Part 16 (1/2)

Quietly Tarrington said, ”And in that, you have my deepest grat.i.tude.”

Qox watched the mist. ”We have a saying among my people: 'Mutual appreciation paves the road of knowledge.'”

”As well it should,” the senator said.

So. Tarrington was willing to trade. Although the Allied intelligence agencies were less efficient than their ESComm counterparts, the Allieds had a different relations.h.i.+p with Skolia and so acquired different data on the Skolians. Valuable data. As Tarrington well knew.

”It is unfortunate the negotiations stalled on the question of Allied trade autonomy,” Tarrington said.

”Indeed,” Qox said. An interesting change of subject. The terms the Allieds wanted on trade autonomy were absurd. Freedom to export to Eube, with no taxes? It brought to mind the maxim that wars were fought more by banks than by armies. If this was the price for whatever intelligence Tarrington offered, the senator wanted a treaty concession far greater than any the Allieds had so far extracted from Eube.

”The worth of paving a road depends on where the road leads,” Qox said. He had no intention of making concessions until he knew what Tarrington offered, just as he knew Tarrington had no intention of giving him data without a guarantee that any bargain they made would be upheld. So they had a dilemma.

The senator considered him. ”I've been encouraged by the progress the teams have made in the mediation of property rights in Onyx Sector.”

Another interesting change of subject. The question of what belonged to who in Onyx Sector was one Eube wanted settled more than the Allieds, who had few holdings there. The negotiators were close to an agreement, but a well-placed word from Tarrington could destroy the accord. So he offered a solution to their dilemma: Qox agreed to the export concession, Tarrington gave him the information, Qox honored their agreement, Tarrington stayed out of the Onyx Accord. If Qox reneged, Tarrington destroyed the Accord.

”Perhaps my people have been too stubborn on this matter of export,” Qox said. ”Together with the Onyx Accord, a new export treaty will benefit both our governments.”

”Indeed it would.” Although Tarrington hid his triumph, Qox detected it. The senator had driven a hard bargain and won.

They were both silent for a while. Then Tarrington said, ”My son requested I bring you a letter.”

”It is charming of him to write,” Qox said. When Tarrington pulled a computer ring out of his coat and gave it to him, Qox added, ”I am glad we were able to meet, Senator.”

Tarrington bowed, recognizing the dismissal. ”I am honored by this audience, Your Highness.”

So you should be, Qox thought. Still, the man had handled himself better than Qox expected.

After the guards escorted Tarrington from the tower, Qox sent for his Trade Minister, Kryx Quaelen. Then the emperor took out his palmtop. Tarrington had taken into consideration the difference in Eubian and Skolian standardization, providing a ring that fit a Eubian palmtop.

The letter from Jessie came up on the screen. It was short, a well-phrased greeting to the emperor and empress. Qox easily ferreted out the hidden files and read them with far more interest than he had read Jessie's letter.

A rustle came from the entrance. As Qox looked up, a tall man entered, a Highton with broad shoulders and eyes as cold as red ice. He bowed, fist at waist, thumb extended.

”My greeting, Kryx,” Qox said.

”My honor at your presence, Your Highness,” Kryx Quaelen said.

The emperor considered him. Quaelen was the one who would actually sign the export agreement with the Allieds. As Trade Minister, he oversaw the merchant guilds run by the Diamond Aristo castes. Qox knew many Hightons questioned his appointing Quaelen to a position of such power. Quaelen's great-grandfather had married a Silicate Aristo instead of a Highton, a scandal that reverberated for decades. Although the Quaelen family had since maintained an impeccable bloodline, the stain remained. Privately, Qox suspected it was why Quaelen did his job well. Just as forbidden Rhon genes enhanced Qox's abilities, so forbidden Silicate genes enhanced Quaelen.

Qox motioned the minister forward. ”I had an interesting meeting with Senator Tarrington.”

Quaelen joined him. ”A taciturn man.”

”His son sent me a letter.”

Dryly Quaelen said, ”How charming.”

Qox gave a slight smile. ”It seems Skolians like Mozart.”

”Who is Mozart?”

”An ancient Earth composer.” Qox paused. ”I learned a most interesting fact, just before you came in. You can use the works of Mozart to define transformation maps for sequences of time-varying complex variable functions.”

Quaelen snorted. ”A game for mathematicians.”

”Indeed.” Qox lifted the palmtop, as if testing its weight. ”Think of the possibilities it offers for encryption.”

”An encryption scheme without encrypted messages to translate has little use.”

”True,” Qox said. ”Just as intercepting encrypted messages without a key to unlock them has little use.” ISC changed their codes often, almost always before ESComm broke the code. Whether or not ISC would ever use the Mozart Code remained to be seen. For that matter, it may have already been retired. But if they did use it, and ESComm picked it up, the pirated data would be available in a timely manner.

Only the future would tell them if the sweet strains of Mozart were worth their price.

The halls beneath the Wilderness Palace were smooth black gla.s.s, tunnels far underground in the Jaizire Mountains. Antique lamps shed dim light on the severe Razers who walked with Qox. In his black uniform and military boots, the emperor became an austere shadow in the dark hours of the night.

Qox knew he had earned the reward he allowed himself now. His work with Tarrington had ramifications beyond their bargain; it helped counter ISC propaganda. Each such success further, established the truth for the Allieds, that Aristos were nothing like the monstrous caricatures imagined by Skolia. Each success further revealed the hysteria behind the Ruby Dynasty's fevered crusade to destroy Eube.

Qox stopped before an obsidian door. It opened into darkness. When he touched the gauntlet around his wrist, a signal went to sensors within the room. In one corner, a dim light appeared, making a glint on the floor. As the light spread, the glint resolved into a metal chain stretched across the stone. A rodent ran across the links and disappeared into the gloom.

Dampness saturated the air. Moisture collected on the walls and formed drops that ran down the stone. The expanding sphere of light reached a rectangular steel frame, half a meter high. The chain ran over the frame to a steel ring embedded in it.

Two hands took form out of the shadows.

The wrists were chained to the ring, palms facing outward. The expanding light revealed slender arms and a length of yellow hair looped over one elbow. Then the head came into view. The girl was lying on her back, unclothed, her arms pulled over her head. Yellow curls surrounded her face, a beautiful face, delicate and sweet, with gigantic eyes. A gag covered her mouth.

The frame pushed her upper back into an arch, then angled down to put her hips level with his. Chains secured her neck and long legs to the steel struts. His bodysculptors had further refined her exquisite shape, augmenting here, cinching there, rounding as needed.

The emperor closed the door of the dungeon and motioned his guards to posts around the walls. He walked to the frame, the martial clip of his boots echoing in the cell. When he stopped by the girl's shoulder, she stared up at him with sapphire eyes. He had selected the unusually intense color himself, from the palette offered by the Silicate pavilion where he bought her.

”Don't be afraid, Cirrus.” He had named her after the wispy clouds. ”Rea.s.sure yourself with the knowledge that by raising me to a higher state of existence, so you elevate yourself.”

A tear leaked out of her eye and ran down her temple, where it soaked into her hair. Qox touched the dampness, then raised his finger to his lips and tasted it. ”To reach elevation is never easy, love. That is what makes it worth attaining.”

A table stood next to the framework, with tools laid out for him. He chose a leather-handled quirt. When he snapped the whip across Cirrus's torso, she gave a m.u.f.fled cry and her pain surged out from her mind, magnified by her empathic strength. His Aris...o...b..ain picked it up and sought to increase his pain tolerance by directing the neural impulses to his pleasure centers. Transcendence swept over him. Ah yes, his choice of Cirrus had been inspired tonight. He had barely begun on her and already she was providing for his needs.

The emperor felt at peace, knowing that today he had taken another step in establis.h.i.+ng the truth for the Allieds, that the Hightons of Eube formed an honorable people of good character, rather than the monsters hallucinated by the Ruby Dynasty.

IV.

Year Fifteen.