
Raj flushed; they were both just turned twenty-five, but there were times when Thom Poplanich made
him feel very much the raw youth, a rustic squire in from the provinces. Even in tweed and leather hunting
clothes, the other man had a slim self-assured elegance that spoke of ten generations of urban
aristocracy. Raj touched his amulet again. It was comforting to know that this was the genuine article,
recovered two centuries ago and blessed by Saint Wu herself. Even if the Church had ruled that belief
made the relic holy, rather than the reverse.
He forced himself into the door and pushed with knees and hands, back braced against the wall. For a
long moment nothing moved, until he took a deep breath and threw the strength of shoulders and back
into it, timing the contraction to the exhalation of his breath the way the family armsman had taught. A
seam parted along the side of his tight uniform jacket, and the thick slab slid open with a protesting
screech of tearing metal. Raj dropped to the floor in a crouch, panting slightly.
"Showoff," Thom said as he sidled past. There was surprise and slight envy in his tone; his friend grinned.
"A strong back comes in useful for other things than pulling a plow," he said, raising his own lantern.
"Let's keep turning to the right."
* * *
Raj genuflected again, touching brows and heart to the ancient, dust-shrouded computer terminal.
"Look, there's not much point in going on," he said. This was the fifth level down from their
starting-point. Emptiness, offices and storage space, eerily uncorroded metal and the smell of damp
stone. And enough computer equipment to stock every church in the Civil Government and the barbarian
lands as well.
Poplanich ran a hand over the swivel chair before the terminal. Dust puffed up behind his hand,
silver-yellow in the light of the lantern.
"Feel this," he said, fascinated. "Itlooks like leather, butnew leather. This area's been abandoned since
the Fall, it should have rotted away to shreds." He swung the chair back and forth. "A greased axle won't
turn that smoothly, and this doesn't evensqueak ."
Raj shrugged. "They had powers before the Fall. The Spirit withdrew them when they proved
unworthy."
Thom nodded absently; that was from the Creed. "I still think this was a naval installation," he said,
picking up a plastic sign from one desk. It was made of two strips joined at one long edge; one side was
blank, and the other bore black letters in the Old Namerique tongue.Wez cainna bie fyr'd: slavs godda
bie sold .His lips moved silently, construing it first into modern Namerique, and then into his native
Sponglish. He frowned absently.Well, of course ,he thought.
"I don't know," Raj replied, heading cautiously out into the corridor again. "The Book of the Fall—hey,
there's a stairwell leading down here, hand me the paintstick again—says the military joined the
Rebellion." They had both sat through enough droning sermons onthat .
Thom's teeth flashed in a grin. "Just as my own interpretation—and please keep this from the Invigiles
Against Heresy, will you?—I'd say that the Brigade and the Squadron and the others were pretty
low-echelon units, out in the wilds when the Fall came. They didn't cause the breakup of the Holy
Federation, they just seized power where they could when we were cut off from the Stars."
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