Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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Vae victis!
IIâLet us have a clear understanding,â said the barbarian chief. âYou are a prisoner on a warship already light-years from Llynathawr, well into the Imperial marches and bound for Scotha itself. You have no chance of rescue, and mercy depends entirely on your own conduct. Adjust it accordingly.â
âMay I ask why you picked me up?â Flandryâs tone was mild.
âYou are of noble blood, and a high-ranking officer in the Imperial intelligence service. You may be worth something as a hostage. But primarily we want information.â
âBut Iâ ââ
âI know.â The reply was disgusted. âYouâre very typical of your miserable kind. Iâve studied the Empire and its decadence long enough to know that. Youâre just another worthless younger son, given a high-paying sinecure so you can wear a fancy uniform and play soldier. You donât amount to anything.â
Flandry let an angry flush go up his cheek. âLook hereâ ââ
âItâs perfectly obvious,â said the barbarian. âYou come to Llynathawr to track down certain dangerous conspirators. So you register yourself in the biggest hotel in Catawrayannis as Captain Dominic Flandry of the Imperial Intelligence Service, you strut around in your expensive uniform dropping dark hints about your leads and your activitiesâ âand these consist of drinking and gambling and wenching the whole night and sleeping the whole day!â A cold humor gleamed in the blue eyes. âUnless it is your intention that the Empireâs enemies shall laugh themselves to death at the spectacle.â
âIf thatâs so,â began Flandry thinly, âthen whyâ ââ
âYou will know something. You canât help picking up a lot of miscellaneous information in your circles, no matter how hard you try not to. Certainly you know specific things about the organization and activities of your own corps which we would find useful information. Weâll squeeze all you know out of you! Then there will be other services you can perform, people within the Empire you can contact, documents you can translate for us, perhaps various liaisons you can makeâ âeventually, you may even earn your freedom.â The barbarian lifted one big fist. âAnd in case you wish to hold anything back, remember that the torturers of Scotha know their trade.â
âYou neednât make melodramatic threats,â said Flandry sullenly.
The fist shot out, and Flandry fell to the floor with darkness whirling and roaring through his head. He crawled to hands and knees, blood dripping from his face, and vaguely he heard the voice: âFrom here on, little man, you are to address me as befits a slave speaking to a crown prince of Scotha.â
The Terrestrial staggered to his feet. For a moment his fists clenched. The prince smiled grimly and knocked him down again. Looking up, Flandry saw brawny hands resting on blaster buttsâ ânot a chance, not a chance.
Besides, the prince was hardly a sadist. Such brutality was the normal order among the barbariansâ âand come to think of it, slaves within the Empire could be treated similarly.
And there was the problem of staying aliveâ â
âYes, sir,â he mumbled.
The prince turned on his heel and walked away.
They gave him back his clothes, though someone had stripped the gold braid and the medals away. Flandry looked at the soiled, ripped garments and sighed. Tailor-madeâ â!
He surveyed himself in the mirror as he washed and shaved. The face that looked back was wide across the cheekbones, straight-nosed and square-jawed, with carefully waved reddish-brown hair and a mustache trimmed with equal attention. Probably too handsome, he reflected, wiping the blood from under his nose, but heâd been young when he had the plasticosmetician work on him. Maybe when he got out of this mess he should have the face made over to a slightly more rugged pattern to fit his years. He was in his thirties now, after allâ âgetting to be a big boy, Dominic.
The fundamental bone structure of head and face was his own, however, and so were the eyesâ âlarge and bright, with a hint of obliquity, the iris of that curious gray which can seem any color, blue or green or black or gold. And the trim, medium-tall body was genuine too. He hated exercises, but went through a dutiful daily ritual since he needed sinews and coordination for his workâ âand, too, a man in condition was something to look at among the usually flabby nobles of Terra; heâd found his figure no end of help in making his home leaves pleasant.
Well, canât stand here admiring yourself all day, old fellow. He slipped blouse, pants, and jacket over his silkite undergarments, pulled on the sheening boots, tilted his officerâs cap at an angle of well-gauged rakishness, and walked out to meet his new owners.
The Scothani werenât such bad fellows, he soon learned. They were big brawling lusty barbarians, out for adventure and loot and fame as warriors; they had courage and loyalty and a wild streak of sentiment that he liked. But they could also fly into deadly rages, they were casually cruel to anyone that stood in their way, and Flandry acquired a not too high respect for their brains. It would have helped if theyâd washed oftener, too.
This warship was one of a dozen which Cerdic, the crown prince, had taken out on a plundering cruise. Theyâd sacked a good many towns, even some on nominally Imperial planets, and on the way back had sent down a man in a lifeboat to contact Cerdicâs agents on Llynathawr, which was notoriously the listening post of this sector of the Empire. In learning that there was something going on which a special agent from Terra had been investigating, Cerdic had ordered him picked up. And that was that.
Now they were homeward bound, their holds stuffed with loot and their heads stuffed with plans for further inroads. It might not have meant much, butâ âwellâ âCerdic and his father Penda didnât seem to be just ordinary barbarian chiefs, nor Scothania an ordinary barbarian nation.
Could it be that somewhere out there among the many stars someone had
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