
Raj shrugged. "They had powers before the Fall. The Spirit withdrew them when they proved unworthy."
Thom nodded absently; that was from the Creed. "I still think this was a naval installation," he said, picking up a plastic sign from one desk. It was made of two strips joined at one long edge; one side was blank, and the other bore black letters in the Old Namerique tongue. Wez cainna bie fyr'd: slavs godda bie sold. His lips moved silently, construing it first into modern Namerique, and then into his native Sponglish. He frowned absently. Well, of course, he thought.
"I don't know," Raj replied, heading cautiously out into the corridor again. "The Book of the Fall — hey, there's a stairwell leading down here, hand me the paintstick again — says the military joined the Rebellion." They had both sat through enough droning sermons on that.
Thom's teeth flashed in a grin. "Just as my own interpretation — and please keep this from the Invigiles Against Heresy, will you? — I'd say that the Brigade and the Squadron and the others were pretty low-echelon units, out in the wilds when the Fall came. They didn't cause the breakup of the Holy Federation, they just seized power where they could when we were cut off from the Stars."
Raj felt a slight discomfort; that was not outside the canons of interpretation, but it was dangerously free-thinking. "Come on," he said. "Two more levels, then we go back."
* * *
"That's a light," Thom said in a hiss as they turned the corner. His foot brushed aside a crumbling human femur; they had seen enough skeletons on this level to grow blasé. A brittle pile of brown-gray bone, hardly marked by the teeth of the rats, bits of rope and stiff leather and rusted metal scattered about it.
Raj squinted, then turned off his lamp. His friend followed suit, and they waited for their eyes to adjust.
