
Sometimes it was a darkness, touched with red-and-gold sunrise on one edge, perhaps the city
Catawrayannis nickering like a star upon its night. Sometimes it was a scimitar, the sun burning dazzlingly
close. Now and then he saw it full, a round shield of brilliance, emblazoned on oceans azure with clouds
argent above continents vert and tenné.
Terra looked much the same at the same distance. (Closer in, you became aware that she was
haggard, as is any former beauty who has been used by too many men.) But Terra was a pair of
light-centuries removed. And neither world resembled rusty, tawny Aeneas for which McCormac's eyes
hungered.
The satellite had no rotation; interior weight was due entirely to gravity-field generators. However, its
revolution made heaven march slowly across the viewpoint. When Llynathawr and sun had disappeared,
a man's pupils readjusted and he became able to see other stars. They crowded space, unwinking,
jewel-colored, winter-sharp. Brightest shone Alpha Crucis, twin blue-white giants less than ten parsecs
away; but Beta Crucis, a single of the same kind, was not much further off in its part of the sky.
Elsewhere, trained vision might identify the red glimmers of Aldebaran and Arcturus. They resembled
fires which, though remote, warmed and lighted the camps of men. Or vision might swing out to Deneb
and Polaris, unutterably far beyond the Empire and the Empire's very enemies. That was a cold sight.
Wryness tugged at McCormac's mouth. If Kathryn were tuned in on my mind, he thought, she'd
say there must be something in Leviticus against mixing so many metaphors.
He dared not let the knowledge of her dwell with him long. I'm lucky to have an outside cell. Not
uncomfortable, either. Surely this wasn't Snelund's intention.
The assistant warden had been as embarrassed and apologetic as he dared. "We, uh, well, these are
orders for us to detain you, Admiral McCormac," he said. "Direct from the governor. Till your trial
or … transportation to Terra, maybe … uh … till further orders." He peered at the fax on his desk,
conceivably hoping that the words it bore had changed since his first perusal. "Uh, solitary confinement,
incommunicado—state-of-emergency powers invoked—Frankly, Admiral McCormac, I don't see why
you aren't allowed, uh, books, papers, even projections to pass the time … I'll send to His Excellency
and ask for a change." I know why, McCormac had thought. Partly spite; mainly, the initial stage in
the process of breaking me. His back grew yet stiffen Well, let them try!
The sergeant of the housecarl platoon that had brought the prisoner up from Catawrayannis Port said
in his brassiest voice, "Don't address traitors by titles they've forfeited."
The assistant warden sat bolt upright, nailed them all with a look, and rapped: "Sergeant, I was twenty
years in the Navy before retiring to my present job. I made CPO. Under His Majesty's regulations, any
officer of Imperials ranks every member of any paramilitary local force. Fleet Admiral McCormac may
have been relieved of command, but unless and until he's decommissioned by a proper court-martial or
by direct fiat from the throne, you'll show him respect or find yourself in worse trouble than you may
already be in."
Flushed, breathing hard, he seemed to want to say more. Evidently he thought better of it. After a
moment, during which a couple of the burly guards shifted from foot to foot, he added merely: "Sign the
prisoner over to me and get out."
"We're supposed to—" the sergeant began.
"If you have written orders to do more than deliver this gentleman into custody, let's see them." Pause.
"Sign him over and get out. I don't plan to tell you again."
McCormac placed the assistant warden's name and face in his mind as carefully as he had noted each
person involved in his arrest. Someday—if ever—
What had become of the man's superior? McCormac didn't know. Off Aeneas, he had never been
concerned with civilian crime or penology. The Navy looked after its own. Sending him here was an
insult tempered only by the fact that obviously it was done to keep him away from brother officers who'd