The sum of all fears - Tom Clancy [467]
The crowd did not exult. In fact, there was no noise at all. Perhaps a collective intake of breath, a few murmured prayers from the more devout among those present; for whose souls the prayers were offered only they and their God could say. At once, those in the front row began to depart. A few from inside the crowd who'd been denied a view came to the fence line, but they stayed there for only a moment before going about their business. After the prescribed interval, the body parts would be collected and given a proper burial in accordance with the religion that each of them had defiled.
Jack didn't know what emotion he was supposed to feel. He'd seen enough death. He knew that much. But these deaths did not touch his heart at all, and now he wondered and worried a little about that.
"You asked me how history is made, Jack," Ali said. "You have just seen it."
"What do you mean?"
"You do not need us to tell you," Golovko said.
The men who started a war, or tried to, executed like criminals in the market square, Jack thought. Not a bad precedent.
"Maybe you're right, maybe it will make people think twice before the next time." That's an idea whose time has come.
"In all our countries," Ali said, "the sword is the symbol of justice an anachronism, perhaps, from a time when men acted as men. But a sword still has a use."
"Certainly it is precise," Golovko observed.
"So, Jack, you have fully left government service?" Ali asked, after a moment. Ryan turned away from the scene, just as everyone else had done.
"Yes, Your Highness."
"And those foolish "ethics" laws no longer apply. Good." Ali turned. The Special Forces officer appeared as though by magic. The salute he gave Prince Ali was the sort to impress Kipling. The sword came next. The scabbard was wrought gold encrusted with jewels. The hilt was gold and ivory, and you could see where parts of it had been worn down by generations of strong hands. Manifestly the weapon of a king.
"This is three hundred years old," Ali said, turning to Ryan. "It has been carried in peace and war by my ancestors. It even has a name - Breeze of Evening is the best I can do in English. It means more than that, of course. We wish you to have it, Dr Ryan, as a reminder of those who died - and those who did not, because of you. It has killed many times. His Majesty believes that the sword has killed enough."
Ryan took the scimitar from the Prince's hand. The gold scabbard was nicked and abraded by generations of sandstorms and battles, but Ryan saw that his reflection was not so terribly distorted as he might have feared. The blade, he saw, on drawing it partway, was mirror-bright, still rippled from the Damascus smith who'd shaped the steel into its fearful and effective purpose. Such a dichotomy, Ryan thought, smiling without knowing it, that something so beautiful could have so terrible a purpose. Such irony. And yet - He'd keep the sword, hang it in a place of honor, look at it from time to time to remind himself of what it and he had done. And just maybe -"Killed enough?" Ryan slid the sword back into its sheath and let it fall to his side. "Yes, Your Highness. I think we all have."
* * *
AFTERWORD
Now that the tale is told, a few things need to be made clear. All of the material in this novel relating to weapons technology and fabrication is readily available in any one of dozens of books. For reasons which I hope will be obvious to the reader, certain technical details have been