WE WERE ALL HUDDLEDย in a shallow spot in the seaside cliffs when the
shuttles came, arcing overland and out along the coastline to come back toward Calagah from the sea. Their lights gleamed blue and white, their tread nearly silent on the air, buoyed by Royse repulsors. They came in like the longships of old, kicking up the surf with their engines, outboard
attitude jets adjusting their drift. Still more shot past, drives carving blue lines in after-image across the sky, angling toward the spot in the west
where the ship had crashed. They looked different in the dimness, oddly fishlike, glinting like brass as they streaked away.
The dozen that set down on the beach were squat lozenges, taller than they were wide. Their slanted front faces hinged open, turning to ramps. A moment later soldiers in rust-colored combat armor tramped out, the Veisi serpent twined across their chests and down their left arms. Their leaderโa centurion, by the transverse crest on her helmโpassed her lance to an
adjutant and unsealed that helmet, which she tucked under her arm. She moved forward, advancing on Elomas and young Karthik where they sat on a low shelf of stone. โSir Elomas!โ She was nearly bald, copper-skinned
and severe with a sheet of burn scar above one bright eye. I recalled her from Spingdeep: a good officer, resolute.
โVriell!โ Karthik rose and dashed to the woman, who stopped to embrace the shorter boy. โAre you here to take us away?โ
โAye, little lord!โ She tousled the fifteen-year-oldโs hair, then stood and spoke to the old knight. โSir, if you would, Iโve orders to return you to Springdeep directly.โ
Elomas had not stirred from his place on the low shelf of stone, boots dug into the beach, jacket thrown down beside him, shirt open to the
breastbone as he chewed on one of his chocolate bars. He looked drawn, pressed thin as paper, and yet he smiled at the severe-looking centurion. โWhatโs going on, Vriell?โ
โIโm not at liberty to say, sir.โ โNot even to me?โ
โNot to anyone,โ she countered, standing at attention, her hand on the hilt of her ceramic short swordโmere soldiers were not permitted true highmatter swords in those days. โNot my place, sir. Orders come straight from the top.โ
โFrom Father?โ Karthik asked, meaning Archon Veisi. He peered up at the centurion. โOr the count?โ
โFrom the knight-tribune,โ Vriell replied, then realized sheโd said too much and set her jaw. โPlease, sir. Letโs get everyone aboard the shuttles now.โ She stepped aside, gesturing with one arm to indicate that Elomas should take the lead. โThis way.โ
The knight-tribune.ย I studied the centurionโs face from my place against the basalt cliff, glanced at Valka and Ada where they sat huddled among the few packs the technicians had liberated from the site.ย Knight-Tribune Raine Smythe?ย I summoned up a memory of the woman from the banquet, from Dorianโs Ephebeia and the triumph. Square-jawed and plain, face traced by patrician scars, her unremarkable brown hair cropped short. She had seized power on Emesh, citing some emergency protocol in the wake of what we
all knew, officially confirmed or otherwise, was a Cielcin attack. Count Balian would have ceded authority to her as the ranking Legion officer,
allowing her temporary command of his personal forces. That explained the Mataro green mixed in among the red and white of His Radianceโs Legions.
Lights still flickered in the sky, bursting and sparking as lighters and other starships tracked and dragged to high and lower orbits, bisecting the night sky with streaks of flame. Every now and again, a point silently blossomed into a rosette of pink-red flame: the death of some spacecraft. The poets romanticize space combat; holograph operas depict them as things of sound and fury. Even from within a battle it is not so, but from the outside they are only light and silence, save when the heavens come
crashing down. I rose from my place, craning my neck to look back along the shoreline to where the smoke of the distant crash muddied the air, lit from beneath by plasma fires and burning metal.
โHow far off are they?โ I demanded. โThe Cielcin?โ
The centurion looked at me, recognition in her bright eyes. Her
eyebrowsโor rather, her eyebrow and the patch of burn scarโrose in surprise. โLord Marlowe.โ
โCenturion,โ I said. Valka and Tor Ada moved steadily toward the fliers, pushing through the milling few dozen technicians and archaeologists. โWe know itโs the Pale.โ
The patch of burn scar above Vriellโs eye whitened. โThen you understand the need for haste.โ
โWhoโs on the other fliers?โ I pointed up at the sky.
โJaddians,โ she answered, unsure how much my rank demanded that she share with me, โand the Legion.โ
I glanced at Valka, then to Elomas. โSir, you have to let me go with them.โ
โWhat?โ Elomasโs eyes widened, green even in the predawn light. โWhy?โ
โOut of the question, lordship!โ the centurion said, taking a step forward to lay a hand on my arm above the elbow. โThe count would never forgive me or Lord Veisi if you were to come to harm.โ
I brushed her gauntleted hand off, but she reasserted her grip. What did I care if Archon Veisi lost favor in the eyes of the count at Borosevo? He was only a regional governor. A flicker of my fatherโs aristocratic ice slipped into the edges of my voice, and I hissed, โGet your hands off me.โ Vriell quailed visibly, reminded for a moment that I was palatine. She released me. That I was to be the consort of her countโs future heir was a secret, was irrelevant, but my own breeding was enough to engender pause. โYouโre going to back them up once the dig teamโs secure?โ She didnโt respond, just set her heavy jaw, chin thrust out. I took it for affirmation and clapped my hands. โGood. Iโm coming with you.โ
โLordship . . . I . . .โ
โIโm coming with you.โ I brushed past her, making for another of the drop-ships, one the dig team wasย notย pouring into.
Valkaโs voice rose above the hum of repulsors and the lapping of waves. โHadrian!โ
I turned back, planted by chance on a slight rise in the craggy beach. My words were for the centurion, though I spoke as my father might, to the
whole group. โIf any of the Pale survived, I can talk to them. I can get them
to surrender.โ Whatever Valka had been about to say, she grew quiet. โI can help! Centurion, you know I can help.โ
The truth was that I did not know what made me say it, what drove me.
Curiosity, perhaps? Or pride? Even now, after all the centuries, all the bloodshed, after the death of a sun and the death of a species, after all the good and evil done by me and in my name and in the name of mankind, it is that instant that rings true. If you seek a momentโthe momentโon which to hang my life, it is there. Upon that stony shore at the margin of the world, on a night when fire reigned and fell from heaven, I found a purpose. I wasย Hadrian Marloweย again. I was like a man possessed, and I stood fidgeting with the wheal of cryoburn scar on my left thumb. I had lost my ring, thrown it away in Borosevo. Iโd looked for it the next morning, but it had vanished. Stolen, I had guessed, by one of the servants, or else tidied away by some unthinking cleaning machine. I had not pressed my claim at the time. It was next to worthless now that my titles and holdings had been revoked by my father, and Iโd had other things to worry over.
โItโs not safe.โ The centurion shook her head and advanced on me again. โYou have to go back to Springdeep.โ
โThen youโll have to stun me, Centurion, and then you can explain to Anaรฏs Mataro why it is you stunned her fiancรฉ.โ That struck true, and the color drained from the centurionโs face. Seeing my opportunity, I forged
ahead. โLet me go where I can help.โ Vriell looked from me to Sir Elomas, but the old man only shrugged, wind pushing his mop of white hair over his face, obscuring it. โIf I can talk to them, maybe I can stop further bloodshed. You donโt want to lose any of your people, surely.โ Makisomnโs head rolled behind my eyes, and I sucked in a breath, eyes screwed shut for a moment as I marshaled myself and forced words out. โThree hundred years of fighting, Centurion, and in all that time weโve never,ย neverย seen the Cielcin surrender. We can change that.โ