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She tapped the navigational plot. “Alliance with the Vay’en would have cost us our humanity. Even if our bodies endured-they would have been no more than husks filled with a living flame-and every human being alive would have been their slave. Yet someone, somewhere, believes it was absolutely necessary to do so.”

“This implies the annihilation of our species at the hands of this unknown threat is the alternative.” Susan flexed her hands angrily. “One of the first lectures Chapultepec beats into the heads of the lower form is that the realm of the Mexica, for all its power, pomp, and majesty, is a tiny principality in a galaxy filled with mammoth empires. It is easy to forget that we are weak and ill-regarded.” She laughed bitterly. “They do not tell you, however, anything about these great powers… that is ring-zero information. Only the Emperors will know how low on the mountain we truly are.”

“Hummingbird implied the same to me, when first we met.” Anderssen closed her field comp. “When you work for the Honorable Company, it’s very clear your purpose is to poke and pry and dig in the dead cities and ruined worlds, not for scientific benefit, but for tools-weapons-knowledge from the ancients that will benefit the Empire. Make it stronger, make it more powerful. Climb another step on that mountain…” She sighed, shaking her head. “The Mirror was trying the same thing here. They found something and wondered if it could make them great-but they were only a cat’s paw. The Templars came prepared. Hummingbird came prepared. Even Xochitl was sent by someone who knew what was here already.”

“What about the Khaid?” Helsdon ventured. “Why bring them into the equation?”

“The Judges-or Hummingbird-must have decided that the Mirror fleet had to be destroyed. And they didn’t know the Order was also in play with a powerful fleet.” Gretchen smiled ruefully at Kosho. “He had great faith in you, Captain, expecting you and your ship to survive when everyone else was slated to die. The arrival of the Tlemitl threw all of those plans into question-he was almost frantic when the Prince arrived.”

“And the Knights of the Temple,” Susan said, her lip curling in distaste, “stood by waiting to clean up the survivors-on either side!-and take the prize.”

“And now they have it.” Helsdon’s pale face was drawn with worry. “ Chu-sa, we’re not ready to fight or even run. Perhaps-perhaps we should give her over, if that will obtain our safe passage?”

Gretchen nodded in agreement, but Kosho’s expression turned obstinate. “She’s all we have for a bargaining chip-I’m not going to offer her to anyone.” She raised a slim hand to forestall Anderssen’s rejoinder. “Consider this as well-at least three Imperial factions were involved here-the Mirror, the Judges, and presumably the Emperor himself-who else could have dispatched Sayu with a newly minted super-dreadnaught? It is very likely the Knights are also divided amongst themselves-if not, why send some of their agents in secret, and others arrive with such overwhelming force as to seize the prize openly? Also weigh that they have not attacked us, though at least a day has passed since the missing Templar from the Sunflower should have reached the Pilgrim.”

This gave Gretchen pause, and she settled back, searching her memories. “That is… possible. Hummingbird had not intended to reach this place aboard the Moulins -we were supposed to meet another ship-one carrying an ally, he said-but the Khaid had intercepted them. I think-I got the impression we were going to meet Captain Hadeishi on that other ship. And he’s here, now, right?”

“Yes.” Susan nodded, her eyes dark. “I’ve been told he is aboard the Pilgrim. They took him aboard, along with many survivors from the Imperial ships destroyed outside the Pinhole. I’ve spoken with one of his officers-a Mirror technician, actually-who was brought over from their medbay. He was on a ship called the Wilful, commanded by a woman Sencho named De Molay.”

“Really? How curious…” Anderssen opened her field comp again. “Yes-I thought that sounded familiar. A famous Templar surname, actually. So two Templar spy-ships-and a fleet to back them up-but maybe only one of the freighters was intended to be here. The other-the crewmen on the Wilful -they had an insignia, a tattoo actually, of a-ah, here it is: the Croix recroisetee au pied fiche, in crimson on a white field.”

She turned the comp so Kosho and Helsdon could see a cross composed of three smaller squared crosses-for the crossbar and crown-then the long end of the cross was more like a spike, or spear, pointing downward.

“Striking,” Susan commented, “but not the insignia of the Knights of the Order. They bear a cross with equal arms and rounded ends, fit to a circle, not a rectangle.”

“This one,” Gretchen said, tapping up a second image, which matched the Nisei officer’s description.

“So there are your two factions, Chu-sa.” Anderssen shrugged again. “Probably representing a political split within the Temple hierarchy; each espousing the same goals, I’m sure, but embracing markedly different means to reach the end.” She tapped the croix fiche . “Three crosses, each composed of three arms, surmounting a spear. I-I saw something like that when I was aboard the Moulins. The sense of it was a warrior brotherhood, standing watch on the edge of infinity, much like the Judges…”

“Three of three?” Helsdon blinked. “Like the patterns on the surface of the Chimalacatl?”

“Aping the Vay’en and their symbology.” Gretchen scowled. “The Hjogadim were the same way, thinking the oversize robes and scepter of their overlords would grant them the power of Lord Serpent! Fools. The strength of the Vay’en was-is-beyond our ability to grasp.” She laughed harshly, thinking of the hundreds of thousands of Hjo corpses desiccating in the garbage disposal chutes throughout the massive artifact. “The same fate awaits us-our puny little principality-if the great houses, the Emperor and the Order all fall out amongst one another over the prize. It is better the Sunflower is gone-safer by far for everyone. Much better.”

Hearing a change in the Swedish woman’s voice, Kosho’s jaw tightened and she glanced sideways at Helsdon. The engineer was watching Gretchen as well, and the same dawning suspicion was showing in his face. “You destroyed the artifact, Doctor? You-what did you do?”

“And why? Just to protect humanity from some hypothetical civil war?” Susan seemed genuinely curious. “Are you certain such a fate would befall us?”

“Look around you, Captain!” Gretchen rang her knuckles on the damaged wall beside her. “An Imperial Judge betrayed the Prince’s expedition to the barbarians! Just to keep the Emperor’s hand from the hilt of this infernal blade! The unity of the Temple is already divided, one faction intriguing against the other-and it will not end here, no-it will not end until Anahuac is a burning ruin and all our colonies and settlements are laid waste.” Her voice had gained a harsh, hectoring edge. “Because even should we seize this power for ourselves and learn its use- others will come which we cannot withstand, even with this weapon! Remember the lesson from the Hill of Grasshoppers!”

The Swedish woman winced, feeling her bruised torso twinge. Angrily, she stabbed at the field comp with her stylus, invoking a projected image of the rosette-the three brown dwarves, the distant demarcation of the Barrier, the singularity-then she cupped the holo in her hands. “The Vay’en assembled this. They dragged these suns into position, spun up a black hole of their own, wrapped in the wall of knives-everything within ten light-years is here by the will of Lord Serpent, who perished nearly a million years ago!” She caught Kosho’s eye with a piercing, exasperated glare-then jabbed a finger at Helsdon. “We can barely perceive their works with our instrumentality-and you expect the Mirror, or the Fleet, to grasp their technology?”