Space Viking H. Beam Piper (life books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: H. Beam Piper
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A ship came in from Bigglersport, a heavily armed chartered freighter. There was sporadic fighting in a dozen places on Gram, nowâ âresistance to efforts on the part of King Angus to collect taxes, and raids by unidentified persons on estates confiscated from alleged traitors and given to Garvan Spasso, who had now been promoted from Baron to Count. And Rovard Grauffis was dead; poisoned, everybody said, either by Spasso or Queen Evita or both. Even with the threat from Xochitl, some of the former Wardshaven nobles began talking about sending ships to Gram.
Less than a thousand hours after he had left, Ravallo was back in the Black Star.
âI went to Gimli, and I wasnât there fifty hours before a Mardukan Navy ship came in. They were glad to see me; it saved them sending off a pinnace for Tanith. They had news for you, and a couple of passengers.â
âPassengers?â
âYes. Youâll see who they are when they come down. And donât let anybody with side-whiskers and buttoned-up coats see them,â Ravallo said. âWhat those people know gets all over the place before long.â
The visitors were Lucile, Princess Bentrik, and her son, the young Count of Ravary. They dined with Trask; only Captain Ravallo was also present.
âI didnât want to leave my husband, and I didnât want to come here and impose myself and Steven on you, Prince Trask,â she began, âbut he insisted. We spent the whole voyage to Gimli concealed in the captainâs quarters; only a few of the officers knew we were aboard.â
âMakann won the election. Is that it?â he asked. âAnd Prince Bentrik doesnât want to risk you and Steven being used as hostages?â
âThatâs it,â she said. âHe didnât really win the election, but he might as well have. Nobody has a majority of seats in the Chamber of Representatives but heâs formed a coalition with several of the splinter parties, and Iâm ashamed to say that a number of Crown Loyalist membersâ âCrowd of Disloyalists, I call themâ âare voting with him, now. Theyâve coined some ridiculous phrase about the âwave of the future,â whatever that means.â
âIf you canât lick them, join them,â Trask said.
âIf you canât lick them, lick their boots,â the Count of Ravary put in.
âMy son is a trifle bitter,â Princess Bentrik said. âI must confess to a trace of bitterness, too.â
âWell, thatâs the Representatives,â Trask said. âWhat about the rest of the government?â
âWith the splinter-party and Disloyalist support, they got a majority of seats in the Delegates. Most of them would have indignantly denied, a month before, having any connection with Makann, but a hundred out of a hundred and twenty are his supporters. Makann, of course, is Chancellor.â
âAnd who is Prime Minister?â he asked. âAndray Dunnan?â
She looked slightly baffled for an instant then said, âOh. No. The Prime Minister is Crown Prince Edvard. No; Baron Cragdale. That isnât a royal title, so by some kind of a fiction I canât pretend to understand he is not Prime Minister as a member of the Royal Family.â
âIf you canâtâ ââ âŠâ the boy started.
âSteven! I forbid you to say that aboutâ ââ ⊠Baron Cragdale. He believes, very sincerely, that the election was an expression of the will of the people, and that it is his duty to bow to it.â
He wished Otto Harkaman were there. He could probably name, without stopping for breath, a hundred great nations that went down into rubble because their rulers believed that they should bow instead of rule, and couldnât bring themselves to shed the blood of their people. Edvard would have been a fine and admirable man, as a little country baron. Where he was, he was a disaster.
He asked if the Peopleâs Watchman had dragged their guns out from under the bed and started carrying them in public yet.
âOh, yes. You were quite right; they were armed, all the time. Not just small arms; combat vehicles and heavy weapons. As soon as the new government was formed, they were given status as a part of the Planetary Armed Forces. They have taken over every police station on the planet.â
âAnd the King?â
âOh, he carries on, and shrugs and says, âI just reign here.â What else can he do? Weâve been whittling down and filching away the powers of the Throne for the last three centuries.â
âWhat is Prince Bentrik doing, and why did he think there was danger that you two would be used as hostages?â
âHeâs going to fight,â she said. âDonât ask me how, or what with. Maybe as a guerrilla in the mountains, I donât know. But if he canât lick them, he wonât join them. I wanted to stay with him and help him; he told me I could help him best by placing myself and Steven where he wouldnât worry about us.â
âI wanted to stay,â the boy said. âI could have fought with him. But he said that I must take care of Mother. And if he were killed, I must be able to avenge him.â
âYou talk like a Sword-Worlder; I told you that once before.â He hesitated, then turned again to Princess Bentrik. âHow is little Princess Myrna?â he asked, and then, trying to be casual, added, âand Lady Valerie?â
She seemed so clearly real and present to him, blue eyes and space-black hair, more real than Elaine had been to him for years.
âTheyâre at Cragdale; theyâll be safe there. I hope.â
XXIVAttempting to conceal the presence on Tanith of Prince Bentrikâs wife and son was pushing caution beyond necessity. Admitted that the news would leak back to Marduk via Gilgamesh, it was over seven hundred light-years to the latter and almost a thousand from there to the former. Better that Princess Lucile should enjoy Rivington society, such as it was, and escape, for a moment now and then, from anxiety about her husband. At tenâ âno, almost twelve; it had been a year and a half since Trask had left Mardukâ âthe boy Count of Ravary was
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