever it is they trade, it is so fabulously valuable that the whole country lives off the sale for a generation. That's an extreme example, but there are many others who guard the nature of their produce with their lives. Liris used to be one such. Now everyone knows what we produce, but that's actually worked to our advantage." 'But what can those others be selling?" Venera shook her head in incomprehension. She was stretching a black jacket over a silver-traced vest, admiring the effect in the mirror. With the mask in place she looked intimidating. She liked the effect. "She is from one of them." It was one of the soldiers who said it. He didn't have to say who sheP was; Venera knew he meant the botanist. jVenera raised an eyebrow. "She wasn't born in Liris?" The soldier shook his head, glancing uneasily at Odess. "Our previous botanist... the trees were languishing, m'lady. They were dying, until she came." Odess was scowling in obvious warning, but the soldier shrugged. "Five years now, she's brought them back to health." p'And you don't know anything about where she came from?" "'Of course we do!" Odess laughed loudly. "She's a lady of the Nation of Sacrus. We know who she is... even if we don't know what it is that Sacrus does." 'You need better spies," said Venera. Nobody laughed, but the thought intrigued her. Spyre, it seemed, was an investigator's playground. She would love to develop a network here, the way she had in secret in her adopted home of Slipstream. They moved from the locker cylinder to the axle of the town-wheel. Here, dozens of yin-yang stairs and elevator shafts ran down to the copper-shingled roofs of the vast buildings lining the wheel. Odess showed their letters of transit to a succession of inspectors and gradually they worked their way over to one of the elevators. 'Stay alert, everyone," Odess said as the wrought-iron doors grumbled shut behind them, and they began to move down. "Watch for any signs of change. In particular, our new interpreter," he nodded at Venera, "is going to cause a stir. We need to stick to our agreed story. You," he said to Venera, "must only speak to the customers, and then only when we ask you to. We don't want to give our rivals any clues about our capabilities or what's been going on inside Liris." "This paranoia reminded Venera of Hale and the darkened corridors of her father's palace. "But why?" she asked in irritation. "Why this skulking?" ~'Questions might be asked," said Odess darkly. "About where you came from. About why our people might have ventured outside our walls. Where we might have gone, what we might have seen. What you might have seen." He shook his head. "Your story is that you were born and raised in Liris." 'But my accent-" \'Is why you will only speak to the customers." There was silence for the rest of the ride. Venera adjusted her veil, glanced around, and noted the tightening of shoulders, straightening of stances as gravity rose until it neared the level she was used to. And then the elevator clunked to a halt, and the doors opened. The trade delegation of Liris edged cautiously into the Great Fair of Spyre. * * * * \Fabulous beasts swept across the dance floor, their skirts wheeling in time to the deep drumbeat of Spyre's music. The beasts had the faces of monsters, of animals, of gods. They danced in pairs, sometimes pausing in midpose as the music paused. It was during those pauses that business was transacted. One slender figure with a hawk's face stood at the foot of a gold-chased pillar, her backdrop a blue trompe l'oeil vista of wheeling towns. She watched the dancers alertly, aware of the deep strains of paranoia and deceit that must run through Spyre for it to have developed this custom. For this filigreed and gleaming ballroom and its whirling dancers was the Great Fair itself. JTrue, there were display rooms. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Odess emerging from the doorway that led to Liris's. He was alone, and doubtless his errand had been to check on the disposition of the glass cases and lights there. No customers had passed that door since she had been here. $Venera had spent some hours in the display room, helping the others set up. A solitary cherry tree dominated the marbled parlor; it sat in a broad stone bowl, the glow of its pink blossoms the first sight that greeted a visitor. It was a fake, made of silk and common woods. While Liris's soldiers played cards behind a screen in the display rooms, the rest of the delegation danced. The music was loud, the dances fast and close; so conversation consisted of quick whispers in your partner's ear, quips at arm's length, or brief nose to nose exchanges. Eavesdropping was impossible in these circumstances-and the soldiers of Spyre watched carefully for any sign of it. Venera had been told that visitors were carefully screened, and the penalty for revealing secrets here was death. Ironically, the whole setup seemed designed for cheating, for who could tell what any two dancers were telling one another? She had heard that the dances were occasionally interrupted by spontaneous duels. The denizens of Spyre took their masque very seriously. Not all the visitors did; most eschewed disguises, and so Venera was able to tell how many principalities were represented here. She even recognized one or two of the national costumes they wore. A gavotte ended and the dancers broke up. Gorgon-headed Eilen headed Venera's way. A waiting footman handed her a drink as she paused, panting. "Is it always like this?" Venera asked her. "Interested customers seem a bit thin on the ground." 'We have our regulars," said Eilen. "It's not the season for any of them. Oh, this gravity! It pulls at my stomach." tVenera sighed. These people were so immersed in their traditions that they couldn't see the insanity of it all. In the brief pause between dances, some of the customers had drifted off with outlandishly masked delegates-salesmen, really. Venera had been keeping track of who went through which doorways. Many of the portals around the vast chamber had never opened. They might be locked or even bricked up on the other side, for all she knew. JShe couldn't figure out the architecture of the fair. It seemed that the sprawling, multi-winged building had been renovated, rebuilt, and reimagined so many times over the centuries that it had lost any sense of its original logic. Corridors ran into blank walls; stairwells led nowhere; elevator shafts opened onto roaring air where lower floors had once been. Behind the public walls countless narrow passages twisted their ways to the offices, storage lockers, and panic rooms of the trade delegations. Liris's domain extended several floors above and below their public showroom; Venera had glimpsed in passing a huge chamber, like a collapsing ballroom, its dripping casements lost in gloomy shadows. Eilen had told her that this was where they met customers back when their cherries were a state secret. The ballroom was on one of the high-security levels of the fair; Liris still owned title to it, but had no use for it now. Venera had scoffed at this. "Has no one had the courage to drill spy holes in the walls to find out what your neighbors are up to?" Odess had sent her one of his disapproving, frightened looks, but nobody had said anything. .Oh, something was happening-Capri, Eilen's apprentice, was leading four people in rich clothes toward the Liris door. The little surge of excitement was absurd, and Venera nearly laughed at herself. Now Odess was bowing to them. He was opening the door. Venera imagined cheering. @'Who are they?" she asked Eilen. |'Oh! Success! That's... let's see... the delegates from Tracoune." Venera ransacked her memory; why was that word familiar? Ah, that was it. It was only a couple of weeks ago that Venera and her husband had attended a soiree in the capital of Gehellen. The event had been unremarkable up until the shooting started, but she did remember a long conversation with a red-faced admiral of the local navy. He had mentioned Tracoune. 'Excuse me, I'd like to watch this," she said to Eilen. The woman shrugged and turned back to the dance. Venera threaded her way around the outskirts of the ball and pushed open the door to the Liris showroom. It was at the end of a long hallway, seventy feet at least in length. Random words echoed back at her as Venera walked down it. Odess was showing them the tree. Now he was opening a lacquered box to reveal the cherries. Capri hovered nervously in the background. The visitors didn't seem too impressed. One of the four-a woman-wandered away from the others to stare idly at the paintings on the walls. They seemed to be marking time here, perhaps taking a break from dancing. Even Venera, with no experience in sales, could tell that. She approached the woman. "Excuse me..." said Venera. She deliberately did not stand or move the way Odess and Capri were-clasping their hands in front of them, darting hesitantly like servants. Instead, Venera bowed like an equal. 'Yes?" The customer looked surprised, but not displeased at being approached in this way. 'Do I have the pleasure of addressing a citizen of Tracoune?" The woman nodded. 'I had the most illuminating conversation recently," Venera continued, "at a party in Gehellen. We talked about Tracoune." An edge of calculation came into the woman's gaze. "Oh, really? Who were you talking to?" 'An admiral in the Gehellen navy, as it happens." Venera saw Odess notice that she was accosting a customer (his expression said, 'the new one's loose!') and then he started trying to make eye contact with her while pretending to give his full attention to his own people. Venera smiled. "I'm so sorry that you've had to cancel the Feast of Saint Jackson this year," she said to her prospect. "The Gehellenese are speculating that you won't be able to afford to feed your own people this time next year. Gauche of them, really." 'They said that?" The woman's face darkened in anger. "The Incident at Tibo was hardly that serious!" 'Ah, we thought not," said Venera in a conspiratorial way. "It's just that appearance is so important to international relations, isn't it?" dTen minutes later the visitors were signing on the dotted line. Venera stood behind the astounded trade delegation of Liris, her arms crossed, inscrutable behind her beaked mask. Odess stepped back to whisper furiously to her. "How did you do it? These people have never been customers before!" She shrugged. "You just have to know people's weaknesses. In a few weeks Tracoune will throw some minor party for visiting officials, and among other things they'll give away a few cherries... as if they could afford boatloads of them. A very discreet message, on a channel so private that almost no one on either side will know why when the Gehellens decide not to call in their outstanding loans to Tracoune-which they've been thinking of doing." DHe glared at her. "But how could..." She nodded. "The levers of diplomacy are very small. The art lies in knowing where to pry." Venera chatted with the clients while a soldier loaded a carrying case with dry ice and Odess measured out the pitted cherries. "Speaking of Gehellen," Venera said after a while, "we heard about some sort of commotion there a couple of weeks ago." The head of the Tracoune expedition laughed. "Oh, that! They're the laughingstock of the principalities!" ('But what happened?" He grinned. "Visitors from one of the savage nations... Oh, what was the name?" r'Slipstream," said the woman Venera had first dealt with. 'Slipstream, that was it. Seems an admiral of Slipstream went mad and took to piracy with some of his captains. They fought a pitched battle with the Gehellen navy in the very capital itself! Smashed their way out of the palace and escaped into Leaf's Choir, where it's rumored they found and made off with the Hoard of Anetene itself!" 'But that part's too preposterous, of course," said the woman. "If they'd found the hoard, they would have a key to Candesce as well-the last one is supposed to be the centerpiece of the hoard. With that they could have ruled all of Virga from the sun of suns itself!" 2'Well." The man shrugged. r'What happened to them?" asked Venera. "Did they escape?" h'Oh, they evaded the Gehellen navy right enough," he said with another laugh. "Only to be cut to ribbons in some barbarous nation near the edge of the world. None escaped, I hear." 'None..." Venera's pulse was racing, but she chose not to believe this man. His story had too many of the facets of rumor. 'Oh, no, I've been following this one," said the woman, with evident enjoyment. "It seems the Slipstreamers ran afoul of a place called Falcon Formation. The admiral suicidally rammed his flagship into some sort of dreadnaught of Falcon's. Both ships were obliterated in the explosion. Of his six other ships, only one got away." 'Its name?" Venera put her hand out to steady herself. Her fingers met the false bark of the fake cherry tree. 'What's name?" z'The... the ship that escaped. Did you hear which one escaped?" nThe woman looked affronted. "I didn't follow the story that closely." Now it was her turn to laugh. "But they foolishly ran for home, and the Pilot of Slipstream had them arrested the instant they came into port. For treason! What foolishness of them to even try to go home." Venera was glad of the mask she wore. It felt like her heart was slowing and would stop at any second. It was all she could do to keep up appearances until the Tracoune delegation left with their first consignment of cherries. Then she rushed back to the screened alcove, ignoring the jubilant congratulations the others were lavishing on her. .Even though the mask would have hid them, she shed no tears. Venera had learned many years ago never to do that in the presence of another human being. * * * * 5 That evening there was a celebration in a gallery overlooking the cherry trees. Amber light poured into the blued central shaft, glinting off windows and outlining shutters and balconies above and below, while small gusts of air still warm from Candesce's light teased the diaphanous drapes. Like everywhere else in Liris, the party room was small, crammed with memorabilia and eccentric furnishings, and reachable only through a labyrinth of stairs and corridors. It reminded Venera of her childhood bedroom. She had not wanted to come. All she wanted to do was sit alone in her closet. But Eilen insisted. "Why so gloomy?" she asked as she leaned hipshot in Venera's doorway. "You did great service to your country today!" Venera didn't speak as they walked, and she did her best to be the ghost at the wedding for the remainder of the night. Her sorrow wasn't catching. Most of Liris turned out for the event, and a dizzying parade of strange and neurotic characters passed in front of Venera as she systematically drank herself into a stupor. There were the hereditary soldiers with their peaked helmets and blunderbusses; the gray sanitation men who spoke in monotones and huddled together near the drinks table; the seamstresses and chandlers, carpenters, and cleaners who all spoke a secret language they had developed together in their childhood. And there were children, too-grave, wide-eyed gamins who skirted around Venera as though she had stepped out of one of their fantasy books. DShe watched them all go by, numb. :I knew that this might happen(, she told herself. "That he might die. Yet she had gone ahead with her plan, dragging Chaison reluctantly into it. It had been necessary if they were to save Slipstream; she knew that. But the decision still felt like a betrayal. 'It's so electric," said Eilen now, "having a new face in our world!" Quite drunk, she balanced on one foot near Venera, waving excitedly at people she had seen every day of her life. Of those people, a few had approached and introduced themselves, halting and stammering; most stayed back, muttering together and eyeing Venera. Foreigner. Strange beast. New darling of the botanist. And yes, the botanist was here, too. She glided through the celebrants as though on rails, nodding here and there, speaking strategic words on the outskirts of discussions, the same mysterious smile as always hovering just behind her lips. Eventually she made her way over to Venera. She hove to just this side of Eilen. Eilen herself moved away, suddenly quiet. 'I've always said that it pays to know your customers," the botanist said. "I judged your potential rightly." Venera eyed her. "Is that what you feel you do? Judge people's potential? Like the buds of flowers that might bloom or whither?" &'How apt. Yes, that's exactly right," said the botanist. "Some are to be encouraged, others cut from the branch. You nod as though you understand." 'I've done a certain amount of... pruning... in my day," said Venera. "So I've achieved a great victory for your tiny nation. Now what?" 'Now," said the botanist in a breathless sort of sisterly way, "we talk about what to do next. You see, you've vindicated my methods. I believe Liris needs to be more open to the outside world-that we need to send our delegates farther, even outside Spyre itself." The fog of Venera's sorrow lifted just a bit. "Leave Spyre? What do you mean?" 'I would like to send a trade mission to one of the principalities," said the botanist. "You, of course, would lead it." 'I'd be honored," said Venera with a straight face. "But isn't it Odess's job to arrange such things?" 'Odess?" The botanist waved her hand dismissively. "Prattling whiner. Take him if you'd like, but I can't see what good he'll do you. No, I picture you, perhaps Eilen, and one or two loyal soldiers. And a consignment of our treasure to tempt potential customers." 'That sounds reasonable." Venera couldn't believe what she was hearing. Did the woman seriously believe she would come back if she got out of this place? But then, everyone in Spyre seemed dangerously naive. 'Good. Say nothing of this to the others," instructed the botanist severely. "It won't do to let old wounds fester." 8What did that mean? Venera thought about it as the botanist strolled away, but then Eilen returned and spilled her drink on Venera's shoes. The evening went downhill from there, and so she didn't really ponder the botanist's unlikely offer until she got back to her closet, near dawn. 8She had just closed the ill-fitting door and was about to climb under the covers when there was a polite knock on the jamb. Venera cracked the door an inch. Moss leaned like a decapitated tree outside her door. "Citizen F-f-fanning," he said. "I j-just wanted to give you th-th-these." In the faint lamplight of the hallway, she could just make out a tiny bouquet of posies in his hand. The juxtaposition of his chiseled features with the emptiness of his eyes made her skin crawl. Venera slipped her hand out to snatch the little bundle of flowers from his nerveless fingers. "Thanks. You're not in love with me, are you?" 'I'm s-s-sorry you're so's-sad," he murmured. "T-t-try not to be so's-s-sad." Venera gaped at him. His words had been so quiet, but they seemed to echo on and on in the silent corridor. "Sad? Why do you think I'm sad?" ^Nobody else had noticed-not even Eilen, who had been watching Venera like a mother hawk all evening. Venera narrowed her eyes. "I didn't see you at the party. Where were you?" F'I w-w-was there. In the c-corner." TPresent yet absent. That seemed to sum Moss up. "Well." Venera looked down at Moss's present. Somehow she had clenched her fist and had crushed the little white blossoms. 'Thank you," she said. Moss turned away with a muted clattering noise. "Moss," she said quickly. He looked back. d'I don't want you to be sad, either," said Venera. He shambled away and Venera closed the door softly. Once alone, she let loose one long shuddering sigh and tumbled face-first onto the bed. * * * * The next morning, Venera wore the half-crushed posies on the breast of her jacket. If anybody noticed, they said nothing. She ate her breakfast with the members of the delegation in their designated dining room-a roofed-over air-shaft lined floor to invisible ceiling with stuffed animals-and followed them silently to their offices. She had discerned the routine by now: they would sit around for the rest of the day, occasionally engaging in desultory, short-lived dialogs, have lunch and then supper, and turn in. ,If she had to live like this for more than a couple of days, Venera knew she would snap. So, at ten o'clock, she said, "Can't we at least play cards?" One of the soldiers glanced over, then shook his head mournfully. "Odess always wins." r'But I'm here now," said Venera. "What if I were to win?" 6Slowly, they roused into a state resembling the attentive. With much cajoling and browbeating, Venera got them to reveal the location of the cards, and once she had these she energetically pulled a table and some chairs into the center of the room. "Sit," she commanded, "and learn." This was her opportunity to grill her compatriots properly-the party last night had been too hectic and strange, with everyone playing pal in transparent ways-and Venera made the best of it. After ten minutes Odess emerged from his office, looking bleary and cross, but his eyes lit up when he saw her shuffling the cards. Venera grinned sloppily at him and he drew up a chair. 'So," she said as the others examined their cards, "tell me about the botanist." The Pantry War had been dragging on for five years. Liris and the Duchy of Vatoris both claimed a five- by seven-foot room off one of the twisting corridors of the fair. The titles went back a hundred years, and the wording was ambiguous. Neither side would back down. 'War?" said Venera as she peered over her cards. "Don't you mean feud?" xThe other players all shook their heads. No, explained Odess, a feud was a family thing. This was a conflict between professional soldiers, and it took the form of pitched battles-even if those battles were between a dozen or so soldiers on either side, which was all the manpower the tiny nations could muster. After years of ambushes, raids, firefights, and all manner of other mayhem, it had settled into a war of attrition. Barricades had been thrown up in the disputed corridor; a no-man's-land of broken furniture and cracked tile stretched for thirty feet between them. The entrance to the closet beckoned only yards away, and either side could capture it in seconds. The trick was to hold it. `The two sides dug in. The barricades were ramified and reinforced, then backed up with cannon and rifles. Days might pass without a shot fired, but the other tenants of the fair got used to sudden flurries of gunfire. Rarely was anyone actually hurt. The loss of a single man would constitute a disaster. These things happened. Even now, the fair was riddled with strange tensions-empty passages paved in dust where no one had walked in generations because of just such disputes as this; neighbors who would think nothing of murdering one another in quiet corners if they had the chance; victims walled up in alcoves; and everywhere, conspiracies. It was a random bullet that changed everything. The walls around the disputed hallway had never been strong, but the combatants had hired a neutral third party to shore them up at regular intervals. Perhaps it was inevitable, though, that chinks and cracks should develop. One day, a bullet fired from the Vatoris barricade slipped through such a crack, ricocheted sixty feet down an abandoned air shaft, and killed the heir of a major nation as he stood at a punch bowl. hVenera rubbed her jaw. "I can imagine the reaction." 0'I'm not sure you can," said Odess portentously. The nation in question was the mysterious Land of Sacrus, a country of "vast size," according to Eilen. 'How vast?" 6'Fully three square miles!" Sacrus traded in power-but exactly how, no one was quite sure. They were one of the most secretive of countries, their fields being dotted with windowless factories, the perimeter patrolled by guards with dogs and guns. Small airships bristling with guns bobbed above the main complex. The Sacrans emerged from their smoke-wreathed towers only once or twice a year, and then they spoke almost exclusively to their customers. They were one of the few nations that had withstood the full force of the preservationists-in fact, nobody in the preservationist camp would talk about just how badly that particular battle had gone. Sacrus was enraged at the death of their heir. Three days after the incident, the Vatoris barricade fell silent. The soldiers of Liris fired a few shots and got no response. When they cautiously advanced on the Vatoris position, they found it abandoned. Discrete inquiries were made. No one had seen any of the Vatorins since the day of the fateful gunshot. In a moment of supreme daring, Liris sent its troops directly to the Vatoris apartments. They were empty. At this point, rumors of a great stench rising from Vatoris itself reached Odess's ears. "I was sitting in our showroom," he said. "I remember it like it was yesterday. One of the scions of a minor nation entered and told me that his people were walking up and down along the border with Vatoris, sniffing the air and exchanging rumors. The smell was the smell of death." XOdess returned home that night to warn his people. "But it was too late. As I lay down to sleep that evening, I heard it-we all did." A hissing sound filled the chambers of Liris. It was faint, but for someone like Odess, who had lived behind these walls his whole life, it had the effect of a siren. 'I stood, tried to run to the door. I fell down." The others related similar experiences, of sudden paralysis, landings behind desks or next to wavering doors. "We lay there helpless, all of us, unable to even focus our eyes. And we listened." tWhat they heard, after an hour or so, was a single set of footsteps. They moved smoothly from room to room, up stairs and down, not as if seeking anything, but as though whoever walked were taking inventory-committing every passage and chamber of Liris to memory. Eventually, they came to a stop. Silence returned. The paralysis faded near dawn. Odess rose, retched miserably for a few minutes, and then-trembling-crept in the direction those footsteps had taken. As he went he saw others emerging from their rooms, or rising from where they had fallen in mid walk. They converged on the place where the footsteps had halted: in the cherry tree courtyard. D'And there she sat," said Odess, "exactly as she sits these days, with the same damned smile and the same damned air of superiority. The botanist. Our conqueror." 'And no one has challenged her?" Venera barked a laugh of disbelief. "You fear reprisals, is that it?" Odess shrugged. "She ended the war, and under her leadership, the cherries bloom. Who else are we going to have lead us?" Venera scowled at her cards. A pulse of pain shot up her jaw. "I thought you were a meritocracy." ~'And so we are. And she is the best botanist we have ever had." P'What happened to the one she replaced?" They exchanged glances. "We don't know," confessed Eilen. "He disappeared the day Margit came." Venera discarded one card and took another from the deck. The others did the same, then she fanned out her hand. "I win." HOdess grimaced and began to shuffle. 'She came to me last night," said Venera. She had decided that she needed information more than discretion at this point. "Margit was pleased with the work I did." Odess snorted; Venera ignored him and continued. "She had a proposal." She told them about Margit's idea of an extended trade expedition into the principalities. As she did, Venera watched all movement around the table stop. Even Odess's practiced hand ceased its fanning of the cards. They were all staring at her. 'What?" She glanced around defensively. "Does this violate some ancient taboo?-I'm sure, everything else does. Or is it something you've been trying to get done for years, and now you're mad that the newcomer has achieved it?" Eilen looked down. "It's been tried before," she said in a quiet voice. 'You must understand," said Odess; then he fell silent. Knitting his brows, he started furiously shuffling. r'What?" Now Venera was seriously alarmed. "What's wrong?" @'To travel outside Spyre... is not done," said Odess reluctantly. "Not without safeguards to guarantee one's return. Hostages, if one is married... but you're not." Venera was disgusted. "The pillboxes, the guns and razor wire-they really aren't to keep people out,H are they? They're to keep them in." 'Yes, but you see, if Margit is willing to send you out despite you having no ties here, no hostages or anything she could hold over you... Then she's obviously willing to try it again," said Odess. He slammed the deck down on the table, kicked his chair back, and walked away. Venera watched him go in startled amazement. The soldiers were standing too, not making eye contact with anyone. PVenera pinned Eilen with her gaze. "Try what?" The woman sighed deeply. "Margit is a master of chemistry and biology," she said. "That's why she is the botanist. Three years ago she conceived the idea of sending an expedition like the one you're describing. She chose a man who was competent, intelligent, and brave, but one whom she didn't completely trust. To guarantee that he would return, she... injected him. With a slow poison that was not supposed to begin to act for ten days. If he returned within those ten days, she would give him the antidote, and he would be fine." ^Venera eyed the splayed cards. "What happened?" 'The return flight was delayed by a storm. He made it back on the eleventh day." Venera hesitated-but she already knew the answer when she asked, "Who was it that Margit sent?" f'Moss," said Eilen with a shudder. "She sent Moss." * * * * 6 'I have to admit I was expecting this," said Margit. Venera stood in the doorway to her apartment; she was dressed down in close-fitting black leathers. Two soldiers hulked behind her, their meaty hands resting heavy on her shoulders. B'In retrospect," Venera said ruefully, "I should have anticipated the trip wires." The inside walls of the courtyard were just too enticing a surface; freed of her metal clothing, Venera weighed only twenty pounds or so and she could easily clamber hand-over-hand up the drainpipe that ran next to Odess's little window. "There's no other way in or out of the building but up that wall. Naturally, you'd have alarms." '...I just wasn't anticipating it so soon," said Margit. She twitched a housecoat over her lavender nightgown and lit another candle off the one she was holding. Even in the dimness of midnight Venera could see that her apartment was sumptuous, with several rooms, high ceilings, and tiled mosaics on the floor beneath numerous tapestries. Of course Margit wouldn't live like the people she ruled. Venera wouldn't have, either. She understood Margit enough by now that staying here in Liris had not been an option. So after bidding her coworkers good night, she had retired to her closet and waited. When the building was silent and dark, Venera had crept out and jimmied open a window that led onto the courtyard. zAdmittedly, she hadn't been thinking clearly. The revelation about Moss had shaken her and she had acted rashly. If she didn't regain control of this situation she would be in real trouble. "'Come in, sit down. We need to talk," said Margit. "You may leave us," she said to the soldiers. They lifted their hands off Venera's shoulders and retreated past the heavy oak door. They would have a long walk down the winding steps that led down to Liris's ground floor. Good", thought Venera. She sat down on a decadent-looking divan, but she kept her feet braced against the floor, ready to leap up instantly if that was required. The first step to taking control of the situation was taking control of the conversation. Margit opened her mouth, but Venera spoke first: "What is an heir of Sacrus doing running a minor nation like Liris?" Margit narrowed her eyes. "Shouldn't I be asking the questions? Besides, what's your interest?" she asked as she gracefully sat opposite Venera. "Professional curiosity, perhaps? You are a noble daughter yourself, are you not? A nation like Liris would be an interesting playground for someone learning how to use power. Are you interested in rulership?" ~'In the abstract," said Venera. "It's not an ambition of mine." 'Neither is assisting your new countrymen, I gather. You were trying to escape us." P'Of course I was. I was press-ganged into your service. And you admit yourself you expected me to try it." She shrugged. "So what could we possibly have to talk about?" 'A great deal, actually," said Margit. "Such as how you came to be here at all." Venera nodded slowly. She had been thinking about that, and the conclusions she had come to had motivated her to run as much as the facts about Moss. "I arrived here through an odd chain of events," she said. "At the time I wasn't prepared to wonder why there were armed troops sneaking over the lawns of Spyre during the nighttime. I was mostly concerned with evading them. But they pursued me here. Why here? At the time, I didn't know enough to even ask the question." LMargit raised an eyebrow and sat back. r'It's my father, you see," said Venera in a confessional tone. "He's flagrantly paranoid, and he wanted his daughters to be as well. He raised me to disbelieve coincidence. So if I was herded, here, what could the reason be? The troops who were following me weren't from Liris. In fact, I assumed they weren't after me at all, but were chasing down another trespasser whom I had met. It wasn't until today that I realized that those other soldiers had been from Sacrus." Margit laughed. "That truly is paranoid. You would implicate my nation in every one of your misfortunes?" >'No, just this one." She sat forward. "Since we're talking, though, I'd like to ask you a couple of questions." Smiling her maddening smile, Margit nodded. "The first question is whether you maintain constant contact with your nation. I've been told you don't, but I don't believe that." Margit shrugged. "It would be easy. So what if I did? Can't a daughter talk to her parents?" t'The second question," said Venera, "is whether Sacrus itself travels regularly into the principalities." Seeing Margit's suddenly guarded expression, Venera nodded. "You do, don't you?" 'So what?" 'Someone guessed where I had come from," marveled Venera. "More than likely the Gehellens have circulated descriptions of myself and my husband throughout the principalities. They seek us, and it's an open secret why." Margit grinned in obvious delight. "Oh, you are smart! I was right to bring you into Liris in the way I did." fVenera cocked her head. "What other way was there?" 8'Oh, I think you can guess." 'Under duress. Tortured," said Venera. "Why do you think I tried to flee just now? It suddenly made no sense to me that I was walking around freely. And your offer to let me travel outside Spyre... made even less sense." >'You became alarmed. That's understandable. I was told to learn everything you know about the Key to Candesce," said Margit. "You figured that out, of course." TVenera looked innocent. "Sorry, the what?" Margit stood up and paced over to a side table. "Drink?" Venera shook her head. 'Something happened a short time ago," said the botanist. She stood with her back to Venera, and in those seconds Venera looked around quickly for anything that might give her an advantage. There were no handy hat-pins, letter openers, or pistols lying on the pillowed furniture. She did spot a battered wooden cabinet that looked markedly out of place compared to the rest of the pieces, but had no time to get to it before Margit turned again, drink in hand. V'Something happened," Margit repeated, "a fight in the capital of Gehellen, rumors of a stolen treasure, and then an event that our scientists are starting to refer to as the outage." Venera tensed. She hadn't expected Margit to know this part of the story. R'Candesce does many things besides light our skies," said the botanist. "We watch the sun of suns closely; we have to, our very lives depend on it. So when one of Candesce's many systems shuts down, even for a moment, we know about it. Even though such an event has not occurred in living memory." jShe sat down again. "Only someone with a key could enter Candesce and manipulate it. And the last key was lost centuries ago. You can imagine the uproar that the outage has caused, here and abroad. The principalities are mobilizing, and agents of the Virga Home Guard have been seen nosing around, even here." Home guard?^ Venera had never heard of them. But she wanted to kick herself for failing to realize that the gambit she and her husband had played would alert all the powers in the world. *Hit another trip wire, she mused. 'It was only a matter of days before we had your name and description and that of your husband and others in your party," said Margit. "We pay our spies well. So when a woman fitting that description miraculously appeared in the skies of Greater Spyre, we acted." 'Clearly, I've been a fool," said Venera bitterly. "Then it was Sacrus troops who drove me here?" l'I actually don't know for sure," Margit admitted. "Our men were out that night, I know that much. But there may have been others as well. In any case, once I communicated that I had you, I was told to hand you and the key over. I couldn't very well refuse my masters the key-but you, I declined to part with." Venera felt a pulse of anxious anger as she realized what Margit was saying. "Then the key is-" r'Locked away in the Gray Infirmary, where Sacrus keeps all their new acquisitions," said Margit with some smugness. She drained her wineglass and tilted it at Venera. "But you're here. I took Liris in order to have a base from which to grow my own power. You provide potential leverage. Why should I give you up?" D'And the offer to let me travel...?" <'I increase my leverage and buy some insurance by getting you out of Spyre and to a safe place that only I know about," said Margit. "But you should really be happy that I haven't tortured you for what you know. I'd prefer to have you on my side. You must admit, I've treated you well." Cautiously, Venera nodded. "It was too risky to keep the key to Candesce for yourself. But a lesser piece of leverage..." '...Who knows something vital about it that I can trade... that's useful to me at the moment." Margit smiled, catlike. It still didn't quite add up. "Why did you let me go up to Lesser Spyre?" Venera asked. "Why risk exposing me at the fair?" T'That was to prove that I had you," said Margit with a shrug. "While I was negotiating what to give up. Sacrus was at the fair. I told them to watch for you, but with the guards and defenses that surround the fair, they couldn't snatch you from me. It was the safest place in Spyre to display you." Someone unused to being used as a political pawn might have been surprised at these revelations. For Venera, discovering that she had been played was almost reassuring. It placed her in a familiar role. She knew exactly what Sacrus was going to do now. Venera had fantasized about it herself: you took the key and entered Candesce, and then shut down the sun of suns. As the darkness and cold began to seep into the principalities, you made your demands of the millions whose lives depended on Candesce. You could ask for anything-power, money, hostages, or slaves. Your leverage would be total. XIt would help to have enough experienced men to crew a navy, though, because one of your first demands would be that the principalities deliver up their own ships. "Sacrus doesn't have any ships, do they?" she asked. "Surely not enough to run the blockade that the principalities would put in place." Margit shrugged. "Oh, we have several. Sacrus is a big nation. But in terms of weapons..." She laughed, and it wasn't a pleasant laugh. "I doubt we would have to worry much about any fleet of the principalities." lHer confidence was suddenly unnerving. Margit sauntered over to the battered wooden cabinet and opened the top. "Since you're here," she said, "let's talk about the key to Candesce." 'Let's not." Venera stood up. "My knowledge is my only bargaining chip, after all. I'm not going to squander that." This time Margit didn't answer. She pulled a bell-rope that hung next to the cabinet. The gravity was low enough and Venera still strong enough that she could probably make it to the window in one leap. Then she could scale the stonework by the tips of her fingers if she had to and make it to the roof in under a minute. Not, however, faster than the soldiers could climb a flight of stairs to retrieve her. $Margit was watching her calculate her options. The botanist laughed as the door opened behind Venera and a large, heavily armored soldier entered. 6'I'm not going to hurt you," said Margit. Something glittered in her hand as she approached Venera. "I just want to guarantee your compliance from now on." 'The way you tried with Moss?" Venera nodded at the syringe Margit held. "Is that the same stuff you used on him?" @'It is. His outcome was an accident," said the botanist as the soldier stepped forward and grabbed Venera's wrists from behind. "I'll be more careful with you." 6His outcome was an accident6. Venera was familiar with that sort of logic, she often blamed others for the things she did to them. For some reason, the argument didn't work this time. Margit had to round a large couch as she approached Venera. She took a step to do so, and Venera made fists, bent her forearms forward, and then raised her arms in an egg-shaped curve that Chaison had once showed her. The startled soldier clung tightly to her wrists but suddenly found himself pulled forward and off balance as Venera lifted his hands over her head. And then she turned and her hands were over his as he lost his grip, and she pushed down and he thumped onto his knees. vShe kicked him in the face. His helmet ricocheted across the room as Margit shouted, and Venera hopped the couch, snatching up the open wine bottle and swinging it at the botanist's head. <Margit slashed out with the syringe, nicking Venera's sleeve. They circled for a second and then Venera grabbed for her wrist and they tumbled onto the floor. |The wine bottle skittered away, gouting red. Venera pulled Margit's arm up and bit her wrist. As the botanist let go Venera made a grab for the syringe. Margit in turn lunged for the bottle. 'I was just going to kill you," hissed Venera. She landed on Margit's back as the botanist closed her fingers on the bottle. "I've changed my mind!" She jammed the needle into Margit's shoulder and pushed the plunger. .Margit shrieked and rolled away. Venera let her. The botanist had let go of the wine bottle, and Venera took it and upended it over the wooden cabinet. 2Cursing and holding her shoulder, Margit ran over to the soldier, who was sitting up. When she saw Venera reach for one of the lit candles she screamed "No!$" and backpedaled. It was too late, as Venera touched the candle flame to the wine-soaked cabinet and the whole thing caught. In the orange light of the fire, Venera ran through a nearby arch. She wanted to know whether that cabinet was all there was to Margit's power. 'Ah..." She stood in a large private pharmacy-dozens of shelves covered in glass bottles of all sizes and colors hung above long work tables crowded with beakers, petri dishes, and test tubes. Venera joyfully swept her arm across a table and tossed the candle into the cascading glasswork as Margit clawed at her from behind. There was fire behind them, now fire ahead and smoke wafting up to the ceiling as Margit pushed and kicked at Venera and tried to get past her. When the soldier finally appeared out of the smoke, Venera stood over the botanist, her nose bleeding but a grin of utter savagery on her face. She brandished a long knife she'd found on the table. 'Back away or I'll cut her throat!" Venera's backdrop was flames. The soldier backed away. BShouts of alarm and clanging bells were waking the house. Venera dragged Margit out of the inferno and threw her to the floor in front of the smoldering cabinet. 'Ten days." She pointed to the door. "You have ten days to convince your people to save you. I have no doubt that Sacrus has the antidote to your poison, but you'll have to go to them on bended knee to get it. For your sake I hope they're in a forgiving mood." People were crowding in the doorway-men and women carrying buckets of sand and water, all shouting at once and all clattering to a halt at the sight of Venera standing over the all-powerful botanist. 'You are no longer the botanist of Liris!" Venera raised her arm, summoning everything she had learned from her father about how to intimidate a crowd. "Let no one here ever grant entry to this woman again! Run! Run home to Sacrus and beg for your life. This place is closed to you." Margit staggered to her feet, clutching her shoulder. "I'll kill you!" she hissed. p'Only if you've a mind to do it," said Venera. "Now go!" The botanist ran for the door, pushing aside the stunned firefighters. 'Get with it!" Venera yelled at them. "Before the whole house goes up!" She walked through them, and as more came up the stairs, she politely eased to the side to let them pass. She reached the main floor of Liris to find all the lights lit and a confused mob swirling around the strangely decorated desks and counters. 'What's happened?" Odess emerged from the rush of faces. The rest of the trade delegation was behind him. 'I've deposed the botanist," said Venera. They gaped at her. She sighed. "It wasn't that" hard," she said. N'But-but how?" They crowded around her. 'But why?"6 Eilen had grabbed her arm. zVenera looked up at her. Suddenly she felt tears in her eyes. 'My... my husband," she whispered through a suddenly tight throat. "My husband is dead." For a while there was silence, it seemed, though Venera knew abstractly that everyone was shouting, that the news of Margit's sudden departure was spreading like fire through Liris. Eilen and the others were speaking to her, but she couldn't understand anything they said. Strangely calm, she looked through the rushing people at the one other person who seemed still. He was giving orders at the foot of the stairs to Margit's chambers, putting out his arm to prevent people without firefighting tools from going up, pointing out where to get sand or buckets to those just arriving. His face was impassive, but his gestures were quick and focused. 'What are we going to do?" Odess was literally wringing his hands, something Venera had never actually seen someone do. "Without the botanist, what will happen to the trees? Will Sacrus forgive us for what you did? We could all be killed. Who is going to lead us now?" Eilen turned to Odess, shaking his shoulder crossly. "Why shouldn't it be Venera?" @'V-Venera?" He looked terrified. She laughed. "I'm leaving. Right now. Besides, you already have your new botanist." She pointed. "He's been here all along." XMoss looked up from where he was directing the firefighting. He saw Venera, and the perpetually desperate expression around his eyes softened a bit. She walked over to him. vAs shouts came down the stairs saying that the fire was under control, she laid a hand on the former envoy's arm and smiled at him. "Moss," she said, "I don't want you to be sad anymore." 0'I-I'll t-try," he said. Satisfied, she turned away from the people of Liris. Venera traced the steps Margit had taken only minutes before, pausing only to arm herself in Liris's barracks. She walked up the broad stone steps over which towered row after row of portraits-centuries of botanists, masons, doctors, and scholars, all of whom had been born here, lived here, and died here leaving legacies that might have been known only to a handful of people, but were meaningful nonetheless. She trod carefully patched steps whose outlines were known intimately by those who tended them, past arches and doors that figured as clearly as heroes out of myth in the dreams and ambitions of the people who lived under them-people to whom they were the very world itself. And on the dark empty roof, cold fresh air blew in from the abandoned lofts of Winter. She threw back the trapdoor and stalked to the roof's edge. These were the final steps of her old life, she felt. Venera was about to mourn, something she had never done and did not know how to do. She stepped onto a swaying platform and began winching it down, feeling the uncoiling certainty of her husband's death in her gut. It was like a monster shaking itself awake; any moment now it would devour her, and who knew what would happen then? Her only defense was to keep turning the wheel to winch herself down. She focused her eyes on the tall grass that swayed at the foot of Liris, willing it closer. In the dim light cast by Lesser Spyre, Venera Fanning walked into the wild acres of the disputed territories. She moved aimlessly at first, admiring the glittering lights overhead and the vast arcs of land and forest that swept up and past them. "When she lowered her eyes it was to see the black silhouette of a man separate itself from a grove of trees ahead of her. Venera didn't pause, but turned slightly towards the figure. He came out to meet her, and she nodded to him when he offered his arm for her to lean on. d'I've been waiting for you," said Garth Diamandis. \They walked into the darkness under the trees. * * * * 7 Venera didn't really notice the passage of the next few days. She stayed with Diamandis in a clapboard hut near the edge of the world and did little but eat and sleep. He came and went, discreet as always; his forays were usually nocturnal and he slept when she was awake. .Periodically she stepped to the doorway of the flimsy hideout and listened to the wind. It tore and gabbled, moaned and hissed incessantly, and in it she learned to hear voices. They were of people she'd known-her father, her sisters, sometimes random members of the crew of the Rook, whom she had not really gotten to know but had heard all about her during her adventures with that ship. She strained to hear her husband's voice in the rush, but his was the only voice she could not summon. One dawn she was fixing breakfast (with little success, having never learned to cook) when Garth poked his head around the doorjamb and said, "You've disturbed a whole nest of hornets, did you know that?" He strolled in, looking pleased with himself. "More like a nest of whales-or capital bugs, even. There's covert patrols crawling all over the place." vShe glared at him. "What makes you think they're after me?" &"You're the only piece out of place on this particular board," said Diamandis. He let gravity settle him into one of the hut's two chairs. "A queen in motion, judging by the furor. I'm just a pawn, so they don't see me-and as long as they don't, they can't catch you either." "Try this." She slammed a plate down in front of him. He eyed it dubiously. >"Mind telling me what you did?" "Did?" She gnawed her lip, ignoring the stabbing pain in her jaw. "Not very much. I may have assassinated someone." "May" have?" He chortled. "You're not sure?" She simply shrugged. Diamandis's expression softened. "Why am I not surprised," he said under his breath. \They ate in silence. If this day were to follow the pattern of the last few, Diamandis would now have fallen onto the cot Venera had just vacated, and would immediately commence to snore in competition with the wind. Instead, he looked at her seriously and said, "It's time for you to make a decision." ~"Oh?" She folded her hands in her lap listlessly. "About what?" He scowled. "Venera, I utterly adore you. Were I twenty years younger you wouldn't be safe around me. As it is, you're eating me out of house and home and having an extra mouth to feed is, well, tiring." "Ah." Venera brightened just a little. "The conversation my father and I never had." Hiding his grin, Diamandis ticked points off on his fingers. "One: you can give yourself up to the men in armor who are looking for you. Two: you can make yourself useful by going with me on my nightly sorties. Three: you can leave Spyre. Or, four-" z"I thought you said I could never leave," she said, frowning. "I lied." Seeing her expression, he rubbed at his chin and looked away. "Well, I had a beautiful young woman in my bed, even if I wasn't in there with her, so why would I let her go so easily? Yes, there is a way out of Spyre-potentially. But it would be dangerous." L"I don't care. Show me." She stood up. P"Sit down, sit down. It's daytime, and I'm tired. I need to sleep first. It's a long trek to the bomb bays. And anyway... don't you want to hear about the fourth option?" 6"There is no other option." :He sighed in obvious disappointment. "All right. Let me sleep, then. We'll visit the site tonight and you can decide whether it's truly what you want to do." * * * * They picked their way through a field of weeds. Lesser Spyre twirled far above. The dark houses of the great families surrounded them, curving upward in two directions to form a blotted sky. Venera had examined those estates as they walked; she'd hardly had the leisure time to do so on her disastrous run to the edge of the world. Now, as the rust-eaten iron gates and crumbling battlements eased by, she had time to realize just how strange a place Spyre was. On the steep roof of a building half-hidden by century oaks, she had seen a golden boy singing. At first she had taken him for some automaton, but then he slipped and caught himself. The boy was centered in bright spotlights and he held a golden olive branch over his head. Whether there was an audience for his performance in the gardens or balconies below; whether he did this every night or if it were some rare ceremony she had chanced to see-these things she would never know. She had touched Garth's shoulder and pointed. He merely shrugged. Other estates were resolutely dark, their buildings choked in vines and their grounds overgrown with brambles. She had walked up to the gate of one such to peer between the leaves. Garth had pulled her back. "They'll shoot you," he'd said. In some places the very architecture had turned inward, becoming incomprehensible, even impossible for humans to inhabit. Strange cancerous additions were flocked onto the sides of stately manors, mazes drawn in stone over entire grounds. Strange piping echoed from one dark entranceway, the rushing sound of wings from another. At one point Venera and Garth crossed a line of strange footprints, all the toes pointed inward and the indentations heavy on the outside as if the dozens of people who had made them were all terribly bow-legged. FIt did no good to look away from these sights. Venera occasionally glanced at the sky, but the sky was paved with yet more estates. After each glance she would hunch unconsciously away, and each time, a pulse of anger would shoot through her and she would straighten her shoulders and scowl. vVenera couldn't hide her nervousness. "Is it much further?" f"You whine like a child. This way. Mind the nails." z"Garth, you remind me of someone but I can't figure out who." "Ah! A treasured lover, no doubt. The one that got away, perhaps?-Wait, don't tell me, I prefer to wallow in my fantasies." b"...A particularly annoying footman my mother had?" h"Madam, you wound me. Besides, I don't believe you." "If there really is a way off of Spyre, why haven't you ever taken it?" He stopped and looked back at her. Little more than a silhouette in the dim light, Diamandis still conveyed disappointment in the tilt of his shoulders and head. "Are you deliberately provoking me?" (Venera caught up to him. "No," she said, putting her fists on her hips. "If this exit is so dangerous that you chose not to use it, I want to know." v"Oh. Yes, it's dangerous-but not that dangerous. I could have used it. But we've been over this. Where would I go? One of the other principalities? What use would an old gigolo be there?" :"-Let the ladies judge that." "Ha! Good point. But no. Besides, if I circled around and came back to Lesser Spyre, I'd eventually be caught. Have you been up there? It's even more paranoid and tightly controlled than this place. The city is... impossible. No, it would never work." >As was typical of her, Venera had been ignoring what Garth was saying and focusing instead on how he said it. "I've got it!" she said. "I know why you stayed." FHe turned toward her, a black cut-out against distant lights-and for once Venera didn't simply blurt out what was on her mind. She could be perfectly tactful when her life depended on it but in other circumstances had never known why one should bother. Normally she would have just said it: DYou're still in love with someone.& But she hesitated. "In there," said Diamandis, pointing to a long, low building whose roof was being overtaken by lopsided trees. He waited, but when she didn't say anything he turned slowly and walked in the direction of the building. "A wise woman wouldn't be entering such a place unescorted," said Venera lightly as she took his arm. Diamandis laughed. &"I am your escort." h"You, Mr. Diamandis, are why escorts were invented." Pleased, he developed a bit of a bounce to his step. Venera, though, wanted to slow down-not because she was afraid of him or what waited inside the dark. At this moment, she could not have said what made her hesitate. @The concrete lot was patched with grass and young trees and they scuttled across it quickly, both wary of any watchers on high. They soon reached a peeled-out loading door in the side of the metal building. There was no breeze outside, but wind was whistling around the edges of the door. 4"It puzzles me why there isn't a small army of squatters living in places like this," said Venera as the blackness swallowed Diamandis. She reluctantly stepped after him into it. "The pressures of life in these pocket states must be intolerable. Why don't more people simply leave?" "Oh, they do." Diamandis took her hand and led her along a flat floor. "Just a bit further, I have to find the door... through here." Wind buffeted her from behind now. "Reach forward... here's the railing. Now, follow that to the left." They were on some sort of catwalk, its metal grating ringing faintly under her feet. J"Many people leave," said Diamandis. "Most don't know how to survive outside of the chambers where they were born and bred. They return, cowed; or they die. Many are shot by the sentries, by border guards, or by the preservationists. I've buried a number of friends since I came to live here." Her eyes were starting to adjust to the dark. Venera could tell that they were in a very large room of some sort, its ceiling ribbed with girders. Holes let in faint light in places, just enough to sketch the dimensions of the place. The floor... There was no floor, only subdivided metal boxes with winches hanging over them. Some of those boxes were capped by fierce vortices of wind that collectively must have scoured every grain of grit out of the place. Looking down at the nearest box, Venera saw that it was really a square metal pit with clamshell doors at its bottom. Those doors vibrated faintly. R"Behold the bomb bays," said Diamandis, sweeping his arm in a dramatic arc. "Designed to rain unholy fire on any fleet stupid enough to line itself up with Spyre's rotation. This one chamber held enough firepower to carpet a square mile of air with bombs. And there were once two dozen such bays." The small hurricane chattered like a crowd of madmen; the bomb bay doors rattled and buzzed in sympathy. "Was it ever used?" asked Venera. "Supposedly," said Diamandis. "The story goes that we wiped out an entire armada in seconds. Though that could all be propaganda-if true, I can see why people outside Spyre would despise us. After all, there would have been hundreds of bombs that passed through the armada and simply kept going. Who knows what unsuspecting nations we strafed?" HVenera touched the scar on her chin. "Anyway, it was generations ago," said Diamandis. "No one seems to care that much about us since the other great wheels disintegrated. We're the last, and ignored the way you pass by the aged. Come this way." They went up a short flight of metal steps to a catwalk that extended out over the bays. Diamandis led Venera halfway down the long room; his footfalls were steady, hers slowing as they approached a solitary finned shape hanging from chains above one of the bays. R"That's a bomb!" It was a good eight feet long, almost three in diameter, a great metal torpedo with a button nose. Diamandis leaned out over the railing and slapped it. ,"A bomb, indeed," he said over the whistling gale. "At least, it's a bomb casing. See? The hatch there is unscrewed. I scooped out the explosives years ago; there's room for one person if you wriggle your way in. All I have to do is throw a lever and it will drop and bang through those doors. Nothing's going to stop you once you're outside, you can go a few hundred miles and then light out on your own." bShe too leaned out to touch the cylinder's flank. "So you'll go home, will you?" he asked, with seeming innocence. Venera snatched her fingers back. She crossed her arms and looked away. P"The people who ran this place," she said after a while. "It was one of the great nations, wasn't it? One of the ones that specialize in building weapons. Like Sacrus?" RHe laughed. "Not Sacrus. Their export is leverage." Means of political control, ranging from blackmail to torture and extortion. They have advisors in the throne rooms of half the principalities." ,"They sell torturers?" 4"That's one of the skills they export, yes. Almost nobody in Spyre deals with them anymore-they're too dangerous. Keep pulling coups, trying to dominate the Council. The preservationists are still hurting from their own run-in with them. You met one of theirs in Liris?" She nodded. @Diamandis sighed. "Yet one more reason for you to leave, then. Once you're marked in their ledgers, you're never safe again. Come on, I'll give you a boost up." "Wait." She stared at the black opening in the metal thing. The thought came to her: this won't workh. She could not return to Slipstream and pretend that things that had been done had not been done. She could not in silence retire as the shunned wife of a disgraced admiral. Not when the man responsible for Chaison's death-the Pilot of Slipstream-still sat like a spider at the center of Slipstream affairs. 8Thinking this made her fury catch like dry tinder. A spasm of pain shot up her jaw, and she shook her head. Venera turned and walked back along the catwalk. dDiamandis hurried after her. "What are you doing?" Venera struggled to catch her breath. She would need resources. If she was to avenge Chaison, she would need power. "Yesterday you said something about a fourth choice, Garth." She rattled down the steps and headed for the door. 8"Tell me about that choice." * * * * 6You must be ready for this," Garth had said. nIt is like no place you have ever been or ever imagined. Near dawn, as they approached the region of Spyre known as the airfall,N she began to understand what he meant. The great estates dwindled as they threaded their way through Diamandis's secret ways; even the preservationists avoided this sector of the great wheel. Ruins dotted the landscape and strange trees lay nearly prone like supplicants. TThe ground shook, a constant wavering shudder. The motion reminded her with every step that she stood on thin metal sheeting above an abyss of air. She began to see patches of speed ivy atop broken cornices and walls. And the loose soil thinned until they walked atop the metal of the wheel itself. vWind pushed at her from behind; Venera had to consciously set her feet down, grinding them into the grit to prevent herself starting to run. Giving into that run would be fatal, Diamandis assured her. The reason why emerged slowly, horribly, from around the collapsed walls and tangled groves of once-great estates. She clapped Diamandis on the shoulder and pointed. "How long ago?" 8He nodded and leaned in so that she could hear him over the roar. "A question important to our enterprise. It happened generations ago, in a time of great unrest in the principalities. Back when the great nations of Spyre still traveled-before they began to hide in their fortresses." A hundred yards or so of slick decking extended past the last broken stones, then the first tears and gaps appeared. Long sheets of humming metal extended out, following the lines of the girders that underlay Spyre's upper skin. Soon even they disappeared, leaving only bright shreds and the girders themselves. A latticework of metal beams was all the ground there was for the next mile. Below the plain of girders dark clouds shot past with dizzying speed. Propelled by Spyre's centrifugal force, a ceaseless hurricane roared in and down and through the empty windows of the broken ruins and leaped off the edges of the world. "Behold the airfall!" Diamandis gestured dramatically; but there was no need. Venera stood awestruck at the sheer savagery of the permanent storm that warred about her. If she lifted one foot or straightened her back she might be caught and yanked out and then down, and shot out of Spyre through this screaming, gouting wound. "This-this is insane!" She hunkered down, clutching a boulder. Her leathers flapped up around her ears. "Am I expected to run into that?" t"No, not run! Crawl. Because up there-do you see it? There is your fourth alternative!" She squinted where he pointed and at first didn't see anything. Then she blinked and looked again. The skin of Spyre had been stripped away for at least a mile in every direction. The hole must have unbalanced the whole wheel-towers, farms, factories, and even perhaps whole towns being sucked out and flung into the depths of Virga in a catastrophe that threatened to destroy the entire wheel. For some reason the peeling and collapse had propagated only so far and then stopped-but the standing cyclone of exiting air must have shaken Spyre so much as to threaten its immediate destruction. This, if anything, explained the preservationists and the fierce war they had fought to lay their tracks around Spyre. The unstable wobble of the wheel could only be fixed by moving massive weights around the rim to balance it. There was no patching this hole. Everything above had been sucked out as the skin peeled away-except in one place. One solitary tower still stood a quarter mile into the plain of girders. It had the great fortune to have been built overtop a main intersection point for Spyre's skeletal system. Also, the place might once have been a factory with its own reinforced foundation, for Venera could see huge pipes and tanks splayed like the roots of a tree below the girders. The tower itself was dark as the clouds that framed it, and it slowly swayed under the force of the winds. The girders bounced it like an acrobat in a net. ZJust looking at it made her nauseated. "What is that?" p"Buridan Tower," said Diamandis. "It's our destination." r"Why? And how are we going to get there through... through that?" "Using our courage, Lady Fanning-and my knowledge. I know a way, if you'll trust me. As to why-that is a secret that you: will reveal, to both of us." jShe shook her head, but Venera had no intention of backing out now. To do anything else but go forward in this mad adventure would be to invite relaxation-and thought. Grief drove her on, an active refusal to think. She waited, eyes tearing from the wind, and eventually Diamandis nodded sharply and gestured come on. <They crept across the last acre of intact skin, grabbing onto every rock and jammed tree branch that might offer purchase. As they approached a great split in the metal sheeting, Venera saw where Diamandis was going, and she began to think that this passage might be possible after all. Here, a huge pipe ran under Spyre's topsoil and skin. It was anchored to the girders by rusting metal straps and had broken in places, but extended out below the skinless plain. It seemed to head straight for swaying Buridan Tower. vDiamandis had found a hole in the pipe that was sheltered by a tortured dune. He let himself down into the black mouth and she followed; instantly the wind subsided to a tolerable scream. "I'm not even going to ask how you found this," she said after dusting herself off. He grinned. The pipe was about eight feet across. Sighting down it she beheld, in perspective, a frozen vortex of discolored metal and sedimented rime. Behind her it was ominously dark; ahead, hundreds of gaps and holes let in the welling light of Candesce. In this new illumination, Venera eyed their route critically. "There's whole sections missing," she pointed out. "How do we cross those?" V"Trust me." He set off at a confident pace. @What was there to do but follow? The pipe writhed in sympathy with the twisting of the beams. The motion was uncomfortable, but not terrifying to one who had ridden warships through battle, walked in gravities great and small throughout Virga, and even penetrated the mysteries of Candesce-or so Venera told herself, up until the tenth time her hand darted out of its own accord to grip white knuckled some peel of rust or broken valve-rim. Rhythmic blasts of pain shot up her clenched jaw. An old anger, born of helplessness, began to take hold of her. The first gaps in the pipe were small, and thankfully overhead. The ceiling opened out in these places, allowing Venera to see where she was-which made her duck her head down and continue on with a shudder. But then they came to a place where most of the pipe was simply gone, for a distance of nearly sixty feet. Runnels of it ran like reminders above and to the sides, but there was no bottom anymore. "Now what?" Diamandis reached up and tugged a cable she hadn't noticed before. It was bright and strong, anchored here and somewhere inside the black cave where the pipe picked up again. Near its anchor point the line was gathered up and pinched by a huge spring, allowing it to stretch and slacken with the twisting of the girders. *"You did this?" He nodded; she was impressed and said so. Diamandis sighed. "Since I've had no audience to brag to, I've done many feats of daring," he said. "I did none in all the years when I was trying to impress the ladies-and none of them will ever know I was this brave." *"So how do we... Oh." Despite her pounding headache, she had to laugh. This was a zip line; Diamandis proposed to clip rollers to it and glide across. Well, at least the great girder provided a wall to one side and partial shelter above. The wind was not quite so punishing here. >"You have to be fast!" Diamandis was fitting a pulley-hold onto the cable. "You can't breathe in that wind. If you get stranded in the middle you'll pass out." "Wonderful." But he'd strapped her into the harness securely, and falling was not something that frightened people who lived in a weightless ocean of air. When the time came she simply closed her eyes and kicked off into the white flood. They had to repeat this process six times. Now that he had someone to give up his secret to, Diamandis was eager to tell her how he had used a powerful foot-bow to shoot a line across each gap, trusting to its grip in the deep rust on the far side to allow him to scale across once. After stronger lines were affixed it was easy to get back and forth. rSo, walking and gliding, they approached the black tower. In some places its walls fell smoothly into the abyss. In others, traces of ground still clung tenaciously where sidewalks and outbuildings had once been. They clambered out of the pipe onto one such spot; here, thirty feet of gravel and plating stretched like a splayed hand up to the tower's flank. Diamandis had strung more cables along that wall, leading toward a great dark shadow that opened halfway around the wall's curve. "The entrance!" Battered by wind, he loped over to the nearest line. pThe zip lines in the pipe had given Venera the false impression that she was up for anything. Now she found herself hanging onto a cable with both hands-small comfort to also be clipped to it-while blindly groping for purchase on the side of a sheer wall, above an infinite drop now illuminated by full daylight. JOnly a man with nothing to lose could have built such a pathway. She understood, for she felt she was in the same position. Gritting her teeth and breathing in shallow sips in vortices of momentary calm caused by the jutting brickwork, she followed Diamandis around Buridan Tower's long curve. HAt last she stood, shaking, on a narrow ledge of stone. The door before her was strapped iron, fifteen feet tall, and framed with trembling speed ivy. Rusting machine guns poked their snouts out of slits in the stone walls surrounding it. A coat of arms in the ancient style capped the archway. Venera stared at it, a brief drift of puzzlement surfacing above her apprehension. She had seen that design somewhere before. p"I can't go back that way. There has to be another way!" Diamandis sat down with his back to the door and gestured for her to do the same. The turbulence was lessened just enough there that she could breathe. She leaned on his shoulder. "Garth, what have you done to us?" He took some time to get his own breath back. Then he jabbed a thumb at the door. "People have been pointing their telescopes at this place for generations, all dreaming of getting inside it. Secret expeditions have been mounted to reach it, but none of them ever came via the route we just took. It's been assumed that this way was impossible. No..." He gestured at the sky. "They always climb down the elevator cable that connects the tower to Lesser Spyre. And every time they're spotted and shot by Spyre sentries." "Why?" "Because the Nation of Buridan is not officially defunct. There are supposed to be heirs, somewhere. And the product of Buridan still exists, on farms scattered around Spyre. No one is legally allowed to sell it until the fate of the nation is determined once and for all. But the titles, the deeds, the proofs of ownership and provenance..." He thumped the iron with his fist. "They're all in here." Her fear was beginning to give way to curiosity. She looked up at the door. "Do we knock?" "The legend says that the last members of the nation live on, trapped inside. That's nonsense, of course; but it's a useful fiction." It began to dawn on her what he had in mind. "You intend to play on the legends." r"Better than that. I intend to prove that they are true." She stood up and pushed on the door. It didn't budge. Venera looked around for a lock, and after a moment she found one, a curious square block of metal embedded in the stone of the archway. "You've been here before. Why didn't you go in?" "I couldn't. I didn't have the key and the windows are too small." >She glared at him. "Then why...?" He stood up, smiling mysteriously. "Because now I do have the key. You brought it to me." "I...?" Diamandis dug inside his jacket. He slid something onto his finger and held it up to gleam in the light of Candesce. One of the pieces of jewelry Venera had taken from the hoard of Anetene had been a signet ring. She had found it in the very same box that had contained the Key to Candesce. It was one of the pieces that Diamandis had stolen from her when she first arrived here. "That's mine!" He blinked at her tone, then shrugged. "As you say, Lady. I thought long and hard about playing this game myself, but I'm too old now. And anyway, you're right. The ring is yours." He pulled it off his finger and handed it to her. The signet showed a fabulous ancient creature known as a "horse." It was a gravity-bound creature and so none now lived in Virga-or were they the product that Buridan had traded in? Venera took the heavy ring and held it up, frowning. Then she strode to the lock-box and placed the ring into a like-shaped indentation there. With a mournful grating sound, the great gate of Buridan swung open. * * * * 8 bGunner Twelve-Fifteen wrapped his fingers around the dusty emergency switch and pulled as hard as he could. With a loud snap, the red stirrup-shaped handle came off in his hand. The gunner cursed and half-stood to try and retrieve the end of the emergency cord that was now poking out of a hole in his canopy. He banged his head on the glass and the whole gun emplacement wobbled causing the cord to flip out into the bright air. Meanwhile, the impossible continued to happen outside; the thing was now a quarter mile above him and almost out of range. 6Gunner Twelve-Fifteen had sat here for sixteen years now. In that time he had turned the oval gun emplacement from a cold and drafty purgatory into a kind of nest. He'd stopped up the gaps in the metal armor with cloth and, later, pitch. He'd snuck down blankets and pillows and eventually even took out the original metal seat, dropping it with supreme satisfaction onto Greater Spyre two miles below. He'd replaced the seat with a kind of reclining divan, built sun-shades to block the harsher rays of Candesce, and removed layers of side armor to make way for a bookshelf and drinks cabinet. The only thing he hadn't touched was the butt of the machine gun itself. Nobody would know. The emplacement, a metal pod suspended above the clouds by cables strung across Greater Spyre, was his alone. Once upon a time there had been three shifts of sentries here, a dozen eyes at a time watching the elevator cable that ran between the town wheels of Lesser Spyre and the abandoned and forlorn Buridan Tower. With cutbacks and rescheduling, the number had eventually gone down to one: one twelve-hour shift for each of the six pods that surrounded the cable. Gunner Twelve-Fifteen had no doubt that the other gunners had similarly renovated their stations; the fact that none were now responding to the emergency meant that they were not paying any attention to the object they were here to watch. Nor had he been; if not for a random flash of sunlight against the beveled glass of a wrought-iron elevator car he might never have known that Buridan had come back to life-not until he and the other active sentries were hauled up for court-martial. He pushed back the bulletproof canopy and made another grab at the frayed emergency cord. It dangled three inches beyond his outstretched fingers. Cursing, he lunged at it and nearly fell to his death. Heart hammering, he sat down again. *Now what? He could fire a few rounds at the other pods to get their attention-but then he might kill somebody. Anyway, he wasn't supposed to fire on rising^ elevators, only objects coming down the cable. The gunner watched in frozen indecision until the elevator car pierced another layer of cloud and disappeared. He was doomed if he didn't do something right now-and there was only one thing to do. dHe reached for the other red handle and pulled it. In the original design of the gun emplacements, the ejection rocket had been built into the base of the gunner's seat. If he was injured or the pod was about to explode, he could pull the handle and the rocket would send him, chair and all, straight up the long cable to the infirmary at Lesser Spyre. Of course, the original chair no longer existed. The other gunners were startled out of their dozing and reading by the sudden vision of a pillowed divan rising into the sky on a pillar of flame. Blankets, books and bottles of gin twirled in its wake as it vanished into the gray. pThe daywatch liaison officer shrieked in surprise when Gunner Twelve-Fifteen burst in on her. The canvas she had been carefully daubing paint onto now had a broad blue slash across it. nShe glared at the apparition in the doorway. "What are you doing here?" "Begging your pardon, ma'am," said the trembling soldier. "But Buridan has reactivated." RFor a moment she dithered-the painting was ruined unless she got that paint off it right now-then was struck by the image of the man standing before her. Yes, it really wasj one of the sentries. His face was pale and his hair looked like he'd stuck it in a fan. She would have sworn that the seat of his leather flight suit was smoking. He was trembling. "What's this about, man?" she demanded. "Can't you see I'm busy?" "B-Buridan," he stammered. "The elevator. It's rising. It may already be here!" She blinked, then opened the door fully and glanced at the rank of bellpulls ranked in the hallway. The bells were ancient and black with tarnish and clearly none had moved recently. "There was no alarm," she said accusingly. <"The emergency cord broke," said the gunner. "I had to eject, ma'am," he continued. "There was, uh, cloud, I don't think the other sentries saw the elevator." "Do you mean to say that it was cloudy? That you're not sure you saw an elevator?" He turned even more pale; but his jaw was set. As the liaison officer wound up to really let loose on him, however, one of the bellpulls moved. She stared at it, forgetting entirely what she had been about to say. "...Did you just see...?" The cord moved again and the bell jiggled slightly. Then the cord whipped taut suddenly and the bell shattered in a puff of verdigris and dust. In doing so it managed to make only the faintest tinking sound. lShe goggled at it. "That-that's the Buridan elevator!" "That's what I was trying to-" But the liaison officer had burst past him and was running for the stairs that led up to the elevator stations. BElevators couldn't be fixed to the moving outer rim of a town-wheel; so the gathered strands of cable that rose up from the various estates met in knotlike collections of buildings in freefall. Ropes led from these to the axes of the towns themselves. The officer had to run up a yin-yang staircase to get to the top of the town (the same stairway that the gunner had just run down); as her weight dropped the steps steepened and the rise became more and more vertical. Puffing and nearly weightless, she achieved the top in under a minute. She glanced out one of the blockhouse's gun slits in time to see an ornate cage pull into the elevator station a hundred yards away. The gunner was gasping his way back up the steps. "Wait," he called feebly. The liaison officer didn't wait for him, but stepped to the round open doorway and launched herself across the empty air. bTwo people were waiting by the opened door to the Buridan elevator. The liaison officer felt an uncanny prickling in her scalp as she saw them, for they looked every bit as exotic as she'd imagined someone from Buridan would be. Her first inclination (drummed into her by her predecessor) that any visitation from the lost nation must be a hoax, faded as one of the pair spoke. Her accent wasn't like that of anyone from Upper Spyre. p"They sent only you?" The woman's voice dripped scorn. She was of medium height, with well-defined brows that emphasized her piercing eyes. A shock of pale hair stood up from her head. The liaison officer made a mid-air bow and caught a nearby girder to halt herself. She struggled to slow her breathing and appear calm as she said, "I am the designated liaison officer for Buridan-Spyre relations. To whom do I have the honor of addressing myself?" The woman's nostrils flared. "I am Amandera Thrace-Guiles, heir of Buridan. And you? You're nobody in particular, are you... but I suppose you'll have to do," she said. "Kindly direct us to our apartments." "Your..." The Buridan apartments existed, the officer knew that much. No one was allowed to enter, alter or destroy Buridan property until the nation's status was determined. "This way, please." She thought quickly. It was years ago, but one day she had met one of the oldest of the watch officers in an open gallery on Wheel Seven. They had been passing a broad stretch of crumbling wall and came to a bricked-up archway. "Know what that is?" he'd asked playfully. When she shook her head he smiled and said, "Almost nobody does, nowadays. It's the entrance to the Buridan estate. It's all still there-towers, granaries, bedrooms and armories-but the other nations have been building and renovating around and over it for so long that there's no way in anymore. It's like a scar, or a callous maybe, in the middle of the city. "Anyway, this was the main entrance. Used to have a sweeping flight of steps up to it, until they took that out and made the courtyard yonder. This entrance is the official one, the one that only opens to the state key. If you ever get any visitors from Buridan, they can prove that they are who they say they are if they can open the door behind that wall." "Come with me," said the officer now. As she escorted her visitors along the rope that stretched toward Wheel Seven, she wondered where she was going to get a gang of navvies with sledgehammers on such short notice. The demolition of the brick wall made just enough of a delay to allow Lesser Spyre's first ministers to show up. Venera cursed under her breath as she watched them padding up the gallery walk: five men and three women in bright silks, with serious expressions. Secretaries and hangers-on fluttered around them like moths. In the courtyard below, a crowd of curious citizens was growing. d"This had better work," she muttered to Diamandis. He adjusted his mask. It was impossible to read his expression behind it. "They're as scared as we are," he said. "Who knows if there's anything left on the other side of that?" He nodded to the rapidly falling stones in the archway. "Lady Thrace-Guiles!" One of the ministers swept forward, lifting his silk robes delicately over the mortar dust. He was bejowled and balding, with a fan of red skin across his nose and liver spots on his lumpish hands. "You look just like your great-great-great grandmother, Lady Bertitia," he said generously. "Her portrait hangs in my outer office." fVenera looked down her nose at him. "And you are...?" "Aldous Aday, acting chairman of the Lesser Spyre Committee for Public Works and Infrastructure," he said. "Elected by the Upper House of the Great Families-a body that retains a seat for you, kept draped in velvet in absentia all these years. I must say, this is an exciting and if I do say so, surprising, day in the history of Upper-" "I want to make sure our estate is still in one piece," she said. She turned to Diamandis. "Mister Flance, the hole is big enough for you to squeeze through. Pray go ahead and tell me that our door is undamaged." He bowed and edged his way past the workmen. He and Venera wore clothing they had found preserved in wax paper in the lockers of Buridan Tower. The styles were ancient, but for all that they were more practical than the contraptions favored by Spyre's present generation. Venera had on supple leather breeches and a black jacket over a bodice tooled and inscribed in silver. A simple belt held two pistols. On her brow rested a silver circlet they had found in an upstairs bedchamber. Diamandis was similarly dressed, but his leathers were all a deep forest green. "It's a great honor to see your nation again after so many years," continued Aday. If he was suspicious of her identity, he wasn't letting on. She exchanged pleasantries with him through clenched teeth, striving to stay in profile so that he and the others could not see her jaw. Venera had done her best to hide the scar and had bleached her hair with some unpleasant chemicals they'd found in the tower; but someone who had heard about Venera Fanning might recognize her. Did Aday and his people keep up with news from the outside world? Diamandis didn't think they did, but she had no idea at this point how far her fame had spread. To her advantage was the fact that the paranoid societies of Spyre rarely communicated. "Sacrus won't want anyone to know they had you," Diamandis had pointed out one evening as they sat huddled in the tower, an ornate chair burning merrily in the fireplace. "If they choose to unmask you, it's at the expense of admitting they have connections with the outside world-and more importantly, they won't want to hint that they have the Key to Candesce. I don't think we'll hear a peep out of them, at least not overtly." bThe workmen finished knocking down the last bricks and stepped aside just as Diamandis stuck his head around the corner of the archway. "The door is there, ma'am. And the lock." X"Ah, good." Venera stalked past the workers, trying to keep from nervously twisting the ring on her finger. This was the proverbial moment of truth. If the key didn't work... The brick wall had been built across an entryway that extended fifteen feet and ended in a large iron-bound door similar to the one at Buridan Tower. The ministers crowded in behind Venera, watching like hawks as she dusted off the lockbox with her glove. "Gentlemen," she said acidly, "there is only so much air in here-though I suppose you have some natural skepticism about my authenticity. Put that out of your minds." She held up the signet ring. "I am my own proof-but if you need crass symbols, perhaps this one will do." She jammed the key against the inset impression in the lockbox. "Nothing happened. "Pardon." Diamandis was looking alarmed and Venera quashed the urge to make some sort of joke. She must not lose her air of confidence, not even for a second. Bending to examine the lock, she saw that it had been overgrown with grit over the years. "Brush, please," she said in a bored tone, holding out one hand. After a long minute someone placed a hairbrush in her palm. She scrubbed the lock industriously for a while, then blew on it and tried the ring again. This time there was a deep click and then a set of ratcheting thumps from behind the wall. The door ground open slowly. "You are the council for... infrastructure, was it not?" she asked, fixing the ministers with a cold eye. Aday nodded. "Hmm," she said. "Well." She turned, preparing to sweep like the spoiled princess she had once been, through the opened door into blackness. A loud bangx and fall of dust from the ceiling made her stumble. There was sudden pandemonium in the gallery. The ministers were milling in confusion while screams and shouts followed the echoes of the explosion into the air. Past Aday's shoulder Venera saw a curling pillar of smoke or dust that hadn't been there a second ago. 4With her foot hovering over the threshold of the estate, Venera found herself momentarily forgotten. Sirens were sounding throughout the wheel and she heard the clatter of soldiers' boots on the flagstones. In the courtyard, someone was crying; somebody else was screaming for help. Expressionless, she walked back to the gallery and peered over Aday's shoulder. "Somebody bombed the crowd," she said. v"It's terrible, terrible," moaned Aday, wringing his hands. "This can't have been planned," she said reasonably. "So who would be walking around on a morning like this just carrying a bomb?" "It's the rebels," said Aday furiously. "Bombers, assassins... This is terrible!" Someone burst into the courtyard below and ran toward the most injured people. With a start Venera realized it was Garth Diamandis. He shouted commands to some stunned but otherwise intact victims; slowly they moved to obey, fanning out to examine the fallen. It hadn't occurred to Venera until this moment that she could also be helping. She felt a momentary stab of surprise, then... was it anger? She must be angry at Diamandis, that was it. But she remembered the mayhem of battle aboard the Rook when the pirates attacked, and the aftermath. Such fear and anguish, and in those moments the smallest gesture meant so much to men who were in pain. The airmen had given of themselves without a moment's thought-given aid, bandages, and blood. She turned to look for the stairs, but it was too late: the medics had arrived. Frowning, Venera watched their white uniforms fan out through the blackened rubble. Then she lit her lantern and stalked back to the archway. "When my manservant is done, send him to me," she said quietly. She strode alone into the long-sealed estate of Buridan. * * * * In an abandoned bedchamber of the windswept tower, while the floor swayed and sighs moaned through the huge pipes that underlay the place, Diamandis had told Venera histories of Buridan, and more. "They were the horse masters," he said. "Theirs was the ultimate in impractical products-a being that required buckets of food and endless space to run, that couldn't live a day in freefall. But a creature so beautiful that visitors to Spyre routinely fell in love with them. To have a horse was the ultimate sign of power, because it meant you had gravity to waste." "But that must have been centuries ago," she'd said. Venera was having trouble hearing Diamandis, even though the room's door was tightly closed and there were no windows in this chamber. The tower was awash with sound, from the creaking of the beams and the roaring of the wind to the basso-profundo chorus of drones that reverberated through every surface. Even before her eyes had adjusted to the darkness inside the building, before she could take in the clean-stripped smell of chambers and corridors scoured by centuries of wind, the full-throated scream of Buridan had nearly driven her outside again. It had taken them an hour to discover the source of that basso cry: the nest of huge pipes that jutted from the bottom of Buridan Tower acted like a giant wind instrument. It hummed and keened, moaned and ululated unceasingly. rDiamandis slapped the wall. This octagonal chamber was filled with jumbled pots, pans and other kitchen utensils; but it was quiet compared to the bedchambers and lounges of the former inhabitants. "Buridan's heyday was very long ago," he said. He looked almost apologetic, his features lit from below by the oil lamp they'd brought. "But the people of Spyre have long memories. Our records go all the way back to the creation of the world." rHe told her stories about Spyre's ancient glories that night as they bedded down, and the next day as they prowled the jumbled chaos of the tower. Later, Venera would always find those memories entwined within her: the tales he told her accompanied by images of the empty, forlorn chambers of the tower. Grandeur, age, and despair were the setting for his voice; grandeur, age and despair henceforth defined her impressions of ancient Virga. He told her tales of vast machines, bigger than cities, that had once built the very walls of Virga itself. Those engines were alive and conscious, according to Diamandis, and their offspring included both machines and humans. They had settled the cold black spaces of a star's outskirts, having sailed for centuries from their home. j"Preposterous!" Venera had exclaimed. "Tell me more." So he told her of the first generations of men and women who had lived in Virga. The world was their toy, but they shared it with beings far more powerful and wiser than themselves. It was simple for them to build places like Spyre-but in doing so, they used up much of Virga's raw materials. The machines objected. There was a war of inconceivable ferocity; Virga rang like a bell, its skin glowed with heat, and the precarious life forms the humans had seeded inside it were annihilated. l"Ridiculous!" she said. "You can do better than that." Spyre was the fortress of the human faction, he told her. From here, the campaign was launched that defeated the machines. Sulking, they left to create their own settlement on the farside of the sun-but some remained. In faraway, frozen, and sunless corners of the world, forgotten soldiers slept. Having accumulated dust and fungus over the centuries, they could easily be mistaken for asteroids. Some hung like frozen bats from the skin of the world, icebergs with sightless eyes. If you could waken them, you might receive powers and gifts beyond mortal desire; or you could unleash death and ruin on the whole world. The humans slowly rebuilt Virga's ecology, but they were diminished from their original, godlike power. The sons and daughters of those who had built Virga forgot their history, and wove their own myths to explain the world. Nations were spawned by the dozen, hot new suns springing into life in the black abyss. They turned their backs on the past. Then, rumors began of something strange approaching across the cold interstellar wastes... a new force, spreading outwards like ripples in a pond. It came from their ancient home. It had many names, but the best description of it was "artificial nature. 6"Ah," said Venera. "I see." They made their rounds as Diamandis talked. Each foray they made began and ended in the central atrium of the old building. Here, upward sweeping arches formed an eight-sided atrium that rose fifteen stories to the glittering stained-glass cupola surmounting the edifice. Lozenges of amber and lime, rose and indigo light outlined the dizzying succession of galleries that rose to all sides. On the second day, as they were exploring the upper chambers, they came across traces of a story Garth Diamandis did not know. As Venera was poking her head in a closet she heard him shout in alarm. Running to his side she found him kneeling next to the armored figure of a man. The corpse was ancient, wizened and dried by the wind. A sword lay next to it. And in the next chamber were more bodies. Some dire and dramatic end had come to the people here. They found a dozen mummified soldiers, all lying where they had fallen in fierce combat. Guns and blades were strewn among long-dried pools of black liquid. The disposition of the bodies suggested attackers and defenders; curious now, Venera followed the path the interlopers must have taken. High in the tower, behind a barricaded door, a blackened human shape lay on the moldering covers of a vast four-poster bed. The white lace dress the mummy wore still moved in the wind, causing Venera to jump in startlement whenever she glanced at it. She systematically ransacked the room while Diamandis stood contemplating the body. Here, in desk drawers and cabinets, were all the documents and letters of marque Venera needed to establish her identity. She even found a genealogy and photos. The best of the clothes were stored here as well, and that evening, rather than listening to a story, Venera began to make up her own-the story of a generations-long siege, a self-imposed exile broken finally by the last member of the nation of Buridan, Amandera Thrace-Guiles. * * * * ZThe darkness yielded detail slowly. Venera stood in what had once been a cobblestoned courtyard overlooked by the pillared facade of the Buridan estate. Black windows looked down from the edifice; once, sunlight would have streamed through them into whatever grand halls lay beyond. At some point in the past dark buttresses had been leaned onto the smooth white flanks of the building to support neighboring buildings-walls and arches that had swathed and overgrown it in layers, like the accumulating scales of some vast beast. For a while the estate would have still had access to the sky, for windows looked out from many of the encircling walls. All were now bricked up. Stone and wrought-iron arches had ultimately been lofted over the roofs of the estate, and at some point a last chink must have let distant sunlight in to light a forlorn cornice or the eye of a gargoyle. Then that too had been sealed and Buridan encysted, to wait. It was understandable. There was only a finite amount of space on a town-wheel like this; if the living residents couldn't demolish the Buridan estate, they'd been determined to reach other accommodations with it. Two glittering pallasite staircases swept up from where Venera stood, one to the left, one right. She frowned, then headed for the dark archway that opened like a mouth between them. Her feet made no sound in the deep dust. Certainly the upstairs chambers would be the luxurious ones; they had probably been stripped. In any case she was certain she would learn more about the habits and history of the nation by examining the servants' quarters. ZIn the dark of the lower corridor, Venera knelt and examined the floor. She drew one of her pistols and slid the safety off. Cautiously she moved onward, listening intently. This servants' way ran on into obscurity, arches opening off it to both sides at regular intervals. Black squares that might once have been portraits hung on the walls, and here and there sheet-covered furniture huddled under the pillars like cowering ghosts. Sounds reached her, distorted and uncertain. Were they coming from behind or ahead? She glanced back; silhouettes were moving across the distant square of the entranceway. But that sliding sound... She blew out the lantern and sidled along the wall, moving by touch. Sure enough a fan of light draped across the disturbed dust of the corridor, and a shadow-play of figures moving against the opposite wall. Venera crept up to the open doorway and peered around the corner in time to meet the eye of someone coming the other way. "Hey! They're here already!" The woman was younger than Venera, and had prominent cheekbones and long stringy hair. She was dressed in the dark leathers of the city. Venera leaped into her path and leveled the pistol an inch from her face. "Don't move." >"Shills!" somebody else yelled. Venera didn't know what a shill was, but yelled, "No!" anyway. "I'm the new owner of this house." The stringy-haired woman was staring cross-eyed at the gun barrel. Venera spared a glance past her into a long low chamber that looked like it had originally been a wine cellar. Lanterns burned at strategic points, lighting up what was obviously somebody's hideout: there were cots, stacks of crates, even a couple of tables with maps unrolled on them. Half a dozen people were rushing about grabbing up stuff and making for an exit in the opposite wall. Several more were training guns on Venera. ^"Ah." She looked around the other side of the stringy-haired head. The men with the guns were glancing inquiringly at one of their number. Though of similar age, with his flashing eyes and ironic half-smile he stood out from the rest of these youths as a professor might stand out from his students. "Hello," Venera said to him. She withdrew her pistol and holstered it, registering the surprise on his face with some satisfaction. "You'd better hurry with your packing," she said before anyone could move. "They'll be here any minute." The guns were still trained on her, but the confident-looking youth stepped forward, squinting at her over his own weapon. He had a neatly trimmed mustache and what looked like a dueling scar on his cheek. "Who are you?" he demanded in an amused upper-class drawl. She bowed. "Amandera Thrace-Guiles, at your service. Or perhaps, it's the other way around." He sneered. "We're no one's servants. And unfortunate for you that you've seen us. Now we'll have to-" f"Stow it," she snapped. "I'm not playing your game, either for your side or for Spyre's. I have my own agenda, and it might benefit your own goals to consider me a possible ally." Again the sense of amused surprise. Venera could hear voices outside in the hall now. "Be very quiet," she said, "and snuff those lights." Then she stepped back, grabbed the edges of the doors, and shut them. Lanterns bobbed down the corridor. "Lady Thrace-Guiles?" It was Aday. "Here. My lantern went out. In any case there seems to be nothing of interest this way. Shall we investigate the upper floors?" "Perhaps." Aday peered about himself in distaste. "This appears to be a commoner's area. Yes, let's retrace our steps." They walked in silence, and Venera strained to hear any betraying noise from the chamber behind them. There was none; finally, Aday said, "To what do we owe the honor of your visit? Is Buridan rejoining the great nations? Are you going to restart the trade in horses?" Venera snorted. "You know perfectly well there was no room to keep such animals in the tower. We had barely enough to eat from the rooftop gardens and nets we strung under the world. No, there are no horses anymore. And I am the last of my line." "Ah." They began to climb the long-disused steps to the upper chambers. "As to your being the last of the line... lines can be rejuvenated," said Aday delicately. "And as to the horses... I am happy to say that you are in error in that case." She cast a sidelong glance at him. "What do you mean? Don't toy with me." xAday smiled, appearing confident for the first time. "There areP horses, my lady. Raised and bred at government expense in paddocks on Greater Spyre. They have always been here, all these years. They have been awaiting your return." * * * * 9 Venera was nine-tenths asleep and imagining that the pillow she clutched was Chaison's back. Such feelings of safety and belonging were so rare for her that by contrast the rest of her life seemed a wasteland. It was as though everything she had ever done, every school lesson and contest with her sisters, every panicky interview with her father, all the manipulations and lies, had been erased by this: the quiet, his breathing, his scent, and his neck against her chin. 4"Rise and shine, my lady!" lGarth Diamandis threw back the room's curtains, revealing a brick wall. He glowered at it as scraps of velvet tore away in his fingers. Dust pillared around him in the lantern-light. Venera sat up and a knife-blade of pain shot up her jaw. "Get out!" She thrashed about for a second, looking for a weapon. "Get out! " Her hands fell on the lantern and-not without thinking, but rather with malicious pleasure-she threw it at him as hard as she could. Garth ducked and the lantern broke against the wall. The candle flame touched the curtains and they caught fire instantly. "Oh! Not a good idea!" He tore down the curtains and, fetching a poker from the fireplace, began beating the flames. "Did you not hear me?" She cast the musty covers aside and ran at him. Grabbing up a broken splinter of chair-leg, she brandished it like a sword. "Get out!" He parried easily and with a flick of the wrist sent her makeshift sword flying. Then he jabbed her in the stomach with the poker. "Ooff!" She sat down. Garth continued beating out the flames. Smoke was filling the ancient bedchamber of the Buridan clan. When Venera had her breath back she stood up and walked to a side-table. Returning with a jug of water, she upended it over the smoldering cloth. Then she dropped the jug indifferently-it shattered-and glared at Garth. 2"I was asleep," she said. He turned to her, a muscle jumping in his own jaw. She saw for the first time that his eyes were red. Had he slept? >"What's the matter?" she asked. With a heavy sigh he turned and walked away. Venera made to follow, realized she was naked and turned to don her clothing. When she found him again he was sitting in the antechamber, fiddling with his bootstraps. ~"It's her, isn't it?" she asked. "You've been looking for her?" ZStartled, he looked up at her. "How did you-" "I'm a student of human nature, Garth." She turned around. "Lace me up, please." "You could have burned the whole place down," he grumbled as he tugged-a little too hard-on her corset strings. "My self-control isn't good when I'm surprised," she said with a shrug. "Now you know." "Aye." He grabbed her hips and turned her around to face him. "You usually hide your pain as well as someone twice your age." `"I choose to take that as a compliment." Conscious of his hands on her, she stepped back. "But you're evading the question-did you find her? Your expression suggests bad news." zHe stood up. "It doesn't concern you." He began to walk away. Venera gnawed her lip, thinking about apologizing for attacking him. It got no further than thinking. "Well," she said after following him for a while, "for what reason did you rouse me at such an ungodly..." She looked around. "What time is it?" P"It's midmorning." He glanced around as well; the chambers of the estate were cast in gloom save where the occasional lantern burned. "The house is entombed, remember?" ,"Oh! The appointment!" "Yes. The horse masters are waiting in the front hall. They're mighty nervous, since neither in their lifetimes nor those of their line stretching back centuries, has anyone ever audited their work." v"I'm not auditing, Garth, I just want to meet some horses." V"And you may-but we have a bigger problem." "What's that?" She paused to look at herself in a faded mirror. Somewhere downstairs she heard things being moved; they had hired a work gang to clean the building, just before fatigue had caught up with her and forced her to take refuge in that mildewed bed-chamber. "There's a second delegation waiting for you," Diamandis explained. "A pack of majordomos from the great families." NShe stopped walking. "Ah. A challenge?" "In a manner of speaking. You've been invited to attend a Confirmation ceremony. To formally establish your identity and titles." "Of course, of course..." She started walking again. "Damn, they're a step ahead of us. We'll have to turn that around." Venera pondered this as they trotted down the sweeping front steps. "Garth, do I smell like smoke?" "Alas, my lady, you have about you the piquant aroma of a flaming curtain." ("Well, there's nothing to be done about it, I suppose. Are those the challengers?" She pointed to a group of ornately dressed men who stood in the middle of the archway. Behind them, a motley group of men in workclothes milled uncertainly. "Those would be the horsemen, then." "Gentlemen," she said with a smile as she walked past the officials. "I'm so sorry to have kept you waiting," she said to the horsemen. P"Ahem," said an authoritative voice behind her. Venera made herself finish shaking hands before she turned. "Yes?" she said with a sweet smile. "What can I do for you?" The graying man with the lined face and dueling scars said, "You are summoned to appear-" R"I'm sorry, did you make an appointment?" :"-to appear before the-what?" p"An appointment." She leaned closer. "Did you make one?" Unable to ignore protocol, he said, "No," with sarcastic reluctance. Venera waved a hand to dismiss him. "Then take it up with my manservant. These people have priority at the moment. They, made an appointment." An amused glint came into his eye. Venera realized, reluctantly, that this wasn't some flunky she was addressing, but a seasoned veteran of one of the great nations. And since she had just tried to set fire to her new mansion and kill her one and only friend in this godforsaken place, it could be that her judgment wasn't quite what it should be today. zShe glanced at Diamandis, who was visibly holding his tongue. With a deep sigh she bowed to the delegation. "I'm sorry. Where are my manners? If we conduct our business briefly, I can make my other appointment without ruffling feathers on that end as well. Who do I have the honor of addressing?" Very slightly mollified, he said, "I am Jacoby Sarto of the nation of Sacrus. Your... return from the dead... has caused quite a stir amongst the great nations, lady. There are claims of proof that you must provide, before you are accepted for who you are." 4"I know," she said simply. "Thursday next," he said, "at four o'clock in the Council offices. Bring your proofs." He turned to go. p"Oh. Oh dear." He turned back, a dangerous look in his eye. Venera looked abjectly apologetic. "It's a very small problem-more of an opportunity, really. I happen to have become entangled in... a number of obligations that day. My former debtors and creditors... but I'm not trying to dodge your request! Far from it. Why don't we say, eight o'clock P.M., in the main salon of my home? Such a date would allow me to fulfill my obligations and-" ^"Whatever." He turned to confer with the others. The conference was brief. "So be it." He stepped close to her and looked down at her, the way her father used to do when she was young. Despite herself, Venera quailed inside-but she didn't blink, just as she had never reacted to her father's threats. "No games," he said very quietly. "Your life is at stake here." Then he gestured sharply to the others and they followed him away. Garth leaned in and muttered, "What obligations? You have nothing planned that day." "We do now," she said as she watched Sarto and his companions walk away. She told Garth what she had in mind, and his eyes widened in shock. J"In a week? The place is a shambles!" "Then you know what you're going to be doing the rest of the day," she said tartly. "Hire as many people as you need-cash a few of my gems. And Garth," she said as he turned to go, "I apologize for earlier." He snorted. "I've had worse reactions first thing in the morning. But I expected better from you." For some reason those parting words stung far more than any of the things she'd imagined he might say. * * * * ."You haven't talked about the horses," he said late that evening. Garth was pushing the far end of a hugely heavy wine rack while Venera hauled on the near side. Slowly, the wooden behemoth grated another few inches across the cellar floor. "How-oof!-what did you think of them?" h"I'm still sorting it out in my own mind," she said, pausing to set her feet better against the riveted iron decking that underlay her estate. "They were beautiful, and grotesque. Dali  horses the handlers called them. Apparently, a Dali is any four-legged beast raised under lower gravity than it was evolved to like." Garth nodded and they pushed and pulled for a while. The rack was approaching the wall where the little cell of rebels had made their entrance-a hole pounded in the brickwork that led to an abandoned airshaft. Garth had explored a few yards of the tunnel beyond; Venera was afraid the rebels might have left traps behind. 2"It was the smell I noticed first," she said as they took another break. "Not like any fish or bird I'd ever encountered. Foul but you could get used to it, I suppose. They had the horses in a place called a paddock-a kind of slave pen for animals. But the beasts... they were huge!" dVoices and loud thuds filtered in from the estate's central hallway. Two of the work gangs Garth had hired that day were arguing over who should start work in the kitchens first. .Shadows flickered past the cellar door. The estate was crawling with people now. Lanterns were lit everywhere and shouted conversations echoed down, along with hammering, sawing, and the rumble of rolling carts. Venera hoped the racket would keep the neighbors up. She had a week to make this place fit for guests and that meant working kitchens, a ballroom with no crumbling plasterwork and free of the smell of decay-and of course, a fully stocked wine cellar. The rebel gang had removed all evidence of themselves when they retreated, but had left behind the hole by which they'd gained entrance. Because the mansion only had one entrance-the back doors had not yet been uncovered-Venera had decided it prudent to keep this bolthole. But if she was going to have a secret exit, it had to be: secret; hence the wine rack. "Okay," she said when they had it about three feet from the wall. "I'm going to grease the floor under the hole, so we can slide the rack to one side if we need to get out in a hurry." She plonked down the can she'd taken from one of the workmen and rolled up her sleeves. ~"We'll have to survey for traps some time," he said reasonably. Venera squinted up at him. "Maybe, but not tonight. You look like you're about to collapse, Garth. Is it the gravity?" NHe nodded, wincing. "That, and simple age. This is more activity than I've had in a long while, when you factor in the new weight. I thought I was in good shape, but..." x"Well, I hereby order you to take two days off. I'll manage the workmen. Take one day to rest up, and maybe on the second you tend to the... uh, that matter that you won't talk to me about." D"What matter?" he said innocently. "It's all right." She smiled. "I understand. You've been in exile for a long time. Plenty of time to think about the men who put you there. Given that much time, I'd bet you've worked out your revenge in exquisite detail." rGarth looked shocked. "Revenge? No, that's not-oh, I suppose in the first few months I thought about it a lot. But you get over anger, you know. After a few years, perspective sets in." "Yes, and that's the danger, isn't it? In my family, we were taught to nurture our grudges lest we forget." t"But why?" He looked genuinely distressed for some reason. "Because once you forgive," she said, as if explaining something to a small child, "you set yourself up for another betrayal." <"That's what you were taught?" "Never let an insult pass," she said, half-conscious that she was reciting lines her father and sisters had spoken to her many times. She ticked the points off on her fingers. "Never let a slight pass, never forget, build realistic plans for your revenges. You're either up or down from other people and you want always to be up. If they hurt you, you must$ knock them down." Now he looked sad. "Is that why you're doing all this?" He gestured at the walls. "To get back at someone?" "To get back, at all," she said earnestly, "I must have my revenge. Else I am brought low forever and can never go home. For otherwise-" Her voice caught. RFor otherwise, I have no reason to return. His expression, of compassion, would have maddened her on anyone else. "You were telling me about the horses," he said quietly. "Ah. Yes." Grateful of the distraction, she said, "Well, they have these huge barrel-shaped bodies and elegant long necks. Long heads like on my ring." She held it up, splaying her fingers. "But their legs! Garth, their legs are twice the length of their bodies-like spider's legs, impossibly long and thin. They stalked around the paddock like... well, like spiders! I don't know how else to describe it. They were like a dream that's just tipping over to become a nightmare. I'm not sure I want to see them again." dHe nodded. "There are cattle loose between some of the estates. I've seen them, they look similar. You have to understand, there's no room on the city wheels to raise livestock." Venera pried open the lid of the grease can and picked up a brush. "But now that the nation of Buridan has returned, the horses are our responsibility. There are costs... it seems a dozen or more great nations have acted as caretakers for one or another part of the Buridan estate. Some are tenants of ours who haven't paid rent in centuries. Others are like Guinevera, who've been tending the horses. There's an immense web of relationships and dependencies here, and we have a little under a week to figure it all out." Garth thought about it for a while. "First of all," he said eventually, "you need to bring a foal or two up here and raise it in the estate." He grimaced at her expression. "I know what I just said, but it's an important symbol. Besides, these rooms will just fill up with people if you give them a chance. Why not set some aside for the horses now?" 0"I'll think about that." They cleared out the space behind the rack, and slid it against the wall. It fit comfortably over the exit hole. As they stood back to admire their work, Garth said, "It's a funny thing about time, you know. It sweeps away anger and hate. But it leaves love untouched." pShe threaded her hand through his arm. "Ah, Garth, you're so sentimental. Did it ever occur to you that's why you ended up scrabbling about on Greater Spyre for the past twenty years?" lHe looked her in the eye. "Truthfully, no. That had never occurred to me. If anything, I'd say I ended up there because I didn't love well enough, not because I ever loved too well." She sighed. "You're hopeless. It's a good thing I'm here to take care of you." b"And here I thought it was I taking care of you." They left the cellar and re-entered the bedlam of construction that had taken over the manor. * * * * Before she could reach her next target a majordomo in the livery of the Council approached and bowed. "They are ready for you upstairs, madam," he said coolly. 8She kept her gaze fixed on the top of his head as she bowed in return. All eyes were on her, she was certain. This was the moment when all would be decided. As she clattered up the marble she tried to remember the lines and gambits she had crammed into her head over the past day or so. It hadn't been enough time, and the hangover of her migraine had interfered. She was not ready; she just had herself, the passing lanterns, the looming shadows above, and the single rectangle of light from a pair of doors in the upstairs hall. She told herself to slow down, control her breathing, count to ten-but finally just cursed and strode down the newly laid crimson carpet to pivot on one heel and step into the room. Jacoby Sarto's leonine features crinkled into something like a smirk as he saw her. He was placing the final chair behind the long conference table in the high-ceilinged minor reception hall. Damn him, he'd moved everything!-Where Venera had contrived a single long table with chairs along two sides, with her at the end, Sarto-or somebody, but it sure looked like him from his posture-had turned the table sideways, crammed all the seats on one side of it (behind it, now) and left one solitary chair in the center of the carpet. What had been a conference room was now a court, with her as the defendant. The rest of the council was standing around behind Sarto as the servants finished the new placement. She had an overwhelming urge to pick a seat behind the table and put her feet up, then point to the solitary position and ask, "who sits there?" Only memory of how badly her recent outbursts had gone stopped her. Well, he had won this round, but she wasn't going to let him revel in it. Venera stopped one of the servants and said, "Bring me a side table, and a bottle of wine and a glass. Some cheese might be good too." She sat graciously in the exposed chair and draped her skirts as she'd seen the other ladies do. Then she locked eyes with Sarto, and smiled. The others began to take their places. There were twelve of them. Jacoby Sarto of Sacrus, who was rumored to be merely an errand boy to the true heads of the family, sat on the far left. The arch-conservative duke Ennersin, who had conspicuously arrived with Sarto, sat next to him, frowning in disapproval at Venera. She could count on those two to oppose her confirmation. Of the others... Pamela Anseratte was smiling at something, but wouldn't meet Venera's eye. Principe Guinevera wasp trying to meet her eye, and apparently attempting to wink; he took up two spaces at the table and his fleshy hands were planted on the tabletop as if he were, at any second, about to leap to his feet and proclaim something. Next to him sat August Virilio, who looked contented, half asleep even-and probably was, after the heroic drinking he'd gotten up to after she forgave his nation's debt. These three were on her side-or so she hoped. *The other great families were represented by minor members and, in three cases, by ambassadors. Two of the ambassadors were cloaked and masked; the families in question, Garrat and Oxorn, were mysterious, isolate and paranoid as only the ancients of Greater Spyre could be. Nobody knew what their nations produced-only that it went for fabulous prices and threat of death on exposure in the outside world. Three out of twelve for sure. Maybe three others if her reckless divestment of Buridan's wealth had done what she hoped. But it was a big if. She was going to need every ounce of cunning and every resource to get through the evening free and intact. The Council all sat and waited while Venera's new servants placed decanters of wine and tall glasses on the table. Then Pamela Anseratte stood and smiled around the table. "Welcome, everyone. I trust the nations are well and that the hospitality of our host has been sampled and appreciated by all? Yes? Then let's begin. We're gathered here tonight to decide whether to reinstate Buridan as an active nation, in the person of the woman who here claims to be Amandera Thrace-Guiles, heir of said nation. I-" "Why are you alone?" Duke Ennersin was speaking directly to Venera. "Why are we to take this one person's word for who she is? Where is the rest of her nation? Why has she appeared here, now, after an absence of centuries?" "Yes, yes, we're going to get to those questions," soothed Lady Anseratte. "First, however, we have some formalities to clear away. Amandera Thrace-Guiles's claim is pointless and instantly void if she cannot produce documents indicating her paternity and ancestry, as well as the notarized deeds and titles of her nation, plus the key." She beamed at Venera. "You have all those things?" Silently, Venera rose and walked to the table. She placed the thick sheaf of papers she'd brought in front of Anseratte. Then she unscrewed the heavy signet ring from her finger and placed it atop the stack. This was her opening move, but she couldn't count on its effect. "I see," said Lady Anseratte. "May I examine the ring?" Venera nodded, returning to her seat. Lady Anseratte took a flat box with some lights on it and hovered it over the ring. The box glowed and made a musical bonging sound. F"Duly authenticated," said the lady. She carefully placed the ring to one side and opened the sheaf. Much of its contents were genuine. Venera had found the deeds and titles in the tower. It had been the work of several careful days to extend the family tree by several centuries and insert herself at its end. She had intended to use her own not-inconsiderable talents at forgery but had been indisposed, but Garth had come through, displaying surprising skills. He was not just a gigolo in his previous life, evidently. As the papers were passed up and down the table Venera kept a bland expression on her face. She tried the wine, and adjusted the fall of her skirt again. "Convincing," said Jacoby Sarto after flipping through the papers. "But just because something is convincing that doesn't mean it's true. It's merely convincing. What can you do to establish the truth of your claim?" @Venera tilted her head to one side. "It would be impossible to do so to everyone's satisfaction, sir, just as it would be impossible for you to prove that you are, without doubt, Jacoby Sarto of Nation Sacrus. I rather think the onus is on this council to disprove my claim, if they can." August Virilio opened one eye slightly. "Why don't we start with your story? I always like a good story after supper." "Excellent idea," said Pamela Anseratte. "Duke Ennersin asked why it is that you are here before us now, of all times. Can you explain why your nation has hidden away so thoroughly for so long?" Venera actually knew the answer to that one-it had been written in the contorted bodies of the soldiers inside the tower, and in the scrawled final confessions of the dead woman in the bedchamber. 0Steepling her hands, Venera smiled directly at Jacoby Sarto and said, "The answer is simple. We knew that if we left Buridan Tower, we would be killed." 6This was gambit number two. The council members expressed various shades of surprise, shock, and satisfaction at her revelation. Jacoby Sarto crossed his arms and sat back. "Who would do this?" asked Anseratte. She was still standing and now leaned forward over the table. "The isolation of Buridan Tower wasn't an accident," said Venera. "Or, at least, not entirely. It was the result of an attack-and the attackers were two of the great nations present at this table tonight." August Virilio smiled sleepily, but Principe Guinevera leapt to his feet, knocking his chair over. "Who?" he raged. "Name them, fair lady, and we will see justice done!" "I did not come here to open old wounds," said Venera. "Although I recognize that my position here is perilous, I had no choice but to leave the tower. Everyone else there is dead-save myself and my manservant. Some bird-borne illness took the last five of our people a month ago. I consigned their bodies to the winds of Virga, as we have been doing for centuries now. Before that we were dwindling, despite careful and sometimes repugnant breeding restrictions and constant austerity... We lived on birds and airfish we caught with nets, and supplemented our diets with vegetables we grew in the abandoned bedrooms of our ancestors. Had I died in that place, then our enemies would truly have won. I chose a last throw of the die and came here." $"But the war of which you speak... it was centuries ago," said Lady Anseratte. "Why did you suppose that you would still be targeted after so long?" Venera shrugged. "We had telescopes. We could see that our enemies' nations were thriving. And we could also clearly see that sentries armed with machine-guns ringed the tower. I was raised to believe that if we entered the elevator and tried to reach Lesser Spyre, those machine gunners would destroy us before we rose more than a hundred meters." "Oh, no!" Guinevera looked acutely distressed. "The sentries were there for your protection, madam! They were to keep interlopers out,( not to box you in!" "Well." Venera looked down. "Father thought so, but he also said that we were so reduced that we could not risk a single soul to find out. And isolation... becomes a habit." She looked pointedly at the ambassadors of Oxorn and Garrat. Sarto guffawed loudly. "Oh, come on! What about the dozens of attempts that have been made to contact the tower? Semaphore, loudspeakers, smoke signals, for God's sake. They've all been tried and nobody ever responded." "I am not aware that anyone has tried to contact us during my lifetime," said Venera. This was true, as she'd learned in the past days. Sarto would have to concede the point. "And I can't speak to my ancestors' motives for staying silent." "That's as may be," Sarto continued. "Look, I'll play it straight. Sacrus was involved in the original atrocity." He held up a hand when Guinevera protested loudly. "But gentlemen and ladies, that was centuries ago. We are prepared to admit our crime and make reparations to the council when this woman is exposed for the fraud that she is." X"And if she's not?" asked Guinevera angrily. "Then to the Nation of Buridan directly," said Sarto. "I just wanted to clear the air. We can't name our co-conspirators because, after all this time, the records have been lost. But having admitted our part in the affair, and having proposed that we pay reparations, I can now continue to oppose this woman's claim without any appearance of conflict." ZVenera frowned. Her second gambit had failed. fIf Sacrus had wanted to keep their involvement a secret, she might have had leverage over Sarto. Maybe even enough to swing his vote. As it was he'd adroitly sidestepped the trap. ZLady Anseratte looked up and down the table. "Is the other conspirator's nation similarly honorable? Will they admit their part?" There was a long and uncomfortable silence. "Well, then," said Pamela Anseratte. "Let us examine the details of your inheritances." FFrom here the interview deteriorated into minutiae as the council members pulled out individual documents and points of law and debated them endlessly. Venera was tired, and every time she blinked to clear her vision, she worried that a new migraine might be reaching to crush her. Pamela Anseratte conducted the meeting as if she had boundless energy, but Venera-and everyone else-wilted under the onslaught of detail. XSarto used sarcasm, wit, guile, and bureaucracy to try to torpedo her claim, but after several hours it became clear that he wasn't making headway. Venera perked up a bit. I could win this, she realized-simultaneously realizing just how certain she'd been that she wouldn't. Finally Lady Anseratte said, "Any further points?" and nobody answered. "Well," she said brightly, "we might as well proceed to a vote." "Hang on," said Sarto. He stood heavily. "I've got something to say." Everyone waited. "This woman is a fraud. We all know it. It's inconceivable that this family could have sustained themselves and their retainers for centuries within a single tower, cut off from the outside world-" "Not inconceivable," said the ambassador of Oxorn from behind her griffin mask. "Quite possible." Sarto glared at her. "What did they do for clothes? For even the tiniest item of utility, such as forks or pens? Do you really believe they have an entire industrial base squirreled away in that tower?" He shook his head. "It's equally inconceivable that someone raised in such total isolation should, upon being dropped into society and all its machinations, conduct herself like a veteran! Did she rehearse social banter with her dolls? Did she learn to dance with her rocking horse? It's preposterous on the face of it. "And we all know why her claim has any chance of success. It's because she's bought off everyone who might oppose it. Buridan has tremendous assets-estates, ships, buildings, and industries here and on Greater Spyre that have been administered by other nations in absentia, for generations. She's promised to give those nations the assets they've tended! For the rest, she's proposing to beggar Buridan by paying all its debts here and now. When she's done Buridan will have nothing to its name but a herd of gangly equines." "And this house," said Venera primly. "I don't propose to give that up." There was some stifled laughter around the table. "It's a transparent fraud!" Sarto turned to glare at the other council members. "Forget about the formal details of her claim-in fact, let it be read that there's nothing to criticize about it. That doesn't matter. We all know the truth. She is insulting the name of a great nation of Spyre! Do you actually propose to let her get away with it?" He was winning them over. Venera had one last hand to play, and it was her weakest. She stood up. "Then who am I?" She strode up to the table and leaned across it to look Sarto in the eye. "If I'm a fraud I must have come from somewhere. Was I manufactured by one of the other nations, then? If so, which one? Spyre is secretive, but not so much so that we don't all keep tabs on one another's genealogies. Nobody's missing from the rosters, are they? "And yet!" She turned to address the rest of the council. "Gaze upon me and tell me to my face that you don't believe I am noble born." She sneered at Sarto. "It's evident in my every gesture, in how I speak, how I address the servants. Jacoby Sarto says that he knowsP I am a fraud. Yet you know I am a peer! V"So then where did I come from?" She turned to Sarto again. "If Jacoby Sarto believes I did not come from Buridan Tower, then he must have some idea of where I did. What do you know, Sir Sarto, that you're not telling the rest of us? Do you have some proof that you're not sharing? A name, perhaps?" DHe opened his mouth-and hesitated. pThey locked eyes and she saw him realize what she was willing to do. The Key to Candesce was almost visible in the air between them; it was the real subject of tonight's deliberations. "Sacrus has many secrets, as we've seen tonight," she said quietly. "Is there some further secret you have, Sir Sarto, that you wish to share with the Council? A name, perhaps? One that might be recognized by the others present? A name that could be tied to recent events, to rumors and legends that have percolated through the principalities in recent weeks?" She saw puzzled frowns on several faces-and Sarto's eyes widened as he heard her tread the edge of the one revelation Sacrus did not want made public. He looked down. "Perhaps I went too far in my accusations," he said almost inaudibly. "I retract my statements." Duke Ennersin leaned back in his chair, openmouthed. And Jacoby Sarto meekly sat down. :Venera returned to her seat. `If I lose, everyone learns that you have the key&, she thought as she settled herself on the velvet cushion. She took a sip of wine and kept her expression neutral as Pamela Anseratte stood again. "Well," said the lady in a cautious tone, "if there are no more outbursts... let us put it to a vote." XVenera couldn't help but lean forward a bit. &"All those who favor this young lady's claim, and who wish to recognize the return of Buridan to Spyre and to this Council, raise your right hand." Guinevera's hand shot up. Beside him, August Virilio languidly pushed his into the air. Pamela Anseratte raised her own hand. tOxorn's hand went up. Then Garrat's ambassador raised his. That made five. Venera let out the breath she'd been keeping. It was over. She had failed- :Jacoby Sarto raised his hand. His expression was exquisite-a mixture of distaste and resignation that you might see in a man who's just volunteered to dig up a grave. Duke Ennersin was staring at him in total disbelief, and slowly turning purple. Lady Anseratte's only show of surprise was a minute frown. "All those opposed?" she said. pEnnersin threw his hand in the air. Five others went up. "And no abstentions," said Anseratte. "We appear to have a tie." lJacoby Sarto slumped back in his chair. "Well, then," he said quietly. "I move we take the matter to the Council investigative team. Let them visit the tower and conduct a thorough-" *"Don't I get a vote?" 0They all turned to stare at Venera. She sat up straighter, clearing her throat. "Well, it seems to me..." She shrugged. "It's just that this meeting was called to confirm my identity and claim to being head of Buridan. Confirmation implies a presumption that I am who I say I am. I am Buridan unless proven otherwise. And Buridan is a member of the Council. So I should have a vote." ,"This is outrageous!" Duke Ennersin had had enough. He threw back his chair and stalked around the table. "You have the temerity to suggest that you-" "She's right." The voice was quiet and languid, almost indifferent-but it stopped Ennersin in his tracks. His head ratcheted around slowly, as if pulled by unwilling forces to look at the man who had spoken. August Virilio was lounging back in his chair, his hands steepled in front of him. "Article five, section twelve, paragraph two of the Charter," he said in a reasonable tone. "Identity is presumptive if there is no other proven heir. And Buridan isr a member of the Council. Its title was never suspended." 2"A mere formality! A courtesy!" But Ennersin's voice had lost its certainty. He appealed to Pamela Anseratte, but she simply spread her hands and smiled. Then, looking around him at Venera, she said, "It appears you are right, dear. You do get a vote. Would you care to...?" Venera smiled and raised her right hand. "I vote in favor," she said. * * * * She was sure you could hear Ennersin outside and down the street. Venera smiled as she shepherded her guests to the door. She was delirious with relief, and was sure it showed in her ridiculous grin. Her soiree was winding down, though naturally the doors and lounges would be open all night for any stragglers. But the council members were tired; no one would criticize them for leaving early. Ennersin was yelling at Jacoby Sarto. It was music to Venera's ears. VShe looked for Garth but couldn't see him at first. Then-there he was, sidling in the entrance. He'd changed to inconspicuous street clothes. Had he been preparing to sneak away? Venera pictured him leaving through the wine cellar exit to avoid the council's troops. Then he could have circled around to stand with the street rabble who were waiting to hear the results of the vote. She smiled; it was what she might have done. There went Ennersin, sweeping by Garth without noticing him. Diamandis watched him go in distaste, then turned and saw Venera watching him. He spread his hands and shrugged. She made a dismissive gesture and smiled back. Time to mingle; the party wasn't over yet and her head felt fine. It felt good to reinforce her win with a gracious turn about the room. For a while everything was a blur of smiling faces and congratulations. Then she found herself shaking someone's hand (the hundredth, it must have been) and looked up to find it was Jacoby Sarto's. "Well played, Ms. Fanning," he said. There was no irony in his voice. 4She glanced around. They were miraculously alone for the moment. Probably a single glance from under Sarto's wiry brows had been enough to clear a circle. hAll she could think of to say was, "Thank you." It struck her as hopelessly inadequate for the situation, but all her strategies had been played out. To her surprise, Sarto smiled. "I've lost Ennersin's confidence," he said. "It's going to take me years to regain some allies I abandoned today." "Oh?" The mystery of his reversal during the vote deepened. Not one to prevaricate, Venera asked, "Why?" \He appeared puzzled. "Why did I vote for you?" v"No-I know why." The key was again unspoken of between them. "I mean," she said, "why did you come out so publicly against me in the first place, if you knew I had that to hang over you?" "Ah." It was his turn to look around them. Satisfied that no one was within earshot, he said, "I was entrusted with the safety of Sacrus's assets. You're considered one of them. If I could acquire you, I was to do that. If not, and you threatened to reveal... certain details... well, I was to contrive a murderous rage." He opened his jacket slightly and she saw the large pistol he had holstered there. "You would not have had a chance to say what you know," he said with a slight smile. ("So why didn't you..." "It is useful to have an acknowledged heir of Buridan controlling that estate. This way we avoid a nasty succession conflict, which Sacrus would view as an unnecessary... distraction, right now. Besides," Sarto shrugged. "There are few moments in a man's life when he has the opportunity to make a choice on his own. I simply did not want to shoot you." 6"And why tell me this now?" His mouth didn't change from its accustomed frown, but the lines around Sarto's eyes might have crinkled a little bit-an almost smile. "It will be easy for me to tell my masters that the pistol was taken from me at your door," he said. "Without an opportunity to acquire or silence you, letting you win was the expedient option. My masters know that." He turned away, then looked back with a scowl. "I hope you won't give me reason to regret my decision." n"Surely not. And my apologies for inconveniencing you." HHe laughed at the edge in her voice. "You may think you're free," he said as the crowd parted to let him through, "but Sacrus still owns you. Never forget that." Venera kept her smile bright, but his parting words worried at her for the rest of the evening. * * * * 11 Muscles aching, Venera swung down from the saddle of her horse. It was two weeks since the confirmation and she had lost no time in establishing her rule over Buridan-which, she had decided, had to include becoming a master rider. She'd knocked down two walls and walled up the ends of one of the high-ceilinged cellar corridors, forming one long narrow room where her steed could trot. There were stalls at one end of this, and two workmen were industriously scattering straw and sand over the plating. "Deeper," Venera told them. "We need several inches of it everywhere." "Yes, ma'am." The men seemed unusually enthusiastic and focused on their task. Maybe they had heard that the new foals were to arrive later today. Probably it was just being in proximity with the one horse now residing here. Venera hadn't yet met anyone who didn't share that strange, apparently ancient love for horses that seemed inbuilt to humans. Venera herself wasn't immune to it. She patted Domenico and walked down the length of the long room, trailing one hand along the low fence that bisected it lengthwise. Her horsemaster stood at the far end, a clipboard clutched in his hand; he was arguing quietly with someone. "Is everything all right, gentlemen?" Venera asked. The other man turned, lamplight slanting across his gnomish features, and Venera said, "Oh!" before she could stop herself. Samson Odess screwed his fishlike face up into a smile and practically lunged over to shake her hand. "I'm honored to meet you, Lady Thrace-Guiles!" His eyes betrayed no recognition, and Venera realized that she was standing in heavy shadow. "Liris is honored to offer you some land to stable your horses. You see, we're diversifying and-" She grinned weakly. It was too soon for this! She had hoped that the men and women of Liris would be consumed by their own internal matters, at least long enough for her new identity to become fixed. If Odess recognized her the news would be bound to percolate through the Fair. She didn't believe in its vaunted secrecy any more than she believed that good always triumphed. &She let go of Odess's hand before he could get entirely into his sales pitch, and turned away. "Charmed, I'm sure. Flance! Can you deal with this?" "Oh, but Master Flance was unable to resolve one little matter," said the horse master, stepping around Odess. "Deal with it!" she snarled. She glimpsed a startled look in Odess's eye before she swept by the two men and into the outer hallway. Well, that had been an unexpected surge of adrenalin! She laughed at herself as she strode quickly through the vaulted, whitewashed spaces. In the half-minute it took her to slow down to a stroll, Venera took several turns and ended up in an area of the cellars she didn't know. Someone cleared his or her throat. Venera turned to find a man in servant's livery approaching. He looked only vaguely familiar but that was hardly surprising considering the number of people she'd hired recently. "Ma'am, this area hasn't been cleaned up yet. Are you looking for something in particular?" Z"No. I'm lost. Where did you just come from?" ^"This way." The man walked back the way they had both come. He was right about the state of the cellars; this passage hadn't been reconstructed and was only minimally cleaned. Black portraits still hung on the walls, here and there an eye glaring out from behind centuries of dust and soot. The lanterns were widely spaced and a few men visible down a side way were reduced to silhouettes, their backdrop some bright distant doors. "Down this way." Her guide indicated a black stairwell Venera hadn't seen before. Narrow and unlit, it plummeted steeply down. Venera stopped. "What the-" Then she saw the pistol in his hand. <"Move," grated the man. "Now." JShe almost called his bluff. One of those quick sidesteps Chaison had taught her, then a foot sweep... he would be on the floor before he knew it. But she hesitated just long enough for him to step out of reach. Caught unprepared for once, Venera stumbled into the blackness with him behind her. * * * * N"You're in a lot of trouble," she said. "We're not afraid of the authorities," said her kidnaper contemptuously. t"I'm not talking about the authorities, I'm talking about me." The stairs had ended on a narrow shelf above an indistinct, dark body of water. It was dank and cold down here; looking left and right she saw that she was standing on the edge of large tank-a cistern, no doubt. "We've been watching you," said the shadowy figure behind her. "I assure you we know what you're capable of." The pistol was in her back again and he was pushing her hard enough that she had trouble keeping her feet. Angrily she hurried ahead and emerged onto the iron plating next to the water. "I didn't know I had this," she commented as she turned right, toward the source of the light. "It's not yours, this is part of the municipal water supply," said a half-familiar voice up ahead. She eyed the black depths. Jump in? There might be a culvert she could swim through, the way heroes did in romance novels. Those heroes never drowned in the dark, though, and besides even if she made it out of here her appearance, soaking wet, in the streets of the city was bound to cause a scandal. She did not need that right now. There was an open area at the far end of the tank. The same tables and crates she'd seen in the wine cellar were set up here, and the same young revolutionaries were sitting on them. Standing next to a lantern-lit desk was the youth with straight black hair and oval eyes. He was dressed in the long coat and tails she'd seen fashionable men wearing on the streets of the wheel; with his arms crossed the coat belled out enough for her to see the two pistols holstered at his waist. She was suddenly reminded of Garth's apparel, which was like a down-at-heel version of the same costume. z"What's the meaning of this?" she snapped, even as she counted people and exits (there was one of the latter, a closed iron door). "You're not being very neighborly," she added more softly. H"Sit her down and tie her up," said the black-haired youth. He had a high tenor voice, not unmanly but refined, his words very precise. His eyes were gray and cold. X"Yes, Bryce." The man who'd led her here sat her down on a stout wooden chair next to the table, and pulling her arms back proceeded to tie a clumsy knot around her wrists. Venera craned her neck to look back. "You obviously don't do this much," she said. Then, spearing this Bryce fellow with a sharp eye, she added, "Kidnapping is precision work. You people don't strike me as being organized enough to pull it off." 0Bryce's eyebrows shot up, that same look of surprise he'd shown in the cellar. "If you'd been following our escapades you'd know what we're capable of." "Bombing innocent crowds, yes," she said acidly. "Hero's work, that." ,He shrugged, but looked uncomfortable. "That one was meant for the council members," he admitted. "It fell back and killed the man who threw it. That was( a soldier's death." She nodded. "Like most soldiers' deaths, painfully unnecessary. What do you want?" Bryce spun another chair around and sat down in it, folding his arms over its back. "We intend to bring down the great nations," he said simply. Venera considered how to reply. After a moment she said, "How can kidnapping me get you any closer to doing that? I'm an outsider, I'm sure nobody cares much whether I live or die. And nobody will ransom me." "True," he agreed with a shrug. "But if you go missing, you'll soon be declared a fraud and the title to Buridan will go up for grabs. It'll be a free-for-all, and we intend to make sure that it starts a civil war." As plans went, it struck Venera as eminently practical-but this was not a good time to be smiling and nodding. rShe thought for a while. All she could hear was the slow drip drip of water from rusted ceiling pipes; doubtless no one would hear any cries for help. "I suppose you've been following my story," she said eventually. "Do you believe that I'm Amandera Thrace-Guiles, heir of Buridan?" (He waved a hand negligently. "Couldn't care less. Actually, I think you are an imposter, but why does it matter? You'll soon be out of the picture." "But what if I am an imposter?" She watched his face closely as she spoke. "Where do you suppose I came from?" Now he looked puzzled. "Here... but your accent is foreign. Are you from outside Spyre?" xShe nodded. "Outside Spyre, and consequently I have no loyalty for any of the factions here. But I do have one thing-I've come into a great deal of money and influence, using my own wits." RHe leaned back, laughing. "So what are you saying?" he asked. "That you're a sympathizer? More like an opportunist; so why should I have anything but contempt for that?" H"Because this power... is only a means to an end," she said. "I'm not interested in who governs or even who ends up with the money I've gained. I have my own agenda." He snorted. "How vague and intriguing. Well, I'm sure I can't help you with this ill-defined 'agenda.' We're only interested in people who believer. People who know that there's another way to govern than the tyrannies we have here. I'm talking about emergent government, which you as a barbarian have probably never even heard of." J"Emergent?" Now it was Venera's turn to be startled. "That's just a myth. Government emerging spontaneously as a property of people's interactions... it doesn't work." "Oh, but it does." He fished inside his jacket and came out with a small, heavily worn black book. "This is the proof. And the key to bringing it back." He held the book up for her to see; with her limited mobility, Venera could just make out the title: >Rights Currencies, 29th Edition. "It's the manual," he said. "The original manual, taken from the secret libraries of one of the great nations. This book explains how currency-based emergent government works, and provides an example." He opened the book and withdrew several tightly folded bills. These he unfolded on the table where she could see them. "People have always had codes of conduct," said Bryce as he stared lovingly at the money, "but they were originally put together hit or miss, with anecdotal evidence to back them up, and using armies and policemen to enforce them. This is a system based on the human habit of buying and selling-only you can't use this money to buy thingsH. Each bill stands for a particular right." She leaned over to see. One pink rectangle had the word JUDGEMENT printed on it above two columns of tiny words. "The text shows which other bills you can trade this one for," said Bryce helpfully. "On the flip side is a description of what you can do if you've got it. This one lets you try court cases if you've also got some other types of bill, but you have to trade this one to judge a trial. The idea is you can only sell it to someone who doesn't have the correct combination to judge and hopefully whoever they sell it to sells it back to you. So the system's not static, it has to be sustained through continual transactions." :She looked at another bill. It said GET OUT OF JAIL FREE. The book Bryce was holding, if it was genuine, was priceless. People had been looking for these lost principles for longer than they'd been trying to find the last key to Candesce. Venera had never believed they really existed. The memory chased all sentimentality out of Garth's mind. His mouth set in a stoic frown, he continued on down the street, digging his hands deep in his coat pockets and avoiding the glances of the few women who frequented the walkway. His aching feet carried him to stairs and more stairs, and his knees and hips began to protest at the labor. The last time he'd gone this way he'd been able to run all the way up. jHundreds of feet above the official street level of Hammerlong, a bridge had been thrown between two buildings back in the carefree Reconstructionist period. Culture and art had flourished here before the time of the preservationists, even before the insular paranoia that had swallowed all the great nations. The bridge was two stories tall and faced with leaded glass windows that caught the light of Candesce. It wasn't used by occupants of either tower; the forges of one had little use for the paper-making enterprise in the other. For decades, the lofting, sunlit spaces of the bridge had been used by bohemian artists-and the agitators and revolutionaries who loved them. @Garth's heart was pounding as he took the last few steps up a wrought-iron fire escape at the center of the span. He paused to catch his breath next to the wrought-iron curlicues of the door, and listened to the scratchy gramophone music that emanated from it. Then he rapped on the door. The gramophone stopped. He heard scrambling noises, muffled voices. Then the door cracked open an inch. "Yes?" a man said belligerently. "Sorry to disturb you," Garth said with a broad smile. "I'm looking for someone." h"Well, they're not here." The door started to close. Garth laughed richly. "I'm not with the secret police, young pup. I used to live here." The door hesitated. "I painted this iron about... oh, twenty years ago," Garth said, tracing his finger along the curves of metal. "It was rusting out, just like the one in the back bathroom. Do the pipes still knock when you run the water?" v"What do you want?" The voice held a little less harshness. Garth withdrew his hand from the remembered metal. With difficulty he brought his attention back to the present. "I know she doesn't live here now," he said. "Too much time has passed. But I had to start somewhere and this was the last place we were together. I don't suppose you know... any of the former occupants of the place?" ("Just a minute." The door closed, then opened again, widely this time. "Come in." Garth stepped into the sunlit space and was overwhelmed by memory. The factory planks paving the floor had proven perfect for dancing. He remembered stepping into and out of that parallelogram of sunlight-though there had been a table next to it and he'd banged his hip-while she sang along with the gramophone. That same gramophone sat on a windowsill now, guarded by twin potted orange trees. A mobile of candles and wire turned slowly in the dusty sunlight, entangling his view of the loft behind it. Where he'd slept, and made love, and played his dulcimer for years... "Who are you after?" A young woman with cropped black hair stood before him. She wore a man's clothing and held a tattoo needle loosely in one hand. Another woman sat at the table behind her, shoulder bared and bleeding. Garth took a deep breath and committed the name to speech for the first time in twenty years. "Her name is Selene. Selene Diamandis..." * * * * 12 Spyre was awe-inspiring even at a distance of ten miles. Venera held onto netting in a rear-facing doorway of the passenger liner Glorious Dawnd and watched the vast blued circle recede in the distance. First one cloud shot by to obscure a quadrant of her view, then another, then a small team of them that whirled slowly in the ship's wake. They chopped Spyre up into fragmented images: a curve of green trees here, a glint of window in some tower (Liris?). Then, instead of clouds, it was blockhouses and barbed wire flicking by. They were passing the perimeter. She was free. She turned, facing into the interior of the ship. The velvet-walled galleries were crowded with passengers, mostly visiting delegations returning from the Fair. But a few of the men and women were dressed in the iron and leather of a major nation: Buridan. Her retainers, maids, the Buridan trade delegation... she wasn't free yet, not until she had found a way to evade all of them. Now that she was undisputed head of the Nation of Buridan, Venera had new rights. The right to travel freely, for example; it had only taken a simple request and a travel visa had been delivered to her the next day. Of course she couldn't simply wave goodbye and leave. Nobody was fully convinced that she was who she said she was. So, it had been necessary for her to invent a pointless trade tour of the principalities to justify this trip. And that in turn meant that she could not be traveling alone. Still-after weeks of running, of being captured by Liris and made chattel; after run-ins with bombers and bombs, hostile nobility and mad botanists-after all of that, she had simply boarded a ship and left. Life was never like you imagined it would be. And she could just keep going, she knew-all the way back to her home in Rush. The idea was tempting, but it wasn't why she had undertaken this expedition. It was too soon to return home. She didn't yet have enough power to undertake the revenge she planned against the Pilot of Slipstream. If she left now it would be as a thief, with only what she could carry to see her home. No, when she finally did leave Spyre, it must be with power at her back. The only way to get that power was to increase her holdings here, as well as the faith of the people in her. So, like Liris and all the other nations of Spyre, Buridan would visit the outer world to find customers. Her smile faltered as the last of the barbed wire and mines swept by to vanish among the clouds. True, if she just kept going she wouldn't miss anything of Spyre, she mused. Yet even as she thought this Venera experienced a little flash of memory: of Garth Diamandis laughing in sunlight; then of Eilen leaning on a wall after drinking too much at the party. Last night Venera too had drunk too much wine, with Garth Diamandis. Sitting in a lounge that smelled of fresh paint and plaster, they had listened to the night noises of the house and talked. "You're not kidding either of us," he'd said. "You're leaving for good. I know that. So let me tell you now, while I can, that you've stripped many years off my shoulders, Lady Venera Fanning. I hope you find your home intact and waiting for you." He toasted her then. "I'll prove you wrong about me yet," she'd said. "But what about you?" she asked. "When all of this really is finished with, what are you going to do? Fade into the alleys of the town wheels? Return to your life as a gigolo?" He shook his head with a smile. "The past is the past. I'm interested in the future. Venera... I found her." Venera had smiled, genuinely happy for him. "Ah. Your mysterious woman. Your prime mover. Well, I'm glad." He'd nodded vigorously. "She's sent me a letter, telling where and when we can meet. In the morning, you'll head for the docks and your destiny, and I'll be off to the city and mine. So you see, we've both won." They toasted one another, and Spyre, and eventually the whole world before the night became a happy blur. She kicked off from the ship's netting, almost colliding with one of the crew, and began hauling her way up the corridor to the bow of the ship. One of her new maids fell into formation next to her. ^"Is there something wrong, lady?" The maid, Brydda, wrung her hands. Her normally sour face looked even more prudish as she frowned. "Is it leaving Spyre that's upset you so?" Venera barked a laugh. "It couldn't happen soon enough. No." She kept hand-walking up the rope that led to the bow. 8"Can I do anything for you?" She shot Brydda an appraising look. "You've traveled before, haven't you? You were put onto my staff by the council, I'll bet. To watch me." "Madam!" "Oh, don't deny it. Just come with. I need a... distraction. You can point out the sights as we go." "Yes, madam." They arrived at a forward observation lounge in time for the ship to exit the cloud banks. The Glorious DawnH was a typical passenger vessel: a spindle-shaped wooden shell one hundred fifty feet long and forty wide, its surface punctuated with rows of windows and open wicker-work galleries. Big jet nacelles were mounted on short arms at the stern, their whine subdued right now as the ship made a scant fifteen miles per hour through the thinning clouds. The ship's interior was subdivided into staterooms and common areas and contained two big exercise centrifuges. With the engine sound a constant undertone, Venera could easily hear the clink of glassware in the kitchens, muted conversations, and somewhere, a string quartet tuning up. The lounge smelled of coffee and fresh air. .Such a contrast to the Rook, the last ship she had flown on. When she'd left it the Slipstream cruiser had stunk of unwashed men, stale air, and rocket exhaust. Its hull had been peppered with bullet holes and scorched by explosions. The engines' roar would pierce your dreams as you slept and the only voices were those of arguing, cursing airmen. The Glorious Dawn was just like every vessel she had ever traveled on prior to the Rook. Its luxuries and details were appropriate to one of Venera's station in life; she should be able to put the ship on like a favorite glove. In the normal course of affairs she would never have set foot on a ship like the Rook, much less would she have seen it through battle and boarding, pursuit and silent running.