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The Unnecessary Man
by
The Empire had to change tactics. Instead of steady expansion, she was forced into a deadly game of interstellar chess, making her plays carefully, so as not to touch off the explosive temper of her opponent.
It was not a situation to be handled by clumsy fools.
And Lord Senesin, the Prime Portfolio of the Imperial File, the elected leader of the Empire, the constitutional head of the Imperial Government, was accused, not only of being a clumsy fool, but of being a dangerous madman. The planet Bairnvell was an independent, autonomic ally of the Gehan Federation, and, although not actually a member of the Federation, was presumably under her protection. For the Imperial Fleet to go to the aid of rebels trying to overthrow Bairnvell’s lawful government seemed to be the act of an insane mind. The people of the Empire wouldn’t stand for it.
* * * * *
Colonel Lord Barrick Sorban was well aware of the temper of the people and of the situation that prevailed politically in the Empire–more so, in fact, than most men. He was also well aware that internal strife of a very serious nature could so dangerously weaken the Empire that the Gehan Federation would be able to attack and win.
His job was to cut off that sort of thing before it could gain momentum. His job was to maintain the Empire; his only superior was the Emperor himself; his subordinates hand-picked, well-trained, and, like himself, unobtrusive to the public eye. And not one of those subordinates knew who the colonel’s superior was.
The colonel strolled along the streets of Honolulu with all the courteous aplomb of a man who was both an officer and a gentleman of leisure. He dropped in at various respectable clubs and did various respectable things. He went into other places and did other things not so respectable. He gave certain orders to certain people and made certain odd arrangements. When everything had been set up to his satisfaction, he ate a leisurely dinner, topped it off with two glasses of Velaskan wine, read the tenth edition of the Globe, and strolled out to the street again, looking every inch the impeccable gentleman.
At ten minutes of eleven, he took a skycab to the fashionable apartment house where the Honorable Jon Senesin, son of the Prime Portfolio, made his home. The skycab deposited him on the roof at two minutes of eleven. The android doorman opened the entrance for him, and he took the drop chute down to the fifteenth floor. At precisely eleven o’clock, he was facing the announcer plate on Jon Senesin’s door.
Senesin opened the door. There was a queer look–half jubilant, half worried–on his face as he said: “Come in, my lord, come in. Care for a drink?”
“Don’t mind if I do, Jon. Brandy, if you have it.”
Young Senesin poured the brandy, speaking rapidly as he did. “I’ve made an appointment to get those tapes, my lord. I want you to go with me. If we can get them, we can break this whole fraud wide open. Wide open.” He handed the colonel a crystal goblet half filled with the clear, red-brown liquid. “Sorry I left so hurriedly this morning, but if that Heywood character had said another word I’d have broken his nose for him.”
The colonel took the goblet and looked into its depths. “Jon, what do you expect these tapes to prove?”
The young man’s face darkened. He walked across the spacious room, brandy goblet in hand, and sat down on the wall couch before he spoke.
“Just what I told you, my lord. I expect to prove that my father’s mind has been tampered with–that he is not responsible for the decisions that have been made in his name–that he is going to lose his position and his reputation and his career for something that he would never have done in his right mind–that he has been the duped pawn of someone else.”