
was close to success...according to the equations.
Yet still his most frequent emotion these days was cold regret. To live in a bright and youthful
period, the Empire at its most glorious, stable and prosperous--that would be worth all his eminence and
accomplishment!
To have returned to him the company of his adopted son Raych, and Dors, mysterious and lovely
Dors Venabili, who harbored within tailored flesh and secret steel the passion and devotion of any ten
heroes...For their return alone he would multiply geometrically the signs of his own decay, aching limbs
and balky bowels and blurred eyesight.
This night, however, Hari was close to peace. His bones did not ache much. He did not feel the
worms of grief so sharply. He could actually relax and look forward to an end to this labor.
The pressures pushing him were coming to a hard center. His trial would begin within a month.
He knew its outcome with reasonable certainty. This was the Cusp Time. All that he had lived and
worked for would be realized soon, his plans moving on to their next step--and to his exit. Conclusions
within growth, stops within the flow.
He had an appointment soon to meet with young Gaal Dornick, a significant figure in his plans.
Mathematically, Dornick was far from being a stranger; yet they had not met before.
And Hari believed he had seen Daneel once again, though he was not sure. Daneel would not
have wanted him to be sure; but perhaps Daneel wanted him to suspect.
So much of what passed for history on Trantor now reeked of misery. In statecraft, after all,
confusionwas misery--and sometimes misery was a necessity. Hari knew that Daneel still had much work
to do, in secret; but Hari would never--could never--tell any other human. Daneel had made sure of that.
And for that reason Hari could never speak the complete truth about Dors, the true tale of the odd and
virtually perfect relationship he had had with a woman who was not a woman, not even human, yet friend
and lover.
Hari, in his weariness, resisted but could not suppress a sentimental sadness. Age was tainted
and the old were haunted by the loss of lovers and friends. How grand it would be if he could visit with
Daneel again! Easy to see, in his mind’s eye, how that visit would go: after the joy of reunion, Hari would
vent some of his anger at the restrictions and demands Daneel had placed upon him. The best of friends,
the most compelling of taskmasters.
Hari blinked and focused on the view beyond the window. He was far too prone these days to
drift off into reverie.
The ocean’s beautiful glow was itself decay; a riot of bioluminescent algae run rampant for almost
four years now, killing off the crops of the oxygen farms, making the air slightly stale even in the chill of
upperside. No threat of suffocation yet, but for how much longer?
The Emperor’s adjutants and protectors and spokesmen had announced imminent victory over
the beautiful plague of algae only a few days before, seeding the ocean with tailored phages to control the
bloom. The ocean did seem darker tonight, but perhaps the uncharacteristically clear sky dimmed it by
comparison.
Death can be both harsh and lovely, Hari thought. Sleep, Dream, Peace.
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