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His superior commended him warmly, after a few days. “Gordon, I was afraid your trouble might have slowed you down. But you keep on like this, and you'll be an assistant-manager some day.”

Gordon could have shouted with crazy laughter, the suggestion seemed so fantastic. He might be an assistant-manager?

He, who as prince of the Empire's royal house had feasted with the star-kings at Throon? He, who had captained the hosts of the Kingdoms in the last great fight off Deneb? He, who had unloosed destruction on the Cloud and had riven space itself?

But he did not laugh. He said quietly. “That would be a fine position for me, sir.”

And then on an evening two weeks after his return as he sat sick with heartache in his rooms, there came a knock on his door.

Gordon was surprised when he found outside it a woman he had never seen before, a pale, dark-haired lovely woman who looked at him with strange shyness.

“My name is Ruth Allen,” she began hesitantly, her eyes not leaving his face.

“Ruth Allen?” he repeated surprisedly. He had heard the name somewhere before.

Then he remembered. This was the woman Willis had mentioned, whose mind had been lost by shock and who had been lying in permanent coma in the same hospital where Zarth Arn had been confined.

“Why, I thought that they said you would never recover-” Gordon began.

Then his voice trailed off as he stared frozenly into the woman's pale, beautiful face.

Somehow it was as though that face had become transparent, as though through its features and through the dark eyes he saw another face, other eyes, another woman.

It was mad, it was insane. But not for his, life could Gordon repress the hoarse cry that broke from his lips as he held out his hands toward the woman.

“Lianna.”

SHE stumbled forward, her arms went around his neck, her head was buried against his cheek as she sobbed.

“John Gordon. You recognized me, even in this body I-I knew you would!”

“Lianna, am I dreaming?” Gordon choked. “It can't be you, here in this time.”

“But it is!” she cried. Tear-glistening eyes looked up into his face-eyes that were different but that were Lianna's eyes.

“Zarth Arn did it, John Gordon!” she was crying. “He told me the whole story when he came back to Throon. Told me how it was you, in his body, whom I really loved.

“And when I told him that I still loved you, the real you, and always would, then Zarth Arn with his apparatus sent me back to your time as I begged. He had known of the woman here whose body was healthy but whose mind was lost forever. He sent me back into her body, so that I could come to you.”

Gordon was stunned, overwhelmed. “Good God, Lianna, you can't do this. Your own body-”

She smiled up at him-Lianna's smile. “The body of the Princess Lianna of Fomalhaut will lie forever in coma in a vault in Throon. What are differences of body to us who each love the real other?”

“I can't let you do it,” he said wildly. “You've got to go back!”

Her old imperiousness flashed. “I am here to stay, and I will not let you say any more about it.”

Tears came to his eyes, as he gathered her more tightly in his arms and pressed his cheek against her soft hair.

“Lianna. Lianna.”

Later, sitting by his window as twilight deepened to night, she told him of Zarth Arn's return to Throon, of his amazement and shaken gratitude when he learned of what Gordon had done in his body.

“He wept when he told me of it, John Gordon. He could not speak, when he learned how you had fought for the Empire.”

She looked up at the starry heavens. “They are there now at faraway Throon, Zarth and his Murn, Jhal Arn and Zora, all of them. What are time and space but distances?”

Gordon voiced the one doubt that still troubled his deep happiness.

“But Lianna, in that other age you were princess of a star-kingdom. This old Earth may seem dull and half-barbaric to you.”

She smiled up at him. “No, John Gordon. It is your world and mine, now. And it seems a quaint and quiet world for lovers, after the wars and intrigues of the star-worlds I knew.”

Gordon made no further protest. He was too content to sit with her in his arms, looking out across the lights of New York at the blaze of the galaxy across the sky.

He had sought adventure but he had found far more. Across two hundred thousand years he had found and won a bride, a daughter of distant suns, a princess of the star-kingdoms yet to be.

The End