know it better than they ever will.”
“Just so,” offered Yosef.
29
Telemach graced them with a tight smile. “I want to deal with this in a swift and
firm manner. I think the Lord Marshal and his masters back on Terra could do with a
reminder that we Iestans can deal with our own problems.”
Yosef nodded here, partly because he knew he was supposed to, and partly
because Telemach had just confirmed for him her real reason for wanting the case
closed quickly. It was no secret that the High-Reeve had designs on the rank of
Landgrave, head of all Sentine forces across the planet; and for her to get that, the
current incumbent—and so the rumours went, her lover—would need to rise to the
only role open to him, the Imperial Governorship of the planet. The Landgrave’s only
real competition for that posting was the Lord Marshal of the Arbites. Showing a
decisive posture towards a crime like this one would count for a lot when the time for
new installations was nigh.
“We’re investigating all avenues of interest,” said Laimner.
The High-Reeve tapped a finger on her lips. “I want you to pay special attention
to any connection with those religious fanatics that are showing up in the Falls and
out at Breghoot.”
“The Theoge,” Laimner offered helpfully, with a sniff. “Odd bunch.”
“With respect,” said Daig, “they’re hardly fanatics. They’re just—”
Telemach didn’t let him finish. “Odium spreads wherever it takes root, Reeve.
The Emperor did not guide the Great Crusade to us for nothing. I won’t have
superstition find purchase in this city or any other on my watch, is that clear?” She
eyed Yosef. “The Theoge is an underground cult, forbidden by Imperial law. Find the
connection between them and this crime, gentlemen.”
“You have an understanding of my interest, then?” she concluded.
He nodded once more. “Indeed I do, ma’am. We’ll do our best.”
Telemach sniffed. “Do better than that, Sabrat.”
She walked on, and Laimner fell in step with her, shooting him a weak grin as
they moved off.
“It’s
as he watched them go.
“What he means, it’s only little people dead so far. No one he has any interest
in.” He blew out a breath.
Daig’s expression had become more pessimistic than normal. “Where does that
effluent about the Theoge come from?” he muttered. “What could they possibly have
to do with serial murders? Everything Telemach knows about those people comes
from rumours, trash based on nothing but hearsay and bigotry.”
Yosef raised an eyebrow. “You know better, do you?” He shrugged. “Clearly
not,” said the other man, after a moment.
After he had put Ivak to bed, Yosef returned to the living room and took a seat by the
radiator. He smiled to see that his wife had poured a glass of the good mistwater for
him, and he sipped it as she set the auto-launder to work in the back room.
30
Yosef lost himself in the honeyed swirl of the drink and let his mind drift. In the
fluids he saw strange oceans, vast and unknown. Somehow, the sight of them rested
him, the perturbations soothing his thoughts.
When Renia coughed, he looked up with a start, spilling a drop down the side of
the glass. His wife had entered the room and he had been so captured by reverie that
he had not even been aware of her.
She gave him a worried look. “Are you all right?”
“Yes.”
Renia was not convinced. Fifteen years of loving someone gave you that kind of
insight as a matter of course. And because of that, she didn’t press him. His wife
knew his job, and she knew that he did his best to leave it at the precinct every time
he came home. Instead she asked him, just once. “Do you need to talk?”
He took a sip of the wine and didn’t look at her. “Not yet.”
She changed the subject, but not enough for Yosef’s comfort. “There was an
incident at Ivak’s schola today. A boy taken out of classes.”
“Why?”
“Ivak said it was because of a game some of the older children were playing.
on. Somehow, he already knew what Renia was going to say. “This boy, he went on
about the Warmaster. Ivak’s teachers heard him and they reported it.”
“To the Arbites?”
She nodded. “Now people are talking. Or else they are not talking at all.”
Yosef’s lips thinned. “Everyone is uncertain,” he said, at length. “Everyone is
afraid of what’s behind the horizon… But this sort of thing… It’s foolishness.”
“I’ve heard rumours,” she began. “Stories from people who know people on other
worlds, in other systems.”
He had heard the same thing, hushed whispers in the corners of the precinct from
men who couldn’t moderate the sound of their voices. Rumour and counter-rumour.