Empire Of Man 3 - March to the Stars

Free Empire Of Man 3 - March to the Stars by John David & Ringo Weber

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Authors: John David & Ringo Weber
closed it.
    “Yes, Your Highness?” Kosutic said softly. “I take it there's something about that statement that bothers you?”
    “Not about your observation,” Roger said as Bebi triggered the notional charge and rushed through the resulting imaginary hole. The prince had set his helmet to project the “shoot house” in see-through mode, and the team seemed to be fighting phantoms in a ghost building as he watched. Combined with his question, the . . . otherworldly nature of their opponents sent something very much like a shiver down his spine.
    “It was that last comment,” he said. “I've been wondering. . . . Why is Satanism the primary religion of Armagh? I mean, a planet settled by Irish and other Roman Catholic groups. That seems a bit . . . strange,” he finished, and the sergeant major let out a chuckle that turned into a liquid laugh Roger had never heard from her before.
    “Oh, Satan, is that all? The reason is because the winners write the history books, Your Highness.”
    “That doesn't explain things,” Roger protested, pulling at a strand of hair. “You're a High Priestess, right? That would be the equivalent of—an Episcopal bishop, I guess.”
    “Oh, not a bishop!” Kosutic laughed again. “Not one of those evil creatures! Angels of the Heavens, they are!” Roger felt his eyes trying to cross, and she smiled at his expression and took pity on him.
    "Okay, if you insist, Your Highness, here's the deal.
    “Armagh was a slow-boat colony, as you know. The original colonists were primarily from Ireland, on Old Earth, with a smattering from the Balkans. Now, Ireland had a bloody history long before Christianity, but the whole Protestant/Catholic thing eventually got out of hand.”
    “We studied the nuking of Belfast at the Academy as an example of internal terrorism taken to a specific high,” Roger agreed.
    “Yes, and what was so screwed up about those Constables was that they killed as many—or more—of their own supporters as they did Catholics.” She shrugged. "Religious wars are . . . bad. But Armagh was arguably worse, even in comparison to the Belfast Bomb.
    "The original colonists were Eire who wanted to escape the religious bickering that was still going on in Ireland but keep their religion. They didn't want freedom from religion, only freedom from argument about it. So they took only Catholics.
    “Shortly after landing, though, there was an attempted religious schism. It was still, at that time, a purely Catholic colony, and the schismatic movement was more on the order of fundamentalism rather than any sort of outright heresy. The schismatics wanted the mass in Latin, that sort of thing. But that, of course, threatened to start the arguments all over. So, as a result, to prevent religious warfare from breaking out again, they instituted a local version of the Papal College for the express purpose of defining what was religiously acceptable.”
    “Oh, shit,” Roger said quietly. “That's . . . a bad idea. Hadn't any of them studied history?”
    “Yes,” she said sadly, “they had. But they also thought they could do things 'right' this time. The Inquisition, the Great Jihad of the early twenty-first century, the Fellowship Extinction, and all the rest of the Jihads, Crusades, and Likuds were beside the point. The worst of it was that those who founded the Tellers were good people. Misguided, but good. The road to Heaven is paved with good intentions, after all. Like most ardent believers, they thought God would make sure they got it right. That their cause was just, and that the other people who'd screwed up exactly the same idea before them had suffered—unlike them—from some fundamental flaw in their vision or approach.”
    “Rather than from just being human.” Roger shook his head. “It's like the redistributionists that don't see the Ardane Deconstruction as being 'what will happen.' ”
    “The one thing you learn from history, Your

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