“Good morning, my dear.”
Cortin greeted her subject cheerily as soon as she
entered the third-stage room. Yes, Mike had had
it cleaned; except for the misery and fatigue in her
subject’s attitude, there was no evidence of
what he’d been through the night before.
“Are you ready for today’s session?”
The man licked his lips, then said,
“That captain who was here before called you
Azrael. What’s that mean who
are you? What’re you gonna do to me?”
“Your education has been sadly
neglected if you do not know the Angel of Death,”
Cortin said easily. “I will carry out the
sentence you earned when you joined the Brotherhood,
eventually. Before that, however, we will share
some entertainment, and you will tell me everything
you know about the Brothers of Freedom.”
“Like hell I will!” But
the man’s voice held no conviction, and Cortin
smiled.
“Oh, not without some resistance,
of course.” She turned to the cabinets,
began laying out instruments and drugs where the subject
could see them, taking her time to give him plenty
of opportunity to study each one. “I have
restricted myself to field-level drugs and instruments
until now; I really should be experimenting with the
more advanced techniques, now that I have easy access
to them. Some of these do look interesting.”
She picked up several of the instruments again, one
at a time, looking thoughtfully from instrument to
prisoner and back, but there was no unusual reaction
from him.
“The simple infliction of pain
holds no particular terrors for you, I see,”
she commented. “Good, then you can demonstrate
some of the drugs for me.” That got a
reaction, as she’d expected from the previous
night; he tried, with little success, to hold back
a gasp. “Not algetin, I am quite familiar
with that, and you have already given me an excellent
demonstration of eroticine.” She studied
labels on various little jars, again taking her time,
stretching his anticipation and fear. “We
can also eliminate these, I think, as they are primarily
for medical purposes; my medic can handle them, if
necessary. That still leaves quite a selection,
however. Hmm, this looks interesting.”
She filled a syringe, turned to him. “Hallucinogens
are not really too useful as interrogation drugs,
because of both their primary function and their unpredictability.
But I cannot resist one called ’demon drops’
and described as causing both hallucinations and rapid
mood changes so you get to try it.”
“Keep that hell-stuff away from me!”
“There is no point in fighting,
you know,” Cortin said as she approached him.
A light coming on caught her attention; she raised
a hand in greeting to whoever had entered the observation
room, surprised when she saw the clock at how long
she’d been working. She dismissed that,
though, and made the injection in spite of her subject’s
ineffectual struggles. As she’d told him,
there was absolutely no point in fighting when you
were shackled by wrists and ankles, but she had no
real objection if one of her subjects wanted to; it
merely emphasized their relative positions.
“There now we will see what happens.”
“You go straight to Hell, Bitch!”
“Your colleagues tried to send
me there once,” Cortin reminded him with a smile.
“Now I return the favor, more successfully.
Should that be my destination, I have excellent reasons
to believe you will be there waiting for me.”
There was nothing more she could do until the drug
took effect, which according to the label should be
quickly, but even a brief time should be enough to
see who the observer was.
Bradford greeted her as she entered
the dimly-lit room with its large window of one-way
glass. “Lieutenant Powell didn’t
have very much except what he already told you that
was one reason you got him to practice on, after all so
I thought I’d come down and watch for a bit.
What’d you give him?”
“Demon drops.” Cortin
shrugged. “I know hallucinogens aren’t
recommended but I learned a long time ago
to play my hunches, and I think this’ll break
him.”
“I was curious, not objecting,”
Bradford said mildly. “I’ve never
had any luck with it, but others have; I don’t
argue with what works.”
“I hope this does,” Cortin
said, watching her subject closely. “If
it’s what the prewars called a bad trip, and
he remembers, it should.”
“It doesn’t look like
it’s going to be a good one,” Bradford
said, chuckling.
“I think you’re right,”
Cortin agreed. Her subject was showing signs
of fear, small as yet but promising. “And
it looks like I ought to get back to him. If
you have any suggestions, I’ll be glad to hear
them.”
“I don’t expect to, but if I do, I’ll
let you know.”
Cortin returned to her subject, pleased
to see his fear become more open when she entered
the room. She wondered what he was seeing; he
hadn’t been visibly afraid of her only minutes
ago, so it had to be something more than a woman in
gray coveralls. As she approached him, he started
to sweat, trembling, his eyes bulging as he fought
to escape whatever he saw. “No go
away, please leave me alone don’t
touch me!”
She must be something impressive,
Cortin thought. A demon such as the one the
drug was named for, perhaps, to get such a strong reaction.
“Why not?” she asked. “What
do you think I am?”
“Lord Azrael,” the man
sobbed. “Go away send the Inquisitor
back! I’ll tell her everything just
leave me alone!”
So he’d taken her code name
and clothed her in that persona, Cortin thought.
Fitting, that he should think he was dying at the
hands of the real Angel of Death. “Tell
me, mortal. Thy life is forfeit, but if thou
shouldst speak quickly and truthfully, I will make
thy passing easy. She will not be so merciful.”
“You’re burning me . . . not so close
. . .”
True enough, his skin was reddening
as if from sunburn. Cortin had read that something
believed strongly enough could affect the body, but
this was the first time she’d seen it.
She wanted to go closer, test the phenomenon further,
but getting information was more important than indulging
her curiosity; she stepped back instead. “Speak
to me, mortal. Quickly, before the Inquisitor
returns and I must leave thee to the slow, terrible
death she intends for thee.” Cortin had
used the “good cop/bad cop” tactic before,
many times it was, for all its age, astonishingly
reliable though this was the first time
she’d played both parts for one prisoner.
The man sagged in his chains.
“Better you than her, I guess . . . what do
you want to know?”
His fear was still there; Cortin read
the signs easily. But she could also see defeat,
almost resignation. He believed the Angel of
Death, where he’d had some hope, however small,
under the Inquisitor. “Tell me first of
the attack planned on the holy Sisters of Succor.”
He confirmed what Powell had told
her, adding that the time was set for the High Mass
celebrating the Order’s founding, and the force
involved would be about fifty men. Yes, it was
to be a massacre like the one at the convalescent
hospital the previous year, but he didn’t know
why such attacks were carried out or what the Brotherhood’s
purpose was; he had joined because farm life was boring
and he wanted adventure. He’d tried for
Enforcement, but been refused because they thought
him unstable. He was quite bitter about being
called unstable by a bunch of oversexed killers in
uniform, and liked taking part in raids just to get
back at them for the insult.
No, he didn’t know how many
Lawrence Shannons there were; no one did, except the
Raidmaster himself and maybe the Brotherhood’s
High Council. Ten or fifteen, he thought, but
that was only a guess. He wasn’t sure
whether or not the real Shannon would lead the convent
raid, but he didn’t think so; he’d heard
rumors of a major raid around Christmas in one of
the other Systems, and the Raidmaster was supposed
to be working on that one. No, he didn’t
know any more about it; it had been only a rumor.
The lesser Raidmaster on the convent job might know,
yes, though he didn’t think it likely.
No, he didn’t know who’d been Raidmaster
on the hospital job; he thought probably the real one,
though. That was all he knew, honestly; now he
would be grateful if Lord Azrael would let him see
a priest before killing him.
Cortin swore silently. She wanted
to send his soul to Hell, where she was sure it belonged but
it looked like his hallucination had thrown the fear
of God into him, and he was about to make a deathbed
repentance. At least she wouldn’t have
to officiate this time, she told herself; she couldn’t
be Azrael and Reverend Mother Cortin at the same time.
“Thou hast that right,” she conceded,
beckoning Bradford to join them. Blast it, from
now on she’d simply have to make it a point
to have Mike or Dave nearby, in case it happened again!
When Bradford entered, Cortin left
the room. She didn’t care to even witness
a Brother’s repentance and forgiveness, though
she admitted unhappily to herself that she would carry
them out again if she had to; she simply wouldn’t
like doing it, any more than she had the first time.
She took advantage of the break to
use the red phone and pass along the additional information
she’d gotten not to His Majesty directly
this time; the one who answered didn’t sound
at all familiar, and promised to pass it along as
soon as His Majesty was free. Then she waited,
with growing impatience, for Bradford to finish with
her subject.
What, in God’s Most Holy Name,
was going on in there? Surely it couldn’t
take this long to confess even a Brother’s obviously-lengthy
list of sins, then receive absolution and Extreme Unction!
When Bradford finally emerged, he
was smiling. “He’s all yours, Joan.
Nice job you did, getting the information and saving
a soul that doesn’t happen often.
Of course, not many Inquisitors have the help of
a blazing Angel of Death, either.”
“Mike told him my code name;
the demon drops and his own imagination did the rest.”
Cortin’s mouth quirked. “I would’ve
preferred a more conventional interrogation, but I
have to admit he had good reason to be afraid of drugs.
And I’ll keep ‘Azrael’s’ promise;
he’ll die as quickly and easily as I can manage,
even though by rights he ought to suffer as much as
his victims did.”
“I think you can safely trust
God to take care of that,” Bradford said drily.
“I can’t tell you what he confessed, of
course, but I can tell you I’m positive he’ll
be spending a long time in Purgatory.”
Cortin grinned. “I’m
sure he deserves every year of it.” All
that was left was killing him, so she got out of her
coveralls, put her tunic back on, settled her gunbelt
into place, and re-entered the third-stage room.
Bradford had freed the prisoner; he was kneeling facing
away from her, toward the room’s crucifix, his
attitude making it obvious he was praying. Cortin
frowned, then nodded to herself, silently drawing
her pistol. There were far worse ways to die
than quickly, while speaking to God, and while he
deserved one of those, she had promised otherwise.
She took careful aim and shot him in the back of the
head.
That, she thought immediately, had
been far kinder to him than it had to her! She’d
forgotten just how loud a heavy-caliber handgun could
be in a confined area, and her ears were ringing painfully.
It also made quite a mess at this close a range;
blood and brains splattered most of the wall he’d
been facing, including the crucifix. The clean-up
crew could handle the wall and body, but she felt
like taking care of the crucifix herself; careful
to avoid getting the mess on her uniform, she took
it into the bathroom to clean it.
As she did, she found herself thinking
about the man the crucifix represented. Jeshua
had become incarnate and sacrificed Himself to protect
humanity from the results of sin, though protection
from sin itself would have to wait for the promised
Protector. In the meantime, Jeshua’s sacrifice
was on behalf of anyone willing to take advantage of
it and Ivan had told her often enough it
was as much an Inquisitor’s job to correct as
to punish. Maybe, she thought, she was starting
to get that through her thick head, because despite
her personal distaste for the idea of a Brother’s
repenting, there was a sense of accomplishment at
this one’s. It also helped, of course,
that Brad had complimented her on being able to manage
both information and repentance!
She grinned at herself as she dried
the crucifix and put it on the desk in the suite’s
office. If Shannon was Shayan, which since her
vision looked more likely than not, turning Brothers
from him to God would be an even better revenge on
him than the traditional version would be on them
. . . even though she still intended to take that kind
on the ones who’d helped rape and maim her.
There was a message on her ground-floor
office desk: His Majesty wanted to see her at
her earliest convenience between interrogations.
It didn’t specify dress uniform, and this close
to the Palace she didn’t need bodyguards, so
less than fifteen minutes later she found herself
sitting sitting! beside His Majesty’s
desk, sipping a cup of the best ginger tea she could
remember tasting and still shocked by the warmth of
His Majesty’s welcome. It was awesome enough
meeting him, though really it was no odder than paying
a routine courtesy call on one’s new commanding
officer; it just felt that way, having the High King
himself as your direct superior. His Majesty
was clearly familiar with such a reaction, because
he was carrying the burden of the conversation until
she had a chance to recover. When she began to
settle down, he smiled. “Reports of your
ability weren’t exaggerated, Colonel. I’m
quite pleased with the results you’ve gotten
so far.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty. I’ll keep
doing my best.”
“I’m certain you will.
Is Harmony Lodge to your liking and adequately equipped?”
“More than adequately, Sire.
I’m still overwhelmed by all of it.”
“You are to let me know immediately
if there’s anything you need or want.
We can’t take major action against the Brotherhood
without the information you provide, which makes you
the most important single person in this operation.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
Cortin took a sip of her tea, savoring the ginger
tang. It was hard to believe she was all that
important she certainly didn’t feel
it but her truthsense said His Majesty did
believe it, so she had to. “If I may make
a suggestion?”
“As one of my Household, that’s
both your privilege and your duty; go ahead.”
“Then I’d say the attack
on the convent would be a good time to activate the
Strike Force. And with Your Majesty’s permission,
my men and I would like to participate in the convent’s
defense.”
“That’s three things,”
King Mark said. “Activating the strike
force at the next terror attack is something I had
already intended; it will be done. Your men
may participate in the convent’s defense if they
wish and Colonel Bradford permits.” He
paused. “I am afraid, though, that I must
forbid your participation in action against anyone
except those you have a personal interest in.
You’re far too valuable to risk that way, and
if I weren’t afraid of losing you, I’d
forbid you participating in action against even personal
enemies. It would be best for the kingdom if
you could resist doing so, but ” he
paused, giving her a rueful smile, “while I
pray for miracles for my people, I’ve learned
not to expect them.”
Cortin wanted to object, but reminded
herself that she’d known about the restriction
when she’d taken the job. “As Your
Majesty commands but it was worth a try.”
The King chuckled. “And
I can’t fault you for making the effort; you
wouldn’t have joined the Strike Force if you
hadn’t wanted to see action. I’m
afraid you’ll see more than I want you to, at
that. Now, if I may change the subject, the
Royal Press Office has received a number of requests
for interviews with you. Whether you give them
or not is your choice.”
“In that case, Sire, I’d
rather not, at least until I finish settling in.”
She’d rather not do it even then; she’d
given more than enough interviews at the Academy and
after graduation. One reason she’d done
so much field work was to get away from reporters.
But she needed publicity favorable publicity to
get support for her family changes, so she’d
have to at least pretend to overcome that dislike.
“They’ll have to content
themselves with the official biography for the present,
then,” the King said. “The Press
Office will need a current photo, though; you can
go by sometime this week and provide it. You’ll
be safe from reporters as long as you’re in the
Palace compound or Harmony Lodge, but I can’t
guarantee the same outside; that will be up to your
team.”
“I don’t really see any
need to leave, except on missions,” Cortin said.
“Harmony Lodge alone has everything I need.”
“As you wish,” the King
said. “I certainly won’t insist on
you being exposed to any unnecessary danger.
But there will be an official reception tomorrow
in your honor; you should come, unless you’re
in the middle of an interrogation.”
Cortin was tempted to arrange it so
she was, but as far as she was concerned, His Majesty
saying she should come made it an order. “I’ll
do my best to be there, Sire. Full dress uniform?”
“Or formal civilan wear.
Though that would mean being unarmed, so I don’t
expect it.” The King raised an eyebrow.
“You do realize you are the only person other
than members of my personal guard who is allowed in
the Royal Presence with a firearm?”
“What?” Cortin stared
at him for an instant, then glanced at the pistol
on her hip. “No, Sire I hadn’t
even thought about it.”
The King smiled, then stood.
“We have no doubt of Your Excellency’s
loyalty, and We wish you a long and healthy life as
Our Inquisitor.”
The audience was over, obviously;
Cortin rose and bowed, then began backing out of the
office.
“Those who carry firearms in
Our presence,” the King said drily, “also
have leave to turn their backs on Us.”
Cortin bowed again, then turned.
As she left, the King allowed himself a brief frown.
He was certain of his Inquisitor’s loyalty,
or she wouldn’t have the position but
he couldn’t deny that she made him uncomfortable.
Male Inquisitors were disturbing enough to be around;
a woman who enjoyed the deliberate infliction of pain
seemed worse, somehow. And one with Colonel
Cortin’s incredible talent at it was decidedly
unnerving.
On the other hand, both Edward and
Ursula were thoroughly taken with her, which was unusual
for both of them, so Her Excellency must have qualities
he couldn’t see, even allowing for her scheme
to let them have heirs. He touched the cartridge
at his neck, frowning again. Unusual qualities,
for these to be so popular with the troops that many
insisted on having one before going out in the field
and swore by their efficacy. Maybe he ought
to have her bless a couple of cases of them, make
them standard issue . . .
Back to the subject, he thought, leaning
back. The idea of polygamy had seemed obscene
when Edward first mentioned it, but the longer he
thought about it, the more reasonable it seemed to
become. As a matter of morality, her argument
that monogamy at this point was tantamount to racial
suicide had a certain validity, and suicide was a sin.
And her argument that marriage laws could be changed
was also valid; the Modern Saints had been branded
heretics not because of their polygamy but because
they had claimed Shayan to be Jeshua’s brother.
And the theologians were still arguing about that
. . .
Then there was his responsibility,
as Sovereign, for his subjects’ welfare, which
tied in with his personal desire to leave his descendants
a prosperous, expanding group of Systems . . . which
he wouldn’t be able to do without some fairly
drastic action. If he didn’t, in a few
generations there would be no Kingdom Systems a
fact he’d known for some time, but had avoided
thinking about because there seemed to be no solution.
Now, though, he’d been handed
a chance, if he could arrange to implement it.
Keep Cortin the focus of whatever happened as a result,
of course; even the best Inquisitor was more expendable
than royalty. From Edward’s report on the
airborne conference, Bishop-Colonel Bradford ought
to be willing to help get Church approval for Enforcement
to formalize the informal group marriages it was rumored
they had in some of the more remote areas.
Remote areas? The High King
smiled as an idea took form. He’d have
to discuss it with his lesser monarchs, because of
their agreement that all Royal Inquisitors hold the
same rank but it promised a place for Cortin
to offer anyone who wanted a group marriage but didn’t
want the notoriety that would inevitbly accompany
the first ones. It would also a not
inconsiderable benefit silence My Lord of
New Colorado’s complaints about having to administer
territories that cost his Dukedom more than the revenues
they generated. Those complaints were justified,
the King admitted but he was incredibly
tired of hearing them!
That would have to wait, though.
The King switched on his intercom, spoke to his secretary.
“Peter, get hold of Bishop-Colonel Bradford.
I want to see him as soon as he can get here.”
Cortin disliked the reception, leaving
as soon as she thought it would be socially acceptable,
intending to indulge herself with a new subject.
Once she got back to the Lodge, though, she decided
she was too tired to do a proper job of starting an
interrogation, and Brady said most of the men had
gone to the New Eden joyhouse. So she might
as well make an early night of it; after a hot soaking
bath, she went to bed and quickly fell asleep.
Fifteen years disappeared; it was
the night after Graduation, and Mike was holding her
close after their first lovemaking, smiling down at
her. “Marry me, Joanie?”
“Of course, beloved.”
Cortin returned his smile, giving him a lingering
kiss.
They were married soon after, and
she found that married life agreed with her; she remained
in the Service, but instead of going into the field
as she’d planned, she took postgraduate work
and became an Inquisitor. That let her spend
time with her husband, when he wasn’t out on
a mission, and with the three children they had.
The youngest was almost a year old when Mike came
home with a pleased expression that told her he’d
contracted the Satyr Plague.
They lay together in the dark warmth,
savoring each other, not hurrying their caresses in
spite of their desire. He wanted her to lie still,
let him pleasure her with his new capacity
Her bedroom door opened, bringing
her awake with her gun in her hand. “Who’s
there?”
“Mike I hadn’t
expected you to be asleep this early. I hope
I didn’t interrupt a good dream.”
Cortin put the gun down. “Only
the best I’ve had in years. Come on in,
if you want; is there something wrong?”
“No, just thought you might
like some normal company after that Palace to-do.”
He entered the room, the hallway light showing, to
her pleasure, that he was already undressed.
“What was the dream?”
“Graduation night, then the
first time we got together after you managed to catch
the satyr bug.” She was not going to tell
him about the impossible marriage and children . .
. Letting amused irritation show in her voice,
she went on, “Or would have, until you interrupted
yourself. Interested in starting over?”
“Any time,” Odeon said
with a chuckle. “Especially since it seems
this is one I owe myself!”