
—and returned as a ragged white pall spurting from the muzzles of volleying rifles. From behind a
courtyard wall, Raj Whitehall and troopers wearing the red and orange neckscarves of the 5th Descott
shot down an alleyway toward the docks of Port Murchison. Each pair of hands worked rhythmically on
the lever,ting, and the spent brass shot backward,click, as they thumbed a new round into the breech
and brought the lever back up,crack as they fired.
There were already windrows of bodies on the pavement: Squadron warriors killed before they knew
they were at risk. Survivors crouched behind the corpses of their fellows and fired back desperately.
Their clumsy flintlocks were slow to load, inaccurate even at this range; they had to expose themselves to
reload, fumbling with powder horns and ramrods, falling back dead more often than not as the Descotter
marksmen fired. A few threw the firearms aside with screams of frustrated rage, charging with their long
single-edged swords whirling. By some freak one got as far as the wall, and a bayonet punched through
his belly. The man fell backward off the steel, his mouth and eyes perfect O's of surprise.
A ball ricocheted from one of the pillars and grazed Raj's buttock before slapping into the small of the
back of the officer beside him in the firing line. The stricken man dropped his revolver and pawed blindly
at his wound, legs giving their final twitch. Raj shot carefully, standing in the regulation pistol-range
position with one hand behind the back and letting the muzzle fall back before putting another round
through the center of mass.
"Marcy!" the barbarians called in their Namerique dialect.Mercy! They threw down their weapons and
began raising their hands. "Marcy, migo!"Mercy, friend!
* * *
Both men blinked as the vision faded—Raj to force memory away, Thom in surprise.
"You brought the Southern Territories back?" Thom said, slight awe in his voice. TheSquadrones— the
Squadron, under its Admiral—had ruled the Territories ever since they came roaring down out of the
Base Area a century and a half ago and cut a swath across the Midworld Sea. The only previous Civil
Government attempt to reconquer them had been a spectacular disaster.
Raj shrugged, then nodded: "I was in command of the Expeditionary Force, yes. But I couldn't have
achieved anything without good troops—and the Spirit."
"Center isn't the Spirit of Man of the Stars, Raj. It's a Central Command and Control Unit from before
the Collapse—the Fall, we call it now."
Neither of them needed another set of Center's holographic scenarios to remember what they had been
shown. Earth—Bellevue, the computer always insisted—from the holy realm of Orbit, swinging like a
blue-and-white shield against the stars. Points of thermonuclear fire expanding across cities . . . and the
descent into savagery that followed. Which must have followed everywhere in the vast stellar realm the
Federation once ruled, or men from the stars would have returned.
Raj shivered involuntarily. He had been terrified as achild, when the household priest told of the Fall. It
was even more unnerving to see it played out before the mind's eye. Worse yet was the knowledge that
Center had given him. The Fall wasstill happening. If Center's plan failed, it would go on until there was
nothing left on Bellevue—anywhere in the human universe—but flint-knapping cannibal savages. Fifteen
thousand years would pass before civilization rose again.
Thom went on: "Center's just a computer."
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