Lanas' head teetered in affirmation. "And what," Durla said with clear urgency, "is that organiza­tion? Tell me about it. Who is the head?" "Minister.. . Durla." A confused look passed among the Centauri in the room. Durla could feel Milifa's gaze boring through him, and he felt a faint buzz of danger. "Yes, I am Prime Minister Durla," he said, trying to discern whether the confused Lanas might simply be addressing him directly. "Who is the head of your organization?" "Minister Durla," Rem Lanas said, this time with more conviction. The blood drained from Durla's face. But Caso looked suspicious, and said, "What is the nature of this organization?" "Employment. . . workers... for excavation purposes..." Durla put his face in his hands, partly out of frustration and partly to hide his relief. Such an absurd misunderstanding could have led to a world of trouble if left unchecked. "The Committee for Centauri Advancement," he said. "Yes ... organization ..." Rem Lanas told them. He was half smiling, but it was such a disassociated look that it was clear he was thinking about something else completely. Durla looked to Milifa, who seemed less than amused. "It's the association I created for the purpose of organizing Centauri workers for-" "I do not care," Milifa said flatly. "I want to know about the bastards who killed my son. If he's one of them, I want all their names." Durla nodded and turned back to Rem Lanas. "I am speaking of a terrorist organization. An organization created for sabotage. You are part of such a group, yes?" Lanas nodded his head. "Now we're getting somewhere," Durla said, smirking. Caso nodded approvingly. "How many people are in it?" "All of them," Lanas told him. "Don't spar with me, Lanas," Durla warned, becoming in­creasingly annoyed. He glanced up at Caso. "How is he able to do this?" "I'm not sure," Caso said, looking a bit worried. "He should

  be unable to hold back anything. It should just all be spilling out of him." "Lanas... who is the head of the organization?" Durla asked, "The head?" "Yes." "The head... is our leader." "Yes. His name. What is the name of the head of the organization?" And his reply made no sense at all. "No. What is the name of the man on second base." "Who?" Durla said, utterly flummoxed. "No. Who is on first." "What?" "What is on second." Durla felt as if he were losing his mind. In a harsh whisper he demanded of Caso, "This is gibberish. What is he saying?" "I don't know!" Caso replied loudly. "Third base," Rem Lanas intoned, as if by rote. Durla was up off his chair with such force that he knocked it over. Caso was about to speak when an angry prime minister grabbed him by the front of his shirt and slammed him back up against the wall. "This is idiocyl" he said tightly. "What sort of game is this?" "It's n-not a game!" Caso stammered, his veneer of Prime Candidate indifference wavering under the infuriated onslaught of the most powerful man on Centauri Prime. "It... it must be a fail-safe..." "Fail-safe? What sort of-" "Something planted in his mind. Imprinted. So that if he's being questioned or probed, instead of breaking through to the core of what we want to know, his mind automatically reverts to this nonsense. It becomes a loop that we can't get past." "That's impossible!" "No. It's not. I've ..." He licked his lips nervously. "I've heard techno-mages can accomplish such things.. ." "Now it's techno-mages!" Milifa bellowed. "Drugs! Chil­dren's stories about techno-mages! What sort of government are you running here, Durla!" Durla rounded on him, suddenly not caring just how powerful

  a house Milifa ran. He pointed a trembling finger at Milifa, and said, "The kind of government that could strip you of name, rank, and property with a snap of my fingers! So watch yourself, Milifa, and show some respect for who and what I am, before I make you less than who and what you are!" Milifa, wisely, said nothing, but the set of his face made it clear he was not happy. Durla, for his part, felt shamed. And the notion that this scrawny no one was playing games with him and shaming him in front of a long-standing ally infuriated him beyond reason. "Forget the drugs," he told Caso. "Now ... now we chat with him in the way we used to do these things." Minutes later, Rem Lanas was upright and spread-eagled, his arms tied to the walls on either side of the cell. Durla stood sev­eral feet away, the lash in his hand crackling with energy. "Prime Minister." Caso sounded respectful but nervous. "The drugs in his system may impede his understanding if another element, such as extreme pain, is introduced into-" "Then we shall give his system a chance to work the drugs out." He saw Milifa nod slightly in approval, took a step back and swung his arm around expertly. The lash slammed across Rem Lanas' back, shredding his shirt in a second. Lanas screamed, his eyes going wide, his body spasming. "You felt that, didn't you," Durla said in a low voice. "Didn't you, Lanas." " Y-yes," he managed to say. "No one can endure more than forty lashes of that nature," Durla continued. "1 do not suggest you be the first person to try." "I... don't want to die..." "At last, truth," Durla noted with satisfaction. "We don't care about you, Lanas. We want those in charge." "In charge . . . of what?" Durla did not hesitate. He swung the lash again, and again. Ten cracks of the lash crashed across Lanas' back, and each time the prisoner howled, until it seemed to Durla he could not re­member a time when screams were not ringing in his ears. "That," he said, "is eleven." But Lanas didn't hear him, because he had lapsed into unconsciousness.

  "Bring him around," Durla said to Caso. Caso did so with brisk efficiency. Durla could see it in Lanas' eyes: When he came to, for a moment he didn't realize where he was. Perhaps he thought that what he had experienced was some sort of tortured dream. When he looked around, however, he realized the all-too-real nature of his predicament. "Ask him who killed my son," Milifa demanded. "Was he himself responsible? Someone else?" "Is your mind clear enough that you can answer the question?" Durla asked. Lanas glared up at him. "You see, we've figured out that when you lose control over your ability to keep information secret, you have some sort of... what was the word, Caso? Fail­safe. A fail-safe in your mind that prevents you from being forth­coming. It is my assumption that if you have possession of your faculties, then your free will holds sway once more. Employ thai free will now. Save yourself." "Tell me who killed my son," demanded Milifa. Lanas seemed to notice him for the first time. "Who is your son?" "Throk of the House Milifa." "Oh. Him." "Yes, him." "He was the first." "The first what?" Durla said. "The first victim of your organization?" Rem Lanas took in a slow, deep breath. "Do you know who I am?" he asked. "You are Rem Lanas." "Beyond that, I mean." The pain in his voice appeared to be subsiding. And then, before Durla could reply, Lanas did it for him. "I am nothing beyond that. I am a nobody. A no one. 1 drifted... from one thing in life to the next. Used by this person, by that person. I have been a victim for as long as I can re­member. No pride in myself, in my heritage, in my people. But I have been a part of something .. . that has made me proud ... for the first time in my meager existence." "So you admit you are part of an organization!" Durla said triumphantly. "Freely," said Lanas. He looked like nothing. He looked like a weakling. But his voice was of iron. "And if you think that I am going to turn over those people who have helped to elevate me, for the first time in my life, to a creature of worth ... then you can think again. And you, Durla... you think . . . you think you are in charge. You think you know everything. You know nothing. And by the time you do... it will be too late for you. It's already too late." Durla suddenly felt a chill in the air. He brushed it off as he said, "If you know so much about me, why don't you tell me?" "Because you would not believe. You are not ready. You likely never will be." "Enough of this!" Milifa said, fury bubbling over. "Tell me who killed my son!" "Your son..." " Yes! Throk of the-" "House of Milifa, yes. Your son . . ." He grinned lopsidedly. "Your son walked into his little hideout with a bomb in his hair. My understanding is that he realized it at the last moment and died screaming 'Get it out, get it out!' Very womanish, from what I 've been told..." Milifa let out a howl of agonized fury and grabbed the lash from Durla's hand. Durla yelped in protest and tried to grab it back, but Milifa was far bigger than he and utterly uncaring, at that moment, of Durla's high rank. He stiff-armed the prime minister, shoving him back. Caso caught Durla before he could hit the ground. Milifa's arm snapped around, and he brought the lash
crash­ing down on Rem Lanas. Lanas made no attempt to hold back the agony as the scream was ripped from his throat. "Milord!" Caso shouted, trying to get the whip away from him, but Milifa, blind with fury, swept it around and drove Caso back. Any attempt to snatch it from Milifa's hand would simply have met with violence. "Tell me-who!" And the whip snaked out. "Who's on first!" shrieked Lanas, and the words were now pouring out of him, running together, bereft of any meaning. "What's on second, I don't know, third base..." "Tell me! Tell me!" "Get the guards!" Durla ordered Caso, and the young Prime

  Candidate did as he was instructed. Milifa was paying no atten­tion. Four years' worth of anger, of rage, poured from him all at once, focused entirely on the helpless individual before him. Over and over he struck, and each time he demanded to know who was responsible for his son's death, and each time Rem Lanas cried out nonsensical comments about third base. Except he did so with progressively less volume each time, even the screams having less force. The door burst open and half a dozen guards poured in, Caso bringing up the rear. They converged on Milifa, and he swung the lash to try to keep them back. But they were armored, and al­though they proceeded with caution, proceed they still did. Within moments they had Milifa pinned to the ground, the lash torn from his grasp. His chest was heaving, his face flushed, his eyes wild. "Tell me!" he was still shouting, as if he had lost track of the fact that he was no longer beating his victim. Lanas' head was slumped forward. Durla went to him, placed his thumb and forefinger under Rem Lanas' chin. The head fell back. And he immediately knew what Caso confirmed only a moment later: Lanas was dead. "Idiot," he murmured, and then his voice grew along with his frustration. "Idiot!" This time he turned to Milifa, who was being held on the floor by the guards, and kicked him savagely in the side. Milifa let out a roar of indignation, but Durla spoke right over it. "Idiot! He was our first, best lead in years! Years! And because of you, he's dead!" "Less .. . than forty lashes ..." Milifa started to say. "It didn't matter! The threshold of pain isn't an exact science! Forty was the maximum! But look at him! He wasn't particu­larly robust! What in the world made you think he could endure that sort of sustained punishment! "But no, you didn't think!" and he kicked Milifa again. "You just cared about your pathetic son!" "How dare you!" Milifa managed to get out. "How dare you interfere with an official interrogation! How dare you think that you can withstand my anger! Get him out of here ... no! No, on second thought, shove him over there!" and he pointed to a corner of the cell. The guards obediently tossed him over into the indicated corner and stepped back. "You can stay here and rot ... along with the corpse of your new best

  friend!" and he indicated the still-suspended body of Rem Lanas. "I hope you two will be very happy together!" He stormed out, allowing the guards to follow and close the door behind him. The last thing the angry prime minister heard was Milifa's enraged shout of protest, before it was cut off by the slamming of the cell door.

  chapter 4 Durla was impressed to see that Castig Lione had made it to his office suite before he arrived there. "Tell me it's not true," Lione, trembling with suppressed rage, said immediately. Durla considered it mildly amusing that the conversation echoed the one he'd had with Milifa, so very recently. "That de­pends," he said calmly. With Milifa locked away and his fury at Lanas passed, Durla was actually able to handle himself with a considerable amount of sangfroid. "What are you referring to, precisely?" "Do not fence with me-" "And do not forget your station, Lione!" Durla warned. He was still calm, but there was definite menace in his tone. "Do not forget who is the power on Centauri Prime." "Oh, I have known that for quite some time," Lione shot back. Durla's eyes narrowed. "What do you mean by that?" "You have put Milifa into prison! Do you have any idea how many friends the House Milifa has? How powerful he is! You need the support of the main Houses . . ." "I have the support of the military, Minister Lione," Durla said. "The generals respect my roots. And they respect my long-term vision. They have helped to execute my inspirations, devel­oping the technologies that will lead us to bury the Alliance. They have as little patience for effete, mincing heads of Houses as I do. They know that conquest comes from military might, and they know that only I have the strength of will to bring Cen­tauri Prime to its true destiny." "The Houses remain the foundation of your power, Prime Minister. If that foundation crumbles . .." "Why should I care what is below me, when my destiny is that which is above me?"

  Lione leaned on a chair without sitting, and shook his head. "Madness," he muttered. But Durla was studying him, like a small creature of prey sizing up something larger than he, trying to decide whether or not he could bring it down. "I have not forgotten your com­ment. Who is the power of Centauri Prime, as far as you are concerned?" Lione regained his composure. "Why, you are, Prime Minister." "Now you are the one who is fencing. What did you mean?" "You do not desire candor, Prime Minister." There was a deadly silence in the office for a moment. And then Durla said, "Lione ... we go back quite a ways. Do not, however, assume that that lengthy relationship has weakened my resolve or ability to do what I feel needs to be done if I am being defied. Do not further assume that the fact that you head the Prime Candidates gives you a power base that is comparable with mine. If I were so inclined, I could order the military to an­nihilate every single one of them. The streets of Centauri Prime would flow with the blood of your precious Candidates, and par­ents might mourn, but otherwise life would go on." "You would never do such a thing," Lione said. Durla smiled thinly. Suddenly the door opened and one of the most massive Cen­tauri that Lione had ever seen walked in. He had to stop in the doorway for a moment, turning sideways slightly, in order to enter. Pure charismatic energy seemed to crackle around him. His neck was so thick that it seemed as if his head were jointed directly into the top of his torso. Furthermore, he had cut his teeth so that small fangs projected over his upper lip. "Minister . . . you remember General Rhys. He's been over­seeing a number of our construction projects on assorted fringe worlds. He also did a superb job leading the recent strike forces on Mipas and other worlds. General, it is good to see you." General Rhys bowed deeply. But as he did so, he never took his eyes off Castig Lione. "General," Durla said quite conversationally, as if discussing the weather. "I'd like you to do me a service, if you don't mind." "Whatever you wish, Prime Minister." "That sword hanging at your side... is it merely ceremonial?"

  "Intended for ceremony, but it carries a killing edge, Prime Minister." "Good. Kindly draw it and decapitate Minister Lione if he does not answer to my satisfaction." Lione started to bark out a laugh, then the laughter choked off in his throat as smooth metal rasped against the scabbard, and he found the blade poised right against his throat. Rhys was holding it quite steady, not wavering in the slightest. "You . .. you're insane," Lione whispered. Then he gasped as the blade edge pressed ever so slightly. That alone was enough to cause a trickle of blood to start running down. A small stain of pinkish red liquid... his blood. .. tinted his white collar. "Look into my eyes, Lione," said Durla. The degree of calm in his tone was absolutely frightening. Lione found himself unable to look anywhere else. "1 will be able to tell if you are lying. I have become quite sensitive to attempts at duplicity. One does not reach my station in life without acquiring that ability. Lie, and I will know. Now tell me .. . who do you think is the true power of Centauri Prime?" "You." "Ah ah ah," Durla said scoldingly, and Rhys-without hav­ing to be told to do so-pushed the blade ever so slightly more against Lione's throat. The minister gasped and sat bolt still, as even the slightest breath would cause the blade to drive into his throat on its own. "Did you think that I was joking? I am not. 1 do not joke. Ever. This is your last chance, Minister: Who is the true power of Centauri Prime?" In truth, Durla was fully prepared for Lione to answer that it was the emperor. Durla was perfectly aware that there remained a handful of holdouts who believed that Londo Mollari still mat­tered in some way, shape, or form to the business of Centauri Prime. It was a quaint notion, of course. Truthfully, he would be surprised if it
turned out that Lione was among those benighted few, but anything was possible. What he was not expecting was the answer that Lione gave: "The Lady Mariel." For just a moment Durla's lips twisted in anger, and he was about to order General Rhys to dispatch Lione for good and all. If nothing else, it would prove to the other ministers that no one was immune to the ire and retribution of the prime minister. But something in Lione's look stopped him, and he realized with a sort of bleak horror that Lione absolutely believed it. "Mariel? My wife?" Lione let out a slow breath. Clearly he thought he was as good as dead. That being the case, there was no point in withholding exactly what he believed, what he thought. "We are not fools," he told Durla with a nervous sneer. "Your obsession with her was known to all. Did you think that I was unable to tell? That none of us would figure it out? And then you wound up acquiring her in some pathetic game. What a startling coincidence." "It was no coincidence," Durla replied hotly. "If you must know, Lione, the woman was attracted to me. Vir Cotto had no desire to try to hold on to her, since all she spoke of was me, and he was more than happy to see me secure her." "Oh, was he now. And how very convenient for him. The chances are that he played you for a fool." "Impossible. Cotto is nothing." "He was in a position to give you that for which you hungered. He must have been something" "He is nothing, I tell you. The Lady Mariel wanted me..." "Let us say that she did. The reason is obvious. She wanted to be able to manipulate you. She was a spy in my employ, Durla, or have you forgotten that? I know just how much information that woman was capable of acquiring. She likely learned of your fixation with her and decided to use it to her advantage. Women, after all, have no power in our government. What better way for a clever and ambitious woman like Mariel to gain influ­ence than by sinking her claws into a man who wo uld accede to her every whim." "Mine is the vision, Lione," Durla stated flatly, his consider­able aplomb beginning to erode. "Mine is the direction for Cen­tauri Prime.. ." "Right, right. Your dreams, from which you garner impressive scientific developments. How likely is that, Prime Minister? As opposed to the thought that they are being fed to you by your beloved wife, who in turn is acquiring them from contacts she has managed to cultivate. We all know you dote on her, fawn on her. She is your sense of self-worth, your inspiration, your image, all rolled into one. You are nothing without the Lady Mariel."