The handlers behind Murini, with a continent to rule, suddenly needed enough hands to carry out their orders. Legitimate Guild having retired and deserted the headquarters in droves, refusing to do the things the new Guild Council orderedâthe Shadow Guild was suddenly in a bind. Controlling Guild Headquarters was one thing. Controlling the membership had proved something else altogether. Controlling the whole country had finally depended on misleading the membership.
And how had this shadowy splinter of the Guild proceeded, thenâthis old man, these officers, suddenly in charge of everything, building a structure of lies? A small group of their elite had a shared conservative philosophy. Its middle tiers werenât so theoreticalâor as skilled. Perhaps in their general recruitment, theyâd given a little pass to those about to fail the next level, let certain people through one higher wicket, and then told them they were making mistakes and they would take certain orders or have their deficiency made known. That was one theory that Algini held. It had yet to be proved.
Early on, for the four decades before the coup, the nascent Shadow Guild had taken very small actions, carrying on a clever and quiet agenda, exacerbating regional quarrels, objecting to any approach to humans, constantly trying to gain political ground. The Assassinsâ Guild, bodyguards to almost every person of note in the aishidiâtat,
knew
what went on behind closed doors.
But when a second human presence had arrived in the heavens, when Tabini had named the paidhi-aiji a lord of the aishidiâtat, claimed half the space station, and let the aiji-dowager take over operations in the heavensâthat had not only scared the whole world, it had upset a long, slow agenda. Technological change had
poured
down from the heavens. There was suddenly a working agreement with the ship-humans. Atevi had become allies with the humans on Mospheira. And from very little changeâchange suddenly proliferated, while the world wondered what was happening up there and who really
was
in charge?
Tabini had fortified himself, anticipating opposition to his embracing human alliance: heâd set his key people into the space station, out of reach of assassination, and then sent the aiji-dowager, his heir, and the paidhi-aijiâas far as the world could conceptualize itâoff the edge of the universe.
His allies had been upset.
His enemies had been alarmed.
The little old man in the Guild, seeing the world going aside from any future he had planned, had seen a need to strike nowâand heâd done it, sure his people would be commanding the Assassinsâ Guild and theyâd gain immediate control, for a complete reversal of Tabiniâs policy.
Heâd been wrong. Not only had the middle-tier Assassinsâ Guild officers turned obstructionist when Murini took power, the upper echelons had organized to fight back. Other indispensable guilds had taken heart and declined to cooperate: the Scholars, the Treasurers, even Transportation had balked.
Then Murini himself had proven hard to manage.
To take over the continent, to inflict the terror theyâd instilled, and to do the deeds theyâd done, the Shadow Guild had had to resort, ultimately, to the three-month recruit given a photo and an entirely illegal mission.
The day the coup had moved to assassinate Tabiniâa fact they all had known from early last yearâthe Assassinsâ Guild Council had been taken by surprise.
But Tabini
himself
hadnât been caught so easilyâwhether by accident, or a feeling of unease or the action of his very skilled bodyguard. The Assassins who had attacked Tabiniâs residence had gone in flawlessly, very high-level, as Algini put it, meaning people of extreme skill, with absolutely no leaks in their operation . . . and one could, Algini had said, almost guess
which
unit.
But with all that expertise,
Bella Andre
S. A. Carter
Doctor Who
Jacqueline Colt
Dan Bucatinsky
Kathryn Lasky
Jessica Clare
Debra Clopton
Sandra Heath
Phyllis Reynolds Naylor