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“Oh, my God!” exclaimed the woman. “There’s Breemeg, come for you!”

Gosseyn was recovering. “Don’t worry,” he said, “let it happen. I promise to be back in a few minutes; but first I should know—we should find out—what’s been going on in the rest of the ship.”

Yet, actually, even to him it seemed like the final confusion when, a few minutes later, he walked away quietly with the courtier.

Before, then, he actually got lost in the tangle of garden, he looked back once. The emperor’s mother was standing at the door, staring after him with haunted eyes.

Considering what a capable, direct person she normally was, Gosseyn didn’t think of what she was feeling as a thalamic reaction. There was such a thing as true emotion.

He was feeling a little himself. Because—could he be responsible for the young emperor’s disappearance?

CHAPTER 11

Beside him, Breemeg broke his initial silence. “I’m deducing,” he said, “that you did not mention our private conversation to the emperor or his mother.”

They were out of the royal garden, and had come to a long corridor, in the desertedness of which the leanbodied, middle-aged courtier apparently felt free to speak.

“True,” said Gosseyn.

It seemed, under the circumstances, a subject of minor importance; and so he had the private thought that two or three minutes had gone by since Leej’s prediction. So that in about nine minutes the whatever would happen that would cause him to use his extra-brain.

In its way nine minutes was a long time. No point, therefore, in dwelling on that… for a while.

“I’m deducing it,” continued Breemeg, “because I would surely not have been called by Queen Mother Strala to come and get you if you had made even the slightest reference to my words.”

This time there were two private thoughts. The first, a simple, personal reaction:… Imagine, she invited me “into her bedroom without telling me her first name—And now, in this casual mention there was the name.

“Strala!” He spoke the name aloud, adding: “I like the sound of it.”

Breemeg seemed not to have heard the comment. They walked on, Gosseyn thinking that her name had a feminine beauty to it.

The second thought consisted of a series of fleeting memories that triggered a sudden hardness. The memories were of Gosseyn Two in action, on the planet of the Predictors, on the planet Gorgzid, the capitol of Enro’s the Greatest Empire. The awareness brought the beginning of determination that was new to this body. There were things to do. Where was that boy? He should be rescued, and quickly.

Breemeg’s next words actually interrupted that train of thought-feeling. “Obviously,” the man said, “our most important task is, still, to find out where we are in space, and to discover what happened to bring us here.” Listening to those words, for the first time Gosseyn had a feeling of relief in relation to this man. Somebody with good sense must have talked to Breemeg in the past forty-five minutes.

The deserted corridor continued to stretch into the distances ahead, as Breemeg enlarged upon his argument: “Naturally, if there’s any chance of our returning to join the fleet, then my statements about a rebellion would have no meaning. That, of course, would be the best solution, since it would ultimately bring us all back to our families.”

It was—Gosseyn conceded silently to himself—not a great moment for General Semantics, as it related to himself. The problem of such a return, according to the data he had, was complicated beyond anything that had ever happened. So it was another lie that the real life situation he was in made it necessary for him to go along with.

But since the truth would probably evoke swift, strong actions from these people, once more optimum survival for everybody—including the villains—seemed to depend on his not revealing what he knew.

The alternative was to tell the facts, and, if there were repercussions, fight it out. Obviously, that had to be for later, if possible.

“On the other hand,” Breemeg said, as Gosseyn came to that decision, “if we are going to be in this area of space from now on, then the sooner we find a habitable planet that we can go to, the better. At which time—” grimly—“our little imperial family will be subject to severe action. The boy—” he shrugged his gaunt shoulders as he walked—“maybe we can leave him in your care.” He smiled, showing his teeth. “Eight hundred games of scroob a day, perhaps.”

He shrugged again. The smile faded. “Whatever—so long as he’s out of the way. As for the mother—”

He paused. And there was a sudden stiffening of his body that brought an abrupt return of Gosseyn’s feeling of purposefulness.

Breemeg said earnestly, “Do you realize that this is the only woman on a ship with one hundred and seventy-eight thousand men. So—” a twisted smile, suddenly—“there’ll be several dozen top echelon leaders who may decide among themselves to share her womanly charms.” The man concluded, “You can see that these are all after-thoughts, and are somewhat more realistic than what I said earlier.”

So it was going to be a fight, after all. Gosseyn was curious. “Are any military officers involved in the plan to share the woman?”

There was a long pause. Breemeg slowed in his rapid walk, and simultaneously turned his head and was staring at Gosseyn. Abruptly, he came to a full stop. And Gosseyn, after walking several steps farther, did the same, turning as he did so.

The courtier of His Imperial Majesty, Enin, said, “That is the damnedest question I’ve heard recently. It implies some thought of your own, a scheme perhaps to enlist those—”

He stopped. Seemed to brace his body. And said grimly, “No, the subject has not been brought up to members of the military. Why do you ask?”

It seemed, to Gosseyn, to be the information he needed. So he said, “It seems to me that you and your associates are all making your plans too quickly. I would guess—” he picked a figure at random—“that you and your friends should hold back from any private plans for a couple of weeks. Meaning, don’t do an irrevocable act that someone else, who is not ready for such a step, might react to.”

Breemeg’s expression changed as the meaning of Gosseyn’s words evidently ended his anxiety. He was suddenly tolerant. “The fact is,” he said, “we have to consider the alien prisoners we have aboard. As a result, the political situation aboard this ship does not permit too much leeway. We have to act, or someone else will act.”

He seemed to have recovered from his momentary shock; for he started walking again. Almost automatically, Gosseyn did the same. But he was thinking: “Alien!” After a long moment, he said, “Just a minute!”

He stopped that reaction with an effort of will, and spoke mentally to his Alter Ego:

“I suddenly feel as if the moment has come for a General Semantics recapitulation. I seem to have been at the receiving end of too many generalizations. And I’m beginning to think I’m assuming a lot that isn’t so—”

The answer from the faraway Gosseyn Two was favorable: “It does appear as if we’re taking a lot for granted. The mention of alien prisoners seems to indicate that the Dzan enemy in Galaxy Two is vulnerable like anyone else, and that individuals among them will surrender, and place themselves at the mercy of their opponents, as soldiers have been doing from time immemorial.”

While his mental exchange took place with the duplicate Gosseyn, he had continued walking along beside the gaunt man. Now, Gosseyn glanced at the courtier, and wondered if he had noticed the silence. There was no indication on the long face that Breemeg was concerned.