art in this abomination." And he left. The sunrise was starting somewhere far away. The fragrance of the jasmine bushes was sharp and sleepy bulls mooed in the village having returned from the late plowing. Wrapping himself in an overcoat and shuddering from cold, Bemish walked to an old gazebo. A servant, stepping softly, brought a basket with liquors to the gazebo and asked what they should serve the guests for the dinner and what they should do to the policemen. The latter started screaming already and the servants had to give them twenty sacks from storage... Bemish barked at him such that the slave ran away in fear. The basket, however, came to be quite useful. Bemish grabbed a wooden bottle plaited with bark, tore the plug out, threw his head back and started gulping palm vodka. He stopped only after having drunk half of it. Far away, through a woven gazebo wall he could see the spaceport. Unlike usual, t didn't gleam at night. The main buildings shined with a dull light and where only yesterday the landing lights used to sparkle, darkness and fog sprawled above the chutes. The monorail gleamed as a lonely horn sticking out of the dark and posts of armed people swarmed every hundred meters on the highway. Somewhere far away, at the first gates blocking the access to the villa, the whole crowd of journalists was throwing a fit. These idiots, Weian officials, insisted on not letting them in... Bemish, however, didn't want to see the journalists. He could imagine what questions they would ask him. And he couldn't even tell them one tenth of what he had said at the emergency committee meeting. The gazebo door squeaked. Bemish turned his head and saw the envoy. The latter's crazy eyes wandered around for a while and then he grabbed the vodka bottle. "I've drunk out of it already," Bemish warned him. The envoy just waved his hand. "You were correct when you left," Severin said. He finished the vodka off and dropped heavily on a bench. "Everybody taking part in this accident will be in shit up to their ears." "Have they decided to call the troops in?" "The commandoes will be here in two hours. It's the Eleventh Federal Paratrooper Division. They are damned good. At the moment Kissur lets the hostages go, they'll roll over him." "In two hours?! How did they get here so fast?" "They were being moved to their new positions." "So, that they could be closer to Gera, right?" The envoy smirked and nodded. "Do you understand that this is Shavash's decision? The only thing that he is afraid of is that Kissur will hang him on the tallest catalpa? He went nuts from fear." "That's right," the envoy said. "I have never seen it before in my life - Mr. Shavash made a public statement supporting a certain decision and he took all the responsibility. Can you imagine that - he signed the request for the Federal troops himself! All the ministers there kindly passed this honor to him..." Bemish muttered something. "Do you know why the officials agreed to invite the troops? They understand that this will make Shavash a political nonentity... You, however, were very brave. Don't you regret losing your company?" Bemish paused. Then he added, smiling. "My company is bankrupt. My stocks are worth less than rutabaga in a farmer's market. I don't care whether my creditors get one cent or ten cents for a dinar." X X X By the time sunrise came to Assalah spaceport and another working day ended in Melbourne, the Federation capital, the news of the Assalah accident had spread across the whole Galaxy. Assalah was photographed from above, from below and from the side. This place used to be known only to a small group of financiers as a great example of investment into a development market. Now it occupied the front pages of newspapers. A number of channels started delivering hourly news from Assalah. Everybody was waiting for the broadcast that was assigned to start (after minor technical arguments with Kissur) at fifteen thirty. Even if Kissur hadn't given his horrible ultimatum - five shot hostages for every minute of delay - few people would've missed such a possibility to peep at history. X X X The division arrived in Weian orbit by seven. They landed in Salgar spaceport by eight and, in four hours, military helicopters unloaded most of the commandoes next to Bemish's villa. Tanks, gleaming dully and looking like huge beetles, spread in a large semicircle; indecipherable peeps of coded signals filled ether; soldiers had already started setting hardy camouflaged tents; bread and canned meat were being passed to the companies off the helicopters. At the same time, the first media conference finally took place. Weian "yellow jackets" ran a body search on a dozen of journalists, crammed them in a bus and drove them to the villa. There, Shavash, Bemish and Envoy Severin sat decorously in a row, expecting them. Shavash familiarized the media with Kissur's ultimatum and he kept talking for a while. Accordingly to his words, the Weian government would not allow any nationalization of private industry to take place. He also said that as the Assalah emergency committee head, he had requested the Federation's military assistance and that 11th space commando division was currently disembarking next to Assalah. "Are they going to attack the spaceport?" a journalist asked. "Absolutely not," Shavash lied unabashedly. "We can't endanger the hostages. We are going to blockade the spaceport so that we can negotiate from a better position." At fifteen thirty, Bemish and the other members of the emergency committee gathered to watch the broadcast made by the hostage journalists. One had to admit that the journalists did their best. They made it clear that they were reporting at gun point. They made it clear that the men who had them at gun point would sacrifice the other people's lives unhesitatingly. They also made it clear that the terrorists would also sacrifice their own lives unhesitatingly. Their denunciations were horrifying. The cameras coldly stared inside the reinforced chutes while, behind the screen, Kissur monotonously commented that these particular types of boarding joints were built only for military rockets. The dull sides of Cassiopeia missiles gleamed slightly. The old accusations spread by zealots about the spaceport's dual purpose were confirmed. The most fantastic rumors spread by Gera about the Federation clandestinely breaking the non-proliferation treaties pompously signed in the past were also confirmed. Luxury cars had been imported labeled as assistance to the victims of natural disasters and ancient Lamass vases had been exported as scrap brass. Laws and regulations had been flouted at an incredible scale. The takeover of the spaceport looked like a desperate attempt - however cruel and despicable it was - to demonstrate the scale of current administration's thievery, corruption and treachery. Several Earth auditors and financiers unwillingly confirmed Ashinik's calculations of the chicanery that had taken place at the spaceport. Once the broadcast had come to an end, the party of people's freedom started a media conference. It was relayed to Weia in real time and to the Galaxy with a five minute delay. Kissur and his cronies sat in the company's director office. Kissur said that right after the conference, they would start releasing the hostages. "Aren't you afraid," a journalist asked, "that they will obliterate you immediately after the hostages are released?" Here Kissur answered that the party of people's freedom had acted out of despair and had tried to reveal the ultimate corruption of the current government. They also wanted to demonstrate that the military treaties, catastrophic for Weia, did in fact exist in spite of blatant denials coming from the government. Killing several thousand unarmed peasants would only confirm the treaty's presence and it would be difficult to imagine the government ready to compromise itself so much. Ashinik spoke afterwards. He said that certain corrupted Weian officials attempted to force the Emperor to follow their policies. When the Emperor had refused to oblige them, they forced him to declare the elections. They hoped to gain the power that the Emperor refused them by lying to the people. When the bureaucrats' party lost the elections, they refused to acknowledge their results. Ashinik stressed that he was one of leaders of the party that had won the elections and his demands were the demands of the people. He declared that his party demanded the complete changeover of the government and that the most corrupted officials should be taken to trial. He declared that people wanted to see Kissur as the first minister and he listed the remaining future cabinet. (Ashinik would become the finance minister.) Ashinik said that the Weian government would have to stop payments on its loans. "The largest part of the country's debt consists of private bank loans that the finance ministry had been bribed to take at a very high interest," Ashinik declared. "It's very difficult for me to say this but it's the only way out for a country where the total taxation amount is smaller that the debt payments. In any case, it's absolutely impossible that the most profitable companies would use paying this debt off as an excuse to avoid paying taxes and would turn into practically independent states inside our country. At first Shavash received millions leading the country into a debt trap and now he wants to receive billions getting the country out of this trap." Ashinik also claimed that in exceptional cases, related to the state security or following ultimate abuses of the state's interests, foreign companies should be nationalized. Assalah spaceport was such a case. "The Assalah spaceport's director claims," a journalist said, "that you would like to nationalize all Weian industry, throw the foreigners out and ban private property. Is it true?" "That's a monstrous lie," Ashinik stated. "I don't know where Bemish got this idea." X X X The press conference with Kissur in Assalah spaceport and the press conference with emergency committee at Bemish's villa, ten kilometers away, took place practically simultaneously. Shavash, Bemish and Earth envoy answered the journalists' questions. They asked Bemish what he could say about the new government's demands and Bemish stated, "The banishment of foreign businessmen would only be the first step. Having obtained power, these people will start nationalizing industry." "How do you know this?" a journalist asked. "Their leader, Ashinik, officially stated that at our last meeting." "We have also received this information," the journalist said. "Ten minutes ago, Ashinik, Yadan and Kissur claimed that they had never said such a stupid thing. How would you explain, Mr. Bemish, the fact that during the election campaign the party of people's freedom had been repeatedly and falsely claimed to hold monstrous views and programs?" Bemish gaped at such affront of the terrorists. "Oh-oh, I got it," a thought glanced in his head. "This party has never taken hostages either!" Severin exploded, "hasn't it? They are practically saints!" "Is it true that a secret military agreement signed during Assalah construction included building a military base at the spaceport and delivery and storage of Cassiopeia missiles?" "That's a monstrous lie," the envoy said. "How will you then explain the presence of the missiles at the spaceport?" "We are currently investigating how terrorists were able to steal these missiles from one of our space military bases and transport them to Assalah." "Are you trying to say that they stole twelve missiles from our bases in such a way that nobody noticed anything and that the best use of them the thief was able to figure out was to hide them at a storage area that could be unlocked only by two people in the Galaxy?" "We are investigating it." "Could you, please, tell us, if the fact that Earth troops have been summoned here confirms that there was a secret military agreement? Does it also confirm, indirectly, that the presence of missiles was a part of the agreement?" "No." X X X Kissur held his word. Immediately after the end of the press conference, the journalists started taping buses and monorail trains leaving the spaceport. The hostages cried, but were incredibly obedient. The fighters screamed that they would shoot anybody who would cut the line trying to get into a bus and nobody tried cutting the line. Five LSV bank employees and Ronald Trevis - bearing some cuts and biting his lips - left with one of the buses. Journalists ambushed him leaving the bus but he blocked his face with his hands, bolted to a helicopter and flew to Arvadan. Two hours later he left Arvadan for Earth and became completely inaccessible. Journalists yearned to question the king of the hidden market about his company's part in financing the most scandalous construction of the century. The journalists didn't have their yearning satisfied and they had to limit themselves with their own commentaries. These commentaries were not particularly benevolent. By 18:00 the last train with passenger hostages left the platform. About eighty employees stayed in the spaceport - they were necessary for the crucial spaceport's systems to function. Five hundred armed fighters and several thousand Weian zealot peasants also stayed. X X X Also by 18:00, next to the spaceport the 11th division had almost finished d disembarking. Heavy helicopters were landing right on the fields behind the company director's villa, amphibian tanks were crawling out of their bellies and sturdy guys in bulletproof uniforms were jumping out. Bemish walked down where the same two counter-intelligence guys were meeting the division commander - colonel Rogov, short and sturdy like a ball bearing. "I think," The colonel said, "that Mr. Bemish should also take part in the planning of the operation. As I understand, you have constructed this spaceport and you should know how to infiltrate the buildings with minimal losses." "Yes," Bemish nodded, "I've already thought about it. For instance, there is a place where the monorail station's ventilation chutes are right next to a cave system. It wouldn't be difficult to enter the caves about three kilometers away from here. We had to reinforce them during construction." "That's excellent," the colonel rejoiced. "Unfortunately," Bemish continued, "a man named Ashinik was my closest assistant. He is now heading the terrorists and he remembers this story with the caves quite well." One of counter-intelligence officers swore loudly. "What do you think about toxic gases?" the colonel asked. "I have to disappoint you. A possibility of chemical attack or, more precisely, an explosion or damage of rocket elements emitting toxins has been taken into account during the construction. A monitoring system would automatically turn an alarm on, block buildings off and start detoxification." The colonel bit his lips for a while. "I am not a military man," Bemish said, "but I think that if you want to kick the terrorists out of the spaceport, the only way to do it is to drive tanks in and shoot at everything that shoots or surrenders. "It looks like you are correct," the colonel said. "What losses will you sustain?" the envoy asked the colonel. "Well, I don't think that this party of people's freedom will fight all that well. It's just civilians..." Bemish got suddenly irritated at the military man. "The zealots can't fight. But if I were you, I wouldn't be in a hurry to classify Aloms as civilians..." "Aloms?!" Bemish looked at him, surprised. "I mean Kissur's Aloms. It's a mountain people who... Listen, haven't you been briefed about the Assalah takeover?" "No," the commander said, "I don't know the details. The assistance request said that it was a rebellion of Weian zealots who had won the elections." "Generally, it's correct," the envoy shrugged his shoulders. "The majority of people in the spaceport are zealots." "So, is the spaceport occupied by Aloms and not by the indigenous people of the Empire?" the colonel specified with unnatural lack of expression. "What difference does it make for you?" the exasperated envoy shouted. Bemish shuddered. "Sorry, colonel, but how do you know about the difference between Weians and Aloms?" "Yes," the colonel said, "what's the difference? We follow orders." It was already dark, when Bemish, having finished briefing colonel Rogov on the spaceport's specific details, walked into the garden. Bemish had never run into the Federation Army before even though he had recently become acquainted to the Federation Counter Intelligence. He liked colonel Rogov - Bemish had considered military people to be much more stupid. One thing astounded him. There were dozens of populated planets in the Galaxy. Weia was located in the backyard of the civilized world. How could a Federal Army colonel know about the enmity between Weians and Aloms who had conquered the former a number of times? When did they start teaching galactic ethnography in military academies? Even he, Bemish, had needed quite a bit of time to realize how deep was the gap between the peoples that outsider observers considered to belong to the same race - the "Empire people" and the "mountainous barbarians." Bemish stood and looked at the night bustling with people. Somewhere an engine yelped piteously like a cat that somebody kept stepping on the tail. The crackling of cicadas mixed with rustling of faraway power stations. That's it. Tomorrow this division would throw all its force at the construction - he had dedicated the last two years of his life to this construction and he had put his soul into it. They would hack the roadways with their tanks, turn buildings and terminals into dust. Crazy zealots would face the tanks with prayers and spells; they would be sure that all this machinery was simply demonic phantoms and that their leaders would rise into the air and turn the demonic fighting machines into paper and their grenade launchers into beans... Tomorrow Kissur would die. Because even if a termite shell's direct hit didn't flatten him into the floor and a fan laser burst didn't find him and a shock wave didn't roll over him, he would still kill himself. It would happen because Kissur always lived as if he had died a long time ago. Never would Kissur let himself be taken alive by commandos called in by Shavash. And then somebody just to Bemish's left said in Alom, "Do you have a fag?" Bemish turned there in astonishment. A Federation soldier sitting next to a fire silently flicked a pack of cigarettes to his comrade. Bemish rushed to the soldier. The latter was clicking his lighter but having seen a civilian he stood up to attention hurriedly. "What have you just said?" Bemish asked. "I asked for a smoke, sir," the soldier was speaking English now. He spoke it with a strange but quite familiar accent. A horrible hunch entered Bemish's mind. "Are you Alom?" he asked sharply in Alom. The soldier was silent. "Are you Alom?" Federation soldiers are forbidden to speak foreign languages, sir," the private replied. "To the hell with this! What's your name?" "Khaina, sir." Khaina, "wolf," was one of the most widely used names among the fighting clans of the mountainous country. "Whose vassal was your father?" "He was a vassal of Sarvak clan." Sarvak clan! Sarvaks were vassals of the White Falcon clan that Kissur belonged to. "How many Aloms are in the division?" Bemish asked trying to suppress shudder in his voice. "I can't know, sir. We are Federation soldiers and we swore an oath to serve the Federation. Aloms do not break their oaths." Bemish paused. Ten soldiers sitting around the fire looked at him with curiosity. Almost everybody had blond or reddish hair, wide eyes and eyebrows tips that were almost flying... "What's your contract salary?" Bemish asked suddenly. "Three hundred credits a year, sir," Khaina said. Three hundred credits a year! The minimal yearly unemployment benefits for a Federation citizen was eleven hundred twelve credits! Bemish turned and walked away searching for the colonel. Now he understood why the latter knew the difference between Aloms and Weians. X X X Bemish found Rogov in the living room. The colonel and several of his officers watched the day's broadcast closely. The colonel was interested not in the broadcast's content but rather in the layout of hangars, storages and chutes. The officers were watching the broadcast for the third time and the sound was turned off. It was difficult to guess, looking at their faces, what they thought about the broadcast after having seen it the first time. "Colonel! How many Aloms are in the division?" The colonel and the officers turned around like one. It looked like there were no Aloms among them except for this one, on the side... No, he was not an Alom, he was a half-breed something like a mix of a Dane and a Vietnamese... "Nobody has counted them," the colonel said calmly, as if he had been waiting for this question for a while, "but I think that it's about eighty to eighty five percent." "Eighty?!! Why?" The colonel grinned. "Mr. Bemish, have you ever served in the army?" "No." "Why?" "Because..." Bemish broke off. On the second day of their acquaintance, Kissur had asked him why he had never served in the army and Bemish remembered what he had said. The colonel smiled as if he guessed what Bemish had answered then and said. "The majority of fully fledged Federation citizens share your attitude towards the army, director. The army receives twenty times less budget financing than medicine. "And you enlist Aloms in the army!" "We enlist anybody who agrees to serve in the army." Here Bemish turned around and noticed that two more people entered the living room attracted by the argument - the Earth envoy, Mr. Severin and the emergency committee head, Mr. Shavash. "But three hundred credits is four times less than unemployment benefits!" "The unemployment benefits are allotted to Federation citizens, not to Aloms. You know very well that they are doomed to much greater poverty in their mountains. For centuries they have been indoctrinated that war is the only occupation worthy of a man, that man should kill, that death is the way to glory. They are happy to join Federation forces. The ones who pass our admission committees take it as a pass to heaven. They know that they will obtain citizenship in ten years of service. By the way, having received it, they don't leave the service. They are as happy to hold weapons in their hands as others are to hold women or money... Where else will you find such warriors? If a Federation citizen is born in a middle class family, he graduates from a college and he makes money. If he is born in a garbage can, he receives unemployment benefits and gobbles up hallucinogens..." "But three hundred credits!" "How much can we pay them? The military budget is one half percent of the GDP!" The envoy listened to their conversation in astonishment. Clearly, he also hadn't known who exactly guarded the borders of his great motherland. Probably, it was a delicate and not particularly popular subject. The military command was not in a hurry to announce that foreign barbarians made up eighty percent of the army, and that strong, healthy guys with excellent muscles and decent brains got paid three times less than hereditary unemployed saturated with drugs. "So, your soldiers are happy, aren't they?" Bemish asked with certain irony. "They are very happy, businessman! They grew up without commercials, human rights, credit cards and whores. They were taught that battle is the road to God! When their contracts run out and they become Federation citizens, they enlist again. They stay in the service!" "Where else can they go to?" Bemish grinned, "Into an investment company? You don't teach them anything but to how to kill. They are aliens in the world of the Federation." "They love the army! And they make twenty times more money here than they would make in their mountains!" "I think that they love the army in their first year, colonel. They love the army when they come there out of a mountain hut where their fathers had two sheep and where ten people slept in one room on a mud floor. In the barracks they have their own bunk beds and they get good food and they see 3D TV first time in their lives. But half a year or a year passes and they watch TV and learn our language. They start understanding that the country that enlisted them into their army pays their soldiers four times less than it pays its unemployed. They start understanding that three hundred credits would be enough to buy a farm in the mountains but it would not be enough to afford a bottle of beer every evening in a bar half a kilometer away from the camp... And they start comparing their own bunk beds not with their clay huts but with the cottages that they pass as they ride to training. And they start thinking that it's not fair that brave and strong people sit in barracks for three hundred credits a year while drooling weaklings sit on boards of directors. Is it true?" The colonel was silent. "Do you know how the previous Weian dynasty fell?" "Yes. Aloms conquered the Empire." "Your soldiers misinformed you, colonel. The people of the Empire were rich and lazy. They didn't like fighting and the government enlisted mostly war-loving barbarians into the army. Aloms didn't conquer the Empire. They simply served in its army and they came to own the Empire when no other troops were left." "How can you say so, Bemish?" the envoy was startled. "It's absolutely impossible. We are talking about a totally different time; they are just commandos, for God's sake!" A moan - or maybe a squeal - sounded next to Bemish.. The Earthman turned around. Shavash - the emergency committee's chairman, the official who called Federation troops in to Assalah to destroy his enemies - covered his face with his hands and was slowly sliding down the door frame to the floor. Shredding cloth crackled - Shavash's jacket caught on a brass decoration on the door frame, the jacket ripped apart and the official fainted and fell all the way to the floor. X X X Bemish stepped across his partner in export-import cooperative, Assako, and walked outside. Stars sparkled in the garden and the engine of an armored troop carrier still roared just as rhythmically as it had roared an hour ago - something was wrong with it. The army still bustled in the dark. It was not evident anymore, however, what side the army was on. Half of these people were White Falcons' vassals. The vassal oath was not inferior in any way to a military one! And nobody could claim that White Falcons would send them to fight for three hundred credits while they were sitting idle and getting rich. White Falcons didn't consider war to be an occupation suitable only for people who couldn't make money on the Exchange. Whatever else happened, when an Alom army entered a battle, White Falcons would ride in front. Somebody moved behind Bemish. The latter glanced aside and saw the colonel. Simultaneously, they started slowly walking down a path. "On what side do you think, your soldiers will fight?" Bemish asked. "I was going to ask you the same question," the colonel answered. They walked silently for a while. "I've heard a lot about Kissur," the colonel said. "Have you heard about him from the soldiers?" "Yes. I mean, from their songs. They don't always go nuts about our bands. They often sing their own songs." "Do they sing about Kissur?" "They sing about Kissur, about his father, grandfather, great grandfather, and so on - all the way to the original clan founder who, if I am not mistaken, married a forest mermaid." "You are mistaken. He didn't marry her, he raped her. And that caused some friction between him and a variety of forest and other outdoor fairies." "Oh, yes, that's right. They sang something along these lines. By the way, these are the songs by their other idol, Khanadar." "This villa is a gift of Kissur's," Bemish said. Here the garden path finished and they found themselves next to a pond. A small altar to Buzhva stood on the lawn in front of the pond and behind it rhododendrons were blooming. Bemish noticed some food out of a trooper's ration lying in the cup on the altar. If Aloms ate next to a god, they always shared their food. Seven or eight soldiers sat on the ground under the blooming rhododendrons passing along a white plastic flask with local wine. Bemish silently sat next to the soldiers and the colonel sat next to him. "Is it true that they don't allow you to speak Alom?" Bemish asked a soldier suddenly. He leaped up startled. "No... Why not..." He muttered in his native tongue. The colonel lay on the ground and closed his eyes. The soldier looked embarrassed; he stood up quickly and hurriedly disappeared behind the bushes. "This is the first man who talked to me in Alom," Bemish said. "He didn't know the Earthmen's language," the colonel spoke quietly. It took a bit for the colonel's words to soak into Bemish's mind. "He didn't know the Earthmen's language... Are you trying to say that it was not your soldier but rather a scout of Kissur's?" "Be silent, Mr. Bemish. I am not going to make speeches for you tonight." The soldiers around the fire sat in silence as if they didn't hear the conversation. The soldier that the spy had sat next to, handed the flask to Bemish. "Drink with us," he said in English. X X X Bemish didn't fall asleep till four am, he watched the camp's inhabitants escaping it like rats running away from a sinking ship. He saw a helicopter with the Federation envoy lifting - the latter suddenly decided to visit the capital. A couple of officials left afterwards. Then the counter-intelligence officers left. Strangely, Shavash was the last one to sneak away to the capital. Three officials, whose names decorated the list of the functionaries to be hanged, left with him. Now, only Federal troops were left. What's the deal, if you think about it? Why should it matter where a soldier was born? In the end, all of them swore the oath of allegiance to the Federation while only slightly more than one third of them were Kissur's vassals. The sentries stood guard perfectly but Bemish heard more and more of Alom spoken around the tents. They switched back to English at his appearance, however. Bemish returned to the bedroom about four. Not taking his clothes off, he crashed down on the bed and almost immediately fell asleep. It was light, by the time Bemish woke up, wind out of the window blew a gauze curtain inside and the sun beat and hopped on a marble table's surface. Bemish turned around still feeling groggy - something was lacking in his attire. What was it, jacket or, excuse me, underwear? Bemish turned around again, feeling the empty gun holder flatten under him. Everything was there except for the gun. Bemish jumped off the bed and ran to the entrance door. The door opened wide and Bemish was relieved to see a commando wearing a Federation uniform behind it. The commando, placed his feet wider apart, shifted his hands on his assault rifle to a more comfortable position and declared, "Sorry, Mr. Bemish. You are not allowed to leave." "Who says so?" "I do," a voice came from behind. Bemish turned around. Kissur stood next to the door leading into the inner halls. Two or three paratroopers lingered behind him. Bemish silently, without thinking jumped at Kissur. This time he was even less lucky. Kissur locked his leg and Bemish tried twisting in the air. At this moment, the commando standing behind him connected his rifle's butt to Bemish's head. The latter barely heard Kissur screaming at the soldier, then, the walls and floor around him turned into thousands of fiery butterflies and flew at him. Bemish fainted. He regained his senses much later - he sat in a military helicopter that had, probably, just taken off the villa's roof. Bemish's hands were handcuffed to a stand behind the pilot's chair and commandos guarded him on both sides. Bemish thought that he was unlikely to escape but here the helicopter jerked in the air. Bemish dropped his head on an Alom's shoulder and fainted again. Next time, he recovered in the spaceport - in his own office, well known to him. His wrists were still handcuffed and somebody thoughtfully deposited him on a black leather sofa located behind his own working table. Having turned his head slightly, he could barely make out the tall back of his own armchair - the armchair that Ashinik had boorishly sat in two days ago. However, nobody was present in the armchair now. Kissur adroitly operated Bemish's own computer sitting slightly to the side, where a department's head would usually be. "Well," Kissur said, "Who was right, you or me? I didn't loose a fight with the special forces' paratroopers, did I?" "You knew," Bemish articulated. His tongue resisted him and lolled in his mouth like a swollen sausage. "You knew how many Aloms served in Federal troops." "Naturally I did." "You are an idiot, Kissur. You took over one division and you think that you won the fight with Federation." "Oh, are you going to send me more troops? Thank you, it's very kind of Earthmen." "Cretin! How many of you, Aloms, are in the army - twenty or thirty thousand? Do you think that ten thousand - even if they are very well trained cutthroats - can win a fight with the Federation of twenty billion? With all our equipment? They will just press a button and eliminate you." "How?" Kissur asked him, "Are you going to drop a nuclear bomb on us? Or is it going to be a meson one?" Bemish bit his lip. It was true. To use standard shock troops against Kissur would be either dangerous - if there were Aloms among them- or simply useless. The troops would meet with at least equally trained Federation paratroopers. To use nuclear weapons against a tiny bit of barbarians on a backwards planet would demonstrate Federation's incredible military weakness. It went without saying, that such actions would violate all official and unofficial human rights regulations. "You are free," Kissur said. "You can go to the capital. Tell them, that our conditions changed. We demand Federation representatives to come to Assalah - we would like to discuss the future relationship between Weia and the Federation. The Federation president or the first minister should come with the delegation." Bemish suddenly imagined old Yadan conducting talks with the demons' president and this idea was so comical that he couldn't smother laughter. "I would like to ask you one thing, Kissur," Bemish spoke unexpectedly. "Everything that you ask for is yours," the Alom replied. "Don't kill Shavash... He... In the end, you got your commandos thanks to him!" A strange, almost laughing expression came over Kissur's face. "He has already killed the little scoundrel..." Bemish thought. "He killed or disabled him with his own hands..." At this moment, however, something moved on his side. Shavash entered the office and sat to the right of Kissur, in the director's armchair. "I took it upon myself to overhear your conversation at the door," the official spoke, smiling. "Your request touched me, Terence. But as you see, Kissur was not going to kill me, to begin with." "You? What are you doing in this office?" Shavash, laughing, placed his hand on Kissur's shoulder. "Why shouldn't I be in this office? You see, it's my armchair... Haven't you forgotten that I was the Assalah Company director? Do you think that could I request this state appointment back due to the company's bankruptcy?" "Do you think, Terence," Kissur inquired, "that Shavash didn't know how many Aloms serve in your army? But even he had to sweat quite a bit, to get them called in! I've never thought that there could be a country that was so set against sending its troops anywhere!" Bemish lowered his head. He could see already the scale of the swindling operation. Oh, my God! That's why such a careful official for the first time in his life insisted so decisively on taking an unpopular action. To think that the other Weians agreed to it to compromise Shavash! Still, something smelled fishy here... "So," Bemish said, "was the quarrel between you and Kissur completely faked? "I am sorry, Terence, I am so sorry. It was a complete and utter fake." "But Yadan, you and Yadan, you and Ashinik - it's not possible, Shavash! The fanatics hate you." Kissur left the room, smiling; he was probably going to give some orders. The official silently beckoned Bemish with his finger and the latter crawled off the sofa, fighting the pain. Shavash approached a window and pulled the blinds up. Bemish stretched his head over Shavash's shoulder and looked out of the window. Out of the director's office windows, a beautiful view opened up at the landing field strewn with the black bodies of fighter helicopters and commandos in spotty camouflage. But the construction's director attention was pulled towards something else. They had used railroad tracks to pull a huge cargo crane RV-37 into the middle of the field. The crane was generally used to correct the positioning of rockets and to load containers heavier than 700 tons. This time, the crane's load was much smaller than the maximum allowed weight. The crane's jib pointed to the sky and twelve... no, thirteen bodies were swinging under it and Bemish recognized his ex-deputy - young Ashinik - hanging to the side. Two squeaking yellow vultures were already circling the crane... "The zealots and rebels," Shavash said coolly, "disturbed the Empire, babbled too much and addled people's minds. It was not possible to catch them all at once - they hid, showed up only separately and threatened to avenge the deaths of their comrades. Now we gathered all of the zealots in one place and destroyed this filth once and forever. Now, when we are not bothered by the crazy gangs, we can negotiate with the Federation as a real state. The simple people that believed zealots will believe Kissur. The officials terrified by zealots will trust me." Shavash turned away from the window. The setting sun was burning and melting in the small official's eyes, his half-opened lips were twisted in a smile... "Why?" Bemish asked suddenly. "Why do you hate us,