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Maliden’s breathing was becoming more ragged, as if the effort of speaking so much was robbing him of his last remaining strength. "You mean you don’t want to understand. The newsriders are all abuzz with Toroca’s theory of evolution, of the survival of the fittest, and how that process changes species. Toroca thinks this is a new idea. He’s wrong. My order has understood it since ancient times, understood it because we practiced it. We were the agent of selection. Every generation, we made sure only the strongest survived. And that did change us, changed us as a race. With each passing generation, we became more territorial, not less. We grew increasingly violent. Yes, we became hardier, too, but at a terrible cost. We’re crippled as a people, unable to work together. It became apparent during the reign of Dybo’s mother that it was only a matter of time before we were driven to war. To war, Afsan! To killing and killing and killing until there was no one left to kill."

"A Quintaglio does not kill other Quintaglios," said Afsan.

Maliden coughed. "So teach the scrolls. And yet we are killers. What happened here was echoed throughout Land: dagamant, the streets flowing with blood. We are poised at the edge of a cliff, Afsan — on the verge of a massive, worldwide territorial frenzy that will go on and on and on." He paused, catching his breath. "Aggression reigns over us; it’s the trait we’ve bred for. And Lends was too aggressive a leader." He paused again. "You met her; do you not agree?"

Afsan thought back to the first and only time he had met Len-Lends. He had gone to seek permission to have young prince Dybo accompany him on the rites of passage, both the ritual first hunt and the pilgrimage. Alone in Lends’s ruling room, she had held up her left hand, the three metal bracelets of her office clinking together as she did so. "I will allow him to go with you, but" — she unsheathed her first claw — "you will" — and then her second — "be" — the third — "responsible" — the fourth — "for his" — the fifth — "safe return." She had let the light in the room glint off her polished claws for several heartbeats as she flexed her fingers. A threat. A threat of physical violence; the very leader of all the people deliberately striking fear into the heart of a child.

"Yes," said Afsan at last. "She was aggressive." Maliden took in breath, a long, shuddery sound. "When she laid her first clutch, the clutch from which the new Emperor would be drawn, I saw a chance to try to change that. I selected the strongest male — it was indeed Rodlox — and sent him far away. The others, in descending order of strength, were sent to the remaining provinces. And Dybo, smallest and weakest of them all, did indeed remain here."

"But why did you do this with the imperial children? Why not with the general population?"

Maliden winced; he was in great pain. "If it had worked, perhaps we would have. But remember, although I am head bloodpriest, I have my opponents, even within my order. It would have been difficult to keep such a change from becoming public. This was easier. Although a closely guarded secret, all eight imperial children always got to live ever since the days of Larsk; I made no change in that. I could not be sure of the results of my — my experiment, to use one of your words — if I’d done it differently."

"A breeding experiment."

"Yes."

"And it was a success."

"In most ways," said Maliden, his voice now much fainter than when he’d begun speaking. "Dybo is the best ruler we’ve ever had; you know that to be true. Without an equitable person such as him on the throne slab, you’d never have gotten your exodus project off the ground, so to speak. Indeed, you’d be dead — long since executed." He paused.

Afsan, uncomfortable in the prolonged crouch, rose to his feet and rocked back on his tail. "Incredible."

"Every word is true, Afsan." Maliden’s attenuated voice was all but lost in the room.

"Incredible," Afsan said again.

"You see the priesthood as your enemy; as the opponent of science. I can understand that, I suppose, for it was a priest, Det-Yenalb, who put a knife point into each of your eyes. But that was Yenalb alone, and even he thought what he was doing was for the good of the people."

Afsan nodded slowly. "I know that."

"And I know that what you are doing is also for the good of the people," said Maliden.

"Thank you."

"But, now, please accept that what I did was likewise for the common good."

Afsan was quiet for a time. "I accept it."

Maliden let his breath out. It took a long time, as though his lungs were so congested that the air was stymied in its attempts to escape. "I’m coming to an interesting moment, Afsan," Maliden said at last. "I’ve been a priest for a long time. I’ve told others what to believe about God, about life after death. Soon, I’ll find out for myself if I’ve been right."

Afsan nodded. "It’s something we all wonder about."

"But I’m supposed to know. And, here, when it counts most of all, I find that I don’t. I really, down deep, don’t know that’s about to happen to me."

"I don’t know, either, Maliden." A pause. "Are you afraid?"

A voice almost nonexistent: "Yes."

"Would you like me to stay with you?"

"It is much to ask."

"I was with my master, Saleed, when he passed on. I was with my son, Drawtood, when he passed on, too."

"What was it like?"

"I didn’t see Drawtood, of course, but Saleed was … calm. He seemed ready."

"I’m not sure I am."

"I’m not sure I’ll ever be, either."

"But, yes, Afsan, I would like you to stay."

"I will."

"When I’m gone, will you tell Dybo that he was indeed the weakest?"

"He’s my friend."

Maliden sighed. "Of course."

"And I would never hurt my friend."

"Thank you," Maliden said.

They waited quietly together.

Musings of The Watcher

I, too, waited quietly, waited for millions of years.

I missed the Jijaki. None of the other worlds I had seeded had yet borne sapient life, although I had hopes for some of them. But my best prospects, I was sure, were the mammal planet and the dinosaur moon. I watched anxiously while this galaxy completed a quarter-revolution, desperately afraid that I had miscalculated, that, because of my interference, no intelligent life would evolve on either world.

But on the reptiles’ new home, despite the shock of transplantation, the slow and steady increase in brain-body ratios continued unabated. Likewise, the mammals, now that all niches were open to them on the Crucible, continued to climb up the same curve.

And, at last, intelligent life appeared, nearly simultaneously, on both worlds.

The dominant land life on the Crucible eventually came to call itself Humanity and to call their world Earth. In a place that came to be known as Canada, human geologists found the Burgess shale, fine-grained fossil-rich stones dating right from what they called the Cambrian explosion, a vast diversification of life, with dozens of new, fundamentally different body plans appearing virtually simultaneously.

Almost all of these body plans died out quickly on the Crucible, although I transplanted specimens of them to many worlds. One of those, the five-eyed, long-trunked Opabinia, was the ancestor of the Jijaki, those long-gone cousins the humans would never know.

For their part, on the moon I’d moved them to, the intelligent beings descended from Earth’s dinosaurs — in particular, from a dwarf tyrannosaur called Nanotyrannus — named themselves Quintaglios, "the People of Land."

I thought I had succeeded. I thought I had allowed both sentient forms to flourish. But it eventually became horribly apparent that there was another factor I had failed to consider.