ASTROPOL - which, despite its grandiose title, had disappointingly little business off Earth - would not
admit that SHAKA really existed. The USSA took exactly the same position, and its diplomats became
embarrassed or indignant when anyone was tactless enough to mention the name.
But Newton's Third Law applies in politics, as in everything else. The Bund had its extremists -though it
tried, sometimes not very hard, to disown them - continually plotting against the USSA. Usually they
confined themselves to attempts at commercial sabotage, but there were occasional explosions,
disappearances and even assassinations.
Needless to say, the South Africans did not take this lightly. They reacted by establishing their own
official counter-intelligence services, which also had a rather free-wheeling range of operations - and
likewise claimed to know nothing about SHAKA. Perhaps they were employing the useful CIA invention of
'plausible deniability'. It is even possible that they were telling the truth.
According to one theory, SHAKA started as a codeword, and then - rather like Prokofiev's 'Lieutenant
Kije' - had acquired a life of its own, because it was useful to various clandestine bureaucracies. This
would certainly account for the fact that none of its members had ever defected, or even been arrested.
But there was another, somewhat far-fetched explanation for this, according to those who believed that
SHAKA really did exist. All its agents had been psychologically conditioned to self-destruct before there
was any possibility of interrogation.
Whatever the truth, no-one could seriously imagine that, more than two centuries after his death, the
legend of the great Zulu tyrant would cast its shadow across worlds he never knew.
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