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the fixed equipment on one of the middle floors of the east wing of the palace. There was a bucket of water, and on a rough wooden bench lay a cloth-wrapped bundle of food. A woman, haggard and disheveled, wearing a suit of greasy mechanicā€™s coveralls and nothing else, squatted beside him. The Crown Princess Melanie, whom Trask remembered as the charming and gracious hostess of Cragdale. She tried to rise, and staggered.

ā€œPrince Bentrik! And itā€™s Prince Trask of Tanith!ā€ she cried. ā€œJust hurry; get him out of here and to where he can be taken care of. Please.ā€ Then she sat down again on the floor and fell over, unconscious.

They couldnā€™t get the story. The Princess Melanie had collapsed completely. Her companion, another noblewoman of the court, could only ramble disconnectedly. And the King merely lay, bathed and fed in a clean bed, and looked up at them wonderingly, as though nothing he saw or heard conveyed any meaning to him. The doctors could do nothing.

ā€œHe has no mind, no more mind than a newborn baby. We can keep him alive, I donā€™t know how long. Thatā€™s our professional duty. But itā€™s no kindness to His Majesty.ā€

The little pockets of resistance in the Palace were wiped out, through the next morning and afternoon. All but one, far underground, below the main power plant. They tried sleep-gas; the defenders had blowers and sent it back at them. They tried blasting; there was a limit to what the fabric of the building would stand. And nobody knew how long it would take to starve them out.

On the third day, a man crawled out, pushing a white shirt tied to the barrel of a carbine ahead of him.

ā€œIs Prince Lucas Trask of Tanith here?ā€ he asked. ā€œI wonā€™t speak to anybody else.ā€

They brought Trask quickly. All that was visible of the other man was the carbine-barrel and the white shirt. When Trask called to him, he raised his head above the rubble behind which he was hiding.

ā€œPrince Trask, we have Andray Dunnan here; he was leading us, but now weā€™ve disarmed him and are holding him. If we turn him over to you, will you let us go?ā€

ā€œIf you all come out unarmed, and bring Dunnan with you, I promise you, the rest of you will be let outside this building and allowed to go away unharmed.ā€

ā€œAll right. Weā€™ll be coming out in a minute.ā€ The man raised his voice. ā€œItā€™s agreed!ā€ he called. ā€œBring him out.ā€

There were fewer than two score of them. Some wore the uniforms of high officers of the Peopleā€™s Watchmen or of Peopleā€™s Welfare Party functionaries; a few wore the heavily braided short jackets of Space Viking officers. Among them, they propelled a thin-faced man with a pointed beard, and Trask had to look twice at him before he recognized the face of Andray Dunnan. It looked more like the face of Duke Angus of Wardshaven as he last remembered it. Dunnan looked at him in incurious contempt.

ā€œYour dotard king couldnā€™t rule without Zaspar Makann, and Makann couldnā€™t rule without me, and neither can you,ā€ he said. ā€œShoot this gang of turncoats, and Iā€™ll rule Marduk for you.ā€ He looked at Trask again. ā€œWho are you?ā€ he demanded. ā€œI donā€™t know you.ā€

Trask slipped the pistol from his holster, thumbing off the safety.

ā€œI am Lucas Trask. Youā€™ve heard that name before,ā€ he said. ā€œStand away from behind him, you people.ā€

ā€œOh, yes; the poor fool who thought he was going to marry Elaine Karvall. Well, you wonā€™t, Lord Trask of Traskon. She loves me, not you. Sheā€™s waiting for me now, on Gram.ā ā€Šā ā€¦ā€

Trask shot him through the head. Dunnanā€™s eyes widened in momentary incredulity; then his knees gave way, and he fell forward on his face. Trask thumbed on the safety and holstered the pistol, and looked at the body on the concrete.

It hadnā€™t made the least difference. It had been like shooting a snake, or one of the nasty scorpion-things that infested the old buildings in Rivington. Just no more Andray Dunnan.

ā€œTake that carrion and stuff it in a mass-energy converter,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd I donā€™t want anybody to mention the name of Andray Dunnan to me again.ā€

He didnā€™t look at them haul Dunnanā€™s body away on a lifter-skid; he watched the fifty-odd leaders of the overthrown misgovernment of Marduk shamble away to freedom, guarded by Paytrik Morlandā€™s riflemen. Now there was something to reproach himself for; heā€™d committed a separate and distinct crime against Marduk by letting each one of them live. Unless recognized and killed by somebody outside, every one of them would be at some villainy before next sunrise. Well, King Simon I could cope with that.

He started when he realized how he had thought of his friend. Well, why not? Mikhylā€™s mind was dead; his body would not survive it more than a year. Then a child Queen, and a long regency, and long regencies were dangerous. Better a strong King, in name as well as power. And the succession could be safeguarded by marrying Steven and Myrna. Myrna had accepted, at eight, that she must some day marry for reasons of state; why not her playmate Steven?

And Simon Bentrik would see the necessity. He was neither a fool nor a moral coward; he only needed to take some time to adjust to ideas. The rabble who had bought their lives with their leaderā€™s had gone, now. Slowly, he followed them, thinking.

Donā€™t press the idea on Simon too hard; just expose him to it and let him adopt it. And there would be the treatyā ā€”Tanith, Marduk, Beowulf, Amaterasu; eventually, treaties with the other civilized planets. Nebulously, the idea of a League of Civilized Worlds began to take shape in his mind.

Be a good idea if he adopted the title of King of Tanith for himself. And cut loose from the Sword-Worlds; especially cut loose from Gram. Let Viktor of Xochitl have it. Or Garvan Spasso. Viktor wouldnā€™t be the last Space Viking to

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