Epilogue
A New Age of the World
Belmondo, Tri-Border Region

The Empire's best colonial administrators operated under the principle of "Waste not, want not." The Palais des Douze Royaumes was already the de facto seat of world government in Altamira, so it was a commonsense move to make it the General Headquarters of the Provisional Planetary Governing Authority. Many of the former members of the League Parliament found new work on the Advisory Council assisting the acting planetary governor or the Executive Committee charged with putting policy into action in the governor's stead.
It had been two years since what was now known as the Aberration Incident. Although the 'mundanes' of the world were originally the target of the Imperials' reprisals for their treatment of the Ancients, those who were terrorized by the Aberration quickly turned to hail the Imperials as their saviors. It made the process of acknowledging the Emperor's claim and swearing fealty to him so much easier. There were some holdouts, of course—there always are—, but those holdouts found themselves isolated and were quickly shuffled off the stage.
If reintegration continued to proceed this smoothly, in another ten to twenty years Altamira would be permitted a Colonial Assembly for a measure of home rule in matters that were beneath the concern of their Imperial overlords. So long as they rendered taxes and other tributes due, things would settle into an equilibrium not so different from the time before the Imperials arrived. This was apparently a familiar pattern across the reclaimed worlds.
Although it should have only felt like a matter of months for her, Gally had a visceral sense of the three hundred years that had passed since the Calamity when she resumed her work as an administrative assistant. Whenever she would stop to think about it, it was surprising how little difference there was between her old civilian life and her new life in the Army. Thanks to her university education, she was eligible to become a warrant officer, so after an additional five weeks of training, she was able to escape the dog's life of an enlisted soldier.
Perhaps if she had not gotten her warrant, Gally might have found herself working as an orderly like what General Sultana offered to Giger that day in the square. She had what was for her the more respectable position of aide to the military liaison to the former Ministry of Magical Affairs, which was redubbed the Arcana Resources Management Administration. The mission of the former Witch-hunters had not changed so much, only now their main task was to press-gang potential mages into service rather than to simply repress them. Wittingly or not, many of them would still identify themselves as ARCANUM rather than the new label. The growing pains of the new order were still ongoing.
Gally stopped at the door to her superior's office and drew in a breath to prepare herself. It could be difficult to maintain military bearing around him, after all. She knocked on the door and cracked it open, saying, "Herr Major?"
"Come in," the Major said, already sounding rather irritable this morning, not that there was ever a time that he was not irritable.
Gally stepped into the office. The Major was sitting at his desk flanked by his two pink-haired orderlies, his brow furrowed as he was trying to do something on his tablet. Two years and still he struggled to adapt to modern technology. What were all those years of studying Lost Technology for?
"Dammit," the Major grumbled. "Why does this damn thing keep changing what I'm typing?"
"It's the auto-correct feature, sir," Gally replied. "How many times have I told you?"
"And how many times do I have to tell you that I'm not making any damn mistakes, so where does this piece of junk come off trying to tell me I'm wrong?"
"They still haven't added a language pack for Venturi," Gally said. "It auto-detects the nearest equivalent language and makes its corrections based on that."
"Auto-this and auto-that... Don't you people do anything for yourselves?"
"I don't want to hear that from a wizard," Gally said, already starting to forget her customs and courtesies.
"Arcanist," the Major corrected. "You know how particular they are about these things."
"All too well."
"Shouldn't there be a 'sir' in there somewhere?" one of the orderlies asked.
"Maybe you'll find it where you left the 'Frau Fähnrich'," Gally replied.
"Will you three behave?" the Major said.
"I didn't say anything," the other orderly said.
"You're all in on it."
As much fun as their usual banter was, Gally wanted to get back on task, or rather, she wanted to get on task in the first place. It always felt like they would get derailed before they could even pull out of the station, but sorting through issues like this was all part of her ongoing headache ever since she was given this assignment.
Speaking of assignments, Gally opened up her tablet and tapped on it while saying, "I hope you remembered that we're going to be on TDA in Dragomere for two weeks, Herr Major. We fly out after the end of working hours today. You did pack, didn't you?"
"Why the hell are we going to Dragomere?" the Major demanded.
"You're going to be doing an inspection of the revised training program of the 4th Arcana Battalion."
"Fourth? Which one is that?"
"Used to be the Salamander Mages' Guild."
"Oh, right. Them. What've we got on them?"
"I've already forwarded the relevant reports to you, sir."
The Major gestured to his tablet as if it were some inscrutable puzzle.
"And how the hell do I get to those relevant reports?"
Gally sighed and said, "By your leave, sir," before walking around behind the Major's desk, past the orderly to his right, and leaned over his shoulder, pointing to his tablet.
"Go to your mail, sir."
"I know how to open my damn mail," the Major grumbled.
"The secure mail?"
The Major was silent, furrowing his brow anew. All Gally could do was sigh once more.
She pointed to an icon and said, "You see this open lock here. Click on it."
The Major did.
"Now hold your tablet up so it can do the biometric scan."
He did that as well and once the scan was finished, the tablet said, "Unauthorized personnel detected. No unauthorized personnel are permitted within three meters of this device for secure mail access. Unauthorized personnel are requested to remove themselves at least three meters from this device or secure access will be aborted."
Gally looked at the orderlies and said, "That means you two."
"Why don't you have to leave?" the orderly on the left asked.
"Unlike you, I have the clearance and the need to know," Gally replied. "And I'm the one who sent the mail in the first place."
The Major waved off the orderlies, telling them, "Go on. Stand over there for a bit."
"But, Giger..." the one on the right whined.
"Go on, Prissy," the Major repeated. "And it's not 'Giger' anymore. Here in the office it's supposed to be 'Herr Major', right? How many times do I have to remind you?"
"At least once more," Prissy said playfully before skipping over to the opposite side of the room.
Her counterpart did not have as much spring in her step as she followed. Maximilla, or 'Maxi' as the Major would call her, still shared a consciousness with the original, but over the past two years she had developed some traits of her own personality, though usually it was only the Major who could tell them apart.
Major Barz Falkner. Strictly speaking, his permanent rank was just leutnant, but he was brevetted to major to serve in his current position. The outlaw wizard Giger Taus took his old name back up again when the Empire gave him his second lease on life, much as Gally had gone back to being Narumi Takahashi once she found herself back in the warm embrace of the Father of All Humanity. The only trace of his old assumed identity was the fact that both Prissy and Maxi were registered under the name Taus. Still, just as Gally would think of herself as the new identity Giger gave her, she would think of him as the man she first knew when she was woken up from her three-hundred-year slumber.
"What?" Giger asked, noticing her staring at him.
He might as well have been a new person. His hair was shorter now, back to its original blue, and he had regulation silver-rimmed glasses instead of his beloved tea shades and a smart-looking Imperial Army uniform instead of the ridiculously gaudy robes he used to wear.
"I was just thinking of how time has a way of changing a person," Gally said.
"You'd be the resident expert," Giger replied.
"In my case, it feels more like it was everything else that changed."
"Three hundred years as a statue can have that effect."
"I hear these days you can make three hundred without being a statue, what with juvenation therapy and life extension."
"Wonders never cease."
"You interested?" Gally asked despite Giger sounding anything but interested.
"No," Giger said, shaking his head. "One life is all you need and I've already got two."
"Maybe this second shot won't be so bad."
"Oh, yeah, trapped in a purgatory of paperwork, all for the glory of the Empire. I can feel Lady Luck sticking her tongue in my ear now."
Gally did not exactly appreciate his choice of mental image, but if she complained, he would only try to come up with something worse. After all their time together, he really knew how to push her buttons, and if she had any sense, she had learned how to avoid inviting him to push those buttons.
Gally simply rolled her eyes and asked him, "Any regrets?"
"Loads," Giger replied, "but not as many as if I'd done things any differently. Now, come on, Frau Fähnrich, back to work."
Remembering those days when she was put to scrubbing floors and dusting the bookshelves, Gally found herself smiling as she said, "Yes, Herr Major."
And so the story of the outlaw wizard Giger Taus had not quite ended as some may have thought but only turned to a new new chapter, just as all of Altamira had done, one more world among the supposed ten thousand graced by the benevolence of His Majesty the Emperor. However, this world was a prize not so easily won. A stone had been cast upon the waters and the waves would soon be felt across the galaxy. The echoes of the Skyfall Calamity continued to reverberate and the price for continuing to reach for the forbidden fruit would have to be paid one day. However, it was as yet a distant concern for this little corner of space. For now, two weeks of Giger complaining about Dragomerean cuisine and their hotel accommodations would make the far-off threat off the collapse of galactic civilization seem all the more distant.