The Return of the Emperor (Sten #6). Allan Cole
to the High Street. Now all he had to do was get out of the city, offworld, and make his way to a very private rendezvous point, one known but to one other being in the universe.
Wi’ m’ left hand. Wi’ m’ left hand in m’ sleep. Wi’ m’ left hand in m’ sleep croonin’t ae lullaby to a bairn.
And Alex Kilgour vanished from the planet of Edinburgh.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE GETTING OF power had always been a complex thing with complex motives. Socio-historians had written whole libraries on it, analyzing and reanalyzing the past, seeking the perfect formula, saying so and so was the right course to follow, and such and such was obvious folly.
Kin mated with kin to achieve power, producing gibbering heirs to their throne. The threat of such a succession sometimes assured the parents of very long and royal reigns.
Kin also murdered kin, or kept them in chains for decades.
Genocide was another favorite trick, one of the few foolproof methods of achieving majority. The difficulty with genocide, the socio-historians said, was that it needed to be constantly applied to keep the edge.
Politics without murder was also favored—under special circumstances. Power was won in such a case by constant and unceasing compromise. Many voices were heard and views taken into account. Only then would a decision be reached. A little artful lying, and everyone believed they had been satisfied. Everyone, in that case, was defined as those favored beings of material importance. A leader only had to make sure those same beings had sufficient bones of imagined progress to toss to their mobs. The rule, there, was that if one had too little, the prospect of more was usually enough to satisfy.
There were other methods, but they tended to follow the same paths.
The most certain way, those historians agreed, was to possess a commodity that beings desired above all else. In ancient times it had been food or water. A well-placed road might accomplish the same end. Sex worked in any era, given the proper circumstances. Whatever the commodity, however, it had to be kept in a safe place and guarded against all possible comers.
The Eternal Emperor had had AM2. It was the ultimate fuel and the cornerstone of his vast Empire. In the past, he had merely to turn the tap one way or the other to maintain complete control. His policies had been supported by the largest military force of any known age. The Emperor had also kept the AM2 in a safe place.
More than six years after his assassination, his killers were unable to find it—and they were about to lose the power they had committed regicide to claim.
Even if they had possessed the key to the Emperor’s AM2 treasure chest, it was likely the privy council was headed for disaster.
Times had not been kind.
In the aftermath of the Tahn wars—the largest and most costly conflict in history—the Empire was teetering on the edge of economic chaos. The Eternal Emperor’s coffers were nearly bare. The deficit from the tremendous military spending was so enormous that even with the highly favorable interest rates the Emperor had bargained hard for, it would take a century to significantly reduce said deficit, much less pay it off.
When the Emperor was still alive, Tanz Sullamora and the other members of the council had strongly proposed their own solution. It involved freezing wages below the pre-Tahn rate and creating deliberate scarcity of product, forcing sharp increases in the price of goods.
And a hefty surtax on AM2.
Through those means and others, the debt would be quickly paid, and corporate health assured for the ages.
The Emperor had rejected those proposals out of hand.
When the Emperor rejected a thing, it was law. With no appeal.
His Majesty’s postwar plans called for a directly opposite approach.
The late, never lamented Sr. Sullamora had detailed the Emperor’s views to his fellow conspirators without editorializing:
Wages would be allowed to rise to their natural levels. The war had been costly in beingpower—especially, skilled beingpower. This would result in immediate higher costs to business.
Prices, on the other hand, would be frozen, putting goods within easy reach of the newly prosperous populations.
Of course, the war had been a tremendous drain on supplies. To alleviate that, the Emperor fully intended to temporarily reduce taxes on AM2—immediately—making goods and transportation cheaper.
In time, he believed, a balance would be achieved.
Where the lords of industry had once seen a future of sudden and continuous windfalls, they now faced a long period of belt-tightening and careful management of their resources. Unearned perks and hefty bonuses would be a thing of the past. Business would be forced to compete equally and take a long-range view of profitability.
That was unacceptable to the privy council. They voted no—with a gun.
The vote had not been unanimous. Volmer, the young media baron, had been horrified by their plan. He wanted no part of it, despite the fact that he disagreed with the Emperor as much as anyone on the council. Although he had no talent for it, Volmer was a fervent believer in the art of persuasion. But he had always had whole battalions of reporters, political experts, and public relations scientists at his command, constantly feeding his enormous media empire. All that was inherited, so talent wasn’t necessary.
Like most heirs, Volmer believed himself a genius. It was his fatal flaw. Even such a dimwit as Volmer should have been able to cipher the precariousness of his situation when he broke with his peers. But the bright light of his own imagined intellect had kept that fact hidden.
The elaborate plot that ensued claimed Volmer as its first victim. The architect of the plot was the Emperor’s favorite toady, Tanz Sullamora.
For most of his professional life, Sullamora had licked the Eternal Emperor’s boots. For decades, he saw his ruler as a being without visible fault. Certainly, he didn’t believe him to be a saint, with gooey feelings for his subjects. He viewed the Emperor as a cold and calculating giant of a CEO, who would use any means to achieve his ends.
In that, Sr. Sullamora was absolutely correct.
He erred only by taking it to the extreme. Business was Sullamora’s faith, with the Emperor as the high priest. He believed the Emperor infallible, a being who quickly calculated the odds and acted without hesitation. And the result was always the correct one. He also assumed that the Emperor’s goals were the same as his own, and those of every other capitalist in the Empire.
To their complete dismay, many others had made the same assumption. But the Eternal Emperor’s game was his own. It was his board. His rules. His victory. Alone.
As for infallibility, even the Emperor didn’t think that. In fact, when he planned, he assumed error—his own, as well as others. That’s why things mostly worked out in his favor. The Eternal Emperor was the master of the long view.
“You tend to get that way,” he used to joke to Mahoney, “after the first thousand years.”
The Tahn war was the result of one of the Emperor’s greatest errors. He knew that more than anyone. But the conflict had been so fierce that he had been forced to be candid—to Sullamora, as well as to others. He started thinking aloud, running the logic down to his trusted advisors. How else could he seek their opinions? He had also revealed self-doubt and admitted his many mistakes.
That was a terrible blow to Tanz Sullamora. His hero was revealed to have feet of definite clay. The corporate halo was tarnished. Sullamora lost his faith.
Murder was his revenge.
To protect himself, he kept the actual details of the plot secret. He guarded his flanks by demanding that his fellow conspirators equally implicate themselves.
They had all fixed their prints to documents admitting guilt. Each held a copy of the document, so that betrayal was unthinkable.