Hidden Empire - Kevin J. Anderson [213]
The Mage-Imperator studied him. His voice was wary. "I am listening, Chairman."
"Both of our civilizations have grown large and powerful," Basil said. "Although we took different paths to our success, we each still build upon the greatness that already exists."
The Mage-Imperator looked skeptically at his human counterpart. He seemed annoyed. "Ildirans have already reached our pinnacle of culture, and we are content. We have no desire to climb upward into an empty sky."
The alien leader seemed to be testing the Chairman's mettle. Basil responded, "How else does one reach the stars, Mage-Imperator, but through continued climbing?"
The Chairman had studied decades of observations on the Ildiran Empire and analyzed the aliens' potential flaws to make certain the human race could surpass them. While Terrans continued to look forward and push ahead, Ildirans preferred to gaze backward, dwelling upon their past accomplishments. While the Hansa expanded into more and more new colonies, the Ildiran Empire had begun to shrink. Even the unruly Roamers had usurped the Ildiran ekti-processing industry, with the aliens' complete blessing. Basil thought the Mage-Imperator was a fool to allow such weakness. But right now the two races needed each other.
The corpulent Mage-Imperator shifted in his chrysalis chair and seemed to draw himself up, swelling his body size, making himself more intimidating.
"Before I consider an alliance, I must speak to you with blunt clarity, Chairman. I find to my dismay and annoyance that the Ildiran people have been drawn into this conflict against our wishes. The enemy aliens do not distinguish between humans and Ildirans. I resent the fact that you have inadvertently dragged us into a war in which we wanted no part."
Surprised at this, Basil took two breaths to calm himself so as not to react precipitously. "Excuse me, Mage-Imperator, but no one knows why these aliens launched their aggression. They have attacked Roamer skymines, our scientific observation station, and now your floating city on Qronha 3. It makes no sense. Our skymines operated without incident for well over a century. Ildiran ekti factories have been in operation far longer than that. Why should this enemy choose to strike now, without warning?"
The Mage-Imperator looked angry. Many years of experience were clearly apparent in his gaze, and Basil looked at him from across an age gulf of more than a century. The Ildiran leader stared at him in disbelief, then seemed to realize that the Chairman's puzzlement was not feigned.
"K'llar bekh! How can you not know? You humans caused all of this. You! You murdered millions of hydrogues." His long braid thrashed at his side. "Tell me, Chairman Wenceslas—is that not a sufficient provocation to war?"
97 KING FREDERICK
A spike-studded warglobe the size of a small asteroid streaked into the solar system and entered Earth orbit as fast as the distant-early-warning sensors could respond. Before the EDF could rally its troops, the gigantic diamond-hulled sphere disgorged a much smaller globe, like a droplet of dew, that made its way directly to the Hansa capital.
The crystal sphere hovered like an unexploded warhead above the sunlit towers of the Whisper Palace. While the military scrambled, the ball dropped down, crossed the Royal Canal, and hung in front of the immense arched Palace doorways.
Words thrummed out, vibrating from the murky soup inside the small liaison sphere, four meters in diameter. The voice, though not human, produced speech that was clearly understandable. "I speak for the hydrogues. I bring a message to the king of the rock dwellers." With a hissing blast, excess steam vented from tiny holes in the pressure vessel.
The royal guards moved about in a frenzy with weapons