
He had obtained a copy of Sten's military record, a tissue of lies, he was sure, but at least a beginning
point in forming a profile of the man. The official record showed a man who had held a series of slightly
above average posts, who had won a little more than his share of military awards and honors, and who
had been promoted regularly. Then, suddenly, for no apparent reason, his career had taken a sharp
upturn. For no readily apparent reason, he had been appointed head of the Emperor's bodyguards. That
had been followed by another sudden shift from the army to the navy and a promotion to commander.
Prek believed the promotion was because of special service to the Emperor. Sten's record was a fake.
Actually, Prek thought, Sten had been a valued intelligence agent. The shift to the navy and, ultimately, to
his command of four tacships had been a reward for services rendered. Those services, Prek was sure,
included the murder of his brother.
Prek had tracked Sten forward to the final battle for Cavite City, where enormous casualties had been
suffered on both sides. Tahn records indicated that Sten had probably died in that battle, although his
remains had never been found. There had been some out-of-the-ordinary official effort to determine
Sten's fate because of "criminal actions instigated by said Imperial officer" prior to the battle for Cavite.
Prek did not believe Sten was dead. His profile showed him to be a man who would do anything to
survive. Prek also did not believe that Sten was serving elsewhere. He was an officer who would always
be in the forefront of battle, and he was also the kind of hero the Eternal Emperor liked to feed into his
propaganda machine.
No. Sten was alive. And Prek was determined to run him to the ground. He would find the man and
then… The Tahn brushed that thought from his mind. He could not allow emotion to interfere with the
hunt.
Senior Captain (Intelligence) Lo Prek was right.
Sten was alive.
CHAPTER TWO
Two emaciated, shaven-headed men crouched, motionless, in the thigh-deep muck.
One of them had been Commander Sten, formerly commanding officer of the now-destroyed Imperial
Cruiser Swampscott. Sten had assumed command of the obsolete rust-bucket in the final retreat from
Cavite and had fought a desperate rearguard action against an entire Tahn fleet. One ultramodern Tahn
battleship had been destroyed by the Swampscott's missiles and a second had been crippled beyond
repair, even as the Tahn blasts shattered the cruiser. In the final moments, Sten had opened his com and
sent a surrender signal. He had collapsed long before the Tahn boarded the hulk that had been a fighting
ship. That almost certainly had saved his life.
Seconds after Sten went out, Warrant Officer Alex Kilgour, a heavy-world thug, ex-Mantis Section
assassin, and Sten's best friend struggled back to consciousness. He bloodily registered, on the
Swampscott's single functioning screen, Tahn tacships closing in. He foggily thought that the Tahn,
barbarians, "ae th' Campbell class," would not properly honor the man who had destroyed the nucleus of
a Tahn fleet. More likely, Sten would be pitched out the nearest lock into space.
"Tha' dinnae be braw nor kosher," he muttered. Kilgour wove his way to a sprawled body, unsealed the
suit, and tore away the corpse's ID tags. He checked a wall-mounted pressure readout. There were still
a few pounds of atmosphere remaining in the CIC. Sten's suit came open, air hissing out, and his ID tags
were replaced. Kilgour heard/felt the crashing as the Tahn blew a lock open and decided that it might be
expedient for him to be unconscious as well.