much, and what, should occur? God! I dared accept the job of ruling, remaking an entire world—when I
knew nothing more about it than its name, and that simply because it was the planet of Hugh McCormac,
the man who would be Emperor. After two years, what else have I learned?
Ordinarily he could sit quiet, but the Hesperian episode had been too shocking, less in itself than in its
implications. Whatever they were. How could he plan against the effect on these people, once the news
got out, when he, the foreigner, had no intuition of what that effect might be?
He put a cigarette into a long, elaborately carved holder of landwhale ivory. (He thought it was in
atrocious taste, but it had been given him for a birthday present by a ten-year-old daughter who died soon
afterward.) The tobacco was an expensive self-indulgence, grown on Esperance, the closest thing to
Terran he could obtain hereabouts while shipping remained sparse.
The smoke-bite didn't soothe him. He jumped up and prowled. He hadn't yet adapted so fully to the low
gravity of Aeneas, 63 percent standard, that he didn't consciously enjoy movement. The drawback was
the dismal exercises he must go through each morning, if he didn't want to turn completely into lard.
Unfair, that the Aeneans tended to be such excellent physical specimens without effort. No, not really
unfair. On this niggard sphere, few could afford a large panoply of machines; even today, more travel was
on foot or animal back than in vehicles, more work done by hand than by automatons or cybernets. Also,
in earlier periods—the initial colonization, the Troubles, the slow climb back from chaos—death had
winnowed the unfit out of their bloodlines.
Desai halted at the north wall, activated its transparency, and gazed forth across Nova Roma.
Though itself two hundred Terran years old, Imperial House jutted awkwardly from the middle of a city
founded seven centuries ago. Most buildings in this district were at least half that age, and architecture
had varied little through time. In a climate where it seldom rained and never snowed; where the enemies
were drought, cold, hurricane winds, drifting dust, scouring sand; where water for bricks and concrete,
forests for timber, organics for synthesis were rare and precious, one quarried the stone which Aeneas did
have in abundance, and used its colors and textures.
The typical structure was a block, two or three stories tall, topped by a flat deck which was half
garden—the view from above made a charming motley—and half solar-energy collector. Narrow
windows carried shutters ornamented with brass or iron arabesques; the heavy doors were of similar
appearance. In most cases, the gray ashlars bore a veneer of carefully chosen and integrated slabs, marble,
agate, chalcedony, jasper, nephrite, materials more exotic than that; and often there were carvings
besides, friezes, armorial bearings, grotesques; and erosion had mellowed it all, to make the old part of
town one subtle harmony. The wealthier homes, shops, and offices surrounded cloister courts, vitryl-
roofed to conserve heat and water, where statues and plants stood among fishponds and fountains.
The streets were cramped and twisted, riddled with alleys, continually opening on small irrational plazas.
Traffic was thin, mainly pedestrian, otherwise groundcars, trucks, and countryfolk on soft-gaited Aenean
horses or six-legged green stathas (likewise foreign, though Desai couldn't offhand remember where they
had originated). A capital city—population here a third of a million, much the largest—would inevitably
hurt more and recover slower from a war than its hinterland.
He lifted his eyes to look onward. Being to south, the University wasn't visible through this wall. What he
saw was the broad bright sweep of the River Flone, and ancient high-arched bridges across it; beyond, the
Julian Canal, its tributaries, verdant parks along them, barges and pleasure boats upon their surfaces;
farther still, the intricacy of many lesser but newer canals, the upthrust of modern buildings in garish
colors, a tinge of industrial haze—the Web.
However petty by Terran standards, he thought, that youngest section was the seedbed of his hopes: in the
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