
When they approached him again an hour later, to take him up to the yacht for medical examina-tion and
treatment, they found him already dead. Autopsy on the spot discovered several kinds of slow and gentle
poison. Nobrega might have taken some deliberately. Or he might have been finished by something the
berserkers had left be-hind, to ensure that there would be no survivors, as they moved on to carry out
their programmed task of eradicating all life from the Galaxy.
On his voyage home from St. Gervase, and for several months thereafter, Yoritimo was pre-vented by
pressing business from really inspect-ing his new treasures. By then the five great statues had been
installed, to good esthetic advan-tage, in the deepest, largest, and best-protected gallery of the Palace.
Lesser collections had been evicted to make room and visual space for Winged Truth Rising; Lazamon's
Laughing (or Raging] Bacchus; The Last Provocation, by Sarapion; Lazienki's Twisting Room; and
Remembrance of Past Wrongs, by Prajapati.
It chanced that at this time the Lady Yoritomo was at the Palace too. Her duties, as Cultural Leader of
the People, and High Overseer of Educa-tion for the four tributary planets, kept her on the move, and it
often happened that she and her Lord did not see each other for a month or longer at a
time. The two of them trusted each other more than
they trusted anyone else. Today they sat alone in the great gallery and sipped tea, and spoke of business.
The Lady was trying to promote her latest theory, which was that love for the ruling pair might be
implanted genetically in the next gener-ation of people on the tributary worlds. Several experimental
projects had already begun. So far these had achieved little but severe mental retar-dation in the subjects,
but there were plenty of new subjects and she was not discouraged.
The Lord spoke mainly of his own plan, which was to form a more explicit working arrangement with the
berserkers. In this scheme the Yoritomos would furnish the killer machines with human lives they did not
need, and planets hard to de-fend, in exchange for choice works of art and, of course, immunity from
personal attack. The plan had many attractive features, but the Lord had to admit that the difficulty of
opening negotiations with berserkers, let alone establishing any degree of mutual trust, made it somewhat
impractical.
When a pause came in the conversation, Yoritomo had the banal thought that he and his wife had little to
talk about anymore, outside of business. With a word to her, he rose from the alcove where they had
been sitting, and walked to the far end of the gallery of statues to replenish the tea pot. For esthetic
reasons he refused to allow robots in here; nor did he want human servitors around while this private
discussion was in prog-ress. Also, he thought, as he retraced his steps, the Lady could not help but be
flattered, and won toward his own position in a certain matter where
they disagreed, when she was served personally by the hands of one so mighty...
He rounded the great metal flank of The Last Provocation and came to a dumb halt, in shocked surprise
so great that for a moment his facial ex-pression did not even alter. Half a minute ago he had left her
vivacious and thoughtful and full of graceful energy. She was still in the same place, on the settee, but
slumped over sideways now, one arm extended with its slender, jeweled finger twitching upon the rich
brown carpet. The Lady's hair was wildly disarranged; and small wonder, he thought madly, for her head
had been twisted almost completely around, so her dead eyes now looked over one bare shoulder
almost straight at Yoritomo. Upon her shoulder and her cheek were bruised discolorations...
He spun around at last, dropping the fragile masterpiece that held his tea. His concealed weapon was
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